chroniclingamerica.loc.gov · will travel in the west francis joseph of bavaria seif-possessed and...

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WILL TRAVEL IN THE WEST Francis Joseph of Bavaria Seif- Possessed and Bland. DUKE FRAXCIS JOSEPH OF BAVARIA. Who arrived hero yesterday. 1 tr«MB, so that he has had plenty of expert- I i >n "'- which will he of c^at advaatage in j I UiaaiSLUilu with the coronation. v he,, the : j duty of providing .-arriasres for all the for- ! "iKn Koyattteai and <r r^ ri ,,i amfaasa»«orß ! j \u25a0 iia« to l..'nd,-m Tor the ceremony will 1 j make a very heavy iaasaaaal upon the royal ] Etablcs. Captain ntxarttHatn is an uncl" or 1 j the present i^r.i "Itawtnkun, ana >."cond in the line of succession to the iatter'a aarj- j j lirm '- other honors nd extensive estates, j He is married to a daughter or the late Henry Brrirkifasaaai. a . cousin of Queen Alexandra's equerry. General Brocklehurst, and •>! .o.mir Sir Philip BrtMkleharst who ; j was second in command of Sir I'nieat j | Shackletaa's expedition to the So\itn Pole. j Although the rHaanlllaißßii claim descent ! j frem a \S"ii ! ia::: Fltzwilli&rn who was a \u25a0 rttrsin t?j Kin? Edward toe Confessor, Hi? I fortunes of the family may be said •> have | hern founded •\u25a0\u25a0 his !iamo?Bko and de- ' j arnaiiaiil who was Sheriff or London In I the rei;m of Hetiry VIII and a jrreat frien<l jof CarOJnal AVolrey. After the lattrr's d!.s- ! crac« hr had Jiie mmft to entertain him i jwith rrest honor and hospitality at iMilion. j his pla^f »io ar Peterborough. Taken to task ' j f cr this by Kins Henry, he r^pli^d thai tie ! j had not any intention of showing1 contempt I jlor his sovereiim's wishes, hut ilia? had i j acfd from motives of Kr.-<tStu'l<-- (<> th<- , Cardinal, m.i h.s.i been his friend, his { nia«trr and his patron. This answer so i pleased hlnff King •Hal" thai he lmm< , ' diately knisrhte.l Fitz.wiliiam and made him < | a member of the Privy Codncll and of th<^ j j royal household, stating th:it a man pop- I ! r*-p=ed of so much loyally was a valuable) i adherent. \ ; Tt was iiiis Sir \\'il!'nir. FltzwilHam's rrandson who was governor of Folhefingay j Castle when Mary Qu«*en of Scots was cxc- J cufe«l there; and on cr'-'inc to »h. sraffxld j Ithe ill fat.-d woman cave him a portrait of! j her son, which is to-day oil" of th« most , jcherished heirlooms^ of the Pltzwili ' j family. This Fitzwiiliaxn's grandson v.as ] |crc3t--<l T .\u25a0-• ' Fltztrniiam by James T. I , j Coronet in Store fcr an American Girl, j : The n»w Lord D«>ciea is not married. Mr- : i I* a lieutenant colonel of the 7th Hussar?, j I ha? been a. D. C to the late Lord Conne- j [ maxa when Governor of Madras, and to the Duke of Connaucht: served in the jUsttabele war of i?:? 6, in the Boer war four | year? later, and won his distinguished ser- i vice order for conspicuous srallantry in the { | Somalilar.d campaign against the Mad j |Mullah. Hi 5 peerage was created at the he- ! sinnins: of th«» nineteenth century in favor j !of the first Marquis of " : \u25a0\u25a0 ford's young- ! 1 est brother, who wn.« Protestant Arch- J i bishop of T man i tfas Formerly a Policeman at Durban. South Africa. \u25a0y-i*" T - jpio, v " the T; r"niwoA.i Company.) 'l!-rd Esr""" 1 - rJnth earl of litp line. who '\u25a0jst y:iccr>cflr-d to the family- honors; th* ?udden deatJi ..< his brother, « r o! '<* <>m an. r*trollinp the **.v. v ;.-\u25a0.'\u25a0 in South Africa, and r.ow Cl ' ", ,-^r*- subordinate rl«rkship •\u25a0 th<* "7: j^rvic*' " f **** \a; al sovernment. ol art Ha*!*"* •*•!• hi i* ir-arrif.) to the erW*r **^ 3 rl l^' s '**'*"- t»m»- dend. v*ha? o«p chJMrm. «nd n^xt to him In '\u25a0-./^ o f c-.jivx-pfjlon remf's hw tinrle, Spen- ' Arthur I'^rf'val. « v«t "'<•*. man. slinOFt "^ , . t- - \u25a0 *.li"« a <-l«i«»rt BOH. Arthur. * 5.'"-5 .'"-i n icss. and wrtiose only otli^r son. ***_ GN)fr°y Perceval, if rvzmorc«l to rnTirdTfJ, 'rith his wife Ccr- ** l( j gtJ r!-.tcr of tl>e Tt«»v. <;«><-.. C Tan- "t laid W* r '"'l^- ?"m«-\\ Ji«?rt» i ; , KckcaMska ... n^ proof poH- = ''t nuJmtii"^ exietsi of his -.•:;. In- - " « ; t on th** «'» r d- <! that thr read si a « H-TT5' Godfrey P^rr-e-.a!, or sbm on* sZibk to b* his s">n. may n-rnttjatly turn C .'l/> rlsioi V,.f> •'arldcm of 3'jrmont. \nr te t!ii ' only com plication. For * f n^ nc*r a ri?n. Sptrirer Arthur PerwvaJ, . ... r^-it h^ir to \u25a0••;- divorced : . j^p f?^ of seventy th^ wife whom he I. <TK-i mnny yearii mv\ l<mgjy jrs New I sia-.i o:1 °* pl ' >a ttlat ancjl whom M4»d presents » him \u25a0 .i- not h1 " «\u25a0!\u25a0 'it-r- It Is quiif* pesslhl« that this man rut forw-srd » claim to :h« ?? <--. *7». _ Cst*te? ha\ p h*"^ 11 !'! ....... th* 1 »-p.y and thf lute Lord Eirmout not lons t^ "pv>t a i ••;«\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0] penaissioa from the mrts to *% 5 only remaininp rountrj' seat, •w- "'.. -pa-k lo Sir "We»tman Pearson, who, m Vi^?: recently raised to the rwvrajrc, &ga£ a* his titl* that of l^r<l Oowdrmy. h ttis cocnertion It would be intereptlr,? : •feirn twin \u25a0•••«\u25a0!-\u25a0""\u25a0: Owdray, who »»o* on his .-."\u25a0\u25a0 country, whether i hi? porchase of Oowdmy Park h«. ! bstbi i' ' i '-M^*t '•"^ transj old law v.a.-=v .a.-= alwa.if 1 jrovmed its succession, ; jT^jjitCT»h« were *t. c owMrs. It is the ', xs \u25a0•Boroutrh English." and pro- j riges ;iis.t ir. th" event of the owner of j Cwrflriy Park dying 1 without makins any -j- or s^ttteniaat Ccsrdray Park should ro ! j^t' to hi? elfieet but to his manes Fon. -.li* Bc-o-jg-'n Enpiish law of lenurc is j rac*d to the practice in vosrae aaion; the j ;sn« cTvr.ers of ancient times in certain j perrs of Er.clanc. who. when their eldest ] y O , ? -y.,,- up, would dower thorn with ~or.t\. herds .-.\u25a0 . fiocks am then sea j tr*er!*out ir.to the world, the family man- j rirr/aa<S estates remainir.g for the younsest j wji}. who hai beer, left at sac to care for . his parent Jn their old are. There is also j r prpu'.ar tradition, which the best auihori- t es *are disposed to discredit, according to m-iic 1 : tte Boroach Engrlish system of suc- ctsEioa owed ::? crisrin to the fact That in; ( ori^H}ixri<^ ol the -exercise of the "droit i £a ssi|rneur" The youngest sor. -vra? the sctet Iflrely io be the \u25a0spring of his i TsctJjer's husbard. and therefore the leciti- j site be::. ; Fansff'y the Earldom of EgaDeti was T*h. But i^e Feventh earl contracted a Tr.ErriiZf with a woman of music hall an- ••~der's. a M:?« Ix>u'.sa Kinr, to whom , - . to devotedly .\u25a0\u25a0..-• h*^ bit- ter res?r,i*d the ostracism to \u25a0which die iras ?übjecteJ by the county families of Essex ena the affront which both -•- and itoe 5-fTer*'.'l in this connection on cne yrTifraNe n".;as!Cti •when they drove in <%•" to £:!*n<3 the Goodwood races. AVhen h^ die<3 he r>equ"?ath«»d \n .-- every vestige cftbe property that he could alienate from Qt *"!f. She is now married to Alfred Brsco, brother of Sir Muscrav*? Brisco, and KdgKt to his life interest all her proj>- rty, thai is to say, the property formerly Itioagi::^ to the Earldom of Ecroont, will F- »t h-r death to her niece and aOopted aiiitcr, Lilian Klnc the wife of Hvlton iico, only son of Sir lluscrave Briseo ai h?ir to hi? baronetcy. BUNTS NEW EARL CNDERTAKERS. FRANK E. CAMPBIHI. M I Weal !M \u25a0»•- rhap»-l!>. Private Rooms. Private Ambulance*. Tel.. 13-1 Chelsea. Rpt. Stephen Merritt. '- wfclMßßewwi nndertakT. Only one place of bu«:ne«-, J-H Eye. and 10th at. I rajsai \u25a0 the world M 124 and 125 CfceUea. ALEXANDER—On Sunday. » » -v 14. Th-»p^« A., cloved husband of Juliette L. v ••xaßKßpr »nd son of Kate C. an.l the late "Mm— R. Alexander, formerfy of Baltim.— Fuasrat ?enl'<a at th» home of hts mother. No. ZiXl Clinton a- " Brooklyn. V.**dnes«day. AnpiK 17 at 10 a. m. Friends invlt»»l to attend. BQUACK oV. aaaaseai Auzusc \u25a0 it Ccwes. isie of Wkakt Kr*ian.i .-«».'. ?an- ford widow of tile late William Dlmoa Black. formerly or Ball. BUclc v Co.. Nsw Tork. and cater of (be Ute -.' ••*!»;» nan*! C. *at Emily Bull Sanford. Notice of f-on*ral her*- after* Boston. IWlasßagaßav Cliicaya ani Denver papers please copy. BOTNTON— At .St. Luke* Hoeptta a.i.« 1". Richard Boynton. ased 15 years, eldest «?n <rf the R»-v. Prof. Charles H. Boynton and Fran- ces . •ojfjwellBoynton. of the General Th*olo»:- cal Seminary. New Yorlc. and Enilewool. N. J. Burial Gaaaaaa N. T.. Thursday. BROWNE—On Monday. Ausnst 15. 19!»>, Tr«>- feasor Samuel Brown* Funeral Baa aa at Mi Ut* resUJence. No. BJ M si.. *"-'•->» Thursday evenlne. at S o'clocic. ititetssaat crtvate. BI"RKE-On Monday. Aus^ist 13. 13t<». Mary SterHns Ca'houn. wit? of Jam*s .~tr^n»haa Burke and yonn=?st daughter •' the 'at* Phi!* f«*. and Sarah C ißbaaav af N-w Torti C»tv and Bridgeport. Cons. BVTLER—Os Monday mominf. Aurust 13. T3!«». at her residence. No. l*« 2Mtb St.. Brook trn. !>larv A. Burler. beloted -wife of Edward M. Butler. j DAVlS— Angu3t 13. .James P. Davi*. ?ervic-« Th» Funeral Church. No. -\u25a0»• West :3d «r. tFrank E. CarapN>!l Buiidin^». Friends invited. ' FAIRBANK Monday. August 13. tdt<>- Emma Elizabeth, wife of Beaumont H. Fatr- t bank and <iaustr."r of the late ' hart«S At. i ana Amelia S. lleek?. jFARKELL Oa August \u25a0 UM*>. Mary A. F=»r- rell. beloved wife cf William L. Farr?lL Fimeral will be held from her lat» horru» No 1320 .St. John's Place. Brooklyn. Iksaajta] irornin^. at 9 o'clock. PAIGE On Mondar. August 15. I3H>. Ada. B. : Paige Flin>-ra! s<>rvi>'es Wednesday. August IT from the residence si her son-10-law. Floyd T. Parsons. No. KS East 39th st . Paterson. N. J.. at \u25a0."""» •' \u25a0\u25a0'< p. m. lnter- , merit at Cedar U»n remetery. ' Qt'J<'K Suddenly, at Saratoga. X. T.. Acsnt i ll. 'liM>>. Martha Stapleton. born in Enslan>l In' ]>«44. Funeral from her late r»std* > n<" E> . Xo. 24 Lamaii Terrace. Tonlter?. N. T . on Wednesday evening:. usual IT. at * p. m. Interment in family plot. Wo«iiai3 Cemeterr, Thursday mornin?, 10 o'clock. ROBERTS Victoria, beloved wife \u25a0' Lawwas—l H. Roberts. Interment Winter Park. Fia. 9TBIM The rtev. Al'-tis WiHism .-ffn. «n Ao- —;,• Irt. at Parana.- I,ake. ~zt*i 3>. Fuwrit private. Boston ar.'l Cincinnati papers plea cory. tEMPTTKRIKS THE f»OOf>l_%W> CEMETERY )s readily anuaaWila br Harl»m Ira fr"^n Grand Central Station. Webster and -T-r.>m% aven»i» trolley* and by irrtag Lots ft* ur* Telephone »*.-»." Gramercy for Book of * —*» or -...-«s»ntatlve. Office, -'i East "T.a St.. >'••» Tata OttJ Commission Merchant Lea7#s I 1«."i ni l to Various Invitations. Th- ullt of I'riah H»rrman. » r«mrrr-»- deal bm '\u25a0\u25a0(••• fl!e«l rpyterdsv. dispose? of Jin *stat«» of "ovpr ty*>,M*K" nf wh*ch * coaaMsvansli amount Is arir^n to rkaii » . -• itkma On* rlaaaM in id* niil creates a trti3t fui>d of I ><>. th»- inromo -.• •Ma shall sfO to Mrs. Ro3*» tlcrrman. widow of David H»rrman, son of th«» testator. as long *)• she romain* a widow. Mr. Herrmari leaves to ten zrandrhUdren. *» ease tb»r« are that number at hi* d»ath. fto.ft'rt »a<:si. Should t!i"r» t-e mor<? or Je^s than t»i, i JtC«V*» i-" to be dtrid-d «>*jij»ilTarnonz them. Th«» charitahl" b*rjurs«ts are: Th» Beta Israel Hospital. JS.^*). th«? Kdurational Ai- lisnce. >2.t.«»; the Hebrew Technical \u25a0rhSMI for Boys. SI.MO; the Jewish Protectory. 51,0C»>; the Young Men's Hebrew a.-- \u25a0\u25a0i- tion. XI •»*>; the Hebrew Saratorium, (LOCO; the Hebrew '"•\u25a0\u25a0• School for GirU. SI.C(». and Urn United H«l»rew Charitie*, tUMK c DIED. Ale^and-r. iBasBM A. ' ' rtaaa Emma a "\ Black. Carafe S. Farr»t!. Mary A. Boynt»»n. Rirhard. Fats<\ Via. B. o-. ,-,n.- ~»muet. \u25a0v»>- \u25a0'- \tart> ?. Burke. Mai S. •:. F.ob*n». Victoria. ' t Butl-r. Mary A. Stir. Her. Alex:9 "\u25a0 Dbtis, James I*. CHAPITY BENEFITS IN WTT T. CONFIDENCE 'AT VATICAN- Cardinal Assures Pope of Victory Spain Not Hostile. Rome. A IS It—The Pop* received Cardf- ! nal Vi \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0"• y Tuto in ,i ;d"-r<-'- to-day. Tne7 I discussed ti)'» Spanish question at consid- erable length, ait.. the Cardinal assured the pontiff that al! reports from Spain indicated that It would be Imposslbl* f"?r Premier CSHsala|l to resist the attack.* which would b^ made against nim on th- reopeninsc of the Cortes, almost from all j quarters. The Marquis de »;onzaie«. who atsaurnM chare 1 ? of th«? Spanish Embassy at ih* Vatican on the withdrawal of. the Marquis fir <>je«u. has r»>'-«»ive<i Instructions to "*- n«>T> to Cardinal Han ial Val. the Papal Secretary of Stale, the a?suran<r<ri» thai thf Spanish jiovcrnment la not anima'*l bj- hostility to th"* Chun-h. but is only d-»- ab •! to maintain the r-K.:>* of the Mata az.«tn.-;t *><rU>p.',nmttr >n»-rf*«r»nr^ and that it will insist that the negotiation*, if con- tinued. nr.ist !•*> carried on wtthout th»" jrovernmTit Trithdrawlnc any of its pro- posal m»a?ur*^. , SPECIAL NOTICES- TO THE KMPI.OrKn. Do you want desirable help quickly? SAVE TIME AM' EXPENfE by con- suiting the file of applications of selected aspirants for position- of various kinds which has just been installed at the Up- town Office of nil KKW-YCHUE TRIBUNE. N.- 13»"i4 Broadway. Between Mlk and S7th —Ii Office hours. 