1
THE WILSON WEDDING1 ninmuTO nniimnmn t, ran ii lawmrLfiii! i Mr. Siijrt' Will Itrnuiin a Guest )i tlio White House I'ntil Moniln.v. .I'AKNKHIK SUNOS A OIKT WrM Virinin Strrl Workers linNing $.5.0(10 to liny I'reMMit for llriilt. V viiimit"n Nov 2n, Francis Howet ft.iw. who Is to will Miss Jessie Woodrow Wiison mi Tuesday, urrlxed nt the White H'miv to. night, where he will be n guest tint it Monday Ills arrival murks the Mia' stage of Ihi' wedding preparations and the White .House fHtnlly and the dduig party ate complete. .t' S.i.Me, following the olil custom, ml1 withdraw from the home of the bmle patents on Monday and will he a cm !t of t'hniiis VS. Hughes, .It,, eon of Usmiate Justice Hughes, at his home In tin Aeiiue of the I'rcslilcntK. Clin r Its i; llughis, Jr, will he one of the ushers Hi-- ' welding. VMthln the White House the decora-in- v lagan the construction y of th. iw.He foot sipiaie dais which will he ,- -t nt the eastward side of the great Fast tootil, the suite of the weddlm;, and upon uhloh the wedding party "111 Hand during the ceremony. The F.ast ri'in In coiimiiu. nee has been closed to isitois until after the ceremony j Th" wedding ireetit flood 's now at lt he'Klit and delivery wngons, furniture v.in. pared pot packages, express wagons ami nicssengeis maintain a ideally stream to nnd from the White House. It leame evident y that there nould not he room for the dlsplny of more tli .(ii a small fraction of the Rifts. The While House Is swamped. I'titll everything HrrlvliiR for the hrld h is hcen ddleied at the White House rjiil' me Itself. This mornlnK orders ! Issued that the delivery men use tre i:eciitlve uttlce HulldlnK. IImihii Otrrltons With (lifts. Tlir crcat spare loom on the top floor pf Hie White House has been tilled to met flowing with Rifts from Miss Wilson's private, acquaintances and her father's fiiMle admirers. Th diamond pendant presented h? the House of Representatives was y Accompanying the ex. qulslu pendant In Its satin lined casket ,. a parchment which read; The Representatives of the people In i'iiiiR e3 send this Klft to Miss Jessie WoiKlrew Wilson with their Mneerest and 'si wishes ns an evidence of the tender nn-es- ami neatly Rood will of all the the people on the happy occasion of her rrarr ise to Mr. Francis Honrs Say re. Nm ember twenty-tlft- nineteen hundred ind thirteen." The parchment was signed by Speaker Clark and Representatives Underwood, M n.n and Murdock, the three party .Ut'S. and by ItepiesentatUes Cooper of u caisln. Henry of Texas. Campbell of K.c mus, llaidwick of Georgia, I'age of X th Carolina, Johnson of Kentucky, ' l I'm-- r of Pennsylvania, Austin of Ten-r"- s Townsenri of New Jersey, Fowler t ' Illinois and Chandler of New York. 'I i.. Iloti-- e sift i a nen.lant. near I In outline, containing eighty-fiv- e ! i,i pure white diamonds and one large , of cirviiry tint. The large stone Tm 'mailer diamonds are placed un 1 the Uwe stone In concentric i a The metal of the setting Is pl.UI-ru- and the gems are mounted In a deli- cate laeework of that metal. The pen-di- hangs from a necklace which con-'ai- n thirty diamonds. Bare Old Vase From thr Harrisons. The gift from the Secretary of War and M's. Harrison was received It If a raie uld vase of Chinese porcelain. The Secretary of Agriculture and Mrs. Houston contributed a pair of handsome irtliU" F.ngllsh andlorns with decorations of hand wrought brass. Tho Secretary of ltbor and Mrs. Wil- ton ent a hand engraved vase of sliver, the design of which Is of the period of the fir; empire, Heretofore It has been understood that ' there would tie no gifts or a substantial rhaiacter from the members of the Dlplo-mHli- e Corps, hut n few days ago there rrvd from the Spanish envoy a silver howl, hand wrought by the skilled silvers-tilt- of Seville. Now the Nlcaraguan ard Colombian Minister" have each sent pieces of plat. Andrew Carnegie's gift consists of a set of a dozen dinner plates In sliver rt' h'y engraved and appropriately Mr. Carnegie Is an old friend of Mr Sayre's. father and was formerly In- timately associated with him In the steel bulnet In western Pennsylvania. Workmen of-- the Wheeling Iron and Ptfl Company are raisins a subscription f J.'.nOO or more with which to purchase a B ft for the bride, A similar movement Jt ",is Inaugurated In Baltimore recently, but ' th. President put a stop to It. As the Wheeling subscribers are friends of the brMfsroom, It Is not regarded as prob-M- e that the President will Interfere. There has been no embargo placed upen the wearing of uniforms by members if the dlploniatlo or the military, naval er marine services at the wedding next Tuesday It Is not regarded ns "prob-aM- however, that uniforms will b worn. WOMEN VOTERS SEND SILVER. fl.non for Service Subscribed In .Northern California. San Kn a nci sco. Nov, 20. A sliver foRtlnK $1,500 to be presented to Mlsa se Wilt-o- as a wedding present wu 'nt In. day by the Women Voteri of ' 'irtliprn California. It was purchased by subscription. CALLS U. 8. STEEL A "GODSEND." nillliaa sun Its Anvmnt KsflM war In (be Trade. HnJmln F, Miles of Clevelsnd, preil-A- -i nt the Itrownlnar KnKlneerlnK Com-I'- ) ti stltled yesterday at the hearlnn In 'hi inverument's antl'trust suit aealnst "i 1'nlted States Hteel Corporation, that advent of the Steel Corporation was "a f'.nri,.n, to the small consumer of steel t'r'lurtn." He said that the corporation tod tended to steady prices and overcome 'h- Mule of war." where "every fellow ( "if i hawked the other." ,i ' know," he said, "hnvlnic seen some larijf. hutches of notes offered through the H riV In the valleys by the CarneKle Com-mii- v win, the understandlnK that If Ihuy " ilisi'iiiinled llilnKH would be made n "t easier for some of Ihc Interests allied Ihfre." "Hheri the notes of the Carnerle Com r'y In Hiiim- - iI.'ijh were questioned, were thT not he was asked. lie said he brlleved they were. Com- petition before the advent of the Hteel ' nitmratlon, the witness said, "left an nHd the way the Iroquois Indian U( to leave portions of eastern Ohio." Thi, hearing will be continued y ml A. at Perfect i . biscuit perfectly delivered At the grocery store ynu will find many varieties of biscuit baked by National Biscuit Company. Each variety of biscuit sweetened or unsweetened whether known as crackers or cookies . . wafers or snaps . . cakes or jumbles is the best of its kind. The extensive dis- tributing service of the National Biscuit Company extends from Coast to Coast. This ensures a con- stant supply of all the perfect biscuit of the National Biscuit Company being de- livered to every part of the United States. wy im baked by NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Always look for that name MANY CHANGES MADE IN CONSULAR SERVICE l.miir List of Nomination Is Sent to the Semite for Confirmation. Washington, Nov 20. A A lanre num- ber of diplomatic and consular nomina- tions were sent to the Senate y by President Wilson. Kvcept for the nomina- tion of Henry M. rindrll of Peoria to be Ambasndor to ftuvsla the list Is made up of appointments In the lower grades of the diplomatic service and changes In the consular service. New York men on the list are these: William W. I In ml ley. to be Consul-Gener- at Callao; M. J. Hendrick, Consul-Gener- at Chrlstlanla, Norway; H, D. Clum, Con- sul at Corlnlo, Nicaragua. William F. Doty, New Jersey, Is to be Consul st Nassau, Hahamas. The principles of the merit system have been applied In the shifts announced to- day. The appointment of Hansford S. Miller to be Consul-Gener- at Seoul, Corea, and that of Frederick Van Dyne to be Consul at Lyons, France, are par- ticularly Interesting ns they mark the re- moval of about the only two officials aur-vlvl- from the Knox regime. Mr. Miller Is one of the best Informed men In the United States on matters con- cerning China and Japan and Is at pres- ent chief of the far Eastern division, while Mr. Van Dyne Is one of the assist- ant solicitors of the Department who had won tho highest commendation for his work In the previous administration. It Is a fact that Mr. Hryan has offered to many of the officials he found In the Slate Department positions In the consular ser- vice. Hestdes those mentioned the nomina- tions were as follows : Frederick M, Dealing, Missouri, to be secretary of embassy at Madrid. To be secretaries of legation: Hugh S. Gibson, California, tit Brussels ; a, Schol-le- Minnesota, at Havana. To be Consul-Gener- at Large, Stuart J, Fuller of Wisconsin, To be Consuls-Genera- l: Carl B. Hurst, District of Columbia, at Barcelonla; H, II. Morgan, Louisiana, at Hamburg: Thomas Sammons of Washington, at Shanghai ; George II. Sldmore, Wisconsin, at Yokohama ; Itobert P. Skinner of Ohio, at Berlin ; John Q. Wood, Hawaii, at Adls Abaha, Abyssinia. The Foreign Relations Committee of tho Senate postponed action for a week on the nomination of Alexander Hweek of Portland, Ore., as Minister to Slam. This action was taken at the request of Sena- tor Lane of Oregon, who was advised by Secretary Bryan that charges had been forwarded to the State Department from Portland citizens against Sweek's appoint- ment, on which Mr, Bryan asked Senator Lane to confer with him. THE WYOMING BEST AT TARGET. Arkansas Is Second and (he Hhode Island Third. Washinqton, Nov. 20. The battleship U'vnmlnr. which is also Admiral Bodger's flagship, leads In elementary und divisional target practice, Hccormnp ia rrconis