new york tribune (new york, ny) 1908-11-25 [p...

1
Going for it? We've the clothes for the holiday, however, wherever you spend it. Fall suits. Fall overcoats. Evening suits. Rain coats. Motor clothes. All the furnishings, hats and shoes that go with them. Rogers. Feet & Company. Three Broadway Stores. 258 842 1302 at at at Warren st. 13th st. 34th st Amusement*. MANHATTAN KSStZfSgiT \u25a0*' J ' C ..: Telephone 1714 «-? OSCAR HAMMERSTEI.N' Dt'«eßs» GRAND OPERA SEASON* l9««-». TO-MGHT at *— J*AM«O>' and DEI.IL.AH. Mile. Gervilie-neache; MM. Da!nr>re«. DufraaaMi Vleullle. «."rabb« 1 Mile. Vaiery. premiere daa»»U!»» Etolle. > Mo« <Ilr.. M. Campanlnl. THIRS. EVE. at * tTr>ank»«! n!»ht>; prm prices. SI to $3 CARMF.N. vine, i%bi\ Zep. pllll. Trentlnl. P"n«R.>. MM. Valle», Cra»>v» Glllbert. Daddl. De Gr«l». «Mlle. Valery. pr»m!er, <lan«eu«e . Mus. dlr . M <»mp»ninl FRI EVE. at S Pirn' time In America tt Mm •• penet« THE .11 GGLER OF NOTRE DAME nn X French). MISS MARY f.ARDCS. MM. R«maud. .7 r'ufrann*. De Se^urola. Valles. Vieull!». Crabb* Mi»M 'i» d!r.. M Campanlnl. "BAT. MAT.. 2IS BARBER or «ETn,LE. MME. TBTRA7.7.INI. Mile Tr-nUnl; 'M paml*. " Sammaro. G!llb«rt. De Segurola. Mv»«. dlr.. jj. t;»mp»nlnl ' SAT. NIGHT. « 13 TOSCA. M1.1.K. LABIA- MM Taeeanl. Renaud. Glanoll-GallettL Mis. dir^ M. Campanlnl »i mi NlGHT— Fourth popular Campaninl eon . cert S'V-JI.SO. Notable artlats. NEXT WEEK. MOV. EVE.. •AMSON un DF.MI.AH. Mil- Oervllle-Reache: Hit- Da!more». Oofrtan*. VJ«otIT«. Crabbe. Grand '*orp» <if Ballet <Mlle Od*tt* Val- ery. premiere danseusi* Etolle. > Mus. dlr.. jj Campanlnl. WED. EVE.. THE .M GGI.ER OF NOTRE DAHZ. MISS MARY GARDEN: MM. Rena-jd. r-ifrawsß, Valleg. De Besot Vleallle. Crabhe. jf,,,, iT^ M. Campanlni. FRI. KVE. Mrlple bllli. ftrjt time In A-n-rlr*. LA CHAIR, an .->per*M«- pantomime. M - Odett* Val.rv premiere d«ns»ai« Etotle; un». Chrtnt'n* Karf: M Montanarl; CAVAI.LERLA RC«»TIC4Jr4 MI.LE. LABIA: Mm-« MarlsJca- Aldrlch. a»-r»r«-«. MM. Tac-anl. Pol-si^: PAGLIACCI. Mile. Enpinaiiir' MM Zenateiin. saranureo. Crabhe. Yvntnrtnt H'la. Mr M Onpanlnl. SAT. MAT.. THE ii i.'.i OF >"OTBE DAME. MISS MARY GARDEN. MM Renaad. DnfrVm I Valles. De -;-, imi a Vle.illJe. Crabbe. jfis. dir..' M Campanlnl. RAT. NIGHT. RIGOLETTO. \fMF. TETR.IZ- ZINI. Marlska-Aldrlch. Severlna; MM. Con»»»r.t:TW <hl» first appearance*, fammaro. GHlbert. Art- mondl. M.• d!r . <'ampanlnl. NEXT WEEK*» SE.«T SALE OPEN* s- TO-MORROW. THI'RSDAY MORNING. CIIDIDC TH»,ITRK. R*iv 4Ath -• ;• •'*) kßlrinC Ma;» We^ . Thars. *n<i ?a» . 2 Vk. .Matinees Tbl« Week. To-day. Thar* and *»». JOHN DREW tn Jack Straw ftADDIPY .T*.th s=r.. near Br««4»Jy Eve. 9 jif UAnmurV Mats We-1 Th \u25a0!-• and =1-. 2:14 "IT WAS TO LAI >un. •"An Anored Sutcc— 7 Wort* Matinee* To-day. To-morrow and *»firi»ay. WM. COLLIER r^r^T HUDSON w 44tn St - E of B'*ar. Et» 13^ nUiIuUII Mats. Wf<l. Thar* anrl Sar.. 2Ja Matinee* Thi» Week. To-day. Thur«. and Sat •"Lady Frederick Is adorable." T!m»». ETHEL BARRYHORE ph^SW__ rDITPPION B'way. 44th St Ef at 7 LXI * CKIUiI Mats Thur» # an.l 3a? at X Matinee* Thl* Week To-morrow and Saturday. VVM. GILLETIE in SAMSON \u25a0 VnCllll *3th ?t . near B"way. Ev^i 9li LTCCUM Mats Thurs. sal Sat. 2:15. Matinee* Thl# Week. To-morrow and Saturday. BILLIE BUK.KE S^VSt KNICKERBOCKER B x"". y ¥^ -.»?£"='\u25a0!* "i THE GIRLS OF GOTTENBERG NEXT MONDAT. ?eats To-.lav !> A M FRirZI •»' HFFF !n The Prlma P— CA\'AV 34 t h st B' W *T Evemr.Ks a: «31 > \J I Mats Thun an'! Sar. a- 2 2r> 1^f t k THE SERVANT & HOUSE Neil T Monday THE WINTERFE.AST METROPOLITAN fig, GRIND OPERA SEA.«O?f !<»O«-t<XV» TO-NIGHT at - TO«rA limes Emma Eames. Randa: MM Carom Scotti. AP^r.i.i:. Patera*, Ba.la, B»a[ie. Mlsslar.o. Con- ductor. TojK-anlnl. SPECIAI- THANKSGIVING MATINEE. TO-MORROW AFTERNOON AT I O'CLOCK. Revival of Wagner Festival Play. PARSIFAL Mmes. Fremstad. Randa: MM Barßsta'.ler. F-ln- ha!». Hlnckley." Gorttz. Wltherspoort; lacreasetj Or- chestra and chorus. ConJ. . Hertz. TO-MORROW" EVG.. « 13 LA BOHF Mmes. Sembrlch. Sparkes: MM B<->ne!. AMo. Didur. Rossi. Ananian. tema Bada. B«a— \u25a0 Mis- siano. I'onductor. Spetrino FRI EVG.. NOV. 27, at 9:30 TIEFT-V\"D M': -- Desflnn. Fornla. Mattf»!d. Randa. L>* Huffier: MM. Schmedes. F<=lnhalß. Hinckley. Gorttz. H«a Conductor. Hertz. SAT. .MAT.. .NOV. -••«. at 2 AIDA Mmes. Emma Earned. Homer. Spark-s: _' ' Caruso. Scottl.'DWur. Rossi. Bad*. Conductor. Toscanini. SAT. EVI.. Nov. 2^. ) iri«-ni FTTfI at a Ofl .Popular Prices. ? MfiOLETTO Mmc». Sembrirh. Homer; MM. B"nri. Amato Con- ' du^tor. Ppetrtno. SUNDAY EVG.. NOV 23TH. AT V3r>. GR.*»D POPVI~\B CONCERT. Soloists: Mr...:. Destinn. Rappold. Nie.sen-Stone: MM *?\u25a0*•'\u25a0• violinist ib) arrangement with R. S Johnston >: Note. Martin. \u25a0vTltherspoon. Entire Met- ropolitan Orer» Orchestra. Conductor. Hertz WEBER PIANO r«l HIPPODROME HB E Mats . Best Seats ft Evenings. = 2^r to It ->0 SPOKTI>"G I BIRD BAIXET. BATTUE D PAY*. I flßf 1 > THE *KIF* Next Sun. NiarM. COLUMBUS MILITARY BAND LYRIC ' ::crijLyBLASER> Casino £££&£' Louise Gunning *^ Dr. John D. Prince Slated for Speaker of the Next New Jersey House. Trenton, V J . \'..\ :'4 Assemblyman John L>. Prince, of Passalc County, prof. .iventa! languages pi Columbia University, Nr\< York, HONORS FOR C. U. PROFESSOR. Brewerton admits that his machine ran over some obstruction. II was dark, he said, and he did not slacken speed because he though! he had struck a d ig, or thai some highwayman hid placed an obstruction in the road. He was carrying a con- siderable sum of money at the time, he said, and did not want to take any chance? by stopping. He said he did not believe that he had run over the n7«n. Edward Brewerton, of Ossining, Does Not Be- lieve He Ran Over Men Near Tarrytown. Bdward Brewerton, of Ossining, waa arrested yesterdi on suspldoi of being the driver of f'i p automobile arhlch ra?i down a i killed Williann Kramer and William Purdj <ti the Albany Post !:..nd. between Ossining and Tarrytown, on Satur- day night. HELD FOR KILLING TWO WITH AUTO. Number of children enrolled In the Industrial schools ' . ' A TIM The daily average number attending. . . ,. ... \u25a0\u25a0- tn til Number 'of children given relief «" »helr home s . ' 144 Number of boys and girl.- sheltered In the lodsln< h"U*es : %*i,, The daily average \u25a0 •• ~ n Number of bova at the farm school i--<" I The dally average ••• •• "• •• •" j Number given one to four weeks' outing In the health home, summer hi. me. farm and other country places --•\u25a0 '\u25a0*™ Number of crippled children ?ent to the country for v two to eight weeks •• \u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0 Number of women an 1 children given day outings at the seaside, r..irk<= and in the country *.**\u25a0 Number of children treated by the Sick Children's Mission ;•• ~ 334 Number of orpnan children placed permanently In family horn's during the year ... "So Number of children alreajv In family homes under oversight -• '-* Number ..f boys and girls placed in homf s at wages 862 Number of boys and girl? with their parents as- si«ted to emigrate J* Number of boys and (rlrli returned to relatives .. •"| - H Number of homelesn mothers and children sheltered fi>9 A very hard year among the Italian Immigrants was reported. The most significant feature of the work, according to the report, was the aid given to orphan. homeleFs and wandeting boys. Every on" under twenty-one years who applied for shelter was cared for. Employment for 1.577 was found, and 1.272 fitted for !t were enlisted in the army and navy. in addition, i."93 were taken to the farm school and later placed in farmers' families at wages. The work of the farm school, the report said, had proved a preat success. As to the so- ciety's wards the report had this statement: We continue to be responsible for -the 2,128 jraunger children placed In homes in former years and 3.210 visits were made by our agents during the year to see that they were properly cared for and sent to school and to remove and replace all those not doing well. Children's Organization Found Em- ployment for I 577. The annual meeting of the Children's Aid Soci- ety was held yesterday afternoon at the Chase Na- tional Bank. William Church Osnorn was re- elected president, A. Barton Hepburn treasurer and C Lorin? Brare secretary. Mr Hepburn. Douaias Robinson, Gustav K. Kissel and Dr. Francis F. Klnnlcuti were re-elected trustees for three years. The annual report of the society, presented by Mr. Brace, contained th« following table, stuping the extent of the work: AID SOCIETY ELECTS. Hmlu'a Eves V.O. M-« 1 TVM. F\VrßSH\>l Udlj S To-morw. ::M > The World and Hl* Wife. MaiestiCMa.^aal t^. ISt. BLUE GRASS HERALD SQ. Ma gi JngS^ nk " 3 TWINS u/cpt run M* 1 * To-day. Thanks- 1 Cf.TPE noi 0 ntol tnJ giMr.gandSat 1 FITCH'S ClliLO Port of New York, Tuesday. Nov. 24. 1908. ARP.FVKr> Steamer Massachusetts. Flndlay. London November 12. to the Atlantic Transport Line, with BldM Arri-. »1 a' the Bar at 1:30 a m. Steamer Re .I'ltalia <Ital). :-ienonl. Genoa November 8. Naples 6. Palermo 7 and Almeria 9. to Cesare Conti. with 100 cabin and 578 steerage passengers and mdse. Arrlvei at the Bar at 4 a m. 23<i. Steamer Aurora (Nor) Chrtetophersen, I^a Guayra No vember 7. Mara, 12 anl Puerto Cabello 14. to Boul- ton. Bliss & Dallett, with Bidae. Arrived at the Bar at 3 p m. 2.".1. Steamer Maracalbo. Hi.-hbom. Maraoalbo November 14. Curacao 15 and La Guatra 1«. to Boullon. BH?s * r>a. lett. with 2 cabin passengers, malls and md»». Arrived at the Bar at 12:04 a m. Pteamer Cherokee. Archibald. Azua Novembr 13, San Domingo city and Macorls 14. Sanchez and Saanaaa 18. Porto Plata and Monte Crlstl 1" and Turk's Is.and 18. to th© Clyde Ss Co, with 2 cabin t>aJ!"er>.<er*. malls and mds«>. Arrived. at the Bar at 11 "7 a m. Steamer Carolina, Sargent. \u25a0\u25a0,"* ' and Aguadi'la November 10 and San Juan I s . to the New York and Pf>rto Rico Ss Co, with .'-4 pas^encers. mails and mas?- Arrived at the Bar at 1:10 a m. 2T>d. Steamer c"orsican Prince |Br), Ord. Santos October 24 Rio de Janeiro 26. Victoria 2!>. Bahia November 1 and Trinidad 13. to Paul F Gerhard & Co. with mdse. Ar- rived at the Bar at midnight. 22d. Pteamer Saramii<-ca |Dotch>. Van Per K=r. Paramaribo November 14 and Barbados 1«. to the Royal Dotcli »st India Mall, with mdae Arrived at the Bar at S:2<> pm- Steamer Comanrhe. Watson, Jacksonville Nov -1 and Charleston 22. to the Clyde .-= Co. with passengers and mdse. Anchored off Sandy Hook in fog. Steamer Carll Devereaux, Geoiaeiwaa, 9 C . N.----m tier lf> and WllmlnatOtt, N c. 21. to the Clyde Bi C->. with mdse. Anchored oil Sandy Hook in fog. Steamer El Paso. Knowl Galvesten November 17. to the Southern Pacific Co. with ni'ise. Arrived at 3p m. 2.1 d. and anchored ofr Scotland Lightship In fog. Passed In Quarantine about 1:30 p m to-day. Steamer city of Atlanta, Smith. Savannah November 21. to the Ocean S.« Co. with passengers and aaawa Da layed twelve hours by fog. Passed In Quarantine about 2 pm. Sandy Hook. N J. Nov 24. 6:45 p m—Dense fog hers and at Quarantine. Rio de Janeiro, Nov 21—Voltaire <Br>. New York: Swedish Prtnee .Rn New York. Pernambueo, No» 22— Anselma de Larrinaga <Rr>. New York . Bordeaux. New 21—Califcrnie Fr> New York. I.ih.Ti. Nov IT— Estonia ißuss). New York. Swansea, Nov 21 Exeter City .Br.. New York. PASSED. Prawla Point. Nov 24 Galileo ißr) New York for Hull Rrowhrad. Nov 24 Canning |Br». New Tork for Man- chester. Malta. Nov 24— Bloamfontehi ißr>, Calcutta for Boston and New Terk. STEAMERS AT FOREIGN PORTS. ARRIVED. Gibraltar. No» 24. S a m—Slavcnla (Br>. N>-*- Tart for Napier. Trips'*. etc Bydoey. N B W. Son 2+ Clan M«olnt<i»h <Br). New Tcric vfa St vlr.'