Transcript

XI . •

Asked if She Will Remove It,si>Says "It's Mine."

Dr. William E. Woodend .md his wifp ra'omHn*to examination yesterday befom I'nited State.Commissioner Hltche ;inrt both answered ,jjJ2qupstton.s put to them by Abraham Grul.^r. r^ceiver of tbe Woodend concern. Thfir presence »jwltaessea was assured by an oroei issued b> j iHolt, directing their arr.-^t if they failed to

(\u0084^."May Donovan. who was Dr. Woo.ienda ateacgi

rapber, waa present before th.- (-xaminer. "sut sj.»di.l not i-~'< Into the witness ;ii.iir. .Mr?. Woc^e-^Wtu he rlr.-t to testify. In r»»;ly t.. Air. (iruier,questions she said she had s o«nk account at tla>Com Exchange Bank's branch at Coiumbiu-tTt,and Seventy-second-et-, and .1 ;af. rtriwili aa^ \u25a0

there. She took i».7< \u25a0> oat -'f the vault .1 v.v-k aa>u> be used bail for h.-r husband

>>.—

V'.u own a house In Xicholaf-ave.' •Test. 1 Inherited it tn>m my moine:-. and also tk»bouse !am livingin.

Q.—Tea own 5-..in<.- ;:o.:i.^ ut the UatUen-Rooj,Company? A. -Yes. They are valued at • -'\u25a0>»

Q.—Bow did you gel tIM stock? a.—lbought,by check oa the Central 'trust Company. My t^band gay« me r.>."•' In Ihe same stock for rioa?,Ihad lent him t.. go Into busnusa

*y.— Di.i you e^t any dividends oa that «oci»

A. v- \u25a0-. !tsi fall•

'.-. Thei \u25a0 was considerable monrj sr.*r.t fcj yoarhusband last year tn [urniahini and adonuaaalhouw its Seventy-first-st.

'A I 1 ::..t tell i»may hv- been as bnch as ts'.'v--.

'

: .\u25a0.•:.! you sa-,. a murtgaso on the d-yeatj.Brst-st bouse? A. 1 .-\u25a0. lgave th. m-.rtjjajf^ <irTuesday in a down»»wn otnye. Iwould hava .--\u25a0off my head at that time, because 1 wu triktel• ;i..1.

'knew Iarms signing sum" son of » paaep

that concerned money matters.Q.—

-X;"l when you signed that rnurt^asc^ did MBnot kn-'w th.-it your husband had .1 money "termIn the beusei A.--I li.l not Iundernr.Mid thatthe bottsa was my own. ;; was tn rr.y name. 1simply know that Iwaa signing a n, rt{a»faSXo.no, .Mi husband urged mt- :-ot t^. r\an v

<1-

'..w did you come to invest In th^ Heda#».Rodee Company? A (• a :-\u25a0 tnj us .; t^'.ja»it was '< «.'..i Investment.

Q.-When are those certiflcafa .if >:\u25a0.- ;c now*

A.—ln the vault "f i'r* Cora Elxchangf- Bank.Q.-lou willnot remove that st..-k. win y..u? ±- why?</ Because your husband'a ct* i n th->»

it ts \u25a0 |..irr ..f his assets. A —lt !«. mire My sea.band save it to me.>l i\u0084r k>ve and affection? A.—Well j

-(j And the horses? A.—Tea.'.\u25a0

—How mii.li would ...'•• <• 1! your horse? ft»»A.—lwould not •• il them. I« iuld not sell tiipnny f'u.-k for anything.

The examination of Mrs. \Vood*?n<J was rhr-n lus.pended, and her husband v.

- ... \u25a0 \u25a0 stacd.He <=.-iid that he had he>*>n a s?o.k brokei h?it.'..iit two yean and sa« Induced to s.-" in.) th«business by bis partner, Mr. £:iger.

'i lon dii business on inejglus? A.—Tea,V -Wh^n an order waa given, what waa .icn»?

A.—It was sent t>> the''"•n<=..|Mat>-.! F. \u25a0

execution.Q \i s m.ir. gave you :""

aa a margin fot th«. •• of .1 million shares .f New-York ''•ntnista k, what was done? A. it was • . •\u25a0

'

Q Were not the customers entitled to rh.- «todtwhen they 1-aTn»- to you with th>- diff(r«m "cv-tweeu t"i>- margie and th^ balance ol th< ntniKj'!A.

—They v. ere.

V.—

Then why .;;.! you not gtve t'rv cuxtonwr» tsistock they applied fee s ft• Says ago" A.—Theyknew tht- situation. Iwas verj fr.nK srlto ta-m.Tht?v knew th it Ihad r.<>r actually received thastock for th"-n. When a demand was made by acustomer, the stock waa I'outht or borrowed forhim.

Q.—la th»-re a w-1! in the Consolidated Kv-ivinge?A Noi thai 1 know -'f.

Q.—Then, wher- di! you -•• wiih the bsjekfldA.—] never bucketed in my lif-'.

Q. In Instances where \."> did n^t h-iy-1 the stockdeUveied and still charged interest to t: . \u25a0

tomers. Is not that Docketing and crooked? A-

That i.= a \',;i!lStr. et custom.<j Ton rcm rmber ywu wif« .-ienine the moitaan

house in Beventy-flrst-st.? A.-Ido. 1 tab]h. r not to do so. She algued it i>e \u25a0 a tatl1 would Ro to jail if .«he did not.

Q.—Ana you k.iv.- \-.;; wife H.~ fl bMt week A.—Idid. That waa out of the BJOO Igot from R-imln-on April V. Wit »h» r-st ai the mon-v ipaU c£the servants and settled sosse smali bills.

Q And that waa after the rhattel mortgaga nyour Bee furniture? A.—lt waa

«.' {That iif'-am-' ..f the check for Mrs WoodeaftHedden-Rodea stork? A.—ldon't kn..w.

y.-Is no! the Hodden-Rodee company hi debt ti>\u25a0.!;:\u25a0 firm In the si::n of S3So;e|tS3? A.—ldor.'t knew.