tabulated at the Nnvy Department. The Arkansas, a sister ship of the Wyoming, was a close second. The Hhode Island, one of the oldest ships In the fleet, was "'in' the full power and endurance trials of the battleships the Idaho led, with the Kansas aod Utah second and third respectively, Tho lliale, Ammen and Patterson as named, attained the highest flktaaor records amoni th dastraysra. THE SUN, INKY THREAT NOTES ' LEAD TO 3 ARRESTS i heth-r- s Tell Miclinele Spnllone to (Jive l'p $1,000 or llnve j Ills Heart Cut Out. UK OOES TO THE POLICE Homh They ltntl Hid in Field Is Kon ml on the Prisoners When Arrested. Inky hearts oozltiR Inky htood. Inky knives MIcMhk In Inky thrimts nntl Inky KlbbelH (lnnslInK Inky HpureH of men, nil ' ilrawn on many letterB nlKned "I,h Mann I .Vera" citUHe.l .Mlchiiele Spnlone much i fear. "(live ux $1,1)00 or we will eut iur heart out mill Mow up ynur hiue with ilnamlle," the lettera imlil. Mlchasle was m aeiueil that he went I'lffht to thf nntlr Htnllnti nnrf l.tl.l lltani there that hl life whs threateneil anil j inui rnmv one waa KimiK lu Henu Ilia lie nnd coal liualnecs from the basement nt 6S8 (IraveKeud nxcniie. In Brooklyn, tluoURh the loof If he didn't do hi he was told. Alsui Mlehaele told the I'arkvllle police that he had planned a trip back lo Sicily j and that maybe people had on that ac- count an lildi that he was rich. No such thlnK. protested Mlehaele; he had barely; " enough for n Kteerage cot there nnd buck. Day before yesterday an unusually r,POr" HouBherty. Deputy l'ollre bloodthlisty letter nrrlved. It was nil- - fomnils.loner, jesterday gave out a long dressed to "Tony," the Italian b.nber on statement defendlnc members of the e first floor, but Mlehaele knew It was partment acnlnst the charges that hlnh lor ninisen, oecause in one corner was written "coal cellar." Whereat Mlehaele trembled and went again to the police, So jesterday the platoons went out frotii the Parkvllle station with orders to look for strange men about 566 Gravesend avenue. Before that order was Issued Detective McDonald had spent an evening walking up and down the Brooklyn Bridge prome- nade a few feet behind Mlehaele, waiting for one who was to cuinc and say, "I am Giuseppe, Give me the money," as the wrltcis had said would be done. But Giuseppe did not appear, though Mlehaele and the detective walked many miles. Spies Men In Field. Patrolman Berberlch hns the beat by Mlchaele's house. He heard the captain tell about the Black Handera and had his weather eye open for strange men. At 6 o'clock he spied three men he hail not seen before slinking Into a field nt Four- teenth avenue and Thirty-nint- h street. He called George Flood and Phil F.ndress, his police partners, and crept In after the trio. Concealed In the weeds Berberlch saw the three bury something. That finished, they went out and placed a stick by the sidewalk to mark the spot. Kndress and Flood followed them, while Berberlch staed In the Held and dug up what had been hidden. It was a bomb with slender fuse eight Inches long and wicked looking. Berberlch put It back where he found It nnd waited. Meanwhile Flood and Kndress had seen the three men walk several times past Mlchaele's basement and peer down to see If the proprietor was there. Mlehaele, not suspecting they were planning to kill him In a little while, was playing with his bambino, the youngest, while his wife sat near him nursing another of the brood. Back to the Held and the bulled bomb went the three. The tallest of them not noticing that some one had been there, lug the thing out nnd put It In his pocket. Then they started for Mlchaele's. Policeman Berberlch crept thtough the grass behind them. Outside In the ilam-nes- s Flood and Kndress werr u.iltlng. Berberlch manoeuvred and got In front. The three bomb men eered nnd came out on Giavesend Hentie far ahead of the policeman. The rapture KSreled. An automobile came by and Flood and Kndress Jumped on the running board. A short distance away from the three fig-ui- they diopped softly off and diew their guns. Berberlch stepped from be- hind his tree anil the trio were prisoners Their leader was a huge man. six feet two Inches tall, broad of shoulder and swarthy of face. He was Giuseppe .o. mangino, a liveryman of 160 First ave- nue, Manhattan, he said. His companions were John Colvltto, U years old, a pedler of 176 l.ufajette street, anil Sardlno C.i- - mlllo. 26, a laborer of 29 Kast Kleventh street, Manhattan. They were searched In the street. ti I.omanglno's pocket was the bomb. Also he had a letter addressed In lony, coal cellar," and full of threats and demands for money. At the Paikvllle station Mlehaele, trem- bling yet from the Imminence of the danger be had escaped, said Lnmanglno had been to his coal cellar trying to buy It and asking many questions about the proprietors wealth. .Mlehaele knew but not Colvltto. Mlehaele was very angry and wnnted to manhandle the three but the pmlce wouliln t let him. The letter Lomanglno had was In the same handwriting as the others Mlehaele got. The three were held without ball. MRS. DOBBINS SEEKS DIVORCE. Heiress Who llloped With Carpen ter Chnrnes ,onSapiort Philadelphia, Nov. 20. Mis. Laura Fllcklnger Dobbins, connected with proinl pent Philadelphia families and one of the heirs to tho estnte of Mrs. Itobert N. Carson, late of Krdenhelm, near Chcsnut Hill, haa brought suit In the Lancaster County Court for divorce. Bernard Dob- bins, a young carpenter who wns em- ployed on the Carson estate and with whom the heiress eloped years ago In opposition to her wealthy relatives. Is tl r&spondent. Although Mrs. Dobbins has st various times alleged that her husband struck her. and once testified to this In court, her counsel, William R, Brlnton of Lnncaster. said y tho only grounds on which the divorce Is asked are desertion and Dobbins denies His wires cnarges, say Inr that he haa llltreated her and hs ovlded for he" a d the children to the best of his nhlllty, GLASS CRITICISES VANDERLIP. Says Nearly All Hankers Are In Fa- vor of Cnrrency 11 1 11. Piiincf.ton, N J., Nov. 20. Tim cur- rency bill was the subject of a talk to- night by Representative Carter Glass, who lectured hero under the auspices of the Spencer Trask Foundation. He criticised Frnnk A. Vanderllp of the National City Bonk of New York, saying that excopt Mr. Vanderllp and the "Inner circle" In Manhattan nearly nil the bankers of the country are In favor of the bill. "We have mndn a conscious effoit to reform the system," he said, "nnd bring about it decentralization of wealth. The people through their Government will have lepresentatlvts on the governing boards of the banks. I say now that the bankers will not hae a representative on tho Federal reserve board which Is to be created under the bill." Friends n Dine eore W. I. oft. ifri.iid of Congressman-elec- t George FRIDAY, NOVEMBER Hotel Nassau Long ach, L. I., N. Y. on: am. yi:ai FORTT MINUTES FROM NEW YORK CUT Long Island I'leelrle MerTlee JH Irsla Dally ROOMS) WITH One prison 'upwards BATH 'ISn n,Mfln, S4 All (I A V ft ,.,..,...,tUluptt4r(l5 perlat Weekly sad Monthly Itstes Mot and Cold Freh and Suit Water In all HMh Itoums tirlll Room Open Moderate Price HARNETT HARM'. CORPORATION w. N. Urn Icr tin run with WiHerl Astoria DOUGHERTY DENIES WIRE TAPPING GRAFT OecllU'eK Police HllVe Mfllle Al'- - rests in Mnny decent Cases. CA I'fUIT OONDORF AX If Protection Wns Promiseil. He Says. It Hns Not Protected. police officers had accepted graft to pro- tect wire tappers. He was aiming at the confession of Al Cohen, a former de- tective In the Police Department, who on Wednesday told the District Attorney of acting ss a for a wire tap- per gan and a police captain who has been retired from the force. The pollen captain, Cohen said, collected the graft for officers higher up. Commissioner Dougherty answer Is a record of the work done by the Police De- partment In rounding up wire tappers. He tell of orders for the arrest of al leged wire tapprs which were sent out In thu last fifteen months and of the arrests made. He says that he arrested Charles and Fred Gondorf, He cites the records to prove that men under him nabbed Paper Collar Joe Gray, Dutch Alonzo Bradford, nirley Carter, Frank farbeaux, George Mcltae and J. A Dow sing. In other words the assertion of the Deputy Commissioner Is that If anybody paid for protection that person failed to Bet It. Refers to Becker's Fate. Can you comprehend," asked Dough erty as the statements were being handed out to the reporters, "that 1 would piom- - Ise to protect any one when Lieut. Becker was lyln-- down there In the Tombs" Mr Dougherty's statement, after re citing that Cohen was assigned as a de- tective November 1J. 1IM0; that on Janu- ary 24, 1912, he was transferred from the detective bureau at Dougherty s re quest, and that he resigned from the Police Department February !. 