New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1909-10-15 [p 6]night a public meeting in the Mathewson Street ......

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Mrs. John J. Staples, who is with Mrs. Frank K. Maaajlai will spend the rest of October at tine Curtis Hotel. Miss May A. Weatherbe*. of New York. i, % 4 guest of Miss Carmen Martinez at th» v^tewond. In Plttafteld. Mr. and Mrs. C. a Weed. Miss Flor- ence M. Weed, of New York, and Mr and Mrs. J. Albert Blake, of Boston, are at the Kaptewooft Mrs. Franklin Osgood. who has passed the *•:*.. m«>r In Lenox, has returned to th» Hotel Manhat- tan, In New York. Mrs. Osgood gave a farewell bridge party on Wednesday everjt-g. Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Vreeland. of Jersey City, and Mr. and Mr*. W. B. Wilson, of New York, an» at the Curtis Hotel. O. Skybak, secretary of the Norwegian Legation. has gone to Washington. Mrs. John E. Reyburn and party, of Philadelphia, are motoring in the Berkshire*. Mrs. Charles H. Baldwin, who has been at the Curtis Hotel. 13 now a guest of Mrs. Morris K. Jesup. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Chapman and George H. Qulney have gone to New York. Hi!i-lri»Th K. Bloodgood, Howard Vsßsfel New- bold Sforrl.i. Miss Isabel Shorter, Joseph Vf. Bur- den. Miss Charlotte Barries. Miss Constancy Fol- som. Frederic Bui!. Miss He!ni?f. Meyer and Miss Helen Alexandre will show saddle horses and hunt- ers at the Lenox horse show. GOV. HUGHES TO LECTURE AT TALE. Twenty-fourth Annnal Convention Opens in Providence. Providence. Oct. 14.—The twenty-fourth annual convention of the Brotherhood of St. Andrew opened In Grace Church here to-day. Proceedings began with celebration of Holy Communion this morning, followed by an address by Bishop Mc- Viekar. of this state. The "charge to the brotherhood" was delivered by the Rev. R, P. .Williams, rector of Trinity Church, Washington. The speakers at a general conference held late in the afternoon were H. D. W. English, of Pitts- burg, the Rev. F. H. Sill, of Kent. Conn., and Professor C. S. Baldwin, of Yale University. To- night a public meeting in the Mathewson Street Church was addressed by President G. Stanley Hall of Clark University and the Rev. Paul B. Bull, of Mirneld, England. The following officers were elected: Chairman, Comteney Barbor. Chicago; vice-chairman. H. C Tnriibull. jr.. Baltimore; second vice-chairman, Henry M. Hewitt. New York; third vice-chairman, J. C. Astredo. San Francisco; fourth vice-chair- man. Charles S. Baldwin. New Haven; secretaries. A. B. Cargill. Milwaukee; F. O. Zezainger, Phlla- dephla, and Richard H. Ranger, Boston. ST. ANDREW BKOTHEBHOOD M- B PXHUSIGX.— Anti-Spanish and anti-rtligious ! demonstrations, prompted by the execution of Professor Ferrer, were - held in Paris, Rome. Vienna, and other leading cities of Southern fCurope, z=zrrr= A lieutenant and live sailors of the Dutch navy were killed by an explosion of •Merle acid aboard it snip's pinnace, near Maass- X'lls. Holland. == The opening of the twenty- « ne provincial assemblies, die beginning of par- liamentary government in China, was ignored in Peking. -=^= The Chinese government is planning a 110,009.001 lottery in place of the do- tnestic loan of 190$. which failed. ===== Pnj;!- d«nt Failures and his Cabinet and Ambassador Whit«* witnessed aeroplane flights at Juvisy, Prance. \u0084 The steamship Athabasca, of thp Canadian Pacific Line, is ashore on Flower .Pot Island, Georgian Bay, c int. -~~~ TTie revolt In Hlcajgicua, led by General Juan Estrada against the President, Jos' Zelaya, reached serious pro- portions. DOMESTIC. President Taft accepted the res- ignation of Chi li s R. Crane as Minister to China, and Mr. Crane's nam^ was dropped from the rolls of the State Department. The President spent the day at the Grand Canyon of the Colorado. In As z na. \u25a0 \u25a0 It was re- |f>orted that the War Department contemplates ' continuing aeronautic testa at some Southern joint this winter. ' Dr. Ernest Kox Nichols \u2666svas Installed at Hanorer. N. H., as the tenth 1resident of Dartmouth College, in the presence (C a distinguished gathering. , \u0084 , A receiver was appointed for th IVare-Kramer Tobacco Company, of Norfolk, Va.. which recently asked damages of ILOOO.OOO fr.«m the American To- bacco Company In an anti-trust suit. - , _- The annual convention of th<s Brotherhood of st Andrew began at Providence, R. I =~ The ab- sence of the head of the body which has been found scattered at Tiv.-rt.m. H. 1., hampered the I >< i <\u25a0<- in their efforts to Identify the victim. city Bt I were strong and active. == William M. Ivins again attacked Justice Gaynor ; at \u25a0 meeting in Cooper Union and told 'why he | was with Hearst. ===== Dr. Frederick A. Cook « drnfed the statement contained in an affidavit by Edward Harrill that the explorer had never |t>crn nearer than fourteen miles to the summit Of Sinunt McKinley. =: William M. Ivina accus^ST Justice Gaynor or trying to nullify th<- na-.e constitution by reversing Governor odc-ll's dismissal of Sh^r!!f Guden of Brooklyn Mr Mar:' Baker Bddy approved the deposition of Mrs. etflon by the directors of the Mother Church of Christian Science. - Charles F. Murphy said he know nothing Of the attempted thprt of the Civic Alliance by Tammany men. "Ross" Williams, the Tammany leader, The indicted and arrested for "stutling" ballot boxes. \u25a0 Charles U. Flint, returning from Eump<\ said he had hacked the Wright brothers financially for two years and that he believed the Kovernh I had made a mistake in not buy- ing 1 their aeroplane secrets. ===== The Missouri. Kansas & Texas Railroad Company elected a X SjeaV board, with Edwin Haul. > as chairman and ,' .Ai;A. Allen as president "of the road, succeeding , Adrian H. Jnline. \u25a0 \u25a0 The Japanese commer- cial commissioners wore the guests of the Chain- \u25a0M*r of Commerce. | THE WEATHER'—Indications for to-day: . iialn and colder. The temperature yesterday: iHchest. IS degrees; lowest. 39. I- Miss Lynam. Who Lived Abroad, Leaves Bulk of Property to Laurence Haynes. Jr. .no will of Laura Cornelia Lynam. who died at Rye. Westchester County, on September 30. was ; filed in the Surrogate's office yesterday. The will ; was made and signed in Paris, and disposes of an \u25a0 estate estimated at JIS.OOO. but believed to be con- : siderably more, the bulk of which goes to Lam- j rence Haynes. jr.. who is described In the will .is | "of Jacksonville. Fla.. actually residins in Paris." Miss Lynam liver most of her time abroad. Her . brother and executor. Robert M. Lynam. of Rye. J is the petitioner for the probate of the will. It is not shown that Haynes la a relative of the Lynara family. THE REV. ARCHIBALD BLACK ORDAINED. The Rev. Archibald Black was ordained pastor of the Bedford Park Presbyterian Church last night. The charge was given by the Rev. Dr. George Alexander. Mr. Black cave the customary , answers to all the questions of the ordination ser- vice. The Scriptures were read by the Rev. Rus- sell S. Gregory, pastor of the Sea and Land Church. \u25a0 and the ordination prayer was said by the Rev. I Perry Wightman. of the University Heights Pres- I byterian Church. The examiner was the Rev. Dr. . Hugh Black, brother of the man who was ordained. Mr. Black Is the first pastor the Bedford Park Church has had sine.- three years ago, when In- ternal troubles developed in the congregation. » COLONEL WARNER UNDECIDED. Clinton. 111.. «><\u25a0: U.—Colonel Vespasian War- ner said to-day that he had not yet deckle.l whether he would resign as Commissioner of Pen- sions, and would not decide tor a month or more. It depends on whether his son. C. M. Warner. whose health has not been good, but has now im- proved, decides to . take an extended vacation. In C. M. Warner's absence Colonel Warner would re- £tgn and care tor his business Interests here. ESTATE WILLED FROM RELATIVES. Gives William Earl Dodge Course and Trowbridge Lectures Also Announced. [By Telegraph to The Tribune.] New Haven. Oct. 14.—Announcements for three leading Yale lecture courses were made to-night. Governor Charles E. Hughes of New York will give the William Earl Dod»e annual course on I "The Responsibilities of Citizenship." beginning November 15. Professor William W. Campbell, of the Lick Observatory, California, will give the first Silllman lecture on some scientific subject Involving research, on January 20, 1910. The Trowbridge lectures In the Art School will be delivered this year by Royal Cortissoz. art editor of The New-York Tribune, who delivered the anniversary address at the Art School last June. CHRISTIAN WORKERS INCORPORATE. New Mission Body Gets Charter to Do Works of Religion and Charity. Justice Blanchard signed yesterday the certifi- cate of incorporation of the Christian Workers of America. One of the objects of the new organiza- tion Is to raise the fallen, help the weak, assist the poor and in general to carry on a mission work among the needy, destitute and unfortunate. The Christian Workers of America will establish rescue missions. Gospel cars and Gospel tents to carry on fresh air work and perform other duties "that will tend to uplift humanity and establish a stronger Christian brotherhood." The soclety will operate in New York City and State, and also obtained permission to establish branches in other states. The incorporating directors are William H. Collhison. Mrs. William H. Collinson. Miss Eva Collluson. H. Roiiemus, John Boughly. Dr. Mal- come Rose and R. Johnson. J.ike Massachusetts, Uhode Island has an ob- vious ami legitimate motive in weighing th.- advantages and disadvantage* of a federal tax on incomes front the point of riew of state in- terest- The change in the Constitution sug- gested by Congress would make it possible tor tue ajMMCBI government to impose a heavier burden on Rhode island thtsji II would bear were au Income tax to be *|»fjurtioucd, .is now fires* TjlM-d.among the state- according to popu- lation. As a state with a relatively small popu- l.v.iuu and a disproportionate share of wealth •subject to the prspoaed federal tax. Rhode Isl- and would be called ui>on to make a greater (sacrifice than many other commonwealths with more inhabitants and smaller taxable resources. No state can be justly criticised for considering its own advantage under such circumstances. or. if it thinks that the bargain which it is f asked to approve is too aided, for insisting on a continuance of the protection assured it by existing constitutional requirements. It is t clearly d domestic matter, to be decided by each estate acting for itM-if without regard 10 declara- tions made by national panics representing the states acting in their federated rapacity. Massachusetts bad tin- further motive for carefully considering the expediency of inviting or combating a federal tax on Income* that it had already appropriated that source of revenue for Its own 1,. licit To let in the federal tax , collector with a fiver Land than be could have under exibtiu^- conditions would mean either the abandonment of the state tax or the taking of a double toll from one class of taxpayers] Bbode Island is in much the same situation, for it has iicommission at work revising it- tax laws, and «*u.i commission may recommend a tax on in- We de^in it bf>t tliat tho Legislature, without rrg-ard to party consideration, take each action a* may eeem best ooncerhlnK the federal in- come tax. It is a financial question and should not be cdudderud as a question of. party poli- tics. . tytHOPfS (si.a \ it AX Tin: tXCOiIE TAX. §£ The Republicans of Übode Island have fol- lowed the sensible example w»{ by the Kepub- licilis Of Slassacliusettii in recommending lloli- pKitisan action «>m t!ie income tax amendment .•cwj'iy subnniti-d by Congress i<» tin: state ?f-*gi*»latures. The Uepublican State Convention j .•«ld on \V«*dnoMl.iy. jetsam the following reso- !;.