1
TREE ELECTIONS PROM. SED Baaf* Tranquil, but Normal Business Conditions Not Restored lea Icting President listalieci jr« thf Executive Mansion. Letter i ells Commissioners of Adirondack Purchase. A:cany, Aug. 27.— Commissioners Roajei P. ; Clerk \u25a0ad H. Lrroy Austin, who are con- j ' : '""'- an investigation into the state's \u25a0 Adirondack land \u25a0. -.- - a <, . by direction of | Governor Hoghaa to-day received a letter | from Timothy 1.,. Woodruff, chairman of j the Reoublican :-•..:. Committee, explain- j int? how \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0- securetl tit!« to Kara;. Kill ; iCare. in the Adirondack?, when he was j presid«=n; of the Forest Preserve Board, in \ m:. The letter says: \u25a0 Gentiemea: The New York papers quite j generally -a that your commission has I securing information as to how I se- ared title to in-, property in the Adiron- ;oacks. known as Karap Kill Kare. The statements assert thai [ pur : as- for my- pelf 1.030 acres for $12,000 and that the state acquire! all the surrounding land at a cost of 5167.000. FaUure to state the number of acres which the state got for this $l«rr.i«m may Imply almost any relation between what I ; paid and what the state paid per acre. The facts are. as the records which you j nave been examining will show, that this purchase made by me for the Rtate amount- ; cd to about S.«M acres, which was $6 per : «.cre. allowing nothing for the great value •of several miles of th« shore front of < Kacquette I^ak<». I paid Jl- per acre for my I property, and. therefore, twice as much per j acre a* the state, and it was of less intrln- : IK value. ; But the all-important point is that Mr. i \\ . W. Diirar.t, from whom I purchased. | would not consider any price whatever from the state, as the lake would become I thereby public property and injure the j value or two adjacent preserves, on which jhe had erected very costly buildings. I only acquired it when Mr. Durant publicly of- ! fered it for sale to any desirable private purchaser. j I paid for my preserve the highest price j that I had known up to that time •• have. I j*-nj *-n paid for unimproved wild Adirondack | lands. The property was twenty-seven i miles from the nearest railroad station and : could only be reached by boats and trails, mo wagon road having been built to it. I j bought it largely for the purpose of fur- ! nishing me a base of operations for th" work of the Forest Preserve Board, of ; which I was for five and one-half years •"•\u25a0"•"\u25a0 ius purchase the president. The fact ; that a man who desired to acquire a half i \u25a0\u25a0-•"' i property with me refused to j do so at the price which Ipaid, insisting I trsat it was not worth more than half the j money, together with the facts I have stated iconcerning the relative prices paid by me : and by t!ie state, should satisfy you and j any on« else with regard to its value at the I time I purchased it. | A •'\u25a0\u25a0 or two subsequent to my pur- ; "'- a '- I boucM for the state a tract stretch- ing from the southerly boundary of my property a distance of nearly five miles and embracing through it.; entire length the out- ; let of my lake for %4 " per acre for which I would have willingly paid much more to complete my preserve could I have pur- chased it for myself without violating the obligation I was under to acquire all the desirable property I could for the state. The new sriar>ers> say you have decided to hold no public earing in connection with this matter but wEI ply make a state- ment concerning it 5n your report to Gov- ernor Hughes. You will, of course, asrree w-ltb me that the above mentioned facts should be embodied in your report to the Governor. I eg to reman yours, very respectfully, TIMOTHY T.. WOODRUJFF. The commissioners. In making public the letter, -said: "The real facts concerning Mr. Wood- ; rufTs purchase as own by the records •"ill -\u0084 covered In our report to Governor ! Hushes."' WOODRUFF'S WARM DENIAL Invited Prosecution if Forest Land Was Bought as Stated. --• [-man Woodruff yesterday made a warm denial of the information apparem laid before the Hashes pom- mipsioners investigating: the state's for- estry aifairs that when he headed the ' •\u25a0' Purchasing Board the state paid ab'>ut $40,000 mere for a tract of land Bur- roi:ndjn^ his amp site than ha<l been asked the tract earlier in the year. He declared that if anything of the kind had 8" .—cd. ed it -<vas the duty of Roger Clark. the . Governor's counsel, and H. I^eßc-y A>jst)n, the commissioners, to demand Ma criminal prosecution. Mr. Woodruff made the 1 «ring state- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -- nSout the transaction yesterday: Ifit is true, as stated, at the property referred to as having r>^ o n purchased ' for the state at '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0' "•"•" tvas offered to me and m** assoi iares in the Forest Preserve Board for $40,000 or --\u25a0 other sum lesa I an that tvhicb -• •\u25a0 paid for it. it is the duty of Mi irk an 3 Mr. Aut-.tin. th*- com- missioners, to demand our <-rim'naJ pros*-- tion. whi-.-h should result in convicting is of the crime of defrauding the -• --• of New York, whose servants to n-er«>. of tfr« difference between the amount nt which the property was offered and the price we pa for it. Of course, a? a ma*- ter of Gael w< never pa ' to secure this or any other pi«<-e of property rmp> penny more than the lowest price •\u25a0(-\u25a0.: pet it. at. aft.^r bartering -with a:.: beating down the ' '-' \u25a0 - I have \u25a0•\u25a0_-:-•'\u25a0 to mm lei loners ark and Austin as follows: "Messrs. <""lark and Austin, commissioners invesnsratins Forest, Fish and Game Commission, Albany. "In vie*v of imputations at yesterday's he^rinc and paper inference draiv:i therefrom. T respe.'t.v.-.lly demand a public .'i^arina: concerning all Adirondack matters \u25a0with whir!; my ra ;n<? has been associated. Plea."-- wire, notifying the time, to my office. Republican State Committee, No 43 West 53th street. New- Fork City. "TIMOTHY T.. WOODRUFF." FUNERAL OF JOHN J. BARRY. John J. Barry, former •""ornmiFsionT of" Corrections, was buried from the Church «?' St. Augustine. TWth street and Franklin \u25a0Tieaw, The Bronx, yesterday. A solemn •"-l»rh requiem mass \u25a0'•. suns by th" Rev. Thomas F. Grejrjr, assisted by the liev. James A. Talbott us deacon and by ll.r Rev. Joiin J. DTcycr as s=;it>-deacr>n. TJie B*v. Thorn.,* J. M<-l^auchlin was master of ceremonies. Blshop Cysiok. Monsignors Lavel]<\ Edwards. McKenna and Wall and folly fifty priests from New York and a.d- diooeses attended fie services, many •'? Th*T32 following the body to the —rave ; n St. Raymond's Cemetery. West Chester. MME. WORIN IN SILENT DRAMA. Mas*. P;iar Motin is to &v* a snatiner J*rfmiuance of "L/Enfant Proditrue." a *'t-ut drama, by Michel C*rrc. with music fey A:ior«t IVoT-mser. at the Liberty The- *'*\u25a0»% oa Friday afternoon, September 9. Sb* his ... Bernstein as t"O- >m. Mme. Morin presented this pi«cc * :'-': '-' marked success at Bar Harboj on May Be Secured Anywhere! If the newsoealer can not supply The New- I York Tribune, fend your nanc and ad- dress direct tc 'ihe We can vnd by msjl I n tims for bmkimaL j L ! J\erv-\ork Tribune I ( >irrtila»jon Departmcn-, j J-4 Nassau St., New York, j | &«fl;. on ] y> one month, . - 50c : i D *iiy and Sunday ?flc j * j CHINESE WOMAN SPEAKER Student Conference Urges Na- tional Assembly by 1917. [B' Tr]«-!rraph to The Tribunal Hartford. Conn.. .Auir. 27. The Chinese ! students in the Eastern States of *lii. H I country, in their sixth conference h«*re. j formally declared to-day that China should sui man the national assembly before ITM7. Th** declaration vat finally adopted only I after much T'k-adin;? "ii the part of Dr. |Cfc«>n Huanohons:. of Columbia University, '< and a loner and hot debate at tin eting. \u25a0 A committee will ho appointed to co- I operate with other Chinese student bodies ito bring Un attitude cf the conference to ' the attention of the Chinese, people and the : government.. Kor the first time in -«ix years the con- ference listened to-day •\u25a0 a platform ad- dress delivered by a woman, and a young and pretty woman student, too. She Js i MiFS Pins Hsia Hi), of \u25a0'\u25a0..-• Sh» ha?