THE SUN, MONDAY, AUGUST 2, 1915. tr- jt r- 12 SIX DIE BEFORE RAIN ENDS DEATH LIST DUE TO HEAT JSI.vfccn Prostrated FotirChll- drcn Hurt In Falls From Fire Escapes. iWOMAX ENDS HEH TjTFE; BOY SHOOTS HIMSELF Humidity, combined with the accumu lated heat of several sizzling days, was chiefly responsible for six deaths yestcr day. IlcnldeR tho deaths rom heat prostration, one woman committed sut elde, a man attempted suicide and four children were hurt In fulls from llro scapes. Tho prostrations were small ms compared with thoso on Saturday, Only sixteen perrons collapsed. The mercury reached Its maximum at noon, when the humidity was 70 per cent. aky darkened and at 3:G3 the first thun- LINER ST. LOUIS BRINGS BACK FOLK OF THE STAGE Elsie, Jnnls Snnpr for the Sol tilers nml Wrote a Poem on the War. The American liner St. lands found fug enshrouding tho Atlantic highway from Nantucket to Sandy Hook ns she neared port yesterday morning and for more than two hours she groped through the vapor veil while her skipper, Capt. Jamison, wondered how ho was going to keep his wireless word and dock boforo noon. He missed It by ahout an hour, Tho trip wns quiet. No sub- tmitlnes were sighted and no wireless c.ills for help were heard whllo tho ship was In tho Herman war zone. I.lfe on an American liner Is sereno because there Is no buckling on of life preservers and no boat drills other than the usual ones Incidental to tho normal voyage. Ship's concerts went on as usual In first and second cabins nnd the largo contingent of returning Canadians aboard said they felt us If they wero really enjoying the freedom of tho seas. Among those who helped to contribute , ,. ,, . i in mo gnyety 01 ino trip were .isio , few hours later the western I ,,, W(ls accomplnC(, bj. her tnuthcr, and Miss Kna 1.0 Galllenne, who was also accompanied by her Bureau. The mercury started down tho I ,m,V,cr. f.0rnlfr!f; ,h" ttlfe ot lhc p0Ct .... , . . .. . . , , , , .Mellaril l.e (lalllonne. tube and got to ,3 before 5 o clock. Ml!lg jnnls sald ghe na(, Mll(,1(. There was nothing spectacular about i for tho wounded soldiers In Kngland. the thunder storm. It was Just an ' 8,10 admitted that her forte was not ordinary visitation and did not Increase ' f "sln JjliL "T h' ,,mt ,h? ",n,or U!1t ... . . ...... . . her singing had been greeted by cries the wind, which had been gcntlo from of "Hack to the trenches!" wan not In aoutheast, by ten miles. ' accordance with the facts. No real war- The coolness persisted until long after !'-!orlwo.ul'I11,') ," unguium. While In j.uhi.iiiu .mas uaois wrote a poem en titled "Where Arc You, Godr which tho people liked so much that they bought I2.G0O worth of It, knowing that the money would go to maintain the war blinded soldiers of the Urltlsh Isles. Miss l.e Galllenne. who Is 17. annenred last year on the London stage na the Cockney girl In the "Laughter of Fools" nnd may make an American debut. Slit and her mother will be tho gucits of Mr. and Mrs. William Favorsham while In this city. Ilobert Uacon, former American Am bassador to France, with Mu liirnn has spent six weeks In France. Ho said Rundown. At midnight about a third ot an Inch of rain had fallen and the Im pression of local propnets was that It would be not so warm to-day. The national soothsayers agreed with the local experts. i Flanges to Death From Window. The first of the six deaths from heat wraa that of Michael Hart, 41, of 3SD West Forty-fifth street, who fell five torlca to & courtyard from a window be opened to get moro air. The sash Btuck when ho first tried to open It. Then It yielded suddenly and he lost his balance. Dr. Katz of l'olycllnlc Hoslptal said death had been Instan taneous from a fractured skull. The sun beat down so hard on tho Unprotected Ninth avenut elevated struc ture between Fifty-fifth and Fifty-sixth streets that IMtrlck Fahey, S3, of 333 East Ninetieth street, who w.ts working there, was overcome and fell to tho atreeL Ho was dead when an ambu lance came. Standing In the Melrose yards of the Naw York Central at 158th srteet and Bherldan avenue. The Uronx, the Pull man car Glcnfleld became so heated that Ollie Houston, 30, a porter, whose heme Is In St. Louis, was pioslrated. He died In a few minutes. James Moss, 42, a salesman who re cently returned from a business trip, collapsed yesterday afternoon Just be fore the cooling rain fell and died at JlailV XaiTOWEscai.PS M. 11.! 