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Monday, Jantaby so, ion. Clearing to-dty and much colder by to-night; fair to-morrow; hiRh west and northwest winds. un. VOL. LXXVI1I. NO U2. NEW YORK, MONDAY. JANIZARY 'AO, 1911. lVUrihl. Iffll, bvlhtSl'nnlina.mdl'ulAMimi.Unm PRICE TWO CKNTS. CLIPPER SHIP, BOX GAR CREW dm i in xa iti I u in i s n i i i tuni i in: n il in- .11 11. nr. iinMril nml III. lather Wouldn't I'm III. Wi ir Irnru l ull. O.f n lanl. -'-'IMirr -. -mi-H irniui 11 '""'I ,,,r I , . . i i i ...I V , Unclean .In,. .h ked yesterday in , ." nnif.Ki) ii. exciting ny tier cnmeli-1 .. i-i.mplimeiit try comin.nl from r.ilks ng-tmie She I Him S. I). Cnrlcton. 1 1 -u.im.M i';i..t .l.ii.i... l,.l..,.l,l . ., . 1 4 Ih'.l sh. M ll... 1. nK' Yankci. , , . , , ., l"ft thill IS HK..J HilyH.tlU S,.' ,..1 iw.'iitv y.'.u old. ho Ih.' fkiiipiT j Willaim II McKinl.'V Mr. Tnft in mt not l. nut in the ahost ii.'cti-d t !. Kirk in tin. Whit.. IIoiih.. I mfi'uMii Imlli or ih.- itr.ic.'l."". I I ..1.' Sh.' i a lino tml,.l ami lr . ..... ..-Hl.-ml..r ami a, hlch .1 anv I .. m..r ami an nmn ,i , : in th-" p.ir.H nim,. th- .lav- Hi -l!.'"l wa- hilf ar.'h.'d with ii k II.Ihv.iih4 poiUni; into th" w f l!i' eh mill"!'..". win- l of th" .'Vi'til.'t'ii in 'ii of th.' ciow 1 ." 1 in n o Ain'r..Mii. lint onlv I w .1 t...s.. knew ai.Mh'm: about a , !.( Th" fkipMr i'il!"l lliciu "a l 1 r.'W," tiiiunlna tint tliy mlKht tr. .'I in th" holi el i If th"y hid Iwn n-lv.".'. Col) font hid.'i.'i d"n. a link ..t t''M wli'-nl t)m was a hoy ..f aliout 19. why-. fouriM r.'.'w too hh rt for 1 'in on th" trip of III (!a-. .11111 win. h.iiiI ' w.t. th"j.i of a New Yo Is r'lillion.il;.'. hut who ii really Ih" hoii of a litillr He Riv. th" .iirnamo of I'ipivm lie aid Ii" riid Ron" tr. Ileno t " tl'" Jell'' 10. .lilmoii tlKht and th.11 li journ.yo.1 thfiio" to San Kr.im.iHOo ,. 11. 1 Rot nti inded. l'i'idpnt will move to Kevorly and from lli father, h" s.tid. refiiM-d t" -nd him ' ',1"rH IH ''l4 "' 10 m.iU.. excmvion-. into $1.-1 to R"t bark ,0 New York and he.,h" "ml t",!",,,ll" ,Wo.M- ,.H, ''"V; .in,.H nl,;.r,i .1,.. ,fl , , 1. 1,-. 'U-ii an invitation to I," th" Rllent of rnonR th" box cw mittlt weie an ex- . nvnlryman f-o:n th Philippine wlr, ild hi missinR toe hid bee.'i slmt nff, te.imstp.-, n peillei-. a "sho-t ordei" .00k from a be.mcry and 11 br.iketnan On th" third dnv out lb" bov told th" 'eond, mate that the mat" miRlit draw ,11 his pay on the arrival of the ship here r'-ovuleti 1... was not sent aloft to nke St iplpnn looked out of Its window to ,r, th flivsalls. The tecond mate ma.lelrie south esfrdiiv nftenioon and saw t.v youngster do his bit, however, nndjcotmnR mi the Narrows a steamship lie will hive enough pay coming to him t.. keep him a few weeks without railing 011 P'lpi 1 (" other men or the ctew ni the Dest , ey could, which win rather feeble com- j -ed with tho wr! of an ordiivir- sea- 1.1411 'hie of them fell from l'i" fore t ps.nlyard 111 h"iy weathr off Pitcairn Island in the Pacific and surptise.1 the .i per by not .ijing right nw-.iy.as the tjrame -nn at least sixty leet. his rail 1 of M1,lv.un ,,ien comninid.-d bv Capt. wis hrol:n by Inlliar.ls. Hewas picked I .lfred'Hin.''ic:.H. Wt Itostnn.where'shelnd ..p uncoiiHciotis and taken IipI'.w. The 1 1,0(. nnloariing part f her ra-go.and -kipper examined him and could lind I ...nied for this port. At I o'chek Satur 11. bone- broken, fever il application- (!lJ. morning th- fir-' officer ..n watch ,f th" galvanic battery 'est -red con- fn,m.l smoke cotniui: from the after h iicli IMines, and do-en of mingled nitn'nn, WHI ,on ! awaUen the captain i.nd lnudanum put th" patten! a-leep : a ll tp.ll i.ll lrind-. They .". off Hlick 'ftrr slumbering several diy-h"reprted .,,,,,1 . ,1. )ln.., and (apt K.. Uens f"- d'Hy. but was neverable there ifter t.. . K-nteneil d-.wn th" hutch, turned steam P"il"lt. "Iitiii tu- h 'Id mid ordered l is engineer While becalmed off tli" mouth of the 1 1 -, ..u-tl.' for New Yk. At the Hook was I i..- Phtc the day before Thanksgiving ,,(lot wilnatn r.'rni'.and w hen IuuIhhI 'i- -kipper made an effort to rapture , i,(M1.,i (.. h...i,,Kl the burning ship for .. i"R -hatk tint had been swimming '. ojl;,',,ntme. wli-re he knew there would i.ri.'in.l th" t-hip convoyed by a school 1 llH ,..,1,. wn,tinir. He saw the Seneca, a t pii.it fi-h. The shirk refisted thefemi j 01 .ti to t.ue n nuiiK 01 I'orK to ioB 1 t ie -kipper got weary and left the ta'ail ivilig th line to it His wife. ' c hi ha the di-tincti.-n of having n 1.. 'tn town rn the bonier of LVatn ' h'..v name.1 lor her, went up on the " ok and took the I'tie As she .I - 'lie shark gulp..! flow 11 the pork! .1 'he hook Site haultd (n Ih" line n . ! g.it the Minrli'M head ..til f f the water . i.- kipper heard the shouts of the men h , 1, . 1 that the monster had been i-d at.d went ait '1 he mate looped . I in. i.ver th" shark's head and mx -hi dr.i'jgeil him abiaid He was mul a I1.1T feet long. He was rut ."i . ..! d m-;de wa- .1 curious fish, the 1 if which the skipper tayi. lie never ii.'f.ir.'