= ' betn j-'ew-ra! year? \u25a0 student In 'Japan |a.n<J ca;ne to this country 'three years ago I She hoi leam«-<3 the English and other I modern Unjrjages required of a college i student in three yea Miss Tlu advocated the formation of ••\u25a0 ! national academy of professional an.i U.ientiric student? in order to adopt a Ken- JTa; policy to advance toe welfare of China !uj \-Hriou.-- line-. The academy. «he said. | | would give the toreisn educated identa j !a chance to modify what they have learned ! foi suitable use In China. j Less than terj an as a Chinese pirl !v. a- not expected to appear publicly l»efore j-OTir.gj -OTir.g nr»n. To-day more than one ran- ! fired coming leaders <>f China listened a.- .. to and applauded the word! of jMini Hui MISSIONARY SAILS WITH FUND, j Tij" He\. Walter P. Scudder. a minion- j j ary of the mission bo^rd Reformed j Church of America, s-ailed for Naples yes-; j I -.\u25a0..• on ihe \u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0;.-.., .... liner j ! Berlin, with $30,000. which he collected in j ! this country in one year. The last contrl- !b'Jtiotj lit- received for his mission worJt ; abroad was; from Miss h^l^n Miller GouJd. j j Tbrongh the efforts of the Hey. Nathan j ! D^marest, of the tJould Memorial Church. I iRoxbury. N. V.. Miss Gould gave Itla \u25a0 I oi.<-"'k for $1,000. •- " - 1 The- money taken abroad by the KfV, Mr. Scudder trill he used in ' be Arcot i..- ' duatrial ififlcioc School at Madras. UP AS COMMON GAMBLERS. The five .••:. in tije raid on suite- of orijeci. ;n a Xew afreet building on Friday were arraigned before \u25a0\u25a0'•'-\u25a0 \u25a0 | irate Corneil in the Tombs police court yesterdny e»:i rijiirjrHS of being ronimon gamblers. Adjournment was granted lintf! Tuesday. MonJ was tfsc << at $l,0u« and fur- fifth /iwnuc. J4tb and 35th Strecis, new York. PARFICLLAR ATTENTION GIVEN TO THE OUTFITTING OF SCHOOL CHILDREN. SHOES AND SLIPPERS FOR NLL REQUIRE.NU - NRf IN STOCK IN APPROVED STYLES FOR CHILDREN. MISSES AND YOUTHS BOYS* AND GIRLS' SHOES THERE ARE BEING SHOWN FASHIONABLE CARME* OF SILK. CREPE DF. CHINE. VOILF AND OTHER MATERIALS ADAPTED TO VARIOUS OCCASIONS OF WEAR. AND IN ADDITION TO THESE THERE ARE RECENT MODELS M MOURNING DRESSES SUITABLE FOR THE DIFFERENT PFRIODS. ADVANCED STYLES, DESIGNS A.sD NEW MATERIALS FOR THE AUTUMN AND WINTER SEASONS ARE NOW DISPLAYED AND ORDERS WILL BE TAKEN FOR GOWNS TAILORMADE SUITS AND RIDING HABITS TO BE MADE TO ORDER. WOMEN'S COSTUMES AND DRESSES IN THE DRESSMAKING & TAILORING DEPARTMENT i. Aiinum & (Eb. s th avenue, 34 th and 35 th streets, new york WILL HOLD AN UNUSUAL SALE TO-MORROW (MONDAY) OF ORIENTAL RUGS AT THE FOLLOWING VERY SPECIAL PRICES: ROOM SIZES . . AT $65.00 TO $475.00 USUALLY $100.00 to $850.00 IN SIZES 4 TO 5 FEET BY 8 TO 10 FEET. AT $37.50 USUALLY $65.00 TO $75 AND AN ADDITIONAL LOT OF ORIENTAL RUGS IN SIZES AVERAGING 3 FEET HI INCHES BY 7 FEET iINCHES. USUALLY $35.00 TO $45.00 AT $19.50 -»>. * - «... ANOTHER EXCEPTIONAL SALE FOR MONDAY WILL CONSIST OF 1 000 PAIRS OF LACE CURTAINS RECENTLY IMPORTED AND USUALLY SOLD AT $7.00 TO $35.00 at $4.50, 8.00, 10.00 & 17.50 per fair BLACK DRESS SILKS WILL BE PLACED ON SALE TO-MORROW, MONDAY. AT THE FOLLOWING SPECIAL PRICES: USUALLY $250 & $3.00 . AT $1.68 PER YARD USUALLY $1.50 & $2.00 . , AT 87c. " USUALLY 75c. & 85c . . AT 58c " SOLD IN DRESS LENGTHS ONLY. Last Week of Removal Sale : All our stock reduced from 10 to 30% off former values. WHITCOMB METALLIC BEDSTEAD CO, 450 FIFTH AVENUE. NEW YORK We are pleased to inform our many Patrons and the Public that we shall remove on September Ist to cur new store at COR. MADISON AVENUE & 34TH ST. WHERE we will present a large and choice assortment of BRASS AND ENAMEL BEDSTEADS, QUEEN ANNE COUCH BEDS, LUXURIOUS BEDDING, LACE SPREADS, ETC., in new and selected designs. The officers of the organization also de- sire to enlarge th« hipping and banking tmeuts. establish a school of naviga- tion, provide mor« a.nd better social com- fort and co-operate more extensively with otiitr agencies for seamen. la order to secure the aid of the public attention is called in the appeal to .-si.m.- ot the work now b'ing done by the institute. A clean home for seamen ashore has been established at No. ID Atlantic avenue, Crooklyn; a bank has been provided, in 1 Ich 1109, 177 was \u25a0!•\u25a0:..,• by seamen last year, ana arrangements .... made whereby seamen may obtain legal aid through the gal Aid Society. All contributions for the support \u00841 th< movement should be -• at to Frank T. War- burton, the treasurer, at No. 1 State street. m PLAY HOSE ON PIGS; SAVE ALL, Mount Holly, N. J.. Aug. 27.— 8y turning ,ii. nose on them firemen laved 11 number o: plga from ixing burned to death early this morning at a lire which destroyed the barns and other buildings of Curtis Brothers 1 re. When the firemen reached (he place there were man) piga In an in- clo.sun', ant!, realizing that they could not rescue them the streams ; .-..,., several lines < :f hcs« wf-ie turned -ii iii.- anlmuli . Ail were Seamen s Church Institute Plans an Extension of Its Work Seamen's Church Institute which ! in 1844 to arford protection to >.ni<jr.s who pour into this nun from .. : world, !i;is issued an ap- for funds with which to <- x t : 1• i the work now carried on The chief f< grouping of the scattered branches <>f the Institution into uildine, to '•« er ed al .;<im-' . dvantageo v 1 La WANTS MONEY TO AID SAILORS Fireman Stabbed When Knocked Down in Row on Boat. As the result of a row on an excursion boat. Wiliiam McClelland, of No. 1001 Van '• \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 Long Island 1 "ity who is a member of the .\*e- A - York Kiro Department, n's Hospital, Long Island City, with a fractured and st;i.b wound; in the ba..-k ;md head liis condi- tion is said to be serious. The Raven wood Social Club, of Long and \u25a0 It irtered the steamboat Howard Carroll yesterday for an excursion ir:p up th< Sound WTien the members of the or^aniza:i«M-i boarded ih<- boat ;it Webster i^'iie Island City, they failed t<> notice that several ;^r:->n;- belonging to rival cl . \u25a0 •• a getting aboard. Ti:<> \u25a0.'\u25a0a.-nu (or their presence was explained a however when the boat »a? on Its trip to the city Tii>'n a fijrhi. -with •\u25a0 - ottles for- weapons wa teg n When \u25a0 upply of bottles became \u25a0 :\u25a0. \u25a0 : i!i. a::'i finally knives were brought Into action. and was In the centre of the n 1 .-\u25a0 ten a. beer bottle struck him on .:\u25a0;. Before h<' sank to th« deck be had also been stabbed >*-verai times N \u25a0 wer Injured In the mix-up, but none aerio . When th. >at .. ided word wa- sent to the police of the Astoria precinct, and the s hurried to the dock NTo one was arres ted. HURT IN EXCURSION FIGHT The National Railways of Mexico, it was learned yesterday, baa acquired the Tan- | Amerif-ar. Railroad and the Vera Crux & Isthmus Railroad. The former was con- troiled by Paul Morton, president of the I Equitable Life Assurance Society, and the I foi-mer United States Ambassador, David I E. Thompson, and their associates 1 . The Vera Cruz road was owned by the Mexican government. The terms upon which th" two roads were taken over could not be learned yes- terday, but it is understood that an official announcement, giving full details of the transaction, will be made within a day or two. Paul Morton, when ?een at his offices ;In the Equitable Building, at No. 120 jBroadway, yesterday, would neither affirm nor deny the report, saying that he had been in Europe, for three months and had enly just returned. If there had been any negotiations for the transfer of the road to the National Railways Company. Mr. Mor- ton said, they had been conducted by Mr. Thompson, and any Information in the matter would have to come from htm. Mr. Thompson Is at present in Mexico. Pan-American About Done. The Pan-American Railroad was an un- dertaking- started by D. P. Doak and J. N. Neeland in 1981. They projected the line from San Geronimo. Mexico, on the Tehuan- tepec National Railroad, southeasterly to the Guatemalan border, a distance of about three hundred miles, with connections to the city of Guatemala. A large part of the road is already completed and in operation. Control of the property was purchased a year ago by Messrs. Thompson and Mor- ton. The road's authorized capital stock is $10,000,080, ail of which is issued. Its bonded debt consists of $2,400,000 first a-old Be and 5C.000.000 general mortgage bonds. The Pan- American Company, a holding company. In- corporated in September. 