< >vi.: A\ INCONSISTENT KNOW-NOTBINQ. In trying lo defend the discriminations against naturalized citizens which the pending suffrage amendment, if adopted, will write into the con- stitution of Maryland, "The Baltimore Bun" falls into a curious inconsistency. It says that the Democratic party In Maryland has always opjMtsed Know-Not hingism and favored equal rights for native and naturalized citizens. But "The Sun" and the Democratic party are n >\v supporting a stiff ruge restriction scheme which will [nit the naturalized citizens of the future into a class by themselves, inferior in privileges to white natives who can show a patent of "an- cestry." Naturally it is hard work to prove to the naturalized white element, which is going to be put on a par after 1909 with the colored vofers, whose claims to "ancestry" are also thrown out of court, that the provisions of the amendment are uot tainted with Know-Nothlng- ism. "The Sun' exhorts the disrated naturalized to cheer up, and by accumulating enough property <<» qualify as voters or by educating themselves so as to paps the educational tests to secure franchise privileges which natives with "ances- tors" can acquire without practising frugality or burning the students lamp. Says our Balti- more contemporary by way of encouragement : It may be tthatt t it will require some offer* perhaps sonic sacrifice on the part of the for- fiffner thus to qualify himself to take part in the governing of tins country of ninety millions of freemen. It may be that he will have to practise economy, cultivate habits of Industry muj self-restraint and work hard to acquire the $500. or. ifhe prefers to take the educational test, be may have to devote himself to the "study of tne lanjruare and the institutions of bis THE SIMILAR 11R. BANNARD. We have already alluded to Mr. Banna rd's >ingular notion that the people of this city ar.' intelligent. Unlike his chief competitor, who is an authority upon the subject, for he re- marks almost daily, "I know the people and they know me." he is not aware that the publfc enjoys being robbed if it may only be robbed amid verbal fireworks. He clings to the delu- sion that it wants to get more than 4o cents tin a dollar back in the form of efficient government for lhe taxes it pays. He holds perversely to the opinion that the people desire the waste in the city government so cut down that there will be a margin with which to build subways, t. increase the number of schools and play- grounds- and to fight tuberculosis. He talks about dollars when he might talk about Gaynor. Hollars interest him. He has a mind not above the economies which a businesslike system would effect In a great corporation like this one. He approaches t lie problem of New York as he would approach the problem of some big bank or railroad which had l«*'n mismanaged ami which he had to reorganise. This dull absorption in practical affairs is t'.ie result of Mr. Bunnards unfortunate bu-i- ness training. He Is only a business man and be Ik unable to look at anything except from a business |«oint of view. New York begins to see that he would make a very uninteresting Mayor. As a Major he would attend to the same things that he now talks about. These business details of the municipal corporation would occupy his mind to the exclusion of other and more exciting matters. A prosaic official, he would be beni on such dull affairs as intelli- gent accounting, economical purchasing, weeding •ml the useless employes, and. In general, on effi- ciency that would give the people, perhaps, twice as much for their money us they now receive. It is only necessary to compare his speeches with those of Judge (Jaynor in order to see how quiet an administration he would give coin pared with that lo he expected from the "Chris tian jurist."' The spice of egotism was left out of his nature. His vocabulary is tame and colorless. Figures interest him. but he lacks imagination; for we do not believe, for exam- ple, that Mr. Bannard regards himself as "con seriated" to the multiplication table. With htm :i> Mayor "The City Record" would probably have no comic supplement, since the Katzen- jammer editor is already engaged by his com- petitor. He would stick to business in his ad- ministration as he does In his spivrhes. The next four years would be so far from declatnu- lory that the city could hear a pin drop and would hear many useless beads drop. Whoso v.auts an administration without "consecra- tion.*' declamation, Inflammation, execration and vituperation must t>e a person of Incorrigi- bly quiet tastes and Jurrerlaimably practical in- clinations : TAMMANTB CONSECRATED CANDIDATE. The consecrated candidate of Tammany Hall! How inexhaustible are the resources of this campaign in amusement: We turn from the Katzenjainmer man. mistaken for a great edi- tor, to the nominee of Murphy and associate of Koesch. Sullivan aud Hagan, who mistakes him -elf for an instrument of heaven consecrated t<»' the cause of good government. "I made a cove- nant then and there." he writes in his letter to his brother, "that from that time onward I •should devote some time every year in work "against low, base and corrupt officials and "government and to lift up government.' And m this consecrated spirit becomes the candidate of all that is low, base and corrupt in the public life of this city to end baseness and corruption. lie is consecrated to the cause of clean govern- ment, and he is helping to elect Roesch. He is ...serrated to the cause of better public morals. and he is helping to elect Sullivan and Hagan. lie is consecrated to the cause of saving the poor from the robbery of politicians, and be- comes the reliance of Tammany Hall in its hour of need. He is consecrated to the cause of economy, and he helps Murphy fill the Board of Estimate and Apportionment with his creat- ures. lias self-deception. If it is not something worse, ever gone further? He rolls his eyes to heaven and murmurs: "God's will be done" when he is approached on the mayoralty ques- tion, but all the while he ls dickering with Hearst and Murphy to insure that their will be done. When he is asked if he ls to have a campaign manager he inquires, "What is that? I never heard of such a thing. But he has one in a few days. One of his racetrack friends offers him $dOO toward his election expenses and he declines it In his loftiest sacerdotal man- ner, well knowing .all the while that Murphy will pour forth an abundance of money In nis support. Was there ever a candidate half so solemn and absurd as this consecrated candi- date of Tammany Hall? What a moving con irast the eampal;ru presents: Tammany with a consecrated candidate, Roesch, Sullivan and 1 lagan consecrated to political purity and the Kataenjamner man consecrated to wire pull- ing! comes in order to increase the state's revenues. The expenditures of the state governments are steadily Increasing with the widening of the scope of state activities. New resources must be uncovered and made use of to defray the higher cost of administration. The states have now practically pre-empted the Inheritance tax. They may soon be forced to resort to an Income tax to supply their enlarging needs, and the surrender of such a rich reserve resource to the federal government may be bitterly re pented. The nation ls not likely to abandon th income tax again, as It did after the Civil War. and its greater ability to make collections would give It the right of way in that field as against the states. It would be well if every common- wealth should treat the ratification of the pend- ing amendment to the Constitution as a busi- ness matter quite divorced from partisan poli- tics. The Rhode Island platform is sound In declaring that the issue Is in no sense one be- tween Republicans and Democrats. good iini:nin\<; and coon feeling. Several recent incidents, the latest in an in- numerable series exti ndlng through many years, hare again suggested the desirability of more general cultivation of international good man- - an indispensable adjunct to international friendship. It should be perfectly obvious that i< rig nations as among individuals complete ;:< •< ><t feeling can be maintained only where there is due regard for the decencies and courtesies of intercourse. The treatment of flags is an important case lv point. There are perhaps a few persons who re- gard even their own national Hag as nothing bqi a fabric of parti-colored cloth, which may l»> lived for advertising purposes or for a dour mat or be treated like any old rag. To such the presentation of the claims of courtesy and re- spect would be In vain. But t-> the great ma- jority of people the Hag is a sacred emblem of national character, national Integrity and na- tional soveignty, and therefore Imperatively entitled to the most respectful and even reveren- tial treatment, and to such the regard which they have for it should certainly -though un- happily it does not always dictate the treat- i .cut which is to be accorded to the flag.-; of other nations. There is a formidable and perhaps insuperable objection to the raising of any foreign Bag 00 I j üblic building here in such a manner or posi- tion as would suggest the sovereignty of a foreign country. The display of that Hag in ap- propriate subordination to our own— such su'.j- < rdination only as that which the host who sits at the head of his own table exacts of his guests who sit at his right and at his left hand is not only permissible, but often is necessary to courtesy, and the name is fo be said of the decoration of convention halls and banquet halls and all other places where there are Inter- national assemblage^. '.•'here are no doubi occasions when the public display of foreign tiags might lie Indiscreet or improper, but such breaches of propriety are few. In the great majority of instances in which violent demonstrations have been made against foreign flags in this country their dis- play li.is been entirely proper, and the hostile manifestations have been made chiefly by those who. If tl|cy were travelling or sojourning In foreign parts, would probably consider it \u25a0 de- sirable and Indeed necessary exhibition of what i Le.. conceive to be patriotism to Haunt their own flag m the facet of their hosts on all pna Bible occasions, fitting or unfitting, and to de- nounce remonstrances as an insult to the siars and Stripes and to the American nation. There is no respect in which scrupuloualy equitable rOOR SPELLISO AMONG PRESUMES. We are not sure how our friends the Sirupli- iied Spellers will regard the ireful tale of or- thography gone agley which comes from a lead- ing Western university, of freshmen who spell Irregular "earegular," and apprentice ''apren- tase," and intelligence "enteligance," and so forth. It Is not improbable that some persons will see in it another demonstration of the dif- ficulties of English orthography and of tho urgent need of reform; though others may hall the fnshmen as pnicious recruits to the cause of Simplified spelling, particularly those wh<> spelled counterfeit "counterflt" and apprentice "aprentis." To us. however, the chief significance of this wretch. -.1 showing is that which is suggested by the head of th>' department of English in the university in question namely, that the grammar and high schools at which these young men were "prepared for college" were remiss in their duty or were Inefficient in their work. We should s.