the sun. (new york, ny) 1912-06-11 [p 6]

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6

OF '12 AT OLDNASSAU;

Timings ill I'n'iiccloii for Cl.-- i

hy Kvi'iils Indoors iiml'

on ('iiinpii. '

r.io iy roir i:i; CI, ASS

'inn' Honored I'm'ivIm" WilliA)iroiriiiti WHnklcs Dr.

Ilililii'ii Aiinoiinri1" ('ift..

I'ntNi mow N'M . .lime in When divdawned thin morning llie commi'iicement

fu-.- l ,.. ivi....,,i ,.. r it,.. I.r.,..-- i,. . .. .1 .mm il.l-.c- .mciiocu uiciiiiucin ugorl. iiui. leu as-uf- of niiolhcr d.ivof the nerfeel weather 111 it ha I lilli furintended the exercise., ol the class of I'll'',

At n o'clock began the annual moelingof I ho Phi Heta Kappa, ill which the I'.ll'.'

members of Ihe Princeton chapter d

a key to President lllbhen At Itthe orctiing exorcise of class day weteheld in Alexander Mall, and at till') cameihe planting of the mi'j ivy in front of Nas-

sau Hull. At ::'n the cannon exercise",Ihe main feattite of I'liiicton's ela day,were held ubout the historic common andin the, evening the seniors sang on thesteps of Nassau Hall. Later Ihe C.I"oClub gave its tlnal concert of the year,und following this was the annual sopho-mor- e

reception in the gymnasium.Though Saturday was the big day for

the alumni reunions and y the ma-

jority of the, younger alumni are back attheir jobs, these were still plenty of "oldgratis"-f- or every alumnus of Princeton,be lie young, middle aged or old, is alwaysreferred to as an "old grad" on the scene,und the always brilliant, but not oftendurable costumes, varying Irom theorange and black co-n- of loot) and thebright crimson durbar rig-- , of IIW7 tothe conventional white sailor suits of thefirst year graduated of lull, lent plenty ofcolor to the oanipu. And then therewore tho) representatives of the fairsex, the mothers, relatives and sweet-hearts of the graduating class, who at thistime of the year far outnumber the coon-to-b- e

alumni. The Princeton campusltselt never looked better than it does now .

It was It o'clock when the class of till-.- '

in Alexander Hall and Masterof Ceremonies John Carroll started thingsoff. The first event was the class orationgiven by C M. Wylie of (irand Hapuls,who took as his theme the debt which themembers of the graduating class oweto their alma mater and lo tin world.Sayer- - Coo of Newark was the clas- - poetand read th" class poem, after winchthe clas.--. marched to Old North lor theplaining of the chs ivy t liaiinceyJielknap of New Voi k citv was the ivyorator.

'Ihe cannon exercises winch are nlwavsthe principal exeiit of clas. ,iv, wereheld m the afternoon A circular standdecorated with the Priiiceloii colo's hadbeen built aiiout the cannon, which borethe numerals "ipr. " Lung bel'or.. thtime set every seat had been taken .t;i:.in 111" siin,r lai-- -. led by !'i..idetitSanford tituwnell Vln,.,. the hero of allPrinceton more glorious athletic uc-ton-

of the last year, and John HaydockCarroll, m.ihter of cereiaoiiie-- . Illisl into

I

their beat 1' I al-e- v nf Kl.,ltieth,the class lold in bo'h pru.-ean- d

the cas. milniduilly and '

collectively dining lh" li-- i fo'.ir year-- ..SpKikmgot the reu,n itnui of Ur Wilson,which vn- - ae"eptsl in tli" f.ill of luluwhen the pir-e- nt gradui' iir c!is whsjunior, he i

"V.; were -- orrv to so" U.m i in stuteofthe fact that h" was th" fir-- ! college pre-i-- 1

lent with .1... iidea that a ol... tw.si..i,tlor sti(l. hilt jlsl In make sure tha' liewouldn't I f mil f ii .I'll) i lecnil i

(iovenicr of th.s grea' ..nd glorious com- -

lno.inealth f N'ew.Iii.. v i!(l s'..Jf"V - dome ihe stum

(i'iv V. .i.-.- with til- - im ill's rs (,f In.imni'diat" liiicly. wis fsent at th"exerci-- . s. and tilt l( i fence to lllill dl'eforth ,ii.loiu" d apil,iii-- e

William W . Wlutnev ! l!e. N V th"p:e..i illation orator and me one who isMipjx's.,1) ( rcriiish Ihe most ainu-eme- nt

lo tie UAVll, ntll ihs.iiiooint themHe 'all:1 foi a lull le u" anil ii was a

n:"i'ilier or th" cla-- ', ',o got aav '

witin'i.t .! hast oti" kM 'k lli o'leninj;Willis we

"Students w ho would !,iw their diplomas l

to be oui. id" tin-ru- m LiirJ- - who hae beenxvaitttu I'1'' year- - i IV,, r r iduaieloud mother- - and lath"-- - ho ihmk iherh iisaiemodel .ouili I nev for.vou.dl "

He liei up lo In- - ilueai and iii.u.va -- mi-

dent -- lent a poo- - hall hour after lh"ei"rci-"- s in explanations

H S. Walrott of Kvi.iis.oti Id . w - theclas- - prophet and li told r '

4 of ihe i la-- - .a mi? someliftmen yeais hence l ollowmg tl.is wasthe president'- - adrlri by Sam While,wlioprovedtonll thai be cati tpak"ii speed,as well as h ran pla ll and tool- - '

ball, and lh" reading ol the class roll bvJ. N Kwiug, th" cia s"ci"tat '

The oommeiieetiieu' b- - id pi .ved th"class xi". lut th" priiu.v lit I tail-- d toend copies .a time for i'ie I. -- s , ...u,i

th words. io ih" ol t.n committeeand the delight of t -- . Iia 'i..l whom donot know wlic the !.. co" is tor and ell '

ol whom forget i' nltes the -- mgrng 'l h,.clrtSH pipes were dst! ibtlted. I he classsmoked their last smoke logi ther, and ledby the president hurled their pipes m (hecarmnii, vhere they broke m a myriad ofpK-ce-