1909, owned $9.60(1,000 of the railroad company's stock and $3,600,000 of its general mortgage bonds. The remaining $2,400,000 of general mort- gage bonds are reserved to retire the out- standing first mortgage bond.=. The officers of the road are: David E. Thompson, presi- dent; Paul Morton, vice-president; E. M. "Wise, general manager, and E. B. Laraz<', secretary and treasurer. The era. Cruz &r Isthmus Railroad, for- merly known as the Vera. Cru* & pacific Railroad Company, lias b.->«.r for many years, owned by The Mexican government. It run? from Cordoba, on the Mexican Railway, to Santa Lucretia, a distance of 203 miles, where it connects with the Tehuan tepee National Railway, alpo a government property, and by "which con- nection is had with Santa Cruz, on the Pacific Ocean. All of «ho $1,000,000 cap- ita! stock of the Vera Cruz <& Isthmus Rail- road was owned by the Mexican govern- ment, which also guaranteed the road's bonds. Other One Acquired Is Vera Cruz and Isthmus, Owned by the Government. Adds Five Hundred Miles to System. The acquisition of these two railroads by the National Railways of Mexico, which is controlled through stock ownership by the Metrical government, will increase the mileage of the latter pystem to the extent of bout five hundred miles, and will still further increase, the hold of the govern- ment on the railroad situation in Mexico and will si c; afford the government system an out.'ef ; into Guatemala. The National Railways of Mexico was incorporated In Mexico City in March, if o s . pursuant to a decree of the Mexican government, to take over an.] unite the properties of the National Railroad Corn- pa v of Mexico and the Mexican Central Railway Company; Limited, with power to acquire, construct and operate other lines of railroad. raced In the system are the Mexican Internafiorial Railroad, which recently be- came a corpora te part of the National Railways of Mexico, and the National Te- hnanrep'-r Railway, which, as already -"-\u25a0"-\u25a0 is owner] by -•- government but Is not a corporate part of the National Rail ways of Mexico. The total milea Ef . of the sy.stem. Including th« two roads it is Just reported to have acquired, Is ar>out seven thousand five hundred mile*. NOW HAS PAN-AMERICAN National Railways of Mexico Adds 500 Miles to System. Detectives Finally Capture Two Men Accused of Robbing Apartment. Detectives Isaacson. Curtayne and Bren- ner, of the Harlem Branch of the Detec- tive Bureau, saw thro.? young men whom the; recognized as former inmates of in- stitutions for wayward youths, they say, leaving the apartment house at No 14 East LOSt i street yesterday afternoon. One of the three hail a pillowcase slun] over his shoulder. The detectives followed the three. At 107th street and Park avenue Curtayne stopped one of the trio, who says he Is William Sachs, and who had the pillow- case on his shoulder. The young man broke into a nin and the detective started after him. Sachs ran to lOBd street where he surrendered, six bullets from the detec- tive's gun scaring him. M- had the pillow- case, which as found to contain, the po- lice say, jewelry and silverware stolen from Louis Domboaky who lives In the lOSth street apartment house. In the mean time the other youths fled east in 101 th street pursued by Brenner and Isaacson. As they turned into Park avenue the detectives Bred at them, but they kept .in running As the passed the New Star Theatre between Park and Lex- ington avenues Edward Lynch, an actor, grabbed on« of them and threw him; H«- fore the officers reached him the young man broke loose and Bed to an apartment house in 108th street, with his companion. On the roof of the building he was cap) ured l.y the detectives and the actor. In the East 104 th street station he gave bis name as John Ms \u25a0• .sixteen year* old. Dombosky Identified the valuables, the de- tectlve* pay. rJ BULLETS FLY IN THIEF CHASE Daughter, Who Was Also Wounded, at Bedside Held for Coroner. Frank J. Allgaier. a saloonkeeper of No. 114 Wyckoff avenue, Williamsburg. die.i in the German Hospital yesterday from bul- let wounds Inflicted by his seventeen-year- old son. Frank Allgaier, jr.. on Friday night. The father had driven the boy from home, it is alleged, and the son had re- turned, bent on vengeance. At the man bedside when he died was his fourteen- year-old daughter. who was slightly wounded when she ran between the father and son. She had been taken to the hos- pital along with her father. When it was seen that Allgaler could not live the daughter was called from her room, next to her father's. She had been with him only a few minutes when he died. The child became hysterical and was car- ried back to her room, where she was at- tended by one of the doctor.*. About the same time the son was being arraigned before Magistrate Higginbotham in the Manhattan avenue court, charged with felonious assault. As he faced the court he grinned, and this aroused the an- ger of the magistrate. He reminded the prisoner that there might yet be a more serious charge against him. While the magistrate was reading the charge news of the father's death reached him. The court ordered the prisoner back into the cell to await the complaint of homicide, which was drawn immediately. As Ii" was led away the youth burst into tears. He was rearraigned and held for the Coroner without bail. Rescue Society Obtains Chinese Playhouse in Doyers Street. Instead of the oldtime flaring Hgns which were wont to attract the thousands of sightseers in Chinatown by their announce- ment of Oriental entertainment within at the old Chinese Theatre, in Dover? street, a laree white sign now proclaims the fact that the Rescue Society of New York will open a midnight mission in the building at 10 p. m. on Thursday, September 1. The Chinese Theatre was compelled to close its doors on account of its situation so near th» dead line between the territory of the Four Brothers and the On L^ong ton? that each was afraid to attend for fear that the other would do some shooting through the windows. The midnight mission formerly occupied the building at No. 17 Doyers street, hut was burned out there last May and moved temporarily to the Mariners' Temple, in Chatham Square. Thomas Xoonan, super- intendent of the society, who obtained the lease of the old theatre, is going to turn t"ie large basement into a. playroom for his boys' club and a. :-e-a,i n room for Mr?. Noonan*s srirls" sewintr club. Men arc al- ready at work clearing and cleaning up th* place. Although the sitrns that •"•ere on the out- side of th* theatre have been removed, the frieze of Chines** lakes, towers, beasts and rivers dotted with little boat;- and crossed by quaint Oriental brideep. will remain. This frieze, which encircles the entire room, was painted by Chin Yin, of No. 3 Doyers street, for the sum of $35. and is consid- ered by the society as an attractive decora- tion for th« walla of th« mission. MAN SHOT BY HIS SON DIES RIDE PLANNED FOR MAYOR May Leave Hospital for Auto Trip To-day In Fine Spirits. , ; Mayor Gaynor passed a restful day yes- terday, and there is just a possibility that » he may go out for Rn automobile ride to- ! day. Nothing definite has been decide* however, according to his secretary. Robert i Adamson. Mr. Adamson slept at home on I Friday night for the first time since the ! Mayor was shot down by James J. Gal- lagher on August 9. Mr. Adamson spent I the greater part of the day yesterday In New York. He visited the Mayor in the I afternoon and returned to the city with \u25a0 William F. Meloney. the Mayor's execu- tive secretary, and Lieutenant William \ Kennel, who is in charge of the Mayor's I office.. Father York, pastor of St. Patrick's Church, Huntlngton, Long Island, visited the Mayor at St. Mary's Hospital. Ilobo- ken. yesterday. The two old friends had a ;pleasant chat. Father York brought a |message from August Hcckscher, of Hunt- j ington, the owner of a 200-foot yacht, who ; placed his craft at the disposal of Mayor | Gaynor if he wished to take a yachting ' trip during his convalescence. Several ! other