-iy that boys ought to be taught to spell better than these freshmen before they arc promoted from the grammar school to the high school. But while thus illiterate— no milder word will serve— that they should be graduated from the high school, as fit (or col- lege, is disgraceful. The blame is not to be laid ;;t the door of English orthography. Such in taught lads would blunder }h<t as badly If our spelling were purely phonetic. The trouble la not thai the words ,-ir<- too difficult to spell, but that the boys were noi taught to learn spelling by the most practical and most successful method— namely, by liberal and studious read- Ing in which they carefully observed the forma- tions of the word's which they read. We ;;:v well aware that the spelling of BOine English words la puzzling, and also that some persons uf otherwise excellent education have mi poor a sense or memory of literal form as to 1«» Indifferent spellers. Hut we believe that In a majority of such cases as those to which we have referred ability to spell correctly would have been developed If proper teaching meth- ods had been employed with the earnestness which was given to other studies, and if ability to spell had been Insisted upon equally with proficiency in other studies as a prerequisite to promotion, graduation and matriculation. Make the grammar school boy understand that he cannot enter the hich school, and the high school boy that he cannot be graduated and enter col- lege until he has learned to «pell with a rea- sonable degree of correctness, and we shall bave fewer such exposures of downright Igno- rance as thai which li.is just been reported. WATER WASTE AXD THEFT. Tho Committee of One Hundred does well to <;i!l attention to the loss which the city suffers through waste and theft of water, for it is a heavy loss and it is due in great part directly to bad administration. The facts are practically indisputable. The city's own engineers have vouched for them \u25a0Sain and asain. Water is lost wholesale, in a variely of ways. Some is lost through leaky and broken mains, which ought to have been replaced long ajro. Some is lost* through defec- tive plumbing, pipes and laps, which the city government ought to have compelled house- bolder* to repair. Some is lost through waste- ful use from uninetered taps, at soda fountains, ban and elsewhere. Some is lost through de- liberate theft, through tampering with meters or through the use of unnietered pipes secretly connected with the mains. TUe news of the day for years past has contained Innumerable pieces of evidence to these various effects, on the authority of <-ity oflkials. A little has be>>n done now and then to correct the evil, hut there has been no general, genuine and effective effort to stop tin* wholesale leakage. More than one-third of the whole supply of the city is thus lust. A certain proportion of loss is doubtless inevitable, hut it is conserva- tively reckoned by competent authorities that three-fourths of the present loss, or about liiO,- (KJ0.000 gallons a day. might be saved through the adoption of honest and enlightened methods of administration. The city has spent many millions of dollars on its water supply systems, and is now spending many millions more. It is a scandal that so costly a service should be so gmssiy mismanaged. Something like a million iuid a half dollars is lost every year through preventable waste and theft of water. Thar Is a big price to pay for the privilege of being ruled l v Tammany Hall. adopted country; but If all this ls to be consid- ered a sacrifice or hardship, surely the privilege of American citisenshlp ls not so mean an«l cheap a thing as not to be worth the price. That may be sound and true. Yet the nat- unillzed citizen will be prompted to ask, If the franchise is worth the price "The Bun" names to liiin. why It is not worth the same price to the white native. If the right to vote is not to bo considered "so mean and cheap a thing." why shouldn't the same valuation be put on it for :ill classes of electors? The naturalized voter is to be penalized simply because he Is foreign burn. If that is not Know-Nothliißisni, wlmt is it? GOVERNOR REGIS H. POST SAILS. San Juan. P. R.. Oct. 14.—Governor Bvsjfcl H. Post was a passenger on the steamer Philadelphia , which sailed yesterday for New York. This Gov- ernor has been the guest of honor at several pri- vate and public dinners during the last week. t^« most Important of which was that given by th» Union Club*. Mr. Post will not return here, but will confer wita Colonel G. R. Cotton, his successor, at Washington. George C. Ward. Secretary of Porto Rico, will *>« Acting Governor until Colonel Colon's inaugura- tion. » IRISH DELEGATES COMING HOME. Queenstown. Oct. 14.— John O'Callash-"-^ -.at:on» secretary, and Captain E.lward O. Condon. tS« delegates* from the United Irish League °** United States, who have just concluded * success- ful tour of Ireland, sailed for home to-<iay on t..« steamer Oceanic. They were given a derr.onstrai.- farewell by a bin party, which included tha 9* tionalist members of the House of Cornmoß»i - \u2666 PHILADELPHIA HUNTERS RETURN- St. Petersburg. Oct. IV— Benjamin Ch«w George Harrison, of Philadelphia, have returned I St. Petersburg from Turkestan, where they ft * v been hunting. They repcrt a splendid bag of * ainl and numerous trophies. $150,000 GIFT TO WOOSTER UNIVERSITY, lronton. Ohio. Oct. 14. An unnamed person ta| pledged HJaVM of the proposed JSCO.OOO •ndowme« fund for Wooster University. The sift M condition* on the collection of the remaining J*so,<»> by J* o * ary 1. 1911. BETTS'S DISCOVERY. From The Syracuse Post-Standard. ,_,„. \u0084 Charles 11. Beits, .t Lyons, in a ''"*.. I tinHaf •The Rochester Wraocrat and Chronicle. 'i/'La ed for wide distribution, maintains that ™f.,Vji dirtatc for the Legislature who make* rw«-*» his legislative course, "in response to t««*^ i 'bolt* hla nomination or put an Independent c »" date in the tield against him. " cannot leS^ "£. the oath of orttV*. Mr. Helta is timlinc few »** porters for this contention. AND THERE YOU ARE. From The Cleveland Leader. *«.„,* <Sruß*«! •W real gentleman never sees his wtena wgjjjji announces a New York paper. Ana^ .*?,<-. *-'\u25a0\u25a0 j never sees a gentleman drunk-ana taerw *"« TAMMANY RESOURCES. i From The Syracuse Herald. -<.«•<» •*" Tammany. *- usual, Is stavtine *»• s"ri_ -** trick play*. If these prove ""availing. u«r. the mass play doubtless will bo raaoTwa with specially imported players from FbUia«JV \u25a0 Jersey City and other nearby town* Announcement is made of the engagement of Miss Elsie Beatrice Rothschild, youngest daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob R. Rothschild, of So. 31 West s?th street, to L. Albert Samstag. son of Mrs. Samuel Samstag. of No. 38 West M street. The wedding will probably take \u25a0*\u25a0** early la December. "Don't these telegraph workers know anything?" u.sked a man who had had returned to him a tele- gram that the operator couldn't read. "Oh. don"t you mind," replied an old newspaper man. "Why, do you know, when I was in Chicago at the Re- publican National Convention of 1008 I had some- thing happen to me that would make your ex- perience seem like a cheap imitation. I had prom- ised Mr. Roosevelt a few confidential bulletins, and one night, at the Auditorium, I sent down a dis- patch addressed to 'The President, Washington.' A minute or two later, back came a request from the woman operator: Name and address, please.' 1 collapsed. But the chief operator didn't. W'iiat he said to that poor girl I uon't know. I was charitable enough not to want to hear it." "There was a time," said the old inhabitant, "v. Inn that piece of property sold for a song." "Really!" replied the grand opera pritna donna. "How very expensive!"— Washington Star. Correspondence between young girls in Germany and natives of the German colonies in Africa has grown to such an extent that the "Norddeutsche Allgemem* Zettung" has published a "warning to parents and guardisins" on the subject. "Exchange of photographs," said the writer, "is often the lirst step in the correspondence, but then letters and photographs ccme and go. to the delight of the African youth, who tacks the pictures of hia 'Ger- man friend' on the wall next to objects and plct- ures not in harmony with civilization and refine- ment; and to the joy also of the silly girls who treasure the badly written notes from negro corre- spondenta aa coming from African princes. Parents are warned against allowing the yonug people to Indulge in the correspondence, which can result In no good." "Don"t ret down in the mouth, old man," said the optimist. "Look on the bright side of things." "Thiit's :tll very well," mournfully replied the sufferer; "but what is the bright side of a cum- boil?"—Tit-Bits. In order to demonstrate that the anti-Jewish feeling is growing less In Austria, "The Philadelphia Exponent" says: "It is well known that the Dual Empire does not exclude the Jews from the ranks of officers In the army, not even from the highest grade, A recent return shows that the Austrian army contains one Jewish lieutenant BoM marshal, three major generals, ten 'colonels, eleven lieuten- ant colonels and seventeen majors, besides a large number of officers of lower grade." "Will the discovery of the pole result in any tangible benefit to mankind?" •I don't know as it will," answered the press humorist. "1 doubt If the few new jokes it af- forded will offset the raft of good old jokes It put out of commission." Louisville Courier-Journal. The desertion of Hedwig Wangel from the stage and her enlistment in the Salvation Army, says the "Frankfurter Klelne Press*." came about in a peculiar way. With her mother, the gifted actress strolled into a hall at Frankfort one evening last month when a meeting was in progress. She was seen to smile broadly when the speaker told of the great future of the army, but when he enlarged on what it had already accomplished and told •bout the poor glrlr It had befriended, of' the dis- consolate who had been cheered and the hopeless ones who had been made to smile and to enjoy life, she became interested, and when the ex- hortation cam* to an end "two women, one young, handsome, beautifully clad and wearing many Jewels, the other older but also fashionably dressed, advanced and knelt among those who had been converted. They were the actress and her mother. That night they both enlisted In the army, the daughter renouncing forever the pro- fession in which she had achieved success." "The multi-millionaire gets •nan every time anybody applies to him tor \u25a0 little money." -Yps. it often happens that swollen fortunes are very sensitive tc the Washington Star. The Rev. Dr. Edward S. Kousrnaniere. of Provl- o>nce, mentioned and voted for several times for ITott-stunt Episcopal blshoprlcß and thought of by some churchmen as a probable successor to tho late Or. Huntington, of Grace Church, New York, has accepted the rectorship of historic St. Paul's! Boston. Dr. I'alkner, the late rector of st Paul's! died abroad \u25a0< few months ago. Dr. Rousmanlar* a native of Boston, was educated at Harvard. "It seems queer that six ever took a fancy to him. He Isn't at all the kind of man one would expect her to admire." "I know; but he always hud a way of noticing it \vh«a :hi happened to have on a new hat or a gown that had Just come from the dressmaker*"— Chicago Record-Herald. THE TALK OF THE HAY. A Mr. Frank Fox, printing in "The London National Review" what he calls "a snapshot" of New York journalism, makes this remark: "Dana Gibson, founder of 'The New York Sun, "was, I believe, the first exploiter of the 'human "interest* story." Fond memory reverts to the gentleman who sought to live by his wits, and, encountering the late "Bill" Travers as that worthy strolled up from the ferry, took him by the hand and said: "Mr. Waldo Coombs, of Goshen, I believe?" "My friend," quoth Tra- ver.% "a man who would believe that would be- lieve anything." SOCIAL NOTES FROM NEWPORT. [By Telegraph to The Tribune. ] Newport. Oct. 14.—Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Ht!'.