. 'Ihe Ha., mi, audience minedin the singing of "Old Nassau" and with a '

looolllOlixe cheer tol Kill1 allll I'lUltller lorPrinceton the een Here In ought toa close.

the scone slulied lo llie I rout( ampiis lor two bonis ol more Jupaiicelanterns sirimg Irom th" tree, with ihe,cla-- s numeral.- - in inl el.-- , trie lights outthe portal ol uld North, and ihe holidavcrowd which thronged the campuslo the seniors Minima. "Th" 'I riatigle

" I he Orange and III U." "HumMi, Oh" and "Where. OI Where." wet."sung, III" (dee Club h;.d lis nun m .le- -under Hull and after he uui-i- c i ami. ihe,dance I it three days th" iiiemb.-i- s ofI 111" SOpllolllolc class' h,.V" been i.vo- -rating tin1 gvinausium lo- - ihe iccition.It will be e.u lv iniirnmg l lorntlm la- -t d.uid! is il i, i.( iiml the weanedliucsi. imd hludciiis , aid tie mor e wearied j

chaperons leave lor a lew hours of sl. eiiIn lore the big eein of Ihe year, the grad-- 'nation ol tlm i !.i-- s ol iiii'j

At the nimu.il cue n en, ..ii.,i meetingol lh" llllstie- - ,,f Ihe ,uilix.Tll x thisiKU'ie.g Pics.dcni Ihblcii made Ihe an- -'

tioutiicii'.enl tlu.t lh" i lass o ss; hadagieed to give jr. nun lo ihe uuierMtylor Ihn pin pose ii,' . iciting a boi.lhou-- e

on the island io l.al;. CatiieL'ie 'lliehouse w ill I." two high, of coneioionud hollow (in proof building hlor I., and.in i'uhio" in ciuiiiiio'iai inn- - kii i nuiy-- 1 '

t wo eight oared hells and o, her smaller..in. .ii, .i inr eniiowmeilland $11 .in,". 7S lot ciinenl n. "uses wete

also lilili'iiiui. ed 111 the II ling

T tVdll sirri't oil It Ion nf 'iiik I'hmmi sisKil.umi nil da iiii.un li Bn, u,, ,itll.j, ,1M,

lntl uii'iii. !,, 'i, ,,f ii. ,.i losing t. ., ,1, ,,, ,, rsr ,,, I,,,, ,,,, ,kP(,f1"' "'', iivct.ll

' Ir, (ht o i;i i, ,,.,, ., ,i,f no I .xim,'N.-d- at.

NEGRO KNIGHTS WIN.

t lilrf .In-le- e Decide They xIiij. farllie I'.lliliin Nil ill r mill dnlilclila.

X AMIINOIOV, dllllo II), Chief Justicehiti- - icvcised ln-i- l iy lilt- - judgment or

llio Supreme ('mill of (ieorgl.i, which.illlrmcd llio judgment of llii lower courtenjoining llio neurit Knights of I'ythi.isill' (leorgiu from ii!iik I In- - name or theI'ylln.iii emblems iiml insignia or nnvimitations of (In) parent order of licit

,11:1ml- - which has a while membershipexclusively

This decision in far uudiing in Ihcn .!'! , I hern ha- - been u gem ral tnvr.niiMit iiirougiiotit (lie isoiithern Hc.it hsto restrain ili negroes fmui using theiiiiiiii'K or emblems of tlm white orders.

! Tin' (leorgia court Imsed im decisionon tin' iiiIim or law which protect llioliiililic neultist unfair lralo inotliiHls.Ilihlne I o - and Justice l.urliili

Chief Justice White held thatthete ivjid 1111 evidetuv to show that thecolorcil lodges hntl injiiicd tlieir wldtn" "ik"i i my way. aim inusiiiiien

"H 'l'.i",H'n had maintained their or- -Kalli. II loll Willlolll Cotlipl litlt f I otll till

I whiles for more lthan twenty years, their I

inomlership having utlamed mm.tiun.i '". 'edges wen? utility of ladies

not be heard to complain in!;, ,!;:, ,)f pilly under wieh circuin- -Malices.

KEEP THE COURTS BUSY

Wliilnuin Questions CliicUTricker, but I.earns

Lit 1 If, He Snys.

Distiict Allorney Whitman had ChickTricker, one of the gangster out onbail on it charge of carrying concealedweapons, in hi. oftice for an interviewyesterday The District Attorneyquesti'Hied Tricker at length, but saidlater that he did not get any more infor-mation from him than the oflico nlreadyhad. Another man whom Mr. Whitman(piestioned yesterday wus Hocco 1'iguoloof "Jiio William street, who runs a naturali-zation school at 10 Kenmure street,

Mr. Whitman Kiid that he would gobefore Judge Hosal.ky in C.eneral Sessions

y and ask that the bail of Jack Zeligbe increased to $10,(HI, Zelig is nt presentin Hellevue Hospi tal recovering from agunshot wound received in front of theCriminal Courts building a week agoyesterday It is expected he will bedischarged from the hospital in a day ortwo 'Ihe present bail under which lie isheld is STinNl. Zelig had a talk withDistrict Attorney Whitman in the latteroftice la- -t Friday The charge againstZelii; is carrying concealed weapons