Q.—

And —till the nedden-Hodaa Coanpany nupaying dividends <\u25a0( -\u25a0" per cent! Aw—Tes.

y.— l>i<! you not share m business with the He>i-d«»n-Rodee Company? A.—Only in the east I1few offices in whi h w> shared the taytusa sf tssorTir»>. Icar only r'^'a!! the name of ort> sucioffice.

Q.—Were there not ten of them? A.—No. Not "••many as that.

Q—

And yon divided the profits for the sals of t^9stock? A.—No; only In the form of dividends 1th«- stock.

t^.—

Were you not to feet So per cent? A.— Xo.Q.

—When Rradhury came here you ialke.l W'T^

him nhout your suspension^ A.—Idid. v- ry

frankly.... And you gave him a' check f.>r P.!"•<"> just ha>\u25a0

1\u25a0

\u25a0 A IdidQ \\'t:at does this check for $"-.'..'\u25a0\u25a0". made out t->

the Hadden-Rodee Company forcastnnw r-'

\u25a0mean? a. -I'm umibia to explain that other tbss.it was yn\<\ s<> that Bradbury could take th.home with him.... But lSnd other chi ka v. i>ie oat to th- HssV.:\u25a0 a-Rodee Company, soma bemg tar stock trnniar \u25a0

a 1 cannot explain them also v>lookina over the 1 ks

Q.—Have you any objection to your wife r.miriirlen-Rodee stock which 3 ; : !

A. 1 gave It '" her In •-•>•*•} faith, \u25a0••:IIt!:is entltb .1 to k.^i> it.

WIFE'S STOCK,

THE WOO DENDS TESTIFY

TKISTMOHri'V IIKI.f

\u25a0BBS k* vn :ir^lliy SBSJBSjBBi »h^ asSSSSMsSSSTrlhuiic'* n.i.-roH lolimmv

Woman Accuses Dawson Reduction and Con-centrating Furnace Company Officer.

Frederick \V.Van Noi \-ick. of No. 22 West Xinety-fourth-it., treasurer of th^ Dawson Reduction ;;niiCoaeeniiating Furnace Company, .it Cbambers-st,and West Bread was arrested yesterday on a

barge of grand larceny. Later b..- was i :irn!- \u25a0'. i!icustody of court

Th.' complainant, Mrs. Emily !>•* \'lilrtte. .if x>>10] v/.-st Portletb-st.. alleges that in May. tSBS,she purchased $\u25a0\u25a0<>' worth of stock of to< i'iv\.s,.:i

company from Van Nortwlck. At th.' time, sbjalleges. Van Sort wick told her that the companybad been formed, and thai it owned all the pat-rats ;uf.l machinery After purchasing the Brstitock, she says, sh.- bought fSSO more. Recently,sh* alleges, me Pound oui thai the Btatementamade by Van Nortwlck were false, and she w.hn-.ille to r back any of the n;..i .v

FIVE HAVE "SPOTTED FEVER."Evidence of the prevalence ..f cen br.> s; inal

meningitis, or "spotted fever." In Harlem bai beenbrought to light, fly>% persona suffering wit!-, thwdlsei •• h.-i\iiic been received al the Harlem Hos-pital within a week ending on Sunday. •

>no ofthese imtl.'nts, Wlnfleld Dyer, .f Xo. MS Kast One-hundred-and-twenry-sixth-st., who entered the ha«-tit.-ii on -Sun. lay. died yesterday. Tv,. ..f the .-;•••four nre seriously ill

COMPANY'S TREASURER AKRESTED.

\u25a0\. Democrat, and recently he became an adherentof William A. Doyle against Benator P. H. Mc< \u25a0"

fen. His appolntmeni to ..tt:. •• will be regmrded a^

iMow nt M- \u25a0< 'arren and a "lift" for 1 »'•>>..\u25a0.

"1 believe Mr Farrell will make a eo."i deputy."Mr McAdoo said yesterday, and added:

M \u25a0 has had ample experience. an<l he cornear^.'ommiMirlr.l t" me as to character, for Integrity,honesty and ability, by some ol the leading businessand professional men of Brooklyn without regardto party. He has been exceptionally recommendedby various clergymen .\u25a0.' rame of the leading <i**-nofnlnatinns, who are warm In their pr.nl -<\u25a0\u25a0 of himand in recommending him for this positinn.

I ;iK.-iin repeat, there la -inly one h*nrl to thepolice force In Brooklyn, as well .'is iv Manhattan,and as long .-i* Iam In this «>nV<» thnt -viil rr.n-rinue to be the case. Th" pobce conditions ir.Brooklyn have rmproved eonsiderabrj of !ate, an«ino effort will be spared to mak« the police ef-ficiency in thai borough better n'l '\u25a0' .'ttaln aliluhiT stan.liir.l than In the past.

Then Mr MiAdoo made a remark which ap-parently waa Intended to have speda] slKnifleano^."Mr. farrell," he said, "thoroughly understan4swhnt 1 want an !must havo. and ho baa

-.mfsr 1

a faithful and loyal support."Mr Parrel] is Bfty-one years old. and waa '.orn

In this city. He has lived most \u0084t hie tif,. in theMlitiiAssembly District of Kings County, an.i horepresented the district m the Assembly in XXO,IMand IMS. lie is a graduate of the CoUega of sr.

Fraii'-is Xavier For s"mt- y.'Hr.- h^ was associatedIn the law business with nammi T. Maddoat, andtook th* practice Of the firm after Mr. Maddoxwpnt on th« heii.il. He w.is chief \u25a0;• rk of theBoard of Supervisors of kitis* County, and anassistant county treasurer, and in MS he waa :«deputy of I'oiiop Commissioner Bell, i;i Brooklyn.

F:irrf!i and.Boll wen mtisaate friends until theMcCarren-sfurphy fplit occurred. Then F.irreiitransferred his alleKian*-* f». William A. Doyle an.lis known now a* a pronounced Doyle n..:•

-:J4t, McKeown, two bills, one i,raiding for chap-was In the New-York Fire Department at 11,000maximum salary: the otl:<-r for medical oftlrrrp withiank and udaries th<» sum- us battalion chiefs.