1'. OV.-...,,. I ' ttreet. Elghtcen-months-old Hugcnla Jarzcrkl eras stricken at the residence of John Barry, 641 Eagle avenue. The Bronx, I tohere she wa visiting with her parents. ai inverneau, i,. i i rariK jjouiuski, i 84, was found lying dead In an open Held j 1!!C persons of the hundreds of thou near a burning brush pile he had been sands In Greater New York who sought tAriirS&&t jtvt; ,,,e heVy "urf-,,on" nr of his clothing were singed. It is mcr bathing yesterday were drowned. thought he was overcome by the sun , Two lost their lives at Coney Island, one found death In the North lllver. one In the Hast lllver, whllo thero was n riiotos copyright by Underwood & Underwood. Ena Le Gallicnnc. Elsie Janis (above). was waiting on tho pier to take him home, did not leave the ship. He Is Charles Woifo nnd when he tame here several months ago from Hngl.md he was arrested for swindling. Since then he has grown a beard. Dctcctlxet Lte son and Million recognized him as Charles Harcrott, tho namo he bore when he camo here, and was held up. Ho admitted that ho had been arrested, but called attention to the fact that charges against him hail been dropped. He was detained all night aboard tho St. Louis nnd will bo taken this morning to ITllls Island, where ho will bo accused of being an "undesirable alien." Tho purser of tho St. Louis, Howard Ernest Hlnsley, who Is an American citizen, makes his last ocean trip after the St. Louis returns to LIv,rnnnl. 11a went to sea when he was 15. In 18D7. 1 Uiai Ills n k rtti itlipni.l . n , n. n i I t ... - i -i - . i . , , "".w.... ,w u. i Limn . .iic:r no joined me business and that It could not be one of Ilrltlsh navy, serving until 1SS0. when Pleasure under the circumstance of war. he became, an oltlcer of the Inman Line. He wn liberal In his praise of tho Amer-' He has been forty-nine years at sea and lean surgeons nnd nurses in Franco and thlrty-fte year with tho Inman and said that the work of tho American Hos- American llr.es. He has made more pltal would be a monument In France than l.Oon Atlantic round trips, covering to tho United States. In response to a about 6,500,000 miles, or 20ft times request for comment on the war Mr. ' around the earth. Ho will recrlvo a ltacon said: "Wild horses could not pension from the American Lino nnd drag that from me." This might Indl- will spend tho rest of his days with cnlc that Mr. Il.icon, as an cx-dlplom.it, his wife in n homo on the estate of tho is neutral. 1 r.uke ot Huccleuch. In Dumfriesshire, I One first cabin passenger, whose wlfo Scotland. i SIX DROWN IN THRONG I POLICE MATRON BUYS OF SUNDAY BATHERS ' A WOMAN FOR $20 Guards; I'ui Held as Slaver After nt Heaelies Kept Busy Savins: Life. and fell near the (lie, Heat Sufferer i:nd Life, Firlit ill Hack lioom of a Saloon. death from drowning nt Southampton, L. 1., and a death in Newark Hay. The only suicide of the day was that M Mrs. George Langor, "S, who Jumped i from the roof of the apartment house at: Tilt: l)i:.I. 7 Eat 164th street, where she lived. onnRXItKlta. Mils. lto.E. :J M... Bhe dropped five fctorles to the sidewalk., woman, Hi- Korty-fourtli itre.t. llrook Bhe had been despondent and In ll yn; drowned In the .urf at the foot of health and had complained of the heat, we.t Thlrty-frst -treft. Coney Ilnd. Francisco listeria, 19, who sad no home, attempted suicide hooting hlrnsolf In the temple with a Mrs. Mary A Sullivan, a police matron disguised :i negro.", went with De tective Kutner Into the back room of a saloon nt S Liwrence street early yesterday and arrested four men and a woman, all ncgrocx, after Mrs. Sullivan had bought the woman from one of them for t20. ! For Rome time Mrs. Sullivan had ' heard that negro women were sold In the saloon. A fow days ago, cleverly made up. with her face stained, she ap proached James lxiwerle, SI, a ne?ro! waiter of 630 WrM 130th street, who! 