1912, takes up In detail the work of the depart ment against wire tappers. The statement refers first to Simeon M. Jones of Pittsburg, who was a lctlm of wiretappers to the extent of J2O.00O Dougherty sny that when the case was brought to hl attention he had nn Inter-le- with Jones, who Identified the mem- bers of the gnng that victimized him. "I personally summoned detectlx e.s to my otllce," Dougherty say", "and In- structed tliem to Mnd and arrest the per- sons Identified and nNo lo brim: Into my otllce anv other persons known a. wire- tappers for Identification. Ot those ar- rested nt th" time, Joseph Gray, alias "Paper Collar Joe,"'nnd Charles Bradford, were Identified b Jniies ns two of the In- dividuals who swindled him. I Imme- diately prepared a circular bearing photo- graphs and descriptions of the persons not npprelietided and sent them out to cities of 5,000 and over In the I'nlted States and to the hundred Kuropean cities. I also spe- cially detail, d detectlvis to watch for George McCrea, George tinndorf and Frank Tarbeaux." Dougherty says that on Instructions from him Jnnfi was sent to the District Attorney's otllce, where Indictments were obtained against all the persons named In the case. The Deputy Commissioner tells of the detectives that were sent to various cities, following clues. "George McCrea," he continues, "wns arrested In l.os Angeles, Cnl . on October 1913. by Detective Leigh of this depart- ment, assigned to the District Attorney's olllce. Claims .Much Personal Work. The Deputy Commissioner sas he per- sonally obtained the Identification and ar- rest of Fred and Charles Gondorf nnd J, A, Dowsing on a charge of swlndllna l, C. Sldbury and J M. Powell of Wilming- ton, N. C. out of J2.1.000. Ho then sent for Kdward B. Culvtr of Sparta, Ga , lie says, and Culver identified Fred Gondnif as the man who swindled him out of K.000, Major K. G. Pendleton of Atlantic City. N. J., next Identified Charles Gondorf as the man who got $55,000 out of him The Deputy Commissioner says he also Iwrsonally ldentltld Fred Gondorf as the man who swindled Duncan Curry out of $61,000, nnd had urged promotion for any man In the department active In rounding up wiretappers, District Attorney Whitman said yester- day he expects to take hU witnesses- In tho wlretnpplng cases before the Grand Jury on Monday, He said lie had new evidence but would not discuss It, PlTTSBCmi, Pa., Nov, 20. Simon M, j j0 wenlFlVy real' estate dealer of this city, who chnrges that he waa fleeced out of $20,onil by a gang of sharpers III New York during July, HH-.'- , declared to- day that ho had not hem a party to n wiretapping game and that he had lost the money In what ho bellecd nt the time, to Ihi a legitimate coal land deal, Mr. Jones went to Nrw York with De- - tectlve W J. Tanney and saw Inspector I Hugh", nnd Ceorgc s. Dougherty. Second Deputy Police Commissioner. loiter uie lour lueu aiiegcu 10 unvn swindled him were captured. Mr. Jones said that efforts have been mad by their friends to have him drop his prosecution. CHILD'S RESCUER REWARDED. Ames, Who Lraprd Into Hudson In January) Gets Medal and ipsn, WasiiiniitoN, Nov. 20, The Life Sav- ing Association of New York has pre- sented a hroiuo medal and $25 In gold to John H, Ames, chief boatswain's nmto on the receiving ship at New York, who Jumped Into llm North River on Janu- ary Hi last and saved a child from drown- ing. He was olllolnlly commended by the Navy Depirtment. The British cruiser Natal was lying off the foot fit West Ninety-sixt- h street after a stormy trip across init Aiianuu nun the body of Whltclaw Held. Ames, act- ing , as captain of the Spray, had taken a party of visitors fiom the Brooklyn navy yard to see the British warship. Cornelius Kane. 7 lenra old, who was playing on the dock, fell Into the Hudson, W, Loft will give a dinner In his honor, The. tide was sweeping down ihe rler at the Little Hungary Cafe In East Hons-lan- d carylng the youngster out tow.od the ton street on December I. Mr. 1 oft ran 'middle. on the Democratic ticket, but there will I Ames leaped Into the ley witter, swain ha many Republicans among the dinner! out to the lad and towed him back In the fuastfl. J. 21, 1913. LINERS MENACED BY SEASON'S FIRST ICE The I'enns.vlvnnla Ueports Three Herfrs In Northern Stennier Lnne. WARNING IS SENT OCT lloiites Mkely to He Moved South Before Reprnlnr Dnte of .fnnunry 31. The first of the Iceberg crop to reach the lane of liners plying between New York nnd Kuropean ports has been dis- covered by the Hamburg-America- n steam- ship Pennsylvania, due here She sent a wireless warning on Monday. Among the stenmshlps that caught It was the Cunnrder Laconln, which has nrrlved nt Boston from Llveipool, The message Mas transmitted to the hydrogiaphli office and was ptomptly put on the chart there for the guldnme of navigators. The Pennsylvania passed thiee bergs, the largest of which was SO feet high nnd 100 feet long. They were several miles north or the liner s course and were drifting slowly Into the steamship lane. The position of the Pennsylvania, as by wireless, was latitude t5 de- grees 4 minutes, longitude 47 degrees 27 minutes. This Is directly In the course of stenmshlps liound to and from the ports of northern Kurope, but a few miles nboe the track of liners running between channel ports nnd eastern ports of the United States. The experts think the sudden appear- ance of Ice so far down this time Indicates nn unusually early drift of bergs Into the steamship tracks. It Is likely Hint the lanes may be moved further south by general consent before the end of the year, Instead of January 31 next year, Charts Show Xo Denser, The latest (November) hydrographlc J conn nan no ice symoois excepi in in Strait of Belle Isle and out In the At- lantic to the eastward about SOn miles. But this chart accounts for conditions on the ocean to October 20 only Under the title of "Ice Conditions" the November chart prints this, "Navigation of tho Strait of Belle Isle by the trans- atlantic trade ordinarily ceases about November 26, although the average date of the formation of local Ice Is some weeks later. In the Itlxer St. Lawrence navigation closes the last week in No- vember." It Is likely that the strait may In. open a bit longer than usual this autumn. The freighter Bristol City, In yester- day from Swansea, also passed n berg. She takes the high course of steamships from northern Kurope. It was fifty feet high and 150 feet long and about sixty miles north of where the Pennsylnnla passed Ice. This would Indicate that n procession of bergs may be coming down on Ihe Labrador current toward the steamship lane. Gales RrlnKlnit lee Down. The southerly movement of the bergs Is due chlclly to the heavy and persistent northwesterly gales that have roared out of the St. Lawrence Valley In the unusu- ally stormy latter half of October nnd the first part of this month. Capt. Johnston of the revenue cutter Seneca, which with the Miami patrolled the Ice region In the first half of this year, remarks In his re- port that so far as Ills obsei-vatjo- went bergs drift with the surface currents. Where two currents meet, such lis the U'ibrador nnd the Gulf Stream, the dom- inant one eventu.illj talus charge of the berg The southern moxement of the Ire along the east side of the Grand Banks seemed to be the captain said, a matter of weather conditions For many das the bergs remained stationary, then nfter a northerly blow they started to the south-- est ('apt. Johnston gives some hints to skip- pers In his reports on his observations of several months cruising in the lie region. He says, "Speaking about lookouts It occurs to me that on a very large ship, with decks some seventy feet above water, bridge some twenty feet higher, nnd look- out posted higher still, the lookout might he higher thnn the top of a small berg, and hence on a dark night he might eas- ily miss seeing the obstruction until too late. lu a light low fog an observer can see a berg from aloft sooner than from the deck, but. In a dense fog we found that the lookout was best Kept from the spar deck, as the first sight of the berg was through the hipping wnter at Its base. With the searchlight we were able to see a berg about three miles away on n dimly moonlit night and two miles after the moon set Owing to the blinding effect of a searchlight on the observer I would not rei omineiid lis general use for a ves sel under way, tin a dink night a vessel In tho vicinity of bergs should slow up so ns to be able able to manoeuvre within tho limit of visibility " PHILOLEXIAN'S 1913 PLAY. rnliimliln foclet) Will Produce "The Silent Woman." The Phllolexlan So.dety of Columbia University will present "The Silent Woman," a comedy of lien Jonson's, In tho Brlnckerhoff Theatre at Barnard Col-leg- this evening nnd after- noon and evening Tho play will be pro- duced by the students In a manner ns nearly as possible approaching the con- ditions of the KlUnbe'han stage at the time at which the play was written Prof Algernon D. Tassln of Columbia has couched the plaers. The Phllolexlan Society Is one of the old- est college literary societies In America It wns founded In ISO-.'