Senator Whitlo^k. authorisJns; the New-TorkBoon) at Estimate a:xl Apportionment to providef«r public playgrounds in that p:irt of BrooklynI«6uiul.d by Division. Loe. Bedford, (Jrof-ne andM;afffc;!«srtoii ays. and to Issue corporate stock fortne purpose not exeeedine J:: r-'.">ir-'.">i a y.:,r.ttaator PlunJdtt. authorizing rtaanse In th» New-

"Eork Central's terminal plans \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 us to carry Park-f»*»r past th«. Forty-«econ<i-Bt. railroad yards bytwo elevated ways instead of one as originallypfjpDosed.

%<r'!''? the bills carrj'injt p.npropriatlons signod byGiylv::<>. Odell to-day ar» the following:

"Senator W. L. Brown's, appropriatlns; C35.000 oft*» receipts from racins; associations, Tor the en-<'(nir»(,'emfni of sericulture under the direction ofthe Commissioner of Asriculture.

?^i*at'.ir Stevens. avuroDriatina SSLISO for the r*-g-uKi)»mair.teiiance at the S::t t«> Fair Commission.

BeTiator Goodseil. appropriating* $6.61w to continue'>" Improvements si Stor.v i'oint Peninsula underthe iIL-Mcilon of the American Sof-nio and Jli.storlcHMerA'atlon Society.

Ml\ Remsen. aoproDrtStinJC lIJOO for a monumenton Antietais battlefield to the but New-York Vol-DMeArs.

iSsxuttor Uarshall, appropriating 126.000 for theSiatj- t contribution to the monument In New-YorkHarbor in memory of the martyrs or the Britishprison rhip?.

MANY MEASURES SIGNED.

These Include Remsen 6 Per Cent andCity Bills.

lell lias signed theMil, a s:ri!iK«-nt

measure designed ro prevent abuses In Dip mattera chattel loans. Th<

law makes it a misdemeanor for any i"-is.n m take\u25a0 ild [urnlture. sewing

\u25a0 silverware In actual use. tools orlc.;.i>-in-•;;!« of trade, '.vf/irinK apparel or Jewelry,for a money or (or the use

ed upon th<»r rate than 6 per cent per

."'!\u25a0 : .'ernor die:: to-day In-

ciude those of:

Store Closes at 5-30 P. M.

oJh ffowmAfY^fm

$37.50. for Costumes that Have Been $60 to $100They are Made of voiles, crepe de Chine and Dei -.1 few of chiffon cloth; in

aa assortment of colors—navy blue, light blue, black and white. A feu- are madewith low neck; other, with high Deck. All arc silk-lined throughout.

A splendid array of gowns to choose from at $37.50.

About FiftyFine CostumesMaKe This "Remar^cible JVetv*It is a matter of common knowledge among the women of SewYork, tint the U'.\xamakek Costume bnsinesa this season hns Wen by t'.-.r the largest

in the city. Today we gather op abort fifty hnndsotne dresses, from many digroups, that we wish to dispose of qmrklv. We hare marked them at a unifomprice, that presents the most remarkable opportunity thai you hare yet seen-even here:

; COURT OF APPEALS DECISIONS.Albany. May :•'•.—Th<» Court of Appeals to-day

Whittled down toe following: decisions:People »x rei. Manhattan r/f<> Insurance Com-

pa!iy. appellant, ati. Wells and others Tax Com-miseioners; People ex re!. Missionary Bisters aj?tRellly and others, assessors, appellants; in re ac-oounttaj| .-.r McElheny, assignee Goodsell Com-pany; People px rel. l>ay. appellant, ;'Kt GreenePolire Commissioner: In re account of Maltland'.triistfr- r.{ Dillon, deceased; People ex rel • 'oxappellant, aKt Greene. Police Commissioner: In reB"count <>f QoetS and othei executors. Ordersaffirmed, with costs

Btodeman, appellant, apt. Haker et al :Herman,appellant, ast. Danirls. Motion to dismiss appeallyAnted. and appeal dismlsttd with <o«ts :,,< $10c*st» of motion.

Blbomberg ;.ct. The Tribune Association apnc-1-la^t: Hudson River Water Power Company .pi"-I-lajjt..agt. Glens Falls <;. s and Electric Light Com-rut.y. Question certified and answered In the af-ftrfliAtivf. and interlocutory decree affirmed, with<jps^. with leave in nrst ease to defendant to an-raT'-Sr within twenty day*. and In me second casewith leave to serve ri'iJv within twenty .lay*Jn re application of Mayor etc.. of New-York—3£»iil«ek-ave.. etc Order reversed and that ofBp«t}al Term affirmed, with costs In this courtana Appellate Division to appellant!*. First ques-tion,answered in negative; second In affirmativeJn re petition of Anderson. Order reversed andrat of Special Term srl'.r/red with costs to peti-tioner In all court?.

The «'or.rt \,t Appeals calendar lor May 11 fol-)fnrF~. No-. 354. m. 35*. z::>. SP>, MC, 303 and tm.

MISS MOROSINI IN SPEEDWAY PARADE.

Driving hrr thr*><- hltth team. Miss Glulia Moro-Blnl will lead the Bfth division of the Road Drivers'UssociaUon's annual Speedway Day parade, nextSaturday afternoon. This division consists otShort-tailed horses, and the trio that Misa Moro-airi will drive are the dneai "i that kind.

AGRICULTURAL SHOW IN NOVEMBER.

Announcement is mau- of aa Inimei horticult-ural and agricult iral show by tli« American Tn-Ktituto of th« City <\u25a0! New-Tork, to ho held In the

Herald Square Exhibition Hall, on to^ of tlio

Ma- y Bull ling, oext November. The show will last

two weeks, day and night, and the annual chrys-

anthemum show will be merged Into this exhibi-tion.