'cl,I?.Lb ltackeiuack Hlver. moral purples. She arranged to meet revolver In Central I'ark, opposite East Eeventy-tlxth street, at about 3 o'clock, wncn mere was a targe crowd in the park. He told policemen and others who ran to him on hearing the shot that he had been out of work nnd could not leep because of the heat. Ho nai ' taken to Flower Hospital, where it was aald that his condition was serious, but I that he might live. The fire escapes, upon which many Kt't'FEKKIt. I'UlI.tr. II. boatman. ;jj Mm tn the saloon. Kant JSSth trt! rtro nf .1 in the Kat I On Saturday night Ixiwcrle. the police' Itlver at the foot of Willis avenue. 'say, produced Mis. Clara Lewis of McdUIttlAN. OKOP.HE. II, laborer, 74M361 West K6th street, offering her'fo Amtrdam anue: drowned In the ...i,. . ..,., . ., ' I North Itlve: at the foot of West Ninety-' for Kutner. who was not ills- Uth treet. pulsed, posed as a partner of Mrs. Sul-1 ItrwiLNTllAU POLOMON, clerk. JIJ i ''" I'ald Lourrle C0 In marked i:.it 10(ih tffti drowned In the urf a: bills. Ho then told Lowerle he was the foot of West Thlrty-sf cond ttreot, under arrest. Lowerle shouted for help Coney Island. nnd forty negroes ran In from the front I RVDK.n, CiKOItOK. ::, Southampton. I- t.. drowned In Mb I'resh 1'ond, near Soutn. nmpton. . mo ojioon wiiii nourished razors Kutner and .Mrs. Sullivan drew their re- IVolvers nnd she blew her unllrn udi.n. j.icui. ..ic.umie anl eight waiting de-' tried to cool off. again proved dangerous to children yesterday. Four of them were hurt by falls. Annl.tn MllntiA, i nt CHQ Trlnllf I avenue. The Ilronx, and Irene I'araste, 5, ' ' ' ' V " .C. ' .'.iil 'ZL tectlves did not hear tho whistle i.n,.- of 906 Kagle avenue. The Ilronx, were nnu ln" '"f V, ,, i . i evcr- and M- Sullivan was about to playing together on the rtrst floor Are M? .n?,X $g feclpal "n ,ho ''' V I, So jiuie sruine. uoxn losi meir uainnce nnu ln.le Irom tuten Island at 10 t 'hi.ii.uo .oian in Mar em court fell to tho courtyard. Irene's skull was tf.r, . Tn" body " was reco - e d lowerle nnd Mrs. Lewis In 11,000 fractured. She Is In a .erious condition. ;erc7but has not been Identltled , hM fur -mInui(on to-day. nniunitt a gmiuiucr va cut uuu in uuva Subway at Astor Place Broadway at Ninth, New York This Day, Bright and Early, Opens the One Great August Sale of Furniture Deserving the Name E have been talking of our homes how through fear of the future we have let them run down even though we had money to fix them up. We have been talking of the prosperity of our country, of our people, of each one of us how the prosperity of the .indi vidual depends largely upon the prosperity of the whole; how the hoarding of money halts prosperity, how the spending of it wisely hastens prosperity. We have been telling of the natural wealth and prosperity of our country bumper crops, more money in the savings banks than ever before, larger incomes according to the tax paid last year. i Now we have a few words to say about the Wanamaker Store and the Wanamaker August Sale of Furniture. The Wanamaker Store originated the Au gust Sale of Furniture. There is a certain dis tinction in this in being original in point of time. But there is a greater distinction in being original in character. It is more to YOU, the buyer of furniture, to know that the Wanamaker August Sale is still FIRST today as it was when the store origi nated the sale some twenty