9 a. in. to 6 p. m. i - NEW-YORK TRIBIST. SUBSCRIPTION RATES 1><«i!» Kdltioo. One « »nt In City of >«» York. •>*"'"'* <"'*!. and l | »t»»kf>a, ElM»wherr. Tiro Cent*. »nn«i»» Edition. Inrladlns «'i«d«T M»p- Tiiw Fly*> r»at*. In New York iti mall "•urM*rrlh*t« will f,* rhx'S'd ' cent p*r e«py ertr» p-«-«t»». Bj*« > HIKTION BY MAIL. r<»3ri\ll. Pall? . it mon»h *»> in l»aily. v r ** ar *°° Sunday. o»r yea» _ «x» Pall' tn>\ y'in&.tr, prr year "09 l)«llv and \u25a0"'n 'l<l per month 70 I'orclsn Po»t»se Eitr*. Official observation* of ITaMai stHt.« acatbai bureaus, taken at I p. \u25a0 yesterday. f. .!!,,« City. Temperature. Weather. Albany . . T^ «'sou<!y Atlantic i"uv _ 72 Cloudy Tloatoti as . '..uiiv Buffalo . . Tti i 'laar Chicago fi «lear n, a . nrteaas •»\u2666 flrar St. Louis «4 «loudy Wa»hin«ton 7-* Cloudy Loral mil. i.i. K«-or«!. \u25a0 ftillowins (ifflcUl record from the Weather Uurean shows the change* in th*- temperature for the la»t twenty-four hours, in comparison with the t:o aspasMhaaj date of la«t yea.-; it**.t!>io! moo. idio r. a. m «7 ~"\u25a0 •• m *4 7* ti a. aa ~- '.> p. m 1> v. m K~ 73 II p. m ...... f.^ 12 m. at T7 12 p. m SJ3 \u25a04 p. ni «rt 73' Highest temperature .•«\u25a0!.!.). m degrees (at i p. in. •: i...v-»t 71 (ai M p. m. »; aval azr. Ii aversee for rorrespoudint date his! \rnT. «V>; arerug* for corresponding dnti last thirty-three years. 72. I.o<-al forecast: To-day, showers. Thursday. p>»rflv cloudy; lleht to moderate northeast t»ni.i». becoming variable easts t»r SporMl I aeaHHce. -Tor fh« Pi«tr:.- -' '""olunibta and. East Pvniiarhra- nla, rartly cloudy to-dar »">' Thuridajr; light, northeast Winus. becoming variable. For N \u25a0 " Jersey. partly rloudy t"dit\ : abowera In aastai n {Kirtion; Thursday. partl> cloudy: light to moderate northeast winds, be- coming •. artaM- For Kaatern New York, partly cloudy to- day; showers In ntmae wats portion; Thur<- da>. partty cloudy; Itjtht '•\u25a0 moUerate north winds, b-'comlriff variable. Kf»r New Kn^'antt. p-irfly etoody to-day; showem in southeast portion; Thataoay, partly cloudy; moderate northeast wtadi 10-day, ex- cept brisk on the soiithonjit coast. For Western New York. partly clotidv to \u25a0!.»\u25a0 and Thursday; ahawera »ml roller niurasay in aaaa ponton; ugbi to moderate east winds l»-C4iminc variable. Official Record and Forr**a»t. Washington. An?. Irt.— Conditions ha-. B*SB BMSMtM since j^>nday ni^ht cast of the Rooky Mountains:, with "Slower' in ih* Atlantic Kates and s<-attrre<i thunderstorms in tke upp*r lake region and tJv* states west of th« Mississippi River. Ther*» ha? Ucn a decided rise m pre««ur<? over the North— v<*st, aecompani*J by cool*r weather, ami on Tuesday nisht t»mp«raiu: ft from 7 to 3 iipgr^«>s below th«» seasonal averasre. It ts \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 Dsiderablj cooler in the -rural Kooky Mi»un- tain region and the tern portion of the «-«'n- era) plains states. In Urn centra! valley* t>rr>- peratures \v»-re rather high, while m the At- Ir.iitic rtat they conthmed moderate. •>.\u25a0.>: of the Rr.. kv Mountains fair w?ather peisista. \u25a0rh low pressure and practical tm- ChMBSCd tpn;p^ratun ¥ !>. Th* northvest hl?1i prpssur» arfa will 3ilvanr*> !»outh«astwarii. at- fnd^J by nii-xleratf 1 \u25a0\u25a0 iperaturea WeesMa \u25a0 in th'- rfntral plains stat<*?. th«" •'\u25a0•• Missouri and uj-pt-r Mivsbwlppl valli'yj and westrrn uppvr take region, an.l \V#Hlne3<iay nt;ht or \u25a0- :i In th* Ohio Valley .in-! th«" r»-main<Jer of th» lake rvgirn. In the Atlantic stau-« hnrat< tera- p-sraturtis irlli Ultw .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0 \u25a0 -:.i - and Timrs- day. rhll« in the Northwest thry will .--;ain : tains by Thurscay. Th. re -.< ill l*» fbowpr< Wedn»^«lav aloni th» New Eneian.l «pri mlrldl* Atlantic stat^sVand [oral thun'lerstorms in the central and southern Rocky Mountain region. th« plains states and tho Missouri and upr^r Mississippi vallr\». •\u25a0> tending Wednesday nisht and Thurs-lay into th«» Ohio Vallry and the lake r«sci<>n In the Houth partly clouoy w"ath.»*- \u25a0rtll continue, with po^- siblj- so.nc f«-3ttered thundersi-rnis. Ka»r weather -'I 1I 1 r-r' > \ail Thursday nest ol the Mis- *is«tnpi R \u25a0 •" Th* winds along tbe N»H Bng md --.as' win b«> moderate northeast If east eic^pt brisk Hi llnaeila i alonsr the extr-m*' sO'jfhca*t por- tion; mWdl" 1 Atlantic cinjt. lleht it rnod-jr^f- northeast t,, •»*.<:«: south Atlantic »nd cast r-,.i7 eoaata. Haiti and rarlaW* wem GaM •m«. light to modem 'ast to southeast: on the lower lak<-s. light to moderate east, h"- .-.^niii>« rarlabl*. and on the upper lake*, tisrhf to modera'e sad variable, bveominaj norlh- v -«• St»am«ri fiep^rtin? \Vfdne»dj" for I ropna ports will hi". •> moderate northeast in -••• \u25a0wind?, with unsettled s'Jther. to fee Orand Banks Lack of Water Attributed to Severe Drouths and Little Snow. Lowell. Mass., Aug: 16. An unusual lowering of the water in Lake Wlnnipe- saukee, one of the principal sources of the Merrimac River, is shown by measure- ments made by the Lock- and Canals Company, of this city. Millions of spin- dles in the textile cities along: the Merri- mac in Massachusetts and New Hamp- shire are still largely dependent on water power, and the company has kept records of the condition of the lake and river for many years. On the locks and canals scale the lake when at its greatest height registers 41 inches; at present it shows only 19% inches, a lower tigure than ever before recorded. The lack of water hi at- tributed to the severe drouths of 190$ and IMS and, the small amount of snow last winter in New Hampshire. Officials of the company who have visit- ed Lake Wiaxdpesaukee state that the captains of the lake steamers are discov- ering rocks in their course of which they had not previously suspected the exist- ence, and that many of the cottagers are unable to reach their regular landings in their boats. THE WEATHER REPORT. LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE LOW Vicv/s Set Forth in Letter to Southern Commercial Con gress Accepting Invitation. in n letter to Charles Hall Davis, chalr- tnan of 'lie Southern commercial ceaMgfeaa to be held In Atlanta in the spring >\u25a0\u25a0 1!>IT. Theodore Roosevelt stated his vlevi on *h* fntur*" -olldlty of th«» South, ajyrt from the political aspect of th» wibjact Bs sravc out he letter yesterday at the "Outlook" of- fices. Incidentally he tentative!] accepted the Invitation Is speak before th« eaaMCraai aaq Ing that In his trip to California mtXi Maid] he «\pectrtl to p«??! throaajh th« South; and if daft anal place rould *>* arrant*;! satis- fit<nor!ly he would be ?Jad to »pe=»k In he- half of th«» Southern ronwnerrto] m»-»v»m"nt. The rnisundcrjtandlntr »boi;t Ism South, Mr. Rooeeireli wrot». was dtaappaartaai and the old south of yesterday. h*» said, was (\u25a0••in? changed into th- % Tounsr America of to-day. ''Every pjsod American aaasn h<?r? to s«* a real wild South." he wrote, "In th" mM of son., business prosperity in the South ; for all good Americans now r?ali/.*' thai tb<3 prosper!^ of any part of the country; helps th« prosperity of th« whole ' .To the young men of th« v South especially Mr. Roosev«|i addressed the messat*, ay- ins: they should look forward and not bark-* Arard, though at Ibe «M Haw krepinz In mind «nd heart th» m"mory of th» deeds of their heroes! "The statue of Of SIS) Left In ( onfed^r- at» uniform, stands in the halls of Congress to-day." he wrote, "and his memory Is hon- ored no more by the South than It is by the North ; and in the North as in the South alike i think we are now learning to apply absolutely in good faith the er^at words Of Grant, 'T^et v? have peate ** . Mr. Roosevelt pr*dict^d in Us l»tt*T that tho sreat material advancement of the South in the last twenty yean Would >* surpassed greatly in the n»\ r twenty year?, and that th" resources of the South would put that s?cti3n from now on in much ie same position relative to the country's de- velopment that the Weal had occupied for years past. "The East has the Atlantic and riie Weal the Pacific.' he wrote: "the South even more than the East or the West will have the Panama Cana;. and wiD therefore stand at the distributing peinl or all tM great ocea;:« of the world.' More people were needed in the Sooth, he continued, but th* need was also that those people should be of the right sort. "There are opportunities for literally millions of opportunity seekers hi the South, provided these opportunity seekers are the right men to srasp the opportunities that will be offered." Mr. Roosevelt wrote "Feeling this way, I naturally sympathize most cordially with every purpose of the Southern commercial congress in its efforts to make the South know Itself and to make both the South and the nation realize that a greater nation will be developed from the development of a greater South." SEES GREAT PROSPERITY The Land of Opportunity Is There, Mr. Roosevelt Writes. omcr.3. MAIN nrfiri No ''\u25a0» N'aswio «tre»r. WALL STKEET OFFICE- No. I* WHU*m *tr»«t. UPTOWN OFKI»"K— No. J3«» D«r>a.iwaj-, cr n/ Anwrtmn r>Htrl«-t Tf!-tm»rh OtT!o. HARLEM OFFICES-N-. IST East 125 th str^-r No. 2<C« \V«t 12T'th street and No. West W^IIIN^TTON* BUREAU— XVwtory Ituilding. NEWARK BnAXt'H OFFICK-Fr*U*rtc* N, i. nul .,, r vo 734 Broad street. AmSuCANS ABKOAD Kill toJ THE TKI»- TiHI'»?SEI S Xo. tKJ Montacui? de la Ccur. LONOOX-Oeiee of THE •RIBS NX. at Imo^m * Inn Hou»* N* -\u25a0 Strand. JLiMrlcao Express Company. N<x 6 llayoar- Tlmwu cook a Son. Tcurist one*. lassjM mo^^hlrl^y A t-o^ m m Pa!J it** Swv^r Brothers. No. . 1-othburj. ThVtonJcn otSc« Ol THE TRIBI'XK is ->» roa- vruient'rtoce to l«?av« BSSMSM and aub- "'"'p'v'ia^-John Munro* Jt Co.. Xo. 7 Rao Scribe Juhn Waiiamalter. No. 1 I Hue SSI !*vt!i«a E4-urt««. __ Kasi>- \u25a0saasjßk No. \u25a0"•-'• Rue Carrhoa. Morgan, Maries ot Co.. Xc. -- Boute\ant Hauaimann. Credit i-v«jn:u*i». Bureau -tcs LtraaseTiu I Continental Hotel Newsstand. .-*«.\u25a0••<\u25a0\u25a0•' \u25a0* X«ws Exchange. No. » R.« 3t- Georre- * . American Express Company. No. 11 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 S.i \u25a0 _ Br»ntano'«- ESS M Avenue -. I Oper*. Xtrt:—<*re«itt I.>onn»«». GCXBV.V LorabartJ. Ossm a Co. and Union PLOJ;EN('E Fr*n«*h. Umon & Co.. N«»s i and » Via Tournabuoni. Maiiiuy Jt «0.. lUnkera. M!U.*X— Sa«rba«*»'« News Exrnans". Vi% t* Monforte, t3.\. i,\MH( American fasmsfl >'oa«M> l K»> a sJatsriataui F. C. WHITNEY'S PLANS. F. (\u25a0 Whitney. who sails to-day on the r.usltania, «iii produce "The Chocolate Soldier" at the K.vrlc Theatre, London, on September 10, with cast made up entirely of English singers. A wee* after the opera is launched in London Mr. Whitney will return to thi.s country to devote himself to the production of his new opera, "Baron Trenck." which will open at the Lyric Theatre in Philadelphia on October S> nnd rome directly 10 New York for i run. While abroad Sir, Whitney will inspe. i the production of "Baron Trerck" in m>iitn. and Tie also expects to c!ose options on several now opera for early production bars> HELPING THE GOOD WORK ALONG. From the Jamestown »N. V.) Post. For a jrreat many years The >.\u25a0"• YorW Tribune has don* a noble work in sendtnz, to the country thousands of children from the tenements of New York for a brief pe- riod In order that they misfit taste for a w »i>|{ or bo the jors of country life. The number averaces i>.'"''l"i >.'"'' l " annually. This year I ie been net exception to th«» rule.- bin the appeal Is rill made for money and for hoarding places for the little one. There it no end to the pood that can he done in this way. In the weeks ihat still remain before the schools open thousands of "kids"' can f l^ ma lo happy If the necea* !»ar> mMn.« are forthcoming. The Rev. John Bancroft Devlna, who takes charg«> of the work for The Tribune, some time .ik« Issued an appeal to the press of the state nu^Restinp that a committee of public spirited people of each town sectiro invitations for girls or boys under twelve nnd a half years old. The transportation expenses are entirely paid from the Fresh Air fund raised by The Tribune, so that the boats Incur no other expense than the board of the children. The youngsters are subjected to medical examination and are thoroughly bathed before being Bent out from New York. This is ho practical and appealing; a movement thai Southwestern Xew York ought to do Its share in prov'kl- ins boarding places. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. Tart of th* proceeds \u25a0•' a van-].-, ill*, m t-rt«,nm«nt given in Morton v,mi ' through Robblns Batteil Sto*ckei n*uwi Mr, Albert X smtley. hSSS Lafc Locust Grove' ainiaV ' School! i Ra!,^;-' '"""' «n i-\ thro««i J- K. Williams.... "" ,^ Mn=. Robert Endlcott mrl Mary k. Rogers. Quoirue. i/mtr inland " 25 1*> "In memory of .1. Fi. w . . £fl "Th« little fairies of tho crass."' \v a «h'-. "' ipsrion. Conn. : Helen Wersebe. presi- dent: .Janoy Woodruff, secretary an.l treasurer; \u25a0• rlub to which some' little i girl? belong; tht parpen being to hetp i the Fund trltli n-hat they rai* from ; dues and rvtl)f>rv.-i.*<» io©| "Madaline. Alice ami Rosalind" ..".."" IB 1O h. b. a \u25a0..'.. '^,'h, From children of I^andscaoc avenue] South fonkers, N v . •_; >«> Joseph "li.iffy. a former Fr<\ih Air boy" :, i>f\ James Etaadel .