Many r'f the lnrg*> growers have already ti*Runto pro luce specimens to enti r In the

tUion Oi •• Western grower 1

committee that lie will Bhow "some pumpkinsuch over iuur Uundn d ach. A

. .-, i,ia»ter will send applei larger than ahat. and a;. Oklahoma fa mnces

t-, the committee thai he will forward a fewof potatoes, each potato as large as a good siz'-a

watermelon. Beedlesi apples, plums, grapes v.idprum - will '\u25a0'\u25a0 exhibited, i'h- premium lists arc to

i. distributed n«t wt-ek.

Father Asks to Have Him Arrested When-ever Found.

[BT TELEGRAPH TO THE T!:Il!'Lincoln, Neb., May 10. Quy A. Aj I

Chancellor B. Benjan wh, of NebraskaUniversity, has lost his mind and wandered fromhomo. Chancellor Andrews appeared in the policecourt to-day and tii-

-1 a complaint against t h •

young man, asking that he be arrested wh<]!•• has been missing from home for thr«-e

weeks, '"it bis absence and I thereof havebeen kept •ecret until to-day. His maladj Iposed t'> be duo to overwork and ill health.

foung Andrews has been admitted to the barur. ll:- ral difflcull

E. B. ANDREWS'S SON INSANE.

.Mr. Poensgen, who was struck In th<- alcharge of buckshot, was less than three

feet away fr^m tho muzzle <>f the pun when It wasdischarged. He died while on t!.. townsix miles distant. Mr. i tensgen was -t sii^-i' man

iided with his mother. Mr. Hensen Is pros-trated with grief over the accident.

They Were Duck Shooting, and Gun WasAccidentally Discharged.

[BT TELEGRAPH TO Till: TRIBUNE.]Ogdensburg, N. V., May 10.—News has

i hen of a fatal shooting accident at El-. Canada. The Rev. Gusta\ P i>gen, the

German Lutheran minister at that place, mddentally sh'>t while duck shooting vi;h the Rev,

Henson. also of Ellerslle. The gun was Intho bands of Mr. Henson, \u25a0 '-ount-iihlc manni-r was discharged

MINISTER KILLED BY MINISTER.

Louisiana Legislature May Divide State'sSchool Taxes.

[BT TELEORAPH MTHE TRIBUNE.]New-Orleana, M presentative T. Bpence

Pmith. <-.f Alexandria, has «iv.-n notice of a lull Itithe legislature which i>roj.<w.-- to divide tho schoolt.ix.^ allowing the negroes only their own con-tributii

Mr. Smith is a leading m< 1 !h" bill \u25a0will1 good chance of passing, it has crt 1

great deal of comment. The negroes pay very lit-tle taxes, and the white po,,pir> have often believedtho proportion of money devoted to th.-ir s<-h'".is

was unjust. Laoulsiana maintains art schoolsfor colored as white children, and a high and in-dustrial school in tliis city.

ONLY THEIROWN SHARE FOR NEGROES

"The Controller gave me the c'.ifcrlnK Informa-tion this afternoon." siiid the Mayor, "that a thou-sand signatures \u25a0 day Is a fall day's work. Hea!=<> added that tho law authorises him to let histwo deputies divide the work. But In my case noone is authorised to sign for me.

So I'llha •• to star' In to-morrow and t^Kin tosign. Iwill sipn and sign find alßn until I p.j t

writer's paralysis, and then I'll take a little vaca-tion. President Foraes will become Acting Mayor.and he can s:rh find sign and .\u25a0-\u25a0„:\u25a0. When Ii.1 Rivesour ;ip an po out into the counts 1 \u25a0 snd rest up, andVI \u25a0\u25a0 President Tim..thy p. Sullivan will be AetlnsMayor. Mo can sign for a day or two, and by thaitime I'llbe rested up and come back."

Mayor's Signature Demanded on

Coupon Bonds.Mayor BCeCleuan yesterday discovered that as th»

bidders for the recent Issue of {37,000.000 in city

bonds have exercised their legal right and have de-manded coupon hon. ls. th" bonds must bo sijrne'lseparately, and the Mayor's and Controller's namesmust be written 87.000 time?.

TO SIGN 37,000 TIMES

7':cr> Writs Against Expelled Men—

Rumor of Another Withdrawal.Oti application of counsel for William Bremer-

man, Justin Bischoff. of the Bupreme Court, ><•--•-irrda.-- i.-s-i. l his attachment against Prank B.Crawford an I indress r. Floyd, the firm of Floyd,Crawford <s>- Co. Deputj BberMts Porges and Meta-ger attached everything in the offices of th>>

I N \u25a0> _'."\u25a0 Broad-st., ond placed .1 custodianThey ,i]~>< attached tlif accounts In

the Vational Hank of Commerce and the fh^nix! !'.;•. Ik and t'.<- soat en the Consolidated

Stock ;ii!.i Petroleum Kx<'!ifme". The .'"it is•t.i recover $^.''-4 alleged to have been

ic.i' 1hrough 1 onverslLater in the afternoon \u25a0\u25a0< representaU\'e of the

law flini of Beasongood <v Ekiwards, .>f sVo. ttCedar-sL, secured another :it::ii\ \ nst thefirm, in favor of EHlxabetti McDermott. ror 82.«N"c information the attarhmeni wasobtalnabla at the Sberi

The Sheriff tor.v possession of the offices at -\

little before noon, when the clerks ol the concerndeparted, and the doors were locked. NeitherFloydnor Crawford, both "f whom were on Monday

: led from membership on the ConsolidatedExchange un tki < 1 irge of "obvious fraud andf;i!sp pretence" was ;\\ th*> office yesterday, andthe customers who succeeded in seeing the office

ger In the course of the morning go( littlesatisfaction. .

