new york tribune (new york, ny) 1910-12-09 [p...

1
AMUSEWENTS. NEW YORK LEAPING TTTE.\Tgt? CMDIBC B'wav, 4<">th Street, tlrlrC Mats. To-rr.r>r-w * "'t.izi FAREWELL APPEARANCE INHIS FAMOUS PLAYS. WILLIAM GILLETTE Sherlock Holme* N»xt K"k On!:. Hif» Prrrat^ LYCEUM *3th St.. nr. B'^av. ET-.S^a" L i ULUm Mara. To-tn'^- & Thars. i3L The Importance aliLmtam. of Being Earnest o^,%^ GAHRICK Mats. To-rr.w 4 Wed.. Z 13. THE SPECKLED BAND: An AdT^nturp of sii^riorK H'>ua«SL Bt a. COXax DOTLE. Dae M Anni* f£« —^-ti in Th- _\u0084.,. KNICKERBOCKER. B wav and ZSth Street. ! Evas, s Sharu. Mats. To-rnor w <v W»«i 2. ' auixi NEILSON fam xS'iS!^ Henry of Navarre! DSC. lf> THE FOOLISH m \u25a0aith MK>. PATRICK CA.MPBELX." HUDSON Mt3. To-rr."^- & VTerf. at 2:3. DAVID BELA?co preset \u2666» BLANCHE SATES >n y 4fSgff CRITEHIdM^^^^^M 134tK TIME THECOMMOIEBS^ CI IfIJT 2OUH St--et. Bwar *tSJK OUwU Mat-. To-m*-» « v:»>i. :.2». Zelda Sear* In THE NEST EGG. NEWAiSTEiOdM Una Abarbanell. with Kaiph oerz. in IVSADAME SHERRY NEXTSUN. I IMPERIAL RUSSIAN" COCKS VIGHTS:I.>; BALALAIKA OSCHESTSA I SEW AMSTERDAM UCYT *ZZ4 M.»'s. ' THF.ATRK .pt- ial. \u25a0«-* ' W»S.» MON.. TIE*.. THI K>. * FRI at Sil^ RUTH ST. DENIS DANCES OF wriFM EOTTT Supporting Company of Ftity. X»tt and Enormo-js Scenic P—^duction. : \u2666n conjuction wtt^ THE IMPERIAL RUSSIiIS COURT BAUUIKA OHOHESTBI Rugers Pef.t & Company Three Broadway Stores at at at Warren St. 13th st 34th st. Winter overcoats, winter suits, evening clothes every- thing men and boys wear. Genuine Capeskin. heav y weii^ht, with '"outseams.** Three shades of tan. A glove better than any $1.25 glove we know, and for which we invite comparison with the usual $1.50 gloves. $1. A specialty which we owe to the fact that we buy at first hand from the makers in Eng- land threat quantities of gkwea of tine quality. We orot it from Eiiixland! A Dollar Glove that's not a dollar glove at all. io the usual, sense. Pn-reg $2. SI 3<">. .<!. 7'c. r.o>-. Sear? &»i:!a?r. liCli lOiX Matinee To-morrw. -OS MLl_f. EMMA TRENT7NT ta Naughty Marietta by TTlcter Itert>-rr * Rida Jchnsor, Tnin?. •-- ORYII T F HARRQID. GA I F TV g^ay \u25a0: 4c i-.>r7-." ; " T. f! AMUSEMENTS- LIBERTY WBR 4SA StTMC. Ev-s. -!3. LlOtfll I Mti To-nri. A VTet *tTJS ™™ BEST COMEDY IN TOWN THi_GOUNTBY_BOY JiS Jo«- Weber**. B y &2!>-h. Ma's.W.'.; ir.iSi' AIII A\ " KITTYGORDON :n *} A I Ma y « > ; : ; CHARLES PTLLINGHAATS Ew^aga a: * GLOBE i^SSKd Matinees Wed.. Thurs.. F*r:. find Sat. **£& BERN HARDT Hl' AFTKKNOO>- C.VtTtXX TO-NIGHT LA *ORrrERE Lizard D<;c 8. . a m— Ryndam iDutchi. New York for Rou!o*n«" and Rotterdam. rthraltar D«»c T— Lacerna (Br>. New York for Molina: PeViigia air.. New York for Pa- Feriln^Dec' f— Kioto CBr>. New York for Han? \u25a0 - ' >•\u25a0•*«\u25a0 5 \u25a0\u25a0 Tar!^ On r^ SSS S- n pitri« nVrk). N>w York for Malta Tarifa. ' - *>< Nw Yrk n " Ma ta and Ptrswa -,' )ps Jle< . 75 am Venezia iFr>. N<»tv Yrrk. Quecnstown, Dec P. 3:50 j> m— Teutonic rßr). * tfrom Southampton and '..'herbourg). New | V«*rk Newcastle. -->'•" Ear! of Carrtck (Brl (from New York). Honolulu- Amsterdam. Dee 6 Rott<>rda.m i Patch tank.; New York. Barbados. r>«<- " ralderon (.Bels). < f rom j Santos*. New York. Pur.m Arenas. T>°o 7—-C',iarlton Ha!. 'Hn. j (from Anrafa?a«r»i). St Lucia and New York, j T-cndon Dec S Mlnneto^ka fßri. New Ycrk. Gibraltar 1i.... s. r. p m— KSnigto Lutae (G*> r > (from Genoa and Naples). New York. «• TVinmas. I»ec 8. 2p m Parinia (Br). New j York. PASSED. -- ' Briptoi. Dec 7— New York City (Bn, Nj=tv \ork. Naples Dec 7. •> a in 6anf Anna >m. .'•i i i»- Tork and Boston; Slh, 5 am. Duca d'Aosta i ltal), New York. TJbau. Dec 3—Kursk (Russ), New York via Rot- terdam. Trieste. Dec \u2666 Laura tAusti. New \ork and Boston via Naples. Suez. Dec B—lnvert.8 Invert.- «Br Calcutta and Colombo for Boston and New York. Portla-nd. England. Dec 7 -Petrolemn «Br). New St Michael's. ... MairdaJena \u25a0 "- New Tcrlc \u25a0-a Kingston. Colon, Barbados, etc, for Snuthampton. Singapore. Dec k Foxley fßr). New Tors via Aden fir Philippines. Bergen. D«C 3 John Wilson fNor>. N"ev Fusan? r t>ec 6—Atholl (Br>, \u25a0-— York via H"nc Knng. Fata in. '•• Octenfe] \u25a0'••- New * >rl via Port Natal. STEAMERS AT FOREIGN PORTS. ARR'" ' Port of New York. Thursday. Decem- ber 8, 1910. ARRIVED. Pteamer Lampasas, Mobile November ZO. Tampa December _ and Key West 3, to the Mai- lory Ss '^o. with passensers and mdse. Passed In Quarantine at 6:43 a m. Steamer City of Columbus. Savannah Decem- ber 5. to the Ocean Ss Co. with passengers and mdae Passed in Quarantine at 7:15 am. Steamer Mil!in~cket. Stockton. Me, with paper. to the Great Northern. Paper Co; vessel to A Pi Bull & ,-, ; Passed in Quarantine at - am. Steamer Comus. New Orleans December 3. to the Southern Pacific Co, with passengers and mdse. Passed in Q»irantine at !»:2O a m. Steamer Taormina fltal), Philadelphia Decem- ber 7. to Hartfivid. Solari & Co. with 13 cabin and 1.001 steerage passensers and m.- in tran- sit. Left Quarantine at '.:',*< a m. Steamer Main (Ger). Bremen November 25. to Oflrtchs & Co. with 149 cabin and PI 7 steerage passenzer3 ami md=o for Me* Ycrk and 68 cabin and 1.083 steerage pasf=*ns;ers asd mdse for Baltimore. Arrived at the Bar at Sa m. Steamer Prinzes Irene (Ger), Genoa Nov 4. Naptes 2T. and Gibraltar 28. to Oelricha & Co. with 29;> cabin and 71- > steerag passengers and mdse Arrived it the Bar at 2:2? am. Steamer Vtrsrinia (Anst). Trieste Oct 20 I itraa Nm- 2. Kalamata 3, Palermo s, Denla 13. Valen- cia lt> ar.d Oran I*. to Phelps Bros & Co. with mds« Arrived at the Bar at 8:43 a m. ?lcamer Tocantins (Brazi. Rio Janeiro Nov 7. Pernamhucn !4 and St Lucia 28 to rhe I.loT'i Brazil with mdse. Arrived at the Bar at 10 a m. Steamer Almlrante (BrV Santa Marta Nov 13>. Colon Dec 1 and Kinzston 3. to the United Fruit Co. with 41 passensrers a:. I fruit. Arrived at the Bar at 1239 p m. Steamer Jefferson. Newport Npwb and Norfolk. to the Old Dominion Ss= Co. with MBengers and nvlse. Passed in Quarantine at 2:15 p m. Steam Grenada ißn. P*-rth Amboy, .... Trinidad Shipping and Tracing Co, in ballast. Passed in Quarantine it 2:1 p m. Steamer Livingstone (Norj. - ska Dec 3. to the American and Cabas Se Lin-, in ballast Ar- riveii at . Bar at 2:4," pm. Steamer Janiestowrn. Newport News and Nor- folk, to the Old Dominion Sa Co, with passen- gers and mdse. Passed in Quarantine at 4 :C5 p m. Bteam°r Adriatic fßr). Southampton and <Ti<?r- bourg November 36 and Queenswm Dpcemner 1. to the White Star line, with oas?encers. mail? and mdse. Southeast of Fire Island at 7:30 pm. Steamer Huron. Jacksonville December 5 and (Charleston f>. to the Clyde Steamship <*o. -w-ith passensrers and nadsi Passed in Quarantine a.t tt:Bfi r> m. Steamer Manchester Inventor (Br». Buenos AyTes October 22. Montevideo .' Trinidad No- vembw 12. Han Juan 16. Cl«nfaeKOS 21. Ivan 25. Matanzas -\u25a0 and Bo«rtcri Derember 6. to R P Houston i Co. with mdse. Arrived at the liar at 4:3." p m. Steamer Sicifia dial). G»enoa Octcb°r 23. L"g- hcrn November 1. Naples 7. Lipari 10. Palermo 1! and Lisbon \u25a0-"»'. to Simpson. Spence <i- Tounc. with mdse. Arrived at the Bar at 7 p m. steamer Adriatic (Br). - tthamptoa. Passed in Sandy Hook at 10:40 p m. Sandy Hook. N .1. Dec 9. f>:?.t> r> m— W '- il southwest. li?ht breeze; partly cloudy; hazy; mi derate sea. SAILED. Steamer?' Hellic Olav OJan>. Oopenhaswi: --...... fßri. Rotterdam Taormina (Ital>. "Napies etc: Italia (Br>. Naples. «c; CHen tNor>. I 1 elpnia; G<?orsria:i. Puerto Mexico; Monroe. Norfolk and Newport News: City of Atlanta. Savannah- Phoebus (Gen, Flashing; Par. Gio- var.ni <Itall Palermo; Esperanza. Havana: Za- ctr>a 'Bn. Kineston: E. >wl. Galvestnn: Fried- rich der 1J ri isse (Ger), Bremen: La Savoi^ irn. Havro: Seneca <Br). Singat^ore. etc; gland igwed.i, Tampit-o. SHIPPING ?TEWS OUTGOING STEAMERS. TO-DAT. Mail. Vessel. Vessel. For. Uller. St Kitts -•• 3 ;toanl I.T."^™ Antilla. Tampico. Ward V-mom Mohawk. Jackswmllle. Clyde. l.w»pm SATURDAY. DECEMBER 10. St Paul. Southampton. Am... fi:3Oam in a a X A Victoria, Hamburg. H-A B:3oam .l-:". l - : " m Odrtc. Liverpool. W Star... S:3O a m £»«>»«» Bermudian. Bermuda. Quebec S:0O a m 1«:«> a m Maracaibo, La Guayra. Red D 8:30 am J2^offl San Juan. San Juan. NT&PR »:f«arn }f£|™ Thames, Jamaica. R M S P.. &:3<>am 1- '*> \u25a0in Havana, Havana. Ward ...10^0 a m I;£>P« Chatham. Barbados. HA. .. .lt:«*>a m } ;oOpm; oOpm Sibiria. Jamaica. H-A lt.iOam i^Sm Panama. Cristobal. Panama. 11:30 am -• P m Bergtpe, Barbados. Brazilian. I^:^ > m 3:'«> \u25ba• in Duca di Genova. Naples. Ital. XK^k^rr. Am'dam. Rot'dam. Hol-Am.. tlS«™ Columbia, Glaseow. Anchor.. i3K«S Niagara. Havana. French t?S>a£ Prinzes? Irene. Naples. N G L 11 \u25a0" am Lapland. Antwerp, Red Star. HM)l)asi R.-ma, Naples. Fabra \u0084, m _ Minneapolis. London At Tr.. l-.W>m Lituania. Rotterdam. Russ. i. r C of Columbus. Savannah. Bar- T'oaS Huron. Jacksonville. Clyde... V^nlm S .Tacinto. Oalveston, Maiiory }\u25a0**{ P Lampasas. Tampico. Mallorj'- 1:00 pm SUNDAY. DECEMBER 11. Comcrlc, Argentina. A R P.. 2:30 a m TRANSPACIFIC MAILS. Destination and steamer. Close IB N. T. P.M. Japan, Owe*. China. Philippines \u25a0via Tacomat— Chicago Maru \u25a0 Tl a >- - >0 Tahiti Marquesas. Cook Islands. Australia. New Zealand (via San Francisco)— Maitai .-.-.•\u25a0•,-\u25a0 S^T" «:|n Hawaii (via Vir«tolan Dec 11.8.30 Japan, Corea. China. Philippines \u25a0via Minnesota Dec 14. 6.30 Mexico Vera Cruz. Dec wart Mexi<-" Vora ' ni2. uw ' «« a iiory Omcho; Galvwton. Her 3 .... ykc ElAlba Galveston. Dec 3 *> * •*'- SATURDAY. DECEMBEP. 10. :^r to :::S^f::::::^ Candidate Antwerp. £• 'i. Kansas City Swansea, .w -^ "tlL__ AEn.-110 Clampa. .Lisbon. >>'*\u25a0-*\u25a0 _ c;,vannah City or Savannah. Savannah. »et .Sa^annan SUNDAY. DECEMBER 11. •Caronia Llv-rpool. Dec 3r. . -- - . - -^J!»™ •Philadelphia.. ..Southampton. Dec 3... Andean •Caledonia Glasgow. I>c3. -- -- x^,Jr I «Var •Arabic Queenstown Dec 4. . .V.^tte ,v^ •^euranoa. .. . V«i» Cras, Dec 2, a*Aiiv-Am •Albinpia Kingston. Dec « IViJS?TraS Mlnnehaha London. Dec 1 ... - Atlantl c_^ rans Toronto Hull. Nov -•_ Wilson Luclgren Tyn«. >"\u25a0"' » Grisrua Orart. Nov -.-^- ra«tl- Mum-aster Castle. Alßlers. Nov 2«. - pac El Mar New Orleans. Dec 6 \u25a0 -So £-ac •Brings mall. TL.. ISntu Tltinfrn Cent. Pk W. 