-ent. c V, Fr»mantle. etc. Hair*. X>•. 22 Prin.« MnoiiU (I>uteh>. New Tr>rk via We« Inilt?s. Venezuela and Si Michaels for Amster- dan Barbados. Nov 23 Atrato (Brt. Southampton for Colon. ?U-. -md .'\u25a0.•<>« T< rk ?ab^n<. Nov 23 Muncaster '"ajt> (Br>. N»w York via Aden for Slnirai re. etc. Er^n-.^n. N>\ 24. Kaiser Wllhelm da* Qraaaa (Oar) New York via Pit mouth and Chfrhourn. Rio de Janeiro. Xov 22 Byron (Br). New York. Malta. Nov 24 -HohenfeN iG»t>. Xew York for Aden. -\u25a0 Melbourne. Nor 2* Dalblalr .Pr). New York via Pre mantl?anl Aielalde Cherbonrs V" -'" I 2:» a m—B! !c^»r (Ger>. New Tork via Plymouth f«r Hamburgr. Copenhaßen. Nov -*4. I r m—United ?tates ir>an> N>t York -.la I i rt-=tip- | Cadiz. >.' .- 17—Antonio Lopez (Span), Kern Tork '\u25a0- Bar- celona, etc. SAILED. Japan C'orea and China (specially a-i- rirejsed only) ivla Seattle)— Tango ,«,«__. Maru Dec. 3.6:30 p m Japan. l>r"ea. China arvl Philippine Isl- and (via Vancouver an.l Victoria. B C) niuims of Japan Dee- \u2666• * :3 ° P Hawaii. Japan forea. China and Philip- pine I«lan.ls ivU San Francisco) T»nyo Man .... Dec. «, «30 m New Zealand. Australia (except We«t>. famoan Islands ani New Caledoni* via Pan Francisco) Lord Pefton Dec. 13, 8:3" p m Japan. Corea and China Ula Seattle) Akl Maru DM - 17. 6;3 ° p m Tahiti and Marouesaa Islands (via San Francisco)— Marlposa Dec. 23. 630 p m SHIPPING NEWS. A mnsewents. Th» hearing will be continued In the Aldermanlc chamber In the City Hall at 11 a m to-day. Justice Olmsted said the Court of Special Ses- eion." mi£ht be sj>ared the investigation of many Skßaai.lt races if the city magistrates exercised a little more patience the performance of their nwhj. Since 'he law of IM, which provides that the complaints drawn up by the District Attorney's ©f3e», the court had be*-n able to dispose of more Trork, Justice Ohnated said. This was due to the fact that prior to this it was the fashion for court clerks to draw up complaints to which successful demurrers could be brought. \u25a0 Th« witness declared that the large increase In *xcis* ra»-f in the last year was due to some ex- tant to the increasing number of shake-ups in the Police Deportment, which put it up to the police to "make pood." Justice Olmsted estimated that the court was now about six thousand cases behind and that it irould take six or seven months to clean up the ball cases aJone. supposing that no other work came in. had flpures showing a total of 5.504 cases in ar- rears on October 3. or this number 1.672. or a little less than one-third, were Hquor cases, and 1.417. or s Mile more than one-quarter, were automobile case* The other cases were classified as follows: Miscellaneous. Including petty larceny and moral turpitude. 1.4?9: disorderly house, 77; factory and Wpamy. 325; medicai and pharmaceutical, 27; sani- tary code. 24; cruelty to animals. 669. Of the cases In arrears one went back as far as 3306. Justine Olmsted said. On October 3 there- were 276 . ;s of cases datln? from I»»7. but some of them had been cleaned up since. Justice Olmsted said that ordinarily each justice tat for two months running and then was off for a month. When sitting he was on th<-- .bench for five ears m the week, except from the ]ast week in June to the first week in September, when he sat for only'thre«> days a week. Of the six justices of the court three were sitting la the general term, one in the children's term and two were off. Assignments •were made a< cording to the rotation system. It developed thst within the last six OT seven montlis *.he cases of cruelty to animals had in- creased to a remarkable degree. It was attributed to the rivalry between the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which has been in existence for many years, and the New York City Hunane Society, which has been organ- ized within the last two years. '"-•'.'- why liquor tax and automobile cases were allowed to accumulate. Justice Olmsted said th*-y believed that cases of larceny and moral turpi- tude should have precedence. Ail bail cases, of coursr. a ire tried first, r>ecaii*e if they were not th» jail would not be larg« enough to h ld all the prisoner* A«k«-r5 if there araa any discrimination in the pen- alty inflicted on proprietors of ordinary disorderly houses arid proprietors of sensed hotels convicted cf a .-.-. justice Olmst^d said there was. "'ln cases of houses h»i t. established." he said, "in neighborhoods where they have existed for some -— . a fine cf ;\u25a0> is imposed for the first offence. or, in flagrant cases, from $75 to tISO In cases of hotels -he penalty i«. usually light. This is be- cause the full legislative penalty is forfeiture of the license and the bond, which is exceptionally severe. Justice. Olmsted saM he thoucht that violations of the Fanitarj- code and <if the, mobile ordinances, now brouphi to the. attention of the Court of Spe- cial Sessions, might just as » f-'.i be passed upon by th» magistrates' courts. The commission consists of two m*mb»r?. ap- pointed by Governor Hugh^s-Bronson Wlnthrop •ad John A. Hamilton, \u25a0\u25a0' Buffalo; two appointed by the Senate— Senators race find Grady. of New York, and three appoints tiT th» Assembly-Assom- Wyrnen Smith and Francis, of New York, and Mur- rhy of Kinß*. pojiator Pape is chairman, and former Attorney General Julius M. Mayer has been ehos«n as cojn«el. The scope of the inquiry la bmad, and a member of the commission yesterday *aid that in addition 10 the line of inquiry laid <sown by Ih»m they storw* read-, to investipat^ any charres of abuses or miscarriages of justice com- jj r p from a responsible source. It Is possible that pome interesting developments may come from an inquiry -a working of the night court, the handlins of disorderly rasps, charsres of favoritism en the part of city magistrates and other allega- tions that have been made by various persona from time to time Justice ".vt!!ar<J-H. Olmsted, of the Court of Spe- cial Sessions. la* Department, ma the sole witness yesterday. The inquiry was shaped toward dis- coveriri?: the amount of work done by the individual members of the court, by the court as a body, the cumber of cases that are disposed of in a year and the extent to which the court is behind in its work. It was evident from the trend of the questions that the members of the commission are trying to dis- cover if it is not possible to relieve the Court of Special Sessions of some of the work now per- iortned by it by having: it done by the magistrates' courts. Special Sessions 6,000 Cases Behind In Its Work. It developed yesterday at the first session Of the commission" appointed to "in<ruire into the manner in which Justice Is administered in the Inferior courts of criminal jurisdiction in cities of the flirt class" in this state that the Court of Fpecial Sefslons in Manhattan and The Bronx is •om» Fix thousand cases rehlnd in its work. By reason of this fact the enforcomrnt of the liquor ta.i md automobile speed laws is practically nul- lified so far as this court C"* This is because liquor tax cases which involve the forfeiture of the license are not reached until after the license has expired and defendants in automobil* cases frequently come m «c" before two or three previous cases acainst them are dirpost-d of. This mak»s it necessary to class the last case as a "first offence." whereas th» penalty for a third offence may he imprisonment. NEW AMSTERDAM THEATRE. 42d St.. Etc* 8:10 Mats Wed.. Thir-i and Sat.. 2:10 To-nay Hatlnrc in honor of Mile. GEXEE at 1 M Gr^at Production, LITTLE tNtL»MO 'SECOND BODY RECOVERED. JOE weber's r .y™ artasi Mat« To-dar. To-morrow and Sat.. t:H ! ANNIE RUSSELL -™ "THE STRONGER «F\ WITH WMF RCSSCIX. A WINNER. BRIM1 PIECE."— World. |j SCTfID B'wav arid 4.>th St. Evu. * 1.1 Mit» | II Ad lUll W»d. •. Sat.. U:ts. To-day Mar .W- IMX Matinee* Tn-d4.« . To-morrww and Satarday. !j! j «th Month. Va| HODOt i|;w>ntu C rV' THE MAN FROM HOME | ;!ni If\ I I Broad^av at SOth. »r?a Ta-nt«t»l | Did W '."-.---- T .$! so.. Thu- » ?it. ' A GENTLEMAN FROM MISSISSIPPI." I CIRCLE Thanks' k an.i I MR. MANN birSULc s^r Mai, t ions ftiflnN in "THE MAN WHO STOOI> «rill ij WALLACK'S B I^^ MARIE CAHILL A^ JSV?t ' ' i UAPsf FTT 4ii ! nAvnCII Mats. ThsnkJKixiri fay A Sat M-c FISKK an ' 1 th< * Manhattan •\u25a0> 1a IMTS. I lOl\t< SALVATION NELL. D r l ACPfI aY THEATRE. W 42.1 St. E\- « » DCLmOuU "^ Mats Thursami st? .2 11 ARLISS Mk DEVIL STHE BELA'CO BLaNOHE BaTES \u0084.l UY Ir S » fl i T BUMOHE BATES EVENINGS AT S:M I THE FIGHTINQ H'.)?B. CARNKOIE HALL. Oratorio Society of I>. V- WTH SEASON. t«»o«-t •.->>» Di Frank PBrnrowli Cor.d-xttt First Concert Wednesday Eveninir r>ec 2rA "Ca UIU HIkVJ by DON-fffTaVi "the Bussed Damczer* Ov ii m M am Ttrk*ts 30 rt». tr» SI. SO. 1 YV stxh St and B-x OS** < \R N E I E BALL. Philharmonic Society of New York *.»FONOK». P«lol»t. MME. KItKK KM > Soprano FISI . NOV :."7. at S:M SAT Nov •« «t *li <>%Tture -Eurvanttif." W»b»r- T.<n^ poem SalcrftaT* Ma.il^ \ : Se^n^ an« \Via. ••inf^lir*." M^nil-M'-inn. sya»* phony >«o T. a ma tor. FWthxv^n Supplrmentarv Subscript ton Sal* seven \u25a0ft#rnooa a* »pv»r> evrntns ennevrts n.>* Office op#n dally from ft to .'• MENDELSSOHN HALL TO-DAY V 4Oth St.. n»ar Prnajwty \u25a0 W WM J WIJLLNER an.l Ms aec-ompanlst. i or sk% \d V. on* . \u25a0 . iumi?^. r AMELIA i MAUDS LINCOLN SQ. BINGHAM ODELL R'way. ««th St Josepnin" Sihvl. P. *»>•» M"'* l "* \u25a0 M»t l>»tly. Sm.%Utn« ' ette». BaraoMTa !>.*». oth^r* £? nPN! "' :ll< IS WAX. tiYPSV i! '1l(1 ! -** \u25a0— 1«| CINEJIATO«;KAPH E»e»» Hour MV» X t ] mankk shah HINDOO TROCP" ILL OI\AIl>(i t* - X M\ | LIBERTY S-E*!Bss- SiSISSHS. \ EXTRA MATINEE THANKSGIVING DAT. l! I ™™|l vt ! THAT SENSATIONAL DRAMA. \\ ' IH<>M PPON S \/IA lA/inrir-r>r-» latest NS I VIA WIRELESS : \ NOTHING LIKE IT IN ALL THE WORLD. \ I BROADWAY TH F^j«f -\u0084"-\u25a0\u25a0 and 4t st St~ Alato. To-day, To-mnrrnnr and ">Murri-t< NEW YORK'S GREATEST SENSATION •NEW YORK WAS PR EPA RED TO ' HEAR SOMETHING SEN\S\Tio\u . THOSE WHO SAW THE * PLAT"last NIGHT GOT IT MlMi AGCGLJA IS I -fIREAT 'A.-TRESS "-Herald Thf Borld'i Mo«t famou. rrnc«-«1i»nn» MlMf AGUGLIA and Her UariraUed in ( OMPANV OF BO Sl< II I\\ RVTx in eh« pia; of Realistic mm All A S i r jts ' imp. ,ss ibi.b to KvJla -\h STT[., OF THESE Sl> II.IANfr A^rTH? |IN HER PORTRAIT if UN SIMI I gaiety THFVrKK •*» * n\u25a0\u25a0<-;n \u25a0\u25a0<- ; EXTRA MATINEE THANKSGIVING D*Y 1 $ THE TRAVELING SALESMAN I NEW YORK T "EATHK. -B-wav and 43th St I ' nCtf lUnft Even S2O Mats Today and Sat < ' ast Week Extra Matinee Thanksgiving I ;,Mi XN '.THE AMr.KICAN IDEA! BEGINNING MONDAY. NOV. 30 ANNA HELD ; in MISS INNOCENCE. !; ; SEATS NOW ON SALE. ! MONTGOMERY & Sfiliit \u0084,,'V/,,, fries J.V. to $1 .V» Mats To-daj an.l S.it . 2 R\e s \V Garden ; , ; < ;-r; '"' GERM A THEATRE *V%r^ THA.NKST.MAT 2 30 1 PA iMs\l E* ' * PAT. MATINEE. 2:IS I V&fSBSz MATINEES. POP. PRICES. | ™,' jj^Dt I COLONIAL i r,;,.