It was reported yesterday .if Ttioon thai anotherConsolidated Exchange broker making sis In all,

• expelled from the .\ hange. or had beenout In soma way, without any public an-

nouncement of the fact. The broker named hasbeen connected with one- of the concerns th<member of which was expelled a few days ago;President Randolph and Vice-President Wagar ol

•lined to ndmit ih.> tr\;th <>r thereport although Mr Wagar Bald tluit ;i membermlKht it of fm exchange without anypublicity If the board of governors thought It bestto make ii"announcement of its action. At theoffice of \u25a0 oncern with which the man namedhud been connected ;-<;-< was said thnt he was not in

and thai n..thine had been heard there either ofhlg ,y . >n or of nif having disposed of his mem-bership by invitation.

Wheat's the Difference?

JOHN WANAMAKEIL Iformerly A r Sle.ar: & Co. Bro.ivjy. 41h »ye.. 9th and l«h *3-

A Beautiful Collection of BrightNewly Trimmed Hats at $8

These handsome hats were just completed in our workroomsyesterday. They are made by our best milliners, with nU v•• latest style-touches.

Made of the finest French chip, in all the latest shapes and colorings;"beautifullyand tastefully trimmed with flowers, toque feathers, owl heads and Paris bands.

'

By their regular valuation they should be marked at $12 to |]8 -which prices Ithey are well worth.

Today They Are $8 EachIt is the best offering of bright, new. stylish millinery that has been made this

season. The upwards of a hundred bats are likely to be eUimed todaj in t jiffy.Second floor, TVnth street.

We have just received abort seventy-fire more of the English bomespoflWalking Skirts, t1..-.t sold at Such a liv.-Iv rate, tho other day. Th.y arc made vrithnine-gore, strapped icanu, beautifully tailored and finished. At $4.50. WOlU)v9t Second Soar, Broadway.

O/>,e GENUINE is a certaincure for all disorders arising

from impaired digestion and isused by physicians in the treat-ment of gout, rheumatism anddyspepsia.

NATURAL ALKALINB... WATER ...Insist on havingthe Genuine

TGhe IMITATION is

charged water containing ab-solutely no medicinal proper-ties and is manufactured withmarble dust and sulphuric acid.

ANALYSIS made by

Fraser & Co., sth Avenue, N.V., shows SYPHON labeled"Vichy" to be only Crotonwater charged with gas.

IMITATION.**I

vf ?|IU"I ICELESTINSIbOLD IN PINTS AND QUARTS ONLY. aaoßroaJwav N Vc

* '

AUGUSTINIAN FATHERS ARRIVE.The Very Rev. Kmarmuel Hallv de Surcy. superior

srener.nl of the Autfustlnlan Fathers of the Assump-tion, arrived last nicht from Antwerp on theKroonlnnd. He has come from Roma to establishbranches of his order in this country, and will goto his monastery at Greendale. Moss. Some timeIn June he will go to 3L lx>uls to form a 3u Loutsprovince.

BOSS PAINTER HELD FOR DEATH.Morris Rosen, a painter, of No. 118 Orchnrd-st..

died In Oouverncur Hospital yesterday from afractured skull, received by fallingor belnK pusheddownstairs on Monday morning at No. 1H« Buf-folk-st. Samuel Schlff. a boss painter, who livesat that address, was arrested, charged with homi-cide. Later he was held In $1,000 ball.

DOUGLAS ROBINSON IN SUBWAY.John B. McDonald took Douglas Robinson and

a party of friends through the subway yesterday.It was said that J. Roosevelt Roosevelt. MunroeFerguson and James D. Regan were In the party.The trip was made on a handcar.

Bought hjf Metropolitan Museum ofArt for $400

JOOOO.i.-n^d to the Metropolitan Museum of Art

nro forty-three cases of "hardware," the oollec.tlon of armor of the Due de Dtno, which arrivedfesterday on the Minnehaha. The collection, whichwas bold lasl June at auction In London, costni'out 1400.009, has been described In detail in theSunday Tribune.re the collection <-an b* exhibited It willhave

through tin- < ustom House, where the classi-fication and appraisal v.ili probably take •

erahle time it in not known wheti the public winhave -m opportunity to view th«- armor, !>ut <jm-eral ii Cesnola is doinx a!i h<; can to expedite ks

rj \u25a0 ithi museum.

DX DIM) ARMOR HERE.

Capitalist* Tell Laurier of GreatImlcs-Atlantic Shipping Plau.

Ottawa, Ont., May 1<». Chicago capltalisu:on sir Wilfrid Laurier to-day and asked

that the government guarantee bonds t.. theextent of $20,000,000 for a railwaj from GaspeHash:, on the Gulf of St Lawrence, to GeorgianBay, to connect the Great Lakes and the u-lantlc with direel steamship communication.

They also asked the government io guaranteebonds to tl of $7,000,000 for a bridgeover the Bt. Lawrence at MontreaL The newenterprise is to be called the Centra] TrunkRailway, and will take the place of the oldAtlantic, and Lake Superior should it be Incor-porated and r< Ive government aid.

WANT $20,000,000 RONDS.

Itoon Seminary Exercise*— Dr.Briggt to do Ahmad.

The graduation exercises of Union Theoiogira!Seminary were held last night nt the Adams ChapelIn th« university building, at Park-aye. nnd Bevett-Ueth-st The graduating class numbered thirty.The honor man was Ralph H. Ferris, Of PelhamManor. N. Y. He \s., s informed several days agothat be had won a fellowship, which will entitlehim to study in the United States or Europe fortwo years on liberal pay The reward Is for ge n.eral excellence in examination. His marking wasmore than '.<> per cent in .very branch.

The graduation exer«ise marked the close "fwhat since Sunday afternoon ii;is been the formalobservance >\u25a0{ the seminary's sixty-eighth annl-versa ry

After a prayer and scripture reading by the I;. vDr. William Force Whltaker, of Albany, Ust ri!K.ht.John Crosby Brown, president of the board of di-rectors, presented the diplomas and addressed theclass briefly. The degrees and certificates wereconferred by the Rev. Di Charles Cuthbeii Hall,president of the seminary. The Rev, Dr. MarvinRichardson Vincent, of the faculty, then addressedChe class.

