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AIDS LEGION ASPRIVATE CITIZENWOOD EXPLAIN!

General Gives Plan WanIndorsement, but Says

It Is Unofficial.

HINT DRIVES OFFICEFROM ARMY BUILDING

1 eagtte to I iniit Armaments, i

Protest t<> Washington.Denounces Idea.

Majoi (»eneral Ijeonard Wood ha<-..- r on* In I early, though unofflcia

i.t c' tlir American Legioilie declares ,! would i'l time <>f vxa

incalculable militar* value.t Ann nenn leacue to Limit Arm

red protesta to Presl

v\ ¡,r. aaraim t the¦¦' .'iimI l aptain J

.-

bvel..

tradition of th

.¦ ..-irtrr(rom in A and Navy Ruiiding, liWhitehall st'i ¦¦¦ alaritim

ii ths vh\. "Evicted,'.« opponent« «ay; "moving to mor

modioua quarters," according t

ipproaiieea of s ippoi t an«

ordial indorsoraeni ara pom. Dtain .lohriRton

f!..l Wood, >.<¦* tik ill »n ndPI

Unix Advising. Sa>a Wood.... opmentaundertttood,the militai",

organi.'!1 VXltl

it. I not and should no'

HI ¦. r.i l !..advice, Such udvic«

ne forming f

to any on«ae " ¦. the ountry in i

mix <-<>ri«,\

"I hoi '.'.¦ o in the seh« me. MId l'<* of inralculalic value in tim«ar. but f want it and«

i« purely.' ( want t.. -n\.

ense a political..loi'Pl Roosevelt*«) sup

foi newi papeirteri oí th,. legion

» Iding We dpi i-i

t there. I mere¬mere till I SP

mail was«ni>. ar

ally installed, anice titl

t.nrrison tails tor Keporl.ni ime the S« cr« tai y of V

neral Woo toto l. ..itT. all the

including the occupancy of armyproperty by a civh;a owii activity.

Colonel A. i. S lartcrmaster*' *hp \ mj Buildina. pis ned t he

as due'. a mi lundei

Hehad i .m Washing

m ange.Th«

intents, which «igned.aaila the

t itlence pul.It opinion in

..T Ihrtry."

of tl

Preacher« Denounce Movement.

the R...... ijfhl

.'l!.-n of 1 of ,i anna

mrnl» j«i«t noxx. Moreover, tin« «mix.-

aaonl far hh America*! Legion appeal«io he nothing bat agitation ano ihrarousing "f sentiment, unless there ¡a«omething mors definite in it than ha-.vet ¡«ppi i'.u.i"M one of the besl possible cxhih

plea of the thing thai should no! h«done ', -.i ou of all is the factthat, apparently, militan olBcera an

lending iheii influence. When militar)oflli n « attempt le flu. the pi blie toward whal they think to be theinterest ,>< the mi itarj organisationthe* do tomething essential!) on-

.m ¡nul and« mo«Rai en S. * ued a «täte

ment, saying:"Il ia time Io call s hall to the ac

tivitiea o n¦..¦ of our arm) heads andtheir underlings in fostering .i militar;

throughout the land We beholdresult in pint ol

r cam] full) engineered bj thearm) c th the always availableuhsitl) .. he rmamenl makei

\\. tlj suffer «he na¬

to be hypnotised by such «

war-preparedn< » peace-insuranca programme uch aa baa des,.late.1 Europe.1« is the fundamental businesa of io-.r.'i.'v i..: onl) to lubordlnata themilitar) to the cri' ai ni of the government, bul to think mid tooí peace rather tban a ar

..It would he irreparably hurtful tothe highest intereata of obi nation to

r tin« hour of Europe'a madne««in the direction of increasing; «mm-

and the stirring up of the spiritof militarism. Ws havs the right to

expect thai the Présidant will promptlyBi*m) engineered militaristic

taganda "

DUKE MUST FIGHT"DIVORCE ACTION

Court Decides It Stil' HasJurisdiction Over Former

Miss Manan.Duke Don Arturo de Majo l'uia.xo

the action for annulment oftheir marriage brought1 by his wife.who waa Elizabeth Prances llnnan, sls-

the shoe manufacturer, in WhitePlains !¦ ... t.. get the Supreme

' i n the ground¦la' it had m, jurisdiction over him, a

subject of the King of Italy, but JuaKcogh decided ag yes¬

terday.The tria!

few days. Mia« llanan marrieiduKe on Februar) I", 1914. They metwhile t:,e Hanans were cru ling ;n the

th«The wedding raa attended by ioc

friends from all ..-.er the country.On May 6 the) «eparated after the

duko had been arrested ;'nr righting in. of the llo;e; de F'aris. Monte

< ;,rlo. The duches« had ¡earned thatband waa wanted in fans

;,, ,.-rvp a term of thre« years foelkeeper, in

1911' She led papera in the case on

bei .. charging that he du k«ght about the marriage b) traild.