years ago first in character, first in reliability, first in volume, first in variety, first in quality, first in values, first in lasting satisfaction. First in New York and in Philadel phia (where our two stores are lo cated), first in the United States and first in the world. There is no other August Sale of Furniture to compare with the Wanamaker Sale. This statement is made with due knowledge and due modesty. It is the truth, as any one may see by personally visiting here and elsewhere. The writer after seeing the Grand Canyon said he would nevermore use the superlative in advertising. But he feels so strongly about this August Furniture Sale that he cannot help call ing it what it is GREATEST OF ALL. Visitors call it "greatest."-Greatest in extent and volume of the furniture, which covers three block-long floors. Greatest in variety, extending from the finest period furniture that is made, costing several thousand dollars for a suite, down to' the plainest, simplest and cheapest bu reau that is worth owning, for as little as $8. Greatest in the artistry and simplicity of de signs, the good taste in decorations; the absence of the tawdry, the garish, the commonplace. Greatest in the high qualities of wood and cabi net work and the low prices marked on the Au gust tags. This perhaps does not sound like a Wana maker announcement. It smacks a little of the other kind, the exaggerated over-drawn state ment. But many people have said that we are too modest about this August Sale of Furniture, that we understate its greatness, and that we do pive a proper conception of its superlative character and its enormous advantages to the public So we risk criticism and state the FACTS as strongly and vehemently as we can, knowing that they will "prove up" upon personal inspection of the furniture. The selling is passing all former records, which- proves up not only the Sale itself but the willingness of the people now to spend their money in fixing up their homes thus giving work to more people, keeping more money in motion, and bringing more prosperity to the whole country. Fifth, Sixth and Seventh Galleries. New Building. 11 sfl "Home Music" During the progress of the August Furniture Sale we shall give IN THE AUDITORIUM Daily Informal Chamber Concerts Every Hour from n to 4 illustrating the place of music in the home and demonstrating the various means of bringing this music into your home as followc: Knabe-Angelus Emersen-Angelus Emerson Automatic Piano Schomacker-Angelus Liiule,ne.n-Angelu Together with Organ, Vocal and Victrola Music Alcoves around the seats in the Auditorium will show settings of music rooms, adaptable to various homes. First Gallery, New Building. Chilli Falls Mi Stories. OnocettI Condi, 6, fell six stories from a fire escape at her home, 331 Cherry treet, but It was said at Hellevue that vouti. immr, wi.e i BOARDWALK FALLS; 20 HURT. Tito filrW nml II out Turns Out. Wilmington. Del.. Aug. 1. Two girls nnd one young man were drowned nt j Ilnsket Ilrnpli I'nrtles Drop Xenr It oi'kuit Hy. he might live, as the doctors arc not. Kenton's Hcach, J. J., on the Delaware About thirty feet of the boardwalk In eure that her skull '.b fractured. Her.Jtlver opposite heie to-day, while on a 1 front of tho Prince :i.,,n-n nti . Sunday outing. They were Kuth Craig, i Hollands near Ho..!,,,,.-,. . ti i 10; Irving McCall. 21. nnd a young ,"c' r """"ny Heneli. col- woman whose Identity haH not been cs-; la!'-",,l yesterday afternoon and carried tuhllshed. with It a scoro of basket parties. ,. McCall. Miss Craig and three others ,vaft wrollsly ,mrt n,lou , were in a rowboat that was capsized by . i,.i,i ' , ,, "mloUK" the swell caused by two motor boats s,unaa t'l'knlckers fell twenty feet to whllo they were a hundred and fifty yards I tho bearh below. It w.