. It wa- as big a- a New ' '.' l iiul dog and had a face like a moii 4 - with whiskers on each side, ami !ti hair sticking up from the nose. 1 'tis had U'eti the rule on the trip iu skipper decided to employ the i'ks t ,i .1 as a breeze breeder by nail-1 ' e i' I., ihe end of the jibboom It was ' ' ii time he had ever seen the super - ii fail The backbone of the shark preserved and came here on the ; Shark backbones make excellent . - The -kipper also caught a dolphin r 1 n all.aeore, the eyes of which, dry ' iHr. he will turn into cuff buttons; "ist that is what the ultramarine gut th" yarn says. I shipper once navigated a prairie nr m Death Valley, where he says " thermometer registered frequently - m th -hide when tliero was any . 1 lint i when Nettie, th" boom ' . n.it now on the map, was founded '' - 1. 1 dm cUim for Sl&.nofi Then ho nek to seafaruiR. which he says 1 hun irresistibly He h'is heard - .f the Cnrleton going into the coal 1 l.tifinnsA and h" floes not want " " them He says that she is too ' . Iipper to be sacrificed and that . - to mako a few more voyaRo m 'i his wife and a crew that wi ' ' tn clap on sail and Ret epeed ' vier that she was designed fo de. PPer brouRht aboard the Carle- I" described as a remai kab e : ""'"' 1 ' , ", . trained fhes shipped a. ,sn 'h barrel th-efforts of. h-t'limigewater He savs they would not ,!'"' u ? tar-" ,h" oll1n, table until after all ihed.shes j IT0."'1'., l"'"''' ?f ,h." '.'"nL. leared away and nevet would the hands or faces of Mrs ' 'he mate or himself They iliv large He trained them by '. method; that m, he ta'ight tliev shooed not do by shooing ''' 'Ml 7 III I THOI.I.n I' i It. l liiuiH.i'i! I'r. 1111 HrlilKf I'liiii'he. Ill-Mil '"i.UKli lee In Ither Heine,. n Ian : William I.nlly and 1e1sf.11 were walking across a l.ndge over a branch of 'he . ,11 Walter i.l.l la-ethis af.i-- .1 ' a sirucK them Andermn f'om 'he . met lire and his . v. .v ir 1... reaa" ."'V' " rt- i severe .ruernal injuriet. ' ....... SIIIEIII I.I. I.OOO .llllrs II)' Mill Take llllll AIh.iiI I "fell I'.KrlV III IVhrilifi ml ll.,t.,l..r I WAs,UNnoS-. .Inn. so. Whit" House l.nil'i.lla r I.... t I.I 1-..f... I spring travel schedule. W Idle ill.. wheel ll,,,wol Hot be as long " Hull of IhhI year, I !'' ,i,M,,,l,;l,l1,!,,H ,,IWI',"1 '' t i ii till ''I l lHHirs.iii.in in uhiit- f ,prrilorv ,, ,,,, awiiy frm . Washington formally days nt a time. The Hrni big trip mi llii- President's' .,.,., ,nm , (1(,(,m wMk , i.. I-"..! ...... 'ii... i ..1....1 will 1.. Springfield, III . lo altiMiil Hi- Lincoln mi'tnori.il celebration On 1 lit way h" will sloi. for a f.ov Ih.iiih ,l I'nluml.ii". !" ' "1M ""h" " m"-- , nil. ..v.'r .OMR' ni III' ll.ill.'v in.'"' 11. '..., . .........1 I... I, ......l.,ilv... ly l-Vl.iu.irv r." '"I' "Ini'li wit a mil.' loliK"! in of '-C'" ,Ml"j;l' w , ,,IO-,,.tl, wlM ,,UVt. WaHhiiiKton for v,.ll1t.,. (i . .. . w, h,,...,K 1 for.. th" Sonllvni (..min.'m il Coim-t.- From Atlanta tin. Ir.'nl"nt will no noilliw.-t- 1 ward throui;li Ti'iini'.-.-.'.' to I'inriniiali. j 111- naliv.' ntv. II" will "top at Nanh- ..III.. ...! I'll It. .ifl 'l.'M.l I. 11.1 III. n . ....... .' 'i i... nl 11. ..III.'. ."11..."... ....r-- ii.T-i. .r.....i... -tin ,..,.,-.. i.. n..niiuii ihr..,. or four d iv and will then make a hltnrl tlip to rlevel.ind. Krom t'leveluid h t ..i.'.'t.'i t. return to WanlmiRlon. lie will li KiniH al l.'i"t .Hi" wc'k on thw Hip. Miil.' no .l"'ltiit" "iiK.ii;i'tiinM lmv" l.f'ii mid" for otlir trip- in Ih" npritiR. it i- unit" iirolnlil.' that tli" rr.'Hi.li'nt will mike brief visits to New York and 1 other Kastcni fines. Ins alrendy . I KITS TltAYEI. t"iitativev accepted invitations that street station was the one who held up ' nelll'il. Willi Haiti llrr Mui'li of tin would l"id lil.n to N.'w York. Hi" profession Ho hailed th" iiiarcht ' rnnilr, I'.illowcil h) CuUlvr. Hetween Mm eh and .bin" no Ioiir trips ..uid commanded 111. 'in to iop. Thev ' W Asiiis'riros'. .Un '.'(i 'lh forecast have been planned so far. In .lime the honor at the ixansis stnt Kair at Hutch ' inson late in September. That trip will 1 add rinse to 3,.l miles to Mr. Tuft's log as ' President. nti:iuiirt:it units .v in in:. Ilrlnss Ullli Her n Ur flnuit Tlmt llarUi'iis till' Narrow . hung with smoke and racing for safety .Sh" was the(!."inan freighter Wil.ienfel-. from Bremen via lioston. with a cargo of ut h..,,,,,. tea. rubber and saltpetre, ,.,k" -m at Calrutt i. and tint (.ame cargo spired in the after hold was burning away with a igor lint made Hi" crew f.f the W'll.lctifeis look anxiously ahead for n l!-ehoa! On Ki.d.iv th" W'lldenfls, with a crew W! eck. tig steamer empl..yed ill tne revenue ! Un - vice. nml railed to lier to go for the .e)0l1I ito.xlv. tint was loafing off Xompkinsvill".' 1 T, ' un,.. .,,,. ov,.r .1 htirrv.and tic Wildenfels, emitting smoke that darkened the Narrows, dropp-d anchor while the little firebo.it hooked alongside fid began to oiirin a torrent that choked the smoke out. Th"('haiicellor. a wreck ing boat of th" Menitt-Chapinan com imny.saw wlrit was 'doing anil she too r.inie to til" WlldetlfeU. 