The duke'a counsel ,at no

court him jurisdiction over

alian itibject: tha* his wife br-bjei ol !*!. i .' hei she mai

r.ed him. and that when hla wife l>e-,in Italian hei property aiin him. rhe ducheai 'a ana

to this v . of an ante-nup-by which the duke re-

I nounced his claim« to any part of heracquired by the laws of Italy

shoul foi rce. separa-oi oí annulment he brought.

LAW HALTS JITNEY "BUSWomen Conductors Get Suin-monses- Rival Firm Accused.

I he afoul of the po¬lice ;

. he vehicles,hei,riñe invitation« to the public to¡de fr« e and lest th« were

in Columbua Circle, and the«omen conductor! Bnd the

be .n the Wealto da)

.| .J. Talley, counsel for the("en1 'Bus < lorporation,

i- thai he believed thead by a rival

corporation. I!. if the ai¦re whether

.(> operat9franchise, r

Piea d< ni -I- ade f the Fifth Avs-..ach Company ;-a,d last night,«wer t.. h repori that his con-

had had a hand in the arrest.hia officers

.nc about he police*! ac¬tion.

it, «¡ipposet wa on a charge o of thei) ordinance regai ng advertise-

on public vehicles, he said.

» Broadway- 4yd¡oJ4}kôt.THE FAMOUS DINNER PLACE

mi:

GRE l 7AFTER-

llll-.} TRtRESORT

SeasonableaSeven - Course LentenLuncheon, 75c (Music)

w.oarel LxtraorcJinaireI wenty Acts Every Evening 7 to I

rOV SHOULD HEARPATR1C0LA

j At Wallick's RestaurantBroadwav at 43d Street*

*SHE IS 7HK BOT Vou Hnvc Ever Heard

FRIDAY NIGHT, MARCH 5TH, MILITARY NIGHTin the POPPY ROOM

SPECIAL COSTUMES AND PRIZES FOR I HE OCCASION'Phonr vom' i raerv-ntion»: Bryant 346

HOTEL »ETHERLANDh if th Avenue and 59th Stiert

MW lOaU III».

DmleaMwg <-nii-»i IHM». Contre of Hfcogl>u . PMlM in.I ntiir XII Thr-lre».

i:\iiv

I!,,,-tu» nltl.1 Inn h 11 gg n»r da».

II .t >»ltli bnili gS.eg iirr tin» «nil npataulI til-ii I«. iln-nit in,I htatli ST no ;.., tlttt ami

upward I i-rnpt'Hii plan.V I. loll W Ma.gtag Hlrei-tor.

BELLECLAIRE

.Jvv_&(MOH'A)7M '¦ ¿2&s-*-ffr]

rt WAY AI 77TM

-

»IK 4M» «(''»I <. »MU V< ifeterla ' -

'->r -li» hua-.Mi.iaiiL

okofe/cS/z/ppnalII ii-, iiiK In lo I. ftnpi «nniliit

CASTl.ES AIR

1 h SIMr. heatf*. l»mi, In»

¦h» (Mil». Me lipping

;,'!;. VernonCastie.i.. » ¦. ¦-.,

» iMHRltira rASI SIXTIITH «TSFIT.

v .|mel

Hat.l HASH ANTOINITT*b»tli fair»»! a Br»»l»»>

'

Mrs. Angle Faces Juryfor Ballou Death To-day

We& HcitN A f. ANCLE (Snapshot ter TXrat/HE *c*>e>/rrrç)

Twenty Talesmen, Strangers from Bridgeport, Sum¬moned, and Woman lirmcs Nerves with five-Mile

Walk for Ordeal oi Manslaughter Trial.