Mr Whitman went before Judgel!osalky in the Court of (Ieneral Sessionsyesterday and asKed that the case ofCharle. Torti, indicted on Friday for theshooting of Zelig, sent to Part V forimmediate trial The motion was op-- I

oed by Francis ,1 Unvn, counsel torTorn, who contended thai he had not hadsufficient tune to prepare his case Judge

ly held that (ireco had had nt

tune, and added that when gang-sters carried their lights to the doors oflh" coutt they ought t b' deilt withprompt t He uriu'ted the motion andTorn will be tmsl as foon as th" trial ofFrank W. Mue hlteldt, the former memberof th" carbarn gang, lor the murder ofPatrick IturiH, a saloon keeer, is con

cluded I' is e.xeeled that the Muehl-fel-

trial will be tinishedMr Whitman Judge ltos.isky

to in.Tc.i-- i th" luil on whicli fourteen menjariested I' r citrying pistols had been

held lor trial in lh Magistrate's court. I

'ih" Uuis m olved ranged from VVm loM.ooii .ludge llosiilsKy granted .Mr

liittnaii's iciiue.-- t and placed llie bailm e ich case at 3.i)ii

I lire" men. all ol whom we'e described,,v ,,.,,. t,1,ItlM., .,. r,..p,mMl.le l..i.i.e,smen lile.ldeil 111 the! ntirt ol (ieneral

;Se.s,.n. yesterday to indictments cliarg- - i

carrying ieoivers in mlalioii o theSullivan law. 'Iwo ol ll.eto. Willi, m

'O.-- . i a i s uai . i i vi i in i is oi i i'1'iand liiacoi'io i'7 yen is old. of tot

el llurlv eighth stieet, were arraignedb.'b.re Jul1;" y, who sentenced!lo..eer io one year in the penitentiaryand sent .isseio to the IJmira Itelorni-ator-

Ihe third prisoner, Paso.iiale Adatno,I'.'H yeirs old, of 'il t'liinoii stieet, waslairaigned bef,,te Judge foster and was'lined All were llrst oirenders.

I'liilip riicdmau, Miowu io the ioli(ea., a member o ihe "Doggie gang." whichhas a recoid ot shooting up the llrowtis-i- e

ei nun oi Hrooklyn at variolic times,was held m Vi.nm l ad yesterday by JudgeI!' ...il-k- y on an iikIk lini nt diargiug himwith currying a levoiver. iTiedmuuis :. years old and lives ai 771 Lalayelteavenue, llrooklyti.

Th" Dogges hae a had reputation mlir i.Mi-vil- le. r cording to mitiois ihalleaclnd tl.e inlin e th" men limits of thatsection got together some time ago. rai-- ui

Jnii and ga.e it lo the gang as Hie priceol N'liig leti alone.

Friedman was picked up at Clintonand Houston streits by Detecnxes Lieberatid Plalasier of lh" Dol.incev stieet sta-tion a few days after a shooting at DollarJohn s saloon at '.".. Houston street(hi May l if 'it. lie was sent to r.lmiiaHefoimatoiy Irom Urooklyh on oonvic-ii"t- i

lor gland larceny and on JulyIldl he was sent back to Klitiiru for bteak-in- g

his parole.Judge Dike in th" County Court, Hrook-

lyn. yesterday sentenced (jamnuno Vitolo a year in tlm penitentiary for carryinga levoiver. He told th defendant "thuthe would have let him off with a

ot sentence if he had not lied bysaying that h" had bought tlm gun frotha Mvrilo avenue pawnbroker two weeks '

Isago

WHAT GERMANS DO TO-DA-

din I in I (.les l.iilielieini on Molikrsports rut' Xlen liure.

programme ntloat nnd aslionof the Ct'im.m Aduilitil, Ins olTleeis i u

and men will hcglu al 1 o'clock this niiiliciiioon, when Admliul Paschwlti'. ,

will cntcN.'iIn at u luncheon aboard theMoltl.e. I!e;iiinng at ; oYloi I; theAdmiral and his oil'ltvis xvill meetabo.'inl the llagshlp a number of hisfi lends ill a reception, Imitations towhich wete sent nut shortly after theCerinaii siiiailron dioppeil niiclior.

Also at II o'i lock ubout .'.n(l (iermntiami ,'iijn Anieilcaii sallms will nunciishoic nnd be tn l,t ii to Coney Islandlor a day al Steeplechase Pail; andl.uu'i and lh" getiei il Joys of Surfmcnuo. About I'iiii German sailors willenjoy IheiuschiH more decorously atmi cult tialiiiiieiit to be givenat the Naval llrandi ot' the V M. tA In Hiiioklyu. A ofthe .Mayor's (ommlllie will see that the

at coney Island have u suffl-dam- p,.'ntl" dinner ut the Kaiser Garten at li o'clock, the tlmilpness laterto be lesiiincil ut Fellinan's tables, Atsundown a soccer football team of Ger-man sailors will play llie German Fool-ba- ll

allClub's clev i n at Macomb's Dam

Park.Al 7 SO o'clock. P. M.. Admiral

I'.i' hv it - und his olTlieis will dine atth Nc.v Vaild ('tub In Fomloilltli stieet a s the gnosis of Cornelius

underbill After the dinner Mr Vim-derh-

will give a reception In honor iiut the VIM torn.

TUESDAY,

P. R. R. EMPLOYEES WILL

TAKE VOTE ON STRIKE

N('!i'oli;i lions Hrokcn Off WlicnI.OIly I'l'lilM'S (O Mci'l

Men's Denuinds.-

I V r I. VN IONS ACT STI .ilt.x l.l.l

(ieneral I'oniinittee Divides Intollodies to Cet Around

Injunction.

I'llll.AliKl.l'IIIA, dime HI. All negotia-tions between the Pennsylvania Hailroadand lis employees on the lines east ofINttslmrir were broken off shortly after .1

. "

" 'll,('k UllM "fb'rnoon, when the generalcommittee of the Hrotherhood of liailroadTrainmen decided to submit the strike(iiestion to its mcmliers.

The general coinmltteo soparntod intoIhroo bodies In Issuing llio order for Ihoreferendum vote, one representing thetrainmen, another the conductors and thethird the firemen. I his was necessaryowing to the injunction suit brought onFriday by John S. Hemphill, tinenginemnn,lo prevent the three bodies from actingas one in a federated board.

Action by the employees was taken aftera two hour secret conference, followingthe receipt of the letter from (IeneralManagers. C, Long, in which he refusedthe demands of the men and reiterated hisformer answer.