-; <t>« "ftoslvn" -• ihi A. P. Tral^r . 500 "Kindly omit name" {>*. I>. IT > ses> I t* K. 2 0") I H. A. O. Abb-. Somere. <"onn . c." "Kindly do not acknoxrl«dg« this with i donor" n*m» throuerh The THbone*".. SO 6O Mrs John S. Kennedy, Bar Harbor. M*. SO 00 Mr= A B Led«tuc, < *ornn-all-on-Hud- son. .V. V \u25a0-•'• <*> \V If TV.. ir 1" <v * J. M Town. '\u25a0>'' Orange N. .1 ....... 2.- 00 "In mpmory of •'• 11. S.*' \u25a0'\u25a0• '"> H. H. Gardner. New Rocbelle. NT. 1 do Previously acknowledged 20.082 831 Total August 1«. 1!H ( > C9.SB«2s Contributions, preferably by cheek, money or express order, should b«- mads payable to the order of the Tribune Fresh Air Fund and* mailed to Th- Tribune, New York. Public Appreciation of New Hopes and Aspirations That Grow in Little Hearts. The proof of the puddin* is in the eating The approval of one partaker, however, is not enough to settle beyond question that the pudding is good. But when many have eaten and agree that the flavor is pleasant and that the after effects are beneficial he would be \u25a0 caviller Indeed who would de- mand still further proofs. Hundreds of thousands of ehildrea have gobbled in. -the expression Is true to life— a sburo of Tribuaw Freso Air Fund ptiddln*. patte.l * certain resjioa of their juvenile anatomies and are smackinc their lips and asking for more. That ought to prove it a good pudding. But there are other tea* monials of \u25a0 .slightly different and lew Massed nature that a good press agent would bring forward. Best of all they come— like all testimonials, of course—en- tirely unsolicited It would seen not only that the padding Is pleasant, but that the doctors recommend it. Says "The Rochester <N. V.» Democrat and •'"hrpiiicle": ••The New-York Tribune has for years been engaged In the meritorious and alto- gether worthy work of sending children of th» N^w Tort tenements to the country for a short time during the not reason. mose observers of the little peopl<* who have in years past enjoyed these country outings 6< s more than mere physical and mental enjoyment by the participants. They come back to their city environment with renewed health and what is fully as important, a knowledge of the pure and beautiful things in nature, which gives them new hope.v and aspirations." The following letter is written from a little different point of view, but it en- forces the same idea: i "A Good Word for the Fresh Air Chil- I dren A sweet faced lady passing through a car filled with happy children returning i to New York smiled at some of the little sririo. One of them turned to her seat- | mate? saying: 'Shove up there and give this i lady a seat!' As there were three occu- pants already the lady did not share tnat seat, but she appreciated the courtesy and i believes the Tribune Fresh Air method jis teaching thoughtfoJaess for others. "Albany. Aug. 11. 1910. ALBANY." The editor of "The Skaneate!es (N. V.) ; Democrat"' see;- in the Fresh Air work po- tential selt-preservation for the dwellers ! outside the metropolitan limits: "There is no more' pathetic feature of life i in the bis congested cities than the children of the stairways, fire escapes and smelly alleys and pavements, who do not know the blue sky and fresh, green grass and trees. In our own metropolitan city this I condition exists to a greater extent than jin any of the other lar^e cities, and it Is a condition that is operative in effect on all the state, since the functions of the urban and interurban population are In- terdependent in government, politics, com- merce and society. On the surface it may seem that a great city like New York should, take care of its own sores, and that properly its own burdens and welfare should be borne by itself. But this is a narrow view for citizens of this great state to take. "The welfare of the cities and country is bound up together in the march of destiny What reacts harmfully on either affects both harmfully, directly or indirectly, and the Indirect evil, not being plain, Is per- haps the more dangerous. "The New-York Tribune's Fresh Air Fund is doing a glorious work by sending each summer thousands of tenement chil- dren to the country." Eager to taste of the pudding which the Tribune Fund has provided for them 196 children left the city on Monday and 104 on Tuesday, while to-day 283 will follow their example. AH were bound for ?re - Pn- land-not the cold, beak one that has Its initial letter capitalised, but a verdant flower adorned greenland, where the ap- Pies are ripening and the crystal streams invite to bathe. The Rev. Dr. John Bancroft Devins manager of the Tribune Fund, is to-day visltins St. Helens Home. .her, . ££ dred Tribune children are being entertain^. GOOD WORDS FOR THE WORK Beneficial Effects. Too. Follow the Fresh Air Outings. EDWARD S. WRIGHT. Cleveland, Aug. 16. Edward S. Wright, author and retired newspaper man, died litre to-day »after an Illness of Meverai weeks following an operation. He was the .-\u25a0•ii of the late E. I*. Wright, superin- tendent of the Western Union Telegraph Company ! "'"' many y«ars. Mr. Wright en- tered newspaper work twenty-five years .i: \u0084 was on tiie staff of 'Th« New York Sun" and 'The Xew York Times." editor of "The 81 Louis Chronicle" and at the time of his retirement some years ago was manager of \u25a0 newspaper syndicate His wife, who survives htm, was Misa McCue. of MaflflHlbn. Ohio. DR. CHARLES FAHLBERG. Bad-Nassau; Oermany. Atts. 1 *'..--Dr. Charles I-'ahtbeCff. •- noie.l chemist, died lu-n to-day. 11,,1 1,, was . |. .. t:i>-dlscoverer wlti'i IM. I. a Hem \u25a0\u25a0! saccharin. THE REV. DR. JAMES F. BRODIE. Boston, Aug. i•> The Rev. Dr. James F. Brodlc. for many years prominent in Con- gregational pulpits and for the last two years connected with th« editorial depart- ment of th** American Board of Commis- sioners' for Foreign Missions, died at a private hospital In th< Jamaica Plains dis- trict 'to-day. Dr. Brodk- was born in Hammond, N. V., in 14".".\,I 4 ".". \, and \u25a0was gradu- ated from Hamilton College in 1&76 and Union Theological Seminary in IBBJ For several years he was treasurer of Flak University^ Nashville. The degree of Doc- tor of Divinity was conferred on him by Hamilton College in 1901. The burial will take place at Gouverneur, N. V., his boy- hood home JAMES E. HURLEY. Topeka, Kan., Aug. '. 6. A cable dis- patch from Carlsbad, Austria, announces tho death to-day of .lames E. Hurley, gen- eral manager of the Santa Fe" Railroad He was at Carlsbad for his health. Death resulted from heart disease. James E. Hurley was born in 1860 at Wapello. lowa. He bad a high school and normal school education, and In 1880 entered the railway service with the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Ft Railroad. He went through the various stages of brakeman, baggageman, clerk, agent and trainmaster, until, in 1891, he was made assistant superintendent at Marcellne, Mo. In 1901 lie became superintendent of the New Mexico and Rio Grande division, while from October of that year to July, 190-', he acted as the general superintend- ent of tlie Western grand division, at La Junta, Col. Mr. Hurley became general manager of the Atchison. Topeka & Sant^ FS Railroad": on May 1. I*os OBITUARY. The first play thai will be enacted upon the stase of the New Blackstone Theatre, Chicago, which is to be jointlymanaged by Charles Frohmatv and Klaw & E«rlanger, will be William 11. Crane in George Aden "U. 8. Minister Jackson." The theatre will open on November 13. Richie Ling was engaged yesterday by Charles Frohman for one of the principal parts in the G. P. Huntley-Hattie Williams company, which is to play the comedy, "Decorating Clementine." The Shuberts announce that "Miss Patsyv" with Gertrude Quinlan. the first Henry W. Savage production to "nave its metropolitan presentation at a Shubeft house, will open at Nazirhova's Thirty-ninth Street Theatre on Monday eveninjr, August 29. Madame X" will begin Its second year in this city at the Lyric Theatre.' beginning with the matinee on Labor Day,' Monday. September 5 "The Arcadian.-. " now playing at the Knickerbocker Theatre, will move to the New York Theatre on August 2?. to make way for "Our Miss Gibbs." which will re- ceive its first presentation in this country on the same date. THEATRICAL NOTES. Henry B. Harris began his management of Jackson's Theatre, at Bridgeport, '"onn.. last night by presenting Edgar Belwyn's four-act comedy. "The Country Boy." \> it'; » cast which included Willnette Ker- shaw. Mrs. Stuart Robson. Forrest Winant, Arthur Shaw and Carolyn Elberts. After a two week?' preliminary tour this plaj will come to the Liberty Theatre en August 2J. Frank Lacy, an Kr,s!i?!i actor, and Ed- « \u25a0 . Fitzgerald, a London stage director. arrived yesterday on the Kronprhuteasin Cecilie to join the forces engaged by Henry W, Savage for his forthcoming production of "The Little DamoaeL" STOCK COMPANY FOR FOX Changes Plan as to Vaudeville at Academ}' of Music. William Fox, who leased the Academy " r Music last spring for a term of years at ftOO.OOO a year, has decided to abandon his plan ti Introduce vaudeville and moving picture* into thai lii.<=tori<- house. He "ill establish a stork company similar to that •if Corse Payton, who wfll end his ten weeks' engagement at the Academy on August -7. Mr. Foxs change of plans Is due so the success of the venture of Corse Payton, who. n is said, lias made (40,000 »\u25a0\u25a0 th« Academy during Hie summer month . Mr. r'.-.\ i-,.,.- secured as stage manager J. Gordon Edwards, formerly associated in <i similar capacity with James K. Hacketi ar the Hackett Theatre, and for the last five years manager of th< Sub- urban Gardens. St. Louis. Me has en- gaged as members of his company Edward Lynch, former leading man of the Belasco Stock companies in San Francisco and Los Angeles: John Dwyer, who la wen known in the South a.- an actor of •heavy" parts: George V. Riddell. an English character player; Join; .1 Kennedy and De Witt Mewing. He has also secured Mis? Pris- cilia Knowles, a Western actress, as lead- ins voman. ami Miss Corinne Cantwell, Florence Gerald. Alice Riker and other.-. •Mr. Fox will begin this fall season on August 29 with "The Girl ILeft Behind ate," in which Miss Knowles. Anna Hollin- ger, George V. Ridden, Edward Lynch and John Dwyer wfll have the- leading parts. Theodor Wolf, editor of the "Ta;e- Watt," who makes the .announcement, ;.1 Is that lio .learns King: George and Queen Mary of Great Britain, the Queen .Mother Alexandra; and Emperor William and Empress Augusta of Ger- mttny have agreed to ad *;» patrons of the fund. Sir Ernest Cassel, though a British subject, has retained his interest in bis native land. J He was born In Cologne, the son of a German banker, In 1832, and in addition to his English knight- hood he wears the order of the Crown of Prussia, first class, one of the highest Gorman decorations. A MILLION DOLLAR FUND Sir Ernest Cassel's Plans to Aid Poor Emigrants. Berlin. Auc. !•». -sir Ernest Cassel, the English financier, has arranged, ac- cording to an announcement made here to-day, to establish a foundation of $1,000,000. the income from which is to be used for the benefit of poor Germans r-e^king employment in England and British subjects seeking work in Ger- many. The now foundation will be in memory of the late Kinpr Edward of England, who was a friend of Sir Ernest an i with whom the financier I:.! been closely associated for many years. He was among thr last persons to be received by the late King before his death. Secretary Meyer arrived this morning on the dispatch boat Dolphin, ami he will re- main until Friday afternoon. He has many invitations in the cottage colony, but he cam** especially : " Inspect tli»- -••'•• ships of th^ fleet which he '''" not have lime to look ovei at Provincetown last week. He wat a t,'i:e*i at the naval re- ception this 1 1' i noon and will be present a! all the larjfe affalrw to be given m honor of Rear Admiral .Sehrocdet. During tli" day about fwtir thousand men froii' the warships were ashore, ,:..| "'' s afternoon ml pvenn igh< hundred ol fnom mfre the guests \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Mi i Hermann riHiidi* .i H vamlevlllr entertainment; Others will l.i sitnilar^- entertained each ... - ; \u25a0\u25a0: ' From Armsea. Hall the officers were hurried over to the naval training station to attend s reception and dance given by Rear Admiral Raymond Perry Rodgers and the officer* of the Newport naval station This was an elaborate affair, fully five hundred. Including many <«f the cottaße colony, being present Rear Admiral and Mrs. Rodgers received at the foot of the steps of Barrack B and presented the su«:sts to Rear Admiral and Mrs. Bcbn ->i- r The Interior of the barracks, where <^.. reception was held, was decorated with lla?s and flowers, the ensigns of all nations having places on the walls. After the reception there was dancing, and then a buffet luneheSn was served. Th« hours for receiving were from 1 to 7 The naval officers wore their blue -• via uniforms and white caps, and the army ofllcers wore full dress. Admiral Schroedcr and Others Guests of the Hoffmans and Admiral Rodgers. [By Tei'jtrai \u25a0'! v - T1 >A Tribune.] . Newport, Aug. 16.