Bridgeport, o* h T,(r: was in readiness to-night foithe trial of Mrs Helen M. V>

fore Judge William WilliiSuperior « i', m m m «..ijit to-morrov.

morning. A special panel of tax int.

talesmen from Bridgeport »a a « aum-

ed this 'temoon None are Stum

ori: men and all th»' unknown to Mrs,

The work g y thaihethei

espon ibl« foi as death of v\ aida R.ford on lui e '..,'.'. la

ai i" a ¦:: -Iucoui .-I i"! ill ingle, an iv« d

early this eve! le willcome up from Staiinor;.: ig at 8 « impanied bybei al he onai 1 Blondell, the

lucí chant.The train will, it i«

expected, be erowded with frienda ofthe woman, who ii well known in Stam¬ford. Interest casa ¦intensified by the announcement ofD 'net Attorney Homer S. Cummingithat be ha- 11 I iei

According to Mr. Gumming tlia likeiy to lu«t fm ten days or two

The iirst witness will be thewho attended Mr. Ballou after

fall.]. itated that the flatiron, a hi« hgu el so prominent i> in the

tional event of las' summer, willtroduced aaevidenee, William H. (innnan, i h i« t ol , t of í ai ford, haaan automobile full of exhibits, and theiron ii among them, Bui Judge Downssi posil iv« ght 1 hal tin flu r 11 un

will not"The) have abandoned entirely 'ne

theory thai an) weapon or dangerousused." he vnid. "The

Mrs. Am;''(truck Ballou ¦.¦. and« and fiat¦¦an ting m :. fall ûov» n ,-t.,i and

¦. head ;.poms' the co(loo W r re confident that '

r Kiii nocence will be eatabl

I"' i .i-.. very

weak to me. \>. one waa neai when it

happi nnot product i

\II rl Phillip*,, as- \ttor-idmittad thai the case

.-ru il elf

-. rharfe id«' Mr. Rallón » a»

,1 downstairs."There is nothing lo the ram aboul

n conspiracy," l--- aid. "Mm, An«'ii»ia the i--'\ person ¡triplicated, and ihe

.¦ against her ia thai she pi»«herlo thai hi fi '¦ downstaiii

"The stale has no prejudice againstMrs Angle or anybody else, we «re

hen to .in our duty, that is all. Ii isi.i, !.. M Ancle to tell her «tor*' i»o a*

to con» in--- n Jury of lier innoce ,-1A« lui Mrs Angle, «ha approached

tin- da) of her tr.al nit) more nervetimi Inee

"i . were going up n ».¦

airship," the aam thir- evening. "Idon'1 Hi going to ¡anil. Hut

0 be afraid. I am confidentthat I shall come down safe and ound."

Mr«. Angle spent tli<- afternoon withThey visited the doctor

iirnt. who pronounced her in fine physi¬cal t- tiit- ordeal ahead of

afterward they rook g live-milewalk in the liriHk March winds. When

i on ed to the hone of thofriends whom .the i« visiting; there «a->

S eh coloi :ii Mr«. Angle'» cheeks, *hpht-! heat! vigorously erect andwith an energetic stride. Mi.

Rlondell said, however, that her ncrvenare s-..ll fur from steady, ami it is

that the strain of testifying willup»et her hard won »elf-control

If Stanley Pinch and Jacob KVmbeen retained by Mi. Hlomle!' to

ludge Downs in the defence ofhis daughter. The state is represented

,, of the keeneal la-gal minds that»ticul has produced, fur a lone;

time. Unmet .-'. Cumminga is a mannf r,;t- l tation. He has beenoffered the Governorship of 'he itate

still looked upon as future Sen-material. He ii viee-chairmanDemocratic N'ational Committee

and .1 . of Woodrow Wilson.Albert s. Phillips wa» foimi-rl-. Secre

State of <'onnedicul

N. J. Senate for Local Option.March :'.. The Sena'!-

tn-day passed the local option lull by a

vote ol II '«. 9, with one Sen:,tor no" bill provide« for a refer¬

endum oi the queatoin of loci-.i optioneent oi rhe m i/.er: - ,.*";,

palitj request a special election.he bill si ill now go to the H

Time Curtain Rises To-day.

Manl

Park

II

inpireII .!-.

AfTtRNOO'.2:(X_- v \i di ííght's I »rea

I "Mil St.

2: SO. 'alano»:00 I'll

.

.

.

i.-.

0.16 The Sri...i¦ --.

SIio*a Whop..«

«-

? ",0 Tl

2:J0.ViAFTERNOON FC.ATUP.t- riLYS.

to to 11 "J S

0:1011:30 to 11:3 dway

IEVENING.

»

Si'1). .

...

8:15..' "ii' 'InnII

... Mi' " ':' "'!««).

-. de tl Unoa !.o:.k., ¡e8:20.-11 to advertise..Cohan'a8:15.la k's Romaneo.i.rand8;_0.K :. K in.Pr8:00.i.¦¦. .Manhattan8:00.Maid In Aroerica Winter Garden

rt< itUk .

12:00..Midingiit FrolicMi w Amst<

r.oo- .:. Trial . .