1 ll"ll tile K)liCe boat Velox rame along and the three hovered about the (ierm.tu until lite at night. The fire wa- practically under control by 0 o'clock, but the smoke con tinued for a lung while th"i "after to roll out of the after Jiut. li In choky clouds. I'apt. hi.ckeiis was unable to estimate the damage done to his cargo. nou:x ox miu vi.oxi roi.ni:. lliin.lr.'.l or Them lo Help -itunip Out ximrclo New II. .nil. IMilraKf. .-rtrrinf f.tiV ltp.fri m THK S".s lUlll'KI.OVA, Jill- '.'11 Next week there will enter the police service one hundred women, whose principal mission will he to aid in stamping out anarchy in this city Another bomb was exploded to-day against the Casa del Pueblo, u pet in stitution of Deputy l.erroux. one wall of which was blown out by an explosion last Friday The bomb to-day was loaded with shot and scrap iron It lore into small fragments a heavy balustrade and de. stroyed ft large tree at the side of the building, which itself was considerably damuRed. The police, hastened to the scene, but their efforts to detect the author of the outragft were, ns usual, fruitless, now nx iti xxixa on.? TltlewMcr I'Iik- Mnr To. Wln InltUII) li fiiiilcn.llnc lou Can't. Wahminoton, N .1 , .Un 29 Although the' Tidewater Pip" !'if" Company has tanks holding nfi.(0 barrels in ChHnge- 1 os- - , Z"""1. faile.l 'I h" county boaid of equalization axes ..as h.-i-"h'.i ... i u. ....... ..1.. . . ...... t r Ill" company ilia. 111" 01. noes 1.01 smy tier" for nny appreciable tune lii" conipanv s"ts forth that th-? oil is constantly flowing in from th" Pennsyl vania oil fields and is constantly flowing out to th" refin Tien i Bayonno, and ll.'.r.'l'on. anv given 1.0,1100 barrel,, of oil that Hi" assessors might find by measure- J uient lo Ik. in the tanks r,n (lav would I not be thr' on tin- day when th" tax bill was made out and forwarded to th' ; company II would In an entirely diffet- "ill UO,ii I mi l el- of oil Th" county board in deciding for th". omipanv has, hownver. HUgg"stcd th-. alvisnbulty of an npixt'il oil th" part or 1 10 I liangwater aiiuinnues chr !. i- a hin Will If-hV ll imniw llirlr I'stsriljii ..m tn H'wrv ami SQth Sit . T .,i,t ll. L. 1 -hrodih Pufl le ana Wni ifrini 11 ' renna. 11. . man Vvlce W Wpclnn.il. l.oull.lj flV 1 ., -1 lrueik .no inu. 1 ticket offlcel. Atft. I POLICE AND ANARCHISTS ROW illltlMS 117 I I'S ll 'S ll Ml l.f. IHM Were llarclilm; on llniiln anil Minuted "KIM the Japanese!" "simnt Hie imi.,.,!" iuin-,1 in....... in mr. Ilnl riiii! Ill I'l.lH'i'iMBiiNrni'V.I,, wllN lhk Kl)V(., ir A crow,! of anan li.-.H. oMlm.il.,1 nil nirn... a Ii.mI llaron Kit.. ..xi..., !,'.,, ttinili ltinti until thtt tiiill ih rnniiilitl ntii ; II..' way from .V. In l.' ,m.ir.'l..'.l ilown "'"'"'""V "'H'1' """I by " httl.'i Itussiaii diesm.ikcr hearing n largo 1 I.lonil n-il l..imii- Tlu'V ram.' from 1 ...Hl..r Hall, al lllirint KH-vhiiIIi xlr.-t wli-r.' H...V ha. I.I a m.'..tinK at which . . , ... , Ih.'.v -iM.k.. Ih.-ir indw.at.oi. ov.'r tho .'c.'iil .',Tiiti..n of tin. .lapan.'H.' anar. cIm'-Ih. Wh.'ii ih.- -iiiinil iciclifd Leonard Mr.M't and ll....i.lay tl,..y ran afoul of1'"' " '""l'''' 1 ,,t', " WU or ' il-'- ' Hi" fVi'iihiK I itrriv hotn.' at , "'. l.. an od to know ,y I ,MhR , " nKt Hi'-v paraded, ror iiiihw-.t , 11nr wH.ri they Hhouled "hill the .lap.in.-i'' Down 1 with Hie .lap-'" A rontrover-.y eiiNiied J and terminaled with the poln-eniaii heitiR for..'.! to draw IiIh revolv.-r to proti'd Iff .1 1. i"",""'lf '"'r' "".iri'ln-l and "eiitu.il arient ,.f four of the men 'Hid the litile l(UHian Rill who .-ariled the H.IR llefore llin arrests couM be made the reserves from two nearby station liou-es were summon.'.! to break up Hi" Rather iiiR crowd and help the lone policeman, while the .inirohlsts shouted "Shoot the police!" Policeman W illi, mi Ituilltvof the Leonard did. but they sto. p.-l onlv to hull do- flinc in loreign tongue.. Then cam" 1 week is as follows the cry of "Kill the .lapane-e'" They "Th" coining week promises to 1m mi" press,..) about him and the Iuniau gnljof un-"ttl"d weath-r. with roiisideiabl" waved her banner 111 hi- lace. 'precipitation over much of th" country. At the h-ight of the di-turb.in. e came a j A change to cold 'r weath-r will over- sm ill boy w ho ollered hl aid to the p.ili 1 spread th" greater part of th" country man He was t 'Id to putlus hand d"ep least of th" Hotky Mountains during the Into th" left hip pocket of th" policeman s first part of th" week, following th" east trousers, draw t herefrom a whistle and 1 ward movement of a disturbance that 1 hen to bio. Th" cop was protecting hi- fare from th" flag with one hand and holding his gun in the other The lmv blew tl:.- whistle and from nearbv streets came other policemen who -ooh had th. crowd under submission. Ai 1 heir heel. ! followed the reserves from the Leonard I Untie States th- latter part of th" week and r.hsibeth street- stations. 