The chief contention of the employeesis that they should have n preferencowhen certain parts of the Pennsylvaniasystem are cleet rilled and that the crownof the steam trains taken off on accountof tho electrification should lie taken euroof immediately without loss of prestignor Hilary. There are many other minordifferences, but the electrillcatlon clauseif the big bono of contention. Tho

assert they foreseo a generalelectrification of the system in the nearfuture, and they wUh to protect them-selves against tho inroads of experiencedelectricians.

The referendum vote will lake eight orten days to take and count, and two-third- s

will lie necessary lo tall a strike. nt

Sines of tin Brotherhood de-clares the vote for a strike will Ik? unani-mous Should the ote lie unanimousIt Mill is doubtful if then) would In? anystrike, (ieneral Manager Long seemsquite certain thnt the employees will notwulk out, but he refus-- x to sav why he isso confident The representatives of thoemployees --eem to fear that if a strike isdeclared the Government will step in tooiler mediation.

Ihn sttike will be tiartlciniilcd in bvabout J.i.Oio employees on the lines eastof Pittsburg. ( lose observers declare thevote will be about evenlv divided, withthe far eastern end of tile division atNew Vork voting almost uuanimouslvfor a walkout, while the western endwhich is not alfected to anv greut extentat present by electrillcatlon. will voleolidly against r walkout

(Ieneral Maimer Lonir in renlv to.ilavto theultimaluinof tho men wrote in part.-

We have carefully ron-M-r- the argument, presented by you r"lutie lo therequest of 'he loiidnetors. I r.ilntiicn anilfiremen to man a icrlaisi i.crieiita-- e ofHi" eleitric trains between Park nl.neN'ewatl.. and Church street. New orfc.or all of llie trams bet ween Turk nl.iie.Newark, and Summit avenue. Jersev l itv.and would adse tint In the framiin; ofthe reiiiit.il Inns nine mi n it eiiniliii tors andtrainmen in road ami jnrd son Ire norsreeiueni was entered Into, euher iiiten-tiunall- v

or unintentionally, whhli wouldruhihif the railroad compmv from

inio coiilrneiur.il arr.niKoments fortie1 purpose "f Improvim; Ihe service to th"public, particularly so v lieu sin h an airrre-ir'e-

a olds di'st rui im tompeliiioii, v,hlehwould I'm) end a duulii re-- uli iinatelyii. llie ilxmivntitace nf llie ineri ,ni, m this(an- - did iioi mipii.i the ml ere-- t . of die

mine than wie.M line occurredm auv event had Ihe eleitric hue been builtalongside or iietr our road

review of the iiilotmiiinn broughtnut lit the eler.ll lli- -i ,. .him. ,ittlm establishment ot ilm n.f.nt. en thuNew ork ilii-io- u bus been inane efleciieand im man wa. di.mi,.i.i Itoni ili. com-i.i- ii

's en nloj b rei-o- n el the m.iucur.i-luu- iof il

llowcwr we can n::airi s.n thnt n neknown and reeoifiiled, articuhirly bvpie-el- it einpln.M'es, that our i oinpiiuy hasever taken unusual care lo saleguard itsemphiyee., i.iul ii K t,,lr to as.imiu tmithe e.-n-t of II, e eleetnlleal am the etn.he ee. then a(feteii. if anv wouhi, be givenmo, I (.iietul iit.iier,tt inn

CiiiCAon. June pi Committee, repre-senting a.inio leam-te- rh and switchmenemployed on railroads entering Chicagoserved an iiliim'um on the ireneral .

managers of tin. railroads involved thm '

iinless the strik,. of th"lreii:lit handlersis settled within tweuty-tou- r hours thetrouble will be spread to othe- - branchesof the service 'I Ik. teamsters and sw itch-me- n

held mass meetings last night andadopted resolutions stronglv indorsingthe strike of the Ireigin handlers andpledging suppoil

NO DEFENCE TO SAY "TRUST."

. and without

.

lor

.Il.ltlf.flfl. us in r.esiraini .

ami I'l'deral laws customerneed not iy for meat Mild bytrust lonceru.

Dressed

Sheriff

combine Unit controls To perof llie business supplying fresh

litis has entered Intowlili .iiii.ru t.. ,.,...i,.i i r

ness nnd ihe orle.. ....aiiltlioiign each eon; cru i claims Its nep- - '

unite Identity the Trust has apportionedterritory to each member.

Counsel lor defemjiiutu asked Jus.tk'e (j'legnlch for onlerpersons ouncctfd with the trust lo

their contentious, nnd thethe plalntllf opposed the

ground Ihal "the defendants cannothope succeed the CulledStatcH railed."

The court decided that the defenceN'nt sufficiently meritorious to warrantmaking order.

THREE BOYS DROWNED.

Into Others At-- Iem il Keaeue,

Tiuvkrsh t'irr, Mich .

Cole, Louis Colo and Scott,boy , w n yesterday indman Irftke, according to ndvlcoi

heroThey xvero playing log boom when

young Sent t ell i . ho dep wa er(Taifiicii Cols jumped oi,ibut mmediuto.y went tlm bottomI.oui i Colo, io navo his her.

No prang Into tho water went downwith th

THE SUN, JUNE 11,' 1912.

ABOUING BRANDT CASE."

t llenlliin of .lurlaillellon In llnlictiCoriniK tetlmi Conns I

A Ml KUV JlllliJ III -- 'I'll" (llestloll ofwhellie." the court had jurisdiction logrant the application of Foulke ' llrandt,Ihe former valet o" Mortimer I.. SchllT.i or a wilt of habeas corpus lo effec hitrelease from the hlrly year sentencewhich he received when he conTeweri thatlie Iiml fiiitntvCulli .i.itn.ful fit., bolt... ,.r

' his former employer, was presented y

!'" ""' ('"llrt Appeals,The case cume tip an appeal taken

try Uiajidt frum decision of the Ap-pellate Division icveisiug onler ofJustin? (Ivrartl granting llrandt a wr.t ofhabeas corpus. Mirabeu'i L, Towns,coiuise' for llrandt, presented tint urgu-me-

for I lie nppellaul andJoseph Kellogg

for the Stale.Mr Towim held that llrandt's twivlc-tlo- u

und the Imposition of a sentence ofthirty year were illegal. He declaredthat there was nothing in the case whichsustained the critiw of burglary whichllrandt had confessed mid that hu nevershould have been sentenced for that crime.Ho further argued that Justice Gerard'sdecision granting the writ, to llrandt woninstilled und that thert? was nothingwhich iiulhorbed appeal front it.He rev.ewed many of the icatit-e- . of theelse which Ireen presented whenthe matter was review before the lowercourts.