yacht? have been thus offered, but j it is not regarded as likely that Mayor Gaynor will take advantage of these offers. The Mayor spent the greater part of the imorning reading a magazine. He appeared ! in good spirits and enjoyed walking about j the room at times, although he finds the | room somewhat small for his favorite ex- ercise. He had some fun with his male I attendant, Luke Clark, whom he has ' dubbed "John the Baptist." Luke has \ been out of the hospital only a couple of j times since the Mayor was brought there as a patient. On the first occasion he '. walked right through the knot of news- I paper men assembled in front of the hos- p ital and none recognized him. Yesterday, j however, his namesake. Peter Clark, in- ! vited him to come out for an automobile : ride. Peter, besides being an alderman, Is ; a blacksmith. "When his shop was reached he went inside. A newspaper photographer appeared at ! that moment and got a picture of Luke. I Some one started the story that Peter Clark j had been paid $50 to get Luke out «o that |he could be photographed. Luke was In- :dignant when this was mentioned to him. "Is that what you call friendship!" he ! exclaimed. "There will be a 'massacroslty' 'If Pete does not divide that money with \u25a0 me. " vvhile no definite plan? for the Mayor's removal from th*» hospital have been made as yet. ]t was intimated yesterday that he would pr^banly leava Hoboken for good b; Wednesday or Thursday next. THEATRE NOW A MISSION May>r Gaynor was told of Luke s ad- venture and of the supposed reward, and he enjoyed twitting Luke about his ?hare of the money. "In experimentation undertaken several yeurs ago it was proved that the boose rty was the direct agent in transmitting the bacillus of green pus, of typhoid fever and the colon bacillus. The foot of the house fly consists of many small suction disks. A fly which ha^ hud access to the room of a typhoid patient and then naak food in .i boring kitchen, will carry, hundreds of germs on lis fert. and deposit then on the lip of the first bottle of milk It sip* from. While intrinsically fermented milk la not so good ,i culture media for g^rnis as fre.sh milk, through much huncHlng In prep- aration It might even come to harbor germs clio ' product* produce ptomaine poison- ing, which may mean acute agony and sudden death," Speaking of the teneiicia! action of but- termilk on the walls of our arteries, Dr. Manning said that it must be remembered that the arteries will not b*> kept young and the system at its highest vigor by an impure and germ laden product an- more than health could be ssutained by eating flesh foods impregnated with ptomaines. The Bulgarian Butter Bug. "One of th«* most interesting circum- stances connected with the fermenting of milk," said Dr. Manning, "is the bringing into this country by natives of Bulgaria of the actual butter bug -that is about the best and most comprehensive term to de- scribe It. Its growth is the same in prin- ciple as the yeast plant, which is sold in the resting stage in the form of compressed yeast, and it looks not unlike boiled tapioca. This living, moving mass has been pre- sf-rved and sent down from generation to generation for many hundred years. The power of reproduction is marvellous. One inch of this culture placed In the bottom of a quart milk Jar and covered with milk to the extent of half a pint will within twen- ty-four hours form a fluid that can be poured off and used as an agent Itself for the production oi more fermented milk. The original mass of bacilli is washed off with cold water in an ordinary sieve, and then for preservation and further reproduc- tion placed in a Jar and covered with three or four inches oi new milk. Tin-- i.s the Bulgarian method which has been carried on so far In the past that there is no record of its origin: but it must be remem- bered that Bulgarians in their own country exercise the greatest care in this process of fermentation. The culture is used only in a darkened stone room to which no dust Is admitted and which corresponds in itsI general principle* to a modern laboratory. ••It will require very little thought on the part of the layniun who has made any study of the serious menace of the common house fly !•> *cc the peril of the manufact- ure of fermented milk in the tenement kitchen. Bulgarian Fermentation Process I Best, She Says Germ Nest \ in Kitchen Laboratory. [ Dangers that lurk in fermented milk were ; ; discussed by Dr. Jacolyn Manning, a well known bacteriologist, at her home. No. 7 "West 92d street, yesterday. "We are but- termilk craiy." said Dr. Mannlne, \u25a0 while she admitted the benefit of fermented milk. "Americans are prone to take up new i things, employ them to enthusiastic ex- travagance and then abandon them and- denly. This national characteristic, which has been carefully studied, has been taken | advantage of by shrewd traders," she con- j tinued. , "The harassed kidney' of the twentieth century. Joggled from its moorings by the j I vibrations of rapid transit, its delicate ex- cretory cells insulted by dally doses of de- j bris from the most exciting food and crowded in its work of elimination by a sluggish digestion and a torpid liver, is cleansed, soothed and fed by the mIM acid- ! lty, bland action and highly nutritious \u25a0 i value of fermented milk. But— we are but- termilk crazy! ' "The authentic announcement that fer- j mented milk retarded the hardening^ of the i arteries and postponed senility was * o! ' ! lowed by a sudden manufacture under vari- ous names in large quantities. Most of this product is good, though the prices charged are so exorbitant and so beyond ordinary means that what promised to be a blessing has teen turned into a menace. Ten cents I for a little more than two gills is the price I of or.« bottled preparation, and 15 cents for I the same quantity of another which bears a different label, but in all probability is of no greater efficiency. As a result of these prices, which yield a profit of from -00 to 300 per cent, hundreds of families In every city in the country have undertaken to prepare their own fermented milk by using the inactive but living germ, sold in jtablet form by druggists generally." Danger in Kitchen Laboratory. It is in the household manufacture of fermented milks that Dr. Manning Fees the greatest dangers. Her work as an investi- gator shortly after her graduation from the Northwestern University, Evan6ton and Chicago, followed by nor writings In "The Journal of the American Medical Associa- tion" on "The Transmission of Pathogenic Germs by the Common House Fly." has ! stamped her as an authority on the subject of the transmission of germs. With regard to the buttermilk tablet she said: "It contains what is technically known a3 a 'pure culture' of the germ, and that means the germ alon«>, and no other. is present m the tablet. The preliminary preparation for the fermenting of fresh milk in the laboratory would be to have a surgically clean mortar ami pestle, In which the tablet was reduced to powder. There would be no open windows through which flies or dust could enter. The tem- perature, would be equable and the rand- of the person who handled the grinding stone would have been previously sterilized with an aseptic solution. After the powdered tablet was placed in the milk, contained in a shallow vat previously sterilized, the con- tents would be protected with a sterilized covpr. No dust and no utrooepherir: germs could exist within the laboratory walls. The process of fermentation would con- r tinue for twenty-four hours, and the. re- sultant product placed in the proper tern- i perature and then not t In a teriHzed ; jar for final consumption. That is the lab- oratory way." The kit-hen laboratory is a. vastly dif- ferent thing. according to Dr. Manning, who added : "Now, when we turn a kitchen into a laboratory, the conditions are diametrical- ly opposite; and thig is particularly true of the lower East Side in New York City, where fermented milk is mad? by hundreds of gallons. Fancy a tenement with no in- dow screens, where flies swarm in ard out day and ni^ht, where damp clothing is dried on lin-s strung from wall to wall, \u25a0 ere putrefying ftaroagp is kept in a t*n pail or porous wooden bucket, "her" the weekly or semi-weekly wash is carried on rr-kjardless