- , and has hcen prominent nt Columbia for the hist cen- tury, Mnny of Columbia's most promi- nent alumni, Including John Purroy Mlt-che- l, have been members of the society "I0LE" TO BE TRIED ON DEC. 8. Musical Coined Will He llenril First In Atlantic ( It). "lole," n musical comedy which Itobert W Chambers, and Ben Teal hae tirade fiom Mr. Chambers's story, xvill have Its Initial performance on December S nt Atlantic City, N J. II. II Frnzen will make tho production, The score was written by William F Peters. Frank Lalor will play the principal role, and the cast will Include Curl Giint-voor- t, Stuart Balrd, Leslie Gnze, Hoyden Keith, Hexford Hendrick. Herbert Martha Richie, Maltha Spears, Hazel Kirk. Kdnn Pendleton, Gretclien Kastmnn, IMini Temple, Ann Vano and Lena Robinson. After three days presentation In At- lantic, City and it similar engagement In Hartford, the piece will tin taken to Boston or brought to New Voik, JAMAICA'S NEW THEATRE. House in He Oncuril Tliniil.sal vlnar Kir Will Sent SS.IIOO. A new $'.'110,01111 theatre lu .Inmnlca, yueens, will be opened on Thanksgiving ovo Borough Piesldent Connolly and other Queens borough officials will be present, and Mr, Connolly will make an address. Th thoatre will be conducted by Will- iam Fox and will be ilewitrd to vaude. vlllu acts nnd phutu- pla)s, which will be shown continuously from I to II 1', M. I ThU theatre will seat 2,300 persons. iiiiiiiniiMiiiiiiiom.i lauiu... . ." Theodore B. Starr, Inc tain A)wtuie nnri 47Fred GLYNN WOULD RETAIN PARTY ORGANIZATION Hopes to Hush Throiich Prhmir.v Dill Al.olisliini: Slate Conventions. Gov. Glj tin favors a direct primar) law that will do away with State conventions, party emblems on the primary ballot arid designating committee, but not with party organizations. He hellcAcs that such a law will be passed by the present Legislature soon after It reconvenes on December S. At the Waldorf yesterday, upon his In New York to attend the Cham-bu- r of Commerce dinner last night, the Governor said : "The bill that is to be framed will pro-vid- e thai tho names of candidates shall appear on the primary ballot by petition anil not under party di slgnatlons. This will really give that freedom of opportun- ity that Is desired. "I am for the retention of the party or- ganization, Including the State nnd county committee and the subdivisions. Some of the men who have called on me to speak for direct primaries would abolish the party system entirely, but I cannot agree with them. I believe In the pait system. "Since the day when I asked the leg-sla- ii leaders lo Kit thlough a tenl direct primary law I hae hem stu prised lit the number and character of the at my office. The) showed me Low earer for direct nominations are people throughout the State. liov Gl.wm said he was hopeful that the lenders lu the Legislature would see Hie problem as he does He said Ihe Demo- cratic party had an obligation to the peo- ple which It must meet at once. ' "The party leaders." he said, "are com- ing to my way of thinking regarding a workmen's compensation law. The hill Is vlitually completed, and 1 bellow It will be passed. 1 feel that the primary bill will go through nt about the same time' Before leasing Albany the Governor said It lookeil as If the legislators would return to the Capitol practically agreed aB to tho laws they wanted passed He thinks the session will not last more than a week. BLAUVELT SUPPORTS GLYNN. For l'inie of Direct Primary Hill at This Session. i t Al n.vv, Nov 20 Stale Senator ' George A. Hlauxelt of Rockland count), who Is to succeed nctlng Lieut Gov Hubert !' Wagner as the Democratic leader of the Slate Senate, agreed that Gov. Glynn was wise In the sugges- - ' j Hon that the present Demociatic I.eglslc- - ture should pass a leal direct primary law and a fair workmen's compensation bill at the December session. j "I believe," said Senntor Hlauvelt. "that the present Legislature should s bulb these measures before adjournment, pm- vlded there Is sufllelont time tor piopci preparation nnd deliberation, but both Heps involve a consideration of bio. id ) uucstlons of ltnl Importniue to all Hi- - people of the State. ' "In view of the ery careful consldeia t Ion which both measures ),ae received during the present year think It Is po- - Mble, to pass them befoie the next l.egis ' lature convenes and In a m.iiinei whan will meet with public approval " Pints and I'lnyers, H special arrangement the I'alae, Theatre will present next week as an. added feature the Lngllsh satire ' Hiivln-- ; a Gun" The piece Is being pbocd tn liondon by O. P. Huntley Cyril Clia an ICngllsh actor, will piesent the pln let here. A special perfoi malice of "Gursehes will be given nt the l.vrlc Theatre . n the. afternoon of IVecinbfr 'i for He benefit of the woman's depai tmenl of tin National Chic I'cder.ition Tin1 opening dale of the "Mlsliadit-Lady- at the I'ulton Theatie lias heci changed fiom Monday to Tuesday ulgbi Krnnk Lea Short of the Open Ap liayirs hn begun lehmrsals for the an mini perfoimance of Caps and Hells, th Williams Collegi. dramatic club. "Nlobe ' will be the offering this year, with tha title role planed by Charles W. Hrackeii, tun of Senator Hrnckett. The plnv will be given on January ." at the Hotel Pla.a. Mine, Hertha Kalbh will appear at th' Knickerbocker Theatie on December 'n a lomantlc ill, una called "Rachel," the engagement of Dolnnd Hi Ian III "The Marriage Market" The annual concert given by tho Catho- lic Protective Sooiety of the Archdiocese of New York will take place at the Hip- podrome on Sunday night. The purpo-- e of the conceit Is to raise funds to con- tinue llm work of the society, which . I carried out In the mutts and prisons, p u Ocularly the chlldicn's court Among tip' 'artists who will appear are .Mine. Fiance Alda, Orvllle Iliinold, Ruby Heeder, Guti.i Casslnl, a Russian cellist-- , Ida DaNlnofl I Russian violinist, and Frank La Forge. The Filars Club will give a dinner 'n , honor of David Wartleld on Sunday nigh' i December It, at the Hotel Astor. Tne an aiigeiuetils ate In Chirac of Cn.ule Hinineisnn Cook, Marc Klaw. Lew Field Max Lai'g Me) its, Marcus t.oew, ll tii son Fisher, Regan Walker. Daniel I'roh man. Mike Simons, Charles Gilbert. Jean C, Havez, Ralph Trier and Richard Hal 5 Sentjeuvln notable gems THREE sapphire, an emerald and a ruby, without equal among the fine specimens now in this country are included in the collection of except lional jewels we are now rhowing. These gems are charac teristic of the care exer- cised in the selection of our stock of precious stones. Inspection is invited. Next Time You Build a Bridge ii will mvp tinio if you Ret Murray O'Ni'il.iilitiil.lcrnttdhomL'tliitiKinorB in Hex Iti'dcliV now nnvol, "The Iron TiuN." This is O'Ni-il- story, lie's no hntiilsotiii' dashing hero, but it lull henvy man of forty, with sliitlitly graying temples und tho laciiil murks of strenuous etule.ivor. Hut he run love mid fight and build. The story eertninly is Alaska. THK COHYSTON I'AMILV Heckling a woman is a ticklish spoil, especially when the woman i hidy ('oryston And. sure enough, she lilts it to the heights ot a liattlof ideas, nnd a line warrior she i in the finest story Mrs. Humphry Ward lias ever written. This new book in called "The Corysion Family ." THF DKSIIM'.I) WOMAN' C lilatiiitigthewoman won't do and ill X. Ilarben shows why ill Iik big new novel called '"Ihe Pi-l- ied Woman." It shows what a m.m ca'i make ol his life when no fore. - but those ol bis own consciousness ,n-- e brought to bear. "Ihe lii-u- i-d Woman" might have been an ninec-tionab- le Moty in some hands Hut not m his. All Harper books .u- - loan. Tin: lMssinxxTi: fimiaiw T No man's woman would si . mil heroine w ho is not a mere ch i "f, but a living realitv in tie- tag f II. C Wells's new novel lb ' Mr. Wells rilVs some sharp tilings .iNi'it our light to live our own live. Ho tells ns how one man and one - me-ii- i did it in this new book which is i .i lied "The Passionate Friends " It i a, good story and much more. TO-DA- Y At any Book Store Harper & Brothers WAGNER'S LIFE IN FILMS OPENS. First Public Presentation nt ew A msterdnm Theatre. Klaw iV-- F.rlangcr's presentation of 'The Life and Works of th" Immortal Com-pos- Rich.ud Wagner-- ' in motion p. uies was given publicly itrrtav after-- 1 noon at the New Amsterdam Theatre Tho pictures alrcadv had b.eu shown a' private, exhibition. The films were made bv the McHe Film Company of llerbn. A i amnion and ti leiital accompanied their presents-- j t on The large theatre was comfortably tilled. The pictures will he continued Indcfl-- 1 ti.tely at the theatre on Simla- . Monday, Ties la Tlnirsdav and F' dr af'rrnnnris nn I on Suiday tuglii FACE BROKE OUT WITH RED PIMPLES Like Bunches. Itched Badly. Would Fester and Be Sore. Used Cuti-cu- ra Soap and Cuticura Ointment. Face As if Never Had Pimples. Stony Creek, V, V, "In tlin 11 n o-- niy face had lilaekheadi h i It in,. I I .i ,, HUee tl'.em out bulllicy would i iiii'Iiii-'- analo and apcr a m.mIo my fare broUi out nIOi I. Im ,.i..,..i..d 'ei.-- .. .. i . U Ilk o little ted leincli-- s, all , , til,, .1 i t would di; nnd i I "ta became t h e y p. ie I ,i ' badly p"l afier I i ' I Un ca p oil lliev T'r 'i 'i ( . anil I.,, kiiri' 'lcl I ' queeis them and they would !' - ,ei I spread. They would iiutn im ' " ' horrid, so Hist I was asliiimen to e il much. I dldu t know wh.n lo tl- ( " e "I would steam my fate goml c r. 'vr. hut. that didn't help it I saw the a tlsement of fiiUi'iir Soap a- I ""' t In the paper o I tent and U"i maple of each I used them up nnd tl en huIu nu rake of Piillcira Soap and some Cuilr'ii Ointment, and after two weeks 1115 (uce aa Jint as ir I neie- - had p'niples on II at all ' (Signed PmI'I II. Putnntn, Mar. Il, 1' It. Although the f'liUcurs Soap said Oint- ment are nioat urierul in Ihe treatment or ITisiion of the skin, scalp, luir and haniU. t he aro alio must alu ibis for eecrjr-Ha- y tin H th toflst, tiath and nursery they iromutsitnl maintain the licdHi of ths akin n4 hair from Infancy lo nn. Bold everywhere. Liberal sample of cvb 'milled frss. tilth ,11-- HWIn lino'. pott card "Cuticura, Dept T, Hm'im. ' WMenwho thaveand thampoo wiih l!u. Iteura hots will Audit but far tola ud teat