Attorney-Gener- Kellogg Midthat the only question involved the casewiih whether the writ applied. He heldthat tlid not, as tho record rshowed thatllrandt had tiecn convicted andin a of competent jurisdiction.There could be therefore levlew otthat reco d,ho contended. through awrit.He tviid that tho questions raised as to

had hapiienrd at tho homu of Mr.Schlff had no case aspresented in the appeal.

Attorney Howard S. Ganp ad(ed thecourt for M?rmiudoii to llio an affidavitin answer to certain statements containedIn affidavit which Is apart of the record.Mr, Garni said that ho Bimply wanted thoaffidavit made part of the record In justi-fication to himself an attorney and notfor tho purpose of having any bearingupon tho merits the case before thocourt. The request will bo consideredby tho court

Mysterious Mnnino Who YVinpil

Out Three Other FamiliesSiisneetcd.

VlM.tsrA, la., June 10. !oeph Moore,his family of five and two girl visitorswere in their beds here some time

night, supposedly by the insane mur-derer who some months ago wliod out

entire family in Colorado Springs,another family in Kansas and a one

eastern IowaAll day nearly every man in

count)' has searched for the mur-derer, but not a single clue ban beenfound. Pending the orrival of blood-hounds the Sheriff pmx-entin- any onefrom entering the house, and tho bodiesare lying in the same osition whichthey were found thi morning.

Moore was the rr.oct prominent citienof Vdli-c- a. whore he for years operatedthe largest implement house in south-western Iowa. The dead are

JOSKI'll MOOIti:Mi MOOIti:, hlswlfrIII'IIMA.V MOOIti:. IICAT!ll-:ltl.ST- . MOOHIS. 9.ri.ovi) Mooiti:. 7.

MOO It, ft

i.rs'A sTit.t.is'OKitIN A .STIl.l.IMlim, n

The bodies were discovered in the earlymorning, when noighlrors noticed thatMoore home was still locked up. All in-

vestigation was made and th" doors un-locked with skeleton key.

In tho guest room on the lower floorwere found the bodies of the Stillingergirls, who were visiting the Moores. Theheads were crushed and mutilated. Uothwere in sume lied and evidently hudU'cn killed while they slept

Hushing upstairs and into the familybedroom tho neighliors found the bodies,of Mr. and Mrs. Moore, their heads crushedand almost tox-ere- from their bodies.Uoth evidently had U-e- struck time aftertime. Liko the Stillinger girls, the adultshad lieen murdered ng I hey slept.

In an adjoining room were found theliodies of Calherino and little Paul. Theirheads had lieen crushed nnd cut.

In still another room liy Hcrtmn andFloyd in tho same lied, heads show-ing deep cuts. In the middle of the floor",'ls " ncavy axe sunneti won mood. Itxvas onlv weunon used bv tho mur- -

idererand had lreen taken from wood- -shed in tho rear of tho Moore hom

All tho Irodlcs lay in a natural position.and no wounds had lieen inflicted otherthan on the heads. From appearancestho struck the firstwith the sharp odgo of tho axe, afterwardusing tho blunt end. Ho liegau his work

tho lower floor and then went upstairs,rn-p- imn li fniinr!

ning and did not reach home until almostt A'i..i,".losenh Moore whr nrohiiblv il.o yni

popular man in Villisca and was not knowniio nave an enemy. According to his

another In Kansas and a third in an easl- -ern lowa town, ineso murders were,'rtl.v similar to the Mnorn Iragedy.In each case bxh wiih uimd nml m'nri.soul in each house put to death thevsiepi an ii iho ? iiiibcu caso no clueswere lelt behind und no roliberv wnsattempted.

There are llngerprlnts on the axe bundleand after bloodhounds taken Ihowont from them they will be preserved asovldenno. Ihe Hounds will arrive al

.In. lice (.li uerh l, ef.c Order In j, eft tho holme without disturbing(ao icnlna XI en I Complin) , anything of value seatchltigSupreme Court Justice Glegeiich fr valuables. Two watcli.es and a pocket-ii.in- ii

! book which lay on a dresser 111 plain sightxcstctilax ithat It no defence were undisturbed.to n suit meat delivered by n pack- - The time of the murders ws after mid-In- g

(Inn to allege that the meat con- - night. The family had attended thotern Is a trust and that because It children's day exercises on Sunday eve- -

... inisiiiessof Stnte a

theThe New Vork llntcheiH brother, thero Is known reason for the

Meat Company Is suing .Moses & Kerdl- - 'murders.mind Sirniis and otherM for $l."i,171 us; Jackson believes Uie murdererthe balance due on a meat bill, The to bo tho noiio mauiao who lust yeardefendants my that the plaintiff Is in killed a family in Colorado Springs,

cent,of

and u conspiracyil...

enhance n,',.i

cenaiiithe

nn lo e.xumlne(

provefor on

to wherehas

the

One Ciilla I.iiLc nml

June

drownedHon --

ceivedon ao

u i,, ic him,lo

hoping biound

other

i.

onthe

an

DeputyA

to

nn

hadin

Deputyin

it

couttno

whatbearing upon the

an

as

of

slainlast

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inMon-

tgomery

is

in

innolni'

I'XI'l.i:

the

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thethe

murderor had blow

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anas

the have

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u. ... ..f.- - ..........i-uu- r nyrj ill

All by I

aFirst citizen's papers were taken out

ycterdH;' la tho United States DistrictCourt by Ccpito Gabriel St. Georges do

Frenchman, 55 years old,who said ho was an agriculturist by pro-fession and was living at pretent at 138Knst Thirtieth street.

count was born in Paris and cameto New Vork from in loos

Chlnear lllauulacil na .Vricrora.Miiovi- - i I,,,,.. i. ...........

l.ll-trl-H... ...s ... ...rV,,,,,, . -i.. .