of the relea.se of bacterial life, from the clothing, where clouds of dust laden with the germ? of tuberculosis and. it may he. spinal paralysis are carried In through the open windows; where the ket- tles and bottles -iiid pans in which the milk Is placed for fermentation -are washed in water that has not been distilled or steril- ized, w hero the dishrag is greasy and where the very milk itself lias hern dipped out of an unclean tin can that, according to tli« milk inspector's reports, showed the presence of ten million bacteria within a certain measurement as against the nor- mal quantity, .which should be five hun- dred thousand— and then you may form some faint idea of the dangers of prepar- ing fermented milk in the kitchen of the tenement." COMMENDS THE BUTTER BUG Bacteriologist Points to Danger in Present Day Enthusiasm. MENA RULES NICARAGUA ' MR. WOODRUFF EXPLAINS TAKES OVER TWO ROADS NEW-YORK DAILY TKIBI NX. SUNDAY, AUGUST 28, miff. SEES BUITERMILK CRAZE WOMAN SENT BACK [ Continued from Srnt page. -aid. and were, as a whole, an "xperier.ee calculated to upset her r«-.. \u25a0• absolutely, j Her trunks and a.! articles of her -"-• -' : were held up- at tha custom-* offhr. nv<\ . d'lrlnß most of her stay in the \u25a0\u25a0 al \u25a0•' j sanatorium she was compelled to wear the j clothes she had on when she was removed J from the ship en which she reached th* J port. \u25a0 "In the hospital to which they finally took ( me. and where I was locke«i up for "even week?." said Miss Hays te-nhjht "all the patients were quite insane. It mi horrible, j Icould not sleep. The place \u25a0:\u25a0-• over- . crowded and, ill and nervous as I wa«. the i mad babbling about the room." and coitl- j dors almcst left me as badly oil a3 the rest j of the unfortunate? confined there. It was | a nightmare stretched over \u25a0 whole seven I weeha. I repeatedly asked thai an Ameri- can physician be sent for and even tried to pet a letter secretly to the American Con- j sul, but they only laughed at me." i \u25a0 KINGDON GOULD HOME. Kingrlon Gould, s-on of Gedrge Gould, who j weal abroad ne»eral months ago with «\u25a0 j beard, returned from Southampton yester- \u25a0 day on the American lin«»r St Louis vrittt- j out the beard. He left i- somewhere tn a j barber shop on the Mediterranean coast, off ! which he bad been cruising with his broth- ! er. Jay Gould. ; THROWNOFF RUNNING HORSE Patrolman Dashed to Street and Probably Fatally Injured. While poinj; off duty and after ita Hop "- hla hor?»- across the Broatlwar bridge at rStii street at 2:IS o'clock yesterday mormntT Mo-jnted Patrolman >-• -G. Warren, nt No. Zill King;>bri«lce avenue. •»\u25a0 throrvn to the .street. ll* suffered injuries which it is thought will raiwc d*atir His skull was fractured am. rlpiit collarbone broken. AV'arren on !*>:«vinc th« BsKVi under ti*<* subway structure, which }-•; » \u25a0 »'\u25a0-\u25a0! a) tl> '. ... swerved to the ripht unccr T- i-S* - street station. HI? ."horjldrr «tr»«'k » cW*. '. an*! he was dashed to th»" parcrnent. \u25a0 ::*\u25a0 '• horse pallopirip on until stopp***! by Pat.""!- .nan .Mcl^auphU;. at -CStli ?tr^et and Broad- way. Mcl*auphlin le«i "• hor«»* b««ck and found the unconscfooa officer. T. I". Cur- ran, of Vonkera. driving an - . "n4*Jß*aV was passing at the tim^ and, stopped hi» machine, barren van lifted into the auto- mobile and taken with all pogslbl*- speed to Fordham Hospital. There Dr. Black. a"fter an examination, said that Warren had little chance of recovering from hi" injuries. His condition was unchanced. tt was aM at the hospital, last nlsht. Warren was appointed a patrolman "• September 3. 1203. and has always been attached to the Ka—i bi station. It waa saH by brother officers at that '•- tion y<~t*-rr!a:- that "• \u25a0 was to •-\u25a0)--• been married to-day The rov^rnmrnt ~inboat NoventiTr<»E, on ' ak c NVirgpua. which has hitherto hrld *~'~ apajnst th<" provisional governtnenr. -MTT<?nti«T' i d to GTi^ral Chaniorro \u25a0. \u25a0 Gra- "afla to-4ay. Th*> retirement of th«» Ma- r:ris Bt«am«?r Venus has \u25a0terminat'"^ hos- ?; iT:r ? r, r the Atlantic coa^t. BluefieJds. Nicaragua, Aug. 27.— General Juts J. Estrada, provisional President of Jkicara^TJa, is. as the first, act of his ad- ministration, syndinp to Dr. Salvador Cas- trillo. his persons! represent ive in the Halted States and Minister to "Washington fixna the provisional -\u25a0.-•-.\u25a0 a note petting forth the policy of the new admin- :*rrat.K>r!. In it he will \u25a0 rone .- for the nHestablishxnent of the mew of the cmnm'v". the elimination or Zelayaism, the abolition of private privileges and conces- sons rfnd complete compliance with the "ems of the Washington convention, aim- in? to put a stop to the' perpetual revolu- tions in the OntxaJ American States and «T!'[Tr> schrr:enTs by *>n^ stale upon another. Ir t)K note, it is understood, he p!edp°s hins*!f to ( nee ----- to the Presidency e'. Nlcarag'ca! to be hold within six months. Onerai Estrada, with other leaders of the revolution, desires the appointment as Minis:«r to Nioarajpsa Of Thomas F. Mol- fat the American Consui at Eiuetl^lds. and in a : 'rram 9»nt to Dr. '--" to-day fc« Ee.:s: "Don 1 forrcu \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;- ffeagnition o* the rerolutlonary govern- ra»ct. to gar«st strong to the Amcri- f«n C^T;<ir'rn«'nt of fftate tho -\u0084-•.• cf Mr. M^ffat as Minister to iragoi :n P^-po'-isf- th<= confidence *-xistinp b<»- r*«>T, the two co'jntrie?. \* r feel that this •Ppontuent will th** best pl*-dpe and ?jarsrt»e of future good relations of the tws TOuritnes."" The ci'.y is tranquil, but norm*] business rondnions hire not yet been restored. The courts and schorls are still closed. the tcle- rhoT?" wit is interrupted md traffic r>v. t^t railroads has not yet bees resumed. A dispatch received to-day by the acting TTp.'-iornt reports a Snal success for the TTf-trada faction, the captain of the govern- ment rtearo^r No venti tress on :.sk<- Nic- aragua, who day before •'•-\u25a0•:.-.; refu.-ed tn obey the aemard of the new "\u25a0\u25a0—"* to i--arTTncer -\u25a0. threatened instead to borrirard Granada, \u25a0 a— - be«»n obliged by -*;«> rnenber^ of hit cr«w to surrender his f*:p to' tr.e provisional povernment. General Juan Estrada arrived at Granada t.\ 530 o'clock yesterday afternoon. One ol the first arts of the acting: President »as to appoint a commission to gro to Granada «T-d escort the triumphant leader of the revolution to the capital. -•-. final clause <->• the agreement signed Isrt night provides that the free elections for the Presidency, which, according to me •propofals cf the commission of concilia- tion, should occur within six months, shall be held within a rear from the present None of the foreifrn consuls resident at Var^g-"* was present at. the conference. The Prefect of Managua has issued a de- cree to the inhabitants .-\u25a0 the capital, in- structing them to decorate their domiciles Irs honor of General Juan Estrada, who is coming to the capita]. r,»no-s! Mena arrived at Manapua over- 'snd !aft night, accompanied by his staff. B :>c o*in:pe<i on th« penitentiary jrrounds. On being informed of Mb presence there. O>ne"«! hamorro. commander in chief of the army, appointed Dr. Pedro Gorr.ez to confer with toaf Estrada, the Frpvisional President. Half an hour befor* rr.ic'r.i^h: Dr. Gomez and Jos6 Estrada -.- ar, a;rreement. consisting of •••-\u25a0 erticle*, which -.a.- witnessed by Aurelio '.Istrscia. F«ibio Hurtado. Toms? Martinez, FeTT.ar.do f olorzano. Alfonso Solcrzano and B-Ilodoro Rivas. agreeing to turn over full usxtrbl of the reins of povcrnment to Gen- rrai Mena this mominir. •»* ? r.ax"-'a. Nicaragua. A^s. 2T.— Jos* \u25a0j-v^;cr< . ? Estrada, •«\u25a0> Thorn r*we*aVent Ma- *srir turned ever the administration of th« Vii-araraP-r: c \u25a0\u25a0 "\u25a0" " f before. flr«?inp the epui.tiy. to~?ay .-. ; from (Ik Presl- gpjjcy 1n favor of General I •.;\u25a0< |f(M who --B5 lesignated by him as H.-tiv,c President r r the republic. This» change of adminis- \u2666 -atvvr: was in accordance with insrtmc- t'or.s from Estrada's brother. General Juan .7 HFtrada. the head of the provisional _.. . -r- »nd leader of the successful - c \u25a0\u25a0'-:, apainst Matrix. General Menu took possession of the Presi- tiaOZC mansion. 9