'Phons Tub NBW insatrß 62d-«Mst«: issooooi To-night. >: IS. Mats. Wed. and Sat.. 2. By arrangement with The N>w Theatre. Until D<*r. I s . Li^bler A Co.'s Production of Maeterlinck's I MARY MAGDALENE E&fma. h OLQA NETHERSOLE Music jßiiHsian >.fnipbonj ( Mod?sc Altschuier. | by i ((-\u25a0\u25a0h<>«trii of 60. j _j"onductor : 11l iro-rip B'wav A 0!»th St. Evs-S:3O. n*tr. inaULO IIU vi:s.U>d. « Thurs.at 3; Sat. •_*:!.". MaeterHncks THE BLUE BIRD - "Th* nine Bird for Happine««." ! N»T Theatre's. Management. Original <^«»T. Ticket* for Shilbeti Th«-«r^*. in Thi<« «,roup. \u25a0 >ot *n!«l Throusrb T.TMn's or Mcßride'i*. iHiPROPRQMEII Entire Block, fith Aye.. 43d-44th Stß. Evea.S- Daily Matinees at U. Best Seats $1.00. | The Interna-iSallet o:' Tiie ; 12 New i tional Cup Niagara ! Earthquake ! Circus Acts Broadway Then.. B'way &41. ' —night at 8 Sothern-Mariowe -I R Repertoire. . Fries ->Oc to $1.50. No Higher. Sat. Mat.only II KKTT. i- .W. of By. Mat.Tm'w737ts^ 3 ALBERT CHEVALIER £%& I.YRK . I2d VV. ofBy. Mi; Ta-niaya 2:15. Evs. at -1 a «t; Q pnftar ln " Two Women." MKS. LcSIIB U fl U 8 1- By Rupert Hugha*. Wm.Coil iers Comedy Th..t ISt.nr. By. Ev. >> : 1 ."i. Matinee T»-Ul m Pnlliar ia " 1 * 11 H% *** Lew Fields' Herald :>fj.. By.3.> St. Evs. S:ls gi^iiamLUisusEß^g'aa; mi V'C Evijs.S:3o. Mat. To-morrow. '2:"iV * LTb BABY MINE CASINO. By i r.uth. Mat. To-morrow. 2:33. Kvm, QAll DLQIiiCn in He Cnme from S:l3 Oflm DLnnlunU MHwankre. Nazimova'a 3DTH ST. THEA.. V.i-".. nr. B*y. Ev«?nlnss S:ls. Matln»e To-morrow. S:lS> MARIETTA u-p Trniinarinur Van B»nsa«>- 011 "iinß. iruuudßJur m ivii><- ni!.nf» Th., 3».B'y &« Ay. Evj.S:;{o. Matint-e To- Tl, 9 Bamiilsrs By Chas. Klein. m»r'y.'J:3». '"° °'*»»"°' S »-tth <>o. Naih. S^iS^ The Summer Widowers N«xt W»ek THE FOT'RTtI ESTATE. ! CIRCLE. H'wav und «Oth. (tIATuFH Evs ST.%. Mat.To-mw.2:tr». »'v 1 ntn S*«t» for Shubert rhralrm in the ,\u25a0.-,-. } ICT"tiii, Mild .it the I'niteiJ Theatre Tirket j C«nu»ii:iy l»ltl<f> 1165 Broadway. Tel 7«iW ' Bryant, and 1 I„> Ifway. Tel. »!»70 Cnrtlundt ELUENDORF jl_ STNDAT EVE at S:3O. I)4ri;r m MONDAY MAT. at 3 \u25a030. iTi\a\l^S Tickets $l.r»n. SI.OO. 7.V.. 50c. Now S-ellini;. Inf iliu ! Tr >- nl *ht & Pat. Eve.. 8:15. L.VST Iflf IHU (TIMES .'Tlie .Musicians tjirl" .. »-l. »< t. i **Daa Muni, \u25a0intriii.tiii-tfcl." Sa! "HI ATtt E , Mat ._: 1 l»^r \,t|. ii,-iirr^,,-r \u25a0 \>iriil« :A > 22 All i-r .-vcis \u25a0i-d at., at B'wav. ; COfXT DB l* v \l'K«»*{ i. »'M :-,>'.' ?st. i '"Tli* Sto>n Story." "The t-urtain rl»--9 r-t 1 aOj Wow Un**.-* \V Mi Wjrnue. * 7.3U P. M. Sharp, j Aim. he L'unir others. MARINE INTELLIGENCE. MINIATURE ALMANAC. Sunri?* 1 . 7:12; sunset. 4:33; niuon sets, .; moon's aj? 1 -. 8. HIGH WATER. A.M. P.M. Sandy Hook 12:33 12:4« Governfr'B Istar.fi ... 1-:. T >2 l:<> 4 •Hell Gate ... . \u25a0 - 12 ! M WIRELESS REPORTS. Thf Caronia. r^rx-'rt^^ as 1.124 miles of Sandy H'<ik at a. m. yesterday, la axjMctad to dock Sunday forenoon; The Minnehaha. reported as l,07»» mlUs «ast of Sandy Hook at midnight Wednesday, is expected to liock Sunday forenoons Th<» Caledonia, reporte as t.085 miles east or Sandy Hof.k at 4:."«t a. in. yesterday. Is exiJect^ii to dock Sunday foreneon. Th»" Arabic. r"V"rtt>.i as 1.1-i» mil^s east of : candy Hook at 1 p. m. yeaierilay, ts eijjt-tted to I flock Sunday afternoon. INCOMING STEAMERS. \u25a0 \ 1 Vessel. Prom Utnc - Adriatic Southatniiton. Nov 30.. Wh .~t«r ; •Vottatro Barbados. O«e - Lame *i n,,it | javurj a - - N '"' -'" Hcmtn\ Main Bremffn. Soy 2(5 n .; Uiyd ; i'ant;'>nia... Gibraltar, N'jv 2? Cunarf t Pretoria Hambuis. Nov 2 Hami^m psrthenia Vnw«rp. Nov - \u25a0 i '•Uiiiirante Klnsston. 4--. Unite.! Frui: AMUSEMENTS. Metropolitan Tn-nieht at 7:45 LOHENO KIN. Hum Fr'msta.l. •\u25a0\u25a0••\u25a0• MM. - \u25a0*«. Goritz. Ilinck- .... Hinshaw. C»nrt.. H^rtz. ' Sat. Mat. at 2—FAIST. Mm-s. Fr.rrar. For- nia - .••....:. MM. Jadlowjaw Rothler .deouti. f-l!lv Beeue. Conductor. Poaestl. ' - D r«tHl f*»t. Evr.. !>*\u25a0<; I©, at S Premiere of Puccini's latest op*ra, "THE GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST." Mm l>sttnn; MM. Caruso. Amato. GiH>. Reiw. PMur, de Daaumla, B«ku«>. r*onil«L-tor. Toscanini. Sun V'.vk. at 8:30. at p«p. prices Onind Rimdar '\u25a0 onr^rt. Mmc< ll<ir»na. Flahaut: MM Ulncki«-y. Hinnhaw. Sciar«-tti. Bntln Metro- >>kt W>rk: Mon. Err— LA Tlt-WIATA. s.^ U.... Mon. Kvn— I A TK.WIATA. l|. M Melba Maubeurg MM. McCorniack. Amato. Hntß\. ' »nd-, Pod-sti. Wed BITTERFI.Y. «m« rmrrwr. Mattfeld: MM .Tadlowk*>r. .Scotti. Bada. Bour- k«*»ls. Conductor, Toscanini. Tluir«. Kvk— LA GIOCOXDA. Mmes. r>^9- tinn HoniM, ClnMi^ns; AfM- Caruso. Amato, tie S«"surola. Conductor. To«ean!ni. Frl Evk. FAUST. Mmfs. Fnrrar. Fbrnta; MM jadlowk<*r. Cllly. Both»*r Cnnd.. podeatl. WEBER PIANO t'SED. \u25a0 (.vnn B'j-. 4Sth St. Ev». S:2O. Mats.iVcd fib lUn and Sat - - : -" (V ' - Mt - s°c-«i.50s °c-«i.50 THE AVIATOR ES l fe - N<"w- Farcical l^£J n'l2>'_^y_J' tsL_*l£ n Js: orTiTy W.lll1.-l. - Wt«.tl ••! - |^1 MAY IRWIN w;,; ; itv ihi i r«« E. 1 »rh St. Evm. at s s t;, O' » \u25a0 Miti!i'-*f \\\:<i. and -:!\u25a0"\u25a0. KYRLr. hf.LLLW .^,',W.. Sunday. Mat. an'l Ev*> Two I,!'UI1<1 f'oiifrrtn. Neil Monday, changi? •' policy VuuUevUlr. MIDDIES' CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY. Annapolis. Dpc. s.—All the members of the first class of midshipmen at the Naval Academy who are on the first conduct grade are to have the unprecedented privi- lege of a three Christmas vacation this year. The only restriction is that the m^n shall a-.- bonaflde Invitations to visit relatives or friends in cities other than Annapolis. Thf lucky middies may bn away from \u25a0 o'clock Saturday until supper time Monday afternoon. /THi NEW THEATRE. V SYMPHONY \ WALTER I>»MRO»(H. t nnmrrtcr. TO- DAT AT a as ANM U. WACNER PROGRAM ! Exc*rpt» from Rl^nzl. Si^srfri?.!, yxr.sttrr.sztr. Tannrsaua*>r. RheSnsroic. Parsifai. etc. \u2666*- I V >e« Minday Afternoon. Ver. IU *t *• / \>«it >undav \ft*rr... Violoncslto *i.'i- / X Ttdwta. Sac to Cat Fex Ofllc«. & / > 1 West 34th St.. Room *"'j^_r-— pens a 7r mo m £ mm. ml l OF NEAV VOBR— / GCSTAV MAHLER. CmmOaeUX- > A < yrle Within rh.- n«ml»r •^trtr*. AT «AKNK<iIE BAXX. Dw. 13- AII-lCm>rh<iv<>n-->i ivi— -<—i.<. I>«T. 27 SO A!!-Ivh:ilkot«,K-, -'.vilntT Jan. S-« lli-Frrnrh-t i*>n-«-nl Jan. 10-I.T \II-\\ :i-n:-r-t.:iii»f»;. i Jar.. 17-20 All -Mourns. M»hJc-'« ttb V«» Svrtea TtclMU $2 s«> J7 ..'•» »«• «m Saw ffnic Lomion «*I-.arlton. Carries;-* HiH. fj* I prr>«p*rtu». : CARNEGIE HALL. > r\ -~ *. r\ «. i T«»- morrow ! SSOSIOn i^aturUa,"! Syrrpncny ! Orchestra so*^ *>«* .Max Fh-dU-r. M^-frvr'TlTl Conductor. | nO/Tnf-Lil** R?» Seats i-box oSr* A Tt»r'i__ __ BEusco MirS^.r/? ! IBEUSCO CONGEST] - REPUBLIC W "^%^ l EF Z ! J BESECOa DF SUMNrBROfIi _fjjjL ; IjULUIIIfiL Thornp-,.n a !•>-. **<>*" i <>g r>; t i;r m.ii. '.'3c. Mil*- Co.. Kay^g^_£s2S. ! I|LHAMBBA!^w imilv Ma;. Z3r.\ Eddie VeaaaT^^f^. r j t'.ua Edwards' Pong Ravtia and H J3^. Hutt»rstiiß ? s~V*?z* >h iff; g^^?WS5*S I fa.'.- Mat.'.-:. * .'-"- ul-flytMll io.2» xs«H. Ut^ 6i Police Declare Prisoners Admit Assaulting Victim. Thinking- He Was Strike Breaker. Three more arrests were made yesterday in connection with the murder on the night of October 31 of John C. Warner, of High- wood. Conn., a young civil engineer, -who had his office in The Times Building and was killed by mistake for an express strike breaker. Six men in all have now been arrested in the case, three prisoners having been taken on Wednesday. Three of the men were committed to the Tombs without bail on the charge of homi- cide. Two others were released from cus- tcdy, but are kept under surveillance as material witnesses. The sixth prisoner, Al- fred Mule, of No. 456 Himrod street, Brook- lyn, was arrested in that borough last night. The police say he has a record, hav- ing served time in Elmira. Mule denied having been, connected with the attack on Warner. One of the prisoner? arrested earlier in the day told the police Mule was the one who did the stabbing. Four of the men were- Peter J. O'Connor, of No. 322 East 125 th street: Charles Klie- man. of No. 713 Third avenue; Harry W. Morten, of No. 760 Eleventh avenue, and James S. Mulligan, of No. 698 Third avenue. All were express "wagon helpers, and were on strike at the time of the murder. They returned to work for the Adams Express Company on the settlement of the strike. The fifth man, who was arrested yester- day afternoon, was Joseph Murphy, of No. 104 West 99th street. He described j himself as a "business agent," and was said by the police to he a walking delegate for the Chauffeurs' Union. He was ar- rested after O'Connor. Klieman and Mulli- j gan had confessed to taking part in an assault on Warner, and had said that they | had given a shotgun taken from Warner Into the care of Murphy. Murphy acknowl- edged having the shotgun, but said that he j did not know where it came from. Planned to Go Shooting. Warner left his office on the night or j October SI, while the express strike was in j progress, to go to the Pennsylvania station, j at Seventh avenue and 33d street, to take j a train for Long Island, where he was j going duck hunting with friends. He was fi re c Se ,i in a khaki hunting suit and car- i <-\u25a0_-\u0084 a shotgun and game bag. In going I to the station he had to pass through a j part of the district where the strikers i congregated. rtatior Wan in a restaurant ii S " seventh ave- nue Several strikers saw him in the res- taurant, and ne of thei ha said : "There's the strike breaking skunk in ther^ now with a gun." When he steppe,: through the door ' I i restaurant. Warner was assaulted by a - and their sympathizers. He called for the police and fought hacK. to he holding - ' \u25a0 untii he suddenly dropped to the ground, and "ris assailants fieri. The police found, when reached the scene, that Warner had 3tabbed in the hack several time?. tie was 'aken io Flower Hospital, where he died three days later. The police saj that, they were not told by the hospital authorities that Warner's cape wa ous. a!w! that it was only a ' \u25a0>\u25a0 hours before his death that his faml By the time the police got on the case the assailants had had a good chance to cover up their tracks. The first clew the po tee got was from an anonymous letter. which said that Warner's shotgun had been taken to the strikers' headquarters in Wash- ington Hall, in Eighth avenue. 