^e^ u i^v^-' UAM^ERSTE'N'S - II and wm Gould. iSSMSSS ou±? Bur%tl It Is expected that thr- J>o<lies o f the workmen \u25a0*rbo were entombed will i>* found this morning. They were at the bottom of the trench. It was learned yesterday that a \u25a0 was nar- rowly averted on Monday. The Commissioners f Accounts decided to Investigate the accident and is- ;«u*<J a number of subp<rnas. The workmen de- «sar^d that, if Bay men were taken away to tea- tify they would all ctjap work. Dr. BensH held ur> tl,o suhpeenns. and Mayor afcdellan, when he viElted <-\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 in the -\u25a0\u25a0••moon. said that they had l>*-en irsued through a mistake. Patrick McKv<iv, who was arrested on Friday morning wnilr trying Jo shut off the flow of gas into tli*- tren<h from the broken mains, was released in th* Adam* Mr^t police rourt when arraigned on -th* charge of homicide. Another Boy Taken from Brooklyn Trench— Rescuers Talk of Strike. The second body wa* taken from the trench in Gold street. Brooklyn, at 6:30 o'clock yesterday morning. It -was* id'_nti^;d as that of Vincent L. . DatMKtjr. sev«»n *<eara old. of No. 109 Gold street. At the time Of the explosion he was playing with Uttlr John C. Brady, wkosc body was recovered on Haaatay nlKht. Trie boy father had been waiting about the excavation ever since Friday, in the hope that \u25a0\u25a0• chiM would be brought t'i the surface alive. REORGANIZING SMELTING COMPANY. A <-ommitte* for the reorganization of the r - on- 'ff>lld«tM Arizona Smelting Company, the property of which »a« recently sold In fcreolosure, fp j n course of formation Members of several large banking houses, }• if, understood, will probably ferve on th* committee, which irOI include also \u25a0 representative of the curb houses, who must, how- ever, »* a banker or a member of a Stock Ex- change house. Woman Complainant Does Not Appear Against Prisoner, and Case Goes Over. Pnni«>l R Kennedy, arrested Monday on the com- plaint of Mrs. Frances Bchleisinger, of No IS west 107 th strft. who charges thai he gave her a can of poisoned cherries, was arraißn^d in the Tombs police rr rt yesterday morning and held in I2.s<V> bail for examination to-morrow. The complainant was not in court, nor was there any intimation that ehe would be on Thursday. Through his coun- **l. Kennedy said the charge were fali»e and that he would be vindicated tr the /-nd During 'he afternoon Miss Elizabeth Alexander, a nurse, who livs with Mrs. Bcblitoraser, called at the office of Assistant District Attorney Murphy, who has cliHree of the rase, and had a conference with him. Sh-> '"id "f Mr« Bchleisinger having be*-n ill after \u2666*a<ing some of th* cherries. ••Did Mrs Hchleisinger show any of the usual symptoms of morphine poisoning?" asked Mr. Murphy The nurse said ehe bei:e\ed «he did. f HELD ON POISONED CHERRIES CHARGE i rjndei unlnation by Jamea W Osborne, Mra Mason etew nervous and said «i I not n •\u25a0 data; of her coming to New Fork, the date Of ber wan mite or the address of the woman »i'h whom she lived aftei h> r «r- rival tn ti.-1 \u25a0 ' \u25a0\u25a0 : ' ' ;! 't that thf- transfer of "Fred" Kl-in. r> door- kf-'-p'-r at the Ra'..,f, Mrs Mason was Mill on .iid whet \u25a0 ata adjourned Mrs. Mason was called as a witness by Mr. Smith. and she told of giving money to the sergeant in a saloon. She said .that she had opened the show on April W. MW. without having secured a license. Bird, ahe said, called on her on April 22. in citizen's clothes, and said that he had come to close the show, but that she might "fix it" for $200. She said that she gave him $Tio on account in the rear room of a saloon ni>ar her place on April 23. and prom- ised to gi \u25a0• him the real of the money later. Mrs. Mason said that Bird was under the influence of liquor both times Jhey met. Woman Testifies Against Former Policeman Charged with Bribery. Ex-Sergeant Peter J. Bird, attached to the Li- cense Bureau prior to his dismissal from the force last week, was brought to trial in General Ses- sions yesterday on a charge of bribery. Assistant District Attorney Smyth said th« officer had ac- cepted $.Vi from Mrs. Dorothy Mason, the owner of a moving picture arcade at No <wn East 149 th street, for permitting her to run the place without a license. EX-SERGEANT BIRD ON TRIAL. The report of these experts is herewith sub- mitted. It shows conclusively that the statements of the examiners contained In their report to the State Controller, submitted March 14. IMS. that there is a denclenc} against the late treasurer vi J3.TP? ."S. that he made Illegal payments to the amount of $3,056 K. and unauthorized payments amounting to $33,754 IS. are without warrant in fact, and are based upon strained and incorrect constructions of the statutes and authorities gov erning th? administration of county affair* On the contrary, we find that, as is shown by the re- port of the exoert accountants employed by us, and as we are advised by counsel, the balance in the hands of the late treasurer to be accounted for. on October n. l? 07, the day before his d^ath. was Jl.Oftf 59. and that the experts state if this Investi- gation were pursued, evidence would be forthcom- ing in their opinion, to cancel the apparent bal- ance remaining to be accounted for in his hands. Report on Clinton Affairs Called Without Warrant in Fact. PUttsburg. N. V. Nov M State Controller Ma-tin H Gi.inn is severely criticised In 8 report by \u25a0 committee of the Clinton county Board of sors made public h^r^ to-day. Controller Glynn's report iast March, following an examination by his two examiners, Andrew Spencer and John (.'. McNeilly, made charges ot >-en..u^ jilegaiitits" and 'appaning disregard of law." htkl dosed by charging that "it is hard to tand how oonditioaa \u25a0 otjld be much worse." The supervisors' committee employed ex-County Francis A Smith, of Elizabethtown. Essex County, as counsel, and Frank E. CooJey, of Al- bany, an offiter of the Albany County Savings Bank, a.- expeit accountant, assisted by W. H. and Mrs. M H. Reynolds, of this city. - ipervisors' committee rep. ..it says, referring to Controller Glynn's charges: CRITICISM FOR GLYNN. \u25a0 ;is N\u25a0• :\u25a0» Tl c nev. Frederick Loose. the young Lutheran Herpytmn who was shot t>> his father to-day in New York, was educated at rdia Seminary here. His wife was Miss Anna Breitenbacb. a trained nurse, who cared for him during an illness whi'-h he wn« attending the seminary. Ix>ose hss been estranged from his family for some -ime. and it was ii: the hope of having his father lead a better life that the son '-ame east Conditions were found to be such thnt a reron- Hliatior wns impossible, and on Monday Lo se was summoned to the Harlem court Tt was ar- rar.ged that Mrs. Loose and Meta go to South I>akota with Frederick and let the father shift for himself. After leaving the court Mrs Loose. Meta and lergyman returned to their home, and early lay morning Loose himself walked in. Without a word of warning, the family says, he drew a revolver and shot his daughter, and as the clergyman r^aohed to eet the revolver hf- shot him, too. John, another son. finally obtained the n and held the father until the arrival i f the police. Father Then Shoots Son, Who Tried to Make Peace. Charged with homicide. Carl Loose, fifty-seven years old. a baker, of No. 1710 Second avenue, was locked up yesterday afternoon In the East SSth street station for having killed his seventeen-year- old daughter. Meta. »nd fatally injured his son. the Rev. Frederick Loose, twenty-four years eld, of Tale. S. D. There was much excitement in the neighborhood following the shooting, and the police of the East SSth street station had considerable trouble in restoring order. The ambulance sur- geon who soon arrived on the scene from the Presbyterian Hospital said that Meta had died al- most Instantly, and that it was a question whether the sin would live. KILLS HIS DAUGHTER. The power given to the Common Council toy the consolidation a-t is to pass ordinances, with pena - ties lor violations, in relation to places of public amusement In my opinion, this section gi \es no authority to pass ordinances having for their object the regulation of prices of admission to theatres. Corporation Counsel Pendleton writes: Tn mv opinion, the richt of the Board of Alder- men to" pass the ordinance in question regulating the sa!<" of tickets is very doubtful. In order that the question may be definitely set- tled, the board should pass two ordlnanres-one^re- pealing the provision as to the licensing of ticket speculators and another relating to the sale of "\u25a0\u25a0k- ets. The -alidity of the latter ordinance could be tested in an appropriate action. Th» board took no action on the question. The effect of the Corporation* Counsel's opinion on the ordinance will be deliberated by those who have been actively advocating the measure. They felt doubtful about bringing Jhe matter to an issue, yesterday because they feared they could not mus- i*r votes to pass it. They expect, however, at the next meeting of the board to have enough votes to put it through, or if that seems improbable, they intend to substitute another ordinance or two ordi- nances, as the Corporation Counsel suggested. Corporation Counsel Doubts Validity of Firing Price. The Corporation Counsel told the Board of Alder- men yesterday that it "unquestionably has the power to repeal parts of the old c<*ic of ordinances enumerated in the proposed ordinance whereby licenses shall no longer be granted to ticket specu- lators and a license fee of fS» for each speculator is no longer to be exacted." The chief difficulty about the proposed ordinance Is the provision regulating the sale of tickets. This provides that every ticket shall have printed on Its face the price and that no greater sum shall be asked or exacted therefor. The Corporation Coun- sel quotes part of an opinion rendered on March 2«. ISK. by Corporation Counsel K. Henry La combe in which Mr. La- ombe said: QUEST IOSS TICKET ACT. PIG IRON INTERESTS DISCUSS TARIFF. A <-onf>r*!v~* of ro;.r'«»! : of the leading plir Iron Interests of th* country was held here paaM*4aj to discuss lift revision and to con?idf-r the advisability of placing the Hews of th*- manu- facturers before th" Hous«- Ways and Means rmmitt»-e.rm- mitt»-e. A committee was appointed to go to Wash- ington *n<l appear before the committee to-day, but irtietber Its ra*-rriL«i - v.-.li favor a reduction » i* :.c: made ki.owa. SUICIDE SAID "WHAT'S THE USE?" Gallipoila, Ohio, .Nov. 21 —Dr. O. B Mills, aged forty-eight years, house physician at the Columbus Insane Asylum, left his bed here in a local hotel early to-day and. going to the middle of the city park, killed himself by sending a bullet through his head. He left a note that read: "What's the use?" IRA D. SANKEY'S SON DECLARED SANE. John E. Banfcey, a son of tba late Ira D. Bankey, was declared to be Bane yesterday by Justlco Mr- Call in the Supreme Court, when he discharged Mrs. Grace L Sankey, ins wife, aa \u25a0- trdian of i.i -. person and estate. Sankey had been found Insane by a sheriff's jury and committed to a sanatorium on the application of his wife. He was discharged on November 17 sane. In rebuttal the state called Austin Cutler, an undertaker, at whose morgue the bodies of Mrs. Ounneaa and her thr<-« children, as well as the body of Andrew Helgelein. lay for more than three weeks. He testified that In the preparation of th» bodies he u*«»d formaldehyde find about fifteen pound! of arsenic powder. This powder was put all over the bodies and Into the cavities. Medical Expert Cannot Say That ItWas Cause of Death. However. I^porte. Ind. Nov. 31.