.hum llil I. ..i ii... .m.i-i- -rn i mil mi ciniti. vt nn mav triAm i n.x.

lellltlif how widely 11. "leMfully workfid,'

- s, .rvi div

MEXICO'S LITTLE GAME

OF HIDE AND SEEK

I'edernls Sny Heliels AreTniietl Lut let Hearty "To

March on Cnpital."

HIT.ItTA'S AIIMV ST A HVINT.?

Orozeo Claims Kneniy'sSoldiers Are Living

on Horse .Meat.

11. Paso, Tex., June to- ,- "We have therebels bottled up at Chihuahua and beloA'Torreon, so that they cannot ptssiblyescape " 'trfro statement.

"We have the Federal army of Gen.lluertu bottled up between Chihuahua andTorreon Marvlng, subsisting on horsemeat mid discussing surrender."- - HtbtlHfnfroirnf.

Tlieso tire the claims of Ihe respectiveRides now battling for supremacy Innorthern Mexico.

The rebels claim that Gen. AntonioItojen and 3,tK)0 men from Chihuahua liavosucceeded in paming Hucrtn'i army atJimenez and that they are rapidly movingsouth to form junction with Campa andArgumedo; that with these forces behindlluertu and the Orozeo forces ahead ntllachlmba, Htterta can get no Ripplics,and his army is starving. They claimthat they have Torreon surrounded.

The Federals assort thai Gen. Hlamiuetha virtually surrounded the Campa-Argume-

command south of Torreon;that ltojas has not passed the liuertacommand and thut an soon as Huerta i?

ready to strike from the south of Chihua-hua other l'ederul commands in Chihua-hua will draw in und so surround the rebelsthat they cannot escape,

Tho Federals point out thnt Gen.HuertaV main Federal army is soutnof tho rebels, below pass, thoFederal cax-alr- under Gen. Ilabago inapproaching from the west of Chihuahua,Gen. Kanjlnes and Gen. San cue,! and theircommands are east of Juarez, in position

i that will enable them lo throw their(columns in and cut the Mexican CentralI Hailroad between the rebel bonier b'ise'and the rebel capital at Chihuahua, and

FedoraN marching from Sonora andwestern Chihuahua are muchof Iho western part of the rebel State,while Federal band is even now incharge of tho town of Madera, midwaybetween Chihuahua und Juarez on InoMexico Northwestern Hailroad in posi-

tion lo stop trainn on tint line, when thesignal is given that tho Central has beencut off

The relels retort that the Federals aredeirting the Huerta army for lack offood, that the men of the Federal com-mand are subsisting on horse flesh amitoo weak in ninny cases to fight, and thatthe rebels can break through the Federalforce if it does not surrender, which theylook for, march unhindered to Torreon.now defended by comparatively smallFederal fone or men under Gen. Iilanciietnnd, joined by ltojas, Campa, Argumedonnd other rel';! chiefs, take the town andthen continue th"ir original plan ofmarching to Mexico city.

They could gixe up northern Mexico,they argue, if they can cut through toToneon, for they could subsist utuiii thocountry from Torreon south and wouldneed no supply base. 1eavhig me mainFederal army m tho north and destroyingthe railroad behind them the rclicls wouldthen march almost unoposed Into Mexicocity, aided and assisted by Gen Zapataand his forces from south of the Mexicancapital, they say.

Kebols and Federals fought to-d- atPeaison. Is'twcen Juarez, and Madera, onthe Mexican Northwestern line, the homeof the big sawmills of Or F S. Pearsonand his New Vork, Ixindon nnd Monttealassociates, ho outcome is not known,nn the railroad operator merelv rerteilthe battle in progress and then said,ndlos, and has not itnsweted his callsince that time

A skirmish is reported to have occurredSunday at Aguaje, near Pearson. Fourwere killed and eight wounded No otherdetails were received

To-nig- the Mexican Northwesterntrain from Chihuahua luoui-li-t toJuarez seven wounded nnd two deadrebels from the lighting at Pearson, andn number of other dead were burled atPearson. Passengers reported that therebels had hanged some of the Federalprisoners near the railroad. A largeforce of Federals was reported by thepassengers us occupying all the countrybetween Pearson and .Madera.

Gon7al" C. Lurile. recently financialagent of the reliellion, arrested yesterdayny lex-a- s Hangers, is situ in jail in MPaso, while the Mexican officials ototrying lo get material xvith which to startextiadilion proceedings Ho is beingtreated in jail for his wounds, receivedfrom twowouldlie assassins In Chihuahualecently,

W. W. ATTERBURY PAROLED.- -

Coroner AxthIIi Outcome of An InVictim's Injuries.

Pilll-MH- . Pin, June pi. W. W Alter-bur-

of llie PennsylvaniaHailroad. whose automobile killed Mrs,Mary Madden and seriously injuredHugh Tuguo early hus beenparoled in th" custody of his counselby Coroner Carr of Delaware countypending the results of tin Injmies to Ihnman.

Mr. Atlerhury, who wns nt the wheel,says ho wns proceeding along th Lan-

caster pike at an ordinary pace when heman and woman lumped from the sidepath in front of tho machine, dlo stoppedtho car withtti two and a hilf lengths,but not in timo. Th"ti he rushed Ihovictims to tho llryn Mawr Hospital.

STRIKE IN CHICAGO HOTEL.