« house will close their season to-morrow and return to New York for the winter. Mr. and Mrs. William B. Brtstow will go to New York for the winter on Saturday. Mrs. Charles H. Berryman will also close at the lame time. Richard T. Wilson closed his stay to-< Jay, and with his daughter. Lady Herbert, departed for New York on a private car. Colonel and Mrs. Howard A. Stevenson will not return to Philadelphia for the winter until the er.i of this month or the first of November. VAN EENSSELAER— MASOS. New Yorker Marries Boston Woman at Stock* bridge, Mass. (By Telegraph to The Tribune 1 Stockbridse. Mass.. Oct. 14.—M Mabel Mason, daughter of Mrs. Herbert Mason, of Stockbrtdg" and Boston, was married In S:. Paul's Episcopal Church to-day to Peyton J. Van Eer.sselaer. oi New York, who for many years has spent the summer and autumn seasons in Stockbriiige. The Rev. Oscar F. Moore, rector of St. George's Epis- copal Church, of Lee. officiated. The bride was given away by E. Pierson Beet*. of Boston, a family friend. The best man was A. Cortlandt Van Rensselaer. a brother of the bridegroom. The bride gown was of electric blue chiffon and satin. She wore a hat of black mess*- line, with white ostrich plumes. Among the guests invited were Mrs. Georg* yon L. Meyer, of Washington: Miss Mary Wey- man. of Stockbridge; Mr. and Mr-. Edward R Hill,of Boston, all cousins of the bride, and Mi-^5 Ann. i Thomas, of Boston; Mr. and Mi.-. Ker.r.etS John Muir and Mrs. R. O. Key I'immacii. 4 New York, cousins r>i the bridegroom. There was a small breakfast party at Plnewold. the villa of the bride's mother, at Siockbrirfge, after the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Van Kensse- laer expect to sail for Europe at the end of Octo- ber, to be gone until next spring. Mrs. Van Rer.s- selaer's father, the late Herbert Mason, was for years a prominent and wealthy Boston merchant. Cedarhurst, Long Island. Cict- It (Special).— sll33 Madelaine ('ham datighter of ilr. ar.d M.-m. Daniel Chauncey. was married to-day at the horn« of her parents to Kdward Ambrose Lynch, o: Man- hattan. Owing to the recent death of Dante! Chauncey, jr., the wedding was a quiet aiTair. Mrs. Woodward Babcock. sister of the bride, was maid of honor, and Clarenc* H. Mackay was best man. There were no other attendants. Tha Right Rev. Frederick Burgess, FJishop of Long laiani performed the ceremony, assisted by the Key. T. J. Wrldley, of Grace Church. Manhattan. Mrs. Lynch was well known in the hunting sets of Long Island, and until the sudden death of her: brother, who was a prominent polo player. sh« was active In social events of both Long Island and Manhattan. The War Department now says that joint manoeuvres will be continued In alternate years, but that care will be taken to select only such state troops for participation in them as have shown adequate stamina and training. These exercises have little educational value for under- trained men. There are some states, however, whose national guards will continue to take part In the war games with spirit and profit. A few weeks ago it was widely remarked that official investigation had repudiated and dis- proved Lord Charles Boresford's alarmist state- ments about the # British navy and had in a measure discredited their maker. Lord Charles, however, insisted that he had been sustained and vindicated, and to the eyes of not a few Im- partial observers it did seem that he was right. Sine© then, at all events, things have been pretty generally going his way. Some of the most important features of his policy have been quietly adopted by the Admiralty. Only a few days ago it was announced that a bureau of mobilization, precisely such as he had rec- ommended, was to be established, and now it is reported that his chief antagonist. Sir John Fisher, is about to retire from the Admiralty. of which he has long been the practical head. We may presently see or hear a magnified and glorified repetition of the famous Alexandria signal, "Well done, Condor!" The admiration of "The New York World" for Justice Gaynor's present "leadership" is painful to witness. It is time the inventors got busy on the type of umbrellas which all will have to carry when airship travel becomes common. The revolution in Nicaragua seems to be a purely domestic affair, for Nicaragua to dispose of as best she can. The neighboring states do not appear to be Involved, but are holding aloof, in compliance with the termß of the interna- tional compacts which they all made a year ago. It is to he hoped that attitude will be sincerely and resolutely maintained. There is nothing new or»sensatlonal in what Mr. Bannard says. New York doesn't need sensations Just now. It dors need, however, such a sensible. biiplne»isl«ke administration of its affairs as Mr. Bannftnl'? election would promise.— Hartford Courant. Mr. Bannard Isn't trying to bo kattenjam- morcd into office. But there are probably enough voters in this city more Interested In good administration than in colored supplement politics to recognize his availability and insure his election. NEW YORK SOCIETY. Society, especially the Long Island set. will b* out In force to-day for the opening of the Nortn Shore horse show on Piping Rock Field. Long Isl- and, and the affair will be made the occasion of a number of week-end house parties Or.c of the features of the show will be the four-m-hand drlv- i Ing competition by women for a cup offered by Mrs. Thomas Hastings, president of the Ladles' Four- In-Hand Driving Club. Many members of the club have entered, among them being Mrs. Thorn*-* Hitchcock. Miss Eleanor Mortimer, Miss Harriet Alexander. Mrs. Arthur Iselln. Mlso Virginia Oo- born and Miss Marion Holltna. Mrs. Freneh-Vanderbllt. who ban been m town for a few days, staying at the St Regis, leaves to- day In her touring car for Newport, going by way of Wllllamstown. Saratoga and through Vermont, airlving in Newport on Monday. Mr. and Mra, Royal Phelps Carroll hay» dosed their villa at Newport and hay« come to town for the winter. Mr. and Mrs. W. Bayard Cutting are at their country place at Oakdale. Long Island, for the fall. Mr. and Mrs. J. Norman de R. Whltehous* have returned to town from Morrlstown. N. J, where they were the guests for a few days of Mr. and Mrs. Luther Kountze. Lord and Lady Algernon Gordon-Lennox, who re- turned from Lenox on Wednesday, are at the Wol- cott. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sampson, jr.. who were mar- ried last fall, willspend the winter with Mr. Samp- son's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sampson. No. 14 West 58th street. Mr. and Mrs. George F. Baker, who recently re- turned from Europe, are at their villa at Tuxedo for the falL Dr. and Mrs. Curtenlus Gillette have arrived In town and are at their home In Park avenue for the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Dulany Howland have left the city for Tuxedo, where they will spend the remainder of the fall. Mrs. Jesse Hoyt will give a reception at her house In Park avenue the end of next month to introduce her daughter, Miss Isabel Hoyt. Mr. and Mrs. Cortlandt Field Bishop, who hay« bom in Europe for several months, are booked to sail for New York to-morrow. Mr. and Mrs. Ernesto G. Fabbri will return to town to-day from Bar Harbor. Me., where they spent the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sanford will return town from Richflold, Conn., to-day, and occupy the house which they have taken at 36th street and Lexing- ton avenue for the winter. Th« Christian (and profanef Jurist has re- signed his place on the bench at laat. but In what a disappointingly commonplace fashion! Surely the world had cause to expect something more of him than that. He might at least have declared: "Isay unto you that In the slow "ripening of time the hour has struck for me "to get off the perch!" reciprocity is more desirable than In the treat- ment or foreign nags, and there Is "nothing more essential to good feeling than pood brewing. m:\v-vouk daily tkibune, / i kiday. octohkr 15, 1909. 6 IN THE BERKSHIRE3. [By T*l«*raph to Th» TrtbuiM] Lenox. Oct. Ch«stnutttn« panic to (***_ Mountain are one of the amusements of the tm!~T To-morrow afternoon a large party will \u25a0n'!?"**" Whitney preserve to whip trees. *• Mm. S. Park man Shaw gave a lunch*©« at a. . wood to-day for Mrs. John L. Thorn^e X3Z Geortcc West!nKhouse, Mrs. r>orge West! «*» Jr.. Mrs. Frederic Bull. Mrs. M T>wf«ht Cr>lll^2^ Marie Br«mw«»lt. Mtsa GconcJana Santent' lft Harriet K. W^!!««. Mrs. now Wh!stl» r mnd J™ W. S. Kernochan w*r* amorss th^ (rust» - r * Mrs. Thomas Ship Iris Clarke .l. , ny . Ajii t*a at F«>rnhrf»ok this afternoon, at which ate thirty were present. ! Mrs. Joseph 11. Choate has gon» to Mount KJsco to visit Mr. and Mrs. Joseph 11. Choate, Jr Mr. and Mrs. Jam*** R. Walker haT»» closed m, Owen cottage In Stwkbrirlff* after the ncason th»>r»* and have gnn<> to Chicago. ' " Mr. and Mrs. Oardner Weath^rbee. «f j;ew Tot* Mrs. M. S. Jones. Mrs. t>. T. Flint and M!ss jray Manning, of Boston; Mrs. S. C. Dayson, Mrs. B w Ames and W. V. Q. Lincoln, of Erookrir.e are « the Hotel Asplnwall. " Mrs. John A. Hadden. jr., will entertain at whist to-morrow at the Curtis Hotel. Amusements, angjnmrr or MUSIC 8:tS Tta« Haiti*. 3—B Vaudeville. «. ASTOR S:l»—The Man from Home. \u25a0CLASOO— 6:Ift— In Matrimony a Failure? JHJOU— S:!»-The Debtor*. ' IUIGII7ON BBACU MOTORDROME-* -Automobile KfiC". nr.OADWAV 8:1S The MiAnißht Son.. CASINO 8:15 The Girl and th« Wizard. CIRCLE— S:ls—ln Haytl COLONIAL— 2— B— Vaudeville. COMEDY— The M<l tin* Pot _ CRITERION— Noble Spaniard, preceded by Tn« Outpost DALY'S— The While Sister. &DSN MI*SEE The World In Was. S:lß lnconstant Ororce. OAIETY S:ls— Fortune Hunter. GARRICK B :3o Detective Si'Mrkc* JIAMMERSTEIN'S—2 :ir»—«:ir.— Vaudeville. IIACKETT— a Uttle Queen. HERALD SQUARE— R:l.V— The Kose of Aluerla HIPPOniiOME R— A Trip to Japan: Inside the Earth: the Ballrt of Jewels. HVr>SON 8:15 th. Y.\< IRVING ri.Ai'R >\u25a0 r> l.uir.|-!ic-sindel KNICKERn«'KKi: l>o!Iar Princess. MBERTY— R:IS—The Wliiov.-'n Mißlit. LINCOLN POl'AnE— S:l.%—Billy. LYCEUM— «:IB— Ar^-ne Lupin. I.VRI' K:lS— The ("hnrnlntc Boidler. ~s_l - Madison SQ. GARDEN— IO a- m. to 11 p. .—Electric BbOfr. MAJESTIC fi:l* * (Itirrn's Horre. Manhattan OPKTIA !!Or.°l3— «»—Louisp. UAXINE ELLIOTT.-. THEATRE v M The Pasi-lnp of the Third Floor irk NEW AMSTERDAM «:K>—The ' nv ' Cure. NEW YORK S-1H The Man Who Owns Broadway. SAVOY \u25a0:!*—Ttie Awakening of Helena EUcMa. FTtTVESANT— fi:IR—The F.a«i«st Way ITAU.ACK'S Ma Th«- Fourth Estate. VFPKR'P B:iri The Cltinas. . WEST END—fe:lT>—The Dawn of a To-morrow. Index to Advertisements. Pas-.C01. ' Pare.Col. Agent* Wanted 11 1 Master m sal-* Annulment* 14 4-«\ Marriage. & Deaths. .7 JMJ Apartment Hotel*. ..m .*• MwtlnCT ]* *' Auction Pair. 11 « Muniml Instruction., .10 ') \u25a0Automofclles >- SlOoran Steamers 11 «-» §«nkrr* £ Brokers.. l 21 1 Prof eamianal Situation* Hnard and Rooms... 31 51 \Vant*<l 11 > Oor>ks and Public*- I Top ml* JO 2 tions 13 «l PuW Notices }J " Tiuslaess Chances.. .ll . »• Railroads .... 11 ? Carpet Cleaning .11 sJr*»l Kstate M \u25a0 Citation* 11 AjUforu . .1" « Citation* in Bt-400l AR*-note» 1" « T>anrin« Academies. lO « > « i..i Notice* 7 « ri\-ldend Notice* IS «' Ft «:nboats 11 l-JJ T>Mm«tir Situations |Si i«e Notices 11 « Wanted 11 i.' •"• T> » Turf *> •' Financial 12 .'•-* Tu^np Subscription rorwlosure Bales... 11 «i Has " « tVw Sal* 11 I Tv. •writing, etc ...U .8 Furnished Rivxmn to ' rnfurr.i>h«"ij Apart- * i^t . 11 81 meow to lyt .10 « Furs anfl rurrlers..ll *! Unfurnished Hnuse* )!<!p W«nt«l . 11 1 ; toUt 10 « Instruction 10 «l Watches * Jewelry. 11 •» t«et Bankbooks 11 Work Wanted 11 1-2 IXtxoiyotk Uatlu £ribu m-. FRIDAY. OITOKER 15, l«09. This newspaper is owned and published by The Tribune Association, a Ketc York corpora- tion; office and principal place of business, Tribune Building, IT* l.ii yassau street, yew York; Ogden Mills, president; Henry If. Beckett, secretary; James M. Barrett, treasurer. The address of the officers is the office of this newspaper. THE VEWB THIS \lolt\l\G About People and S octal Incident A