WEDDING1 Perfect Hotel perfectly Theodore Starr,Inc ... · THE WILSON WEDDING1 ninmuTO nniimnmn t, ranii lawmrLfiii! i Mr. Siijrt' Will Itrnuiin a Guest)i tlio White House I'ntil

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THE WILSON WEDDING1

ninmuTO nniimnmnt, ran ii lawmrLfiii!

i

Mr. Siijrt' Will Itrnuiin a Guest)i tlio White House

I'ntil Moniln.v.

.I'AKNKHIK SUNOS A OIKT

WrM Virinin Strrl WorkerslinNing $.5.0(10 to liny

I'reMMit for llriilt.

V viiimit"n Nov 2n, Francis Howetft.iw. who Is to will Miss Jessie WoodrowWiison mi Tuesday, urrlxed nt the WhiteH'miv to. night, where he will be n guesttint it Monday Ills arrival murks theMia' stage of Ihi' wedding preparationsand the White .House fHtnlly and the

dduig party ate complete..t' S.i.Me, following the olil custom,

ml1 withdraw from the home of thebmle patents on Monday and will hea cm !t of t'hniiis VS. Hughes, .It,, eonof Usmiate Justice Hughes, at his homeIn tin Aeiiue of the I'rcslilcntK. Clin r Itsi; llughis, Jr, will he one of the ushers

Hi-- ' welding.VMthln the White House the decora-in- v

lagan the construction y ofth. iw.He foot sipiaie dais which will he,- -t nt the eastward side of the greatFast tootil, the suite of the weddlm;,and upon uhloh the wedding party "111

Hand during the ceremony. The F.ast

ri'in In coiimiiu. nee has been closed toisitois until after the ceremony

j Th" wedding ireetit flood 's now atlt he'Klit and delivery wngons, furniturev.in. pared pot packages, express wagonsami nicssengeis maintain a ideally streamto nnd from the White House.

It leame evident y that therenould not he room for the dlsplny of moretli .(ii a small fraction of the Rifts.

The While House Is swamped. I'titlleverything HrrlvliiR for the hrld

h is hcen ddleied at the White Houserjiil' me Itself. This mornlnK orders

! Issued that the delivery men usetre i:eciitlve uttlce HulldlnK.

IImihii Otrrltons With (lifts.Tlir crcat spare loom on the top floor

pf Hie White House has been tilled tomet flowing with Rifts from Miss Wilson'sprivate, acquaintances and her father'sfiiMle admirers.

Th diamond pendant presented h?the House of Representatives was

y Accompanying the ex.qulslu pendant In Its satin lined casket

,. a parchment which read;The Representatives of the people In

i'iiiiR e3 send this Klft to Miss JessieWoiKlrew Wilson with their Mneerest and'si wishes ns an evidence of the tendernn-es- ami neatly Rood will of all the

the people on the happy occasion of herrrarr ise to Mr. Francis Honrs Say re.Nm ember twenty-tlft- nineteen hundredind thirteen."

The parchment was signed by SpeakerClark and Representatives Underwood,M n.n and Murdock, the three party

.Ut'S. and by ItepiesentatUes Cooper ofu caisln. Henry of Texas. Campbell ofK.c mus, llaidwick of Georgia, I'age ofX th Carolina, Johnson of Kentucky,

' l I'm-- r of Pennsylvania, Austin of Ten-r"- s

Townsenri of New Jersey, Fowlert ' Illinois and Chandler of New York.

'I i.. Iloti-- e sift i a nen.lant. nearI In outline, containing eighty-fiv- e !

i,i pure white diamonds and one large, of cirviiry tint. The large stone

T m 'mailer diamonds are placedun 1 the Uwe stone In concentric

i a The metal of the setting Is pl.UI-ru-

and the gems are mounted In a deli-

cate laeework of that metal. The pen-di-

hangs from a necklace which con-'ai- n

thirty diamonds.

Bare Old Vase From thr Harrisons.The gift from the Secretary of War and

M's. Harrison was received ItIf a raie uld vase of Chinese porcelain.

The Secretary of Agriculture and Mrs.Houston contributed a pair of handsomeirtliU" F.ngllsh andlorns with decorationsof hand wrought brass.

Tho Secretary of ltbor and Mrs. Wil-

ton ent a hand engraved vase of sliver,the design of which Is of the period of thefir; empire,

Heretofore It has been understood that' there would tie no gifts or a substantial

rhaiacter from the members of the Dlplo-mHli- e

Corps, hut n few days ago thererrvd from the Spanish envoy a silver

howl, hand wrought by the skilled silvers-tilt-

of Seville. Now the Nlcaraguanard Colombian Minister" have each sentpieces of plat.

Andrew Carnegie's gift consists of aset of a dozen dinner plates In sliverrt' h'y engraved and appropriately

Mr. Carnegie Is an old friend ofMr Sayre's. father and was formerly In-

timately associated with him In the steelbulnet In western Pennsylvania.

Workmen of-- the Wheeling Iron andPtfl Company are raisins a subscription

f J.'.nOO or more with which to purchasea B ft for the bride, A similar movement

Jt ",is Inaugurated In Baltimore recently, but' th. President put a stop to It. As the

Wheeling subscribers are friends of thebrMfsroom, It Is not regarded as prob-M- e

that the President will Interfere.There has been no embargo placed

upen the wearing of uniforms by membersif the dlploniatlo or the military, navaler marine services at the wedding nextTuesday It Is not regarded ns "prob-aM-

however, that uniforms will b worn.

WOMEN VOTERS SEND SILVER.

fl.non for Service Subscribed In.Northern California.

San Kn a nci sco. Nov, 20. A sliverfoRtlnK $1,500 to be presented to Mlsa

se Wilt-o- as a wedding present wu'nt In. day by the Women Voteri of

' 'irtliprn California.It was purchased by subscription.

CALLS U. 8. STEEL A "GODSEND."

nillliaa sun Its Anvmnt KsflM warIn (be Trade.

HnJmln F, Miles of Clevelsnd, preil-A- -i

nt the Itrownlnar KnKlneerlnK Com-I'- )

ti stltled yesterday at the hearlnn In'hi inverument's antl'trust suit aealnst"i 1'nlted States Hteel Corporation, that

advent of the Steel Corporation was "af'.nri,.n, to the small consumer of steelt'r'lurtn." He said that the corporationtod tended to steady prices and overcome'h- Mule of war." where "every fellow

( "if i hawked the other.",i ' know," he said, "hnvlnic seen some

larijf. hutches of notes offered through theH riV In the valleys by the CarneKle Com-mii- v

win, the understandlnK that If Ihuy" ilisi'iiiinled llilnKH would be made n

"t easier for some of Ihc Interests alliedIhfre."

"Hheri the notes of the Carnerle Comr'y In Hiiim- - iI.'ijh were questioned, werethT not he was asked.

lie said he brlleved they were. Com-petition before the advent of the Hteel' nitmratlon, the witness said, "left an

nHd the way the Iroquois IndianU( to leave portions of eastern Ohio."

Thi, hearing will be continued y mlA. at

Perfecti .biscuitperfectlydelivered

At the grocery storeynu will find manyvarieties of biscuitbaked by NationalBiscuit Company.Each variety ofbiscuit sweetenedor unsweetenedwhether known ascrackers or cookies. . wafers or snaps. . cakes or jumbles

is the best of itskind.

The extensive dis-tributing service ofthe National BiscuitCompany extendsfrom Coast to Coast.

This ensures a con-stant supply of allthe perfect biscuit ofthe National BiscuitCompany being de-

livered to every partof the United States.

wy im

baked by

NATIONALBISCUIT

COMPANYAlways look for that name

MANY CHANGES MADE

IN CONSULAR SERVICE

l.miir List of Nomination Is

Sent to the Semite forConfirmation.

Washington, Nov 20. A A lanre num-

ber of diplomatic and consular nomina-tions were sent to the Senate y byPresident Wilson. Kvcept for the nomina-tion of Henry M. rindrll of Peoria to beAmbasndor to ftuvsla the list Is made upof appointments In the lower grades of thediplomatic service and changes In theconsular service.

New York men on the list are these:William W. I In ml ley. to be Consul-Gener-

at Callao; M. J. Hendrick, Consul-Gener-

at Chrlstlanla, Norway; H, D. Clum, Con-

sul at Corlnlo, Nicaragua. William F.Doty, New Jersey, Is to be Consul stNassau, Hahamas.

The principles of the merit system havebeen applied In the shifts announced to-day. The appointment of Hansford S.Miller to be Consul-Gener- at Seoul,Corea, and that of Frederick Van Dyneto be Consul at Lyons, France, are par-ticularly Interesting ns they mark the re-

moval of about the only two officials aur-vlvl-

from the Knox regime.Mr. Miller Is one of the best Informed

men In the United States on matters con-cerning China and Japan and Is at pres-ent chief of the far Eastern division,while Mr. Van Dyne Is one of the assist-ant solicitors of the Department who hadwon tho highest commendation for hiswork In the previous administration. ItIs a fact that Mr. Hryan has offered tomany of the officials he found In the SlateDepartment positions In the consular ser-

vice.Hestdes those mentioned the nomina-

tions were as follows :

Frederick M, Dealing, Missouri, to besecretary of embassy at Madrid.

To be secretaries of legation: Hugh S.Gibson, California, tit Brussels ; a, Schol-le-

Minnesota, at Havana.To be Consul-Gener- at Large, Stuart

J, Fuller of Wisconsin,To be Consuls-Genera- l: Carl B. Hurst,

District of Columbia, at Barcelonla; H,II. Morgan, Louisiana, at Hamburg:Thomas Sammons of Washington, atShanghai ; George II. Sldmore, Wisconsin,at Yokohama ; Itobert P. Skinner of Ohio,at Berlin ; John Q. Wood, Hawaii, atAdls Abaha, Abyssinia.

The Foreign Relations Committee oftho Senate postponed action for a weekon the nomination of Alexander Hweek ofPortland, Ore., as Minister to Slam. Thisaction was taken at the request of Sena-tor Lane of Oregon, who was advised bySecretary Bryan that charges had beenforwarded to the State Department fromPortland citizens against Sweek's appoint-ment, on which Mr, Bryan asked SenatorLane to confer with him.

THE WYOMING BEST AT TARGET.

Arkansas Is Second and (he HhodeIsland Third.

Washinqton, Nov. 20. The battleshipU'vnmlnr. which is also Admiral Bodger'sflagship, leads In elementary und divisionaltarget practice, Hccormnp ia rrconistabulated at the Nnvy Department. TheArkansas, a sister ship of the Wyoming,was a close second. The Hhode Island,one of the oldest ships In the fleet, was

"'in' the full power and endurance trialsof the battleships the Idaho led, withthe Kansas aod Utah second and thirdrespectively, Tho lliale, Ammen andPatterson as named, attained the highestflktaaor records amoni th dastraysra.