1-efween 47th and 4Sth streets, where the strikers exhib- ited it with the ark: "I guess r that 1 strike \u25a0 Gun Clew to Arrests. \u25a0 In a locker behin - \u25a0 front of the hall. The police m id -• arch of al! the frun ha ed Working from i \u25a0 how- \u25a0 men who were - As one result of the murder of Warner !the police learned that the strikers kept a close watch on the strike breakers, an 1 that when a strike breaker was ... going anywhere alone word was telephoned to Washington Hall, and an "entertainment i committee" was sent out to assault the man. The police found means after the Warner case to learn wh<*n the handy men were to go oiit. and patrolmen met them at the appointed spot for the assault. man, Morton, O'Connor and Mulligan were put through a long examination by Inspector Russell nd Deputy Commissioner Flynn. anil tn«>n taken to the Criminal Courts Build - where they -. •\u25a0. exam- ined again in thf District Attorney's office. As a result of the sf-ond pxamination Mor- tnn was released, but O'Connor. Mulligan atiH Klieman were taken before Coroner Hellerssteiri and sent to the Tombs without bail. The inquest was fw»T for 1 \u25a0•- rr-mber 22. In order lo give the police timp to work u;> their .-ase. Three witnesses were found to testify that the men held had taken part in the assault. They were all former strikers. O'fonnnr, Mulligan and Klieman then confessed that they bad elped to assault Warner, but they denied stabbing him. Mulligan and O'Connor said that the shotgun had been turned over .r". r " Murphy. It is understood that all - \u25a0•*<• of the prisoners named the man who used the knlft on Warner. SAY ANOTHER STABBED HIM Former Express Strikers Ac- cused of Killing John C. Warner. BUTLER GETS LONG PRISON TERM. Jean DeLalt, a butler, who says he has worked in several royal households in Ku- roi>e. was yesterday sentenced to not less than five years, nor more than nin« years' imprisonment in Sing Sing by Judge Humphrey in Long Island City. He plead- ed guilty to an Indictment charging him with havins stolen j^werly. value.] at about ISOB from Hie home ai Samuel Kubie, at \Vavc Cr«-.st. Fa< Rodcuvvay, about a. month a^o. Chandelier Falls from Courtroom Ceil- ing and Just Misses Them. Colonel William F. Beecher, senior coun- sel for the Long Island Railroad, and John F. Mclntyre and George Bconeid. lawyers, narrowly escaped death or serious injury when an immense electric chandelier fell from the ceiling at the courtroom of Part I of the Supreme Court building, in Long Island City, shortly before the noon recess yesterday. Mr. Mclntyre and Mr. Sconeld were associated In trying the case of Eliza- beth Corkery against the Long Island Rail- road for $50.0i)i) damages for the d^ath of her huaband. and Colonel Belcher was de- fending the action. Without warning the chandelier foil anil struck on th* 1 corner \u25a0\u25a0' \u25a0 table adjoining the lawyers' -\u0084.... It missed Mr. S*on>ld[ by six inches. Th*> crash created great ex- citement in the courtroom for a few mo- ments. CLOSE CALL FOR LAWYERS Trunk Murder Investigators Balked by Rhode Isiand Laws. ienre -..-. ? Baffled in his m- restigation by the Rhodi Island statutes. Lieutenant .lames .1 Kane, of the New V'-rk police, whi went to Foster to-< irr the gra-.e of William H Lewis to a?- certain wrhether I.'wi? was th< \u25a0\u25a0 ed in connection i.! Si the Callier trunk murder mysten returned to New Fork to- The dead man rests in his grave undisturbed, and the question remain^ un- solved whether this was 'he William Lewis. a waiter, who wsjs \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 Albert C. Callier. an artist, supposed b '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 the vid Attornej General William B. Greenough. pinion to the to^ Foster tl i? afternon, said tl fii tv I - ooks which gave any one the ngh 1 to grant a permil for 'he dis- intcrment of the body in the circumstanoes. LEWIS'S GRAVE NOT OPENED Among the Republicans being mentioned for the place by their friends esterday were Julius M. Mayer. Charles O. Man.-, Samuel B. Koenig. Robert E. Morris and "William A. Keener . -\u25a0 a \u25a0 '\u25a0nor White name a Republican tnoM of tin didatee so far have •• ; - iblicans. It was said last night, however, on excellent authority I tl fovernor 'White \u25a0 si - Democrat for the plaoe, »ayton was a I temocr ,i^ ri.e =ame authority I 3 said that \u25a0 or White diil not Intend I Edward B. Whitney, the h - tent Democrat appointed bj Governor to serve until January I Whit:" \u25a0•\u25a0 ' \u25a0 ' '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 faji. but thi Democratfi refused to nomi- nate him and he was Candidates for Judicial Appoint- ment Already Active. Candidates for appointment to the Su- preme Court bench to take the place left vacant by the death of Justice Dayton sprang up like magic yesterday. Some of them got into the race themselves, while others were pushed to the front by admir- ing friends The appointment, which is in the hands of Governor White, is only for a year, but the incumbent of the place would probably receive the regular nomina- tion of his party next fall. Even if he were not elected, a ear on the Supreme Court bench- carries with a prestige that is much desired, to say nothing of the salary of $17,500. SEEK DAYTOM'S ROBE Da vie' s operations in Boston are said to etted him (580.000, most of whi ins* in stock Bpeculai Davie is known in nave been in Mexico " \u25a0 November 19, aF Raiph B. Dud Boston, received a letter from hln envelope bearing tne Mexico City postmark. Davie wrote Tf) Dudley that he wa_- to Canada and perha»>s to Alaska. Dudley - came acquainted with "'boy . -• teer" when the latter was a bellboy at Kennebunkport. Me Jackson seeks to recover various securi- ties that be allege? he deposited with Davie. He especially desires an accounting as to 1,070 shares of American News Company stock, which he alleges Davie wrongfully pledged with the Federal Trust Company to secure a loan made by the company to Davie tor 550.090 . Baker, Ayling & Co sue for an accounting for SIO.W), and seek to reach Davie's interest in the 1.070 shares of the American New? Company. Goods which a deputy sheriff seized at the Broolkin* 3 Apartments formerly occupied by Davie will be auctioned at a Roxbury storage warehouse on Monday. The goods include a library, bric-a-brac, curios, cloth- ing, pictures and photographs, including some of President Tart and Harry Ladder, the Scotch comedian, who gave Day $25,000 to invest. Boston Man Named to Hear Ac- tions Against "Boy Broker." Boston, Dec 8 '.ieorge W Estabrook was appointed master by JuOge Pierce In the Superior < "ourt to-day to hear the consoli- dated suits of William H Jackson, the Federal Trusr Company and Baker. Ayling ag-aii!S* Robert E Davie, the miss- ing "boy broker." and others. The hear- ing? will begin soon. MASTER FOR DAVIE SUITS Charles I*- Barnes, of Weymouth. Mass.. a former chairman of the Assembly Com- mittee on Insurance in that state, told the committee something of the operation of the Massachusetts ' mutuals." which ap- peared he about the same a? those de- scribed at the session of the committee on Wedaetfday morning by the officers of the Rhode Island mutual companies. The same tremendous reduction in rate? as compared with the s\ook companies was evident lv tne Massachuse T ts as it was in the Rhode Island mutual?. This croup of Xcv York state "mutuais" charge their holders regular stock company rates, he said, but they have paid back in dividends to their subscribers, which means their policyholders. T6 per cent of the premium charged on risks pro- tected witn automatic sprinklers, and 33 per cent of the premium charged on all risks. Mr Waters named over a score of the largest mercantile firms in the city as being subscribers to this group of "mutuais." "Ican write to-day $1. 139.425 on a single -isk."' said Mr. Waters, "if it is equipped with automatic sprinklers, but the insured person or firm would have to be a sub- scriber in each of these three groans Every subscriber is an underwriter first. then a policyholder." Mr. Waters told the committee how a body known as the Individual Underwriters started with a business men's luncheon club conversation during 1 which six men pledged themselves to the extent of $2.- 000 each for sire loss of any of their num- ber, \u25a0each one therefore carrying what was practically an insurance of $10,000, and how that body grew from its original and small start into thr»e organizations, which are now covering 5150.000,000 of fire insur- ance annually. open only to tho?e men or corporations, of such hiTh financial rating: and character as can become at the same time satisfactory insurers and policyholders. From John R. Waters, the head of three mutual companies in New York, the com- mittee learntd that big insurers in this sta».«> frivf already found that they can •-i:»"^ money by ratrontzins th "mutuais." tnough it api^eared that the opportunity Is Legislative Committee Devotes Afternoon to Insurance. The legislative Investigating committee devoted the last pan of its afternoon ses- sion yesterday to fire insurance inquiry, an.i pArti'-uJarly to the field covered by the "mutuals." This was only the consensus of opin- ion among "the Mets," he said, adding that th*- matter was never discussetl for- mally by them as a body. INQUIRY TURNS TO MUTUALS Charles E. Heney. who is a member of the executive committee of "the Mets," was the next witness. His business, said Mr. \u25a0 lene was that of an art dealer. "To protect the racesxnng public from •vvelshin?" was th^ original and only pur- pose of th*> formation of "the Mets." Mr. H^ney t*»stin>d. and the executive com- initte*' was charged with the duty of "re- jecthig undesirable citizens when they applied for membership.