Transcript of New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1909-10-15 [p 6]night a public meeting in the Mathewson Street ......

Page 1: New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1909-10-15 [p 6]night a public meeting in the Mathewson Street ... na-.e constitution by reversing Governor odc-ll's ... adouble toll from one class

Mrs. John J. Staples, who is with Mrs. FrankK. Maaajlai will spend the rest of October at tineCurtis Hotel.

Miss May A. Weatherbe*. of New York. i,%

4guest of Miss Carmen Martinez at th» v^tewond.In Plttafteld. Mr. and Mrs. C. a Weed. Miss Flor-ence M. Weed, of New York, and Mr and Mrs. J.Albert Blake, of Boston, are at the Kaptewooft

Mrs. Franklin Osgood. who has passed the *•:*..m«>r In Lenox, has returned to th» Hotel Manhat-tan, In New York. Mrs. Osgood gave a farewellbridge party on Wednesday everjt-g.

Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Vreeland. of Jersey City,and Mr. and Mr*. W. B. Wilson, of New York, an»at the Curtis Hotel.

O. Skybak, secretary of the Norwegian Legation.has gone to Washington.

Mrs. John E. Reyburn and party, of Philadelphia,are motoring in the Berkshire*.

Mrs. Charles H. Baldwin, who has been at theCurtis Hotel. 13 now a guest of Mrs. Morris K.Jesup. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Chapman and GeorgeH. Qulney have gone to New York.

Hi!i-lri»Th K. Bloodgood, Howard Vsßsfel New-bold Sforrl.i. Miss Isabel Shorter, Joseph Vf. Bur-den. Miss Charlotte Barries. Miss Constancy Fol-som. Frederic Bui!. Miss He!ni?f. Meyer and MissHelen Alexandre will show saddle horses and hunt-ers at the Lenox horse show.

GOV. HUGHES TO LECTURE AT TALE.

Twenty-fourth Annnal Convention Opens inProvidence.

Providence. Oct. 14.—The twenty-fourth annualconvention of the Brotherhood of St. Andrewopened In Grace Church here to-day. Proceedingsbegan with celebration of Holy Communion thismorning, followed by an address by Bishop Mc-Viekar. of this state.

The "charge to the brotherhood" was deliveredby the Rev. R, P. .Williams, rector of TrinityChurch, Washington.

The speakers at a general conference held latein the afternoon were H. D. W. English, of Pitts-burg, the Rev. F. H. Sill, of Kent. Conn., andProfessor C. S. Baldwin, of Yale University. To-night a public meeting in the Mathewson StreetChurch was addressed by President G. StanleyHall of Clark University and the Rev. Paul B.Bull, of Mirneld, England.

The following officers were elected: Chairman,Comteney Barbor. Chicago; vice-chairman. H. CTnriibull. jr.. Baltimore; second vice-chairman,Henry M. Hewitt. New York; third vice-chairman,J. C. Astredo. San Francisco; fourth vice-chair-man. Charles S. Baldwin. New Haven; secretaries.A. B. Cargill. Milwaukee; F. O. Zezainger, Phlla-dephla, and Richard H. Ranger, Boston.

ST. ANDREW BKOTHEBHOOD M-

B PXHUSIGX.—Anti-Spanish and anti-rtligious !demonstrations, prompted by the execution ofProfessor Ferrer, were - held in Paris, Rome.Vienna, and other leading cities of SouthernfCurope, z=zrrr= A lieutenant and live sailors ofthe Dutch navy were killed by an explosion of•Merle acid aboard it snip's pinnace, near Maass-X'lls. Holland. == The opening of the twenty-« ne provincial assemblies, die beginning of par-liamentary government in China, was ignoredin Peking. —-=^= The Chinese government isplanning a 110,009.001 lottery in place of the do-tnestic loan of 190$. which failed. ===== Pnj;!-d«nt Failures and his Cabinet and AmbassadorWhit«* witnessed aeroplane flights at Juvisy,Prance. \u0084 The steamship Athabasca, of thp

Canadian Pacific Line, is ashore on Flower .PotIsland, Georgian Bay, c int.

-~~~ TTie revolt InHlcajgicua, led by General Juan Estrada againstthe President, Jos' Zelaya, reached serious pro-portions.•

DOMESTIC.—

President Taft accepted the res-ignation of Chi li s R. Crane as Minister toChina, and Mr. Crane's nam^ was dropped fromthe rolls of the State Department. —

ThePresident spent the day at the Grand Canyonof the Colorado. In As z na. \u25a0 \u25a0 It was re-|f>orted that the War Department contemplates' continuing aeronautic testa at some Southernjoint this winter.

'

Dr.Ernest Kox Nichols\u2666svas Installed at Hanorer. N. H., as the tenth1resident of Dartmouth College, in the presence(C a distinguished gathering. —,

\u0084, A receiver

was appointed for th IVare-Kramer TobaccoCompany, of Norfolk, Va.. which recently askeddamages of ILOOO.OOO fr.«m the American To-bacco Company In an anti-trust suit.

-, _- Theannual convention of th<s Brotherhood of stAndrew began at Providence, R.I=~ The ab-sence of the head of the body which has beenfound scattered at Tiv.-rt.m. H. 1., hampered theI>< i<\u25a0<- in their efforts to Identify the victim.city Bt I were strong and active. ==

William M. Ivins again attacked Justice Gaynor; at \u25a0 meeting in Cooper Union and told 'why he| was with Hearst. ===== Dr. Frederick A. Cook« drnfed the statement contained in an affidavit

by Edward Harrill that the explorer had never

|t>crnnearer than fourteen miles to the summit

Of Sinunt McKinley. =: William M. Ivinaaccus^ST Justice Gaynor or trying to nullify th<-na-.e constitution by reversing Governor odc-ll'sdismissal of Sh^r!!f Guden of Brooklyn •

Mr Mar:' Baker Bddy approved the depositionof Mrs. etflon by the directors of the MotherChurch of Christian Science.

-Charles F.

Murphy said he know nothing Of the attemptedthprt of the Civic Alliance by Tammany men.

"Ross" Williams, the Tammany leader,The indicted and arrested for "stutling" ballotboxes. \u25a0 Charles U. Flint, returning fromEump<\ said he had hacked the Wright brothersfinancially for two years and that he believedthe Kovernh • • Ihad made a mistake in not buy-ing1 their aeroplane secrets. ===== The Missouri.Kansas & Texas Railroad Company elected a

XSjeaV board, with Edwin Haul. > as chairman and

,' .Ai;A.Allen as president "of the road, succeeding, Adrian H. Jnline. \u25a0 \u25a0 The Japanese commer-cial commissioners wore the guests of the Chain-\u25a0M*r of Commerce.|THE WEATHER'—Indications for to-day:

. iialn and colder. The temperature yesterday:iHchest. IS degrees; lowest. 39.

I-Miss Lynam. Who Lived Abroad, Leaves Bulkof Property toLaurence Haynes. Jr.

.no will of Laura Cornelia Lynam. who died atRye. Westchester County, on September 30. was ;

filed in the Surrogate's office yesterday. The will;was made and signed in Paris, and disposes of an

\u25a0 estate estimated at JIS.OOO. but believed to be con-: siderably more, the bulk of which goes to Lam-j rence Haynes. jr.. who is described In the will .is| "of Jacksonville. Fla.. actually residins in Paris."

Miss Lynam liver most of her time abroad. Her. brother and executor. Robert M. Lynam. of Rye.

J is the petitioner for the probate of the will. It isnot shown that Haynes la a relative of the Lynarafamily.

THE REV. ARCHIBALD BLACK ORDAINED.The Rev. Archibald Black was ordained pastor

of the Bedford Park Presbyterian Church lastnight. The charge was given by the Rev. Dr.George Alexander. Mr. Black cave the customary

, answers to all the questions of the ordination ser-vice. The Scriptures were read by the Rev. Rus-sell S. Gregory, pastor of the Sea and Land Church.

\u25a0 and the ordination prayer was said by the Rev.I Perry Wightman. of the University Heights Pres-

Ibyterian Church. The examiner was the Rev. Dr.. Hugh Black, brother of the man who was ordained.Mr. Black Is the first pastor the Bedford ParkChurch has had sine.- three years ago, when In-ternal troubles developed in the congregation.

»

COLONEL WARNER UNDECIDED.Clinton. 111.. «><\u25a0: U.—Colonel Vespasian War-

ner said to-day that he had not yet deckle.lwhether he would resign as Commissioner of Pen-sions, and would not decide tor a month or more.It depends on whether his son. C. M. Warner.whose health has not been good, but has now im-proved, decides to .take an extended vacation. InC. M. Warner's absence Colonel Warner would re-• £tgn and care tor his business Interests here.

ESTATE WILLED FROM RELATIVES.

Gives William Earl Dodge Course—

and Trowbridge Lectures Also Announced.[By Telegraph to The Tribune.]

New Haven. Oct. 14.—Announcements for threeleading Yale lecture courses were made to-night.Governor Charles E. Hughes of New York willgive the William Earl Dod»e annual course on I"The Responsibilities of Citizenship." beginningNovember 15. Professor William W. Campbell, ofthe Lick Observatory, California, will give thefirst Silllman lecture on some scientific subjectInvolvingresearch, on January 20, 1910.

The Trowbridge lectures In the Art School willbe delivered this year by Royal Cortissoz. arteditor of The New-York Tribune, who deliveredthe anniversary address at the Art School lastJune.

CHRISTIAN WORKERS INCORPORATE.

New Mission Body Gets Charter to Do Worksof Religion and Charity.

Justice Blanchard signed yesterday the certifi-cate of incorporation of the Christian Workers ofAmerica. One of the objects of the new organiza-tion Is to raise the fallen, help the weak, assistthe poor and in general to carry on a missionwork among the needy, destitute and unfortunate.

The Christian Workers of America will establishrescue missions. Gospel cars and Gospel tents tocarry on fresh air work and perform other duties"that will tend to uplift humanity and establisha stronger Christian brotherhood." The socletywill operate in New York City and State, and alsoobtained permission to establish branches in otherstates. The incorporating directors are WilliamH. Collhison. Mrs. William H. Collinson. Miss EvaCollluson. H. Roiiemus, John Boughly. Dr. Mal-come Rose and R. Johnson.

J.ike Massachusetts, Uhode Island has an ob-vious ami legitimate motive in weighing th.-advantages and disadvantage* of a federal taxon incomes front the point of riew of state in-terest- The change in the Constitution sug-gested by Congress would make it possible tortue ajMMCBI government to impose a heavierburden on Rhode island thtsji II would bearwere au Income tax to be *|»fjurtioucd, .is nowfires*TjlM-d.among the state- according to popu-lation. As a state with a relatively small popu-l.v.iuu and a disproportionate share of wealth

•subject to the prspoaed federal tax. Rhode Isl-and would be called ui>on to make a greater(sacrifice than many other commonwealths withmore inhabitants and smaller taxable resources.No state can be justly criticised for consideringits own advantage under such circumstances.or. if it thinks that the bargain which it is

f asked to approve is too aided, for insisting

on a continuance of the protection assured it• by existing constitutional requirements. It ist clearly d domestic matter, to be decided by each

estate acting for itM-if without regard 10 declara-tions made by national panics representing thestates acting in their federated rapacity.

Massachusetts bad tin- further motive forcarefully considering the expediency of invitingor combating a federal tax on Income* that ithad already appropriated that source of revenuefor Its own 1,. licit To let in the federal tax, collector with a fiver Land than be could haveunder exibtiu^- conditions would mean either theabandonment of the state tax or the taking ofa double toll from one class of taxpayers] BbodeIsland is in much the same situation, for it hasiicommission at work revising it- tax laws, and«*u.i commission may recommend a tax on in-

We de^in it bf>t tliat tho Legislature, withoutrrg-ard to party consideration, take each actiona* may eeem best ooncerhlnK the federal in-come tax. It is a financial question and shouldnot be cdudderud as a question of. party poli-tics.

.tytHOPfS (si.a \ it AX Tin: tXCOiIE TAX.§£ The Republicans of Übode Island have fol-

lowed the sensible example w»{ by the Kepub-licilis Of Slassacliusettii in recommending lloli-pKitisan action «>m t!ie income tax amendment.•cwj'iy subnniti-d by Congress i<» tin: state

?f-*gi*»latures. The Uepublican State Convention j.•«ld on \V«*dnoMl.iy. jetsam the following reso-!;.< >vi.:

A\ INCONSISTENT KNOW-NOTBINQ.In trying lo defend the discriminations against

naturalized citizens which the pending suffrageamendment, if adopted, will write into the con-stitution of Maryland, "The Baltimore Bun"falls into a curious inconsistency. It says thatthe Democratic party In Maryland has alwaysopjMtsed Know-Not hingism and favored equalrights for native and naturalized citizens. But"The Sun" and the Democratic party are n >\vsupporting a stiffruge restriction scheme whichwill [nit the naturalized citizens of the futureinto a class by themselves, inferior in privilegesto white natives who can show a patent of "an-cestry." Naturally it is hard work to prove tothe naturalized white element, which is goingto be put on a par after 1909 with the coloredvofers, whose claims to "ancestry" are alsothrown out of court, that the provisions of the

amendment are uot tainted with Know-Nothlng-ism.