-ih shortly after noon that ih right leg Is broken. Margaret (iromnnn, S, tell from the third story Hie escape to tho tir.it storj nt ir home, 337 Kast Ninety-third street. Bhe was badly shaken up, but not seri ously hurt. That so few were prostrated compared So Kn tlirit:i v'k 1-prnnl it fiirlv.onf. wnu due to the rain, which began at almost 1 from shore. John J. Murphy of Wilkes exactly 1 o'clock. Though It sent tho ibnrre, I'.i.. wa the only one who could! humiilltv im fiom srt m i.i. tho ttminern. I Hwlni. He saved Miss Helen Dougherty ' ture dropped from SO to 73 and brought of Wilmington and himself. A third girl relief to many who felt ns If they could managed to reach shore, tand It no longer. Most of the sixteen McCall, although sinking himself, tried were prostrated shortly after noon. hard to save Miss Craig. They went Fully 400,001) people were at Coney mown togetner. UNEARTH TEMPLE OF SETI I. IN EGYPT I'liivcisity of Pennsylvania Excuvntnrs .Make Vnlunlilo Discovery nt Memphis. PEACE LEAGUE PLANS I BRANCHES IN EUROPE Island yesterday. Nearly half of them went In bathing and nil had an enjoy able time until It started to rain nt S :30 J'. M. Then a large portion of tho rerord crowd hurried for shelter nnd tho trolley and train terminals, a ml Surf neuue Was congested us never before. The jam teas so great that people couldn't moui at all for a time, To add to tho misery of the crowd nnd the troubles of tho railway olllelals a new steel car on the 6ea Heach line got stalled Just after It left the Wist Knd terminal and thero was nu eighteen minute tleup thnt ills arranged hchedules. The IJ. n. T. ran trains on a ten minutes headway whllo It ralnel tho hardest and about 5,1100 persons were left behind every time a train went out. Nearly BO.OOO persons spent Saturday right on the beah. There was a three or four mile Mrcteh of sleejiers from Manhattan Iteach to Sei (late. Many irought pillows and blankets from home. Thousands Just walked around until daylight, Ilathers began to gather In front of the municipal bathing house nt 3 A. M., end at s o'clock, when tho baths were opened, between lfi.000 and 20.000 men nnd women wero waiting for a chance 1o get Into the fturf. I'ollce C.iptaln John Linden's men held the long lines In control and no serious disturbances occurred. The usual number of children got srp nrnted from their parents nnd tho hos pltal sutgiuns wero kept busy dressing cut feet. Six men were arretted for wearing obbrevlated bathing suits. Soon afterward the young woman whose Identity has not been established was drowned while bathing. The body of Miss Craig was the only one recovered. Two Youths Ilroun In MolinwU. Philadelphia, Aug 1. The discovery of a great temple at Memphlo, In Ugypt, collapse occurred. .Most of the iioi-u, '"longing to approximately the period of on tho boardwalk wero eating lh.li- ltie"e U- ' aiinoutiooil ly the L'ltlvor- lunch at tho time. Tho criis nf n,nu. I R,t- Museum as a result of the spring who dropped to thu beach drew htin-'nn(1 ,11"""cr explorations of the ticktey dreds of others, who crowded the Lr. ir.i! ' 11 Cox- Jr- Egyptian expedition under loodbred, 30, nnd James Itockafeller, 1G, were drowned In the Mohnwk lllver near hero this afternoon. They wero seized with cramps while swimming. Com panions who tried to save them had a narrow escape from drowning. LONG SWIM BY GIRL TEACHER. the leadership of Dr. Klsher, curator ol the Kgyitlan section of the University Museum. Tne find Is considered of the first Im- jKirtauce and Is hoped to be only the beginning of developments In Memphis, which was one of the great cities of the world In the time of Itamcscs II., more than 3,000 years ago, and which is known to have been of great Importance Tnlce Coiivlcleil Murderer Takes s000 Vars ago, The temple was silted 1 over by jnud from the Nile and covered with sand blown fro.n tho de.sert so that nothing remains of the glories which ii.