— Evidence was finished to- <la> in the trial of Ray I^amoheie for the murder of Mrs Pell° Gunneas and her rhr<=-<=. 'iiiidron by pettinp fire to the Gunneaa h.-i?e on April 2S The case will probably g" to tlie jury to-morrow night I>r. Walter S Haines. profe.aor of t. dcolbgy -if Rush Medical College, Chicago, testified for the defence this afternoon thai be had examined the stomachs supp< sed to be those t.f Andrew Heicei^in and Mrs Gunneas and her children He ha I arsenic and Strychnine in them. On crj ss examination Dr. Main's Mn-ed that he could not say that the persons wlvs* n< i.c had analyzed had died from strychnine poison- ing. FOUND POISON IN LAPORTF BODIES American Museum of Natural History Now Has Finest Dinosaur in the World. Barnum Brown, of the department of verte- brate paleontology of the American Museum of Natural History, has returned from a five months' expedition to Montana, with "finds" which are considered of extraordinary scientific interest and importance by Dr. Hcrmon C. Bumpus, director of the museum. This was the eleventh trip made to that region by Mr. Brown. Speaking of the results, he said yesterday: * '•We discovered a skeleton of the tyranosaurus which included a skull and the vertebral column, with the exception of the tip of the tail We have about twenty-five feel of the whole skeleton, and probably tea feet of the tall is missing. "While the limbs were missing, his skeleton sup- plements the one which we discovered in 1902 in Montana; so that we know at the present time the complete anatomy of this reptile, which lived about three million years ago. It is the largest of the carnivorous dinosaurs, and the most formidable of Its type The museum is new In posei Mi of the finest dinosaur skeleton of that period in the world GETS SKELETON OF TYRANOSAURUS At the beginning of his cross-examination the Russian government's counsel asked Pouren his marriage, and endeavored to brinp )Ut many details in the personal histon of the defendant. The^e questions were met by a storm Ol from Herbert Parsons, counsel for Poure«, most of which were sustained, while Pouren himself de- clined to reply to others. Mr. Parsons Awaits Evidence from Russia to Aid Refugee. The cross-examination of Jan Pouren, the Rus- sian fugitive whom the Russian government is seeking to extradite on the basis of a criminal charge, was continued before United States Com- missioner Hitchcock yesterday by counsel for the Ruffian government. After objections to many of his questions had been sustained by the Commls- s'.on-r. Mr. Murray, for the Russian government, wanted to show that Pouren entered this country by perjury and fraud and therefore had no right to an asylum here. This offer was refused by Commis- sioner Hitchcock, whereupon Mr. Murray declined to cross-examine the witness further. . Immediately after the termination of the cross- examination the hearing was adjourned Indefinite- ly, pending the receipt of a document from Russia by which, the defence says, it will show that Pouren had been proclaimed a revolution by the Russian government ant! that a reward had been offered for his capture as such and not as a crin. inal. POrREX CASE HELD IP. This money was tak^n at a time when the bank was struggling for existence— at a time when the directors and everybody else interested were about striving to get money to make up the legal reserve of the bank. He took it without the knowledge of the directors and by deceiving the directors. At the same time he was pretending to be working to get money for the bank After the bank closed it was shown that by the forgeries, fraudulent en- tries and pretended loans this defendant abstracted more than half a million dollars from the banK and turned it over to the firm of Frank and John G. Jenkins, jr. The persons who were supposed to be receiving the money from these taini were a lot of clerks They never got the monev-never «aw a cent of it. It was turned over to the firm of Frank and John G. Jenkins, jr.. to enable It to carry on Its operations. The a>'«>dMii took from the trust company the sum ??*»<• 'V^t he capital of the bank was only S3W-WO. so that he took more than the capital of ihe bank. Legally, the District Attorney declared, the bank could only have lent $300,000-40 per cent of Its cap- ital and surplus. Mr. Conklin explained how. just before the Clos- ing, the First National Bank, of which John G. Jenkins, sr.. was president, lent the trust company (200.000 on the promissory notes in Its possession. On October S3 a call came from Mr. Reutr-r. cashier of the brokerage firm, for $50,000. Mr. Conklin said that the loans were not "good" for It,hut Mr Jen- kins ordered that the additional sum be paid over, and it was done. The loan was later transferred to the account of the brokerage firm. The check whereby the sum was drawn was placed In evi- dence. The witness also told of returning, by the president's order, many of the securities, which were given by the dummies to secure the loans, to the brokerage firm. The District Attorney de.-Mr e.i that the securities were at the end $100,000 short. Former President's Trial for Steal- ing $50,000 Begins. Charged . with stealing $50,000 from the Jenkins Trust Company, now the Lafayette Trust Com- pany' of which he was formerly "president. John G. Jenkins was brought to trial in the Supreme Court. Brooklyn, yesterday. In the Indictment it was charged that the theft occurred on October 23. 1&07. two days before the bank closed. AH day Monday District Attorney Clarke and Stephen C. Baldwin. Mr. Jenkins's attorney, were engaged in selecting a jury. Practically the entire day was used in the ex- amination of William A. Conklin. the former sec- retary of the concern. The books of the company were produced, and the witness, refreshing his memory from the accounts, told what he knew of the juggling of loans— loans charged up for the most part to dummies and credited to the. stock brokerage, firm of Frank and John G. Jenkins. Jr. Most of the testimony centred ah~ut six loins, ag- gregating $557,000. Of these $95.000 was charged against Frederick C Voting. $58.000'- to Charles H. Neuter, $62,000 to Frederick Kaiser, $\u25a0 r *. lV " to Waldo E. Hunter. $50,000 to Frederick Jenkins and $ISS.OOO to the brokerage firm Conklin testified, among other things, that John G. Jenkins, who was known up to the time ot his father's death a few months ago as John G. Jenkins, jr.. ordered him to make out two credit Flips and carry them as cash paid on loans, though not a cent had been paid. They were for 51.V1.000 each. Mr. Clarke charged that this was \u25a0 fraudu- lent scheme, whereby it was made to appear that the company had more money on hand than it really did have, deceiving the directors. The plan also made more money available: for the needs of the brokerage firm, which had Its offices at No. 72 Broadway. Regarding the defendant's acts, the District Attorney said in his opening speech to the Jury: JENKINS TRUST DEALS. SIX DUMMY LOANS MINIATURE ALMANAC. Sunrise 00 in* I ; '>' M on so!s 6:071 Moon' I age 2 HIGH WATER V. M.— Sandy Hook 8:13 n Isla I* 27 Hell Gate in 20 P. M.— San-iy Hook B:34|Gov. Island 8:43; Hell Gal 10:38 INCOMING STEAMERS. I DAT. Vessel. \u25a0 Prom. I. ln*. .Prnr.',. t ... Par* November 11. Booth •C F Tietg'.n Co[»ntiaf;fn. November 12. Scand Am Br'.sgavia Hamburg. Nov«m*«r 11 Ham-Am •gnrnln Kingston. November lit Alias •Urino.o Kingston. November 21 R MSP Mokta Huelva. No*ember 4 Callistro Rotterdam. November 8 Creole New Orleans. November is p o p ac El Faso Galvestoa Novembe- IT So J'ac Van<is»lla Gibraltar. Nm-ember Ift Chalmette. Galveston, November 18.. Morgan Lampasas Galveston, November 18. Mai lon PrlnxeM Irene Gibraltar. November 16 N a 1.1. , ] Kan«ns <"ity Swansea. November 11. ..'. Grist", l Osataw Galveston, November 17 . Be. THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 2fl •Adriatic Southampton. Nov. 18 Ubite Star •Crow n of Grenada .Tttnidad, November 18 Trinidad Buffalo Hul November I- ... Wllaon rroteij? New Orleans November 21 . So Ta El Dorado Galveston, November 20 s.> I'a Mohawk . Jacksonville, ... 03 Clyde FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27 •Partma St ft mas November 22 (Quebec •Alliance Cristobal; No, embe r 21 Panama -M.-.,i.n Havana. November 24 Ward Ix.ribaMia . Np.ples. Nmfml->r 14 ...... Italian San iJK.vannl Palerma November II \u25a0 \u25a0 Italian Victorious Lisbon. November 10 •Brlns* real: OUTGOING STEAMERS. TO-PAY Mail \>s«el Ve«9-»1. For. Line. closes \u25a0alia Lusltanla. Liverpool. Cunard 8 30 .1 m 10 Warn Teutonic Southampton, 'Whit* Star « joa m lo.ixi a m Krix-mlanii. Antwerp, Red Star . Laura Naples. AuMrn-Am Admiral Dewejr. Jamaica. United Fruit « :30 am H»:*v>am Tuscany, Arsertina. Norton U0 -i m in in a m Berroudtan. Bermuda, Quebec 9:00 am 11:00 a m Cav< ur. Arcentlnn. Lamport * H01t.".: it »i am 12:30 m Efpernnia. Ha\Hna. 'Vnid 12 \u25a0«> > ,11 3:<^)pm Maraval. Grenada. Grenada lotto a m |2 .hi m Onnther, Pernambueo, Hniubui k- Am. ll:0Aam 1 -no p m Comal. Galveston. Mallory ... 13:00 m Alamo, Tampa. Mallory - nrvom Huron, .In^kfonvllle. Clyde _ 1 -i>o p m Monroe. Norfc 'k, (Mil Dominion 3:Wprn THURSDAT. NOVEMBER -jr. Amerlka. Hamburg. Hamb Am fl:30 a m ]\u0084,,,,., -U Provence, Havre. '\u25a0\u25a0->nh ':•>•> a in IO:0»i a m mmlar. Pernambueo. Brazilian l ftn \u0084 m s-Ouom Frterl fl'r 'iros-.^. Hremen. N <1 Lloyd. l" '"'a in Oscar 11.. I'hriMlansand, Scand-Am. . . l*> \u0084, m Bulgaria. Hamburg Hamh-Am "J "' Albano Html irq Hamb n 110 m city r.f Atlnnta. Savannah, . annn.J Hamilton. Norfolk. Old W V *T!^ JVOOpm FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 27 p E Frirdrleh. Colombia, Hamb-Am. .ll:0«1 a m 2no„._ Ba: an»o, Tampto. Wart! 8 no n m i omanrhe. Jacksonville. Cli \u25a0!» i.fwiE .le.fcroon. Norfolk, Old r>imfnlo n 3 no p TRANSPACIFIC MAILS I i>«.htinat|f.n and »team*r. ! If>»e In New York | Hawaii .'Hpan. «'oiea ami China (vU .-an Fran. !»\u25a0<)»- M.uhkHs Today I -ii \u0084 „, Ja (an. c.ien =in.| china (via Ta<oma»— ' I AntH" Nov. 27 A3o D m Australia (except Went), New Zealand. v FIJI Islands and New Caledonia (via Vancouver and Victoria. B O— Moini.Nov 2f> in n m Uawitil. Guam and Phtlipplna Inland* " CVi* din FrancUtoj—i; s Tia>,»poit ..Nov. 30, 0:30 p » MARINE INTELLIGENCE. was announced to-day as the probable choice of Republican leaden for Speaker of the next House of Assembly. A caucus will be held on Tuesday, when the selection will very likely be confirmed. Professor Prince was a candidate for Speaker last winter, but wag defeated after a spirited contest by two votes. He was at one time dean of New York University, and received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy from Joans Hopkins Uni- versity. Hr ip also a writer on historical and hls- torico-legal subjects. This is Mr. Prince'a third term as an Assemblyman. NEW-YORK DAILY TKIBINT.. WEDNESDAY. yOVEMBER 25. J9» COURTS OVERCROWDED 14 SHOW'S AT FIRST ISQIIKV- ITJOYAL IJEvBAKIHSFOWtt Why these grapes ? Because from the healthful grape comes the chief ingre- jl dicnt of Royal Baking Powder, Royal j If Grape Cream of Tartar. 'J Aiw-ptapl-te powdo, *o««k w*tank ated «±S. U ; \u25a0ad busc be •voided. H