'I he four. This disturbance will U. preceded by ris met., the irirl nml ll." ....I lummr IIIR temperature. attnded by general piled into two patrol wagons and taken to th" station houses. At th" Kluabeth street station house the pedigrees of two men were taken. They -aid they were Domlnirk Valent ini. a silversmith of I'll Kast Twenty-first street, ami Victor Klasseur. a rook of 4l7 Seventh avenue In the Leonard Htreet station one of the men arrested said h" was lleiijamin Wcinstoin. a tailor of ?t W'allnbout street. Brooklyn The girl slid that she was Lillv Chi-man. a dress, maker of on Kat Ninth street Simon Friedman of lis Kast Ninety-eighth street said that he was an anarchi-t and a ,r Roods worker All were charged . ,..,. mi,rUig n,ore literal scale with unlawful assembly and t.arading , , nderstoo.l that Hi" last examination without a permit Later they were taken I WH, ,,.,, ,,... tUmctlU l(l U(llu Th., to the night court list of detlcieuts also includes fifteen mem- At the Webster Hall meeting resolu-1 ).,. ,,( t,.. Kraduating class who were lions were drawn up declaring that "Dr I (,(i,.lM, m navigation It is said bv th" Diijiro Totoku his wife and eleven I mididiiptnen that'the examinations on th" or his comrade. had been hanged legally whol wer,. ,),.. mst difilcillt that have assassinated, by the Japanese (iovern- ,.,. Kivi. j,, rP0)., v,.ars iiieiit The anarchists also declared ' that the .lapane-e Government would;, yol.l V.TTV. I Oil l'lti:SI lll'.K '. De mane to sillier Magistrate Butts in the night court spent 1 two hours listening to the testimony I and then discharged Valentini and held the others 111 S.Mm bail for Special I Sessions with Die exception of Lilly Chisman, I who was charged with interfering with a policeman She was sent to the women's court The meeting the anarchists came from was called by the Italian Socialist Fed eration and was presided over by Bayard Boyesen of Columbia. Alexander Betk inau was the principal speaker. The meeting adopted resolutions of protest against the Japanese executions and then some of the audience shouted for a parade lo the Japanese Consulate ill Wall Street llyppolite Havel, editor of Muthtr Kurlh, with which Alexander Berkman is associated, was the principal witness for the defendants He said lli-y did nothing unlawful and then entertained Magistrate Butts with a twenty minute dissertation on tin principles of anarchv He called the Magistrate's attention to the fart that leading men mall countries deplored the action of the Mikado. Magistrate Butts in summing up said "Ihe Court can't review the principles anarchy "The sol-purpose of this court is to up hold the law. Certain laws have been enacted which make the actions of these defendants unlawful." onnx xxrt: i:xrt:in.MHxr To llelermliie I'.ITrpl of a I'rojertlle 011 Vrinor Plate at llattlr llancr. Wahiiinotos. Jan '.'Ii The Navy e partment will Miorily perform an ord iiRtice experiment in the lower part of Chesapeake Bay to determine Ihe pene trating effect of a service projectile on armor plate at the usual battle range. The firing will be done by the monitor Tallahnasee. A 12 inch gun will be fired at a plate or armor erected on the. "Id ram Katahdin. which has lieen recently used In ordnance experiments. The test is the second experiment which the Navy Departmen was directed by Congress to perform. 'Ihe first, which wan held In Hampton Hoads last Novem ber, consisted in the ignition of two charges of 2W pounds each of explosive gelatine against ihe turret armor and ihe water line armor belt respectively of the monitor Puriian The explosion on tin. xvalerlinii armor belt was so ceriuiiN that llie monitor sank I IIMIT llfl.'HIf'IN EIX iXIIEItS, Hill ItiiMla Majs 'II m t r Work In IVrida Shall Not He a I'lrprileut. Sprevil C'Hilr Itr.paiih to 'iiik ,si'n l.iiMiios. Jan .'I Tile St Petersburg correspondent o' the 7Vnrx says that Itussla agrees to American financiers heloine Persia w. organize a fiscal system ' .... .1 . . . " condition tlat 1 does not create a ..recedent and ria. thev admit, financial l,retenen' Bna rln"'ey nomii. iinuuciai ft(jvlBorB fr0rn t! o buropran Powers. untax ntitirs i . He's .linking n Stinl) of .11111 C.uislnirtliin I'roni I In Ground I p. laxVHKXrK, Mas.. Jun 20. It.ii'otl Kltlio vim KItz, nephew of the Prime Minister or Hungary, has got job 'h liborer on Hi" new Uhwoco mill of tin- I niti-il States "-... .i,-.r. i";.!!::,rv " , '''"ir.:1! 1 ,i'-"n'V"" i i......i 1...11.1 i 11.1II. i.ntl flmmltti? hin oVi.r.lIU w.W.m It... . . .... . . ,,,',.,:. Huron Kit makes his home hi a fund ionnl.lc inn nl Andovi-r. Hh in 32 yiir of n'miil iicali KiikIIhIi lln.'iiily H.iron 1.11 nayi: Ht . t. . .. . . 1 l. I .. ' "v" 1 7 ninriiinit nl fl.aii. oath.'. hIhvc and .'iijov I, 1(r,.UfllH, I hoard iIih T :io o'cl.ii'U lr.if fr Lrvrenr.' from Andov.'r. and al I s (I'.'lo.'K I h ive dotuifd my nvcrulU m'ii.I am readv for worlt. At noon I wit lit tit- . ,). ..yeniiiR I uwik t rfporln of wh'il 1 have aeromplihed and what I le.irin.tl renardniR American mill con- ftriu lion I am repreentuiR my countrj over here. I" K. 1. SJoHtrom. treaniirer of the I'nll.'d State Worsted Company, l alo a director of th" American-lliin-Rarian H.111U. and when in my country a. year iiro he inler.l'd the I'riine Mliilter o niui'li ill the 111 inufai'lure of wor-tedi that I wi ".'tit hie to study mill con1 strui'lion and liter will lake up wornled inaniifactiintiR " i : tr: wnv.it nut mis n ::.. .if the Weath-r Hiireau for th" present was oer th" midd) West 011 Sunday "Ih" principal disturbance of th" week will prevail during Hi" next several days west of th Hocky Mountains, wh-nc" it will move eastward and crosr. th middle W'est lhur-.l.iy or Fiiday and th" At- precipitation, and ! followed l.y con siderably colder weather in northern and central districts east of the Hocky .Moun tains " ..SMK.V fill. 10 nss. Kort-nm lriiilrr of Second t'lht li" Mclrnt In Mrclmnlcs. I Annapomh. Md.. Jan. .. On Aooount i of difflrulty .with th examination In niedianic forty-oil" meiiilsrs of the j second class of midshipmen Haw been reported as unsatisfactory and mav le asked to resign However it is probable V... .I...