-.lr uy aim maun it sag. r. Victor of tho Hoekaway Iteach Hospital came In an umbiilam-e and attended twenty persons who were scratched and bruised. Ono mini, tho most seriously hurt, had his miso broken in two places The Hiipports for tho lionniu-nii. i.' Fort Plain, N. Y Aug. 1. Mark . was said, wero Insulllclent. DE MARTINI IN BECKER'S CELL. r.xei'iiliMl .Man's Plnrr. Ossi.nino, Aug, 1 John De Mnrtlnl llojle (ioes It il it on lllirr. Was to-d.iv nwnrilni! Mm r,ll .... . . . rTll.t Mile. Cliurlcs lieckor when he went to the "ro,n",tnt ln ,n6 W of I. mill .lllie III ... tlnrn.lnlnu n,.l ln.lo.1 ..nlll f,. riiTiric cnair. ir. nu iioinmii f..t .i.. ..m-i Doiiiis l'BURT, N. Y Aug. 1 Mis Iiretta llojle, :n, a prlmaiy grado teacher In the Dobln Ken y public school, swam eight miles In the Hudson lllver In two hours and twenty minutes this afternoon. She dived Into the water nt Ialwln (lould'H pier at Ardsley and left the river nt tho public pier in Vnukein, Her father, l.awreuco W. Hoyle, ac companied her In a inwboat. Two hll'h hcIwoI girls, Sophie nnd Catherine Ilo.iehen, swam a part of thu way with the athletic teacher. Miss llojle propoes to swim from the Tairtimii llghthoUM- to Poll Wash ington, u distance of llfteen miles, oil Thursday, She was brought up on a farm and rides a horto and plays tennis -with equal tklll. cell that was occupied by Sam Ilaynes. 1 l,l0.H"U" cra' ino awaniN worn maun nrter a spirited contest among llvo Inmates of th0 Slug Sing prison ilesth houo annex, flaelo Montlmagno, convicted of slay ing Michael (ialmeil, asked for a place III the old death house to get out of his sttilty numi cell, but failed to get It. I'llnclpal Keeper Doruer decided to allot the mort spacious ccIIh to thouo who had spent the longest ptiiodB In the annex. As Do Martini hculid tho list Im was given his pick and chose Decker's cell, lloiundl got tha other one. Dn Martini, like Hecker, was twice convicted of murder in I ho Hi st degree but Hecker was the Hist maii In the prison's history to leavo tho death house und bo returned acun, Tho temple oiiglnnlly must hnvo been ono of thu glories of Kgypt. In spite iJ the wrack of time, of slcgea and othor works of destruction, enough survives to show that It was. a inagnlllceut building, This temple In all Ita gor gcousness was described by Herodotus. A large Inscription Indicates thnt It may possible be the teinplo of Sell I al though at first It was supposed to have been elected by Meneplitah, son of Itiimet-es II, .Some 4,000 specimens were recovered, soiuu uf them of great urchitologlcal Im portance, Tho finds Inrludn scarabs, amulets, gold nnd silver rings and other objecta of thcBO precious metals, many ushabtis, und especially many moulds for making theso ushnbtln, necklaces and aj aorta ot prpauaenta. KIDNAPPING PLOT EXPLODED. ttnrU Puller I,et Motor Party (in fllT KSllllllllllllllS, N'KWMiK, N .1. Aug 1 A supposed , kidnapping was exploded hero to-night bv Ho- polo.'. The heroine who It Work Will Re Extended o All ? r-""i ' '"V"!!;" stolen was Miss Mario White, nlneteen fllP Vlltin'lK WllPllier Ijeiir-old daughter of I. like W. White, a lilt .MIlllMIN III lilt l I Pennsylvania lumber merchant. Miss White, with her father and a friend nani.il 'o, were motoring to New York on a motoi cycle. Outside of l'hiladitphla, ns a storm was about to overtake tile party, an automobile bear lug an Alabama lliense came along. The occupants of the nulonioblle volunteered to take Miss White Into their car to fcflJl-J While pointing out the re. markable values in the men's suits marked down to $15 -Thousands of suits that drooped to $20 and S25 de. serve their share of the lime light. Most of our mixture suits and lots of serges have been revised in price. $15, $20 and $25 are the bargain prices. Youths, too, come in for their share. $12.50 now for suits that were lots higher 32 to 35 chest. Everything for the Torrid Zone. Rogers Peet Company Broadway at 13th St, Broadway at Warren "The Four Corners" Broadway i.t 34th St. Fifth Ave. Bt 41st St. ' QUICKWOOD ' CO Torsummtt'wtai' S r RED-MANl MADRASl 2 re. 25 ctT 'Boy BEST roomier nt War or Not. Herbert S. Houston, chairman of the League to Knfnrco Peace, of which ex President Taft Is a member, announced yesterday that the league will foim' protect her fmm the Morm, her father br.niehr. In nil llin rnnnlrles of lliirone. ' anil ts to follow on In mini. both those at war and those at peace. I The Menu. -ii Ti'i-nwn anil Philadelphia the ,.. 