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Page 1: New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1908-11-25 [p 14]chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1908-11-25/ed-1/seq-14.pdfGoing for it? We've the clothes for the holiday, however, wherever

Going for it?We've the clothes for the holiday,

however, wherever you spend it.Fall suits.Fall overcoats.Evening suits.Rain coats.Motor clothes.Allthe furnishings, hats and shoes

that go with them.Rogers. Feet & Company.

Three Broadway Stores.

258 842 1302

at at at

Warren st. 13th st. 34th st

Amusement*.

MANHATTAN KSStZfSgiT \u25a0*'J 'C ..: Telephone 1714

—«-?

OSCAR HAMMERSTEI.N' Dt'«eßs»GRAND OPERA SEASON* l9««-».

TO-MGHT at *—J*AM«O>' and DEI.IL.AH.Mile. Gervilie-neache; MM. Da!nr>re«. DufraaaMiVleullle. «."rabb« 1Mile. Vaiery. premiere daa»»U!»»Etolle. > Mo« <Ilr.. M. Campanlnl.

THIRS. EVE. at * tTr>ank»«! -« n!»ht>; prmprices. SI to $3

—CARMF.N. vine, i%bi\ Zep.

pllll. Trentlnl. P"n«R.>. MM. Valle», Cra»>v»Glllbert. Daddl. De Gr«l». «Mlle. Valery. pr»m!er,<lan«eu«e . Mus. dlr. M <»mp»ninl

FRI EVE. at S—

Pirn' time In America tt Mm ••penet« THE .11GGLER OF NOTRE DAME nn XFrench). MISS MARY f.ARDCS. MM. R«maud. .7r'ufrann*. De Se^urola. Valles. Vieull!». Crabb*Mi»M 'i» d!r.. M Campanlnl."BAT. MAT.. 2IS

—BARBER or «ETn,LE.

MME. TBTRA7.7.INI. Mile Tr-nUnl; 'M paml*. "

Sammaro. G!llb«rt. De Segurola. Mv»«. dlr.. jj.t;»mp»nlnl'

SAT. NIGHT. « 13—

TOSCA. M1.1.K. LABIA-MM Taeeanl. Renaud. Glanoll-GallettL Mis. dir^M. Campanlnl

»i mi NlGHT—Fourth popular Campaninl eon.cert S'V-JI.SO. Notable artlats.

NEXT WEEK.MOV. EVE.. •AMSON un DF.MI.AH. Mil-Oervllle-Reache: Hit-Da!more». Oofrtan*. VJ«otIT«.

Crabbe. Grand '*orp» <if Ballet <Mlle Od*tt* Val-ery. premiere danseusi* Etolle. > Mus. dlr.. jjCampanlnl.

WED. EVE.. THE .M GGI.ER OF NOTRE DAHZ.MISS MARY GARDEN: MM. Rena-jd. r-ifrawsß,Valleg. De Besot Vleallle. Crabhe. jf,,,, iT^M. Campanlni.

FRI. KVE. Mrlple bllli. ftrjt time In A-n-rlr*.LA CHAIR, an .->per*M«- pantomime. M

-Odett*

Val.rv premiere d«ns»ai« Etotle; un». Chrtnt'n*Karf: M Montanarl; CAVAI.LERLA RC«»TIC4Jr4MI.LE. LABIA:Mm-« MarlsJca- Aldrlch. a»-r»r«-«.MM.Tac-anl. Pol-si^: PAGLIACCI. Mile. Enpinaiiir'MM Zenateiin. saranureo. Crabhe. Yvntnrtnt H'la.Mr M Onpanlnl.

SAT. MAT.. THE iii.'.i OF >"OTBE DAME.MISS MARY GARDEN. MM Renaad. DnfrVm IValles. De -;-, imia Vle.illJe. Crabbe. jfis. dir..'M Campanlnl.

RAT. NIGHT. RIGOLETTO. \fMF. TETR.IZ-ZINI.Marlska-Aldrlch. Severlna; MM. Con»»»r.t:TW<hl» first appearance*, fammaro. GHlbert. Art-mondl. M.• d!r.<'ampanlnl.

NEXT WEEK*» SE.«T SALE OPEN*s- TO-MORROW. THI'RSDAY MORNING.

CIIDIDC TH»,ITRK. R*iv 4Ath -• ;• •'*)kßlrinC Ma;» We^ . Thars. *n<i ?a» . 2 Vk.

.Matinees Tbl« Week. To-day. Thar* and *»».

JOHN DREW tn Jack StrawftADDIPY .T*.th s=r.. near Br««4»Jy Eve. 9 jifUAnmurV Mats We-1 Th \u25a0!-• and =1-. 2:14

"IT WAS TO LAI—

>un.•"An Anored Sutcc— 7

—Wort*

Matinee* To-day. To-morrow and *»firi»ay.

WM. COLLIER r^r^THUDSON w 44tn St- E of B'*ar. Et» 13^nUiIuUII Mats. Wf<l. Thar* anrl Sar.. 2Ja

Matinee* Thi» Week. To-day. Thur«. and Sat•"Lady Frederick Is adorable."

—T!m»».

ETHEL BARRYHORE ph^SW__rDITPPION B'way. 44th St Ef at 7LXI

*CKIUiI Mats Thur» # an.l 3a? at X

Matinee* Thl* Week To-morrow and Saturday.

VVM.GILLETIE in SAMSON\u25a0 VnCllll *3th ?t . near B"way. Ev^i 9liLTCCUM Mats Thurs. sal Sat. 2:15.

Matinee* Thl# Week. To-morrow and Saturday.

BILLIEBUK.KE S^VStKNICKERBOCKER Bx"".y ¥ -.»?£"='\u25a0!*"iTHE GIRLS OF GOTTENBERG

NEXT MONDAT. ?eats To-.lav !> A M

FRirZI •»' HFFF !n The Prlma P—

CA\'AV 34th st • B'W *T Evemr.Ks a: «31> \J I Mats Thun an'! Sar. a- 2 2r>

1^ftk THE SERVANT & HOUSENeilT Monday THE WINTERFE.AST

METROPOLITAN fig,GRIND OPERA SEA.«O?f !<»O«-t<XV»

TO-NIGHT at-

TO«rAlimes Emma Eames. Randa: MM Carom Scotti.AP^r.i.i:. Patera*, Ba.la, B»a[ie. Mlsslar.o. Con-ductor. TojK-anlnl.

SPECIAI- THANKSGIVING MATINEE.TO-MORROW AFTERNOON AT IO'CLOCK.

Revival of Wagner Festival Play.

PARSIFALMmes. Fremstad. Randa: MM Barßsta'.ler. F-ln-ha!». Hlnckley." Gorttz. Wltherspoort; lacreasetj Or-chestra and chorus. ConJ. . Hertz.TO-MORROW" EVG.. « 13 LA BOHFMmes. Sembrlch. Sparkes: MM B<->ne!. AMo.Didur. Rossi. Ananian. tema Bada. B«a— \u25a0 Mis-siano. I'onductor. SpetrinoFRI EVG.. NOV. 27, at 9:30 TIEFT-V\"DM':

--Desflnn. Fornla. Mattf»!d. Randa. L>*Huffier:

MM. Schmedes. F<=lnhalß. Hinckley. Gorttz. H«aConductor. Hertz.SAT. .MAT.. .NOV. -••«. at 2 AIDAMmes. Emma Earned. Homer. Spark-s: _'

'Caruso.

Scottl.'DWur. Rossi. Bad*. Conductor. Toscanini.SAT. EVI.. Nov. 2^. ) iri«-niFTTfIat a Ofl.Popular Prices. ? MfiOLETTO

Mmc». Sembrirh. Homer; MM. B"nri. Amato Con-'du^tor. Ppetrtno.

SUNDAY EVG.. NOV 23TH. AT V3r>.GR.*»D POPVI~\B CONCERT.

Soloists: Mr...:. Destinn. Rappold. Nie.sen-Stone:MM *?\u25a0*•'\u25a0• violinist ib) arrangement with R. SJohnston >: Note. Martin. \u25a0vTltherspoon. Entire Met-ropolitan Orer» Orchestra. Conductor. Hertz

WEBER PIANO r«l

HIPPODROME HBEMats . Best Seats ft Evenings.

=2^r to It ->0

SPOKTI>"G I BIRD BAIXET. • BATTUE DPAY*. I flßf 1 > THE *KIF*

Next Sun. NiarM. COLUMBUS MILITARYBAND

LYRIC'::crijLyBLASER>

Casino £££&£' Louise Gunning *^Dr. John D. Prince Slated for Speaker of theNext New Jersey House.

Trenton, V J . \'..\ :'4 Assemblyman John L>.Prince, of Passalc County, prof. .iventa!

languages pi Columbia University, Nr\< York,

HONORS FOR C. U. PROFESSOR.

Brewerton admits that his machine ran over someobstruction. IIwas dark, he said, and he did notslacken speed because he though! he had strucka d ig, or thai some highwayman hid placed anobstruction in the road. He was carrying a con-siderable sum of money at the time, he said, anddid not want to take any chance? by stopping. Hesaid he did not believe that he had run over then7«n.

Edward Brewerton, of Ossining, Does Not Be-lieve He Ran Over Men Near Tarrytown.

Bdward Brewerton, of Ossining, waa arrestedyesterdi on suspldoi of being the driver of f'ip

automobile arhlch ra?i down a i killed WilliannKramer and William Purdj <ti the Albany Post!:..nd. between Ossining and Tarrytown, on Satur-day night.

HELD FOR KILLINGTWO WITH AUTO.

Number of children enrolled In the Industrialschools • ' . ' A TIM

The daily average number attending...,.... \u25a0\u25a0-tn til

Number 'of children given relief «" »helr homes . '144

Number of boys and girl.- sheltered In the lodsln<h"U*es : %*i,,

The daily average \u25a0•• ~

nNumber of bova at the farm school i--<"IThe dally average •••••"•• •• •"jNumber given one to four weeks' outing In the

health home, summer hi.me. farm and othercountry places --•\u25a0 '\u25a0*™

Number of crippled children ?ent to the country forv two to eight weeks ••

\u25a0• \u25a0'\u25a0

Number of women an 1 children given day outings

at the seaside, r..irk<= and in the country *.**\u25a0Number of children treated by the Sick Children's

Mission ;•• ~334Number of orpnan children placed permanently In

family horn's during the year ... "SoNumber of children alreajv In family homes under

oversight -• '-*Number ..f boys and girls placed in homfs at

wages 862Number of boys and girl? with their parents as-

si«ted to emigrate J*Number of boys and (rlrlireturned to relatives .. •"|-H

Number of homelesn mothers and children sheltered fi>9

A very hard year among the Italian Immigrants

was reported. The most significant feature of thework, according to the report, was the aid given

to orphan. homeleFs and wandeting boys. Every

on" under twenty-one years who applied for shelterwas cared for. Employment for 1.577 was found,

and 1.272 fitted for !t were enlisted in the army andnavy. in addition, i."93 were taken to the farmschool and later placed in farmers' families at

wages. The work of the farm school, the reportsaid, had proved a preat success. As to the so-ciety's wards the report had this statement:

We continue to be responsible for -the 2,128jraunger children placed In homes in former yearsand 3.210 visits were made by our agents during

the year to see that they were properly cared forand sent to school and to remove and replace allthose not doing well.

Children's Organization Found Em-

ployment for I577.

The annual meeting of the Children's Aid Soci-ety was held yesterday afternoon at the Chase Na-

tional Bank. William Church Osnorn was re-

elected president, A. Barton Hepburn treasurer and

C Lorin? Brare secretary. Mr Hepburn. DouaiasRobinson, Gustav K. Kissel and Dr. Francis F.

Klnnlcuti were re-elected trustees for three years.

The annual report of the society, presented by

Mr. Brace, contained th« following table, stuping

the extent of the work:

AID SOCIETY ELECTS.

Hmlu'a Eves V.O. M-« 1 TVM. F\VrßSH\>lUdljS To-morw. ::M > The World and Hl*Wife.

MaiestiCMa.^aal t^.ISt. BLUE GRASS

HERALD SQ. MagiJngS^ nk"3TWINS

u/cpt run M*1*To-day. Thanks- 1 Cf.TPE noi 0ntol tnJ giMr.gandSat 1 FITCH'S ClliLO

Port of New York, Tuesday. Nov. 24. 1908.ARP.FVKr>

Steamer Massachusetts. Flndlay. London November 12.to the Atlantic Transport Line, with BldM Arri-.»1 a'the Bar at 1:30 a m.

Steamer Re .I'ltalia <Ital). :-ienonl. Genoa November 8.Naples 6. Palermo 7 and Almeria 9. to Cesare Conti. with100 cabin and 578 steerage passengers and mdse. Arrlveiat the Bar at 4 a m. 23<i.

Steamer Aurora (Nor) Chrtetophersen, I^a Guayra November 7. Mara, 12 anl Puerto Cabello 14. to Boul-ton. Bliss & Dallett, with Bidae. Arrived at the Bar at3 p m. 2.".1.

Steamer Maracalbo. Hi.-hbom. Maraoalbo November 14.Curacao 15 and La Guatra 1«. to Boullon. BH?s * r>a.lett. with 2 cabin passengers, malls and md»». Arrivedat the Bar at 12:04 a m.

Pteamer Cherokee. Archibald. Azua Novembr 13, SanDomingo city and Macorls 14. Sanchez and Saanaaa 18.Porto Plata and Monte Crlstl 1" and Turk's Is.and 18. toth© Clyde Ss Co, with 2 cabin t>aJ!"er>.<er*. malls andmds«>. Arrived.at the Bar at 11 "7 a m.

Steamer Carolina, Sargent. \u25a0\u25a0,"*' and Aguadi'la

November 10 and San Juan Is. to the New York andPf>rto Rico Ss Co, with .'-4 pas^encers. mails and mas?-Arrived at the Bar at 1:10 a m. 2T>d.