8:20--' »Ut<_Bt .I.1:15.1 .Park8:15.Slnnel a ['laB.M-- » entures <

Mas Im -.;1:30.Th« !.'..er ices Pm h à Jud8:15.Th* Law ol the Land..'..lift.1 h< .¦

. H8:19.The Only Girl....Lj/rli8 10- t Girl .a«' H

m.Emi 1rsft:«5.'I i.- Show >!,,,r..Hudson

*M~¦

..... Boothhe White Keather.

8:15. . -râl.SI8:0-0 T»x m8:00. ei .Cart8:20.Watch Vour Step No« Atnatordam

FEATURE FILMS.12 to 11:10 \ .;¦ lleroan of La8:30.Sir Ltouglaa Mawsoi WeUr'a

Vatlo.o 11:30.'I't

a 30Central Afr » «

VAUDEVILLE HOUSES.

1 lie. ate fl «

AI mbraBURLESQUE HOlSl-r,

ColumbiaI'd. »

I

MANAGER SHOWSHOW BIG BAKERSSWALLOWED FOE

Taylor Admits Ctishman'sNew Company Put Find

to Competition.

SIX-CENT LOAF WASALTRUISM. SAYS WARD

Answers Indirectly When AskedAbout Use of Plaster of

Paris for Flour.

Kvidence «it a local combinfttioa of¡urge hrr>B() msniiri.-Mirir.'J interests¦.. inch mm- ararran i action bj the At¬torns*1 General »ras adduced jresterdaya) tin state ¡nquir* into the adtrance

of bread, dour and wheat.While the (acts may Iw-ar furrher in¬vestigation, il I« known rhHt the tes-timon* o.' I'.ilr.iiiiid St, .lohn Taylor,member of ecutive eommil teeand tales manager of 8. Cuahman'aRons, Inc., »a« considered remarkablyfrank and illuminating by Deputy At-torne) General Becker.

Ilo Deputy Attorney General .4oughtii. ascertain through the witness iwhether the Cushman concern, which

¡, organized laal Decer-ibor withttifiOO.OOO capital, amounted to a com-bination in restraint of trade. It ap¬peared from Mr. Taylor's testimonythat the ne*» organisation consisted of Iall tin migina! S. I'ushman's stmsjj« ho operated independent bakeriesprior '.i December, toguthor withHerschi lan * Ble1er, o'' 5-0 Last 8sv-.-ond Street, who, it »»as admit

tPil, were the principal competitors ofu ihmana,Becker refusi d to eommonl on

the Taylor testimony. It is under-;stood, however, that. In the opinion of-

of the investigators, the net*-'romh nation hear- sons of the ear-:mark«, on ,i smaller si-ale, of the so-:railed "trusta" the federal government

ight to diasolee,Mr. Taylor testified that the original

I'ushman sons organised the tirm ofishman & Sons in 1892, and thai

a year later a friendly dissolution oc¬

curred, r,.»iilfinK in the organizationof ele-, in different concerns. Thesetrm» divided the territory in this city.anil each agreed not to sell bread outside the district ^«i/nnd to it. according fo the witn»ss. That eliminatedcompetition among them, although!.hey appeared f.> h,- working independ¬ently and competing with one another,as Mr. Hocker pointed OUt

Absorbed Chief < onipelitor.Lasat December, Mr. Taylor testified,!

ths original Cushman firms combineda« H ashman'« Bons, Incorporated,uni |2,M0,000 of the i-ap'*ali*a*mn was

paid up. All th» Cuahman Arms hadoperata'd several branches. They con-sisted of s. Cushman'« Son, Ineorpo-

of 51T »Vest Fifty-ninth Street,with aeren branches; Cuahman Bread. ompany, of 82 Lawrence Street, withthree hranches: Cushman Globe Com*pany, of 416 Amsterdam Avenue, with

anches, and llerschman * Blii."-.ra ith sll hranches.

I lie witness said that the Herseh-n,an ttr Bieter Company were taken intotiie new corporation lubseqnent to itsformation, in December"They were your chief competitors,

uere they not?" asked Mr. Beckei"Ves, they were sharp competitors,"

replied the witnes«. "They sold breadalong the same routes followed by the

man eoneei-,

Georgs S. Ward, rice-president ofthi- Ward Baking 1 "ompany, wa« «Iwitness. Me waived immunity. He saidthe Ward eornpany was .-npitalizcd at140,000,000 and was formed three yearago by buying out plant- throughoutthe East ami Middle West, lie em¬phatically denied that any drivers re¬

ceived orders to tell retail customer«to -f»)i the brand st six ci ifter thewholesals priée was raised to fivecent», on February 10. He «aid hegave the order to ,-.d\ance the priceafter some Of the salesmen had reported thai the Shults Bread Company had

i,l a rise"We were «1! relucían I to advance

the price," «aid Mr. Ward. "No onewanted to take the lead. We believedthe attitude of the government, nalional and slate, vas to throw ^r^-'-»ion around the small baker. We fellwe might he criticised if we main-

the lower pr.ee. with the re.-u!-of foreing into bankruptcy many smallhake:-«."So your object in advancing the

pnce was altruistic as well as pracliras thai it?" asked Mr. Becker.

witness epl ied in i-.- affirmalive.