7,,V ,h , i, nutomoblle outd.Man.vd the moloicycle. committee, which will have this u.,1It. fl,irl . , attomlt WJIM MnK ipcclally In cH'n' has for lt , ,,,,, ,lls ,t.,uu,or. work spec! chairman Theodore Marburg, former I'nlted States Ambassador to llelgium. Mr. Marburg already has begun coi re sponding with distinguished citizens of Kngland, Krance, Urrmany, Italy, Hol land and ltufsia, "Tho present war and Its problems," say the league's statement, "ar not within the scopo of this oiganlzntlon's consideration. Its concern Is with tho future only. It looks to tho tlmo after peace has been iloclaied In Kuropo when this country and the other great Powers will enter Into an alliance which shall ttnd to lesen the probability of wars. "It Is not proposed to restrain nations from going to war If they aro deter mined to do so, nor to bind them to com ply with any decision a Judicial tribunal or council of conciliation may make, but merely tli.it before they lesort to arms they be forced to statu their caso before tho world, theriby allowing the oppor tunity of a settlement without tho shed ding of blond," The executlvo committee of the leaguo hns been enlarged by the election of tho following: Myron T. Herrlck, former Ambassador to Franco; David It. Fran- the Trenton police nml telegraphed to tills city. Sergaent Todd of the motor cycle squad Inteiiepteil the Alabama car it, I i. .,oguii Mot a. aiu! tlie mo. torlsth weio taken to police headquar ters. They wero Louis Plzltz of Ala bama, his wlf and children, Miss White and the chauffeur. After explanations the party was per milled to coniiiiuo on its way. Tim dostluatian of tho Plzi'j! family was tho Hotel York, Manhattan, where Miss Whit" will remain until her father ar-rlu's. HAY BURNS; $100,000 LOSS. Spc clnciiliir Jersey 1'lre Tien West Miiire Alnln Line, A lire that destroyed n large ino storage wari'liouso containing about two bundled carloads of bay at .New Huihain, N. J., nttracted the attention of liuudiedH of perMius In Manhattan, Jersey City, Newark nnd other placis by Its brilliancy Inst night. Tho lire, which Is believed to have cis, cx-iiovernor of .Missouri ; John drier been due to spontaneous combustion. lllbbeii, president of Princeton Unlver- I hlai ted about 11 o'clock and burned for city, and Ir. Frederick Lynch, secretary i two hours. For morn than an hour tho of the Church Ptaco I'nUm. Tho follow, main lino of thu West Shoio Itatlroa.i was tied up by hoso across tho tracks, elected : Senator Theodora 15. Hurton, Hr. Shaller Matthews, Miss Marv (5. Woolley, .Miss Jane Addami, MIk Mary Hurnham, Miss Mabel Hoanlman, Mrs, Carrlo Chapman t'att, Mrs, J, Ilordrn Harrlman, Mrs. Philip N'. Mnore, Mr. J. Malcolm Forbes and Mrs, Fanny Fern Andrews, Although firemen from both New I nu ham nnd North Ilergen responded to the alarm they weio unable to pre vent the (lames from demolishing the building, which was owned by John j, .Murray, who has an ofiico nt Urt Lib erty street. The dnmage, It la believed, will amount to ubout $100,000, SON CUTS OFF INCOME OF U. S, CONSUL'S WIFE! i Court Snstiiins Kefusnl to Pay! Si'.OOO Ycnrly to Mrs. T. St. John Giiffnoy. NEW YORK'S PRIVATE SCHOOLS TOUMS Mf-V .NI ninn, itAitNAitti sriiooi. roit mn- FleldvonAVest ai2d St. llo insy n iln all dsy, Including Hat'r. Study hour In Court. Attiletlc Kleld. Klnd'K to . . 