MENA RULES NICARAGUA EXPLAINS TAKES OVER TWO ROADS … · TREE ELECTIONS PROM.SED Baaf* Tranquil, but Normal Business Conditions Not Restored lea Icting President listalieci jr«

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Page 1: MENA RULES NICARAGUA EXPLAINS TAKES OVER TWO ROADS … · TREE ELECTIONS PROM.SED Baaf* Tranquil, but Normal Business Conditions Not Restored lea Icting President listalieci jr«

TREE ELECTIONS PROM.SED

Baaf* Tranquil, but NormalBusiness Conditions Not

Restored

lea Icting President listaliecijr« thf Executive Mansion.

Letter iells Commissioners ofAdirondack Purchase.

A:cany, Aug. 27.— Commissioners Roajei P.;Clerk \u25a0ad H. Lrroy Austin, who are con-j':'""'- an investigation into the state's

\u25a0 Adirondack land \u25a0. -.--a <, . by direction of

|Governor Hoghaa to-day received a letter|from Timothy 1.,. Woodruff, chairman ofj the Reoublican :-•..:. Committee, explain-j int? how \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0- securetl tit!« to Kara;. Kill; iCare. in the Adirondack?, when he wasj presid«=n; of the Forest Preserve Board, in\ m:. The letter says:

\u25a0 Gentiemea: The New York papers quitej generally -a that your commission hasI securing information as to how Ise-

ared title to in-, property in the Adiron-;oacks. known as Karap Kill Kare. Thestatements assert thai [pur :as- for my-pelf 1.030 acres for $12,000 and that the stateacquire! all the surrounding land at a costof 5167.000.

FaUure to state the number of acreswhich the state got for this $l«rr.i«m mayImply almost any relation between what I

;paid and what the state paid per acre.The facts are. as the records which you

j nave been examining will show, that thispurchase made by me for the Rtate amount-;cd to about S.«M acres, which was $6 per:«.cre. allowing nothing for the great value•of several miles of th« shore front of< Kacquette I^ak<». Ipaid Jl- per acre for myIproperty, and. therefore, twice as much perj acre a* the state, and it was of less intrln-:IK value.; But the all-important point is that Mr.i \\. W. Diirar.t, from whom Ipurchased.| would not consider any price whatever• from the state, as the lake would becomeI thereby public property and injure thej value or two adjacent preserves, on whichjhe had erected very costly buildings. Ionlyacquired it when Mr. Durant publicly of-

! fered it for sale to any desirable private• purchaser.j Ipaid for my preserve the highest pricej that Ihad known up to that time •• have.I j*-nj *-n paid for unimproved wild Adirondack| lands. The property was twenty-sevenimiles from the nearest railroad station and:could only be reached by boats and trails,mo wagon road having been built to it. Ij bought it largely for the purpose of fur-!nishing me a base of operations for th"

work of the Forest Preserve Board, of; which Iwas for five and one-half years

•"•\u25a0"•"\u25a0 ius purchase the president. The fact;that a man who desired to acquire a halfi \u25a0\u25a0-•"' iproperty with me refused tojdo so at the price which Ipaid, insistingItrsat it was not worth more than half thejmoney, together with the facts Ihave statediconcerning the relative prices paid by me:and by t!ie state, should satisfy you andjany on« else with regard to its value at theItime Ipurchased it.| A •'\u25a0\u25a0 or two subsequent to my pur-;"'-a '-IboucM for the state a tract stretch-ing from the southerly boundary of myproperty a distance of nearly five miles andembracing through it.; entire length the out-

;let of my lake for %4"

per acre for whichIwould have willingly paid much more tocomplete my preserve could Ihave pur-chased it for myself without violating theobligation Iwas under to acquire all thedesirable property Icould for the state.

The new sriar>ers> say you have decided tohold no public earing in connection withthis matter but wEI

—ply make a state-

ment concerning it 5n your report to Gov-ernor Hughes. You will,of course, asrreew-ltb me that the above mentioned factsshould be embodied in your report to theGovernor.Ieg to reman yours, very respectfully,

TIMOTHY T.. WOODRUJFF.The commissioners. In making public the

letter, -said:"The real facts concerning Mr. Wood- ;

rufTs purchase as own by the records•"ill -\u0084 covered In our report to Governor !Hushes."'