— Rear Admiral Seaton Schroeder and tlio offl< era of the At- lantic fleet were k<n«t on.the fro this after- noon an<) evening, but if was "\u25a0\u25a0'thing to what if In store for them Mr. and Mrs Charles F. Hoffman pave a luncheon for them at Armsea Hall, which a large nurn- l;rr of Lhc members.; of the villa colony al"°o attended. FLEET OFFICERS KEPT ON GO Prince Louis Poniatowski, who married Miss Helen Elizabeth Sperry, of California. was alsr. on board. Tho prince will be a guest of Char Stillman, the banker, brother of .Tames Stillman. during a brief stay. Th<- prince Is prominent in Parisian financial circles. He will return on the same steamship when sh« next sails. Duke Franz Josef ju a nephew of the prince regent The possibility that he may ever ascend the throne is rather remote. The duke's father was the r>uke Kar] Th'o- «;or. nntfd for his contributions to the vari- ous branches of optical science. Karl Theodor v,;is one of the most skilled oculists in Europe. He died, and Franz Josef suc- ceeded him In (lie year 1909. Among the passengers was Countess Georg Wrdel. whose husband Is <*harß6 a'Affalres of the German Embassy at Washington. Count Wedel was at the pier to meet his wife. Th« duk< will oe In town at T ii r Ho""! Plaza for a few days onlj before he de- parte for Newport. Later he "ii; go to Chicago. Seattle, San Francip<-<-> and other Western cities •"f > t>irnin£ on October 15. Conversation *~ r;iiii veering toward the possibility thai Duke F"ranz Josef might de- cide i" rhoos< and tak< \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 an American duke became grimly bland and evaded the Issue by declaring that really to formia persona] "pinion «f American young women had been \u2666\u25a0x- j brief and Car apa t, and that he \u25a0 \u25a0• _ irrying, anyway. H p -i marriage could out Inciting his countrymen to civil «a r or involving him In le?a! compli- .: \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0. serious natui \u25a0 . \u25a0 \u25a0 | : yon Lossow, of .< rman am Wh»n asked by the reporters why he was here rml how long be was going to stay anil whether be expected to marry an American ciri before sailing away, the duke was engagingly bland. He replied, with quiet self-possession, that his Inclinations ran more to yachting an-! to hunting of quite another sort. He fon3 of hunting, he Bald, «n<] hoped to discovi - sonx of the rear sport nut West. The crew were proud, but their saluta- tions meant a lot of work.' Before reaching the pie: newspaper re- porters bad received distinct assurances I from the dpke himself that he had not come to America with the intention of askinpr any American woman to share his name. The duke might have been a chorus girl or the president of a railroad— he was so equable durin? the interview. It was as though he had been warned not to be sur- prised. He la only twenty-two years old. His English Is nearly free from accent and his clothes entirely bo. There is, in fact, noth- ing: in his appearance to suggest that when he travels on a big boat his full name is placed at the head of the list, all by itself. There is everything in his manner to in- dicate that the duke would be as cheerful were it not so. Josef Michael Karl Maiia Evariste Quiri- Lkai Pi he House of Perceval, founder of th^ fortune? of th*= Tlou^p tfPErcpvai. of which Lord Esrmont Is the rial may !\u25a0>*> said to havp W-^n Richard Jtoeval, rtri< of th<; -.•\u25a0\u25a0. of th* txxt Lord Rurlpieh. tli" famous P^cr**- trry of ?tsip of Qm?*>t) Klizab*»tVi. Tn 1."56. Ppairi v.as secretly preparing' to dpal t-Qfadb. blow to F^nzland \u25a0re'ith thp intincJ- Iteuuiiiada, an English ship captured a f»m£>h v.-.sol bound from «^adiz to the. SXsiian«?f=. on which w»»rp found a num- fcw of \u25a0writtpn in cipher. Those «t sstrrntt*«j to T»rd Burleiph and by i:rrrf:m*<j pvt to Richard Perceval, who \u25a0fs*- rorcessfu] in «s°riphTine thr-m. when '&•••.\u25a0 n-pi-f. found :o <-r>nTfiir! all sort? of taaife concerning the in and projects "' the rnt«>nd*d invasion of England. In *irt. rhfs*- dispatches conveyed to the '*>zk Queen arid jo r«<r celebrated pre- oiw th" f.rsi authentic n^^F about the f??Tiis!i Armada, and enabled th^m to TStk*- rhf n«>c»s.sar>' preparation? for Ihe feftace ol th« kmkdom. Throucrh this 'tiir.e Perceval \u25a0won the <jueen's favor, and r< W! tnat niompnt his fortune- was mad*. ffil fon. Sir Philip Perceval, was a very '-*?iiT?ui. c h»o statf-fltian dtirins the rr-lsm ti Jsnief |. n liof* £rood nil] h^ rnjoyed to f£> «ii that he received a grant «• rnorf Tiian « };undred thousand acre* \u25a0 sor.. :n turn. John Pcrcev«i. stood •Jagh if the good graces of 1 \u25a0 rftes II ™>t h* latter not merely conferred upon » baronetcy of !rrlan<l. hut likowiF? 5 -*"<l a T<-r:iark2lj'«- and uniqtj* 1 proviso to f : tasen»>d In t'tr* patent to the effect that NfWen son of th« holder «f the baronetcy '^in hf created a S.aronrt ir his own :**£^nrtag hip lifetime en attaining his Down io the reisrn of Kin? jrr ** IV Th«> *»;rj»-<:» «tnn of every haronot * ft? nrh! ti demand th«* honor of 1 . froni th« ...... on attaintns; his '^•-firn birthday, a rule which was a* ay with Jost before Qi3»»»n A'irtnria * sajc to thf ihrr>n". T?ut in- Perceval ri ?T!*!«-v uc ,n T.-iprE«l 1n \u25a0 \u0084...-•\u25a0.' - Sr n r-^ if: ih^ orily on* in oxiMon-' 1 which ? j^-ikje.c T v, B yrari of a ww baronetcy •* tn« eMest so»> of a baron*>r nhile th«> ?***i* j^iiil Jivinz. *0* Tr^ 1 *"^ r<J r Tr!A!1 '- Wm* add in con- H<->'° n ' ' ** tx^^-hertoew of th" Right sp^n-cr Perceval, who, trhlle Pr^niiT, in the lobhy of the Hou:* 1 T< ; n isii_ On ,. ;j Unt jr«d «.nd 8^ P*>*lously on* of hi? ttn«-estors - -Hr>h~ Tt pereeral, a famous duellist, was \u25a0T*"*»t«c: h] the strnnd by murderers *^ identity ne v-er discovered. ftrng George's Crown Equerry. Ufcrt? r '* rr ' rSf ' 9 - r<iw * crown «»querry Is Cap- 2> Me H<m. Charles I-'itzwilllam, who was fcSf**" " f the stables when Prince of £7** The rrown equ«rrj'. who also re- ftral '" th ° Kb of dexk marshal, was "^y Etyled gentlemaa of the BStSBI in r to fitetinrcish him from his chief, the )££* °1 the horse - He ranks next to the jj^, ' his place, when absent, in pr«- Sbj? *\u25a0'\u25a0"" aII tatters relating to th '' royal *e».T f iISS superintendence of all the \^f" s "-.';— therewith, swears in its Rhtr\! ° S=laJs - and the senior of a.ll th«; *j«« % ? Utrri *' s' The poFl * s a ver3 ' a S rt ' fe " *• J*?' ' itnd oarries with it emoluments to !f **.' m <»f bom* 17,500 a year, including V '^'faed .'jouse. which stands or, the rujht £^f* t ? ray ... into the royal tsta- * l B '-ckingiiam Palace. The crown Sj~J y ha *' also th " ukp of thC royal car- Ti H . b^ 3J5d h<>rses. v:n!ike tlie master of ! on a? V^° chan ?c? «"!th the administra- jfci C " vrow*«3'jerry is a perrrwtnent offl- H^and p lr Henry Ewari who ha« just t-,^ y'" tx>*U h*!d it throughout th" (^li" Virzwi! »*ni «»* for.n^rly in th- '•-' '• \u25a0'» , * Ou * r<5 ' i - «** an nid<--d?-<-amp J *«i* LSL Sl * lj " r<l ni^" n v!i< >l«rri»y *>f l^jSr^Js^? *suerry ->~<i master of the \u25a0*•*!• tht prticnt Kins ius Prince of AGAINST THE NAME OF HARRIMAN Alt-any. Ausr. 16.— Peter Turner, on behalf of himself and other -\u25a0..;•.\u25a0• of Turner. Omnuf County, has entered a complaint with the Public Service Commission against the Krir- Railroad Comparry -hanains tl» nani» «ji" Turner Ration on its li:if to Mar- riman. The railroad company has twenty dayo in which to file an answer. ENGLISH PASTOR CALLED. Plainn>W. Conn., Auz. H^-The Rev. Fred crick Bamford. of Lancashire. England, win h^nm* p*c t*>r of «h<» Firrt nonpreßa- tioi. c-hurch here on September :;. having recent!} accepted thf rail NEW YORK FROM THE SUBURBS. \u25a0\u25a0-.;,' -•\u25a0•\u25a0 storks wet* recently brought from Boron* 10 New York. Trnst they ...,. t<. be if loose on upper Fifth avenue and rei.tral Park K'e»l Th- Eaa s^ide h*s plenty now. Syracuse Pout-Standard. A Western wrestler choked to death simultaneously two men who had attacked him. ofling his arms on one and his \f-z* ... the other. Thai B«ems to be as jjood as iiu jitsu. What a man l>»- WouUl "'\u25a0 for \u0084 Sunday barge excursion in "\u25a0• » \ork Harbor!— Troy Times. r>iIn—lrl this crime [the shooting of GaynorJ was committed In New .l«-rsey, a state which with all it» faults is never- theless noted for its ' oroughgoing, prompt dispensing of justice. The coun- try learned with relief of the fact that Gallagher was the prisoner of Me» York's neighbor and not of New York itself, for it has s^-en i ..... many tnal i of justice miscarrying in the metropolis to be con- fident of the result of the trial of such a case within the New York Jurisdiction.-^ Washington Star. ~' : A man who 9UOt lived free in New York City ha* went a dollar to the "conscience fund." Lots of other folks have gone to Xew York, bu^ th'-y never found free liv- ing Usually it coat more to live a rj!;n- ist*- in New York than a ear elsewhere. So perhaps it Is worth a dollar to pet something for nothing over ... Phila- delphia Times. In New York the last dime museum has closed Us doors for lack of patronage There \u25a0re -'i many political freaks run- ning at large on tlie streets that people will no longer pay money to see such things Chicago News. One reason why people don"t go to church inNew York in the summer is liiat -\u0084 man places of. worship are closed. Whether New York pastors have found that it doesn't ps lo k*«=p churches *>]> en Jn ihe summer, or »ii^y f»«<»i that conffrc; gationw may take S vacation at thi.s sea- son of Ui« y«ar «^ w*-U :ts preachers; Isj no< knoivii. Certaii ii is that m appai- *>i:tJy unnecessary number i.f >po)itan counties are !tot availablejfor purposes of worsnip diirlns the warm »?atii'.r. l'itts- butS t'azet it- Tune*. Humphreys and the friend he had with him in his automobile had no intention of trying to outdo old Israel; In fa^t. they did not even know that they were riding down the historic steps, for both of them, Humphreys Mr th^ wheel, were pound asleep. They iia<i driven ill the way from Boston, and both were greatly fatisu'-d. They were clojse to tho foot of the hill wh<"n the machine, travelling at a good rato of speed, dashed into a telegraph pole The pol<\ which was an old nr.f and partly rotted, snapped off about six fret from tho .... an<l fell, narrowly miss- ing th* 1 two men. NY-it her man was; thrown from the machin". nor wav either injured. The front of the machine, however, w;is badly damaged. Humphreys admitted he was asleep, having just dozed off when th<> machine struck the polo, His friend had l-een iis'Tp some tim<-, with h's h'-'a'l \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. Himipbreyss's should* r DUPLICATE PUTNAM'S RIDE But Steed Is Auto. Which Hits Pole, Waking Tourists. f By T«»T«>irraph The Tribune! Greenwich. Conn., Aug. 16. Jan.es Hum- phrey?, a young N>w Yorker, met with a curious nrrid«»nt to-day while driving down Putt's Hill, rh<* s<-«*ne «,f General Putnam's hairbreadth ride down the Eton steps, and had an Ps<apf •" \u25a0•\u25a0- death which was no l<\=s remarkable than that of th« Revolu- tionary patriot. 1 Next to the Hon. Robert comes the Hon. I Henry Bere.sford. formerly a captain in j the 33th Hussar?, ho also married one ;of the •'girls from Kay's,"' who as Kitty j Gordon was a gr^a 1 favorite, with Lon- don theatregoers. There are no children born of this onion, and it would eeem a? if the Decies peerage was bound to co ulti- mately to the Hon. William Beresford, who is married to an American girl, a Miss Florence Miller, daughter of G. L. Miller, of Providence. They are living together now on the Bowness. Kane 1 -, near Cal- cary. in Canada. MARQUISE DE FONTEXOY. i X \- in lino a* heir to the baron} which | is an Irish one and carries with it no scat in i the House of Lord?, is the Hon. Robert de ! la Peer Beresford. who married Delia O'Sul- I livan. of The Grant, Killame}". who had ! made a great bit in "The Girl from Kay's." ! He was a special newspaper correspondent ! durinjr the South African war, had no \u25a0money with which to support a wife and | \u25a0was gazetted as a bankrupt, with the re- sult that the fair Delia was forced to re- ! turn to the footlights. Two years ago she 1divorced him after some rather sensational I scenes at the Norfolk Hotel, at Brighton. [and within a fortnight of the decree being i made final secured the hand and the title 01 young: Sir Charles Huntingdon, who has a beautiful country place, known as Astley Bank, in Lancashire: a London home, known as The 'lock House, on the Chelsea Embankment, and a considerable fortune inherited from his father, who was the hr-ad of \u25a0 srrpat wailpaper syndicate and who secured a Saronetcy through his lib- eral contributions to the Unionist party ; fund?. PRAISES A SOLID SOUTH i\KAV-Y<_>lU\ 'DAILY I IM HirNE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST it 1910. FUDir EATERS' PROOFS DUKE HERE Fi THE HUNT I'uko Franz Josef of Bavaria arrived on the steamer Kronprlnaessin Cecili>. of the North German LJoyd line, yesterday. The s;intc vessel r>\<n brought a prince and a countess. but most of the strain upon the captain tnd Ma crew resulted from the presence on hoard of Duke Franz More Interested in Hunting Big Game and Yachting- than in the American Girl. 7