Steamer c"orsican Prince |Br), Ord. Santos October 24

Rio de Janeiro 26. Victoria 2!>. Bahia November 1 and

Trinidad 13. to Paul F Gerhard & Co. with mdse. Ar-

rived at the Bar at midnight. 22d.Pteamer Saramii<-ca |Dotch>. Van Per K=r. Paramaribo

November 14 and Barbados 1«. to the Royal Dotcli »stIndia Mall, with mdae Arrived at the Bar at S:2<> pm-

Steamer Comanrhe. Watson, Jacksonville Nov -1 and

Charleston 22. to the Clyde .-= Co. with passengers andmdse. Anchored off Sandy Hook in fog.

Steamer Carll Devereaux, Geoiaeiwaa, 9 C. N.----mtier lf> and WllmlnatOtt, N c. 21. to the Clyde Bi C->. withmdse. Anchored oil Sandy Hook in fog.

Steamer El Paso. Knowl Galvesten November 17. tothe Southern Pacific Co. with ni'ise. Arrived at 3 p m.2.1d. and anchored ofr Scotland Lightship In fog. PassedIn Quarantine about 1:30 p m to-day.

Steamer city of Atlanta, Smith. Savannah November21. to the Ocean S.« Co. with passengers and aaawa Dalayed twelve hours by fog. Passed In Quarantine about2 pm.

Sandy Hook. N J. Nov 24. 6:45 p m—Dense fog hersand at Quarantine.

Rio de Janeiro, Nov 21— Voltaire <Br>. New York:Swedish Prtnee .Rn New York.

Pernambueo, No» 22— Anselma de Larrinaga <Rr>. NewYork.

Bordeaux. New 21—Califcrnie Fr> New York.I.ih.Ti. Nov IT—Estonia ißuss). New York.Swansea, Nov 21

—Exeter City .Br.. New York.

PASSED.

Prawla Point. Nov 24—

Galileo ißr) New York for HullRrowhrad. Nov 24

—Canning |Br». New Tork for Man-chester.

Malta. Nov 24— Bloamfontehi ißr>, Calcutta for Bostonand New Terk.

STEAMERS AT FOREIGN PORTS.ARRIVED.

Gibraltar. No» 24. S a m—Slavcnla (Br>. N>-*- Tart forNapier. Trips'*. etc

Bydoey. N B W. Son 2+—

Clan M«olnt<i»h <Br). New Tcricvfa St vlr.'-ent. c V, Fr»mantle. etc.

Hair*. X>•. 22 Prin.« MnoiiU (I>uteh>. New Tr>rk viaWe« Inilt?s. Venezuela and Si Michaels for Amster-dan

Barbados. Nov 23—

Atrato (Brt. Southampton for Colon.?U-. -md .'\u25a0.•<>« T< rk

?ab^n<. Nov 23—

Muncaster '"ajt> (Br>. N»w York viaAden for Slnirai re. etc.

Er^n-.^n. N>\ 24.—

Kaiser Wllhelm da* Qraaaa (Oar)New York via Pitmouth and Chfrhourn.Rio de Janeiro. Xov 22 Byron (Br). New York.

Malta. Nov 24 -HohenfeN iG»t>. Xew York for Aden. -\u25a0

Melbourne. Nor 2*—

Dalblalr .Pr). New York via Premantl?anl Aielalde

Cherbonrs V" -'" I2:» a m—B!!c^»r (Ger>. New Torkvia Plymouth f«r Hamburgr.Copenhaßen. Nov -*4. Ir m—United ?tates ir>an> N>t

York -.la Ii rt-=tip-|Cadiz. >.' .- 17— Antonio Lopez (Span), Kern Tork '\u25a0- Bar-

celona, etc.SAILED.

Japan C'orea and China (specially a-i-rirejsed only) ivla Seattle)— Tango ,«,«__.Maru Dec. 3.6:30 p m

Japan. l>r"ea. China arvl Philippine Isl-and (via Vancouver an.l Victoria. BC)—

niuims of Japan Dee- \u2666•*:3°P ™

Hawaii. Japan forea. China and Philip-pine I«lan.ls ivU San Francisco)T»nyo Man .... Dec. «, «30 m

New Zealand. Australia (except We«t>.famoan Islands ani New Caledoni*via Pan Francisco) Lord Pefton Dec. 13, 8:3" p m

Japan. Corea and China Ula Seattle)—

Akl Maru DM- 17. 6;3°p mTahiti and Marouesaa Islands (via San

Francisco)— Marlposa Dec. 23. 630 p m

SHIPPING NEWS.

Amnsewents.

Th» hearing will be continued In the Aldermanlcchamber In the City Hall at 11 a m to-day.

Justice Olmsted said the Court of Special Ses-

eion." mi£ht be sj>ared the investigation of many

Skßaai.lt races if the city magistrates exercised alittle more patience

—the performance of their

nwhj.

Since 'he law of IM, which provides that thecomplaints b« drawn up by the District Attorney's©f3e», the court had be*-n able to dispose of moreTrork, Justice Ohnated said. This was due to the

fact that prior to this it was the fashion for court

clerks to draw up complaints to which successfuldemurrers could be brought.

\u25a0 Th« witness declared that the large increase In*xcis* ra»-f in the last year was due to some ex-tant to the increasing number of shake-ups in thePolice Deportment, which put it up to the police to

"make pood."

Justice Olmsted estimated that the court wasnow about six thousand cases behind and that it

irould take six or seven months to clean up the ball

cases aJone. supposing that no other work came in.

K« had flpures showing a total of 5.504 cases in ar-rears on October 3. or this number 1.672. or a littleless than one-third, were Hquor cases, and 1.417.

or s Mile more than one-quarter, were automobilecase* The other cases were classified as follows:

Miscellaneous. Including petty larceny and moralturpitude. 1.4?9: disorderly house, 77; factory andWpamy. 325; medicai and pharmaceutical, 27; sani-tary code. 24; cruelty to animals. 669.

Of the cases In arrears one went back as far as

3306. Justine Olmsted said. On October 3 there- were276 .;s of cases datln? from I»»7. but some ofthem had been cleaned up since.

Justice Olmsted said that ordinarily each justice

tat for two months running and then was off for amonth. When sitting he was on th<-- .bench for fiveears m the week, except from the ]ast week in Juneto the first week in September, when he sat foronly'thre«> days a week. Of the six justices of thecourt three were sitting la the general term, one in

the children's term and two were off. Assignments

•were made a< cording to the rotation system.

It developed thst within the last six OT sevenmontlis *.he cases of cruelty to animals had in-

creased to a remarkable degree. It was attributedto the rivalry between the American Society for

the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, which hasbeen in existence for many years, and the NewYork City Hunane Society, which has been organ-

ized within the last two years.'"-•'.'- why liquor tax and automobile cases

were allowed to accumulate. Justice Olmsted saidth*-ybelieved that cases of larceny and moral turpi-

tude should have precedence. Ail bail cases, of

coursr. a ire tried first, r>ecaii*e if they were not

th» jail would not be larg« enough to h ld all theprisoner*

A«k«-r5 if there araa any discrimination in the pen-alty inflicted on proprietors of ordinary disorderly

houses arid proprietors of sensed hotels convictedcf a .-.-. justice Olmst^d said there was."'ln cases of houses h»i t. established." he said, "inneighborhoods where they have existed for some-—.a fine cf ;\u25a0> is imposed for the first offence.or, in flagrant cases, from $75 to tISO In cases of

hotels -he penalty i«. usually light. This is be-cause the fulllegislative penalty is forfeiture of thelicense and the bond, which is exceptionally severe.

Justice. Olmsted saM he thoucht that violations ofthe Fanitarj- code and <if the, mobile ordinances,

now brouphi to the. attention of the Court of Spe-cial Sessions, might just as » f-'.i be passed upon byth» magistrates' courts.

The commission consists of two m*mb»r?. ap-

pointed by Governor Hugh^s-Bronson Wlnthrop

•ad John A. Hamilton, \u25a0\u25a0' Buffalo; two appointed

by the Senate— Senators race find Grady. of NewYork, and three appoints tiT th» Assembly-Assom-

Wyrnen Smith and Francis, of New York, and Mur-rhy of Kinß*. pojiator Pape is chairman, and

former Attorney General Julius M. Mayer has been

ehos«n as cojn«el. The scope of the inquiry la

bmad, and a member of the commission yesterday

*aid that in addition 10 the line of inquiry laid

<sown by Ih»m they storw* read-, to investipat^ any

charres of abuses or miscarriages of justice com-jjrp from a responsible source. It Is possible thatpome interesting developments may come from

an inquiry -a working of the night court, the

handlins of disorderly rasps, charsres of favoritism

en the part of city magistrates and other allega-

tions that have been made by various persona from

time to timeJustice ".vt!!ar<J-H. Olmsted, of the Court of Spe-

cial Sessions. la* Department, ma the sole witnessyesterday. The inquiry was shaped toward dis-

coveriri?: the amount of work done by the individualmembers of the court, by the court as a body, the

cumber of cases that are disposed of in a year and

the extent to which the court is behind in its work.

It was evident from the trend of the questions that

the members of the commission are trying to dis-

cover if it is not possible to relieve the Court ofSpecial Sessions of some of the work now per-

iortned by it by having: it done by the magistrates'

courts.

Special Sessions 6,000 Cases Behind

In Its Work.It developed yesterday at the first session Of

the commission" appointed to "in<ruire into the

manner in which Justice Is administered in the

Inferior courts of criminal jurisdiction in cities of

the flirt class" in this state that the Court of

Fpecial Sefslons in Manhattan and The Bronx is

•om» Fix thousand cases rehlnd in its work. By

reason of this fact the enforcomrnt of the liquor

ta.i md automobile speed laws is practically nul-

lified so far as this court C"* This is becauseliquor tax cases which involve the forfeiture of

the license are not reached until after the license

has expired and defendants in automobil* cases

frequently come m «c" before two or three

previous cases acainst them are dirpost-d of. This

mak»s it necessary to class the last case as a "first

offence." whereas th» penalty for a third offencemay he imprisonment.

NEW AMSTERDAM THEATRE. 42d St..

Etc* 8:10 Mats Wed.. Thir-i and Sat.. 2:10To-nay Hatlnrc in honor of Mile. GEXEE at 1 MGr^at Production, LITTLE tNtL»MO

'SECOND BODY RECOVERED.

JOE weber's ™r.y™ artasiMat« To-dar. To-morrow and Sat.. t:H

! ANNIE RUSSELL -™

"THE STRONGER «F\ WITHWMF RCSSCIX. A WINNER.BRIM1 PIECE."— World.

|j SCTfID B'wav arid 4.>th St. Evu. *1.1 Mit» |IIAdlUll W»d. •. Sat.. U:ts. To-day Mar .W- IMX

Matinee* Tn-d4.« . To-morrww and Satarday.!j! j «th Month. Va| HODOti|;w>ntuCrV' THE MAN FROM HOME |;!ni If\IIBroad^av at SOth. »r?a Ta-nt«t»l |Did W '."-.----T .$! so.. Thu- » ?it.

'A GENTLEMAN FROM MISSISSIPPI." I

CIRCLE Thanks' k an.i I MR. MANNbirSULc s^r Mai, t ions ftiflnNin "THE MAN WHO STOOI> «rill

ijWALLACK'SB I^^MARIECAHILL A JSV?t '

'iUAPsf FTT 4ii !nAvnCII Mats. ThsnkJKixiri fay A Sat

M-c FISKK an'1 th<* Manhattan •\u25a0> 1aIMTS.IlOl\t< SALVATIONNELL.

DrlACPfI aY THEATRE. W 42.1 St. E\- «»DCLmOuU "^ Mats Thursami st? .2 11

ARLISS Mk DEVILSTHE BELA'CO

BLaNOHE BaTES\u0084.lUYIrS»fliT BUMOHE BATESEVENINGS AT S:M I THE FIGHTINQ H'.)?B.

CARNKOIE HALL.

Oratorio Society of I>. V-WTH SEASON. t«»o«-t •.->>»

Di Frank PBrnrowli Cor.d-xtttFirst Concert

Wednesday Eveninir r>ec 2rA"Ca UIU HIkVJ by DON-fffTaVi

"the Bussed Damczer*Ov iim M am

Ttrk*ts 30 rt». tr» SI.SO. 1 YV stxh St and B-x OS**< \R N E IE BALL.

Philharmonic Society of New York*.»FONOK».