Mr. Becker referred i-. thefrom Boston, including <* report made'

HIPPODROMEitti A»'.. 4'rd to 44th Strratv »ally Mata.

WINTER CIRCUSM 11 "

I-...

V44INE ElllOTT'S. 'a

PHYLLIS NEILSON-TERRY ¡.VßuSSLBOOTH. -a- ¦ *T« I

THE TRAPLITTLE

HIEA TRI

DA PAR OF SILK STOCKINGSAM. SI A

MANHATTAN OP. MOUSf Ml «net It« Ava.... .»« Mai «Ff X* IO

CASINO t,

EXPERIENCECOMEOY Ii- I' . «a._«_Í*

ÍHI WHITEFEATHERi . . 11

Mi» ,. . « iiTHAT HAS EVERYTHINGuUltl mi play

CANOLtR TMfAIRI SPECIAL.$ SUNDAY Ä^,IRV1NCOBB

MR. WALTER DAMROSCHí WAúNER'i NIBELUNGEN TRILOGY

I» MM Vacatlart War Rrllaf C««iTiltt»«.v- .. H.i \|a- :i II B«ta. 4- M ». * V »

. II .,. . -

I .int'ilf Ha» Thor» «Ü 11 tr Ulli, tal f.List M XK( Kl ' x

Recitalhis

Season-. -.a- I IISEMBRIGH

DEBATE T NIETZSCHE-¦ ',i,,\ j,

Till 4.TRI ".'a-

afOUAN HAIL *a1«it r»» Mar I al I IJ.

FL0NZAL£YQJ,m.uNCIlNtf

Clever Onesr<m. e N Mat. Friday an« Sal. ? «0.

(-¦ .-¦ En m. «ave a H - . i A *.

hv disperto- .l«m«' O. Jonisn, of the1!.. ton Hoard of Health, to Mayor Car¬le) in which he -aid that certainbakeries In New York und Boston wit«»

m-aKin« bread which contains calcium

sulphate, otherwise known as plasterof Paria, or gypsum, th«« material usedm making placer eaat ».

Mr. Ward iit'1 riot an «wer the que«tion dirrctlv h«. to whether his com

panv ifseil such an it.|*ri'dien' r i'-

hi,-ad. bel he declared that nuTiing

iinhenlthful wns used.Several rirnall Imker« testihed tha'

they were «till ahle to rnnke whitebread to fell Ht a prolit at | cents dc-

s|iit«. the pravailing high price of flour.The irn|iiiry xvan adjourned until to¬

morrow at 11 ». in.

A score of small bakec appearedyesterday before the Km«* CountyGrand Jury «' Borough Hail. Brooklyn. and told about the cost of prodi'lOD of five-cent bread.

FRIENDS EXPLAINST. CLAIR MYSTERY

Wife Knew of Infatuation and

Hoped Her Husband Would

Forge. Mrs. Hall.vVntorbury, Conn., March 2. Harr)

Hall, a eonnumptivn, was told to dathat the woman who died '«¡th CharlesSt. Clair, of 15« Kant Sixty-first Str.'.',s evx fork, in the Wind'or Hotel, at

Philadelphia, last night was his wife.Soon after he received the teletram heleft this eity

Mrs. Hall was Kdna Porter, daughterof a fanner in the neighborhood, Hull,a civil engineer, had known her fromthe timt! they went to school together.Before she was out of short nkirt.« lie1 ad asked her to marry him.Then the "white plague" came. Hut

the girl married him eight month« apo.He was unable to work, and »he sat<>ut to earn money to send him to Colfl '

rado. She want first to Boston, andthree months ago to New 1*01-, whereshe sold perfumeries in a dr«i|» store inth*» i,i.m.I Central Station.

All this she told her husband. Butshe did not mention the other man.Where she met St. (lair no one know«.He seems to have become immediatelyinfatuated with her. There were hintsin the letters that, reached here thatsome persoi, va« troubling her.