"The Sun' exhorts the disrated naturalized tocheer up, and by accumulating enough property<<» qualify as voters or by educating themselvesso as to paps the educational tests to securefranchise privileges which natives with "ances-tors" can acquire without practising frugalityor burning the students lamp. Says our Balti-more contemporary by way of encouragement :

It may be tthatttit will require some offer*

—perhaps sonic sacrifice on the part of the for-fiffner

—thus to qualify himself to take part in

the governing of tins country of ninety millionsof freemen. It may be that he will have topractise economy, cultivate habits of Industrymuj self-restraint and work hard to acquirethe $500. or. ifhe prefers to take the educationaltest, be may have to devote himself to the "studyof tne lanjruare and the institutions of bis

THE SIMILAR 11R. BANNARD.We have already alluded to Mr. Banna rd's

>ingular notion that the people of this city ar.'

intelligent. Unlike his chief competitor, whois an authority upon the subject, for he re-marks almost daily, "Iknow the people andthey know me." he is not aware that the publfcenjoys being robbed if it may only be robbedamid verbal fireworks. He clings to the delu-sion that itwants to get more than 4o cents tina dollar back in the form of efficient government

for lhe taxes it pays. He holds perversely tothe opinion that the people desire the waste inthe city government so cut down that therewill be a margin with which to build subways,t. increase the number of schools and play-grounds- and to fight tuberculosis. He talksabout dollars when he might talk about Gaynor.Hollars interest him. He has a mind not abovethe economies which a businesslike system

would effect In a great corporation like thisone. He approaches t lie problem of New Yorkas he would approach the problem of some bigbank or railroad which had l«*'n mismanagedami which he had to reorganise.

This dull absorption in practical affairs ist'.ie result of Mr. Bunnards unfortunate bu-i-ness training. He Is only a business man andbe Ik unable to look at anything except from abusiness |«oint of view. New York begins tosee that he would make a very uninterestingMayor. As a Major he would attend to thesame things that he now talks about. Thesebusiness details of the municipal corporationwould occupy his mind to the exclusion of otherand more exciting matters. A prosaic official,he would be beni on such dull affairs as intelli-gent accounting, economical purchasing, weeding•ml the useless employes, and. In general, on effi-ciency that would give the people, perhaps,twice as much for their money us they nowreceive.

It is only necessary to compare his speecheswith those of Judge (Jaynor in order to see howquiet an administration he would give coin

pared with that lo he expected from the "Christian jurist."' The spice of egotism was left out

of his nature. His vocabulary is tame andcolorless. Figures interest him. but he lacksimagination; for we do not believe, for exam-ple, that Mr. Bannard regards himself as "con

seriated" to the multiplication table. With htm:i> Mayor "The City Record" would probablyhave no comic supplement, since the Katzen-jammer editor is already engaged by his com-petitor. He would stick to business in his ad-ministration as he does In his spivrhes. Thenext four years would be so far from declatnu-lory that the city could hear a pin drop andwould hear many useless beads drop. Whosov.auts an administration without "consecra-tion.*' declamation, Inflammation, execrationand vituperation must t>e a person of Incorrigi-bly quiet tastes and Jurrerlaimably practical in-clinations :

TAMMANTB CONSECRATED CANDIDATE.The consecrated candidate of Tammany Hall!

How inexhaustible are the resources of thiscampaign in amusement: We turn from the

Katzenjainmer man. mistaken for a great edi-tor, to the nominee of Murphy and associate of

Koesch. Sullivan aud Hagan, who mistakes him

-elf for an instrument of heaven consecrated t<»'

the cause of good government. "Imade a cove-nant then and there." he writes in his letter to

his brother, "that from that time onward I•should devote some time every year in work"against low, base and corrupt officials and"government and to lift up government.' Andm this consecrated spirit becomes the candidateof all that is low, base and corrupt in the publiclife of this city to end baseness and corruption.lie is consecrated to the cause of clean govern-ment, and he is helping to elect Roesch. He is...serrated to the cause of better public morals.and he is helping to elect Sullivan and Hagan.

lie is consecrated to the cause of saving thepoor from the robbery of politicians, and be-comes the reliance of Tammany Hall in its hourof need. He is consecrated to the cause ofeconomy, and he helps Murphy fill the Boardof Estimate and Apportionment with his creat-ures.

lias self-deception. If it is not somethingworse, ever gone further? He rolls his eyes toheaven and murmurs: "God's will be done"when he is approached on the mayoralty ques-tion, but all the while he ls dickering withHearst and Murphy to insure that their willbe done. When he is asked if he ls to have acampaign manager he inquires, "What is that?Inever heard of such a thing. But he has onein a few days. One of his racetrack friendsoffers him $dOO toward his election expensesand he declines itInhis loftiest sacerdotal man-ner, well knowing .all the while that Murphywill pour forth an abundance of money In nissupport. Was there ever a candidate half sosolemn and absurd as this consecrated candi-date of Tammany Hall? What a moving conirast the eampal;ru presents: Tammany with aconsecrated candidate, Roesch, Sullivan and1 lagan consecrated to political purity and theKataenjamner man consecrated to wire pull-ing!

comes in order to increase the state's revenues.The expenditures of the state governments aresteadily Increasing with the widening of thescope of state activities. New resources mustbe uncovered and made use of to defray thehigher cost of administration. The states havenow practically pre-empted the Inheritance tax.They may soon be forced to resort to an Incometax to supply their enlarging needs, and thesurrender of such a rich reserve resource to

the federal government may be bitterly re

pented. The nation ls not likely to abandon thincome tax again, as It did after the Civil War.and its greater ability to make collections wouldgive It the right of way in that field as against

the states. It would be well if every common-wealth should treat the ratification of the pend-ing amendment to the Constitution as a busi-ness matter quite divorced from partisan poli-

tics. The Rhode Island platform is sound In

declaring that the issue Is in no sense one be-

tween Republicans and Democrats.

good iini:nin\<; and coon feeling.

Several recent incidents, the latest in an in-numerable series extindlng through many years,hare again suggested the desirability of moregeneral cultivation of international good man--

an indispensable adjunct to internationalfriendship. It should be perfectly obvious that

i< rig nations as among individuals complete;:<•< ><t feeling can be maintained only where thereis due regard for the decencies and courtesies ofintercourse.

The treatment of flags is an important case lvpoint. There are perhaps a few persons who re-gard even their own national Hag as nothing bqi

a fabric of parti-colored cloth, which may l»>lived for advertising purposes or for a dour mator be treated like any old rag. To such thepresentation of the claims of courtesy and re-spect would be In vain. But t-> the great ma-jority of people the Hag is a sacred emblem ofnational character, national Integrity and na-tional soveignty, and therefore Imperativelyentitled to the most respectful and even reveren-tial treatment, and to such the regard whichthey have for it should certainly -though un-happily it does not always

—dictate the treat-

i.cut which is to be accorded to the flag.-; ofother nations.

There is a formidable and perhaps insuperableobjection to the raising of any foreign Bag 00 Ijüblic building here in such a manner or posi-tion as would suggest the sovereignty of aforeign country. The display of that Hag in ap-propriate subordination to our own—such su'.j-< rdination only as that which the host who sitsat the head of his own table exacts of hisguests who sit at his right and at his left hand—

is not only permissible, but often is necessaryto courtesy, and the name is fo be said of thedecoration of convention halls and banquethalls and all other places where there are Inter-national assemblage^.

'.•'here are no doubi occasions when the publicdisplay of foreign tiags might lie Indiscreet orimproper, but such breaches of propriety arefew. In the great majority of instances inwhich violent demonstrations have been madeagainst foreign flags in this country their dis-play li.is been entirely proper, and the hostilemanifestations have been made chiefly by thosewho. If tl|cy were travelling or sojourning Inforeign parts, would probably consider it \u25a0 de-sirable and Indeed necessary exhibition of whatiLe.. conceive to be patriotism to Haunt theirown flag m the facet of their hosts on all pnaBible occasions, fitting or unfitting, and to de-nounce remonstrances as an insult to the siarsand Stripes and to the American nation. Thereis no respect in which scrupuloualy equitable

rOOR SPELLISO AMONG PRESUMES.We are not sure how our friends the Sirupli-

iied Spellers will regard the ireful tale of or-thography gone agley which comes from a lead-ing Western university, of freshmen who spellIrregular "earegular," and apprentice ''apren-tase," and intelligence "enteligance," and soforth. It Is not improbable that some personswill see in it another demonstration of the dif-ficulties of English orthography and of thourgent need of reform; though others may hallthe fnshmen as pnicious recruits to the causeof Simplified spelling, particularly those wh<>spelled counterfeit "counterflt" and apprentice"aprentis."

To us. however, the chief significance of thiswretch. -.1 showing is that which is suggestedby the head of th>' department of English inthe university in question

—namely, that the

grammar and high schools at which these youngmen were "prepared for college" were remiss intheir duty or were Inefficient in their work.We should s.-iy that boys ought to be taught tospell better than these freshmen before theyarc promoted from the grammar school to thehigh school. But while thus illiterate— nomilder word will serve— that they should begraduated from the high school, as fit (or col-lege, is disgraceful. The blame is not to be laid;;t the door of English orthography. Such intaught lads would blunder }h<t as badly If ourspelling were purely phonetic. The trouble lanot thai the words ,-ir<- too difficult to spell, butthat the boys were noi taught to learn spellingby the most practical and most successfulmethod— namely, by liberal and studious read-Ing in which they carefully observed the forma-tions of the word's which they read.

We ;;:v well aware that the spelling of BOineEnglish words la puzzling, and also that somepersons uf otherwise excellent education havemi poor a sense or memory of literal form as to1«» Indifferent spellers. Hut we believe that Ina majority of such cases as those to which wehave referred ability to spell correctly wouldhave been developed If proper teaching meth-ods had been employed with the earnestnesswhich was given to other studies, and if abilityto spell had been Insisted upon equally withproficiency in other studies as a prerequisite topromotion, graduation and matriculation. Makethe grammar school boy understand that hecannot enter the hich school, and the high schoolboy that he cannot be graduated and enter col-lege until he has learned to «pell with a rea-sonable degree of correctness, and we shallbave fewer such exposures of downright Igno-rance as thai which li.is just been reported.

WATER WASTE AXD THEFT.Tho Committee of One Hundred does well to

<;i!l attention to the loss which the city suffersthrough waste and theft of water, for it is aheavy loss and it is due in great part directlyto bad administration.

The facts are practically indisputable. Thecity's own engineers have vouched for them\u25a0Sain and asain. Water is lost wholesale, in avariely of ways. Some is lost through leakyand broken mains, which ought to have beenreplaced long ajro. Some is lost* through defec-tive plumbing, pipes and laps, which the citygovernment ought to have compelled house-bolder* to repair. Some is lost through waste-ful use from uninetered taps, at soda fountains,ban and elsewhere. Some is lost through de-liberate theft, through tampering with metersor through the use of unnietered pipes secretlyconnected with the mains. TUe news of theday for years past has contained Innumerablepieces of evidence to these various effects, onthe authority of <-ity oflkials. A little has be>>ndone now and then to correct the evil, hut therehas been no general, genuine and effective effortto stop tin* wholesale leakage.