** He knew of no assessment ever having l>een made to combat or iniiuence any legislation, and personally a member or as an individual had never contributed a cent to any such fund. "We felt that any action %ye mipht take would work against our purpose," said Mr. Heney, "and •->• judged it best to keep quiet. We were strongly op- posed to the bills, of course, but are thought that our motives would be mis- construed if we tried to take any hand in the fight. " From the meag-re records available, however. Mr. Kresel discovered the stub of a check for S4. r»o<» drawn in favor of Evans himself, and bearing the nota- tl -n. "l^s'al expense." Thereupon he wanted to knew the reason for the extra $4,300 for leiEral expense when the $12.5<*0 was to cover everything. That had been handed in '-ash to ""Eddie" Burke Mr. Evans said, bo he reimbursed himself by heck. and as Burke was president of the club, and had told him he wanted it for le^ai expenses, be mao° that note on the check stub, but he didn't Know how Bu*"ke misrnt have spent the mon«»y. Mr. Kresel read a list of a score or so of members who withdrew bout the same time, and each neon receiving his share paid back by pel in check amounts varying from ?.Vi to 5250 Mr. Kresei thought these return checks were lor assessments, presumably made in connection with the figiii on th« Agnew- Hart bills, which the members had not paid at th*» timp they \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0•• ere Ipvi«»d. but Evans denied this hotly and declared they were nothing but accumulation \u25a0\u25a0* dues, bar bills in the club or their pro- portionate sharp of death benefit as- sessments. To Protect its Members. _• \u25a0 was ere to defend \u25a0be members of The Uetropotitan Turf Association who _ \u25a0 - \u25a0 -\u25a0 \u25a0 line in the They b fee steps in the re, Mr. Evans said. He stuck to that answer through a series of questions about the mysterious source of th«= $20,000 until Mr. Kresel dropped his inquiry as to its source and went on to learn as to its destination. Ultimately it appeared that $12,590 of it went to Davies. Stone ft Auerbach and to DeLancey Nieoll. presumably in equal measure. That was on June 16, ISQS. and Mr. Evans swore that the payment was for services to be per- formed in the future. \u25a0 - - . , 3ement upon the members of tne Metropolitan Turf •ation°"" he was -\u25a0 - - : as. ''I \u25a0 -\u25a0 - \u25a0 wasn't an \u25a1 "It must have been a bond sale, then." The lawyer convinced him that it couldn't have been that, however, be- cause Mr. Evans had previously testified that he sold bonds only once for "the Mets." and that was on February ">. 1909 which put Mr. Evans completely at a loss to explain the source of the 520,- Of**. Mr. Kr'.-- •• v ined that the lost ledger- Btory had been told by Mr. Kirk- the Mutual Bank, bo ft could scarcely affect the Lincoln Trust Com- pany's rra- Mr Evans took the trai ripi \u25a0\u25a0 .-. vain for any 000 withdrawal, and thei \u25a0 : *\u25a0 the remark: "Why. I read in the papers this morn- ing that th«*y lost their ledger." he de- claimed. "How could they make up any transcript?" m at fin \u25a0 it faith in ranscript. "Oh. that was (30.090 I drew out of our old accojunt in the Lincoln Trust Company." explained Mr. Evans affably. "Ididn't like the way they handled our account, so I took it to the Mutual." Has His Banks in Story Mixed. But Mr. Kresel had thoughtfully sup- plied himself with a transcript of the ac- count of "the Mets" with the Lincoln Trust Company, and he asked Mr. Evans to point out the $20,000 withdrawal on the transcript. Bookkeeping reduced to its utmost simplicity it -upeared to be, but stranseiy iackinar in the details which Mr. Kresei hoped to brine to the atten- tion of the graft-hunting committee. However. Mr. Kresel made the best of thinps as he found them, and discov- ered on the memoranda of deposits in the Mutual Bank, in which the bookies' fund? were kept, a $20,000 item on May 12. 190S. That interested him. and he wanted Mr. Evans to tell where the $20,000 came from. consisted of nice and new-looking memorandum book which was about two by fly» inches in dimensions, and an equally n^w-lookine checkbook. in which, it was disclosed, the first check stub was dated April ». 100$. Mr. Evans explained at a previous session that the *Mets" had been most unfortunate in th*> matter of records. Much of the detail of their bookkeeping- «aja on I card system, he said, and "Tim" Sullivan, the asred secretary of th* club, had carried the card system in' \u25a0 the South with him for the winter. And he himself had decided in the spring- of 190S that the old checks of the "Xeta" were not in keeping with the artistic standards of the club, so had ordered a new check book, and the old one had inexplicably disappeared. As to any book to keep track of his bank deposits, Mr Evans scorned such an in- vention, and simply jotted down his deposits on the reverse side of his check stubs. "Well. *'** f**lt that Mr Miller had a just claim against us," s-id Mr. Wilson, ""and h<? needed the money, Ithink." Mr. Wilson ended his testimony with a i-road denial that the Saratoga Racing Association had ever contributed to any fund to be used in man illegitimate way 1., influence legislation in general or the Apnew-Hart bills in particular. John J Evans, the treasurer of the "M«=ts," brought with bins, in one hand. ,11 thf books of that organizatiuii. They "'I myself thought Miller should pet Jo~O0i) a year." said Mr. "Wilson, "'hut most of the other? seemed to think that £LSOO a year would be nearer rijsrht. and that was offered to him. but he refused It. until finally in 108 we agreed to give him ;.- <mi. a year and settle his claim for ba^k salary and organization ex- peaaea at a lump sum of $25,000, which was also to include his salary for that year and up to January 1. IMB " Isidor Kr^sel, associate counsel of the committee; who was examining Mr. Wil- Kjn. commented upon the fact that the club should vote this sum of money just at a tim* when racingr was practically dyinsr out. and just after the Saratoga association had lost a sum of money on its summer meeting:. Th*» question didrft come u%y formally b*-?orr- tli*- directors. Mr. "Wilson r-x- Tjlain*»d. but It was discussed by the dir*"Clors informally a great deal, until elonjr in 190G or lf*»7. he wasn't sure v.hirh. it was the cause of a break among th<> directors. New Miller's Salary Hung Up. "In the summer of CMO said Mr. "Wilson. "Mr.Miller ;e:ot an option on the *tock of the old Saratoga association. and he went around and r .j a , -cd that stock with th*» men we wanted in th new cluK The 3at*> William C. "Whitney b^'rame the president of the- n^w dub. find Mr. Miller was made Fecretary- treaßureT. Mr. Whitney promised him a. of fl< .r«. a year: made that promise sevwsJ times inmy hearing, but *<?mc of the other directors Ltd not want to srive Mr. Miller anything like that. "When wp increased our capita! in IPO*J Mr. Miller ajrain placed the stock, but mill j n r> matter of his salary .drae:?fd along." He no salary himself as presi- dent of th*» Saratoga. Racing Associa- tion, and he wanted tr> explain about the £25. 0W settlement with Andrew Miller. as treasurer. *T wasn't in this country during that •^•inirr.'" he explained, "and so I didn't know the details of affairs at that time." Kf ias referr>»d then to the testimony m Wednesday of A. McL. Earlooker, the p«=neral factotum of the Saratoga as- sociation, with regrard to the "legal ex- pens* iLCcount" of th* Saratoga club, which totalled up as follows: L 907. $2 ISS- 1308, - -. -„. and 1900 16*5. •\u25a0_\u25a0 TVilson couldn't give any explana- tion in detail of the surprising- increase in If* » c . but he admitted that all the rac- ing associations were naturally inter- ested In defeating the A^new-Hart bills of that year. Richard T. TViison. jr.. speakinsr only for the Saratoga association, said that that organization had not employpd any "\u25a0publiciTy bureau" such as that de- scribed by Mr. Fptmont which worked for the Westehester Racing Association, and he was unable to state whether the Saratoga club had contributed to the p«=n«=ral publicity fin of the Jockey Cliib. Amara Thornton, a lawyer, who was mentioned in Mr. Belmont's testimony en TVednesday. appeared for a few mo- ments to explain the nature of his so- called "missionary work among clergy- men." as Mr. Belmont styled it. Ministers Gave No Encouragement. "I spoke to fight or ten ministers whom T kn*>w." said Mr. Thornton, "about the A<cnew-Hart bills, but found they were all in favor of the bills, so I reported to Mr. lielmont. and si hadn't done very much work for him my bill was only \u25a0_"- He was asked to »xpiain why he had requested Mr- Belmont to s«>r.d him his personal check rather than tne «-heck of the Jockey Ciub or th«> Westchester Ra< - tag (tan '_" a. and r^spond^d that he thought his work had been for Mr. Bel- mont personally, and he did not consider that he had b^ri engraved by any of the racinsr associations. Mr. "Wilson was preceded or. the stand by J. J. Evans, treasurer of "the Hets." and Charles E. Hen«>> . another member of the executive committee or the book- makers' organization, both of whom \u25a0were ?rril!ed as to the part taken by the Metropolitan Turf Association, or by any of its members., in the fight asainst the Afnew-Hirt anti-racinp bills of 190 S. One other member of "the Mets." "Dave" Oide^n. who had been in the committee's room, was found to have disappeared while his fellows were beiner examined. Mr. Gideon answered his subpoena call £ - the openinc of the day's session, but apparently thought he wasn't wanted when he wasn't put on th*» stand im- rr.'Kiiately. and "went his way. Frank K. Sturgis. the treasurer of the Jockey Club, went on the stand just lonr trough to correct his testimony of last week in on» particular and then re- \u25a0-\u25a0 He said that the man who had recommended .'.-\u25a0" P. Coyne to the racing associations was not Speaker James XV. TV~a/ls worth, jr.. but his father, the ex-ConErr^ssman and present chairman of the State Racing Commis- sion. Legislative Committee Gets More News of Misfortune in the Matter of Records Going Astray Richard T. Wilson, jr.. as president of th-- Saratpsra Racing Association, took th*> stand hi the legislative investigratinc committee's inquiry yesterday afternoon to tell m <\u25a0•*\u25a0«> in detail about the 525.000 <..-- \u25a0 •-- with Andrew Miller, th" treasurer of the club, which, strangely f-n^usrh. came in the very \u25a0"\u25a0\u25a0a- when the racing organizations of the state were making their last flgU for life, but he was able to furnish little information to UU I,'1 ,' committee-. rmmv Hetl^l^tlC 2LttbttH& «**»*\u25a0 n 10in THE HELD FOR MURDER GRAFT HUNTERS GET •TO" ON THE STAND Two Officiais Deny That Tuff Association Took Part in Corruption Fund- HEAR R.T. WILSON. JR.. ALSO The purpose of this establishment is to offer to the well-dressed, critical v/om?n of New York apparel with a standard h^r«- tofore not set by any firm selling women's wear in this country. An entire building, seven floors, consisting of fifty-three thousand square feet, at 564. 566 and 568 Fifth Avenue, Forty-sixth and Forty-seventh Streets, equipped with ever/ modern convenience and arranged with such thought and care that it can take first rank at once as the most beautiful and charming shop for the sale or \X omer. s --—.- vj in the world Sensible prices shall nil no matter how exclusive or distinctive the article may be. This firm has built its business elsewhere on this p::r.:.:..•. It shall rule here. Five Sixty Four to Five Sixty Eight Fifth Aye. Forty-Sixth and Forty-Seventh Streets New 1 ork We open Monday, December twelfth I C £2£X*H ±m*->mm mmmn |) hit \rfALLraxTfiOJ<£)\ 14