WOODRUFF'S WARM DENIALInvited Prosecution if Forest

Land Was Bought as Stated.--•

[-man Woodruff yesterdaymade a warm denial of the informationapparem laid before the Hashes pom-mipsioners investigating: the state's for-estry aifairs that when he headed the'

•\u25a0' Purchasing Board the state paidab'>ut $40,000 mere for a tract of land Bur-roi:ndjn^ his amp site than ha<l beenasked

—the tract earlier in the year. He

declared that if anything of the kind had8" .—cd.

—ed it -<vas the duty of Roger Clark.

the . Governor's counsel, and H. I^eßc-yA>jst)n, the commissioners, to demand Macriminal prosecution.

Mr. Woodruff made the 1 «ring state-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0

--nSout the transaction yesterday:

Ifit is true, as stated, at the propertyreferred to as having r> on purchased

'

forthe state at '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0' "•"•" tvas offered to meand m** assoi iares in the Forest PreserveBoard for $40,000 or --\u25a0 other sum lesaIan that tvhicb -•

•\u25a0 paid for it. it is theduty of Mi irk an3 Mr. Aut-.tin. th*- com-missioners, to demand our <-rim'naJ pros*--

tion. whi-.-h should result in convictingis of the crime of defrauding the -• --• of

New York, whose servants to n-er«>. oftfr« difference between the amount ntwhich the property was offered and theprice we pa for it. Of course, a? a ma*-ter of Gael w< never pa

'to secure this

or any other pi«<-e of property rmp> pennymore than the lowest price •\u25a0(-\u25a0.: pet it.at. aft.^r bartering -with a:.: beating downthe

''-'\u25a0

-Ihave \u25a0•\u25a0_-:-•'\u25a0 to mm lei lonersark and Austin as follows:

"Messrs. <""lark and Austin, commissionersinvesnsratins Forest, Fish and GameCommission, Albany.

"In vie*v of imputations at yesterday'she^rinc and paper inference draiv:itherefrom. T respe.'t.v.-.lly demand a public.'i^arina: concerning all Adirondack matters\u25a0with whir!; my ra ;n<? has been associated.Plea."-- wire, notifying the time, to myoffice. Republican State Committee, No 43West 53th street. New- Fork City.

"TIMOTHY T.. WOODRUFF."FUNERAL OF JOHN J. BARRY.John J. Barry, former •""ornmiFsionT of"

Corrections, was buried from the Church«?' St. Augustine. TWth street and Franklin\u25a0Tieaw, The Bronx, yesterday. A solemn•"-l»rh requiem mass \u25a0'•. suns by th" Rev.Thomas F. Grejrjr, assisted by the liev.James A. Talbott us deacon and by ll.rRev. Joiin J. DTcycr as s=;it>-deacr>n. TJieB*v. Thorn.,* J. M<-l^auchlin was master

of ceremonies. Blshop Cysiok. MonsignorsLavel]<\ Edwards. McKenna and Wall andfolly fifty priests from New York and a.d-

diooeses attended fie services, many•'? Th*T32 following the body to the —rave;n St. Raymond's Cemetery. West Chester.

MME. WORIN IN SILENT DRAMA.Mas*. P;iar Motin is to &v*a snatiner

J*rfmiuance of "L/Enfant Proditrue." a*'t-ut drama, by Michel C*rrc. with musicfey A:ior«t IVoT-mser. at the Liberty The-*'*\u25a0»% oa Friday afternoon, September 9.Sb* his ... Bernstein as t"O-

>m. Mme. Morin presented this pi«cc*:'-': '-' marked success at Bar Harboj on

May BeSecuredAnywhere!

Ifthe newsoealer cannot supply The New-

I York Tribune, fendyour nanc and ad-dress direct tc 'ihe

We can vnd by msjl

I n tims for bmkimaL j

L —!J\erv-\ork TribuneI

(>irrtila»jon Departmcn-,jJ-4 Nassau St., New York, j|&«fl;.on]y> one month, . - 50c :

iD*iiyand Sunday ?flc j*—j

CHINESE WOMAN SPEAKER

Student Conference Urges Na-tional Assembly by 1917.

[B' Tr]«-!rraph to The TribunalHartford. Conn.. .Auir. 27.

—The Chinese

!students in the Eastern States of *lii.HIcountry, in their sixth conference h«*re.j formally declared to-day that China shouldsui man the national assembly before ITM7.Th** declaration vat finally adopted only

Iafter much T'k-adin;? "ii the part of Dr.|Cfc«>n Huanohons:. of Columbia University,'< and a loner and hot debate at tin • eting.

\u25a0 A committee will ho appointed to co-Ioperate with other Chinese student bodiesito bring Un attitude cf the conference to' the attention of the Chinese, people and the

:government..Kor the first time in -«ix years the con-

ference listened to-day •\u25a0 a platform ad-dress delivered by a woman, and a young

and pretty woman student, too. She JsiMiFS Pins Hsia Hi), of \u25a0'\u25a0..-• Sh» ha?='betn j-'ew-ra! year? \u25a0 student In 'Japan

|a.n<J ca;ne to this country 'three years ago

IShe hoi leam«-<3 the English and otherImodern Unjrjages required of a college

istudent in three yea

Miss Tlu advocated the formation of ••\u25a0

!national academy of professional an.iU.ientiric student? in order to adopt a Ken-JTa; policy to advance toe welfare of China!uj \-Hriou.-- line-. The academy. «he said. ||would give the toreisn educated identa j!a chance to modify what they have learned !

foi suitable use In China. j

Less than terj an as a Chinese pirl

!v. a- not expected to appear publicly l»eforej-OTir.gj -OTir.g nr»n. To-day more than one ran-!fired coming leaders <>f China listened a.-.. to and applauded the word! of

jMini Hui

MISSIONARY SAILS WITH FUND, jTij" He\. Walter P. Scudder. a minion- j

jary of the mission bo^rd Reformed jChurch of America, s-ailed for Naples yes-; j

I-.\u25a0..• on ihe \u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0;.-.., .... liner j!Berlin, with $30,000. which he collected in j!this country in one year. The last contrl-!b'Jtiotj lit- received for his mission worJt

; abroad was; from Miss h^l^n MillerGouJd. jjTbrongh the efforts of the Hey. Nathan j!D^marest, of the tJould Memorial Church. IiRoxbury. N. V.. Miss Gould gave Itla \u25a0Ioi.<-"'k for $1,000. •- "-1 The- money taken abroad by the KfV,Mr. Scudder trill he used in 'be Arcot i..-

'

duatrial ififlcioc School at Madras.

UP AS COMMON GAMBLERS.The five .••:. in tije raid on •

suite- of orijeci. ;n a Xew afreet buildingon Friday were arraigned before \u25a0\u25a0'•'-\u25a0 \u25a0 |

irate Corneil in the Tombs police courtyesterdny e»:i rijiirjrHS of being ronimongamblers. Adjournment was granted lintf!Tuesday. MonJ was tfsc<< at $l,0u« and fur-

fifth /iwnuc. J4tb and 35th Strecis, new York.

PARFICLLAR ATTENTION GIVEN TO THE OUTFITTINGOF SCHOOL CHILDREN.

SHOES AND SLIPPERS FOR NLL REQUIRE.NU-

NRf IN STOCK IN APPROVED STYLES FOR

CHILDREN. MISSES AND YOUTHS

BOYS* AND GIRLS' SHOES

THERE ARE BEING SHOWN FASHIONABLE CARME*

OF SILK. CREPE DF. CHINE. VOILF AND OTHER MATERIALS

ADAPTED TO VARIOUS OCCASIONS OF WEAR.

AND IN ADDITION TO THESE THERE ARE RECENT MODELS MMOURNING DRESSES SUITABLE FOR THE DIFFERENT PFRIODS.