1RVINC SCIIOOI. I.. It. It T 3A W. f.th Ml. Tel. A?.ti "rhuyler Hoys from l to 20. All Department Nu home stud) for lni mnler li. TI1IXITT M'ltlMII. I3U-14 Wlt Ull Street A C'htirtti lls Sihool fUH IU)VS Mr.rAHI'KNTI'.U'S SCIIIMII. fur HOTS S10-.112 Went Knd Ave. Tel Col r"io The 13th yer t-stns OrtoN-r 4. I s Outdoor eierciiH 1.11) to 4 all winter nwir.HT sciioni.. is w. 4.in sr Dy Dept.of New York Preparatory Vbral Thorouuh work, limited rlo, mil "' Huromrr !rlon for hept. KianUruin ..i FOR IIIHI.S AMI TIIDNII WIIMI V. IHKnAltNAHII SCIIOOI. I'OII l.lltl.s Klnderxsrien to College. iiradusle in le I lag Colli Kfv II) mnalum and TcuuU. t. at lotue. 423 Wnt Utn Mreet HAMILTON INSTiri'Ti: 1 (lit (illll.s Cotlrse rertttlcates. Domestic nn. course, adiancnl work In KiikII.Ii an l e - eru Lanuase for Hub bciiool uralt.i'ti THIS IIUtKCIOKV AI'I'IIAIIS lull 1 Nl'MIAY. ItAIKS ON lir.OI ll the school, coi.i.i:i,i: ami i mi' HIKKAII. N, V, Sl'.N, N, 1. MM Mi T. St. John Caffney, wife of the American Consul at Munich, who was formerly n New York lawer and is now ono of the most popular Ameri can consular agents In Germany, will hae her Incomo cut 2,000 a year as the result of a decision by the Court of Appeals sustaining the refin-al of her sou, Frederic 1. Humphreys, to continue the payments to his mother. Mr Humphrc)s, who Is a West Po.nt graduate, Is one of the two children of Mrs. llarfney by her first husband, .lay Humphreys, son of Dr. Frederick lltimphros who founded the Humph reys homirop ithlc patent medicine business and left a fortune when ho died in lS!i. Mrs. (iatTney's other child by her tlrst marriage is J.it.i Humphreys, who was married to the llaron Hans Heinrlch ou Wolf ami lives In tier man South Africa. The Harmless has bten giving her mother J2.D00 a. v.-.ir l-and will continue the payments. vt nen .Mrs. llnfTuey married again after the death of her llrst husband her father-in-law did not approve of tho match, but he set aside a trut fund, now amounting to flL'n.oon and consisting chiefly of S7.1 shares ot the Humphreys medical company stock, for the ben. lit of his two grandchildren. He provided that their mother should lecelve 17,000 a year as their guardian until the daughter reached IM and $3, S00 until the son came of age. Then her Income stopped, The provisions of the fund were that when the children reached si the weie to get half the accumulated Income from tho fund and when tin- son, who was tho nuiiget. leached 3ft the en tiro principal was to be divided be tween them The two children sigmd an agiee. ment In 1903, when Frederic, then In Weat l'olnt, had come ot age, under Private Schools THE SUN mnintuins n most efficient Educational Uurcnu. This complete service h absolutely freo of charge to you. Accurate nntl unbiassed Information given to nil in quirers. This service will prove of valuable assistance in se lecting the proper school for placing your loy or girl. In writing give sufficient detnils to that intelligent advice enn be given. SCHOOL-COLLEGE and CAMP BUREAU 150 Nassau St., New York which e.ii'h set as dr ot,. share, or not tiune t m J. to provide an income f"r t and a further agrerni. i t -in 1 '.i n 7 in which the two Iced to continue the i'ii. I their mother dining he.- lif.-i.; , I the son reached 30 it. ll'll ; I the Central Trust Compim trustee midir the agri'ioi i.i I intended to dltromlntii' l.i'. n ' ) mother and demanded ' - f of the P! Itii lp.ll of tV f p I I The trust romp my t'o", I rfeil.ng In tho Supture i' r' for a ruling on the br.ritv , I prouuso to make the !.' i . I his mother The case w.is (, . I Justlie luvld l.evntrtt ,ti he tnadrt this decision .is t t agreement : "Tln conclusion Is m, nmii this agreement w is not f.np . i valid consideration, -and be .: etent In Itself to ere-it,. a tins will not lend its aid t e tnetlt of a tins! lused o "' The caso was pen i l.g for two yeirs bef ir, i n Court of Appt.tis. ul, . ui referee und decided asamrt M'. ncy.