-. I v. ix t-uYitrttln:ivt irn or ni-fonlit Scnutor Opens llailfiiartrr in mi. I'mil as a lliirrau. s, Pt, , .,;,, what is believed to ..Inning of a delerniin.'d effort ,,, ,.Jir( 1)f Senator Hobett .V. Ui l'olletle of Wisconsin to land the P.epul lirnu nomination for President i th" opening in this ci'y of Lu Follette's liead U'larters in f harg" of C M Chtistensen. He will hae charge of Minnesota and the Dukolns and will employ a staff of field men ostensibly to gumer news ami ideas for .i FotlfUi'f Wnl.ly. but Hi. real purpose, it is believed by old politi cians, will be the advancement of La Follette's stock in this iart of the North west The lame tactics have been under taken by La Follette's campali'ii mana gers before but have not been success fully Worked out Mr ( hrisiensen refused lo make any comment on ll.ework whichheissiippo-iHl tfi do ill the three States viin. s rmxrt: to f. v ro-n . xiarMrct MilplO. Horn llllnd, llrllrto Mir Will Krr. PlTTslit'ltfi, Jan. .. - The eight day fast of Margaret Shipley, Urn McKecsport blind girl, begun last Sunday to restore her sight will end to-morrow. Th" watchers who spent the day at the bed of the trancelike sleetver told visitorn this evening that her soul which had left her body early this morning nml had been absent in heaven all day returned to her body to-night. Shortly aflerwnrd the alrl raised h"r hands anil said. "Jesus Christ was the Saviour of the Jaws', I will be th" Saviour of lhe(ierililen." It was the only timo she spoke, all day Churchgoing citizens, canrtilizefl by the visiting thousands who tramped up Ihe hill in Hit) mud to view the sleeping girl, petitioned the MrKepsport police thin ith police after sending a physician to examine the girl and finding she was in al.CrUOO.I ... s.l.p ..." 1. A. ui'.l inn no;.a"Kenrf.HM" ,r"m ruJ1H "authorities, however, forbade twelve-year-old F.dna Tauber, whom ' Margaret had arranged lo have remain at her bedside day and night iinlil her , fast was over, to continue, her watch longer and sent her home for the night It was discovered that Minn, exaiteu ny .Marnaret's example, had not tasted food for two days Margaret has promised that after her soul takes its mp to heaven to-morrow and returns to her body she will wake with her sight at H o'clock to-morrow live ning, although sh" was born blind. Twenlv-fiMi thousand people visited the Haldermaii home, where Ihe girl is slaying, to-day. Many women walked Hue., and four miles in lh rain. The roads were a soi of mud and Iho visitors tracked great clods into the house with them. They died past Hie door of the room in which she lay, but were not ad mitted. M.n TIHIN Til TUKVrON Prim.) h mtn IIMIrnait brave IVnnlllianlo 1 ?.!,1'.",.Nfw.v."rli. 1 :.'.' M rrUlny,for.ywaru. ru.iii'in or!ur.i.n .ru.lw ir-K rrinrcnu Juni-ilni ami Trrninn Parlor far and rnAChm, Al-o nim train for rwnrw, IraMni Trrnin, A M rlv nruiinnlrk D O A M and Nrwaik 1 lu.ua A.M., with parlor car aail coachai. .tit. WOMAN CHOKED AND DEAD!"'" ""J!J" " 4 x livjuiiM v..v V.)v Hmnnv ItrlM'P a Moment. Then HHM' rat mi inn its FI I'll 1 1 ii ..' r ::. Towel (ifTt-.l Ilown Her Throat ami lllue llarUs on Her Tare nml Netl. 'Hie Cormier Has Not round tint Win. fhc Is Orders an u1op). The bo.lv of a woman was found last night 111 a loom on the second lloorof Ihe Bryant Hotel at Forty-fourth street mid Sixth avenue There weie blue marks on the face and neck A towel had been crowded into her mouth and well back into her throat Coroner Helletistein looked at the.bo.lv and said It looked to him like a rase of minder by strangulation A chambermaid made lite discovery at K.1.1 o'clock last, night and William Dioge. the ptoptietor, called ill Policeman Cook The body was lying half on the bed and was part tally dres-ed It was that of a woman about ,1s years old. . f.'.-t '.' niche in height and weighing in 1 pounds Her hair was brown, her complexion light and he- eve blue Her clothing included a white shlrlwai-t, black skirt, brown hat. black fur coat, black shoea and stockings and short while kid glove. On the woman's left hand were a plain gold ring iititl a gold ring with live bril lia'its On hr right hand was a ring set with a large turipioie She al-fi wote small tur.iiois. earrings A large hand bag with 11 coin purse inside lay near by . There was no money and no cards or papers In addition to lh towel which was found crowded some seven inches into the woman's tliroit wa another towel lying on the floor n.-ir by with an odor which the police thought might be that of chloroform 011 it. This towel, too, was rolled tip as if it might have been wound nlxitit the woman's face and no-.