The "farewell words" w.r,. delivered by Dr. Hall.In part he said:This is an age of changing conditions, In whichmen are failures who ,'.,, not a.|jii>t themselves tothe. conditions as they develop, This seminary ish sensitive place, but on that account it has beenand is .-in interpreter of th lught to the wlole coun-try. Since tins place baa taken th- position IIhasin advanced thought, thlnga thai were uncommonare no longer received In distrust and alarm butare being assimilated In religious and social Ufathroughout the country.

Several changea were announced yesterday in thefaculty. To the Rev. Dr. Charles A. Briggs, who hasreceived the first of the, new graduate professor-ships, has been granted a leave of absence until1905. He will Mini, start for Europe. Meanwhilethe chair is to be divided between the Rev DmJulius \. Bewer. of OberUn. and Francis BrownProfessor James K. Frame will be associate pro-fessor..r biblical theology of the X.v TestameniThe Rev Di Thomas S. Hastings, a former presi-dent of the seminary and profestior of homiletlcihas been made lecturer on practical theolocy I'r.-si'dent Hall will take Dr. HasUnn'a hon.lletl chiirThe •\u25a0• '\u25a0 Henry Sloan Coffin, krandson of WilliamH. Vanderbilt, will retain his pastorate of the 1.-.iford Park Church, but he will be an assistant i'i..-fessor of homiletics. \u25a0

THIRTY ARE GRADUATED

Thirty-nine Theologians Receive Di-

plomas.[by tei.ecihaph TO Till: trirl-nk.j

Princeton, N. J.. May 10.— graduating exer-cises of the ninety-second annual commencementof the- Princeton Theological .Seminary were heldthis morning: in Miller- Chapel, and thirty-ninestudents received diplomas. The class is the small-est that has been graduated since MB. The chapel,however, was well rilled with the friends and rela-tives of the graduates, while the larf?o number ofalumni present made the occasion memorable.

The Rev. Dr. E. B. Warfleld. president of La-fayette College, who was yesterday elected presi-dent of the board of directors in place of Dr.George D. Baker, of Philadelphia, conducted theexercises. After the singing, President Warfleldread the Scriptures, and Dr. Maltland Alexanderoffered the prayer. The first address to the gradu-'atlng class was made by Hugh Hamill. of Tren-ton. This was followed by the announcement ofthe prize winners and the fellows by l>r. Alexander.Immediately afterward President Warfleld dis-tributed the diplomas to the senior class, andPresident Francis I. Patton conferred the degreeof Bachelor of Divinity on the thirteen graduatesand the five seniors who had completed the extrawork.

The. final address to the graduating class whsmade by President Patton. At Jir.st he touched onphilosophical mutters, hut later made a more prac-tical discourse to th» class. The class hymn wassung and the graduating exercises were closed wltnprayer and benediction. The alumni remained forthe annual meeting of the association, which washeld in Miller I'hapel directly after the exercises,and was presided over by the Rev A. WoodruffHalsey, of New-York. Alter the business meetingthe alumni adjourned to Stuart Hall where theannual banquet was held and toast.* were givenby the Rev. Iv P. Cowan. 'M, of Plttsburg; theRev. W. .1. Holland, '74. director or the ("arnepleMuseum of Plttsburg; the Rev. S. J. McPhersoa

\u25a0 '•. of Lawrenceville; the Rev. C. A. R. Janvier,St. of Germantown, Perm., anil the Rev. A .1Weisley, ':'), at Trenton.

At the alumni luncheon President Patton toldsom.Mhii.g about what was Kojnj? to be accom-<pushed In the seminary In th« near future Heemphasised Hie statement that It is to be atheological university, a place of religious learningwhere a man can jr"t anything «nd everything intheology thru he wants, in connection with thisi«ie.i he \u25a0 poke of the probability of an early settle-ment of the 52.000.000 Winthrop estate "now inlitigation, which was bequeathed to the seminary.He Bald that if necessary two or three more chairswould be endowed, arid In the, future the- seminarywould doubtless stand out as the great centre ofreligious training In th» I'nited States

The following post graduate students received th«degree of bachelor of divinity: John R. AllertynWellington, Cape Colony; th» Rev Louis BerlchcfPrinceton, v; I; the Re V. Pnmnei a. Bower!Mooresburg, Perm.; George i•. Fisher Hmlthsterry Perm.; Howard M. Frank. Topeka. Kan."the Rev. John T. tiackatt. Charieroi, Venn.: iheuov loseuhT fork Station, Peni . ,„„Rev. Leonard /,. Johnson, Princeton, N J ; Alec<> Ma.-Donald. Te.sv.nt.-r. On( . the Rev StantonOlinger, Morton. Kan . David P Pretulev TroyXPn."- ;ITth'\ Mev. Robert Robinson. N'ew-On tna."ti

l,!ii"lri k \u25a0'• "-<- Malmesbury. Cape I lony-rhe following five s.niors also recolv^d th- d.-.pr.-: Rajpi, X Hickok. W'oosterVO; Henry GHow Jacksboro. Texas; < 'harles 6l m , .intvrJ'l;.-iro|t. Mich : HaroM M. RobmSil Wl ic r:-ar'Minn.; Gerritt Verkuyl Parkeville. M i.

SMALL(LASS GRADUATED.

EXERCISES AT PRINCETON

REFUSES THE AMPHION A LICENSE.Police Commissioner McAdoo yesterday granted

licenses for the Garden Theatre and the GrandCentral Palace, and refused a license for theAmphlon Theatre. In Brooklyn, because lta appli-

cation had not been unqualifiedly Indorsed by theFir© and Buildlnir departments. The licenses forthe Garden Theatre and the Grand Central Palacewere refused some time ago because they we:.- notproperly Indorsed.