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Page 1: New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1910-12-09 [p 14]chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1910-12-09/ed-1/seq-14.pdf · WILLIAMGILLETTE Sherlock Holme* N»xt K"k On!:. ... of tine

AMUSEWENTS.

NEW YORK LEAPING TTTE.\Tgt?

CMDIBC B'wav, 4<">th Street,tlrlrC Mats. To-rr.r>r-w * "'t.izi

FAREWELL APPEARANCEINHIS FAMOUS PLAYS.

WILLIAM GILLETTESherlock Holme*

N»xt K"k On!:. Hif» Prrrat^

LYCEUM *3th St.. nr. B'^av. ET-.S^a"LiULUm Mara. To-tn'^- &Thars. i3L

The Importance aliLmtam.of Being Earnest o^,%^GAHRICK Mats. To-rr.w 4 Wed.. Z 13.THE SPECKLED BAND:

An AdT^nturp of sii^riorK H'>ua«SLBt a. COXax DOTLE.

Dae M—

Anni* f£« —^-ti in Th- _\u0084.,.

KNICKERBOCKER. B wav and ZSth Street. !Evas, s Sharu. Mats. To-rnor w <v W»«i 2.

'auixiNEILSON famxS'iS!^ Henry of Navarre!

DSC. lf>—

THE FOOLISH m\u25a0aith MK>. PATRICK CA.MPBELX."

HUDSON Mt3. To-rr."^- & VTerf. at 2:3.DAVID BELA?co preset \u2666»

BLANCHE SATES >n y4fSgffCRITEHIdM^^^^^M

134tK TIME

THECOMMOIEBS^CIIfIJT 2OUH St--et. Bwar *tSJKOUwU Mat-. To-m*-» « v:»>i. :.2».

Zelda Sear* In THE NEST EGG.

NEWAiSTEiOdMUna Abarbanell. with Kaiph oerz. in

IVSADAME SHERRYNEXTSUN.IIMPERIAL RUSSIAN" COCKSVIGHTS:I.>; BALALAIKAOSCHESTSA ISEW AMSTERDAM UCYT *ZZ4 M.»'s.

'THF.ATRK .pt-

• ial. \u25a0«-* ' W»S.»MON.. TIE*.. THIK>. * FRI at Sil^

RUTH ST. DENISDANCES OF wriFM EOTTT

Supporting Company of Ftity.X»tt and Enormo-js Scenic P—^duction. :

\u2666n conjuction wtt^ THE

IMPERIAL RUSSIiIS COURTBAUUIKA OHOHESTBI

Rugers Pef.t & Company

Three Broadway Stores

at at at

Warren St. 13th st 34th st.

Winter overcoats, wintersuits, evening clothes —every-thing men and boys wear.

Genuine Capeskin. heav yweii^ht, with '"outseams.**

Three shades of tan.A glove better than any

$1.25 glove we know, and forwhich we invite comparisonwith the usual $1.50 gloves.

$1.

A specialty which we owe tothe fact that we buy at firsthand from the makers in Eng-land threat quantities of gkweaof tine quality.

We orot it from Eiiixland!A Dollar Glove that's not a

dollar glove at all. io the usual,sense.

Pn-reg $2. SI 3<">. .<!. 7'c. r.o>-. Sear? &»i:!a?r.

liClilOiX Matinee To-morrw. -OSMLl_f. EMMA TRENT7NT ta

Naughty Mariettaby TTlcter Itert>-rr *Rida Jchnsor, Tnin?.•-- ORYIIT F HARRQID.

GA IF TVg^ay \u25a0: 4c i-.>r7-.";"

T. f!

AMUSEMENTS- LIBERTY WBR 4SA StTMC. Ev-s. -!3.LlOtfllIMtiTo-nri. A VTet *tTJS™™

BEST COMEDY IN TOWNTHi_GOUNTBY_BOY JiSJo«- Weber**. B y &2!>-h. Ma's.W.'.; ir.iSi'AIIIA\

"KITTYGORDON :n *}AIMa y « >;• : ;

CHARLES PTLLINGHAATS Ew^aga a: *GLOBE i^SSKd

Matinees Wed.. Thurs.. F*r:. find Sat.

**£& BERN HARDTHl' AFTKKNOO>- C.VtTtXX

TO-NIGHT LA *ORrrERE

Lizard D<;c 8. . a m— Ryndam iDutchi. New

York for Rou!o*n«" and Rotterdam.rthraltar D«»c T—Lacerna (Br>. New York for

Molina: PeViigia air.. New York for Pa-

Feriln^Dec' f—Kioto CBr>. New York for Han?\u25a0

- ' >•\u25a0•*«\u25a0 5 \u25a0\u25a0

Tar!^Onr^SSSS-

npitri« nVrk). N>w York for MaltaTarifa.' - *>< Nw Yrk n" Ma ta

and Ptrswa -,'

)ps Jle<.7 5 a m—

Venezia iFr>. N<»tv Yrrk.Quecnstown, Dec P. 3:50 j> m— Teutonic rßr).*

tfrom Southampton and '..'herbourg). New |V«*rk

Newcastle.-->'•" Ear! of Carrtck

(Brl (from New York).Honolulu-Amsterdam. Dee 6

—Rott<>rda.m iPatch tank.;

New York.Barbados. r>«<- "—

ralderon (.Bels). <from jSantos*. New York.

Pur.m Arenas. T>°o 7—-C',iarlton Ha!. 'Hn. j(from Anrafa?a«r»i). St Lucia and New York, j

T-cndon Dec S—

Mlnneto^ka fßri. New Ycrk.

Gibraltar 1i.... s. r. p m—KSnigto Lutae (G*>r>(from Genoa and Naples). New York.

«• TVinmas. I»ec 8. 2 p m—

Parinia (Br). New jYork.

PASSED.

-- '

Briptoi. Dec 7—New York City (Bn, Nj=tv \ork.Naples Dec 7. •> a in

—6anf Anna >m. .'•iii»-

Tork and Boston; Slh, 5 am. Duca d'Aostailtal), New York.

TJbau. Dec 3— Kursk (Russ), New York via Rot-terdam.

Trieste. Dec \u2666—

Laura tAusti. New \ork andBoston via Naples.

Suez. Dec B—lnvert.8—

Invert.- «Br Calcutta and Colombofor Boston and New York.

Portla-nd. England. Dec 7 -Petrolemn «Br). New

St Michael's. ... MairdaJena \u25a0"- New Tcrlc

\u25a0-a Kingston. Colon, Barbados, etc, for

Snuthampton.Singapore. Dec k

—Foxley fßr). New Tors via

Aden fir Philippines.Bergen. D«C 3

—John Wilson fNor>. N"ev

Fusan? rt>ec 6—Atholl (Br>, \u25a0-— York via

H"nc Knng.

Fata in. '•• Octenfe] \u25a0'••- New*

>rl viaPort Natal.

STEAMERS AT FOREIGN PORTS.ARR'"

'

Port of New York. Thursday. Decem-ber 8, 1910.

ARRIVED.Pteamer Lampasas, Mobile November ZO.

Tampa December_

and Key West 3, to the Mai-lory Ss '^o. with passensers and mdse. PassedIn Quarantine at 6:43 a m.

Steamer City of Columbus. Savannah Decem-ber 5. to the Ocean Ss Co. with passengers andmdae Passed in Quarantine at 7:15 am.

Steamer Mil!in~cket. Stockton. Me, with paper.to the Great Northern. Paper Co; vessel to A Pi

Bull & ,-,; Passed in Quarantine at-

am.Steamer Comus. New Orleans December 3. to

the Southern Pacific Co, with passengers andmdse. Passed in Q»irantine at !»:2O a m.

Steamer Taormina fltal), Philadelphia Decem-ber 7. to Hartfivid. Solari & Co. with 13 cabinand 1.001 steerage passensers and m.- in tran-sit. Left Quarantine at '.:',*< a m.

Steamer Main (Ger). Bremen November 25. toOflrtchs & Co. with 149 cabin and PI7 steerage

passenzer3 ami md=o for Me* Ycrk and 68 cabinand 1.083 steerage pasf=*ns;ers asd mdse for

Baltimore. Arrived at the Bar at Sa m.Steamer Prinzes Irene (Ger), Genoa Nov 4.

Naptes 2T. and Gibraltar 28. to Oelricha & Co.with 29;> cabin and 71-> steerag passengers andmdse Arrived itthe Bar at 2:2? am.

Steamer Vtrsrinia (Anst). Trieste Oct 20 IitraaNm- 2. Kalamata 3, Palermo s, Denla 13. Valen-cia lt> ar.d Oran I*.to Phelps Bros & Co. withmds« Arrived at the Bar at 8:43 a m.

?lcamer Tocantins (Brazi. Rio Janeiro Nov 7.Pernamhucn !4 and St Lucia 28 to rhe I.loT'iBrazil with mdse. Arrived at the Bar at10 a m.

Steamer Almlrante (BrV Santa Marta Nov 13>.Colon Dec 1and Kinzston 3. to the United FruitCo. with 41 passensrers a:. Ifruit. Arrived at theBar at 1239 p m.

Steamer Jefferson. Newport Npwb and Norfolk.to the Old Dominion Ss= Co. with MBengers andnvlse. Passed in Quarantine at 2:15 p m.

Steam Grenada ißn. P*-rth Amboy, ....Trinidad Shipping and Tracing Co, in ballast.Passed in Quarantine it 2:1 p m.

Steamer Livingstone (Norj.-

ska Dec 3. to theAmerican and Cabas Se Lin-, in ballast Ar-

riveii at—. Bar at 2:4," pm.

Steamer Janiestowrn. Newport News and Nor-folk, to the Old Dominion Sa Co, with passen-gers and mdse. Passed in Quarantine at 4 :C5p m.

Bteam°r Adriatic fßr). Southampton and <Ti<?r-bourg November 36 and Queenswm Dpcemner

1. to the White Star line, with oas?encers. mail?and mdse. Southeast of Fire Island at 7:30 pm.

Steamer Huron. Jacksonville December 5 and(Charleston f>. to the Clyde Steamship <*o. -w-ithpassensrers and nadsi Passed in Quarantine a.ttt:Bfi r> m.

Steamer Manchester Inventor (Br». BuenosAyTes October 22. Montevideo .' Trinidad No-vembw 12. Han Juan 16. Cl«nfaeKOS 21. Ivan25. Matanzas -\u25a0 and Bo«rtcri Derember 6. to R P

Houston iCo. with mdse. Arrived at the liar

at 4:3." p m.Steamer Sicifia dial). G»enoa Octcb°r 23. L"g-

hcrn November 1. Naples 7. Lipari 10. Palermo1! and Lisbon \u25a0-"»'. to Simpson. Spence <i- Tounc.with mdse. Arrived at the Bar at 7 p m.

steamer Adriatic (Br).-

tthamptoa. Passedin Sandy Hook at 10:40 p m.

Sandy Hook. N .1. Dec 9. f>:?.t> r> m—W '-ilsouthwest. li?ht breeze; partly cloudy; hazy;

mi derate sea.SAILED.

Steamer?' Hellic Olav OJan>. Oopenhaswi:--...... fßri. Rotterdam Taormina (Ital>.

"Napies etc: Italia (Br>. Naples. «c; CHen tNor>.I 1 elpnia; G<?orsria:i. Puerto Mexico; Monroe.Norfolk and Newport News: City of Atlanta.Savannah- Phoebus (Gen, Flashing; Par. Gio-var.ni <Itall Palermo; Esperanza. Havana: Za-ctr>a 'Bn. Kineston: E. >wl. Galvestnn: Fried-rich der 1Jriisse (Ger), Bremen: La Savoi^ irn.

Havro: Seneca <Br). Singat^ore. etc; glandigwed.i, Tampit-o.

SHIPPING ?TEWS

OUTGOING STEAMERS.TO-DAT.

Mail. Vessel.Vessel. For.

Uller. St Kitts -•• 3;toanl I.T."^™Antilla. Tampico. Ward V-momMohawk. Jackswmllle. Clyde. l.w»pm

SATURDAY. DECEMBER 10.St Paul. Southampton. Am... fi:3Oam in™a aX A Victoria, Hamburg. H-A B:3oam

.l-:".l

-:" m

Odrtc. Liverpool. W Star... S:3O a m £»«>»«»Bermudian. Bermuda. Quebec S:0O a m 1«:«> amMaracaibo, La Guayra. Red D 8:30 am J2^offlSan Juan. San Juan. NT&PR »:f«arn }f£|™Thames, Jamaica. R M S P.. &:3<>am 1- '*>\u25a0in

Havana, Havana. Ward ...10^0 a m I;£>P«Chatham. Barbados. HA....lt:«*>a m };oOpm;

oOpmSibiria. Jamaica. H-A lt.iOam i^SmPanama. Cristobal. Panama. 11:30 a m -• <» P m

Bergtpe, Barbados. Brazilian. I^: >̂ m 3:'«> \u25ba• in

Duca di Genova. Naples. Ital. XK^k^rr.Am'dam. Rot'dam. Hol-Am.. tlS«™Columbia, Glaseow. Anchor.. i3K«SNiagara. Havana. French t?S>a£Prinzes? Irene. Naples. N GL 11 \u25a0" amLapland. Antwerp, Red Star. HM)l)asi

R.-ma, Naples. Fabra\u0084, m

_Minneapolis. London At Tr.. l-.W>m

Lituania. Rotterdam. Russ. i.r—

C of Columbus. Savannah. Bar- T'oaSHuron. Jacksonville. Clyde... V^nlmS .Tacinto. Oalveston, Maiiory }\u25a0**{ PLampasas. Tampico. Mallorj'- 1:00 pm

SUNDAY. DECEMBER 11.Comcrlc, Argentina. A R P.. 2:30 a m

TRANSPACIFIC MAILS.Destination and steamer. Close IBN. T. P.M.