- Her hps were stained Her coal bore the label of a New York dry goods house, but much of the other clothing was scarcely that usually worn by New Yot k women and gave those who saw the body th" idea that th" woman might have come from out of town The shoes, in particular, were or a cut not much affected m the city They were of the blucher type with the lower part of patent leather All of the clothing was rather cheap The police were told that the woman came to the hotel at ran o'clock yesterday morning with a man who tegitered as John .Stmt ti and wife of Moutclair. At first it was stated definitely bv the hotel people that the man had left at fl;4. o'clock last night, a little less than two hours, before the body of the woman was found, l-lter they were less sure about thla. The night clerk said that the man was still in the room when the clerk left at T o'clock yesterday morning, but he did not know anything further except that the man was gone when the clerk again came 011 duty at 7 o'clock last night. The man is described as .1.". years old. 2 feel H inches in height anil weighing Mh pounds. He had a cast in one eye. He wore a light colored overcoat and a black soft hat and carried a small suit case Coroner Hellonstoin ordered the body removed to the morgue and will have an autopsy performed hi if ou; 1 XKTiir.ttsoi.K's mm. lllrlimoml Hotels anil partnirntstt ui.'l Let I'.ien To) Hta) In It.... 111. ItieilMONI). Va . Jan 20 - Olga Nether sole, who will appear 111 the Academy of Music to-morrow night in "The Hedcmp Hon of Kvelyn Vmidray," arrived in Itichmotid tin- afternoon and went dir.-ctly to the Jefferson Hotel. When she went to register a surprise awaited her. The clerk lifted a forbidding hand "Not with that dog," he said, pointing to a toy lucked under her arm Some argument followed and Miss Nethersold hied heraway to the Iticliluoiid Hotel. "No dog- allowed," said the clerk at the Itichmond. All down the line the same fate awaited Miss N.ithersole Nothing daunted, she took a taxi for the best apartment house in the city, but gut lliu same reception. The taxi went from apartment to apart ment, but none accepted dogs. At the Jefferson she was finally allowed to register on condition that the dog did not go to her room. ATTUhs sorni.isr uuoit. Milwaukee lluliie Man -a Vili.ilnls. tratlnn I I'.xlraisnant ami liiertli'lent. Mtl.WAi'KKK. Jan 29 Col I'red C Bogh. an insurance and real estatebroker, has issued an open letter in which he hotly attacksoho Socialist administration He charges that the administration is not run along economical lines and that l.y its claims and allegations it has discredited thn financial standing of the city Ambition and greed are the friends and companion of theadtuinlstratinn, hesays. Men lacking entirely in experience, if not grossly incompetent, are occupying re sponsible positions The administration has done nothing to advance the business interests of the city The payrolls have been increased JIlN.SM 70 in the six months the administration has been in power Increases in salary are made out of all proportion to Ihecity'sfinanclalronditlon und inconsistent with the capabilities of those employed He charges that the city has hoi Il,;.ou,ono xnis ".r.l.. "i?nr V interest of JI2.IKNI ' .o0rA,oWn,,e;..Mh,r """"'"'"; to havo 1 10 nam. iEiton.ixEs. Mr Hnlieris Thinks the Concussion of an j I'.MiloilIng shell Would I pel Tliem. I W'AHiiiNoro.N, Jan 20 Itepresentative ' Huberts of .Massachusetts, who is a mein 1 ber of th" House Committee on Naval I Affairs, has suggested tothc Navy Deport 1 .1... ..,iu,.i,n,i.. 1 .... . .... .... .... , ..-.(. .....j iM iniorrtUHlOg H series of experiments to determine tin. effect of exploding projectiles in the vicinity or aeroplanes, Mr lloberls he - heves that if an explosive shell were ig - . nited m the vicinity of an aeroplane L" ... . . ." lyieiu loiipsci I "'Mr'liK'.Wn'a'; .'Ha. "I'ii'ls miestlou ! could be demonstrateil by firing e.xiilo - sivf. project llrs at box kites sent up from the deck of a 11av.1l vessel. The nfflrm of the Navy Depiir.ment are itm.ressed prupuDvu n 111 pruuauiy 00 carrica out. ;..( for Him. Thomas Kane. 11 keeper it, tl. monkey , house iii th.! Bronx zoo. w ,s changed' yesterday lo the lion house I,, supply th.. ' place of 11 keeper who was ill .J.ist before closing time Kane was cleaning .,ui the I cage of a leopard when the leopard, after , eying the stranger for a' moment, ! pounced on Kane's right arm. which was I extended into the cage. Kane tiie.l lo beat the beast off with a broom, but was not successful. Ills slioiWs brought John Schwartz, a keeper regularly employed in the building. Schwartz ordeted the leopard back to his corner and the animal obeyed. I Jr. W". Heed Illaid. veterinary to the zoo, ftiiind that Kane's arm was badly torn but that he had received 110 per manent injuries. The keeper will be laid up for some time. m:s moixi:s hits a nut rriiler Muck In Annapolis Harbor rrotii ;::io A. i. Till .1:20 I'. M. Ann'aI'oI.Is, Mil.. 1I1111. 