A careful study of the life of man In the periodbetween his incarnations shows how small a pro-portion this physical lite bears jo th<> whole. Inthe rase of the average educated and cultured manof any of the higher races, the period of one lift-—thai ib to say, of on» day in the real life

—would

av«?niß« about fifteen hundred years. Of thisperiod, perhaps seventy or eighty years would DCspent in physical life, some fifteen or twenty uponthe, astral plane, and all the rest in the iteavcuworld, which is therefore by far the moat Importantpart of man's existence. Naturally these i'lopor-tlona vary considerably for different types of men,and when we come to consider the younger souls!born <ither In Inferior race.'" or In trie lower titttkaof our own. we find that these proportions are en-tirely chansed. for the astral life Is likely to bemuch longer and the heaven lifemuch shorter. Inthe ease of the absolute savage there is scarcelyany he.wen life at all. because he has not y,«t de-veloped within himself the qualities which cloneenable tho man to attain that life.

THEOSOPHIST VIEW OF LIFE'S LENGTH.C. W. I.eadbeator. the FliiKllsh Theosophlst, made

aa address on "What Tbeeeophy Hoes for l"s," at

Genealofflcal Hall. No. 226 West Fifty-eighth- .last evening. He said in r.art:

'extern Union Directors Make NoRe ply to McAdoo'» Statement.

President Clowry and other directors of the West-ern Union Telegraph Company yesterday maintaineda policyof silence regarding the statement of PoliceCommissioner McAdoo and the statement "f Cap-tain W. Norton Ooddard In respect to the use of thecompany's wires by the poolsellers. Colonel Clownrefused to see several newspaper men who askedfur Interviews on the subject. To a representativeof a press association he said that he bad nothingi. add to the statement he made las) week.

Several of the directors of the company sppeare 1to be annoyed by Commissioner McAdoo'a statemi nlthai he would not send a list of poolroom* t" thecompany, nut would make raids on Informationwhich th« company, through Its employe! at thepoolrooms, should send to him. They decline*] totalk on the subject, however, and it was said thaithe directors had not held a meeting to discuss theBUlriert.

Officials of th" N.w-York and New-Jersey Tele-phone Company were equally reticent yesterdayTh" poolrooms in the city were running .is usualyesterday. and the poolsellers seemed to think theywere In no danger si> long as the police and th*Western I'nlon were at cross purpose*.

mFARM rOKEMEN

nrc riprrt imil \nlunlilr,and winiflline* ililli.nil Co «<\u25a0!.But a number of good oiifnniHy be s<xriirril by consult .ins '''I- -iin.itinn- Wiiii'.-J .i.l\.ii» -..-iii.-;ii

-in the nar-

row column*.

A POIACV OF SILENCE.

v \u25a0 are tir.-.i of living We wan! to:did anj ••\u25a0 • ":.

T. a pawn tickets, dated last month,showing that various household

•i p iwii.d, wei •

There was ;iGO In cash in the room.

Commit Suicide - Feared One

Might Die Before Other.The. fear that one ml^ht die bet the other Is

believed to nave been the cause of th> death*°'

Conrad Hauensteln and his son, Conrad, Jr., U'lS.'

bodies were found yesterday In a room In the basemen! of No. 217 Easi Twenty-flfth-st. Th« twocommitted suicide by Inhaling illuminating nas.

They were always together. Th«- elder was aprinter and his son an upholsterer. The father waspartially paralysed, but did some work, while theson went to work regularly. They had lived In thebasement f"r some tinw and were rarely seen s.-;>a-

iin a table wai an -ii »i..j-«» on which was writ-ten:

FATHER AND SON KILLED.

Maurice Pike Supported EdxcinBooth and Wat Friend of Belasco.Maurice Tike, once a member Of th» supporting

cast of Edwin Booth and a former malinger oftheatres in this city, was a defendant in the W«slSide court yesterday, charged with vagrancy

Pike is Sixty-seven years old. He was taker, to

the West TMrty-sevanth-St. station Monday night

by a man who said he was William Robertson, butwho refused his address. Robertson told MagistrateMayo yesterday that Pike had been wandering

about for two weeks Robertson thought be ought

|0 be eared for. At the hearing David Belasco wasmentioned as one of th« friends who have cared Foi

Pike. In IMPiko was playing In San Franciscoand met Belasco, who wos then a stnmKllriK actor

and author. Belasce at that tim«» was In need ofmoney and Pike helped him liberally. Mr. Belascohad never forgotten It. Plko said, and had returnedthe kindness often.

Magistrate Maya adjourned fie henrinar t.> com-municate with the Actors' Fund, when it bet-am*known thai the old actor's daughter already hadappealed to the fund to care for her rather Th«fund declined to cars for him. <<n the ground thathe was addicted to intoxicants. Magistrate Mayothen wished to mmli him for six months, but Ptk*lndlsnuntly objected.

"I viisl. to work for mv living-, your honor." heexclaimed. "1 do not desire to be a dependent on.my one or any corporation. My desire la to gelemployment In my profession, where Ihay» beenH KUCCPSS

"Plnall) Magistrate Mayo adjourned th« bearing

for forty-etght hours.I»lk> started us in actor in the Bowery. Shortly

after the ('iviiWar !.»' became the manager of th-old Bowery Theatre, and for some yeara be wasmsnagw <>' the Grand Ooera House. iw-mad." suc-crestis with famous productions at the Grand OperaHouse. Then Edwin Booth waj especially promi-nent, and Pike I »me Booths leading support,playing parts in Bhakespeartan tragedies. He playedLaertes to Booth's Hamlet, Sfercutlo to p..>.»th'BRomeo, and Antonio to Booth's Othello. !!• alsoplayed I\u25a0•• Maupraud to Booth's Cardinal Richelieu.

CALL ACTOR A VAGRANT.

Liter Policeman Dunn climbed through th»window, revolver In hand, and drove Mrs.

Schroeder int < » her bedroom, where she barri-caded herself. After breaking down the doorand a s->lid WOOden bed that was placed against

it. the three policemen climbed over and grabbed

Mrs. Schroeder, who still handled her revolverand threatened t.> shoot them, but did n«'t usethe weapon. They had a fiKht to get her fromthe room, and to«,k her up bodily and carried herto the patrol wagon. One of the men searchedthe house for the Egmn ghrl He failed to findthe tlrl<>r any trace of h"i\ The woman fmiffhtnil the waj to court and until

-taken

hito the court.