Japan, Owe*. China. Philippines\u25a0via Tacomat— Chicago Maru \u25a0

Tl a>- ->0

Tahiti Marquesas. Cook Islands.Australia. New Zealand (via SanFrancisco)— Maitai .-.-.•\u25a0•,-\u25a0 S^T" «:|n

Hawaii (via—

Vir«tolan Dec 11.8.30Japan, Corea. China. Philippines

\u25a0via Minnesota Dec 14. 6.30

Mexico Vera Cruz. Dec wartMexi<-" Vora 'ni2. uw ' ««aiioryOmcho; Galvwton. Her 3 .... "£ ykcElAlba Galveston. Dec 3 *> * •*'-

SATURDAY. DECEMBEP. 10.

:^rto:::S^f::::::^Candidate Antwerp. £• 'i.Kansas City Swansea, .w -^ "tlL__AEn.-110 Clampa. .Lisbon. >>'*\u25a0-*\u25a0

_c;,vannah

City or Savannah. Savannah. »et .Sa^annan

SUNDAY. DECEMBER 11.

•Caronia Llv-rpool. Dec 3r.. ---. --^J!»™•Philadelphia.. ..Southampton. Dec 3... Andean•Caledonia Glasgow. I>c3.

-- - - x^,JrI«Var•Arabic Queenstown Dec 4...V.^tte,v^•^euranoa. .. .V«i» Cras, Dec 2,

a*Aiiv-Am•Albinpia Kingston. Dec « IViJS?TraSMlnnehaha London. Dec 1... -Atlantlc_^ ransToronto Hull. Nov -•_ Wilson

Luclgren Tyn«. >"\u25a0"' »Grisrua Orart. Nov -.-^- ra«tl-Mum-aster Castle. Alßlers. Nov 2«. -

pacElMar New Orleans. Dec 6 \u25a0 -So £-ac

•Brings mall.

TL.. ISntu Tltinfrn Cent. Pk W. 'Phons

Tub NBW insatrß 62d-«Mst«: issooooiTo-night. >:IS. Mats. Wed. and Sat.. 2.

By arrangement with The N>w Theatre.Until D<*r. Is.Li^bler A Co.'s Production ofMaeterlinck's IMARY MAGDALENE

E&fma. hOLQA NETHERSOLEMusic jßiiHsian >.fnipbonj(Mod?sc Altschuier.| by i ((-\u25a0\u25a0h<>«trii of 60. j _j"onductor:

11l iro-rip B'wav A 0!»th St. Evs-S:3O. n*tr.inaULO IIUvi:s.U>d. « Thurs.at 3; Sat. •_*:!.".

MaeterHncks THE BLUE BIRD-"Th*nine Bird for Happine««."

!N»T Theatre's. Management. Original <^«»T.

Ticket* for Shilbeti Th«-«r^*.inThi<« «,roup. \u25a0

>ot *n!«l Throusrb T.TMn's or Mcßride'i*.

iHiPROPRQMEIIEntire Block, fith Aye.. 43d-44th Stß. Evea.S-

Daily Matinees at U. Best Seats $1.00. |The Interna-iSallet o:' Tiie ; 12 New itional Cup Niagara !Earthquake !Circus Acts

Broadway Then.. B'way &41.'

—night at 8

Sothern-Mariowe -IR Repertoire.

.Fries ->Oc to $1.50. No Higher. Sat. Mat.only

II KKTT.i-.W. of By. Mat.Tm'w737ts^3 ALBERTCHEVALIER £%&

I.YRK. I2d VV. ofBy. Mi;Ta-niaya 2:15.Evs. at -1 a«t;Q pnftar ln

"Two Women."MKS. LcSIIB UflU81-ByRupert Hugha*.

Wm.Coil iers Comedy Th..tISt.nr.By.Ev.>>:1."i.Matinee T»-Ulm Pnlliar ia

"1*11 H%***

Lew Fields' Herald :>fj..By.3.> St. Evs. S:lsgi^iiamLUisusEß^g'aa;mi V'C Evijs.S:3o. Mat. To-morrow. '2:"iV*LTb BABY MINECASINO. Byir.uth. Mat. To-morrow. 2:33.Kvm, QAll DLQIiiCn in He Cnme fromS:l3 Oflm DLnnlunU MHwankre.Nazimova'a 3DTH ST. THEA.. V.i-".. nr. B*y.Ev«?nlnss S:ls. Matln»e To-morrow. S:lS>MARIETTAu-p Trniinarinur Van B»nsa«>-

011 "iinß. iruuudßJurm ivii><-ni!.nf» Th.,3».B'y &« Ay. Evj.S:;{o.Matint-e To- Tl,9 Bamiilsrs By Chas. Klein.m»r'y.'J:3».

'"° °'*»»"°'S»-tth <>o. Naih.

S^iS^ The Summer WidowersN«xt W»ek

—THE FOT'RTtI ESTATE. !

CIRCLE. H'wav und «Oth. (tIATuFHEvs ST.%. Mat.To-mw.2:tr». »'v1ntn

S*«t» for Shubert rhralrm in the ,\u25a0.-,-. }ICT"tiii, Mild .it the I'niteiJ Theatre Tirket jC«nu»ii:iy l»ltl<f> 1165 Broadway. Tel 7«iW 'Bryant, and 1I„>Ifway. Tel. »!»70 Cnrtlundt

ELUENDORFjl_ STNDAT EVE at S:3O. I)4ri;rm MONDAY MAT. at 3\u25a030. iTi\a\l^STickets $l.r»n. SI.OO. 7.V.. 50c. Now S-ellini;.

Infiliu!Tr>-nl*ht & Pat. Eve.. 8:15. L.VSTIflfIHU (TIMES .'Tlie .Musicians tjirl"..»-l. »< t. i **Daa Muni,\u25a0intriii.tiii-tfcl." Sa!"HIATttE,Mat ._:1 l»^r \,t|. ii,-iirr^,,-r\u25a0

\>iriil«:A> 22 All i-r .-vcis\u25a0i-d at., at B'wav. ;COfXT DB l*v \l'K«»*{i.»'M :-,>'.' ?st. i '"Tli*Sto>n Story." "Thet-urtain rl»--9 r-t 1 aOj Wow Un**.-*\V MiWjrnue.*7.3U P. M.Sharp, j Aim.he L'unir others.

MARINE INTELLIGENCE.

MINIATURE ALMANAC.Sunri?*1. 7:12; sunset. 4:33; niuon sets, .;

moon's aj?1-. 8.

HIGH WATER.A.M. P.M.

Sandy Hook 12:33 12:4«Governfr'B Istar.fi ... 1-:.T>2 l:<>4•Hell Gate ... . \u25a0

- 12 !M

WIRELESS REPORTS.Thf Caronia. r^rx-'rt^^ as 1.124 miles of

Sandy H'<ik at S» a. m. yesterday, la axjMctadto dock Sunday forenoon;

The Minnehaha. reported as l,07»» mlUs «ast ofSandy Hook at midnight Wednesday, is expected

to liock Sunday forenoonsTh<» Caledonia, reporte as t.085 miles east or

Sandy Hof.k at 4:."«t a. in. yesterday. Is exiJect^iito dock Sunday foreneon.

Th»" Arabic. r"V"rtt>.i as 1.1-i» mil^s east of :

candy Hook at 1 p. m. yeaierilay, ts eijjt-tted to I

flock Sunday afternoon.

INCOMING STEAMERS.\u25a0 \ 1

Vessel. Prom Utnc-Adriatic Southatniiton. Nov 30.. Wh .~t«r ;

•Vottatro Barbados. O«e -Lame *in,,it |•

javurj a - -N'"' -'" Hcmtn\

Main Bremffn. Soy 2(5 n .; Uiyd;i'ant;'>nia... Gibraltar, N'jv 2? Cunarf tPretoria Hambuis. Nov 2 Hami^mpsrthenia Vnw«rp. Nov -

\u25a0 i'•Uiiiirante Klnsston. 4--.Unite.! Frui:

AMUSEMENTS.Metropolitan

Tn-nieht at 7:45—

LOHENO KIN. HumFr'msta.l. •\u25a0\u25a0••\u25a0• MM.

-\u25a0*«. Goritz. Ilinck-.... Hinshaw. C»nrt.. H^rtz.'

Sat. Mat. at 2—FAIST. Mm-s. Fr.rrar. For-

nia-

.••....:. MM. Jadlowjaw Rothler .deouti.f-l!lv Beeue. Conductor. Poaestl.'-

Dr«tHl f*»t. Evr.. !>*\u25a0<; I©, at S—

Premiereof Puccini's latest op*ra, "THE GIRL OF THEGOLDEN WEST." Mm l>sttnn; MM.Caruso.Amato. GiH>. Reiw. PMur, de Daaumla, B«ku«>.r*onil«L-tor. Toscanini.

Sun V'.vk. at 8:30. at p«p. prices—

OnindRimdar '\u25a0 onr^rt. Mmc< ll<ir»na. Flahaut: MMUlncki«-y. Hinnhaw. Sciar«-tti. Bntln Metro-

>>kt W>rk: Mon. Err—LA Tlt-WIATA.s.^ U.... Mon. Kvn—IA TK.WIATA.l|.M Melba Maubeurg MM. McCorniack.Amato. Hntß\. ' »nd-, Pod-sti.

Wed—

BITTERFI.Y. «m« rmrrwr.Mattfeld: MM .Tadlowk*>r. .Scotti. Bada. Bour-k«*»ls. Conductor, Toscanini.

Tluir«. Kvk—LA GIOCOXDA. Mmes. r>^9-tinn HoniM, ClnMi^ns; AfM- Caruso. Amato,tie S«"surola. Conductor. To«ean!ni.

Frl Evk.—

FAUST. Mmfs. Fnrrar. Fbrnta;MM jadlowk<*r. Cllly.Both»*r Cnnd.. podeatl.

WEBER PIANO t'SED.\u25a0 (.vnn B'j-. 4Sth St. Ev». S:2O. Mats.iVcdfib lUn and Sat

- -:-" (V' - Mt

-s°c-«i.50s°c-«i.50

THE AVIATORES

lfe-

N<"w- Farcical l^£Jn'l2>'_^y_J'tsL_*l£nJs: orTiTy

W.lll1.-l.- Wt«.tl ••!

-|^1 MAY IRWIN w;,; ;

itvihiir«« E. 1»rh St. Evm. at s s t;,

O' • »\u25a0 Miti!i'-*f\\\:<i. and • -:!\u25a0"\u25a0.

KYRLr. hf.LLLW .^,',W..Sunday. Mat. an'l Ev*>

—Two I,!'UI1<1 f'oiifrrtn.

Neil Monday, changi? •' policy—

VuuUevUlr.

MIDDIES' CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY.Annapolis. Dpc. s.—All the members of

the first class of midshipmen at the NavalAcademy who are on the first conductgrade are to have the unprecedented privi-

lege of a three Christmas vacationthis year. The only restriction is that them^n shall a-.- bonaflde Invitations to visit

relatives or friends in cities other thanAnnapolis. Thf lucky middies may bnaway from

\u25a0 o'clock Saturday until supper

time Monday afternoon.

/THiNEW THEATRE. V

SYMPHONY \WALTER I>»MRO»(H. t nnmrrtcr.

TO-DAT AT a as ANMU.

WACNER PROGRAM!Exc*rpt» from Rl^nzl. Si^srfri?.!, yxr.sttrr.sztr.

Tannrsaua*>r. RheSnsroic. Parsifai. etc. \u2666*-IV >e« Minday Afternoon. Ver. IU*t*• /\>«it >undav \ft*rr...

Violoncslto*i.'i- /

X Ttdwta. Sac to Cat Fex Ofllc«. & /> 1 West 34th St.. Room *"'j^_r-—

pens a7r mo m £—mm.mll OF NEAV VOBR—

/ GCSTAV MAHLER. CmmOaeUX- >A < yrle Within rh.- n«ml»r •^trtr*.

AT «AKNK<iIE BAXX.Dw. 13- 1«

—AII-lCm>rh<iv<>n-->i ivi—-<—i.<.

I>«T. 27—

SO—

A!!-Ivh:ilkot«,K-,-'.vilntTJan. S-«

—lli-Frrnrh-t i*>n-«-nl

Jan. 10-I.T—

\II-\\:i-n:-r-t.:iii»f»;.

i Jar.. 17-20—

All-Mourns. M»hJc-'« ttb V«»Svrtea TtclMU $2 s«> J7..'•» »«• «m Saw

ffnic Lomion «*I-.arlton. Carries;-* HiH. fj*

I prr>«p*rtu».

: CARNEGIE HALL.> r\

-~*.r\«. i T«»- morrow! SSOSIOn i^aturUa,"!