P«lol»t. MME. KItKK KM > SopranoFISI . NOV :."7. at S:M SAT Nov •« «t *li

<>%Tture -Eurvanttif." W»b»r- T.<n^ poem • SalcrftaT*Ma.il \ : Se^n^ an« \Via. ••inf^lir*." M^nil-M'-inn.sya»*phony >«o T. a ma tor. FWthxv^nSupplrmentarv Subscript ton Sal* seven \u25a0ft#rnooa a*»pv»r> evrntns ennevrts

n.>* Office op#n dally from ft to .'•

MENDELSSOHN HALL TO-DAY V4Oth St.. n»ar Prnajwty \u25a0 W WM•

J

WIJLLNERan.l Ms aec-ompanlst. ior sk% \d V. on* . \u25a0. iumi?^. r AMELIA i MAUDS

LINCOLN SQ. BINGHAM ODELLR'way. ««th St Josepnin" Sihvl. P. *»>•»M"'*l

"*\u25a0

M»t l>»tly. Sm.%Utn« 'ette». BaraoMTa !>.*». oth^r*

£? nPN! "':ll< IS WAX. tiYPSV i!'1l(1 !-**\u25a0— 1«| CINEJIATO«;KAPH E»e»» Hour

MV» X t ] mankk shah HINDOO TROCP"

ILLOI\AIl>(i t*- XM\

|LIBERTY S-E*!Bss- SiSISSHS. \EXTRA MATINEE THANKSGIVING DAT. l!I™™|l

vt! THAT SENSATIONAL DRAMA. \\' IH<>MPPON S \/IA lA/inrir-r>r-»latest

NS I VIA WIRELESS :\ NOTHING LIKE IT IN ALL THE WORLD. \

IBROADWAY THF^j«f -\u0084"-\u25a0\u25a0 and 4tst St~

Alato. To-day, To-mnrrnnr and ">Murri-t<NEW YORK'S GREATEST SENSATION•NEW YORK WAS PR EPARED TO'

HEAR SOMETHING SEN\S\Tio\u. THOSE WHO SAW THE*PLAT"lastNIGHT GOT IT MlMi AGCGLJA ISI-fIREAT'A.-TRESS "-HeraldThf Borld'i Mo«t famou. rrnc«-«1i»nn»

MlMf AGUGLIAand Her UariraUed

in( OMPANV OF BO Sl< III\\RVTxin eh« pia; of Realistic mm AllASir jts

'imp. ,ss ibi.b to KvJla -\hSTT[., OF THESE Sl> II.IANfr A^rTH?

|IN HER PORTRAIT if UN SIMI

Igaiety THFVrKK •*» * n\u25a0\u25a0<-;n \u25a0\u25a0<- ;EXTRA MATINEE THANKSGIVING D*Y 1 $

THE TRAVELING SALESMAN INEW YORK T"EATHK.-B-wav and 43th St I' nCtf lUnft Even S2O Mats Today and Sat <'

ast Week Extra Matinee Thanksgiving I;,MiXN'.THE AMr.KICAN IDEA!

BEGINNING MONDAY. NOV. 30

ANNA HELD; in MISS INNOCENCE. !;; SEATS NOW ON SALE. !

MONTGOMERY & Sfiliit \u0084,,'V/,,,fries J.V. to $1 .V» Mats To-daj an.l S.it . 2 R\e s \VGarden ; ,; < ;-r; '"'

GERM A THEATRE *V%r^THA.NKST.MAT 2 30 1 PA iMs\l E*

'*PAT. MATINEE. 2:IS I V&fSBSzMATINEES. POP. PRICES. | ™,'jj^Dt

ICOLONIAL ir,;,.^e^ui^v^-'

UAM^ERSTE'N'S-

II and wm Gould. iSSMSSS ou±? Bur%tl

It Is expected that thr- J>o<lies of the workmen\u25a0*rbo were entombed will i>* found this morning.They were at the bottom of the trench.It was learned yesterday that a \u25a0 >« was nar-

rowly averted on Monday. The Commissioners fAccounts decided to Investigate theaccident and is-

;«u*<J a number of subp<rnas. The workmen de-«sar^d that, ifBay men were taken away to tea-tify they would all ctjap work. Dr. BensH heldur> tl,o suhpeenns. and Mayor afcdellan, when heviElted <-\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 in the -\u25a0\u25a0••moon. said that theyhad l>*-en irsued through a mistake.

Patrick McKv<iv, who was arrested on Fridaymorning wnilr trying Jo shut off the flow of gas intotli*- tren<h from the broken mains, was released inth* Adam* Mr^tpolice rourt when arraigned on-th* charge of homicide.

Another Boy Taken from Brooklyn

Trench— Rescuers Talk of Strike.

The second body wa* taken from the trench inGold street. Brooklyn, at 6:30 o'clock yesterday

morning. It -was* id'_nti^;d as that of Vincent L.. DatMKtjr. sev«»n *<eara old. of No. 109 Gold street.

At the time Of the explosion he was playing withUttlr John C. Brady, wkosc body was recovered onHaaatay nlKht. Trie boy father had been waitingabout the excavation ever since Friday, in the hopethat \u25a0\u25a0• chiM would be brought t'i the surfacealive.

REORGANIZING SMELTING COMPANY.A <-ommitte* for the reorganization of the r

-on-

'ff>lld«tM Arizona Smelting Company, the propertyof which »a« recently sold In fcreolosure, fp jncourse of formation Members of several largebanking houses, }• if, understood, will probablyferve on th* committee, which irOI include also \u25a0representative of the curb houses, who must, how-ever, »* a banker or a member of a Stock Ex-change house.

Woman Complainant Does Not Appear Against

Prisoner, and Case Goes Over.Pnni«>l R Kennedy, arrested Monday on the com-

plaint of Mrs. Frances Bchleisinger, of No IS west

107 th strft. who charges thai he gave her a canof poisoned cherries, was arraißn^d in the Tombspolice rr rt yesterday morning and held in I2.s<V>bail for examination to-morrow. The complainantwas not in court, nor was there any intimationthat ehe would be on Thursday. Through his coun-**l.Kennedy said the charge were fali»e and thathe would be vindicated tr the /-nd

During 'he afternoon Miss Elizabeth Alexander, anurse, who livs with Mrs. Bcblitoraser, called at

the office of Assistant District Attorney Murphy,who has cliHree of the rase, and had a conferencewith him. Sh-> '"id "f Mr« Bchleisinger havingbe*-n ill after \u2666*a<ing some of th* cherries.

••Did Mrs Hchleisinger show any of the usualsymptoms of morphine poisoning?" asked Mr.

MurphyThe nurse said ehe bei:e\ed «he did.

f

HELD ON POISONED CHERRIES CHARGEi

rjndei • unlnation by Jamea W Osborne,Mra Mason etew nervous and

said «i Inot n ••\u25a0 data; of her coming to

New Fork, the date Of ber wan mite or the address

of the woman »i'h whom she lived aftei h> r «r-

rival tn ti.-1 \u25a0'

\u25a0\u25a0:' • ';! 't that thf- transfer of

"Fred" Kl-in. r> door-kf-'-p'-r at the Ra'..,f, Mrs Mason was Mill on

.iid whet \u25a0 ata adjourned

Mrs. Mason was called as a witness by Mr. Smith.and she told of giving money to the sergeant in a

saloon. She said .that she had opened the show on

April W. MW. without having secured a license.

Bird, ahe said, called on her on April22. in citizen'sclothes, and said that he had come to close theshow, but that she might "fixit" for $200. She saidthat she gave him $Tio on account in the rear roomof a saloon ni>ar her place on April 23. and prom-

ised to gi \u25a0• him the real of the money later. Mrs.Mason said that Bird was under the influence of

liquor both times Jhey met.

Woman Testifies Against Former Policeman

Charged with Bribery.

Ex-Sergeant Peter J. Bird, attached to the Li-

cense Bureau prior to his dismissal from the force

last week, was brought to trial in General Ses-sions yesterday on a charge of bribery. AssistantDistrict Attorney Smyth said th« officer had ac-cepted $.Vi from Mrs. Dorothy Mason, the owner of

a moving picture arcade at No <wn East 149 thstreet, for permitting her to run the place without

a license.

EX-SERGEANT BIRD ON TRIAL.

The report of these experts is herewith sub-mitted. It shows conclusively that the statementsof the examiners contained In their report to theState Controller, submitted March 14. IMS. thatthere is a denclenc} against the late treasurer vi

J3.TP? ."S. that he made Illegal payments to theamount of $3,056 K. and unauthorized paymentsamounting to $33,754 IS. are without warrant infact, and are based upon strained and incorrectconstructions of the statutes and authorities governing th? administration of county affair* On

the contrary, we find that, as is shown by the re-port of the exoert accountants employed by us,

and as we are advised by counsel, the balance inthe hands of the late treasurer to be accounted for.

on October n. l?07, the day before his d^ath. wasJl.Oftf 59. and that the experts state if this Investi-gation were pursued, evidence would be forthcom-ing in their opinion, to cancel the apparent bal-ance remaining to be accounted for in his hands.

Report on Clinton Affairs CalledWithout Warrant in Fact.

PUttsburg. N. V. Nov M State ControllerMa-tin H Gi.inn is severely criticised In 8 report

by \u25a0 committee of the Clinton county Board of

sors made public h^r^ to-day.

Controller Glynn's report iast March, following

an examination by his two examiners, AndrewSpencer and John (.'. McNeilly, made charges ot

>-en..u^ jilegaiitits" and 'appaning disregard oflaw." htkl dosed by charging that "it is hard to

tand how oonditioaa \u25a0 otjld be much worse."The supervisors' committee employed ex-County

Francis A Smith, of Elizabethtown. EssexCounty, as counsel, and Frank E. CooJey, of Al-bany, an offiter of the Albany County SavingsBank, a.- expeit accountant, assisted by W. H.

• and Mrs. M H. Reynolds, of this city.- ipervisors' committee rep...it says, referringto Controller Glynn's charges:

CRITICISM FOR GLYNN.

\u25a0

;is N\u25a0• :\u25a0» Tlc nev. Frederick Loose.

the young Lutheran Herpytmn who was shot t>>his father to-day in New York, was educated at

rdia Seminary here. His wife was Miss Anna

Breitenbacb. a trained nurse, who cared for himduring an illness whi'-h he wn« attending theseminary.

Ix>ose hss been estranged from his family for

some -ime. and it was ii: the hope of having his

father lead a better life that the son '-ame east

Conditions were found to be such thnt a reron-Hliatior wns impossible, and on Monday Lo se

was summoned to the Harlem court Tt was ar-rar.ged that Mrs. Loose and Meta go to South

I>akota with Frederick and let the father shift for

himself.After leaving the court Mrs Loose. Meta and

lergyman returned to their home, and early

lay morning Loose himself walked in.

Without a word of warning, the family says, he

drew a revolver and shot his daughter, and as the

clergyman r^aohed to eet the revolver hf- shothim, too. John, another son. finally obtained the

n and held the father until the arrival if

the police.

Father Then Shoots Son, Who

Tried to Make Peace.Charged with homicide. Carl Loose, fifty-seven

years old. a baker, of No. 1710 Second avenue, waslocked up yesterday afternoon In the East SSth

street station for having killed his seventeen-year-

old daughter. Meta. »nd fatally injured his son. the

Rev. Frederick Loose, twenty-four years eld, of

Tale. S. D. There was much excitement in theneighborhood following the shooting, and the police

of the East SSth street station had considerabletrouble in restoring order. The ambulance sur-geon who soon arrived on the scene from the

Presbyterian Hospital said that Meta had died al-

most Instantly, and that it was a question whetherthe sin would live.

KILLS HIS DAUGHTER.

The power given to the Common Council toy theconsolidation a-t is to pass ordinances, withpena

-ties lor violations, in relation to places of public

amusement In my opinion, this section gi\es noauthority to pass ordinances having for their object

the regulation of prices of admission to theatres.

Corporation Counsel Pendleton writes:

Tn mv opinion, the richt of the Board of Alder-men to" pass the ordinance in question regulating

the sa!<" of tickets is very doubtful.In order that the question may be definitely set-

tled, the board should pass two ordlnanres-one^re-pealing the provision as to the licensing of ticketspeculators and another relating to the sale of "\u25a0\u25a0k-

ets. The -alidity of the latter ordinance could be

tested in an appropriate action.

Th» board took no action on the question. The

effect of the Corporation* Counsel's opinion on the

ordinance will be deliberated by those who have

been actively advocating the measure. They felt

doubtful about bringing Jhe matter to an issue,

yesterday because they feared they could not mus-

i*r votes to pass it. They expect, however, at the

next meeting of the board to have enough votes to

put it through, or if that seems improbable, they

intend to substitute another ordinance or two ordi-nances, as the Corporation Counsel suggested.

Corporation Counsel Doubts Validity

of Firing Price.The Corporation Counsel told the Board of Alder-

men yesterday that it "unquestionably has thepower to repeal parts of the old c<*ic of ordinances

enumerated in the proposed ordinance whereby

licenses shall no longer be granted to ticket specu-

lators and a license fee of fS» for each speculator

is no longer to be exacted."The chief difficulty about the proposed ordinance

Is the provision regulating the sale of tickets. Thisprovides that every ticket shall have printed on Its

face the price and that no greater sum shall be

asked or exacted therefor. The Corporation Coun-

sel quotes part of an opinion rendered on March 2«.

ISK. by Corporation Counsel K. Henry Lacombe in

which Mr. La- ombe said:

QUESTIOSS TICKET ACT.

PIG IRON INTERESTS DISCUSS TARIFF.A <-onf>r*!v~* of ro;.r'«»!: of the leading

plir Iron Interests of th* country was held herepaaM*4aj to discuss lift revision and to con?idf-rthe advisability of placing the Hews of th*- manu-facturers before th" Hous«- Ways and Means rmmitt»-e.rm-mitt»-e. A committee was appointed to go to Wash-ington *n<l appear before the committee to-day,but irtietber Its ra*-rriL«i

-v.-.li favor a reduction

» i*:.c: made ki.owa.

SUICIDE SAID "WHAT'S THE USE?"Gallipoila, Ohio, .Nov. 21 —Dr. O. B Mills, aged

forty-eight years, house physician at the ColumbusInsane Asylum, left his bed here in a local hotelearly to-day and. going to the middle of the citypark, killed himself by sending a bullet through hishead. He left a note that read: "What's the use?"