THE SUN,

INKY THREAT NOTES'

LEAD TO 3 ARRESTSi

heth-r- s Tell Miclinele Spnlloneto (Jive l'p $1,000 or llnve j

Ills Heart Cut Out.

UK OOES TO THE POLICE

Homh They ltntl Hid in Field IsKon ml on the Prisoners

When Arrested.

Inky hearts oozltiR Inky htood. Inkyknives MIcMhk In Inky thrimts nntl InkyKlbbelH (lnnslInK Inky HpureH of men, nil '

ilrawn on many letterB nlKned "I,h Mann I

.Vera" citUHe.l .Mlchiiele Spnlone much i

fear."(live ux $1,1)00 or we will eut iur

heart out mill Mow up ynur hiue withilnamlle," the lettera imlil.

Mlchasle was m aeiueil that he wentI'lffht to thf nntlr Htnllnti nnrf l.tl.l lltanithere that hl life whs threateneil anil j

inui rnmv one waa KimiK lu Henu Ilia liennd coal liualnecs from the basement nt6S8 (IraveKeud nxcniie. In Brooklyn,tluoURh the loof If he didn't do hi hewas told.

Alsui Mlehaele told the I'arkvllle policethat he had planned a trip back lo Sicily j

and that maybe people had on that ac-count an lildi that he was rich. No suchthlnK. protested Mlehaele; he had barely; "

enough for n Kteerage cot there nnd buck.Day before yesterday an unusually r,POr" HouBherty. Deputy l'ollre

bloodthlisty letter nrrlved. It was nil- - fomnils.loner, jesterday gave out a longdressed to "Tony," the Italian b.nber on statement defendlnc members of the e

first floor, but Mlehaele knew It was partment acnlnst the charges that hlnhlor ninisen, oecause in one corner waswritten "coal cellar." Whereat Mlehaeletrembled and went again to the police,

So jesterday the platoons went outfrotii the Parkvllle station with orders tolook for strange men about 566 Gravesendavenue.

Before that order was Issued DetectiveMcDonald had spent an evening walkingup and down the Brooklyn Bridge prome-nade a few feet behind Mlehaele, waitingfor one who was to cuinc and say, "Iam Giuseppe, Give me the money," as thewrltcis had said would be done. ButGiuseppe did not appear, though Mlehaeleand the detective walked many miles.

Spies Men In Field.Patrolman Berberlch hns the beat by

Mlchaele's house. He heard the captaintell about the Black Handera and had hisweather eye open for strange men. At6 o'clock he spied three men he hail notseen before slinking Into a field nt Four-teenth avenue and Thirty-nint- h street.He called George Flood and Phil F.ndress,his police partners, and crept In after thetrio.

Concealed In the weeds Berberlch sawthe three bury something. That finished,they went out and placed a stick by thesidewalk to mark the spot.

Kndress and Flood followed them, whileBerberlch staed In the Held and dug upwhat had been hidden. It was a bombwith slender fuse eight Inches long andwicked looking. Berberlch put It backwhere he found It nnd waited.

Meanwhile Flood and Kndress had seenthe three men walk several times pastMlchaele's basement and peer down tosee If the proprietor was there. Mlehaele,not suspecting they were planning to killhim In a little while, was playing with hisbambino, the youngest, while his wife satnear him nursing another of the brood.

Back to the Held and the bulled bombwent the three. The tallest of them notnoticing that some one had been there,lug the thing out nnd put It In his pocket.

Then they started for Mlchaele's.Policeman Berberlch crept thtough the

grass behind them. Outside In the ilam-nes- s

Flood and Kndress werr u.iltlng.Berberlch manoeuvred and got In front.The three bomb men eered nnd came outon Giavesend Hentie far ahead of thepoliceman.

The rapture KSreled.An automobile came by and Flood and

Kndress Jumped on the running board. Ashort distance away from the three fig-ui-

they diopped softly off and diewtheir guns. Berberlch stepped from be-

hind his tree anil the trio were prisonersTheir leader was a huge man. six feet

two Inches tall, broad of shoulder andswarthy of face. He was Giuseppe .o.mangino, a liveryman of 160 First ave-nue, Manhattan, he said. His companionswere John Colvltto, U years old, a pedlerof 176 l.ufajette street, anil Sardlno C.i- -

mlllo. 26, a laborer of 29 Kast Kleventhstreet, Manhattan.

They were searched In the street. tiI.omanglno's pocket was the bomb. Alsohe had a letter addressed In lony, coalcellar," and full of threats and demandsfor money.

At the Paikvllle station Mlehaele, trem-bling yet from the Imminence of thedanger be had escaped, said Lnmanglnohad been to his coal cellar trying to buyIt and asking many questions about theproprietors wealth. .Mlehaele knew

but not Colvltto. Mlehaele wasvery angry and wnnted to manhandle thethree but the pmlce wouliln t let him.

The letter Lomanglno had was In thesame handwriting as the others Mlehaelegot. The three were held without ball.

MRS. DOBBINS SEEKS DIVORCE.

Heiress Who llloped With Carpenter Chnrnes ,onSapiort

Philadelphia, Nov. 20. Mis. LauraFllcklnger Dobbins, connected with proinlpent Philadelphia families and one of theheirs to tho estnte of Mrs. Itobert N.Carson, late of Krdenhelm, near ChcsnutHill, haa brought suit In the LancasterCounty Court for divorce. Bernard Dob-bins, a young carpenter who wns em-ployed on the Carson estate and withwhom the heiress eloped years ago Inopposition to her wealthy relatives. Is tlr&spondent.

Although Mrs. Dobbins has st varioustimes alleged that her husband struck her.and once testified to this In court, hercounsel, William R, Brlnton of Lnncaster.said y tho only grounds on whichthe divorce Is asked are desertion and

Dobbins denies His wires cnarges, sayInr that he haa llltreated her andhs ovlded for he" a d the childrento the best of his nhlllty,

GLASS CRITICISES VANDERLIP.

Says Nearly All Hankers Are In Fa-

vor of Cnrrency 11 1 11.

Piiincf.ton, N J., Nov. 20. Tim cur-

rency bill was the subject of a talk to-

night by Representative Carter Glass, wholectured hero under the auspices of theSpencer Trask Foundation. He criticisedFrnnk A. Vanderllp of the National CityBonk of New York, saying that excoptMr. Vanderllp and the "Inner circle" InManhattan nearly nil the bankers of thecountry are In favor of the bill.

"We have mndn a conscious effoit toreform the system," he said, "nnd bringabout it decentralization of wealth. Thepeople through their Government will havelepresentatlvts on the governing boardsof the banks. I say now that the bankerswill not hae a representative on thoFederal reserve board which Is to becreated under the bill."

Friends n Dine eore W. I.oft.ifri.iid of Congressman-elec- t George

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER

Hotel NassauLong ach, L. I., N. Y.

on: am. yi:aiFORTT MINUTES FROM NEW YORK CUT

Long Island I'leelrle MerTleeJH Irsla Dally

ROOMS) WITH One prison 'upwardsBATH 'ISn n,Mfln, S4 All (I A V ft

,.,..,...,tUluptt4r(l5perlat Weekly sad Monthly Itstes

Mot and Cold Freh and Suit Water In allHMh Itoums

tirlll Room Open Moderate PriceHARNETT HARM'. CORPORATION

w. N. Urn Icr tin run with WiHerl Astoria

DOUGHERTY DENIES

WIRE TAPPING GRAFT

OecllU'eK Police HllVe Mfllle Al'- -

rests in Mnny decentCases.

CA I'fUIT OONDORF AX

If Protection Wns Promiseil.He Says. It Hns Not

Protected.

police officers had accepted graft to pro-

tect wire tappers. He was aiming atthe confession of Al Cohen, a former de-

tective In the Police Department, who onWednesday told the District Attorney ofacting ss a for a wire tap-per gan and a police captain who hasbeen retired from the force. The pollencaptain, Cohen said, collected the graftfor officers higher up.

Commissioner Dougherty answer Is arecord of the work done by the Police De-partment In rounding up wire tappers.He tell of orders for the arrest of alleged wire tapprs which were sent outIn thu last fifteen months and of thearrests made. He says that he arrestedCharles and Fred Gondorf, He cites therecords to prove that men under himnabbed Paper Collar Joe Gray, DutchAlonzo Bradford, nirley Carter, Frankfarbeaux, George Mcltae and J. A Dowsing.

In other words the assertion of theDeputy Commissioner Is that If anybodypaid for protection that person failed toBet It.

Refers to Becker's Fate.Can you comprehend," asked Dough

erty as the statements were being handedout to the reporters, "that 1 would piom- -

Ise to protect any one when Lieut. Beckerwas lyln-- down there In the Tombs"

Mr Dougherty's statement, after reciting that Cohen was assigned as a de-

tective November 1J. 1IM0; that on Janu-ary 24, 1912, he was transferred fromthe detective bureau at Dougherty s request, and that he resigned from thePolice Department February !. 1912,takes up In detail the work of the department against wire tappers.

The statement refers first to Simeon M.Jones of Pittsburg, who was a lctlm ofwiretappers to the extent of J2O.00ODougherty sny that when the case wasbrought to hl attention he had nn Inter-le-

with Jones, who Identified the mem-bers of the gnng that victimized him.

"I personally summoned detectlx e.s tomy otllce," Dougherty say", "and In-

structed tliem to Mnd and arrest the per-sons Identified and nNo lo brim: Into myotllce anv other persons known a. wire-tappers for Identification. Ot those ar-rested nt th" time, Joseph Gray, alias"Paper Collar Joe,"'nnd Charles Bradford,were Identified b Jniies ns two of the In-

dividuals who swindled him. I Imme-diately prepared a circular bearing photo-graphs and descriptions of the persons notnpprelietided and sent them out to cities of5,000 and over In the I'nlted States and tothe hundred Kuropean cities. I also spe-cially detail, d detectlvis to watch forGeorge McCrea, George tinndorf andFrank Tarbeaux."