Syrrpncny!Orchestra so*^ *>«*

.Max Fh-dU-r. M^-frvr'TlTlConductor. | nO/Tnf-Lil**R?» Seats i-box oSr* A Tt»r'i__

__BEusco MirS^.r/? •

!IBEUSCO CONGEST]-REPUBLIC W"^%^lEFZ

! J BESECOa DF SUMNrBROfIi _fjjjL;IjULUIIIfiLThornp-,.n a !•>-. **<>*"i<>g r>;ti;rm.ii. '.'3c. Mil*- Co.. Kay^g^_£s2S.

!I|LHAMBBA!^wimilvMa;. Z3r.\ Eddie VeaaaT^^f^. r

j t'.ua Edwards' Pong Ravtia and HJ3^.Hutt»rstiiß ?s~V*?z*

>h iff;g^^?WS5*SIfa.'.- Mat.'.-:. *.'-"-

ul-flytMllio.2» xs«H.Ut^6i

Police Declare Prisoners AdmitAssaulting Victim. Thinking-

He Was Strike Breaker.

Three more arrests were made yesterday

in connection with the murder on the night

of October 31 of John C. Warner, of High-

wood. Conn., a young civil engineer, -whohad his office in The Times Building andwas killed by mistake for an expressstrike breaker. Six men in all have nowbeen arrested in the case, three prisonershaving been taken on Wednesday.

Three of the men were committed to theTombs without bail on the charge of homi-cide. Two others were released from cus-tcdy, but are kept under surveillance asmaterial witnesses. The sixth prisoner, Al-fred Mule, of No. 456 Himrod street, Brook-lyn, was arrested in that borough lastnight. The police say he has a record, hav-ing served time in Elmira. Mule deniedhaving been, connected with the attackon Warner. One of the prisoner? arrestedearlier in the day told the police Mule wasthe one who did the stabbing.

Four of the men were- Peter J. O'Connor,

of No. 322 East 125 th street: Charles Klie-

man. of No. 713 Third avenue; Harry W.Morten, of No. 760 Eleventh avenue, and

James S. Mulligan, of No. 698 Third avenue.All were express "wagon helpers, and wereon strike at the time of the murder. They

returned to work for the Adams ExpressCompany on the settlement of the strike.

The fifth man, who was arrested yester-

day afternoon, was Joseph Murphy, ofNo. 104 West 99th street. He described jhimself as a "business agent," and wassaid by the police to he a walking delegatefor the Chauffeurs' Union. He was ar-rested after O'Connor. Klieman and Mulli-jgan had confessed to taking part in anassault on Warner, and had said that they |had given a shotgun taken from Warner

Into the care of Murphy. Murphy acknowl-edged having the shotgun, but said that he jdid not know where it came from.

Planned to Go Shooting.

Warner left his office on the night or jOctober SI, while the express strike was in jprogress, to go to the Pennsylvania station, jat Seventh avenue and 33d street, to take j

a train for Long Island, where he was j

going duck hunting with friends. He wasfirecSe,i in a khaki hunting suit and car- i<-\u25a0_-\u0084 a shotgun and game bag. In going Ito the station he had to pass through a jpart of the district where the strikers i

congregated.

rtatior Wanin a restaurant ii S

"seventh ave-

nue Several strikers saw him in the res-taurant, and ne of theiha v« said :

"There's the strike breaking skunk inther^ now with a gun."

When he steppe,: through the door ' I i

restaurant. Warner was assaulted by a- and their sympathizers.

He called for the police and fought hacK.to he holding - '

\u25a0 untii

he suddenly dropped to the ground, and"ris assailants fieri. The police found, when

reached the scene, that Warner had3tabbed in the hack several time?.

tie was 'aken io Flower Hospital, wherehe died three days later. The police saj

that, they were not told by the hospital

authorities that Warner's cape waous. a!w! that it was only a

'\u25a0>\u25a0 hours

before his death that his faml

By the time the police got on the casethe assailants had had a good chance tocover up their tracks. The first clew thepo tee got was from an anonymous letter.which said that Warner's shotgun had beentaken to the strikers' headquarters in Wash-ington Hall,in Eighth avenue. 1-efween 47thand 4Sth streets, where the strikers exhib-ited it with the ark:

"I guess r that 1 strike\u25a0

Gun Clew to Arrests.\u25a0

In a locker behin-

\u25a0 • front ofthe hall. The police m id -• arch of al!

• the frun ha

ed Working from i \u25a0 how-\u25a0 men who were-

As one result of the murder of Warner

!the police learned that the strikers kept aclose watch on the strike breakers, an1that when a strike breaker was ... goinganywhere alone word was telephoned toWashington Hall, and an "entertainmenticommittee" was sent out to assault theman. The police found means after theWarner case to learn wh<*n the handy menwere to go oiit. and patrolmen met themat the appointed spot for the assault.

man, Morton, O'Connor and Mulliganwere put through a long examination byInspector Russell nd Deputy CommissionerFlynn. anil tn«>n taken to the CriminalCourts Build - where they -. •\u25a0. exam-ined again in thf District Attorney's office.As a result of the sf-ond pxamination Mor-tnn was released, but O'Connor. Mulligan

atiH Klieman were taken before CoronerHellerssteiri and sent to the Tombs withoutbail. The inquest was fw»T for 1 \u25a0•- rr-mber 22.In order lo give the police timp to work u;>their .-ase.

Three witnesses were found to testify thatthe men held had taken part in the assault.They were all former strikers. O'fonnnr,Mulligan and Klieman then confessed thatthey bad elped to assault Warner, butthey denied stabbing him. Mulligan andO'Connor said that the shotgun had been

turned over .r".r" Murphy. It is understood

that all-

\u25a0•*<• of the prisoners named theman who used the knlft on Warner.

SAY ANOTHER STABBED HIM

Former Express Strikers Ac-cused of Killing John C. Warner.

BUTLER GETS LONG PRISON TERM.Jean DeLalt, a butler, who says he has

worked in several royal households in Ku-

roi>e. was yesterday sentenced to not lessthan five years, nor more than nin« years'

imprisonment in Sing Sing by JudgeHumphrey in Long Island City. He plead-

ed guilty to an Indictment charging himwith havins stolen j^werly. value.] at aboutISOB from Hie home ai Samuel Kubie, at\Vavc Cr«-.st. Fa< Rodcuvvay, about a.month a^o.

Chandelier Falls from Courtroom Ceil-ing and Just Misses Them.

Colonel William F. Beecher, senior coun-sel for the Long Island Railroad, and JohnF. Mclntyre and George Bconeid. lawyers,narrowly escaped death or serious injury

when an immense electric chandelier fellfrom the ceiling at the courtroom of Part Iof the Supreme Court building, in Long

Island City, shortly before the noon recessyesterday. Mr. Mclntyre and Mr. Sconeldwere associated In trying the case of Eliza-beth Corkery against the Long Island Rail-road for $50.0i)i) damages for the d^ath ofher huaband. and Colonel Belcher was de-fending the action.

Without warning the chandelier foil anilstruck on th*1 corner \u25a0\u25a0' \u25a0 table adjoiningthe lawyers' -\u0084.... It missed Mr. S*on>ld[by six inches. Th*> crash created great ex-citement in the courtroom for a few mo-ments.

CLOSE CALL FOR LAWYERS

Trunk Murder InvestigatorsBalked by Rhode Isiand Laws.

ienre -..-. ? Baffled in his m-restigation by the Rhodi Island statutes.

Lieutenant .lames .1 Kane, of the NewV'-rk police, whi went to Foster to-<irr the gra-.e of William H Lewis to a?-

certain wrhether I.'wi? was th< \u25a0\u25a0

ed in connection i.!Si the Callier trunkmurder mysten returned to New Fork to-

The dead man rests in his graveundisturbed, and the question remain^ un-solved whether this was 'he William Lewis.a waiter, who wsjs \u25a0\u25a0

\u25a0 Albert

C. Callier. an artist, supposed b '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0

the vidAttornej General William B. Greenough.

pinion to the to^ Fostertl i? afternon, said tl fii tv I

-ooks which gave any

one the ngh1 to grant a permil for 'he dis-intcrment of the body in the circumstanoes.

LEWIS'S GRAVE NOT OPENED

Among the Republicans being mentioned

for the place by their friends esterday

were Julius M. Mayer. Charles O. Man.-,

Samuel B. Koenig. Robert E. Morris and"William A. Keener

. -\u25a0 a \u25a0• '\u25a0nor White

name a Republican tnoM of tindidatee so far have •• ;-

iblicans. It

was said last night, however, on excellentauthority I tl fovernor 'White \u25a0

si- Democrat for the plaoe,

»ayton was a Itemocr,i^ ri.e =ame authority I 3 said that

\u25a0 or White diil not Intend I• Edward B. Whitney, the h

-tent Democrat appointed bj Governor

to serve until January I •

Whit:" \u25a0•\u25a0'

\u25a0

''\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0

faji. but thi Democratfi refused to nomi-

nate him and he was

Candidates for Judicial Appoint-

ment Already Active.Candidates for appointment to the Su-

preme Court bench to take the place leftvacant by the death of Justice Daytonsprang up like magic yesterday. Some of

them got into the race themselves, while

others were pushed to the front by admir-ing friends The appointment, which isin the hands of Governor White, is only

for a year, but the incumbent of the place

would probably receive the regular nomina-

tion of his party next fall. Even if he

were not elected, a ear on the Supreme

Court bench- carries with a prestige that ismuch desired, to say nothing of the salary

of $17,500.

SEEK DAYTOM'S ROBE

Davie's operations in Boston are said to

etted him (580.000, most of whiins* in stock Bpeculai •

Davie is known in nave been in Mexico"

\u25a0 November 19, aF Raiph B. DudBoston, received a letter from hlnenvelope bearing tne Mexico City postmark.

Davie wrote Tf) Dudley that he wa_-

to Canada and perha»>s to Alaska. Dudley-came acquainted with "'boy

. -• teer" when the latter was a bellboy at

Kennebunkport. Me

Jackson seeks to recover various securi-ties that be allege? he deposited with Davie.He especially desires an accounting as to

1,070 shares of American News Company

stock, which he alleges Davie wrongfully

pledged with the Federal Trust Company

to secure a loan made by the company to

Davie tor 550.090. Baker, Ayling& Co suefor an accounting for SIO.W), and seek to

reach Davie's interest in the 1.070 shares ofthe American New? Company.

Goods which a deputy sheriff seized at theBroolkin*3 Apartments formerly occupied by

Davie will be auctioned at a Roxburystorage warehouse on Monday. The goods

include a library, bric-a-brac, curios, cloth-ing, pictures and photographs, including

some of President Tart and Harry Ladder,the Scotch comedian, who gave Day • $25,000

to invest.

Boston Man Named to Hear Ac-tions Against "Boy Broker."

Boston, Dec 8—

'.ieorge W Estabrook wasappointed master by JuOge Pierce In theSuperior <"ourt to-day to hear the consoli-dated suits of William H Jackson, theFederal Trusr Company and Baker. Ayling

ag-aii!S* Robert E Davie, the miss-ing "boy broker." and others. The hear-ing? will begin soon.

MASTER FOR DAVIE SUITS

Charles I*- Barnes, of Weymouth. Mass..a former chairman of the Assembly Com-mittee on Insurance in that state, told thecommittee something of the operation ofthe Massachusetts

'mutuals." which ap-

peared he about the same a? those de-scribed at the session of the committee onWedaetfday morning by the officers of theRhode Island mutual companies. The sametremendous reduction in rate? as comparedwith the s\ook companies was evident lvtne Massachuse T ts as it was in the RhodeIsland mutual?.

This croup of Xcv York state "mutuais"charge their holders regular stockcompany rates, he said, but they have paid

back in dividends to their subscribers,

which means their policyholders. T6 percent of the premium charged on risks pro-

tected witn automatic sprinklers, and 33per cent of the premium charged on allrisks. Mr Waters named over a score ofthe largest mercantile firms in the city

as being subscribers to this group of"mutuais."

"Ican write to-day $1.139.425 on a single

-isk."' said Mr. Waters, "if it is equipped

with automatic sprinklers, but the insuredperson or firm would have to be a sub-

scriber in each of these three groansEvery subscriber is an underwriter first.

then a policyholder."

Mr. Waters told the committee how abody known as the Individual Underwritersstarted with a business men's luncheonclub conversation during1 which six menpledged themselves to the extent of $2.-000 each for sire loss of any of their num-ber, \u25a0each one therefore carrying what waspractically an insurance of $10,000, andhow that body grew from its original andsmall start into thr»e organizations, which

are now covering 5150.000,000 of fire insur-

ance annually.

open only to tho?e men or corporations, of

such hiTh financial rating: and character ascan become at the same time satisfactory

insurers and policyholders.

From John R. Waters, the head of three

mutual companies in New York, the com-mittee learntd that big insurers in thissta».«> frivf already found that they can

•-i:»"^ money by ratrontzins th "mutuais."tnough it api^eared that the opportunity Is

Legislative Committee DevotesAfternoon to Insurance.