More than one-third of the whole supply ofthe city is thus lust. A certain proportion ofloss is doubtless inevitable, hut it is conserva-tively reckoned by competent authorities thatthree-fourths of the present loss, or about liiO,-(KJ0.000 gallons a day. might be saved throughthe adoption of honest and enlightened methodsof administration. The city has spent manymillions of dollars on its water supply systems,and is now spending many millions more. It isa scandal that so costly a service should be sogmssiy mismanaged. Something like a millioniuid a half dollars is lost every year throughpreventable waste and theft of water. Thar Is abig price to pay for the privilege of being ruledlv Tammany Hall.

adopted country; but Ifall this ls to be consid-ered a sacrifice or hardship, surely the privilegeof American citisenshlp ls not so mean an«lcheap a thing as not to be worth the price.

That may be sound and true. Yet the nat-unillzed citizen willbe prompted to ask, If the

franchise is worth the price "The Bun" namesto liiin. why It is not worth the same price tothe white native. Ifthe right to vote is not to

bo considered "so mean and cheap a thing." why

shouldn't the same valuation be put on it for:ill classes of electors? The naturalized voteris to be penalized simply because he Is foreignburn. If that is not Know-Nothliißisni, wlmtis it?

GOVERNOR REGIS H. POST SAILS.San Juan. P. R.. Oct. 14.—Governor Bvsjfcl H. Post

was a passenger on the steamer Philadelphia ,which sailed yesterday for New York. This Gov-

ernor has been the guest of honor at several pri-

vate and public dinners during the last week. t^«

most Important of which was that given by th»

Union Club*.Mr. Post will not return here, but will confer wita

Colonel G. R. Cotton, his successor, at Washington.

George C. Ward. Secretary of Porto Rico, will *>«Acting Governor until Colonel Colon's inaugura-

tion.»

IRISH DELEGATES COMING HOME.Queenstown. Oct. 14.—John O'Callash-"-^ -.at:on»

secretary, and Captain E.lward O. Condon. tS«

delegates* from the United Irish League°**

United States, who have just concluded *success-ful tour of Ireland, sailed for home to-<iay on t..«

steamer Oceanic. They were given a derr.onstrai.-farewell by a bin party, which included tha 9*tionalist members of the House of Cornmo߻i-

\u2666

PHILADELPHIA HUNTERS RETURN-St. Petersburg. Oct. IV—Benjamin Ch«w a»

George Harrison, of Philadelphia, have returned ISt. Petersburg from Turkestan, where they ft*v

been hunting. They repcrt a splendid bag of *ainl

and numerous trophies.

$150,000 GIFT TO WOOSTER UNIVERSITY,lronton. Ohio. Oct. 14.

—An unnamed person ta|

pledged HJaVM of the proposed JSCO.OOO •ndowme«fund for Wooster University. The sift M condition*on the collection of the remaining J*so,<»> by J*o*ary 1. 1911.

BETTS'S DISCOVERY.From The Syracuse Post-Standard. ,_,„. \u0084

Charles 11. Beits, .t Lyons, in a ''"*..ItinHaf•The Rochester Wraocrat and Chronicle. 'i/'Laed for wide distribution, maintains that ™f.,Vjidirtatc for the Legislature who make* rw«-*»his legislative course, "in response to t««*^

i 'bolt* hla nomination or put an Independent c»"

date in the tield against him."

cannot leS^ "£.the oath of orttV*. Mr. Helta is timlinc few »**

porters for this contention.

AND THERE YOU ARE.From The Cleveland Leader. *«.„,*<Sruß*«!

•W real gentleman never sees his wtena wgjjjjiannounces a New York paper. Ana^

•.*?,<-. *-'\u25a0\u25a0

j never sees a gentleman drunk-ana taerw *"«

TAMMANY RESOURCES.iFrom The Syracuse Herald. -<.«•<» •*"

Tammany. *- usual, Is stavtine *»• s"ri_-**trick play*. If these prove ""availing. u«r.the mass play doubtless will bo raaoTwawith specially imported players from FbUia«JV \u25a0

Jersey City and other nearby town*

Announcement is made of the engagement ofMiss Elsie Beatrice Rothschild, youngest daugh-

ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob R. Rothschild, of So.

31 West s?th street, to L. Albert Samstag. son of

Mrs. Samuel Samstag. of No. 38 West M street.The wedding will probably take \u25a0*\u25a0** • early la

December.

"Don't these telegraph workers know anything?"u.sked a man who had had returned to him a tele-gram that the operator couldn't read. "Oh. don"tyou mind," replied an old newspaper man. "Why,do you know, when Iwas in Chicago at the Re-publican National Convention of 1008 Ihad some-thing happen to me that would make your ex-perience seem like a cheap imitation. Ihad prom-ised Mr.Roosevelt a few confidential bulletins, andone night, at the Auditorium, Isent down a dis-patch addressed to 'The President, Washington.'A minute or two later, back came a request fromthe woman operator: Name and address, please.'1 collapsed. But the chief operator didn't. W'iiathe said to that poor girlIuon't know. Iwascharitable enough not to want to hear it."

"There was a time," said the old inhabitant,"v.Inn that piece of property sold for a song."

"Really!" replied the grand opera pritna donna."How very expensive!"— Washington Star.

Correspondence between young girls in Germanyand natives of the German colonies in Africa hasgrown to such an extent that the "NorddeutscheAllgemem* Zettung" has published a "warning toparents and guardisins" on the subject. "Exchangeof photographs," said the writer, "is often thelirst step in the correspondence, but then lettersand photographs ccme and go. to the delight of theAfrican youth, who tacks the pictures of hia 'Ger-man friend' on the wall next to objects and plct-ures not in harmony with civilization and refine-ment; and to the joy also of the silly girls whotreasure the badly written notes from negro corre-spondenta aa coming from African princes. Parentsare warned against allowing the yonug people toIndulge in the correspondence, which can result Inno good."

"Don"t ret down in the mouth, old man," saidthe optimist. "Look on the bright side of things."

"Thiit's :tll very well," mournfully replied thesufferer; "but what is the bright side of a cum-boil?"—Tit-Bits.

In order to demonstrate that the anti-Jewishfeeling is growing less InAustria, "The PhiladelphiaExponent" says: "It is well known that the DualEmpire does not exclude the Jews from the ranksof officers In the army, not even from the highestgrade, A recent return shows that the Austrianarmy contains one Jewish lieutenant BoM marshal,three major generals, ten 'colonels, eleven lieuten-ant colonels and seventeen majors, besides a largenumber of officers of lower grade."

"Will the discovery of the pole result in anytangible benefit to mankind?"•I don't know as it will," answered the press

humorist. "1 doubt If the few new jokes it af-forded will offset the raft of good old jokes Itputout of commission." Louisville Courier-Journal.

The desertion of Hedwig Wangel from the stageand her enlistment in the Salvation Army, saysthe "Frankfurter Klelne Press*." came about in apeculiar way. With her mother, the gifted actressstrolled into a hall at Frankfort one evening lastmonth when a meeting was in progress. She wasseen to smile broadly when the speaker told of thegreat future of the army, but when he enlargedon what it had already accomplished and told•bout the poor glrlr It had befriended, of'the dis-consolate who had been cheered and the hopelessones who had been made to smile and to enjoylife, she became interested, and when the ex-hortation cam* to an end "two women, one young,handsome, beautifully clad and wearing manyJewels, the other older but also fashionablydressed, advanced and knelt among those who hadbeen converted. They were the actress and hermother. That night they both enlisted In thearmy, the daughter renouncing forever the pro-fession in which she had achieved success."

"The multi-millionaire gets •nan every timeanybody applies to him tor \u25a0 little money."-Yps. it often happens that swollen fortunes arevery sensitive tc the Washington Star.

The Rev. Dr. Edward S. Kousrnaniere. of Provl-o>nce, mentioned and voted for several times forITott-stunt Episcopal blshoprlcß and thought of bysome churchmen as a probable successor to tholate Or. Huntington, of Grace Church, New York,has accepted the rectorship of historic St. Paul's!Boston. Dr. I'alkner, the late rector of st Paul's!died abroad \u25a0< few months ago. Dr. Rousmanlar*a native of Boston, was educated at Harvard.

"It seems queer that six ever took a fancy tohim. He Isn't at all the kind of man one wouldexpect her to admire.""I know; but he always hud a way of noticing

it \vh«a :hi happened to have on a new hat or agown that had Just come from the dressmaker*"—Chicago Record-Herald.

THE TALK OF THE HAY.

A Mr. Frank Fox, printing in "The LondonNational Review" what he calls "a snapshot"of New York journalism, makes this remark:"Dana Gibson, founder of 'The New York Sun,"was, Ibelieve, the first exploiter of the 'human"interest* story." Fond memory reverts to thegentleman who sought to live by his wits, and,encountering the late "Bill" Travers as thatworthy strolled up from the ferry, took him bythe hand and said: "Mr. Waldo Coombs, ofGoshen, Ibelieve?" "My friend," quoth Tra-ver.% "a man who would believe that would be-lieve anything."

SOCIAL NOTES FROM NEWPORT.[By Telegraph to The Tribune.]

Newport. Oct. 14.—Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. Ht!'.«house will close their season to-morrow and returnto New York for the winter.

Mr. and Mrs. William B. Brtstow will go to NewYork for the winter on Saturday. Mrs. Charles H.Berryman will also close at the lame time.

Richard T. Wilson closed his stay to-<Jay, andwith his daughter. Lady Herbert, departed for NewYork on a private car.

Colonel and Mrs. Howard A. Stevenson will not

return to Philadelphia for the winter until the er.iof this month or the first of November.

VAN EENSSELAER— MASOS.

New Yorker Marries Boston Woman at Stock*bridge, Mass.

(By Telegraph to The Tribune 1Stockbridse. Mass.. Oct. 14.—M Mabel Mason,

daughter of Mrs. Herbert Mason, of Stockbrtdg"and Boston, was married In S:. Paul's EpiscopalChurch to-day to Peyton J. Van Eer.sselaer. oiNew York, who for many years has spent thesummer and autumn seasons in Stockbriiige. TheRev. Oscar F. Moore, rector of St. George's Epis-copal Church, of Lee. officiated.

The bride was given away by E. Pierson Beet*.of Boston, a family friend. The best man wasA. Cortlandt Van Rensselaer. a brother of thebridegroom. The bride gown was of electric bluechiffon and satin. She wore a hat of black mess*-

line, with white ostrich plumes.Among the guests invited were Mrs. Georg*

yon L. Meyer, of Washington: Miss Mary Wey-

man. of Stockbridge; Mr. and Mr-. Edward RHill,of Boston, all cousins of the bride, and Mi-^5Ann.iThomas, of Boston; Mr. and Mi.-. Ker.r.etSJohn Muir and Mrs. R. O. Key I'immacii. 4New York, cousins r>i the bridegroom.

There was a small breakfast party at Plnewold.the villa of the bride's mother, at Siockbrirfge,

after the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Van Kensse-laer expect to sail for Europe at the end of Octo-ber, to be gone until next spring. Mrs. Van Rer.s-selaer's father, the late Herbert Mason, was foryears a prominent and wealthy Boston merchant.

Cedarhurst, Long Island. Cict- It (Special).— sll33Madelaine ('ham datighter of ilr. ar.d M.-m.Daniel Chauncey. was married to-day at the horn«of her parents to Kdward Ambrose Lynch, o: Man-

hattan. Owing to the recent death of Dante!Chauncey, jr., the wedding was a quiet aiTair.Mrs. Woodward Babcock. sister of the bride, wasmaid of honor, and Clarenc* H. Mackay was bestman. There were no other attendants. Tha Right

Rev. Frederick Burgess, FJishop of Long laianiperformed the ceremony, assisted by the Key. T. J.Wrldley, of Grace Church. Manhattan. Mrs.Lynch was well known in the hunting sets ofLong Island, and until the sudden death of her:brother, who was a prominent polo player. sh«

was active In social events of both Long Islandand Manhattan.