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Page 1: chroniclingamerica.loc.gov · WILL TRAVEL IN THE WEST Francis Joseph of Bavaria Seif-Possessed and Bland. DUKE FRAXCIS JOSEPH OF BAVARIA. Who arrived hero yesterday. 1 tr«MB, so

WILL TRAVEL IN THE WEST

Francis Joseph of Bavaria Seif-Possessed and Bland.

DUKE FRAXCIS JOSEPH OF BAVARIA.Who arrived hero yesterday.

1 tr«MB, so that he has had plenty of expert- Ii>n"'- which will he of c^at advaatage in jIUiaaiSLUilu with the coronation. v he,, the :jduty of providing .-arriasres for all the for-!"iKn Koyattteai and <rr r̂i,,i amfaasa»«orß !j \u25a0 iia« to l..'nd,-m Tor the ceremony will1jmake a very heavy iaasaaaal upon the royal]Etablcs. Captain ntxarttHatn is an uncl" or 1

jthe present i^r.i "Itawtnkun, ana >."cond inthe line of succession to the iatter'a aarj- j

j lirm'- other honors nd extensive estates,j He is married to a daughter or the lateHenry Brrirkifasaaai. a . cousin of QueenAlexandra's equerry. General Brocklehurst,and •>! .o.mir Sir Philip BrtMkleharst who

;

j was second in command of Sir I'nieat j| Shackletaa's expedition to the So\itn Pole.j Although the rHaanlllaißßii claim descent !j frem a \S"ii!ia::: Fltzwilli&rn who was a

\u25a0 rttrsin t?j Kin? Edward toe Confessor, Hi?Ifortunes of the family may be said •> have|hern founded •\u25a0\u25a0 his !iamo?Bko and de-

'

j arnaiiaiil who was Sheriff or London InIthe rei;m of Hetiry VIIIand a jrreat frien<ljof CarOJnal AVolrey. After the lattrr's d!.s-!crac« hr had Jiie mmft to entertain him i

jwith rrest honor and hospitality at iMilion.jhis pla^f »ioar Peterborough. Taken to task

'jfcr this by Kins Henry, he r^pli^d thai tie !jhad not any intention of showing1 contempt Ijlor his sovereiim's wishes, hut ilia? h« had ij acfd from motives of Kr.-<tStu'l<-- (<> th<- ,Cardinal, m.i h.s.i been his friend, his {nia«trr and his patron. This answer so ipleased hlnff King •Hal" thai he lmm< ,'diately knisrhte.l Fitz.wiliiam and made him <

|a member of the Privy Codncll and of th<^ jj royal household, stating th:it a man pop- I! r*-p=ed of so much loyally was a valuable)iadherent. \; Tt was iiiis Sir \\'il!'nir. FltzwilHam's• rrandson who was governor of FolhefingayjCastle when Mary Qu«*en of Scots was cxc-J cufe«l there; and on cr'-'inc to »h. sraffxld jIthe illfat.-d woman cave him a portrait of!j her son, which is to-day oil" of th« most ,jcherished heirlooms^ of the Pltzwili

'jfamily. This Fitzwiiliaxn's grandson v.as ]|crc3t--<l T

.\u25a0-•'

Fltztrniiam by James T.I,jCoronet in Store fcr an American Girl, j: The n»w Lord D«>ciea is not married. Mr- :

iI*a lieutenant colonel of the 7th Hussar?, jIha? been a. D. C to the late Lord Conne- j[maxa when Governor of Madras, and tothe Duke of Connaucht: served in the

jUsttabele war of i?:?6, in the Boer war four|year? later, and won his distinguished ser-ivice order for conspicuous srallantry in the {|Somalilar.d campaign against the Mad j|Mullah. Hi5 peerage was created at the he-!sinnins: of th«» nineteenth century in favor j!of the first Marquis of

": \u25a0\u25a0 ford's young- !1est brother, who wn.« Protestant Arch- Jibishop of T man i

tfas Formerly a Policeman atDurban. South Africa.

\u25a0y-i*"T - jpio, v" the T;r"niwoA.i Company.)

'l!-rd Esr"""1- rJnth earl of litp line. who

'\u25a0jst y:iccr>cflr-d to the family- honors;

th* ?udden deatJi ..< his brother,

« ro!'<*<>man. r*trollinp the**.v.v • ;.-\u25a0.'\u25a0 in South Africa,and r.owCl' ", ,-^r*- subordinate rl«rkship •\u25a0 th<*

"7: j^rvic*'"f

****\a;al sovernment. ol

art Ha*!*"*—

•*•!•hi i*ir-arrif.) to theerW*r

**^ 3 rll^'s'**'*"- t»m»- dend.

v*ha? o«p chJMrm. «nd n^xt to him In

'\u25a0-./^ of c-.jivx-pfjlon remf's hw tinrle, Spen-'

Arthur I'^rf'val. « v«t "'<•*. man. slinOFt"^ ,.t--

\u25a0 *.li"«a <-l«i«»rt BOH. Arthur.*5.'"-5 .'"-in icss. and wrtiose only otli^r son.***_ GN)fr°y Perceval, if rvzmorc«l to

rnTirdTfJ, 'rith his wife Ccr-**l(jgtJr!-.tcr of tl>e Tt«»v. <;«><-.. C Tan-

"t laid W* r'"'l^- ?"m«-\\ Ji«?rt» i;,KckcaMska... n^ proof poH-=

''tnuJmtii"^ exietsi of his -.•:;. In--"« ;t t« on th** «'»rd-<! that thr read si a—« H-TT5' Godfrey P^rr-e-.a!, or sbm on*

sZibk to b* his s">n. may n-rnttjatly turnC .'l/> rlsioi V,.f> •'arldcm of 3'jrmont.

\nr te t!ii' only complication. For*f n^nc*ra ri?n. Sptrirer Arthur PerwvaJ,

.... r^-it h^ir to \u25a0••;- divorced:. j^p f?^ of seventy th^ wife whom he

I. <TK-i mnny yearii mv\ l<mgjy jrs New

Isia-.i o:1°*

pl'>a ttlat ancjl whom

M4»d presents » him \u25a0 .i-not h1" «\u25a0!\u25a0

'it-r- It Is quiif* pesslhl« that this manrut forw-srd » claim to :h« ??

—<--.

*7». _Cst*te? ha\ p h*"^11!'! ....... th*1

»-p.y and thf lute Lord Eirmout not lons

t "̂pv>tai••;«\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0] penaissioa from the mrts to

*% 5 only remaininp rountrj' seat, •w-"'.. -pa-k lo Sir "We»tman Pearson, who,

m Vi^?: recently raised to the rwvrajrc,

&ga£ a* his titl* that of l^r<l Oowdrmy.

h ttis cocnertion It would be intereptlr,? :

•feirn twin \u25a0•••«\u25a0!-\u25a0""\u25a0: Owdray, who»»o* on his .-."\u25a0\u25a0 country, whether

ihi? porchase of Oowdmy Park h«.!

bstbi i' 'i'-M^*t *° '•"^ transj old lawv.a.-=v.a.-= alwa.if1 jrovmed its succession, ;

jT^jjitCT»h« were *t.c owMrs. It is the ',

xs \u25a0•Boroutrh English." and pro- jriges ;iis.t ir. th" event of the owner of jCwrflriy Park dying1 without makins any-j-or s^ttteniaat Ccsrdray Park should ro!j^t' to hi? elfieet but to his manes Fon.

-.li* Bc-o-jg-'n Enpiish law of lenurc is jrac*d to the practice in vosrae aaion; the j;sn« cTvr.ers of ancient times in certain jperrs of Er.clanc. who. when their eldest ]yO,

? -y.,,- up, would dower thorn with~or.t\. herds .-.\u25a0 . fiocks am then sea j

tr*er!*out ir.to the world, the family man- jrirr/aa<S estates remainir.g for the younsest jwji}.who hai beer, left at sac to care for.his parent Jn their old are. There is also jr prpu'.ar tradition, which the best auihori- •

t es *are disposed to discredit, according to

m-iic1:tte Boroach Engrlish system of suc-ctsEioa owed ::? crisrin to the fact That in;(ori^H}ixri<^ ol the -exercise of the "droit i

£a ssi|rneur" The youngest sor. -vra? thesctet Iflrely io be the \u25a0spring of his i

TsctJjer's husbard. and therefore the leciti- jsite be::. ;

Fansff'y the Earldom of EgaDeti wasT*h. But i^e Feventh earl contracted aTr.ErriiZf with a woman of music hall an-••~der's. a M:?« Ix>u'.sa Kinr, to whom, - . to devotedly .\u25a0\u25a0..-• h*^ bit-

ter res?r,i*d the ostracism to \u25a0which dieiras ?übjecteJ by the county families ofEssex ena the affront which both

-•-and

itoe 5-fTer*'.'l in this connection on cneyrTifraNe n".;as!Cti •when they drove in<%•" to £:!*n<3 the Goodwood races. AVhenh^ die<3 he r>equ"?ath«»d \n .-- every vestige

cftbe property that he could alienate fromQt *"!f. She is now married to AlfredBrsco, brother of Sir Muscrav*? Brisco, andKdgKt to his life interest all her proj>-

rty, thai is to say, the property formerlyItioagi::^ to the Earldom of Ecroont, willF- »t h-r death to her niece and aOoptedaiiitcr, Lilian Klnc the wife of Hvltoniico, only son of Sir lluscrave Briseoai h?ir to hi? baronetcy.

BUNTS NEW EARL

CNDERTAKERS.FRANK E. CAMPBIHI. MIWeal !M \u25a0»•-

rhap»-l!>. Private Rooms. Private Ambulance*.Tel.. 13-1 Chelsea.

Rpt. Stephen Merritt. '- wfclMßßewwinndertakT. Only one place of bu«:ne«-, J-HEye. and 10th at. I• rajsai \u25a0 the world M124 and 125 CfceUea.

ALEXANDER—On Sunday. » » -v 14. Th-»p^«A., cloved husband of Juliette L. v ••xaßKßpr

»nd son of Kate C. an.l the late "Mm— R.Alexander, formerfy of Baltim.— Fuasrat?enl'<a at th» home of hts mother. No. ZiXl

Clinton a- " Brooklyn. V.**dnes«day. AnpiK17 at 10 a. m. Friends invlt»»l toattend.

BQUACK—

oV. aaaaseai Auzusc \u25a0 itCcwes. isie of Wkakt Kr*ian.i .-«».'. ?an-ford widow of tile late William Dlmoa Black.formerly or Ball. BUclc v Co.. Nsw Tork.and cater of (be Ute -.'••*!»;» nan*! C. *atEmily Bull Sanford. Notice of f-on*ral her*-after* Boston. IWlasßagaßav Cliicaya aniDenver papers please copy.

BOTNTON—At .St. Luke* Hoeptta a.i.« 1".Richard Boynton. ased 15 years, eldest «?n <rf

the R»-v. Prof. Charles H. Boynton and Fran-ces . •ojfjwellBoynton. of the General Th*olo»:-cal Seminary. New Yorlc. and Enilewool. N.

J. Burial Gaaaaaa N. T.. Thursday.

BROWNE—On Monday. Ausnst 15. 19!»>, Tr«>-feasor Samuel Brown* Funeral Baa aa at Mi

Ut* resUJence. No. BJ M si.. *"-'•->» n»Thursday evenlne. at S o'clocic. ititetssaatcrtvate.

BI"RKE-On Monday. Aus^ist 13. 13t<». Mary

SterHns Ca'houn. wit? of Jam*s .~tr^n»haa

Burke and yonn=?st daughter •' the 'at* Phi!*

f«*. and Sarah C ißbaaav af N-w Torti C»tvand Bridgeport. Cons.

BVTLER—Os Monday mominf. Aurust 13. T3!«».at her residence. No. l*«2Mtb St.. Brooktrn.!>larv A. Burler. beloted -wife of Edward M.Butler.

jDAVlS—Angu3t 13. .James P. Davi*. ?ervic-«Th» Funeral Church. No. -\u25a0»• West :3d «r.tFrank E. CarapN>!l Buiidin^». Friends invited.'

FAIRBANK—

Monday. August 13. tdt<>-Emma Elizabeth, wife of Beaumont H. Fatr-

t bank and <iaustr."r of the late ' hart«S At.i ana Amelia S. lleek?.jFARKELL

—Oa August \u25a0 UM*>. Mary A. F=»r-

rell. beloved wife cf William L. Farr?lLFimeral willbe held from her lat» horru» No

1320 .St. John's Place. Brooklyn. Iksaajta]irornin^. at 9 o'clock.

PAIGE—

On Mondar. August 15. I3H>. Ada. B.: Paige Flin>-ra! s<>rvi>'es Wednesday. August

IT from the residence si her son-10-law.Floyd T. Parsons. No. KS East 39th st.Paterson. N. J.. at \u25a0."""» •' \u25a0\u25a0'< p. m. lnter-, merit at Cedar U»n remetery.'

Qt'J<'K Suddenly, at Saratoga. X. T.. Acsnt

i ll.'liM>>. Martha Stapleton. born in Enslan>lIn' ]>«44. Funeral from her late r»std*>n<"E>.Xo. 24 Lamaii Terrace. Tonlter?. N. T.on Wednesday evening:. usual IT. at

*p. m. Interment in family plot. Wo«iiai3Cemeterr, Thursday mornin?, 10 o'clock.

ROBERTS—

Victoria, beloved wife \u25a0' Lawwas—lH. Roberts. Interment Winter Park. Fia.

9TBIM The rtev. Al'-tis WiHism .-ffn. «n Ao-—;,• Irt. at Parana.- I,ake. ~zt*i 3>. Fuwritprivate. Boston ar.'l Cincinnati papers pleacory.

tEMPTTKRIKS

THE f»OOf>l_%W> CEMETERY

)s readily anuaaWila br Harl»m Ira • fr"^nGrand Central Station. Webster and -T-r.>m%aven»i» trolley* and by irrtag Lots ft* ur*Telephone »*.-»." Gramercy for Book of

*—*»

or -...-«s»ntatlve.Office, -'i East "T.a St.. >'••» Tata OttJ

Commission Merchant Lea7#s I1«."inil

to Various Invitations.Th- ullt of I'riah H»rrman. » r«mrrr-»-

deal bm '\u25a0\u25a0(••• fl!e«l rpyterdsv. dispose? ofJin *stat«» of "ovpr ty*>,M*K" nf wh*ch *coaaMsvansli amount Is arir^n to rkaii ». -• • itkma

On* rlaaaM in id* niil creates a trti3tfui>d of I><>. th»- inromo -.• •Ma shallsfO to Mrs. Ro3*» tlcrrman. widow of DavidH»rrman, son of th«» testator. as long *)•

she romain* a widow. Mr. Herrmarileaves to ten zrandrhUdren. *» ease tb»r«are that number at hi* d»ath. fto.ft'rt »a<:si.Should t!i"r» t-e mor<? or Je^s than t»i, iJtC«V*» i-" to be dtrid-d «>*jij»ilTarnonz them.

Th«» charitahl" b*rjurs«ts are: Th» BetaIsrael Hospital. JS.^*). th«? Kdurational Ai-lisnce. >2.t.«»; the Hebrew Technical \u25a0rhSMIfor Boys. SI.MO; the Jewish Protectory.51,0C»>; the Young Men's Hebrew a.-- \u25a0\u25a0i-

tion. XI •»*>; the Hebrew Saratorium, (LOCO;

the Hebrew '"•\u25a0\u25a0• School for GirU.SI.C(». and Urn United H«l»rew Charitie*,

tUMK c

DIED.Ale^and-r. iBasBM A.

'' rtaaa Emma a "\Black. Carafe S. Farr»t!. Mary A.Boynt»»n. Rirhard. Fats<\ Via.B.o-.,-,n.- ~»muet. \u25a0v»>- \u25a0'- \tart> ?.

Burke. Mai S. •:. F.ob*n». Victoria.'t

Butl-r.Mary A. Stir. Her. Alex:9 "\u25a0

Dbtis, James I*.

CHAPITY BENEFITS IN WTT T.