Alleged Kidnapper Subdued andHeld on Insanity Charge.

Mr?. Mary gchroeder, of No. 188 Seventeenth-\u25a0ve., in the Dutch Kills section of Lou* Islandcity, who was summoned u> appearMagistrate Smith yesterday In connection withthe mysterious disappearance of Mamie Bgan,

six years old, and who has been missinff from herhome since Saturday, did not appear In court

as ordered, but was eventually brought thereby the police after \u25a0 tight and after her househad beeu forced open. No trace of the childhi.- been obtained. The woman has been com-mined to the county jail for examination as to

her sanity. Mrs. Bchroeder has. for some time,

been looked on by her neighbors as demented.

When the return of the summons \u25a0>'. as calledyesterday morning and defaulted. Magistrate

Smith issued a warrant on a charge of insanity.

A patrol wagon, with three policemen In it, went

to her home. The news that the police wereabout to storm the house spread and a crowdgathered. Th" police found all the doors barri-caded. Mrs. Schroeder refused to answer their

knocks on the door. Policeman <siKli<> finally

raised \u25a0 s.ish and wai about half way through

a window when Mrs. Schroeder rushed In. She

had a pistol In one hand and told the officer if

be did not retreat from the window she would

killhim. He retreated."

LOST GIRL NOT FOUND.

WOMAN FIGHTS POLU'I-.

NEW- YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. WEDNESDAY. MAY 11. 1004.

FAMMSLL POLICE DEPUTYATTACHBROKERS' OFFICE.WILL VETO RIG BILLS?Doyle Man to Have Charge of the

Force in Brooklyn and Queens.Police Commissioner HcAdoo announced yester-

day that he had appointed Thomas K. Karrell to

the office of Second Depot: Police Commissioner,

to have charge of th.- police in Brooklyn an.i

Qurons. Mr. Farrell. who is a lawyer, at Ho, 84Broadway. Brooklyn, and Ihres at No. M Pwwers-;t., in that borough, will not be sworn In until

to-morrow. Because he has ?ome eases to dispose ofin the courts before he can begin his official duties.Ma is a Democrat, anil has been an officeholder as

THOMAS F. TATJ'IPT.T*Appointed Second Deputy Police Coauatsskmer

ihr- Governor's action willbe on the threehl% measures siiil pending, the Retnsen East Riv-er Gas bill,the Niagara Power Company billand

theJ. T. Smith bill, is unknown. Inthecaseifth» first bill the widespread impression exists that

It will be vetoed, and this is shared by As.«em-

Wy.rnan Reinsen. Lhe author of the bill. <"er-

tai/i Tami;.. Senators who have been in thecity recently have suggested that the Tam-many men who went Into the stock market onthis bill have, already protected themselves,

nnd that an Interesting situation will develop

if ,rtie Governor vetoes the measure. Theirassertion Is that many people have sold shorton 'the assumption that the Governor wouldvena the bill, and that owing- to the mannerIn -which the pas stock i.« held an Insistenceen their covering is expected to send the price

Uf>rather than down on the veto.

In Th' ease of the Niagara bill. SenatorL/Sleinnsedieu, Assemblyman Thompson andr.any kpori people saw the Governor In be-half of th« measure to-day mid subsequently

!-i><viii=- gloomily, and the majority of those fol-lowteg the situation predict Its veto. Nothing

B%ge be fact that the .T. T. Smith DutchessGwthty Water Mil has been held up so lonse»faLß in th« way of evidence as to hew theGovernor will take action on this measure. ThegfneraJ impression is that the appropriationmeasures, reduced, as published In The Tribunettf-fisy from 128,000.000 to $26,200,000. will berrac'.e- public morrow or Thursday, and pos-sibly the omnibus vet.i also. It -\u0084; known thattie constant stream of members visiting thefjssjqilisi. and appealing for their particularmiMsure Is wearying him. and he may take

method of ending- the matter.

Belief That Odcil WillKillUcmscn,

Niagara and Smith Measures.[:ir TnT.EiUApn to the 7SIBCMB.]

AJbanv Mv, 10.—Callers at the ExecutiveCiiami.fr to-day, after talking with GovernorO^.-l!, declared they believed he would veto trfRCfftaen East River <".as bill, the Niagara Power

bg£and the J. T. Smith Water bilL The Gov-ernor has nearly completed bis work on the!!,;-.y 'Jays 1 bills and the majority of the meas-.ir- ft, exclusive of the Supply and Appropria-tion bills, nhich have not been signed will be

Included In his omnibus veto, which will he

mad" public Foon

THE PRINCE BILLSIGNED.

,1l i>erson vtho gives, or offers to give, any mn.fy

it!: consideration to any duly unpointedrepresentative of a labor organization, with Intentt<> influ<no«- him in respect to . ay of his acts, tie-.•js:.'.:I.^.1.^. or other dutita :.s sue.l representative, ortf> laduce him to prevent or •\u25a0an*'- a -:rik<=> by theemploye* of any r-orporttlon or person, i

* (entity of::.m:?ii'ira<laT-(ir, and no person shall be t-xcuwdtrgtm attending and testifying or producing anyLook?, papers or other documents before any orurtir magistrate on the proond thai »uch rvirtfnoereojiired of him may ten.) to convict him -\u25a0; a

\u25a0 'oi-- <.r subject him to a penalty \u25a0\u25a0• forfeiture.*ffc«» Ftatutft. however, expressly provides im-

rnunity from prosecption for the person producingevidence, and its use in any criminal proceed

-ing flsain.M him.

mmm

Drawn by Jerome to Reach Bribery

of Labor Men.[by zbubosaph to the Tr.in-sr |

Albar.y. May M.—Governor odell to-day signed

th>- Prince bill, drawn by District Attorney Jerome-,> r.nviiv certain evils in the labor system <!.>-

cowrfd by liim. while securing evidence whichj-'fi'.!'-] In th.- conviction of Samuel J. Parks, whotiie-J .ln Sim Bins last week. The bill am»ndsth£ \":ial code by adding the following new pec-

tin:

d

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