Mr». F;dna Hall wa« lured hv -

Clair to Philadelphia or the promiset!,Ht ha would get her a place as a

motion picture actress, accordinc toMrs. Frances Ramsey, with whom Mrs.Hall roomed, at 217 was! Thirty-fourthStreet, Mrs. Ram«ev said yesterds)tha: Mrs. Hall had told her of St.. lair's persistent attentions, but «ha'nhe had repulsed them all, till heworked on her lifelong ambition to goon the stage. Mrs. Hall's real int«in life, according to her roommate,was ro provide «oniforts for ihe in-valid husband.

Si i lair, in apite of In*1 infatuationtor Mm. Hal!, had no' \'r<*'*.en with hi«'. f. Ile had been a prizefighter andme;, her in Hohe; Kong, where she v> n

employed a.» .i trained nurse. She knewof her husband's infatuation, she saidve-terdav. He had prom:.«".i lo foMi Hall.

BROK_TcÜST()lMSLAW, U. S. HOLDS

German Line Not Accused ofNeutrality Violation- Two

Officers Plead.Indictment! were found ¡.».'a ha the

Hamburg-American I.me and its offi¬cer for violating the customs laws,rather than for violating tha neutral¬ity lav -, because, in the opinion of thegovernment, the Aral charge could beeasily prias.-.-d, while it vxa« doubtful ifa charge of breaking the neutralitylaws could. H. Snowden MarshaUnited State- Attorney, »-aid this yeat'-rduv. in anawe r to the question rai >,iby many friends of the Allies, whowere inclined to think the Germanswere bein« treated too leniently.

"It was thouphi best to lecure an In¬dictment un which conviction could behad." said the attorney, "than one on

which results were doubtful."George Hoetter and Adolph Hack-

meister, officer of the eompanv andWalter Poppenhouae, supercargo on theBerwind when it is alleged the cus-

toms lav- were violated, appeared inthe I'nited States court yesterda) andpleaded not guilty. Bail -ih- fixed at

10,000, Karl Buense, managing directorof the line, who is ill, and relia Seff-ner. aupercargo, are absent frpin .hecity, but are expected to jilead ne\tivei-k. Those pleading yesterday have

March lo to change then-und file demurrers.-.-

Make Dry Carolina Air-Tight.Raleigh, N « '.. March 2. Th« \'oi:l-i

Carolina Senati to-da) passed theGrier anti-ji c bill, ilreadj Ph isethe House, b il in ended it to providefor submission to .'m voters at s apecial elect ¡on 01 \ ..,

=' 1. Thei.r« riri.'. ,d>' thai liquor o

any ingredienl i.~e,i in .:-. manufactureshall be delivered in the st.il-

WINTtR (.AHDfN III. a . I

MAID IN AMERICA44TM ST. Tha». Rffi i" »I«' f i

EMMA n ..The P#a>«n! a CLIFTONTRENTINI Girl." CRAW'ORDLYRIC. Km if« SU lia) .- a

TH*. ONLY GIRLII II- - BknaOtl a: ! V ij Ii. .' -

SHUBERT T "V.: w ,,f,".v l-"n '

cZ'.ZXr' T0-NÎGHVS TH: NIOHTPLAYHOUSE

SINGERS48th ST. *.THE LAW LAND ,.

'.9th 8t thfatrf » vi,

mÁhif DKCOoLC ¦

PRINCESSTHROUGH CEN1RAL AFRICA.-'...'¦.STANDARD"THE STORY /..V ROSARY"METROPOLITAN °55__t.hm .. - ni-n, i -, :Sr-

,.

Tn.-ra. || . R..n«a,aller 1.1 Man..*! Srriii/¦¦¦¦ '

Frl- «a Run..«.

Frl. il Tru.at.r,. |. , ,, ,r M tl| ,.,1 - anil

Sat. a I TrltUu u. ImU», r.adikl Wat

*»«t. . < La Tra.uta". A:-, p., i,. p |a .Neat Man Tinnh««ua»r. K irl \!a

W»<) x' . | Amar» rj«l tf. Re Rear r ¦-»-a

'lAU'ii as I'lA-.'i I M.i.

(CARNtülE MALL. TUES. FVr MAR .

THE WAR AND rau-NM.! hkbat»WHAT CAUSED IT ¡?, .\ 1;L\, ;, *

DR EDMUNO VON MACH CE. Il cM»STEBT0NFOR f.F.RMANY FOR ENGLAND.

m .,i !>

Carneil« Hall Sat. An.

rar . . ii

M _h 11 ¦ t'ym

Julia HEINRICHv no« at th« Pleat BTF.IYWATl ..,,, c|

- Mfl »« U HAM*--* i. a .'