Dougherty says that on Instructionsfrom him Jnnfi was sent to the DistrictAttorney's otllce, where Indictments wereobtained against all the persons named Inthe case.

The Deputy Commissioner tells of thedetectives that were sent to various cities,following clues.

"George McCrea," he continues, "wnsarrested In l.os Angeles, Cnl . on October

1913. by Detective Leigh of this depart-ment, assigned to the District Attorney'solllce.

Claims .Much Personal Work.The Deputy Commissioner sas he per-

sonally obtained the Identification and ar-rest of Fred and Charles Gondorf nnd J,A, Dowsing on a charge of swlndllna l,C. Sldbury and J M. Powell of Wilming-ton, N. C. out of J2.1.000. Ho then sentfor Kdward B. Culvtr of Sparta, Ga , liesays, and Culver identified Fred Gondnifas the man who swindled him out ofK.000, Major K. G. Pendleton of AtlanticCity. N. J., next Identified Charles Gondorfas the man who got $55,000 out of himThe Deputy Commissioner says he alsoIwrsonally ldentltld Fred Gondorf as theman who swindled Duncan Curry out of$61,000, nnd had urged promotion for anyman In the department active In roundingup wiretappers,

District Attorney Whitman said yester-day he expects to take hU witnesses- In thowlretnpplng cases before the Grand Juryon Monday, He said lie had new evidencebut would not discuss It,

PlTTSBCmi, Pa., Nov, 20. Simon M,j j0 wenlFlVy real' estate dealer ofthis city, who chnrges that he waa fleecedout of $20,onil by a gang of sharpers III

New York during July, HH-.'-, declared to-

day that ho had not hem a party to nwiretapping game and that he had lostthe money In what ho bellecd nt the time,to Ihi a legitimate coal land deal,

Mr. Jones went to Nrw York with De- -

tectlve W J. Tanney and saw InspectorI Hugh", nnd Ceorgc s. Dougherty. SecondDeputy Police Commissioner.

loiter uie lour lueu aiiegcu 10 unvnswindled him were captured. Mr. Jonessaid that efforts have been mad by theirfriends to have him drop his prosecution.

CHILD'S RESCUER REWARDED.

Ames, Who Lraprd Into Hudson InJanuary) Gets Medal and ipsn,

WasiiiniitoN, Nov. 20, The Life Sav-ing Association of New York has pre-sented a hroiuo medal and $25 In gold toJohn H, Ames, chief boatswain's nmtoon the receiving ship at New York, whoJumped Into llm North River on Janu-ary Hi last and saved a child from drown-ing. He was olllolnlly commended bythe Navy Depirtment.

The British cruiser Natal was lying offthe foot fit West Ninety-sixt- h street aftera stormy trip across init Aiianuu nunthe body of Whltclaw Held. Ames, act-ing

,

as captain of the Spray, had takena party of visitors fiom the Brooklynnavy yard to see the British warship.

Cornelius Kane. 7 lenra old, who wasplaying on the dock, fell Into the Hudson,

W, Loft will give a dinner In his honor, The. tide was sweeping down ihe rlerat the Little Hungary Cafe In East Hons-lan- d carylng the youngster out tow.od theton street on December I. Mr. 1 oft ran 'middle.on the Democratic ticket, but there will I Ames leaped Into the ley witter, swainha many Republicans among the dinner! out to the lad and towed him back In thefuastfl. J.

21, 1913.

LINERS MENACED BY

SEASON'S FIRST ICE

The I'enns.vlvnnla Ueports

Three Herfrs In Northern

Stennier Lnne.

WARNING IS SENT OCT

lloiites Mkely to He MovedSouth Before Reprnlnr Dnte

of .fnnunry 31.

The first of the Iceberg crop to reachthe lane of liners plying between NewYork nnd Kuropean ports has been dis-

covered by the Hamburg-America- n steam-ship Pennsylvania, due here Shesent a wireless warning on Monday.Among the stenmshlps that caught It wasthe Cunnrder Laconln, which has nrrlvednt Boston from Llveipool, The messageMas transmitted to the hydrogiaphlioffice and was ptomptly put on the chartthere for the guldnme of navigators.

The Pennsylvania passed thiee bergs,the largest of which was SO feet highnnd 100 feet long. They were severalmiles north or the liner s course and weredrifting slowly Into the steamship lane.The position of the Pennsylvania, as

by wireless, was latitude t5 de-grees 4 minutes, longitude 47 degrees27 minutes. This Is directly In the courseof stenmshlps liound to and from the portsof northern Kurope, but a few milesnboe the track of liners running betweenchannel ports nnd eastern ports of theUnited States.

The experts think the sudden appear-ance of Ice so far down this time Indicatesnn unusually early drift of bergs Into thesteamship tracks. It Is likely Hint thelanes may be moved further south bygeneral consent before the end of theyear, Instead of January 31 next year,

Charts Show Xo Denser,The latest (November) hydrographlc J

conn nan no ice symoois excepi in inStrait of Belle Isle and out In the At-

lantic to the eastward about SOn miles.But this chart accounts for conditionson the ocean to October 20 only

Under the title of "Ice Conditions" theNovember chart prints this, "Navigationof tho Strait of Belle Isle by the trans-atlantic trade ordinarily ceases aboutNovember 26, although the average dateof the formation of local Ice Is someweeks later. In the Itlxer St. Lawrencenavigation closes the last week in No-vember." It Is likely that the strait mayIn. open a bit longer than usual thisautumn.

The freighter Bristol City, In yester-day from Swansea, also passed n berg.She takes the high course of steamshipsfrom northern Kurope. It was fifty feethigh and 150 feet long and about sixtymiles north of where the Pennsylnnlapassed Ice. This would Indicate that nprocession of bergs may be coming downon Ihe Labrador current toward thesteamship lane.

Gales RrlnKlnit lee Down.The southerly movement of the bergs

Is due chlclly to the heavy and persistentnorthwesterly gales that have roared outof the St. Lawrence Valley In the unusu-ally stormy latter half of October nnd thefirst part of this month. Capt. Johnstonof the revenue cutter Seneca, which withthe Miami patrolled the Ice region In thefirst half of this year, remarks In his re-

port that so far as Ills obsei-vatjo- wentbergs drift with the surface currents.Where two currents meet, such lis theU'ibrador nnd the Gulf Stream, the dom-inant one eventu.illj talus charge of theberg

The southern moxement of the Ire alongthe east side of the Grand Banks seemedto be the captain said, a matter ofweather conditions For many das thebergs remained stationary, then nfter anortherly blow they started to the south--

est('apt. Johnston gives some hints to skip-

pers In his reports on his observations ofseveral months cruising in the lie region.He says, "Speaking about lookouts Itoccurs to me that on a very large ship,with decks some seventy feet above water,bridge some twenty feet higher, nnd look-out posted higher still, the lookout mighthe higher thnn the top of a small berg,and hence on a dark night he might eas-ily miss seeing the obstruction until toolate.

lu a light low fog an observer can seea berg from aloft sooner than from thedeck, but. In a dense fog we found thatthe lookout was best Kept from the spardeck, as the first sight of the berg wasthrough the hipping wnter at Its base.With the searchlight we were able to seea berg about three miles away on n dimlymoonlit night and two miles after themoon set Owing to the blinding effectof a searchlight on the observer I wouldnot rei omineiid lis general use for a vessel under way, tin a dink night a vesselIn tho vicinity of bergs should slow upso ns to be able able to manoeuvre withintho limit of visibility "

PHILOLEXIAN'S 1913 PLAY.

rnliimliln foclet) Will Produce "TheSilent Woman."

The Phllolexlan So.dety of ColumbiaUniversity will present "The SilentWoman," a comedy of lien Jonson's, Intho Brlnckerhoff Theatre at Barnard Col-leg-

this evening nnd after-noon and evening Tho play will be pro-duced by the students In a manner nsnearly as possible approaching the con-ditions of the KlUnbe'han stage at thetime at which the play was written ProfAlgernon D. Tassln of Columbia hascouched the plaers.

The Phllolexlan Society Is one of the old-

est college literary societies In AmericaIt wns founded In ISO-.'-

, and has hcenprominent nt Columbia for the hist cen-tury, Mnny of Columbia's most promi-nent alumni, Including John Purroy Mlt-che- l,

have been members of the society

"I0LE" TO BE TRIED ON DEC. 8.

Musical Coined Will He llenril FirstIn Atlantic ( It).

"lole," n musical comedy which ItobertW Chambers, and Ben Teal hae tiradefiom Mr. Chambers's story, xvill haveIts Initial performance on December S

nt Atlantic City, N J. II. II Frnzenwill make tho production, The scorewas written by William F Peters.

Frank Lalor will play the principalrole, and the cast will Include Curl Giint-voor- t,

Stuart Balrd, Leslie Gnze, HoydenKeith, Hexford Hendrick. Herbert

Martha Richie, Maltha Spears,Hazel Kirk. Kdnn Pendleton, GretclienKastmnn, IMini Temple, Ann Vano andLena Robinson.

After three days presentation In At-

lantic, City and it similar engagementIn Hartford, the piece will tin taken toBoston or brought to New Voik,

JAMAICA'S NEW THEATRE.

House in He Oncuril Tliniil.sal vlnarKir Will Sent SS.IIOO.

A new $'.'110,01111 theatre lu .Inmnlca,yueens, will be opened on Thanksgivingovo Borough Piesldent Connolly andother Queens borough officials will bepresent, and Mr, Connolly will make anaddress.

Th thoatre will be conducted by Will-iam Fox and will be ilewitrd to vaude.vlllu acts nnd phutu- pla)s, which will beshown continuously from I to II 1', M.

I ThU theatre will seat 2,300 persons.

iiiiiiiniiMiiiiiiiom.i lauiu... . ."