The legislative Investigating committee

devoted the last pan of its afternoon ses-

sion yesterday to fire insurance inquiry,

an.i pArti'-uJarly to the field covered by the

"mutuals."

This was only the consensus of opin-

ion among "the Mets," he said, adding

that th*- matter was never discussetl for-mally by them as a body.

INQUIRY TURNS TO MUTUALS

Charles E. Heney. who is a member ofthe executive committee of "the Mets,"

was the next witness. His business, saidMr. \u25a0 lene was that of an art dealer.

"To protect the racesxnng public from

•vvelshin?" was th^ original and only pur-

pose of th*> formation of "the Mets." Mr.

H^ney t*»stin>d. and the executive com-initte*' was charged with the duty of "re-

jecthig undesirable citizens when they

applied for membership.**

He knew of no assessment ever having

l>een made to combat or iniiuence any

legislation, and personally—

a memberor as an individual had never contributeda cent to any such fund.

"We felt that any action %ye mipht

take would work against our purpose,"

said Mr. Heney, "and •->• judged it best

to keep quiet. We were strongly op-

posed to the bills, of course, but arethought that our motives would be mis-

construed if we tried to take any handin the fight.

"

From the meag-re records available,

however. Mr. Kresel discovered the stubof a check for S4. r»o<» drawn in favor ofEvans himself, and bearing the nota-

tl-n. "l^s'al expense." Thereupon hewanted to knew the reason for the

extra $4,300 for leiEral expense when the$12.5<*0 was to cover everything.

That had been handed in '-ash to""Eddie" Burke Mr. Evans said, bo he

reimbursed himself by heck. and asBurke was president of the club, andhad told him he wanted it for le^aiexpenses, be mao° that note on the

check stub, but he didn't Know howBu*"ke misrnt have spent the mon«»y.

Mr. Kresel read a list of a score or soof members who withdrew bout thesame time, and each neon receiving hisshare paid back by pel in check

amounts varying from ?.Vi to 5250 Mr.Kresei thought these return checks were

lor assessments, presumably made inconnection with the figiiion th« Agnew-Hart bills, which the members had notpaid at th*» timp they \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0•• ere Ipvi«»d. but

Evans denied this hotly and declaredthey were nothing but accumulation \u25a0\u25a0*

dues, bar bills in the club or their pro-

portionate sharp of death benefit as-sessments.

To Protect its Members.

_• \u25a0• was

ere to defend\u25a0be members of

The Uetropotitan Turf Association who_\u25a0

-\u25a0

-\u25a0 \u25a0 line in theThey b fee steps in the

re, Mr.Evans said.

He stuck to that answer through aseries of questions about the mysterious

source of th«= $20,000 until Mr. Kreseldropped his inquiry as to its source andwent on to learn as to its destination.

Ultimately it appeared that $12,590 of

it went to Davies. Stone ft Auerbachand to DeLancey Nieoll. presumably inequal measure. That was on June 16,

ISQS. and Mr. Evans swore that thepayment was for services to be per-

formed in the future.

\u25a0

- - • . • ,3ement upon

the members of tne Metropolitan Turf•ation°"" he was

-\u25a0

- -: as. ''I

• •\u25a0 -\u25a0

-\u25a0

• wasn't an\u25a1

"Itmust have been a bond sale, then."The lawyer convinced him that it

couldn't have been that, however, be-

cause Mr. Evans had previously testifiedthat he sold bonds only once for "the

Mets." and that was on February ">.1909 which put Mr. Evans completely ata loss to explain the source of the 520,-Of**.

Mr. Kr'.-- •• v ined that the lostledger- Btory had been told by Mr. Kirk-

•the Mutual Bank, bo ft could

scarcely affect the Lincoln Trust Com-pany's rra- Mr Evans took thetrai ripi \u25a0\u25a0 .-. vain for any

000 withdrawal, and thei \u25a0 : *\u25a0

• the remark:

"Why. Iread in the papers this morn-ing that th«*y lost their ledger." he de-claimed. "How could they make up anytranscript?"

m at fin \u25a0 it faith inranscript.

"Oh. that was (30.090 Idrew out ofour old accojunt in the Lincoln TrustCompany." explained Mr. Evans affably.

"Ididn't like the way they handled ouraccount, so Itook it to the Mutual."

Has His Banks in Story Mixed.But Mr. Kresel had thoughtfully sup-

plied himself with a transcript of the ac-count of "the Mets" with the LincolnTrust Company, and he asked Mr. Evansto point out the $20,000 withdrawal onthe transcript.

Bookkeeping reduced to its utmostsimplicity it -upeared to be, butstranseiy iackinar in the details whichMr. Kresei hoped to brine to the atten-tion of the graft-hunting committee.

However. Mr. Kresel made the best ofthinps as he found them, and discov-ered on the memoranda of deposits inthe Mutual Bank, in which the bookies'fund? were kept, a $20,000 item on May

12. 190S. That interested him. and hewanted Mr. Evans to tell where the$20,000 came from.

consisted of nice and new-lookingmemorandum book which was about twoby fly» inches in dimensions, and anequally n^w-lookine checkbook. inwhich, it was disclosed, the first checkstub was dated April ». 100$.

Mr. Evans explained at a previoussession that the *Mets" had been most

unfortunate in th*> matter of records.Much of the detail of their bookkeeping-«aja onIcard system, he said, and "Tim"Sullivan, the asred secretary of th* club,

had carried the card system in' \u25a0 theSouth with him for the winter. And

he himself had decided in the spring-

of 190S that the old checks of the"Xeta" were not in keeping with theartistic standards of the club, so hadordered a new check book, and the oldone had inexplicably disappeared. As

to any book to keep track of his bankdeposits, Mr Evans scorned such an in-vention, and simply jotted down hisdeposits on the reverse side of his checkstubs.

"Well.*'** f**lt that Mr Miller had a

just claim against us," s-id Mr. Wilson,

""and h<? needed the money, Ithink."

Mr. Wilson ended his testimony witha i-road denial that the Saratoga Racing

Association had ever contributed to any

fund to be used in man illegitimate way

1., influence legislation in general or theApnew-Hart bills in particular.

John J Evans, the treasurer of the"M«=ts," brought with bins, in one hand.,11 thf books of that organizatiuii. They

"'I myself thought Miller should pet

Jo~O0i) a year." said Mr. "Wilson, "'hut

most of the other? seemed to think that

£LSOO a year would be nearer rijsrht. andthat was offered to him. but he refusedIt. until finally in 108 we agreed to give

him ;.- <mi. a year and settle his claim

for ba^k salary and organization ex-

peaaea at a lump sum of $25,000, which

was also to include his salary for thatyear and up to January 1. IMB

"

Isidor Kr^sel, associate counsel of the

committee; who was examining Mr. Wil-

Kjn. commented upon the fact that the

club should vote this sum of money just

at a tim* when racingr was practically

dyinsr out. and just after the Saratoga

association had lost a sum of money on

its summer meeting:.

Th*» question didrft come u%y formally

b*-?orr- tli*- directors. Mr. "Wilson r-x-Tjlain*»d. but It was discussed by thedir*"Clors informally a great deal, untilelonjr in 190G or lf*»7. he wasn't sure

v.hirh. it was the cause of a break amongth<> directors.

New Miller's Salary Hung Up.

"In the summer of CMO said Mr.

"Wilson. "Mr.Miller ;e:ot an option on the

*tock of the old Saratoga association.and he went around and r.ja,-cd thatstock with th*» men we wanted in th

new cluK The 3at*> William C. "Whitney

b^'rame the president of the- n^w dub.find Mr. Miller was made Fecretary-

treaßureT. Mr. Whitney promised him a.

of fl< .r«. a year: made that

promise sevwsJ times inmy hearing, but

*<?mc of the other directors Ltd not want

to srive Mr. Miller anything like that.

"When wp increased our capita! in IPO*JMr. Miller ajrain placed the stock, but

mill jnr> matter of his salary .drae:?fdalong."

He—

no salary himself as presi-

dent of th*» Saratoga. Racing Associa-tion, and he wanted tr> explain about the£25.0W settlement with Andrew Miller.as treasurer.

*T wasn't in this country during that•^•inirr.'" he explained, "and so Ididn'tknow the details of affairs at that time."

Kfias referr>»d then to the testimony

m Wednesday of A.McL.Earlooker, thep«=neral factotum of the Saratoga as-

sociation, with regrard to the "legal ex-

pens* iLCcount" of th* Saratoga club,

which totalled up as follows: L907. $2

ISS- 1308,--. -„. and 1900 16*5.

•\u25a0_\u25a0 TVilson couldn't give any explana-

tion in detail of the surprising- increasein If*»c.but he admitted that all the rac-

ing associations were naturally inter-

ested In defeating the A^new-Hart billsof that year.

Richard T. TViison. jr.. speakinsr only

for the Saratoga association, said thatthat organization had not employpd any

"\u25a0publiciTy bureau" such as that de-scribed by Mr. Fptmont which workedfor the Westehester Racing Association,

and he was unable to state whether theSaratoga club had contributed to thep«=n«=ral publicity fin of the Jockey

Cliib.

Amara Thornton, a lawyer, who was

mentioned in Mr. Belmont's testimony

en TVednesday. appeared for a few mo-

ments to explain the nature of his so-

called "missionary work among clergy-

men." as Mr. Belmont styled it.

Ministers Gave No Encouragement.

"I spoke to fight or ten ministerswhom T kn*>w." said Mr. Thornton,

"about the A<cnew-Hart bills, but foundthey were all in favor of the bills, so Ireported to Mr. lielmont. and si hadn'tdone very much work for him my billwas only \u25a0_"-

He was asked to »xpiain why he hadrequested Mr- Belmont to s«>r.d him his

personal check rather than tne «-heck ofthe Jockey Ciub or th«> Westchester Ra<

-tag (tan '_" a. and r^spond^d that he

thought his work had been for Mr. Bel-

mont personally, and he did not considerthat he had b^ri engraved by any of the

racinsr associations.

Mr. "Wilson was preceded or. the standby J. J. Evans, treasurer of "the Hets."and Charles E. Hen«>>. another memberof the executive committee or the book-

makers' organization, both of whom\u25a0were ?rril!ed as to the part taken by theMetropolitan Turf Association, or by any

of its members., in the fight asainst the

Afnew-Hirt anti-racinp bills of 190S.One other member of "the Mets." "Dave"Oide^n. who had been in the committee'sroom, was found to have disappeared

while his fellows were beiner examined.Mr. Gideon answered his subpoena call£

-the openinc of the day's session, but

apparently thought he wasn't wantedwhen he wasn't put on th*» stand im-

rr.'Kiiately. and "went his way.

Frank K. Sturgis. the treasurer of theJockey Club, went on the stand just

lonr trough to correct his testimony oflast week in on» particular and then re-

\u25a0-\u25a0 He said that the man who hadrecommended .'.-\u25a0" P. Coyne to theracing associations was not Speaker

James XV. TV~a/ls worth, jr.. but hisfather, the ex-ConErr^ssman and present

chairman of the State Racing Commis-sion.

Legislative Committee GetsMore News of Misfortune in

the Matter of RecordsGoing Astray

Richard T. Wilson, jr.. as president ofth-- Saratpsra Racing Association, tookth*> stand hi the legislative investigratinc

committee's inquiry yesterday afternoonto tell m<\u25a0•*\u25a0«> in detail about the 525.000<..-- \u25a0 •-- with Andrew Miller, th"

treasurer of the club, which, strangely

f-n^usrh. came in the very \u25a0"\u25a0\u25a0a- when theracing organizations of the state were

making their last flgU for life, but hewas able to furnish little information to

UUI,'1,' committee-.

rmmv Hetl^l^tlC 2LttbttH& «**»*\u25a0 n 10in

THE HELD FOR MURDERGRAFT HUNTERS GET•TO" ON THE STAND

Two Officiais Deny That TuffAssociation Took Part in

Corruption Fund-

HEAR R.T. WILSON. JR.. ALSO

The purpose of this establishment is to

offer to the well-dressed, critical v/om?n of

New York apparel with a standard h^r«-

tofore not set by any firm selling women's

wear in this country.

An entire building, seven floors, consisting offifty-three thousand square feet, at 564. 566 and568 Fifth Avenue, Forty-sixth and Forty-seventhStreets, equipped with ever/ modern convenience

and arranged with such thought and care that it can

take first rank at once as the most beautiful andcharming shop for the sale or \X omer. s --—.- vj

in the world—

Sensible prices shall nil no matter how exclusive or

distinctive the article may be.

This firm has built its business elsewhere on this p::r.:.:..•.

It shall rule here.

Five Sixty Four to Five Sixty Eight Fifth Aye.

Forty-Sixth and Forty-Seventh StreetsNew 1ork

We open Monday, December twelfth

IC£2£X*H±m*->mmmmmn|) hit \rfALLraxTfiOJ<£)\

14