CONFIDENCE 'AT VATICAN-Cardinal Assures Pope of Victory—

Spain Not Hostile.Rome. A IS It—The Pop* received Cardf-

! nal Vi\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0"• y Tuto in ,i ;d"-r<-'- to-day. Tne7Idiscussed ti)'» Spanish question at consid-

erable length, ait.. the Cardinal assuredthe pontiff that al! reports from Spain

indicated that It would be Imposslbl* f"?rPremier CSHsala|l to resist the attack.*

which would b^ made against nim on th-reopeninsc of the Cortes, almost from all

j quarters.The Marquis de »;onzaie«. who atsaurnM

chare 1? of th«? Spanish Embassy at ih*Vatican on the withdrawal of. the Marquis

fir <>je«u. has r»>'-«»ive<i Instructions to "*-

n«>T> to Cardinal Han ial Val. the PapalSecretary of Stale, the a?suran<r<ri» thaithf Spanish jiovcrnment la not anima'*lbj- hostility to th"* Chun-h. but is only d-»-ab •! to maintain the r-K.:>* of the Mataaz.«tn.-;t *><rU>p.',nmttr >n»-rf*«r»nr^ and thatit will insist that the negotiation*, if con-tinued. nr.ist !•*> carried on wtthout th»"jrovernmTit Trithdrawlnc any of its pro-posal m»a?ur*^. ,

SPECIAL NOTICES-

TO THE KMPI.OrKn.Do you want desirable help quickly?

SAVE TIME AM'EXPENfE by con-

suiting the file of applications of selectedaspirants for position- of various kindswhich has just been installed at the Up-

town Office ofnilKKW-YCHUE TRIBUNE.

N.- 13»"i4 Broadway.

Between Mlk and S7th —IiOffice hours. 9 a. in. to 6 p. m.

i-

NEW-YORK TRIBIST.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES1><«i!» Kdltioo. One « »nt In City of >«»

York. •>*"'"'* <"'*!. and l|»t»»kf>a,

ElM»wherr. Tiro Cent*.»nn«i»» Edition. Inrladlns «'i«d«T M»p-

Tiiw Fly*>r»at*.In New York • iti mall "•urM*rrlh*t« will

f,* rhx'S'd'

cent p*r e«py ertr» p-«-«t»».Bj*«>HIKTION BY MAIL.r<»3ri\ll.

Pall? . it mon»h *»> in

l»aily. vr **ar *°°Sunday. o»r yea»

_«x»

Pall' tn>\ y'in&.tr,prr year "09l)«llv and \u25a0"'n'l<l per month 70

I'orclsn Po»t»se Eitr*.

Official observation* of ITaMai stHt.«acatbai bureaus, taken at Ip. \u25a0 yesterday.f..!!,,«

City. Temperature. Weather.Albany . . T^ «'sou<!yAtlantic i"uv _ 72 CloudyTloatoti as . '..uiivBuffalo . . Tti i'laarChicago fi «learn, a .nrteaas •»\u2666 flrarSt. Louis «4 «loudyWa»hin«ton 7-* Cloudy

Loral mil.i.i. K«-or«!. \u25a0 • ftillowins (ifflcUlrecord from the Weather Uurean shows thechange* in th*- temperature for the la»ttwenty-four hours, in comparison with thet:o aspasMhaaj date of la«t yea.-;

it**.t!>io! moo. idior. a. m «7 ~"\u25a0

••m *4 7*

ti a. n» aa ~-'.> p. m *»

—1> v. m K~ 73 IIp. m...... f.^

—12 m. at T7 12 p. m SJ3

—\u25a04 p. ni «rt 73'

Highest temperature .•«\u25a0!.!.). m degrees(at i p. in.•: i...v-»t 71 (ai M p. m.»; avalazr. Ii aversee for rorrespoudint date his!\rnT. «V>; arerug* for corresponding dnti lastthirty-three years. 72.

I.o<-al forecast: To-day, showers. Thursday.p>»rflv cloudy; lleht to moderate northeastt»ni.i». becoming variable

easts t»r SporMl IaeaHHce. -Tor fh«Pi«tr:.- -' '""olunibta and. East Pvniiarhra-nla, rartly cloudy to-dar »">' Thuridajr; light,northeast Winus. becoming variable.

For N \u25a0" Jersey. partly rloudy t"dit\:

abowera In aastai n {Kirtion; Thursday. partl>cloudy: light to moderate northeast winds, be-coming •. artaM-

For Kaatern New York, partly cloudy to-day; showers In ntmae wats portion; Thur<-da>. partty cloudy; Itjtht '•\u25a0 moUerate northwinds, b-'comlriff variable.

Kf»r New Kn^'antt. p-irfly etoody to-day;showem in southeast portion; Thataoay, partlycloudy; moderate northeast wtadi 10-day, ex-cept brisk on the soiithonjit coast.

For Western New York. partly clotidv to \u25a0!.»\u25a0and Thursday; ahawera »ml roller niurasayin aaaa ponton; ugbi to moderate east windsl»-C4iminc variable.

Official Record and Forr**a»t.—

Washington.

An?. Irt.—Conditions ha-. B*SB BMSMtM sincej^>nday ni^ht cast of the Rooky Mountains:, with"Slower' in ih* Atlantic Kates and s<-attrre<ithunderstorms in tke upp*r lake region and tJv*

states west of th« Mississippi River. Ther*» ha?Ucn a decided rise m pre««ur<? over the North—v<*st, aecompani*J by cool*r weather, ami onTuesday nisht t»mp«raiu: ft from 7 to 3iipgr^«>s below th«» seasonal averasre. It ts \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0

Dsiderablj cooler in the -rural Kooky Mi»un-tain region and the tern portion of the «-«'n-era) plains states. In Urn centra! valley* t>rr>-peratures \v»-re rather high, while m the At-Ir.iitic rtat they conthmed moderate.

•>.\u25a0.>: of the Rr.. kv Mountains fair w?atherpeisista. \u25a0rh low pressure and practical tm-ChMBSCd tpn;p^ratun ¥!>. Th* northvest hl?1iprpssur» arfa will 3ilvanr*> !»outh«astwarii. at-fnd^J by nii-xleratf1 \u25a0\u25a0 iperaturea WeesMa \u25a0 inth'- rfntral plains stat<*?. th«" •'\u25a0•• Missouri anduj-pt-r Mivsbwlppl valli'yjand westrrn uppvr takeregion, an.l \V#Hlne3<iay nt;ht or \u25a0- :i In th*Ohio Valley .in-! th«" r»-main<Jer of th» lakervgirn. In the Atlantic stau-« hnrat< tera-p-sraturtis irlli Ultw .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0 \u25a0 -:.i

-and Timrs-

day. rhll« in the Northwest thry will.--;ain b»:tains by Thurscay.

Th. re -.< ill l*» fbowpr< Wedn»^«lav aloni th»New Eneian.l «pri mlrldl* Atlantic stat^sVand[oral thun'lerstorms in the central and southernRocky Mountain region. th« plains states andtho Missouri and upr^r Mississippi vallr\». •\u25a0>tending Wednesday nisht and Thurs-lay into th«»Ohio Vallry and the lake r«sci<>n In the Houthpartly clouoy w"ath.»*- \u25a0rtll continue, with po^-

siblj- so.nc f«-3ttered thundersi-rnis. Ka»rweather -'I1I1 r-r'>\ail Thursday nest ol the Mis-*is«tnpi R \u25a0

•"

Th* winds along tbe N»H Bng md --.as' winb«> moderate northeast If east eic^pt briskHillnaeilaialonsr the extr-m*' sO'jfhca*t por-tion; mWdl"1 Atlantic cinjt. lleht itrnod-jr^f-northeast t,, •»*.<:«: south Atlantic »nd castr-,.i7 eoaata. Haiti and rarlaW* wem GaM

•m«. light to modem 'ast to southeast: onthe lower lak<-s. light to moderate east, h"-.-.^niii>« rarlabl*. and on the upper lake*, tisrhfto modera'e sad variable, bveominaj norlh-v -«•

St»am«ri fiep^rtin? \Vfdne»dj" for I ropnaports will hi". •> moderate northeast in -•••\u25a0wind?, with unsettled s'Jther. to fee OrandBanks

Lack of Water Attributed to SevereDrouths and Little Snow.

Lowell. Mass., Aug: 16. An unusuallowering of the water in Lake Wlnnipe-saukee, one of the principal sources of the

Merrimac River, is shown by measure-ments made by the Lock- and CanalsCompany, of this city. Millions of spin-dles in the textile cities along: the Merri-mac in Massachusetts and New Hamp-

shire are still largely dependent on waterpower, and the company has kept recordsof the condition of the lake and river formany years. On the locks and canalsscale the lake when at its greatest heightregisters 41 inches; at present it showsonly 19% inches, a lower tigure than everbefore recorded. The lack of water hi at-tributed to the severe drouths of 190$ andIMS and, the small amount of snow lastwinter in New Hampshire.

Officials of the company who have visit-ed Lake Wiaxdpesaukee state that thecaptains of the lake steamers are discov-ering rocks in their course of which theyhad not previously suspected the exist-ence, and that many of the cottagers areunable to reach their regular landings intheir boats.

THE WEATHER REPORT.

LAKE WINNIPESAUKEE LOW

Vicv/s Set Forth in Letter to

Southern Commercial Congress Accepting Invitation.

in n letter to Charles Hall Davis, chalr-tnan of 'lie Southern commercial ceaMgfeaa

to be held In Atlanta in the spring >\u25a0\u25a0 1!>IT.Theodore Roosevelt stated his vlevi on *h*fntur*" -olldlty of th«» South, ajyrt from thepolitical aspect of th» wibjact Bs sravc outhe letter yesterday at the "Outlook" of-

fices.Incidentally he tentative!] accepted the

Invitation Is speak before th« eaaMCraai aaqIng that In his trip to California mtXi Maid]

he «\pectrtl to p«??! throaajh th« South; andif daft anal place rould *>* arrant*;! satis-fit<nor!ly he would be ?Jad to »pe=»k In he-half of th«» Southern ronwnerrto] m»-»v»m"nt.

The rnisundcrjtandlntr »boi;t Ism South,

Mr. Rooeeireli wrot». was dtaappaartaai andthe old south of yesterday. h*» said, was

(\u25a0••in? changed into th-% Tounsr America ofto-day.

''Every pjsod American aaasn h<?r? to s«*a real wild South." he wrote, "In th" mMof son., business prosperity in the South ;

for all good Americans now r?ali/.*' thai tb<3prosper!^ of any part of the country; helpsth« prosperity of th« whole

'

.To the young men of th«v South especiallyMr. Roosev«|i addressed the messat*, ay-

ins: they should look forward and not bark-*Arard, though at Ibe «M Haw krepinz Inmind «nd heart th» m"mory of th» deeds oftheir heroes!

"The statue of OfSIS) Left In ( onfed^r-at» uniform, stands in the halls of Congress

to-day." he wrote, "and his memory Is hon-ored no more by the South than Itis by theNorth;and in the North as in the Southalike i think we are now learning to applyabsolutely in good faith the er^at wordsOf Grant, 'T^et v? have peate

**

. Mr. Roosevelt pr*dict^d in Us l»tt*T thattho sreat material advancement of theSouth in the last twenty yean Would >*

surpassed greatly in the n»\r twenty year?,

and that th" resources of the South wouldput that s?cti3n from now on in much ie

same position relative to the country's de-velopment that the Weal had occupied foryears past.

"The East has the Atlantic and riie Wealthe Pacific.' he wrote: "the South evenmore than the East or the West will havethe Panama Cana;. and wiD therefore standat the distributing peinl or all tM greatocea;:« of the world.'

More people were needed in the Sooth,

he continued, but th* need was also thatthose people should be of the right sort.

"There are opportunities for literally

millions of opportunity seekers hi the South,provided these opportunity seekers are theright men to srasp the opportunities thatwill be offered." Mr. Roosevelt wrote"Feeling this way, Inaturally sympathizemost cordially with every purpose of theSouthern commercial congress in its effortsto make the South know Itself and to makeboth the South and the nation realize that

a greater nation will be developed from thedevelopment of a greater South."

SEES GREAT PROSPERITY

The Land of Opportunity IsThere, Mr. Roosevelt Writes.

omcr.3.MAINnrfiri No ''\u25a0» N'aswio «tre»r.

WALL STKEET OFFICE- No. I* WHU*m*tr»«t.

UPTOWN OFKI»"K—No. J3«» D«r>a.iwaj-, cr n/

Anwrtmn r>Htrl«-t Tf!-tm»rh OtT!o.HARLEM OFFICES-N-. IST East 125 th str^-r

No. 2<C« \V«t 12T'th street and No. West

W^IIIN^TTON* BUREAU—XVwtory Ituilding.NEWARK BnAXt'H OFFICK-Fr*U*rtc* N,i.nul

.,, r vo 734 Broad street.

AmSuCANS ABKOAD Kill toJ THE TKI»-

TiHI'»?SEI S Xo. tKJ Montacui? de la Ccur.LONOOX-Oeiee of THE •RIBS NX. at Imo^m*

Inn Hou»* N* -\u25a0 Strand.JLiMrlcao Express Company. N<x 6 llayoar-

Tlmwu cook a Son. Tcurist one*. lassjM

mo^^hlrl^y A t-o^ m m Pa!J it**Swv^r Brothers. No. . 1-othburj.

ThVtonJcn otSc« Ol THE TRIBI'XK is ->» roa-vruient'rtoce to l«?av« BSSMSM and aub-

"'"'p'v'ia^-John Munro* Jt Co.. Xo. 7 Rao ScribeJuhn Waiiamalter. No. 1IHue SSI !*vt!i«a

E4-urt««.__

Kasi>- \u25a0saasjßk No. \u25a0"•-'• Rue Carrhoa.Morgan, Maries ot Co.. Xc.

--Boute\ant

Hauaimann.Credit i-v«jn:u*i». Bureau -tcs LtraaseTiu

IContinental Hotel Newsstand.

.-*«.\u25a0••<\u25a0\u25a0•' \u25a0* X«ws Exchange. No. » R.« 3t-Georre-

* . „American Express Company. No. 11 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0

S.i \u25a0

_Br»ntano'«- ESS M Avenue -. • IOper*.

Xtrt:—<*re«itt I.>onn»«».GCXBV.V

—LorabartJ. Ossm a Co. and Union

PLOJ;EN('E—

Fr*n«*h. Umon & Co.. N«»s i

and » Via Tournabuoni.MaiiiuyJt «0.. lUnkera.

M!U.*X—Sa«rba«*»'« News Exrnans". Vi% t*Monforte, t3.\.

i,\MH( American fasmsfl >'oa«M> l K»>a sJatsriataui

F. C. WHITNEY'S PLANS.

F. (\u25a0 Whitney. who sails to-day on ther.usltania, «iii produce "The ChocolateSoldier" at the K.vrlc Theatre, London, onSeptember 10, with cast made up entirely

of English singers. A wee* after the operais launched in London Mr. Whitney willreturn to thi.s country to devote himselfto the production of his new opera, "BaronTrenck." which will open at the Lyric

Theatre in Philadelphia on October S> nndrome directly 10 New York for irun.While abroad Sir, Whitney will inspe. i theproduction of "Baron Trerck" in m>iitn.and Tie also expects to c!ose options onseveral now opera for early production

bars>

HELPING THE GOOD WORK ALONG.From the Jamestown »N. V.) Post.