«

WOMAN, 90, DIESALONE IN HOME

Aged Recluse Had Almost$9,000.Dead 2 Weeks

When Pound.Two WMks mMOd, the body of Johann«

Kit/iffrald va* fou d last night at 9f>

Hoary Street. In cask and *>».

fmiiiil in tlic dismal room where si-ehud metli» her homo sinrf tha» Irish ¡eft

Cherry Hill wa« her fortune, nearlyIt,.

Miss Fitsaarald '»a* «bout ninetyyears old. Msny a man of stinstunre

to-ilay. who wont to school in ( herry

EfIII in Hip «lays when Henry Streetv»j rho aboil«- of the wealthy, may re-

ruembrr Miss .Johanna Fitzgerald «ndMill Mary, her sister. They were liv¬ing in the same house then. Theyl--ei| there for tifty-two years

In the old days the sisters may havebeen gracious and affable. They may-have given eweermeath to boys, whobecame politicians and Supreme Courtjustices. Cherry Hill was the home nt»uch. They had pride. There is nodmibr of thai. The politicians antl thejttdgOS, pr»«enl ami to come, movedaway from Henry Street, But MissJohanna und Mi«« Mary slavedChange« seem to have bittet deeper

into tbs heart of Mis» Mary than intothat jf In r elder siater. Perhaps sheStayed just to keep the determinedJohanna company. A* any rate, for ageneration no one «aw M,«s Mary. I*.was always the elder sister who marietheir purchase» arid conducted thebusiness affairs of the household.A week later Max Silberman, the jan¬

itor, saw Miss Johanna, h wa» the!last time any one »aw her sliv«. Lastniirht, having failed to gain admittanceon Monday rent day Silberman againknocked at the door. He knocked andkicked «t the panels.At length he went to the police, and

the door W8S forced. On the bed laythe body of Miss Johanna. It was anancient folding bed. On all four sidesit was propped up with soap boxes that... Srs array with (lust.

Two dingy chair» with bristly hair¬cloth seats and a decrepit table com¬posed the furnishing-! of the room. Onthe tnble were several prayerbooks sndrosario«. Beside the bed lay a fadedblack skirt. Silberman picked it up.Something dropped from the pocket.It ara« a bankbook or" the Hank for Sav¬ings.

In the dingy old garment were three,other bankbook«, al! of the Emigrant'Industrial Savings Bank. They showeddeposits of $8.500. There was also s

wa.) of bills, amounting to 1489.

TMfcSF Nr»V VOP'a LEA0IN1. THEATRES I

»ar and aV I I ¦»«

an- tea To <lav aid lEMPIRE ,,'

Nfv 1,I'

ETHEL BARRYMORELYCEUM Mat« I', in-.. A Sal al : |l

ELSIE FERGUSONOUTCAST

C AirTV Bread»»« * 4 "l.VjAlt-, 1 I Mail)

RUTH CHATTERTONDADDY LOVr. i:<iS

HUDSON" y .r,:,

BELASCO *¦¦..\" rSa"Miss Star. Wander.ul".SunFRANCES STARR

ll MABIEOOILr.

GRJNDO.H. '

FISKE 0 MARA In JAI'fc s RiV.IA

TN Rf.fi HVKUr.te. j- I Ci RSai «i.-faa is Kti»rp.Ran I ..-«; Mallo«* Hi'in»» a

....¦.,«atr'l laaj. --.. '- l/lf- Ht»ta II

OPENS TO-NIGHT at 8:05,".. ¡i'k naii.\ ", M i r; f* a K rtK

Hßj d.w.gbiffÎth's-»III _-«. si :eír.l»iis pr*4u*ian o'

IHOMAS MXON'S"".JT-a

ER» ~n"ü THEl'AVV

AKT *vhuí Ílfl«*aai CLANS-MARK-» A-. 1 ¦ 'il I W'faiVR!'> "I- IrtI w-MI.Ii

18,000 PEOPLEla tri« ml»ittl«at b»-itac!» «v»r fretoet.

Srre.'MONV ORCHISTSA ñf it.N

L CTiGACRE PU«. Mat. TODAY. 2:40.

INSIDE "S LINESASi'UR . ,'..;, I ..'. E sB» HELLO BROADWAY.ait', I,a» M. Cahan. Wm. Colliar .-.-.

ON TRIALPI i a SAT

,liO t.ood beataIn Ut Balc»n,ôOr... rs*.. $ioo

CANOLtR THfATPE -arl. I.4T

.' SUNDAY WiïirWIRVIN COBB ¡»rBV»idl»AKk ¦:^y^:r ; TJS!.

mm&M Matlna«Today.