The War Department now says that joint

manoeuvres will be continued In alternate years,but that care willbe taken to select only suchstate troops for participation in them as haveshown adequate stamina and training. Theseexercises have little educational value for under-trained men. There are some states, however,

whose national guards willcontinue to take part

In the war games with spirit and profit.

A few weeks ago it was widely remarked that

official investigation had repudiated and dis-proved Lord Charles Boresford's alarmist state-ments about the # British navy and had in ameasure discredited their maker. Lord Charles,however, insisted that he had been sustainedand vindicated, and to the eyes of not a few Im-partial observers it did seem that he was right.Sine© then, at all events, things have beenpretty generally going his way. Some of themost important features of his policy havebeen quietly adopted by the Admiralty. Onlya few days ago it was announced that a bureauof mobilization, precisely such as he had rec-ommended, was to be established, and now it isreported that his chief antagonist. Sir JohnFisher, is about to retire from the Admiralty.

of which he has long been the practical head.We may presently see or hear a magnified andglorified repetition of the famous Alexandriasignal, "Well done, Condor!"

The admiration of "The New York World" forJustice Gaynor's present "leadership" is painfulto witness.

Itis time the inventors got busy on the type

of umbrellas which all will have to carry whenairship travel becomes common.

The revolution in Nicaragua seems to be apurely domestic affair, for Nicaragua to dispose

of as best she can. The neighboring states do

not appear to be Involved, but are holding aloof,

in compliance with the termß of the interna-tional compacts which they all made a yearago. It is to he hoped that attitude will besincerely and resolutely maintained.

There is nothing new or»sensatlonal in what Mr.Bannard says. New York doesn't need sensationsJust now. Itdors need, however, such a sensible.biiplne»isl«ke administration of its affairs as Mr.Bannftnl'? election would promise.— HartfordCourant.

Mr. Bannard Isn't trying to bo kattenjam-

morcd into office. But there are probablyenough voters in this city more Interested Ingood administration than in colored supplementpolitics to recognize his availability and insurehis election.

NEW YORK SOCIETY.

Society, especially the Long Island set. will b*

out In force to-day for the opening of the Nortn

Shore horse show on Piping Rock Field. Long Isl-

and, and the affair willbe made the occasion of a

number of week-end house parties Or.c of the

features of the show will be the four-m-hand drlv-i Ingcompetition by women for a cup offered by Mrs.

Thomas Hastings, president of the Ladles' Four-

In-Hand Driving Club. Many members of the club

have entered, among them being Mrs. Thorn*-*

Hitchcock. Miss Eleanor Mortimer, Miss Harriet

Alexander. Mrs. Arthur Iselln. Mlso Virginia Oo-born and Miss Marion Holltna.

Mrs. Freneh-Vanderbllt. who ban been m town

for a few days, staying at the St Regis, leaves to-

day Inher touring car for Newport, going by way

of Wllllamstown. Saratoga and through Vermont,

airlving in Newport on Monday.

Mr. and Mra, Royal Phelps Carroll hay» dosedtheir villa at Newport and hay« come to town forthe winter.

Mr. and Mrs. W. Bayard Cutting are at theircountry place at Oakdale. Long Island, for the fall.

Mr. and Mrs. J. Norman de R. Whltehous* have

returned to town from Morrlstown. N. J, wherethey were the guests for a few days of Mr. andMrs. Luther Kountze.

Lord and Lady Algernon Gordon-Lennox, who re-turned from Lenox on Wednesday, are at the Wol-cott.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sampson, jr.. who were mar-ried last fall, willspend the winter with Mr. Samp-

son's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sampson. No.14 West 58th street.

Mr. and Mrs. George F. Baker, who recently re-turned from Europe, are at their villa at Tuxedofor the falL

Dr. and Mrs. Curtenlus Gillette have arrived Intown and are at their home InPark avenue for thewinter.

Mr. and Mrs. Dulany Howland have left the cityfor Tuxedo, where they will spend the remainderof the fall.

Mrs. Jesse Hoyt will give a reception at herhouse In Park avenue the end of next month to

introduce her daughter, Miss Isabel Hoyt.

Mr. and Mrs. Cortlandt Field Bishop, who hay«

bom in Europe for several months, are booked tosail for New York to-morrow.

Mr. and Mrs. Ernesto G. Fabbri will return totown to-day from Bar Harbor. Me., where theyspent the summer.

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sanford willreturn t» townfrom Richflold, Conn., to-day, and occupy the housewhich they have taken at 36th street and Lexing-ton avenue for the winter.

Th« Christian (and profanef Jurist has re-signed his place on the bench at laat. but Inwhat a disappointingly commonplace fashion!Surely the world had cause to expect something

more of him than that. He mightat least havedeclared: "Isay unto you that In the slow"ripening of time the hour has struck for me

"to get off the perch!"

reciprocity is more desirable than In the treat-

ment or foreign nags, and there Is"nothing moreessential to good feeling than pood brewing.

m:\v-vouk daily tkibune,/ikiday. octohkr 15, 1909.

6

IN THE BERKSHIRE3.[ByT*l«*raph to Th»TrtbuiM]

Lenox. Oct.—

Ch«stnutttn« panic to (***_Mountain are one of the amusements of the tm!~TTo-morrow afternoon a large party will \u25a0n'!?"**"Whitney preserve to whip trees.

*•Mm. S. Park man Shaw gave a lunch*©« at a..

wood to-day for Mrs. John L. Thorn^e X3ZGeortcc West!nKhouse, Mrs. r>orge West! «*»Jr.. Mrs. Frederic Bull.Mrs. M T>wf«ht Cr>lll^2^Marie Br«mw«»lt. Mtsa GconcJana Santent' lftHarriet K. W^!!««. Mrs. now Wh!stl»r mnd J™W. S. Kernochan w*r*amorss th^ (rust»

- r*Mrs. Thomas ShipIris Clarke .l.

, ny.Ajiit*a at F«>rnhrf»ok this afternoon, at which atethirty were present. !

Mrs. Joseph 11. Choate has gon» to Mount KJscoto visit Mr. and Mrs. Joseph 11. Choate, Jr

Mr. and Mrs. Jam*** R. Walker haT»» closed m,Owen cottage In Stwkbrirlff* after the ncason th»>r»*and have gnn<> to Chicago.

' •" Mr. and Mrs. Oardner Weath^rbee. «f j;ew Tot*Mrs. M. S. Jones. Mrs. t>. T. Flint and M!ss jrayManning, of Boston; Mrs. S. C. Dayson, Mrs. B wAmes and W. V. Q. Lincoln, of Erookrir.e are «the Hotel Asplnwall.

"

Mrs. John A. Hadden. jr., will entertain at whistto-morrow at the Curtis Hotel.

Amusements,

angjnmrr or MUSIC—

8:tS—

Tta« Haiti*.—3—B

—Vaudeville. «.

ASTOR—

S:l»—The Man from Home.\u25a0CLASOO— 6:Ift—In Matrimony a Failure?JHJOU— S:!»-The Debtor*.

'IUIGII7ON BBACU MOTORDROME-*-Automobile

KfiC".nr.OADWAV

—8:1S

—The MiAnißht Son..

CASINO—

8:15—

The Girl and th« Wizard.CIRCLE—S:ls—ln HaytlCOLONIAL—2—B—Vaudeville.COMEDY— The M<ltin* Pot

_CRITERION—

—Noble Spaniard, preceded by Tn«

OutpostDALY'S—

—The While Sister.

&DSN MI*SEE—

The World In Was.—S:lß

—lnconstant Ororce.

OAIETY—

S:ls— Fortune Hunter.GARRICK

—B:3o

—Detective Si'Mrkc*

JIAMMERSTEIN'S—2:ir»—«:ir.— Vaudeville.IIACKETT— a Uttle Queen.HERALD SQUARE— R:l.V—The Kose of AluerlaHIPPOniiOME R— A Trip to Japan: Inside the

Earth: the Ballrt of Jewels.HVr>SON

—8:15

—th. Y.\<

IRVING ri.Ai'R >\u25a0 r> l.uir.|-!ic-sindelKNICKERn«'KKi: l>o!Iar Princess.MBERTY—R:IS—The Wliiov.-'n Mißlit.LINCOLNPOl'AnE— S:l.%—Billy.LYCEUM—«:IB—Ar^-ne Lupin.I.VRI' K:lS—The ("hnrnlntc Boidler. ~s_l -Madison SQ. GARDEN—IO a- m. to 11 p. .—Electric

BbOfr.MAJESTIC

—fi:l*

—* (Itirrn's Horre.Manhattan OPKTIA !!Or.°l3—«»—Louisp.UAXINE ELLIOTT.-. THEATRE v M The Pasi-lnp

of the Third Floor irkNEW AMSTERDAM

—«:K>—The

' nv'Cure.NEW YORK

—S-1H

—The Man Who Owns Broadway.

SAVOY—

\u25a0:!*— Ttie Awakening of Helena EUcMa.FTtTVESANT—fi:IR—The F.a«i«st Way

ITAU.ACK'S Ma—

Th«- Fourth Estate.VFPKR'P B:iri

—The Cltinas. .

WEST END—fe:lT>—The Dawn of a To-morrow.

Index to Advertisements.Pas-.C01.

' Pare.Col.Agent* Wanted 11 1 Masterm sal-* 1°

•Annulment* 14 4-«\ Marriage. & Deaths. .7 JMJApartment Hotel*. ..m .*• MwtlnCT ]* *'Auction Pair. 11 « Muniml Instruction., .10 ')\u25a0Automofclles >- SlOoran Steamers 11 «-»§«nkrr* £ Brokers..l211Profeamianal Situation*Hnard and Rooms... 31 51 \Vant*<l 11 >Oor>ks and Public*- ITop ml* JO 2tions 13 «l PuW Notices }J

"Tiuslaess Chances.. .ll . »• Railroads .... 11 ?Carpet Cleaning .11 sJr*»l Kstate M \u25a0Citation* 11 AjUforu . .1" «Citation* in Bt-400l AR*-note» 1" «T>anrin« Academies. lO « > « i..i Notice* 7 «ri\-ldend Notice* IS «'Ft «:nboats 11 l-JJT>Mm«tir Situations |Si <» i«e Notices 11 «

Wanted 11 i.' •"• T> » Turf *> •'Financial 12 .'•-* Tu^np Subscriptionrorwlosure Bales... 11 «i Has

" «tVw Sal* 11 ITv.•writing, etc ...U .8Furnished Rivxmn to

'rnfurr.i>h«"ij Apart-*

i^t . 11 81 meow to lyt .10 «Furs anfl rurrlers..ll *!Unfurnished Hnuse*)!<!p W«nt«l . 11 1; toUt 10 «Instruction 10 «lWatches * Jewelry. 11 •»t«et Bankbooks 11 Work Wanted 11 1-2

IXtxoiyotkUatlu £ribum-.FRIDAY. OITOKER 15, l«09.

This newspaper is owned and published by

The Tribune Association, a Ketc York corpora-tion; office and principal place of business,

Tribune Building, IT* l.iiyassau street, yewYork; Ogden Mills, president; Henry If.Beckett, secretary; James M. Barrett, treasurer.The address of the officers is the office of thisnewspaper.

THE VEWB THIS \lolt\l\G

About People and Soctal Incident A