For a jrreat many years The >.\u25a0"• YorWTribune has don* a noble work in sendtnz,to the country thousands of children fromthe tenements of New York for a brief pe-riod In order that they misfit taste for aw»i>|{ or bo the jors of country life. Thenumber averaces i>.'"''l"i >.'"''l" annually. This year

I ie been net exception to th«» rule.- bin theappeal Is rill made for money and forhoarding places for the little one. Thereit no end to the pood that can he done inthis way. In the weeks ihat still remainbefore the schools open thousands of"kids"' can fl^ ma lo happy If the necea*!»ar> mMn.« are forthcoming.

The Rev. John Bancroft Devlna, whotakes charg«> of the work for The Tribune,

some time .ik« Issued an appeal to the pressof the state nu^Restinp that a committee ofpublic spirited people of each town sectiro

invitations for girls or boys under twelvennd a half years old. The transportationexpenses are entirely paid from the FreshAir fund raised by The Tribune, so thatthe boats Incur no other expense than theboard of the children. The youngsters aresubjected to medical examination and arethoroughly bathed before being Bent outfrom New York. This is ho practical andappealing; a movement thai SouthwesternXew York ought to do Its share in prov'kl-

ins boarding places.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS.Tart of th* proceeds \u25a0•' a van-].-, ill*,mt-rt«,nm«nt given in Morton v,mi

'

through Robblns Batteil Sto*ckei n*uwiMr, Albert X smtley. hSSS LafcLocust Grove' ainiaV

'

School! iRa!,^;-''"""'

«n i-\thro««i J- K. Williams....""

,^Mn=. Robert Endlcott mrlMary k. Rogers. Quoirue. i/mtr inland"

25 1*>"Inmemory of .1. Fi. w . . £fl"Th« little fairies of tho crass."' \va«h'-.

"'ipsrion. Conn. :Helen Wersebe. presi-dent: .Janoy Woodruff, secretary an.ltreasurer; \u25a0• rlub to which some' little igirl? belong; tht parpen being to hetp ithe Fund trltli n-hat they rai* from ;dues and rvtl)f>rv.-i.*<» io©|

"Madaline. Alice ami Rosalind" ..".."" IB 1Oh. b. a \u25a0..'.. '^,'h,From children of I^andscaoc avenue]

South fonkers, N v . •_; >«>Joseph "li.iffy.a former Fr<\ih Air boy" :, i>f\James Etaadel .-; <t>«"ftoslvn" -•

ihiA. P. Tral^r . 500"Kindly omit name" {>*. I>. IT > ses> It* K. 2 0")IH. A. O. Abb-. Somere. <"onn . c.""Kindly do not acknoxrl«dg« this with i

donor" n*m» throuerh The THbone*".. SO 6OMrs John S. Kennedy, Bar Harbor. M*. SO 00Mr= A B Led«tuc, < *ornn-all-on-Hud-

son. .V. V \u25a0-•'• <*>\V If TV.. ir 1" <v*J. M Town. '\u25a0>'' Orange N. .1 ....... 2.- 00"In mpmory of •'• 11. S.*' \u25a0'\u25a0• '">H. H. Gardner. New Rocbelle. NT. 1 doPreviously acknowledged 20.082 831

Total August 1«. 1!H(> C9.SB«2sContributions, preferably by cheek, money

or express order, should b«- mads payableto the order of the Tribune Fresh AirFund and* mailed to Th- Tribune, NewYork.

Public Appreciation of NewHopes and Aspirations That

Grow inLittle Hearts.

The proof of the puddin* is in the eating

The approval of one partaker, however, is

not enough to settle beyond question that

the pudding is good. But when many have

eaten and agree that the flavor is pleasant

and that the after effects are beneficial he

would be \u25a0 caviller Indeed who would de-

mand still further proofs.

Hundreds of thousands of ehildrea havegobbled in. -the expression Is true to life—a sburo of Tribuaw Freso Air Fund ptiddln*.patte.l * certain resjioa of their juvenileanatomies and are smackinc their lips andasking for more. That ought to prove it

a good pudding. But there are other tea*monials of \u25a0 .slightly different and lewMassed nature that a good press agentwould bring forward. Best of all they

come— like all testimonials, of course—en-tirely unsolicited It would seen not only

that the padding Is pleasant, but that thedoctors recommend it.

Says "The Rochester <N. V.» Democratand •'"hrpiiicle":

••The New-York Tribune has for yearsbeen engaged In the meritorious and alto-gether worthy work of sending children ofth» N^w Tort tenements to the country

for a short time during the not reason.mose observers of the little peopl<* whohave in years past enjoyed these countryoutings 6< s more than mere physical andmental enjoyment by the participants.They come back to their city environmentwith renewed health and what is fullyas important, a knowledge of the pure andbeautiful things in nature, which gives

them new hope.v and aspirations."The following letter is written from a

little different point of view, but it en-forces the same idea:

i "A Good Word for the Fresh Air Chil-Idren A sweet faced lady passing througha car filled with happy children returningito New York smiled at some of the littlesririo. One of them turned to her seat-

| mate? saying: 'Shove up there and give thisilady a seat!' As there were three occu-pants already the lady did not share tnatseat, but she appreciated the courtesy andibelieves the Tribune Fresh Air methodjis teaching thoughtfoJaess for others.

"Albany. Aug. 11. 1910. ALBANY."The editor of "The Skaneate!es (N. V.)

;Democrat"' see;- in the Fresh Air work po-tential selt-preservation for the dwellers

!outside the metropolitan limits:"There is no more' pathetic feature of life

iin the bis congested cities than the childrenof the stairways, fire escapes and smellyalleys and pavements, who do not knowthe blue sky and fresh, green grass andtrees. In our own metropolitan city thisIcondition exists to a greater extent thanjin any of the other lar^e cities, and it Isa condition that is operative in effect onall the state, since the functions of theurban and interurban population are In-terdependent in government, politics, com-merce and society. On the surface it mayseem that a great city like New Yorkshould, take care of its own sores, and thatproperly its own burdens and welfareshould be borne by itself. But this is anarrow view for citizens of this great stateto take.

"The welfare of the cities and country isbound up together in the march of destinyWhat reacts harmfully on either affectsboth harmfully, directly or indirectly, andthe Indirect evil, not being plain, Is per-haps the more dangerous.

"The New-York Tribune's Fresh AirFund is doing a glorious work by sendingeach summer thousands of tenement chil-dren to the country."

Eager to taste of the pudding which theTribune Fund has provided for them 196children left the city on Monday and 104on Tuesday, while to-day 283 will followtheir example. AH were bound for ?re

-Pn-land-not the cold, beak one that has Its

initial letter capitalised, but a verdantflower adorned greenland, where the ap-Pies are ripening and the crystal streamsinvite to bathe.

The Rev. Dr. John Bancroft Devinsmanager of the Tribune Fund, is to-dayvisltins St. Helens Home. .her,.££dred Tribune children are being entertain^.

GOOD WORDS FOR THE WORK

Beneficial Effects. Too. Followthe Fresh Air Outings.

EDWARD S. WRIGHT.Cleveland, Aug. 16.

—Edward S. Wright,

author and retired newspaper man, diedlitre to-day »after an Illness of Meverai

weeks following an operation. He was

the .-\u25a0•iiof the late E. I*. Wright, superin-

tendent of the Western Union TelegraphCompany !

"'"'many y«ars. Mr. Wright en-

tered newspaper work twenty-five years

.i: \u0084 was on tiie staff of 'Th« New YorkSun" and 'The Xew York Times." editor

of "The 81 Louis Chronicle" and at the

time of his retirement some years ago

was manager of \u25a0 newspaper syndicate

His wife, who survives htm, was MisaMcCue. of MaflflHlbn. Ohio.

DR. CHARLES FAHLBERG.Bad-Nassau; Oermany. Atts. 1*'..--Dr.

Charles I-'ahtbeCff. •- noie.l chemist, diedlu-n to-day. 11,,1 1,, was . |... t:i>-dlscovererwlti'i IM. I.a Hem • \u25a0\u25a0! saccharin.

THE REV. DR. JAMES F. BRODIE.Boston, Aug. i•> The Rev. Dr. James F.

Brodlc. for many years prominent in Con-gregational pulpits and for the last twoyears connected with th« editorial depart-ment of th** American Board of Commis-sioners' for Foreign Missions, died at aprivate hospital In th< Jamaica Plains dis-trict 'to-day. Dr. Brodk- was born inHammond, N. V., in 14".".\,I 4".". \, and \u25a0was gradu-

ated from Hamilton College in 1&76 andUnion Theological Seminary in IBBJ Forseveral years he was treasurer of FlakUniversity^ Nashville. The degree of Doc-tor of Divinity was conferred on him by

Hamilton College in 1901. The burial willtake place at Gouverneur, N. V., his boy-

hood home

JAMES E. HURLEY.Topeka, Kan., Aug. '. 6.

—A cable dis-

patch from Carlsbad, Austria, announcestho death to-day of .lames E. Hurley, gen-

eral manager of the Santa Fe" RailroadHe was at Carlsbad for his health. Deathresulted from heart disease.

James E. Hurley was born in 1860 atWapello. lowa. He bad a high schooland normal school education, and In 1880entered the railway service with theAtchison, Topeka & Santa Ft Railroad.He went through the various stages ofbrakeman, baggageman, clerk, agent andtrainmaster, until, in 1891, he was madeassistant superintendent at Marcellne,

Mo. In 1901 lie became superintendent ofthe New Mexico and Rio Grande division,

while from October of that year to July,190-', he acted as the general superintend-ent of tlie Western grand division, at LaJunta, Col. Mr. Hurley became generalmanager of the Atchison. Topeka & Sant^FS Railroad": on May 1. I*os

OBITUARY.

The first play thai will be enacted uponthe stase of the New Blackstone Theatre,Chicago, which is to be jointlymanaged by

Charles Frohmatv and Klaw & E«rlanger,

will be William 11. Crane in George Aden"U. 8. Minister Jackson." The theatre willopen on November 13.

Richie Ling was engaged yesterday by

Charles Frohman for one of the principal

parts in the G. P. Huntley-Hattie Williamscompany, which is to play the comedy,"Decorating Clementine."

The Shuberts announce that "Miss Patsyv"

with Gertrude Quinlan. the first Henry W.Savage production to "nave its metropolitanpresentation at a Shubeft house, willopen at Nazirhova's Thirty-ninth StreetTheatre on Monday eveninjr, August 29.

Madame X" will begin Its second year inthis city at the Lyric Theatre.' beginning

with the matinee on Labor Day,'Monday.September 5

"The Arcadian.-."

now playing at theKnickerbocker Theatre, will move to theNew York Theatre on August 2?. to makeway for "Our Miss Gibbs." which will re-ceive its first presentation in this country

on the same date.

THEATRICAL NOTES.Henry B. Harris began his management

of Jackson's Theatre, at Bridgeport, '"onn..last night by presenting Edgar Belwyn's

four-act comedy. "The Country Boy."

\> it'; » cast which included Willnette Ker-

shaw. Mrs. Stuart Robson. Forrest Winant,

Arthur Shaw and Carolyn Elberts. Aftera two week?' preliminary tour this plaj willcome to the Liberty Theatre en August 2J.

Frank Lacy, an Kr,s!i?!i actor, and Ed-

« \u25a0 . Fitzgerald, a London stage director.

arrived yesterday on the KronprhuteasinCecilie to join the forces engaged by HenryW, Savage for his forthcoming production

of "The Little DamoaeL"

STOCK COMPANY FOR FOXChanges Plan as to Vaudeville at

Academ}' of Music.William Fox, who leased the Academy "r

Music last spring for a term of years at

ftOO.OOO a year, has decided to abandon hisplan ti Introduce vaudeville and movingpicture* into thai lii.<=tori<- house. He "illestablish a stork company similar to that•if Corse Payton, who wfll end his ten

weeks' engagement at the Academy onAugust -7.

Mr. Foxs change of plans Is due so thesuccess of the venture of Corse Payton,

who. n is said, lias made (40,000 »\u25a0\u25a0 th«Academy during Hie summer month .

Mr. r'.-.\ i-,.,.- secured as stage managerJ. Gordon Edwards, formerly associatedin <i similar capacity with James K.Hacketi ar the Hackett Theatre, and for

the last five years manager of th< Sub-urban Gardens. St. Louis. Me has en-gaged as members of his company EdwardLynch, former leading man of the BelascoStock companies in San Francisco and LosAngeles: John Dwyer, who la wen knownin the South a.- an actor of •heavy" parts:

George V. Riddell. an English characterplayer; Join; .1 Kennedy and De WittMewing. He has also secured Mis? Pris-cilia Knowles, a Western actress, as lead-ins voman. ami Miss Corinne Cantwell,

Florence Gerald. Alice Riker and other.-.

•Mr. Fox will begin this fall season onAugust 29 with "The Girl ILeft Behindate," in which Miss Knowles. Anna Hollin-ger, George V. Ridden, Edward Lynch andJohn Dwyer wfll have the- leading parts.

Theodor Wolf, editor of the "Ta;e-

Watt," who makes the .announcement,;.1Is that lio .learns King: George

and Queen Mary of Great Britain, theQueen .Mother Alexandra; and Emperor

William and Empress Augusta of Ger-mttny have agreed to ad *;» patrons ofthe fund.

Sir Ernest Cassel, though a Britishsubject, has retained his interest in bisnative land. J He was born In Cologne,the son of a German banker, In 1832,

and in addition to his English knight-

hood he wears the order of the Crownof Prussia, first class, one of the highestGorman decorations.

A MILLION DOLLAR FUND

Sir Ernest Cassel's Plans to AidPoor Emigrants.

Berlin. Auc. !•». -sir Ernest Cassel,

the English financier, has arranged, ac-

cording to an announcement made hereto-day, to establish a foundation of$1,000,000. the income from which is to

be used for the benefit of poor Germansr-e^king employment in England andBritish subjects seeking work in Ger-many. The now foundation will be in

memory of the late Kinpr Edward ofEngland, who was a friend of SirErnest an i with whom the financierI:.! been closely associated for manyyears. He was among thr last personsto be received by the late King beforehis death.

Secretary Meyer arrived this morning on

the dispatch boat Dolphin, ami he will re-

main until Friday afternoon. He has many

invitations in the cottage colony, but hecam** especially :" Inspect tli»- -••'••

ships of th^ fleet which he'''"

not have

lime to look ovei at Provincetown last

week. He wat a t,'i:e*i at the naval re-

ception this 1 1' inoon and will be present

a! all the larjfe affalrw to be given m honorof Rear Admiral .Sehrocdet.

During tli"day about fwtir thousand menfroii' the warships were ashore, ,:..|

"''s

afternoon ml pvenn igh< hundred olfnom mfre the guests \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Mii HermannriHiidi* .i H vamlevlllr entertainment;Others will l.i sitnilar^- entertained each... -

; • \u25a0\u25a0:'

From Armsea. Hall the officers werehurried over to the naval training station

to attend s reception and dance given by

Rear Admiral Raymond Perry Rodgers andthe officer* of the Newport naval station

This was an elaborate affair, fully fivehundred. Including many <«f the cottaßecolony, being present Rear Admiral andMrs. Rodgers received at the foot of thesteps of Barrack B and presented the

su«:sts to Rear Admiral and Mrs. Bcbn • ->i- rThe Interior of the barracks, where <^..reception was held, was decorated withlla?s and flowers, the ensigns of all nationshaving places on the walls.

After the reception there was dancing,

and then a buffet luneheSn was served.Th« hours for receiving were from 1 to 7

The naval officers wore their blue -• viauniforms and white caps, and the army

ofllcers wore full dress.