29. The United States cruiser l)es Moines went aground on (irccnhcrry Point bar at the mouth of Annapolis harbor at 7:30 this morning and was floated at 3:20 this afternoon. The Des Moines, which brought the body or Commaniler John F. Ltlby, her late commander, to Annapolis, was attempting to leave (he harbor when the accident occurred, She was under th.; command or Capt. John ('. Leonard. There Is plenty of water iii the channel to float the Des Moines, but a -harp turn is necessary Just before leaving Ihe har bor. The tide having risen con-i.lerably this afternoon the vessel was floated with till, aid of the Government tug Standish and continued her voyage. She was uninjured. IHUl SiYKS CHU.IHtEX. I'ulls Them I'rom Pond and Ketches Their I'ather. Hex, an nvernro,wn St Bernard puppy owned by David Wilson, a farmer of Bogota, N J , saved tlm lives of Wilson's two children on Saturday night. Harry Wilson. 12 years old, and Oraee, n years, fell through the ice on a small pond back of th" Wilson barn. Hex jumped in and pulled first the boy and then the girl ashore. Both children had swallowed a quantity or water and were helpless tor a time As soon as he had them ashore the dog ran to the farmhouse and fetched their father. .irimi: mikes nor a max. ;ie Him .Majorlt Itlalils at in No as to Kxaile CIUI Hen Ice Hules. Kansas Citt, Jan. 29.-legally John Toman, IB years old, is 21 . Judge K. h. Fischer of the District Court of Wyandotte county, Kansas, added two years to the boy'a ate by law in order that he might take a civil service examina tion. Toman is a veterinarian. He decided to seek a place In the United States De partment or Animal Industry, but on ac count of being a minor was barred from the examination The boy went before Judge. Fischer, explained that he was the sole support of his mother and five children and men tioned his ambition. The rights of ma jority were then conferred on him. SEEKS IXSfHAXt'E AT 7.V. i:-SenatorlioriloiiTlilnks Ills l.lfe Worth MKMMMMt Ken If He I a lilt Old. Okoixiva, Miss, Jan 2 -Former I'nited Slates Senator James Gordon, who is 7 years old, yesterday made application for lino.noo life insurance The Senator says that he has made all arrangements to live not less than loo years and does not know that ho will stop at that age. Mr Cordon is hale' and hearty and can take his gun and ke.p the field all day iiih u;o .11 iv i.o.s'i: .1 ririix Or. I'.NaiiN. .Martini d'0le). Inlen.b'il to l.rmi' SIIHMMNI Palminc lo the CIL. -ufi.iJ I'lifc'r lif'i'.ilth In Thk Sus. Paris, Jan ?lt If . ur his friends fear. I)r John Kvans, Marquis d'Oyley, who di.sl here yeslerday afternoon, left no will, his illness living very short and his death unexpected the Chicago Museum .Mil lose a painliug by Titian which l)r Kvans alwuys said he Intended to leave to ihe gallery of his native cily The Titian came from the Palais Hoyal collection It was cut from its frame during the Commune and was s..'iil 10 London, where l)r Evans bought ll The Louvre was always desirous of ecpiiring the picture, but the price, Joo.ixm francs (llim.nni'i, was prohibitive .!( XlOlt IIEI'I Itl.H IX I.OXIIOX Will He Opened In a lew Month Two .Hon' li He I'oiin.le.l In Till I'ountr), lriA('A, Jan. 29. A George Junior Hepilblic will be founded ill F.tlgland this spring, according to William H. George of Freeville, the founder of the republic idea m this country. He said that the success of the F.nglish institution was practically assured and that in a few months it would be opened in London. It is planned to have a nunilier of citizens from one of the American republics hs the pioneer colonists of the British institutien George Montague will have charge of the work in 1otidon. Mr. George Slid. Mr. George is also working out plans for founding two more republics in this rountrr. nt Chicago and Boston. He ,1()p,,fl tlm, I,,,,), r.r these institutions will lorganizv-d this year. The junior 1 republic Idea, which .nr. iieorgporigiinneu 'and set in motion llrst at Freeville, has 1 now spread across the country, and there are about half a dozen institutions in a flourishing condition. .rn. 11 ntMoX'S uorsi: mtv. I'alU to l'a .Meter llrnt ami Authorities Klmt OtT Water. Cnl.rMBl'H, Ohio, Jan. 20, (low Judsnn Harmon is out of water at his home. ' Yesterday an inspector went there and turned off the water. 1 The department untitled (iov. Harmon 1 several weeks ago that he must pay 15 tor ni meter. .No notice wan taken , "''' "'' '"1" effect, so yestettlay the ilepartnient ordered the water shut off. 1 '. fl.OHHIA HI I'lCltlou tsKIIVIf'K . .. si l.lnr, "N Klnrl.la ri-uua:" .w" 3 i oihet Umltcct trains dally. i:io U'wa TO DRAG LAKES FOR LOST GIRL . '"",rn' "-VO''W SKKS XK 4" VI'STHAI. VAItli AT IICSH. . ... a Woman Tflls the Family and Police Ue lo He Calleil On Attain-full Mtntemeiit of the Itniiilry Among the. Hen Mip Knew - llrntlier Haw fJrlicom The police will be asked this morning to drag the lakes of Central Park for Iho body of Dorothy II. C. Arnold. A tele phone message to the Arnold home nt 7 o'clock last night suggested to the family a platilhl explanation for her ih-appe,i ranee -that sh" had been at tacked in the park while walking home after dark on the evening of December 12 last It was a woman who telephoned at 7 o'clock mid nsked to speak to John H. Keilh, who