(NICHT.DAVID BISPHAM M .1». 4r- ',-' I

4.h titmore Morning Musicalei KIDA*. m wm ii i \ i 11-M

Il IIIN

McCormacka| \lil-.l I I 1 II I

GARRISON ORRELLii 5

Pa i a f»r Mm Eroroa CALVEA la. A Va» t EDITH TALIAFfRRO,

pOLONIAL M«S. LESJE CARTER\j .» «a ,. ¦/«/»

M« LIIMaa Larrala«

ÂLHAM.RA.a-.| L.I

CENTURY LHEATRE.IHIK-^lVV Vil M Vl(( II 1 VI .-a.i

CHILuRErs REVOLUTIONaWCnÎÛMtENr a, Ml II ALL. MON. AFT.. MAR. I AT 1.

OSCAit SEAGLE agg-au' ...S. II.S« »i S'»' Baaaafli I, .- ,, « a

IRVING PL TH-ATnE fc ,'. '. M l\

I» 1*4411 i: m ri ,,,.

., a S «a,

|THE RAOIUM

T 14 IF. VIS 41

There'i ;i self*Mtisfied ¡li¬

to the rilan who Iihs il'iiio liis«luty wfll.

\V<- feel lliat ira) »boutour Spring Block«.

Four stores replete with

everything new tnd Springyfor men awl bojTl

Spring suits, overcoat!furnishings, liats. sboei nn«.

sporting goods.»"Scotch Mists" for now.

Overcoats that combine tli*»smart feature, of a "fnii-weather coat with tlie rain¬proof eíTecHrencM of a rain-eoat.Handsome Scotch chev¬

iots, rain proofed.. .'»¦..a«:-* «v, t .-«a -, .-.

An added convenience!Our nexv etore at Fifflt

Avenue and ifft Street, rcitha 42nd Street entrance, itnorv open.Making four rtoret at y<w*

nenice.

Rogers Pr.F.T CompanyBroadway Broadwayat 13th St. "The at 34th St.

FourBroadway Corners" J7'1--"- Ave.at Warren at «list St

«AVE NO OEAUNGS Va/ITM TH| TYSON TO

NEK AMSTERDAM v..WATCH YOUR STEP

Mr. and Mr, Varna« f.a.tl" Erin« Tien.,

[ iTDAMX D_ r^LtT-T"¦Tgl ir*'U>'^,» £

neYt'monday klaw & ERLANGER sSEATS TOM'W. ENTERTAINFFSFADS ^FANCIES

gmû COHAN'S r"IT PAYS TO ADMRTISI '

a A LAU r, HINT, RI IT

A/All APK'Ç lu iah nccaitn.lirtLLMüiX WiiKAKVIlLEMtKEit?t&Ís*t%. A Midaumme.abe ttrut. st I _| N«i?lit'§ Dre«nfm. ami »at .

__ HemarrJ »«ha»«E»|v I j sa« ¿ir _.__.!Mat. at ; i« i An«Jrnclt.«4 1 he I

FULTONTWIN BEDSCANOtEn THE»T>!r >. IAJ

&.¥ SUNDAYIRVINCOBB .:,v,;,N

_Uofc. aai r dai * Bai ai : II

MONTGOMERY & STONE« h!5HARR»S4 v,e.''¦¦."...':.ILLIN6T0N ÏÏIELTINPE

Qn_-_-------I--REPUBLIC

TH« SENSATION ri"' NEW VPP«

_î_3__!£_«s_:._yrttBLR'xS

For a Limit««Eniaien»»*«.

SIRDOUOLAS

mmmA DRAMAlliSTORY OK

_.ADVENTURE INAN UNKNOWNI AND.

THRILLING MOTION PICTURESSTARTLE ¿MUSE WOîUQ

188.881 l'ennui. A.|.ra_«.| <-,The CraaUst Spe. ud- Eve,

Proiluce>d.

SYMPHONY"uirMir,:,,:r\;,"',,'m. GERHARDTII I lili TIM» I », .

'

Seat» .- Hoi . |

PHILHARMONICM V

'Oftltl »UllVsKV I .n,|.. Ii.rT»m«». iTliura.i E,| I I) 4 nr.t ft '

*.' HAROLD BAUERI'., a, III, M

[D[|lv,d¿5r"NIÜS[[rt I .. Ma- x ,1 a >

WassermanHf-ulUWBlí aUBLi-.uOc

H»« AMI ANO B U8I « slll » «> «

StrandIS M »a.- .i . . . . a. ..

AKHIAN HALL, tri I .. M»!«* »» V IU. "».

HERMAN. .

saiMcaaTtiaai

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