Admiral Schroedcr and Others Guestsof the Hoffmans and Admiral Rodgers.

[By Tei'jtrai\u25a0'! v-

T1>A Tribune.] .Newport, Aug. 16.— Rear Admiral Seaton

Schroeder and tlio offl< era of the At-lantic fleet were k<n«t on.the fro this after-noon an<) evening, but if was "\u25a0\u25a0'thing to

what if In store for them Mr. and MrsCharles F. Hoffman pave a luncheon forthem at Armsea Hall, which a large nurn-l;rr of Lhc members.; of the villa colonyal"°o attended.

FLEET OFFICERS KEPT ON GO

Prince Louis Poniatowski, who marriedMiss Helen Elizabeth Sperry, of California.was alsr. on board. Tho prince will be aguest of Char Stillman, the banker,

brother of .Tames Stillman. during a briefstay. Th<- prince Is prominent in Parisianfinancial circles. He will return on thesame steamship when sh« next sails.

Duke Franz Josef ju a nephew of theprince regent The possibility that he may

ever ascend the throne is rather remote.The duke's father was the r>uke Kar] Th'o-«;or. nntfd for his contributions to the vari-ous branches of optical science. KarlTheodor v,;is one of the most skilled oculistsin Europe. He died, and Franz Josef suc-ceeded him In (lie year 1909.

Among the passengers was CountessGeorg Wrdel. whose husband Is <*harß6a'Affalres of the German Embassy atWashington. Count Wedel was at the pierto meet his wife.

Th« duk< will oe In town at T iir Ho""!Plaza for a few days onlj before he de-parte for Newport. Later he "ii; go toChicago. Seattle, San Francip<-<-> and otherWestern cities •"f>t>irnin£ on October 15.

Conversation *~r;iiii veering toward thepossibility thai Duke F"ranz Josef might de-cide i" rhoos< and tak< \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 an American

duke became grimly bland andevaded the Issue by declaring that really

to formia persona] "pinion«f American young women had been \u2666\u25a0x-

• j brief and Car apa t, and that he•

\u25a0 \u25a0•_

irrying, anyway. Hp

-i marriage couldout Inciting his countrymen to

civil «a r or involving him In le?a! compli-.:

\u25a0 • \u25a0\u25a0. serious natui ••

\u25a0 . \u25a0 \u25a0 | : yon Lossow, of.< rman am

Wh»n asked by the reporters why hewas here rml how long be was going tostay anil whether be expected to marryan American ciri before sailing away, theduke was engagingly bland.

He replied, with quiet self-possession,that his Inclinations ran more to yachtingan-! to hunting of quite another sort. He

fon3 of hunting, he Bald,«n<] hoped to discovi

-sonx of the rear

sport nut West.

The crew were proud, but their saluta-tions meant a lot of work.'

Before reaching the pie: newspaper re-porters bad received distinct assurancesIfrom the dpke himself that he had not

come to America with the intention ofaskinpr any American woman to share hisname.

The duke might have been a chorus girlor the president of a railroad— he was soequable durin? the interview. It was asthough he had been warned not to be sur-prised.

He la only twenty-two years old. HisEnglish Is nearly free from accent and hisclothes entirely bo. There is, in fact, noth-ing: in his appearance to suggest that whenhe travels on a big boat his full name isplaced at the head of the list, all by itself.There is everything in his manner to in-dicate that the duke would be as cheerfulwere it not so.

Josef Michael Karl Maiia Evariste Quiri-Lkai

Pihe House of Perceval,

founder of th^ fortune? of th*= Tlou^p

tfPErcpvai. of which Lord Esrmont Is therial may !\u25a0>*> said to havp W-^n RichardJtoeval, rtri< of th<; -.•\u25a0\u25a0. of th*txxt Lord Rurlpieh. tli" famous P^cr**-trry of ?tsip of Qm?*>t) Klizab*»tVi. Tn 1."56.

Ppairi v.as secretly preparing' to dpal

t-Qfadb. blow to F^nzland \u25a0re'ith thp intincJ-Iteuuiiiada, an English ship captured af»m£>h v.-.sol bound from «^adiz to the.SXsiian«?f=. on which w»»rp found a num-fcw of \u25a0writtpn in cipher. Those«t sstrrntt*«j to T»rd Burleiph and byi:rrrf:m*<j pvt to Richard Perceval, who\u25a0fs*- rorcessfu] in «s°riphTine thr-m. when'&•••.\u25a0 n-pi-f. found :o <-r>nTfiir! all sort? oftaaife concerning the inand projects"'

the rnt«>nd*d invasion of England. In*irt. rhfs*- dispatches conveyed to the'*>zk Queen arid jo r«<r celebrated pre-oiw th" f.rsi authentic n^^F about thef??Tiis!i Armada, and enabled th^m toTStk*- rhf n«>c»s.sar>' preparation? for Ihefeftace ol th« kmkdom. Throucrh this'tiir.e Perceval \u25a0won the <jueen's favor, and•r<W! tnat niompnt his fortune- was mad*.ffil fon. Sir Philip Perceval, was a very

'-*?iiT?ui.ch»o statf-fltian dtirins the rr-lsmtiJsnief |. nliof* £rood nil] h^ rnjoyed tof£> «ii that he received a grant

«• rnorf Tiian « };undred thousand acre*\u25a0

sor.. :n turn. John Pcrcev«i. stood•Jagh if the good graces of 1 \u25a0 rftes II™>t h* latter not merely conferred upon

» baronetcy of !rrlan<l. hut likowiF?5 -*"<l a T<-r:iark2lj'«- and uniqtj*1 proviso tof:tasen»>d In t'tr* patent to the effect thatNfWen son of th« holder «f the baronetcy'^in hf created a S.aronrt ir his own:**£^nrtag hip lifetime en attaining his

Down io the reisrn of Kin?jrr•**IV Th«> *»;rj»-<:» «tnn of every haronot*

ft? nrh! ti demand th«* honor of1. froni th« ...... on attaintns; his

'^•-firn birthday, a rule which wasa*ay with Jost before Qi3»»»n A'irtnria*

sajc to thf ihrr>n". T?ut in- Percevalri

?T!*!«-v uc,n T.-iprE«l 1n \u25a0 \u0084...-•\u25a0.'-Srnr-^ if: ih^ orily on* in oxiMon-'1 which

? j^-ikje.c Tv,B yrari of a ww baronetcy•* tn« eMest so»> of a baron*>r nhile th«>

?***i* j^iiilJivinz.

*0* Tr 1̂ *" r̂<J r-«Tr!A!1'- Wm* add in con-

H<->'°n' ' ** tx^^-hertoew of th" Rightsp^n-cr Perceval, who, trhlle Pr^niiT,

in the lobhy of the Hou:*1

T< ;n isii_ On,. ;jUntjr«d «.nd8^ P*>*lously on* of hi? ttn«-estors-

-Hr>h~ Tt pereeral, a famous duellist, was\u25a0T*"*»t«c: h] the strnnd by murderers*^ identity nev-er discovered.

ftrng George's Crown Equerry.

Ufcrt? r'*rr'rSf'9- r<iw* crown «»querry Is Cap-

2> Me H<m. Charles I-'itzwilllam, who was

fcSf**""f the stables when Prince of£7** The rrown equ«rrj'. who also re-

ftral'"

th° Kb of dexk marshal, was"^y Etyled gentlemaa of the BStSBI inr to fitetinrcish him from his chief, the

)££* °1 the horse - He ranks next to thejj^, ' his place, when absent, in pr«-

Sbj? *\u25a0'\u25a0"" aII tatters relating to th'' royal

*e».Tf iISS superintendence of all the

\^f"s "-.';— therewith, swears in its

Rhtr\!°

S=laJs -and !« the senior of a.ll th«;

*j««%?Utrri*'s' The poFl *s a ver3

'a Srt'fe"*• J*?''itnd oarries with itemoluments to

!f**.'m <»f bom* 17,500 a year, including

V'^'faed .'jouse. which stands or, the rujht

£^f*t?ray ... into the royal tsta-*lB'-ckingiiam Palace. The crown

Sj~J y ha *' also th" ukp of thC royal car-TiH. b^3J5d h<>rses. v:n!ike tlie master of!on a? V^°chan ?c? «"!th the administra-jfci C"vrow'» *«3'jerry is a perrrwtnent offl-H^and plr Henry Ewari who ha« just

t-,^ y'" tx>*U h*!d it throughout th"

(^li"Virzwi!»*ni «»* for.n^rly in th-'•-' '•\u25a0'» , * Ou*r<5'i- «** an nid<--d?-<-amp

J*«i* LSLSl* lj"r<l ni^"n •v!i<-» >l«rri»y *>fl^jSr^Js^? *suerry ->~<i master of the

\u25a0*•*!• tht prticnt Kins ius Prince of

AGAINST THE NAME OF HARRIMANAlt-any. Ausr. 16.— Peter Turner, on behalf

of himself and other -\u25a0..;•.\u25a0• of Turner.Omnuf County, has entered a complaint

with the Public Service Commission againstthe Krir- Railroad Comparry -hanains tl»nani» «ji" Turner Ration on its li:if to Mar-riman. The railroad company has twentydayo in which to file an answer.

ENGLISH PASTOR CALLED.Plainn>W. Conn., Auz. H^-The Rev. Fred

crick Bamford. of Lancashire. England,

win h^nm* p*c t*>r of «h<» Firrt nonpreßa-tioi. c-hurch here on September :;. havingrecent!} accepted thf rail

NEW YORK FROM THE SUBURBS.\u25a0\u25a0-.;,' -•\u25a0•\u25a0 storks wet* recently brought

from Boron* 10 New York. Trnst they...,. t<. be if loose on upper Fifth avenueand rei.tral Park K'e»l Th- Eaa s^ideh*s plenty now.

—Syracuse Pout-Standard.

A Western wrestler choked to deathsimultaneously two men who had attackedhim. ofling his arms on one and his \f-z*... the other. Thai B«ems to be as jjoodas iiu jitsu. What a man l>»- WouUl "'\u25a0 for

\u0084 Sunday barge excursion in "\u25a0• » \orkHarbor!—Troy Times.

r>iIn—lrl this crime [the shooting ofGaynorJ was committed In New .l«-rsey, astate which with all it» faults is never-theless noted for its ' oroughgoing,prompt dispensing of justice. The coun-try learned with relief of the fact thatGallagher was the prisoner of Me» York'sneighbor and not of New York itself, forit has s^-en i..... many tnal

—i of justice

miscarrying in the metropolis to be con-fident of the result of the trial of such acase within the New York Jurisdiction.-^Washington Star. ~' :

A man who 9UOt lived free in New YorkCity ha* went a dollar to the "consciencefund." Lots of other folks have gone to

Xew York, bu^ th'-y never found free liv-ing Usually it coat more to live a rj!;n-

ist*- in New York than a ear elsewhere.So perhaps it Is worth a dollar to petsomething for nothing over ... —

Phila-delphia Times.

In New York the last dime museum hasclosed Us doors for lack of patronageThere \u25a0re -'i many political freaks run-ning at large on tlie streets that peoplewill no longer pay money to see suchthings

—Chicago News.

One reason why people don"t go tochurch inNew York in the summer is liiat

-\u0084 man places of. worship are closed.Whether New York pastors have foundthat it doesn't ps lo k*«=p churches *>]>enJn ihe summer, or »ii^y f»«<»i that conffrc;gationw may take S vacation at thi.s sea-son of Ui« y«ar «^ w*-U :ts preachers; Isjno< knoivii. Certaii ii is that m appai-*>i:tJy unnecessary number i.f >po)itancounties are !tot availablejfor purposes ofworsnip diirlns the warm »?atii'.r.

—l'itts-

butS t'azet it-Tune*.

Humphreys and the friend he had withhim in his automobile had no intention oftrying to outdo old Israel; In fa^t. theydid not even know that they were riding

down the historic steps, for both of them,Humphreys Mr th^ wheel, were pound

asleep. They iia<i driven ill the way fromBoston, and both were greatly fatisu'-d.

They were clojse to tho foot of the hillwh<"n the machine, travelling at a goodrato of speed, dashed into a telegraph pole

The pol<\ which was an old nr.f andpartly rotted, snapped off about six fretfrom tho .... an<l fell, narrowly miss-ing th*1 two men. NY-ither man was; thrownfrom the machin". nor wav either injured.

The front of the machine, however, w;is

badly damaged. Humphreys admitted hewas asleep, having just dozed off when th<>

machine struck the polo, His friend hadl-een iis'Tp some tim<-, with h's h'-'a'l \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.

Himipbreyss's should* r

DUPLICATE PUTNAM'S RIDEBut Steed Is Auto. Which Hits

Pole, Waking Tourists.f By T«»T«>irraph t« The Tribune!

Greenwich. Conn., Aug. 16.—

Jan.es Hum-phrey?, a young N>w Yorker, met with acurious nrrid«»nt to-day while driving downPutt's Hill, rh<* s<-«*ne «,f General Putnam'shairbreadth ride down the Eton steps, andhad an Ps<apf •"

\u25a0•\u25a0- death which was nol<\=s remarkable than that of th« Revolu-tionary patriot.

1 Next to the Hon. Robert comes the Hon.IHenry Bere.sford. formerly a captain inj the 33th Hussar?, ho also married one;of the •'girls from Kay's,"' who as KittyjGordon was a gr^a 1 favorite, with Lon-don theatregoers. There are no childrenborn of this onion, and it would eeem a?if the Decies peerage was bound to co ulti-mately to the Hon. William Beresford,who is married to an American girl, a MissFlorence Miller, daughter of G. L. Miller,of Providence. They are living togethernow on the Bowness. Kane 1-, near Cal-cary. in Canada.

MARQUISE DE FONTEXOY.

i X \- in lino a* heir to the baron} which

|is an Irish one and carries with it no scat inithe House of Lord?, is the Hon. Robert de

!la Peer Beresford. who married Delia O'Sul-Ilivan. of The Grant, Killame}". who had!made a great bit in "The Girl from Kay's."!He was a special newspaper correspondent!durinjr the South African war, had no

\u25a0money with which to support a wife and

|\u25a0was gazetted as a bankrupt, with the re-sult that the fair Delia was forced to re-!turn to the footlights. Two years ago she1divorced him after some rather sensationalIscenes at the Norfolk Hotel, at Brighton.[and within a fortnight of the decree beingimade final secured the hand and the title01 young: Sir Charles Huntingdon, who hasa beautiful country place, known as AstleyBank, in Lancashire: a London home,

known as The 'lock House, on the ChelseaEmbankment, and a considerable fortuneinherited from his father, who was thehr-ad of \u25a0 srrpat wailpaper syndicate andwho secured a Saronetcy through his lib-eral contributions to the Unionist party;fund?.

PRAISES A SOLID SOUTHi\KAV-Y<_>lU\ 'DAILY IIMHirNE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST it 1910.

FUDir EATERS' PROOFSDUKE HERE FiTHE HUNT

I'uko Franz Josef of Bavaria arrived onthe steamer Kronprlnaessin Cecili>. of theNorth German LJoyd line, yesterday.

The s;intc vessel r>\<n brought a princeand a countess. but most of the strainupon the captain tnd Ma crew resultedfrom the presence on hoard of Duke Franz

More Interested in Hunting BigGame and Yachting- than in

the American Girl.

7