has had charge of the investi gation She told Mr. Keith that there could be no doubt that Dorothy was In Park A Tilford's store at Fifth avenue and Fifty-ninth street nt 5 o'clock on the ufternoon of December 12, or half an hour after sunset. The family had assumed heretofore that Dorothy bought a box of candy there about r.sn P. M. All they know about it was that a bill had come in Tor the candy. The woman began her talk to Mr Keith by saying she did not know Dorothy, but that there could be no mistake as to the identity of the girl who was buying the, candy in the store near the park because she heard tlm girl tell the salesman to charge the purchase to Francis It, Arnold of IOS Kn-t Seventy-ninth street. She herself was buying groceries at the time and while waiting for her bill noticed that a very good looking and well dressed girl seemed to bo unusually particular about the kind of candy she wanted. She said that the young woman walked along the counter looking at all of Ihe candy receptucles, selecting a little here and a little there to lie put into A box And when the salesman had col lected just what she wanted she asked that it be charged tn Mr Arnold. The significance of this information lies in this, Mr. Keith said last night, that Dorothy had a habit of carefully select ing candies. She never bought a box that had been tnnde up, but Invariably picked out the sweetmeats she liked best and had them put up specially. For this rea son, as weil ns because the woman on the phono was positive about the girl asking that the candy bo charged to Mr. Arnold, the family seemed suro last night that it was the only important piece of infor- I mation that had come to them concern ing the girl's mox'ements. "It. leads ue to heli-'ve," said Mr. Keith, "that she waa on her way homo just after dark and that she stopped in Park A Til ford's to get some candy Wo think now that she went Into th') park after leaving Park A Tilford's and that she was attacked and thrown into a lake. Thre was some very cold weather afterward, the lakea were frozen and the body might easily have escaH'd observation. "We thought until to-night that she hod bought the candy as well as tho novel early in the afternoon, but I remember now that the girl friend who saw her after she came out of Krentano's at about I .10 P M said that she had "a bundle" under her arm She didn't say that Dorothy was carrying two parcels. We were too hasty in assuming that she had been at Park A Tilford's early in the after noon. "I am going to Commissioner Cropsey the first thing in the morning and ask him to have the lakes dragged. I believe that the result of this will be the discovery of the body " John W. Arnold, n brother of the girl who has been missing for forty-eight days, called on (leorge S. (Iriscom. Jr. in Florence, Italy, on January is and asked Mr. C.riscom if he know anything about Dorothy's whereabouts or her reason for leaving home Mr Uriseom is the middle nged Pittsburger who Is lelaled to the (in-eonis of this city and Philadelphia mid who, a- has been told, was 11 tte.pieiit Msitor at the Arnold home last summer. He convinced young Arnold, so Mr. Keith said yesterday, that he was as much mystified 11s the girl's family and fiii'iul-. He talked with so much frank-nes-. Mr Keith says, that the family abandoned any notion that he was ac quainted with Miss Arnold's movements after he went abroad on November 3 last Four men altogether were put under surveillance tluee young New Yorkers ami Mr. (Iriscom as the result of con versations the Arnold family hail with Dorothy's Bryn Mawr friends and tha examination of the letters sh left behind, In the first days of the search tho family thought that a young man, a member of 11 prominent family in this city, could tell something of Dorothy's motives for disappearing. This young man wa shadowed by Pinkertons and questioned eventually by Francis P. Oarvan and Mr. Keith. He cleared himseir without diffi culty, arcording to Mr. Keith. Then, following- other suggestions ob tained from Dorothy's correspondence and from her Rirl friends, the Arnolds sought for information concerning George S. Oriscom, Jr. They knew very little about Mr. Griscom, although he had been a pronounced admirer of Dorothy. Tha first thing they did was to go to Lloyd C. Oriscom, former Ambassador to Italy and Ihe president of the Republican county committee, and ask him if he could be of assistance, Mr. Keith describes the investigation in this way "Unable to put aside any possible elms lit was thought necessary to lind out if Mr. (Iriscom had been writing to Dorotny since December 12 last, when she dis appeared, or if there was any indication that he knew more about her movements than we knew. We did not know where Mr. (Iriscom was, so we asked Lloyd C. (Iriscom if he could tell us about his cousin. "He said he hadn't seen the maa for twenty years, but that Oeorgo 8. Oris- rfoom'a people in Pittsburg would mow where he was. He gave lis tlio name or an mint of George S. Griscom, Jr.. and sho told us that he had gone abroad with his father and mother ou Novembei 3. Bhe Hjd that the tatllllv were ill Florence, 1 " happened that two of Dorothy's