IRA D. SANKEY'S SON DECLARED SANE.John E. Banfcey, a son of tba late Ira D. Bankey,

was declared to be Bane yesterday by Justlco Mr-Call in the Supreme Court, when he dischargedMrs. Grace L Sankey, ins wife, aa \u25a0- trdian of i.i -.person and estate.

Sankey had been found Insane by a sheriff's juryand committed to a sanatorium on the applicationof his wife. He was discharged on November 17*£ sane.

In rebuttal the state called Austin Cutler, anundertaker, at whose morgue the bodies of Mrs.Ounneaa and her thr<-« children, as well as thebody of Andrew Helgelein. lay for more than threeweeks. He testified that In the preparation of th»

bodies he u*«»d formaldehyde find about fifteenpound! of arsenic powder. This powder was put allover the bodies and Into the cavities.

Medical Expert Cannot Say That ItWas Cause

of Death. However.

I^porte. Ind. Nov. 31.—Evidence was finished to-<la> in the trial of Ray I^amoheie for the murderof Mrs Pell° Gunneas and her rhr<=-<=. 'iiiidron by

pettinp fire to the Gunneaa h.-i?e on April 2S Thecase will probably g" to tlie jury to-morrow night

I>r. Walter S Haines. profe.aor of t. dcolbgy -if

Rush Medical College, Chicago, testified for the

defence this afternoon thai be had examined the

stomachs supp< sed to be those t.f Andrew Heicei^inand Mrs Gunneas and her children He ha Iarsenic and Strychnine in them.

On crj ss examination Dr. Main's Mn-ed that hecould not say that the persons wlvs* n<i.c had analyzed had died from strychnine poison-ing.

FOUND POISON IN LAPORTF BODIES

American Museum of Natural History Now

Has Finest Dinosaur in the World.Barnum Brown, of the department of verte-

brate paleontology of the American Museum of

Natural History, has returned from a five months'expedition to Montana, with "finds" which areconsidered of extraordinary scientific interest andimportance by Dr. Hcrmon C. Bumpus, director of

the museum. This was the eleventh trip made to

that region by Mr. Brown. Speaking of the results,

he said yesterday:*

'•We discovered a skeleton of the tyranosaurus

which included a skull and the vertebral column,

with the exception of the tip of the tail We haveabout twenty-five feel of the whole skeleton, andprobably tea feet of the tall is missing.

"While the limbs were missing, his skeleton sup-

plements the one which we discovered in 1902 inMontana; so that we know at the present time thecomplete anatomy of this reptile, which lived about

three million years ago. It is the largest of the

carnivorous dinosaurs, and the most formidable ofIts type The museum is new In posei Mi of the

finest dinosaur skeleton of that period in the world

GETS SKELETON OF TYRANOSAURUS

At the beginning of his cross-examination the

Russian government's counsel asked Pouren

his marriage, and endeavored to brinp )Ut many

details in the personal histon of the defendant.

The^e questions were met by a storm Olfrom Herbert Parsons, counsel for Poure«, most of

which were sustained, while Pouren himself de-

clined to reply to others.

Mr. Parsons Awaits Evidence fromRussia to Aid Refugee.

The cross-examination of Jan Pouren, the Rus-sian fugitive whom the Russian government is

seeking to extradite on the basis of a criminalcharge, was continued before United States Com-

missioner Hitchcock yesterday by counsel for the

Ruffian government. After objections to many ofhis questions had been sustained by the Commls-s'.on-r. Mr. Murray, for the Russian government,

wanted to show that Pouren entered this country by

perjury and fraud and therefore had no right to anasylum here. This offer was refused by Commis-sioner Hitchcock, whereupon Mr. Murray declinedto cross-examine the witness further.. Immediately after the termination of the cross-examination the hearing was adjourned Indefinite-ly, pending the receipt of a document from Russiaby which, the defence says, it will show thatPouren had been proclaimed a revolution by the

Russian government ant! that a reward had been

offered for his capture as such and not as a crin.

inal.

POrREX CASE HELD IP.

This money was tak^n at a time when the bankwas struggling for existence— at a time when thedirectors and everybody else interested were aboutstriving to get money to make up the legal reserveof the bank. He took it without the knowledge ofthe directors and by deceiving the directors. At

the same time he was pretending to be working to

get money for the bank After the bank closed itwas shown that by the forgeries, fraudulent en-tries and pretended loans this defendant abstractedmore than half a million dollars from the banKand turned it over to the firm of Frank and JohnG. Jenkins, jr. The persons who were supposed to

be receiving the money from these taini were alot of clerks They never got the monev-never«aw a cent of it. It was turned over to the firmof Frank and John G. Jenkins, jr.. to enable Itto carry on Its operations. The a>'«>dMii tookfrom the trust company the sum ??*»<•'V^t hecapital of the bank was only S3W-WO. so that hetook more than the capital of ihe bank.

Legally, the District Attorney declared, the bank

could only have lent $300,000-40 per cent of Its cap-

ital and surplus.Mr. Conklin explained how. just before the Clos-

ing, the First National Bank, of which John G.Jenkins, sr.. was president, lent the trust company

(200.000 on the promissory notes in Its possession.

On October S3 a call came from Mr.Reutr-r. cashier

of the brokerage firm, for $50,000. Mr. Conklin saidthat the loans were not "good" for It,hut Mr Jen-

kins ordered that the additional sum be paid over,

and it was done. The loan was later transferred to

the account of the brokerage firm. The checkwhereby the sum was drawn was placed In evi-

dence. The witness also told of returning, by thepresident's order, many of the securities, whichwere given by the dummies to secure the loans, tothe brokerage firm. The District Attorney de.-Mre.ithat the securities were at the end $100,000 short.

Former President's Trial for Steal-

ing $50,000 Begins.Charged . with stealing $50,000 from the Jenkins

Trust Company, now the Lafayette Trust Com-pany' of which he was formerly "president. John G.Jenkins was brought to trial in the Supreme Court.Brooklyn, yesterday. In the Indictment it wascharged that the theft occurred on October 23.

1&07. two days before the bank closed. AH day

Monday District Attorney Clarke and Stephen C.

Baldwin. Mr. Jenkins's attorney, were engaged inselecting a jury.

Practically the entire day was used in the ex-amination of William A. Conklin. the former sec-retary of the concern. The books of the company

were produced, and the witness, refreshing hismemory from the accounts, told what he knew of

the juggling of loans— loans charged up for themost part to dummies and credited to the. stockbrokerage, firm of Frank and John G. Jenkins. Jr.Most of the testimony centred ah~ut six loins, ag-

gregating $557,000. Of these $95.000 was charged

against Frederick C Voting. $58.000'- to Charles H.Neuter, $62,000 to Frederick Kaiser, $\u25a0 r*.lV

" to

Waldo E. Hunter. $50,000 to Frederick Jenkins and$ISS.OOO to the brokerage firm

Conklin testified, among other things, that John

G. Jenkins, who was known up to the time ot hisfather's death a few months ago as John G.Jenkins, jr.. ordered him to make out two creditFlips and carry them as cash paid on loans, though

not a cent had been paid. They were for 51.V1.000each. Mr. Clarke charged that this was \u25a0 fraudu-lent scheme, whereby it was made to appear thatthe company had more money on hand than itreally did have, deceiving the directors. The plan

also made more money available: for the needs of

the brokerage firm, which had Its offices at No. 72Broadway. Regarding the defendant's acts, theDistrict Attorney said in his opening speech to

the Jury:

JENKINS TRUST DEALS.

SIX DUMMY LOANS

MINIATURE ALMANAC.

Sunrise 00 in*I ;'>' M on so!s 6:071Moon'Iage 2HIGH WATER

V. M.—Sandy Hook 8:13 n Isla I*27 Hell Gate in 20P. M.—San-iy Hook B:34|Gov. Island 8:43;Hell Gal 10:38

INCOMING STEAMERS.• I DAT.Vessel. \u25a0 Prom. I.ln*.

.Prnr.',. t ... Par* November 11. Booth•C F Tietg'.n Co[»ntiaf;fn. November 12. Scand Am•Br'.sgavia Hamburg. Nov«m*«r 11 Ham-Am•gnrnln Kingston. November lit Alias•Urino.o Kingston. November 21 R MSPMokta Huelva. No*ember 4Callistro Rotterdam. November 8Creole New Orleans. November is po pacEl Faso Galvestoa Novembe- IT So J'acVan<is»lla Gibraltar. Nm-ember Ift

Chalmette. Galveston, November 18.. MorganLampasas Galveston, November 18. Mailon

PrlnxeM Irene Gibraltar. November 16 N a 1.1. , ]

Kan«ns <"ity Swansea. November 11. ..'. Grist",lOsataw Galveston, November 17 . Be.

THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 2fl•Adriatic Southampton. Nov. 18 Ubite Star•Crow n of Grenada .Tttnidad, November 18 TrinidadBuffalo Hul November I- ... Wllaonrroteij? New Orleans November 21 . So TaEl Dorado Galveston, November 20 s.> I'a •Mohawk . Jacksonville, ... 03 Clyde

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27•Partma St ft mas November 22 (Quebec•Alliance Cristobal; No, embe r 21 Panama-M.-.,i.n Havana. November 24 WardIx.ribaMia . Np.ples. Nmfml->r 14 ...... ItalianSan iJK.vannl Palerma November II \u25a0

\u25a0 ItalianVictorious Lisbon. November 10

•Brlns* real:

OUTGOING STEAMERS.TO-PAY

Mail \>s«elVe«9-»1. For. Line. closes \u25a0alia

Lusltanla. Liverpool. Cunard 8 30 .1 m 10 WarnTeutonic Southampton, 'Whit* Star « joa m lo.ixia mKrix-mlanii. Antwerp, Red Star .Laura Naples. AuMrn-AmAdmiral Dewejr. Jamaica. United Fruit «:30 am H»:*v>amTuscany, Arsertina. Norton • U0 -i m inina mBerroudtan. Bermuda, Quebec 9:00 am 11:00 a mCav< ur. Arcentlnn. Lamport * H01t.".: it »iam 12:30 mEfpernnia. Ha\Hna. 'Vnid 12 \u25a0«> > ,11 3:<^)pmMaraval. Grenada. Grenada lotto a m |2 .himOnnther, Pernambueo, Hniubuik-Am. ll:0Aam 1 -no pmComal. Galveston. Mallory ... 13:00 mAlamo, Tampa. Mallory - nrvomHuron, .In^kfonvllle. Clyde

—_1 -i>o p m

Monroe. Norfc 'k, (Mil Dominion 3:WprnTHURSDAT. NOVEMBER -jr.

Amerlka. Hamburg. Hamb Am fl:30 a m ]\u0084,,,,.,-U Provence, Havre. '\u25a0\u25a0->nh ':•>•> a in IO:0»i a mmmlar. Pernambueo. Brazilian lftn \u0084 m s-OuomFrterl fl'r 'iros-.^. Hremen. N <1 Lloyd. l"'"'a inOscar 11.. I'hriMlansand, Scand-Am. .. ——

l*> \u0084, mBulgaria. Hamburg Hamh-Am "J

"'Albano Html irq Hamb n 110 „mcity r.f Atlnnta. Savannah, . annn.JHamilton. Norfolk. Old WV*T!^ JVOOpm

FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 27p E Frirdrleh. Colombia, Hamb-Am. .ll:0«1 a m 2no„._Ba: an»o, Tampto. Wart! 8 no n miomanrhe. Jacksonville. Cli \u25a0!» i.fwiE.le.fcroon. Norfolk, Old r>imfnlon 3no p

TRANSPACIFIC MAILSI i>«.htinat|f.n and »team*r. !If>»e In New York| Hawaii .'Hpan. «'oiea ami China (vU

.-an Fran. !»\u25a0<)»- M.uhkHs Today I-ii\u0084„,

Ja (an. c.ien =in.| china (via Ta<oma»—'

I AntH" Nov. 27 A3o D mAustralia (except Went), New Zealand. vFIJI Islands and New Caledonia (viaVancouver and Victoria. B O—Moini.Nov 2f> inn mUawitil. Guam and Phtlipplna Inland*

"CVi* din FrancUtoj—i;s Tia>,»poit ..Nov. 30, 0:30 p»

MARINE INTELLIGENCE.

was announced to-day as the probable choice ofRepublican leaden for Speaker of the next Houseof Assembly. A caucus will be held on Tuesday,

when the selection will very likely be confirmed.Professor Prince was a candidate for Speaker

last winter, but wag defeated after a spiritedcontest by two votes. He was at one time deanof New York University, and received the degreeof Doctor of Philosophy from Joans Hopkins Uni-versity. Hr ip also a writer on historical and hls-torico-legal subjects. This is Mr. Prince'a thirdterm as an Assemblyman.

NEW-YORK DAILY TKIBINT.. WEDNESDAY. yOVEMBER 25. J9»

COURTS OVERCROWDED14

SHOW'S ATFIRST ISQIIKV-

ITJOYALIJEvBAKIHSFOWttWhy these grapes ? Because from the

healthful grape comes the chief ingre-

jl dicnt of Royal Baking Powder, Royal jIf Grape Cream of Tartar. 'J•

Aiw-ptapl-te powdo, *o««k w*tank ated «±S. U; \u25a0ad busc be •voided. H