XVnlUont ill XVller XI ny .XI run Tlr-i- ii

Dui'lnic Convention.Chicago, June in. Visions of a spread

of the New Vork waiters' strike to Chi-cago hotels during the Republican na-tional convention loomed upwhen Ihlrty-flv- o waiters employed at tho1.1 Still,. 11,, l. I u.,aa, ,ln,,n,J ........

"w trouble," said Manager Wolf,"was thut the men became angered at

delay of the medicul men in gathering,They demanded extra pav. This wanrefused and the men limply quit, Thofact that substitutes look their placeswithout comment convinces us that tiieiois no likelihood of a general strike."

Wlille'a l.nlral Trouble I'mleil,.liislali .1. White of 13 Columbia

lteliihU, Hrool:ln, has been tellrveit fiomthe rharxe of craiul laireny In retainingnn- - u.'i.Mi.iiiKs in ii is mi mer n(iiiKek(-tjer- ,

Vim.! nuimlHM lleoillnc il,.. .......i..i..' i

watr.lni: of eh tf Mar. jtiatr K.mm.nsi'lnut futther Mining with the ecim.h 1 tjt llirit.il.. (Ii.. l' pi vpti ij mmi.n i.nin u. . i

."'"VS V.r."' ' '. '. "J.FKP" -a twi. iivciiti unti Liie Liiiitiimifit u ii

Villisca about L' o'clock Wednesday inorii.L.,.ni.,in,. ....... .....i ..... r iting and will beat onco placed on tho scent, i37 TmZZFRENCH COUNT TO BE emmJlJ

AHrlcullurtal Trnile.

Lenoncour, a

ThoMontreal

... !., "Mi

iii iti

Isolated

a

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n

a

a

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iixi 111

i hi

CHINAMAN HELD FOR KILLING.

I, er Dock f llronkl) n la Accused ofKlllliiK Lee liar.

bo Dock, a chinaman, ;i yr.ais oldwho said ho lives in Adams street, Hrook-

lyn, was held for tho Coroti'T by Magis-

trate Kenioclmn In tho Tombs policecourt yesterday, Ho is accused of caus-ing the dentil of l'o Kay, a chlneso merchant of 18 Mott street. Kny died yesterday in tint Hudson street hospitalof u bullet wound inflicted by Dock. Thoshooting occurred February ltt. Kuywas sitting In his store nlniut 8:30 o'olocl;in Iho evening wh"ii Dock, who la a HipSing Toiig. nnd another Hip Sing mankicked ofieli the door of his store andlegau firing at him.

When ho dropicd to Ihe floor Dockand his friend ran Into one of the China-town tenements and i'.cad. DetectivesNelson and Mntigiu nrrested lo Dock.He was taken lo the hospital and identifiedbv IJov. Dock xvas luter let go on 11,000biiil. 'Kny told the tiollcn ho was not amemlier nf cither tong ami did notknow why I.ee Dock had selected hltnfor his target. I.ust Monday Kay'scondition becnino such that Coronerlloltidinusor was called to take hl nnte-morto- m

statement. Dock was then ar-rested. He will lie tried this week by thoCoroner's jury.

BALFOUR SPEAKS ON

GREAT EXPORT OF ART

No Way to Prevent the Inerensiiiff American Purchases,

He Says.

Lon'pon, June I. The steady exodusof urt treasures from I'ngland is stillexetclsing tho minds of tieoplo. Tliesubject was referred to in a recent letterwhen the idens of the Prime Ministeras expressed at tho annual banquet oftho Hoyal Academy, were given. AJ. Italfour has now tnatle a long stieechon tho same question, and his ideas coincide closely with those of Mr. Asqtiith.

The speech xvas dclixercd at the seventhannual meeting of National Art ( ollectlons Fund, a Fociety founded with thoobject of securing pictures and othorworks of art for the national collectionsof this country. Speaking of the necewsity of adding to the great national collections, if this country is to keep itsplace, he said that the process of additionwas dally growing more difficult.

Men engaged in the purchase and saleof works of art will probably tell you.he said, "that London has always been thogreatest contre, the greatest mart, forworks of art in the xvorld; that to Londonworks of art havo come; that in Londonthey havo leen purchased; but thatxvhereas they havo been purchased inLondon in times gone by for Lnglishmenund for htigland, they are now purchasedin London in order to go abroad to Amer-ica nttd elsewhere.

"We have no grounds for complaintagainst America for doing to us what.utter ail, wo in our turn, xtrlten wo weretho great purchaser, did to Italy, to Holland, to France nnd to Germany, butsurely xvo havo considerable ground fornatinti.il misgiving. What is going on isperfectly simple. The great works ofart aro necessarily limited in numberTho question is that of price, and you cansee how that question is altered in charac-ter when you consider tho amount givonby tho country to the National Galleryfor the purchase of new works of art."

The State contribution for this pur-pos- o

is ?3,0on a year, which, nt Mr Bal-lo-

said, might not have been inadequatetwenty or thirty or forty years ago, butN now absolutely ludicrous when theprices habitually fetched by great mastersIn the markets of the world nro con-sidered.

"I take it," he said, "that there N nofirst-cla- work of art which can bbought out of that j.'.l.ona, even if ihowhole of it were offered for one work.That need not to be so, but it is ? nowond for my own part I seo no chuneo-o- r,

at all events, no probability of anymaterial or important change in thisparticular respect. On the contrary". Ishould imagine that tho prices, whichhave gone steadily up during tho wholoof my recollection, nro likely to go upstill further as city bids against city, nsmillionaire bids against millionaire, forthe possession of works whoo numbercannot be increased, but which are llnd-in- g

an exvr-wideni- circle of admirersdrawn from every portion or tho civilizedglobe That is the difficulty. It is notfelt in this country only. It has beenfelt in thos countries for n long timo.ana legislation sometimes of tho mostdrastic character has been adopted,specially hi Italy, in order to preventwhat would otherwise hax'e been an un-checked exodus of works of nationalimportance."