Theodore B. Starr, Inc

tain A)wtuiennri

47Fred

GLYNN WOULD RETAIN

PARTY ORGANIZATION

Hopes to Hush Throiich Prhmir.vDill Al.olisliini: Slate

Conventions.

Gov. Glj tin favors a direct primar) lawthat will do away with State conventions,party emblems on the primary ballot ariddesignating committee, but not withparty organizations. He hellcAcs thatsuch a law will be passed by the presentLegislature soon after It reconvenes onDecember S.

At the Waldorf yesterday, upon hisIn New York to attend the Cham-bu- r

of Commerce dinner last night, theGovernor said :

"The bill that is to be framed will pro-vid- e

thai tho names of candidates shallappear on the primary ballot by petitionanil not under party di slgnatlons. Thiswill really give that freedom of opportun-ity that Is desired.

"I am for the retention of the party or-

ganization, Including the State nnd countycommittee and the subdivisions. Someof the men who have called on me tospeak for direct primaries would abolishthe party system entirely, but I cannotagree with them. I believe In the paitsystem.

"Since the day when I asked the leg-sla- ii

leaders lo Kit thlough a tenldirect primary law I hae hem stu prisedlit the number and character of the

at my office. The) showed me Low

earer for direct nominations are peoplethroughout the State.

liov Gl.wm said he was hopeful that thelenders lu the Legislature would see Hie

problem as he does He said Ihe Demo-

cratic party had an obligation to the peo-

ple which It must meet at once.'

"The party leaders." he said, "are com-

ing to my way of thinking regarding aworkmen's compensation law. The hill Isvlitually completed, and 1 bellow It willbe passed. 1 feel that the primary billwill go through nt about the same time'

Before leasing Albany the Governorsaid It lookeil as If the legislators wouldreturn to the Capitol practically agreedaB to tho laws they wanted passed Hethinks the session will not last more thana week.

BLAUVELT SUPPORTS GLYNN.

For l'inie of Direct Primary Hillat This Session. it

Al n.vv, Nov 20 Stale Senator '

George A. Hlauxelt of Rockland count),who Is to succeed nctlng Lieut GovHubert !' Wagner as the Democraticleader of the Slate Senate, agreedthat Gov. Glynn was wise In the sugges- - 'jHon that the present Demociatic I.eglslc- -

ture should pass a leal direct primary lawand a fair workmen's compensation bill atthe December session. j

"I believe," said Senntor Hlauvelt. "thatthe present Legislature should s bulbthese measures before adjournment, pm-vlded there Is sufllelont time tor piopcipreparation nnd deliberation, but bothHeps involve a consideration of bio. id )

uucstlons of ltnl Importniue to all Hi- -people of the State. '

"In view of the ery careful consldeiat Ion which both measures ),ae receivedduring the present year think It Is po- -

Mble, to pass them befoie the next l.egis '

lature convenes and In a m.iiinei whanwill meet with public approval "

Pints and I'lnyers,H special arrangement the I'alae,

Theatre will present next week as an.added feature the Lngllsh satire ' Hiivln-- ;

a Gun" The piece Is being pbocd tnliondon by O. P. Huntley Cyril Clia

an ICngllsh actor, will piesent thepln let here.

A special perfoi malice of "Gurseheswill be given nt the l.vrlc Theatre . n

the. afternoon of IVecinbfr 'i for Hebenefit of the woman's depai tmenl of tinNational Chic I'cder.ition

Tin1 opening dale of the "Mlsliadit-Lady-

at the I'ulton Theatie lias hecichanged fiom Monday to Tuesday ulgbi

Krnnk Lea Short of the Open Apliayirs hn begun lehmrsals for the anmini perfoimance of Caps and Hells, thWilliams Collegi. dramatic club. "Nlobe '

will be the offering this year, with thatitle role planed by Charles W. Hrackeii,tun of Senator Hrnckett. The plnv willbe given on January ." at the Hotel Pla.a.

Mine, Hertha Kalbh will appear at th'Knickerbocker Theatie on December 'na lomantlc ill, una called "Rachel,"

the engagement of Dolnnd Hi IanIII "The Marriage Market"

The annual concert given by tho Catho-lic Protective Sooiety of the Archdioceseof New York will take place at the Hip-podrome on Sunday night. The purpo-- e

of the conceit Is to raise funds to con-tinue llm work of the society, which .

I carried out In the mutts and prisons, p uOcularly the chlldicn's court Among tip'

'artists who will appear are .Mine. FianceAlda, Orvllle Iliinold, Ruby Heeder, Guti.iCasslnl, a Russian cellist-- , Ida DaNlnofl

I Russian violinist, and Frank La Forge.The Filars Club will give a dinner 'n

, honor of David Wartleld on Sunday nigh'i December It, at the Hotel Astor. Tnean aiigeiuetils ate In Chirac of Cn.uleHinineisnn Cook, Marc Klaw. Lew FieldMax Lai'g Me) its, Marcus t.oew, ll tiison Fisher, Regan Walker. Daniel I'rohman. Mike Simons, Charles Gilbert. JeanC, Havez, Ralph Trier and Richard Hal

5

Sentjeuvlnnotable gemsTHREE sapphire, an

emerald and a ruby,without equal among thefine specimens now inthis country are includedin the collection of exceptlional jewels we are nowrhowing.

These gems are characteristic of the care exer-cised in the selection ofour stock of preciousstones.

Inspection is invited.

Next Time YouBuild a Bridgeii will mvp tinio if you Ret MurrayO'Ni'il.iilitiil.lcrnttdhomL'tliitiKinorB

in Hex Iti'dcliV now nnvol, "TheIron TiuN." This is O'Ni-il- story,lie's no hntiilsotiii' dashing hero, butit lull henvy man of forty, withsliitlitly graying temples und tholaciiil murks of strenuous etule.ivor.Hut he run love mid fight and build.The story eertninly is Alaska.

THK COHYSTON I'AMILVHeckling a woman is a ticklish

spoil, especially when the woman i

hidy ('oryston And. sure enough,she lilts it to the heights ot a liattlofideas, nnd a line warrior she i inthe finest story Mrs. Humphry Wardlias ever written. This new book incalled "The Corysion Family ."

THF DKSIIM'.I) WOMAN'

C lilatiiitigthewoman won't do andill X. Ilarben shows why ill Iik big

new novel called '"Ihe Pi-l- ied

Woman." It shows what a m.m ca'imake ol his life when no fore. - butthose ol bis own consciousness ,n-- e

brought to bear. "Ihe lii-u- i-d

Woman" might have been an ninec-tionab- le

Moty in some hands Hutnot m his. All Harper books .u- -

loan.

Tin: lMssinxxTi: fimiaiwT No man's woman would si . milheroine w ho is not a mere ch i "f,but a living realitv in tie- tag fII. C Wells's new novel lb ' Mr.Wells rilVs some sharp tilings .iNi'itour light to live our own live. Hotells ns how one man and one - me-ii- i

did it in this new book which is i .i lied"The Passionate Friends " It i a,

good story and much more.

TO-DA- Y

At any Book StoreHarper & Brothers

WAGNER'S LIFE IN FILMS OPENS.

First Public Presentation nt ewA msterdnm Theatre.

Klaw iV-- F.rlangcr's presentation of 'TheLife and Works of th" Immortal Com-pos-

Rich.ud Wagner-- ' in motion p.uies was given publicly itrrtav after-- 1

noon at the New Amsterdam Theatre Thopictures alrcadv had b.eu shown a' private,exhibition.

The films were made bv the McHe FilmCompany of llerbn. A i amnion and ti

leiital accompanied their presents-- jt on The large theatre was comfortablytilled.

The pictures will he continued Indcfl-- 1

ti.tely at the theatre on Simla- . Monday,Ties la Tlnirsdav and F' dr af'rrnnnrisnn I on Suiday tuglii

FACE BROKE OUT

WITH RED PIMPLES

Like Bunches. Itched Badly. Would

Fester and Be Sore. Used Cuti-cu- ra

Soap and Cuticura Ointment.Face As if Never Had Pimples.

Stony Creek, V, V, "In tlin 11 n o--

niy face had lilaekheadi h i It in,. I I .i ,,HUee tl'.em out bulllicy would i iiii'Iiii-'-

analo and apcr a m.mIo myfare broUi out nIOi I. Im

,.i..,..i..d 'ei.-- .. .. i

. U Ilk o little ted leincli-- s, all, ,til,, .1 i t

would di; nnd i I "tabecame t h e y p. ie I ,i

' badly p"l afier I i' I

Un ca p oil lliev T'r 'i 'i (. anil I.,, kiiri' 'lcl I '

queeis them and they would !' - ,ei I

spread. They would iiutn im ' " '

horrid, so Hist I was asliiimen to e il

much. I dldu t know wh.n lo tl- ( " e

"I would steam my fate goml c r. 'vr.hut. that didn't help it I saw the a

tlsement of fiiUi'iir Soap a- I ""' t

In the paper o I tent and U"i maple ofeach I used them up nnd tl en huIu nu

rake of Piillcira Soap and some Cuilr'iiOintment, and after two weeks 1115 (uce aa

Jint as ir I neie- - had p'niples on II at all '

(Signed PmI'I II. Putnntn, Mar. Il, 1' It.Although the f'liUcurs Soap said Oint-

ment are nioat urierul in Ihe treatmentor ITisiion of the skin, scalp, luir andhaniU. t he aro alio must alu ibis for eecrjr-Ha- y

tin H th toflst, tiath and nurserythey iromutsitnl maintain the licdHi

of ths akin n4 hair from Infancy lo nn.Bold everywhere. Liberal sample of cvb'milled frss. tilth ,11-- HWIn lino'.

pott card "Cuticura, Dept T, Hm'im. '

WMenwho thaveand thampoo wiih l!u.Iteura hots will Audit but far tola ud teat