Like Mr. Asqtiith, Mr. Hulfour did notthink that any such legislation could besuccessfully adopted for Lngland. Hethen pointed out that in many cases itis impossible for tho owners of greatworks of art to preserve them. Ho said:

"A man's hus beenpalmed by one of tho great F.nglitJi por-trait painters. I suppose tho portraitdid not originally cost more than WJor ?00, I daro say not as much. Thedealer is now ready to givo him 23,01)for it If u man keeps that on his wallsit means SWl a year, or what is equivalentto -- 00 a year, doing nothing. Ho maybe, very often ho is, a man of restrictedmeans xvith children to provido for nnd tosend out into tho world. How- - I it tin.iblc for him to prevrvo In many cass Imis piciurerThe difficulty, said Mr. Halfour. had no

doubt been increased by tho system ofdeath duties, "which require a very heavyund practically immediate paymoiit. andsuch a portion of on Inherited ostat ? uscan ih? turned rapidly into ready money,without cattsltif, any loss of Income,cannot ask pooph of mndorato mean's todeprive themselves of "

Private generosity, assisted to what oI

;

forthe time being mlglitdeom justillable, '

soomed, In tho end, to bo the only romeilvthat Mr. Holfour could think of

SHOOTS FIANCEE; KILLS SELF.

toulh Out of Work Sliooia m.Xlolhrr'.i 1'reai-iier- .

i

Chicago, Juno lo.-.Ia- mes Kramer,J'.' year.s of aw. and nrolmlil.- -

wounded his fianciV. Mis Jennie I.oelinup .

six years his senloi, alias Warren itvenue,and killed himsel in the home of himotner. air AntlA I , r imn, in. ,1....tl 7 ''-- . -- IIJ II I'll"'ison sireei, eanx ln(l.lv

. nnsiniy occurr d III tho nresBiirs.01 xram?r s mother while Ml,,-- , Loclmr."Wilt ViBlf llliV libf''iiimi, iiri,lt.. :

.! lieen out Of pmilliil'm..nl

nr mnma rmndi.mlM.4. 1 despooainV. ' and this had undo him

Wilds3YVt

OrientalsThe Largest SpecialtyMux House in America

If there were a Com-missioner of WeddingGifts, or a Committeeof Bridal Utilities, theirlists would be headed byOriental rugs.

What should a wed-ding gift embrace?

Sentiment. Long dura-bility. An evidence ofnice discrimination. Un-

questioned value. Beauty.Utility that borders onthe ornamental.

What so thoroughlypresents ALL these ele-

ments as an Orientalrug, recognized becauseof the establishment fromwhich it comes as the verybest of its class?

What other gift couldpossibly remind thebride and the groom ofthe donor so often for avery long period of time?

Twenty-fiv- e dollars-fi- ftyseventy-fiv- e will

purchase an excellentWild's Oriental whichwill help furnish theyoung couple's long-to-b- e

- remembered firstabode.

And BEING a Wild'sOriental is the one thingthat evidences the nicediscrimination which ap-peals to the pardonablepride of a bride in hergifts.

W rite for out .summer ling Booklet

Joseph ild & (aFifth Avenue &-- 35th Street

".NEW YORK.'

MEAT B0YC0TTERS OUT AGAIN.

( lushes In Xt llllnnisliurc nml linn.hiiis I lllKfll p.

The Williamsburg women. who startedu rumpus on Saturday in their efforts tocoined butchers to reduce meat prio sor close up their shop-- cont iniied their agitation yesterday. About twenty womenu."sembl"d at Munhattan ami Hum.boldt street and matched around intoHoerutti street near Graham avenue.where they snatched Horn a woman aparcel containing meat, doused It withkerosene and threxv it away.

Their nclion precipitated a fight, whichwas rpielled by the police,

'ihe boycotteiv neM went to the marketof Abraham Hantaan nt M Moore street,where they lo pull women ts

out of iho place. Hefore the raid-ers could do any damage to the meatw'tth tlm kerosene they carried in bottlcithree policemen ejected them.

A large crowd followed Ihofind those butchers who hud lee'n soilingmeat and had not followed in the wake ofothers who closed their t.hops locked theirrloois until tho boycotlers had lieen di.vIsTseji. iho xvomen did not interferewith butchers who sold only poultry.

At Marcy nvenuo nnd Hopkins streetother boycotters uttacked Hire womenwho xvero carrying meat and tried to cmit away from them, but the women routedtheir assailants, '1 hero xvero other clashesbetween the police, and boycotteis in theMyrtle avenue section nnd in the Seigelstreet section. The iolico did not makeany arrests but dispersed the bovcoltcrfit was said that nine out of excrv tenbutchers shut down and that the policturned back the drivors ot manv truck,ouds of beef, xvarning them thai if thvnxaded the boycotting locality they would

He obliged to assume responsibility if theirtlock wns destroyed.

WIDENER REPORT DENIED

.xitorne,. sn lie Mill Not llnlldMhrar nt llartnnl.

Pllll..MiKi,iMlu, June in. Attorneytepresonting P. A. H. Wideuer ridiculedme idea y that Mr. Widener is aboutto erect a library building for Harvard

Uiverslty In which to house th" colle.tlon of manuscripts and boo.H M. bvhis grandson. Hurry Llkins Wid-iis- i,who was lost with the Titanic

It was explained tint th' cilh timiwhllo valuable contains onlv tl.ini mau iscripts and Looks and tha. tn-- s- couldlie'taken euro of In a small tiii,ho attorneys also anno .ncc .li'.Mrs. (.'orgo I). Widener who Ion tierson and xvas made a widnv thro ig i t n

ifllllio disaster. Pus .r,.., 1, i ..."oru on tno wideiuu

tnends that she novel eo,.ld bu hai ,

.o long as her husbond i edit m iwith her.

Best Table SauceHousewives know it for I --traro quality and rich flavor.

LEA PERRINS8AUCE

TNI OSiaiNtl WOUeitTIHtMIRI

Kcft (utonlnic for Soups, riih,Mnana. Ckopa, Cravlc. etc.

f An AppttiterL Job Duc4x'i Sosi. Ajenti, K.T.

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