ADVANCED STYLES, DESIGNS A.sD NEW MATERIALS FOR THE

AUTUMN AND WINTER SEASONS ARE NOW DISPLAYED

AND ORDERS WILL BE TAKEN FOR GOWNS TAILORMADE SUITS

AND RIDING HABITS TO BE MADE TO ORDER.

WOMEN'S COSTUMES AND DRESSES

IN THE DRESSMAKING & TAILORING DEPARTMENT

i.Aiinum &(Eb.

s th avenue, 34th and 35 th streets, new york

WILL HOLD AN UNUSUAL SALE TO-MORROW (MONDAY) OF

ORIENTAL RUGS

AT THE FOLLOWING VERY SPECIAL PRICES:

ROOM SIZES . . AT $65.00 TO $475.00USUALLY $100.00 to $850.00

IN SIZES 4 TO 5 FEET BY 8 TO 10 FEET. AT $37.50USUALLY $65.00 TO $75

AND AN ADDITIONAL LOT OF ORIENTAL RUGS IN SIZESAVERAGING 3 FEET HI INCHES BY 7 FEET iINCHES.

USUALLY $35.00 TO $45.00 AT $19.50

-»>. * -«...

ANOTHER EXCEPTIONAL SALE FOR MONDAY WILL CONSIST OF

1000 PAIRS OF LACE CURTAINS

RECENTLY IMPORTED AND USUALLY SOLD AT $7.00 TO $35.00

at $4.50, 8.00, 10.00 & 17.50 per fair

BLACK DRESS SILKS

WILL BE PLACED ON SALE TO-MORROW, MONDAY.AT THE FOLLOWING SPECIAL PRICES:

USUALLY $250 & $3.00 . AT $1.68 PER YARD

USUALLY $1.50 & $2.00 . , AT 87c."

USUALLY 75c. & 85c . . AT 58c"

SOLD IN DRESS LENGTHS ONLY.

Last Week of Removal Sale : Allour stock reducedfrom 10 to 30% off former values.

WHITCOMB METALLIC BEDSTEAD CO,450 FIFTH AVENUE. NEW YORK

We are pleased to inform our many Patrons and the Publicthat we shall remove on September Ist to cur new store at

COR. MADISON AVENUE & 34TH ST.WHERE we will present a large and choice assortment of

BRASS AND ENAMEL BEDSTEADS,QUEEN ANNE COUCH BEDS,LUXURIOUS BEDDING,LACE SPREADS, ETC.,

in new and selected designs.

The officers of the organization also de-

sire to enlarge th« hipping and bankingtmeuts. establish a school of naviga-

tion, provide mor« a.nd better social com-fort and co-operate more extensively withotiitr agencies for seamen.

la order to secure the aid of the publicattention is called in the appeal to .-si.m.- otthe work now b'ing done by the institute.A clean home for seamen ashore has beenestablished at No. ID Atlantic avenue,Crooklyn; a bank has been provided, in

1Ich 1109, 177 was \u25a0!•\u25a0:..,• by seamen lastyear, ana arrangements .... madewhereby seamen may obtain legal aidthrough the gal Aid Society.

All contributions for the support \u00841 th<movement should be -• at to Frank T. War-burton, the treasurer, at No. 1 State street.

m

PLAY HOSE ON PIGS; SAVE ALL,

Mount Holly, N. J.. Aug. 27.—8y turning,ii. nose on them firemen laved 11 numbero: plga from ixing burned to death early

this morning at a lire which destroyed thebarns and other buildings of CurtisBrothers 1 re. When the firemen reached(he place there were man) piga In an in-

clo.sun', ant!, realizing that they could notrescue them the streams ;.-..,., several lines<:f hcs« wf-ie turned -ii iii.- anlmuli . Ailwere

Seamen s Church Institute Plans anExtension of Its Work

Seamen's Church Institute which! in 1844 to arford protection to

>.ni<jr.s who pour into this nun from..: • world, !i;is issued an ap-for funds with which to <-x t•:1•i the

work now carried on The chief f<grouping of the

scattered branches <>f the Institution intouildine, to '•« er ed al .;<im-'

. dvantageo v 1La

WANTS MONEY TO AID SAILORS

Fireman Stabbed When KnockedDown in Row on Boat.

As the result of a row on an excursionboat. Wiliiam McClelland, of No. 1001 Van'• \u25a0 \u25a0

\u25a0 Long Island 1 "ity who is amember of the .\*e-A

-York Kiro Department,

n's Hospital, Long IslandCity, with a fractured and st;i.bwound; in the ba..-k ;md head liis condi-tion is said to be serious.

The Raven wood Social Club, of Longand \u25a0 It irtered the steamboat HowardCarroll yesterday for an excursion ir:p upth< Sound WTien the members of theor^aniza:i«M-i boarded ih<- boat ;it Webster

i^'iie Island City, they failed t<>

notice that several ;^r:->n;- belonging torival cl . \u25a0 • •• a • getting aboard. Ti:<>\u25a0.'\u25a0a.-nu (or their presence was explaineda • however when the boat »a? on Its

trip to the city Tii>'n a fijrhi. -with•\u25a0

-ottles for- weapons wa teg n When

\u25a0 • upply of bottles became \u25a0 :\u25a0. •\u25a0 :i!i. a::'i finally knives were brought Intoaction.

• and was In the centre of then • 1 .-\u25a0 ten a. beer bottle struck him on

.:\u25a0;. Before h<' sank to th« deck behad also been stabbed >*-verai times N \u25a0

wer Injured In the mix-up, butnone aerio .

When th. >at .. ided word wa- sent tothe police of the Astoria precinct, and the—

s hurried to the dock NTo one wasarres ted.

HURT IN EXCURSION FIGHT

The National Railways of Mexico, it waslearned yesterday, baa acquired the Tan-| Amerif-ar. Railroad and the Vera Crux &Isthmus Railroad. The former was con-troiled by Paul Morton, president of the

IEquitable Life Assurance Society, and theI foi-mer United States Ambassador, DavidIE. Thompson, and their associates 1. TheVera Cruz road was owned by the Mexicangovernment.

The terms upon which th" two roadswere taken over could not be learned yes-terday, but it is understood that an officialannouncement, giving full details of thetransaction, will be made within a day ortwo. Paul Morton, when ?een at his offices

;In the Equitable Building, at No. 120jBroadway, yesterday, would neither affirmnor deny the report, saying that he hadbeen in Europe, for three months and hadenly just returned. If there had been anynegotiations for the transfer of the road tothe National Railways Company. Mr.Mor-ton said, they had been conducted by Mr.Thompson, and any Information in thematter would have to come from htm. Mr.Thompson Is at present in Mexico.

Pan-American About Done.The Pan-American Railroad was an un-

dertaking- started by D. P. Doak and J. N.Neeland in 1981. They projected the linefrom San Geronimo. Mexico,on the Tehuan-tepec National Railroad, southeasterly tothe Guatemalan border, a distance of aboutthree hundred miles, with connections tothe city of Guatemala. A large part of theroad is already completed and in operation.

Control of the property was purchased ayear ago by Messrs. Thompson and Mor-ton. The road's authorized capital stock is$10,000,080, ail of which is issued. Its bondeddebt consists of $2,400,000 first a-old Be and5C.000.000 general mortgage bonds. The Pan-American Company, a holding company. In-corporated in September. 1909, owned$9.60(1,000 of the railroad company's stockand $3,600,000 of its general mortgage bonds.The remaining $2,400,000 of general mort-gage bonds are reserved to retire the out-standing first mortgage bond.=. The officersof the road are: David E. Thompson, presi-dent; Paul Morton, vice-president; E. M."Wise, general manager, and E. B. Laraz<',secretary and treasurer.

The era. Cruz &r Isthmus Railroad, for-merly known as the Vera. Cru* & pacificRailroad Company, lias b.->«.r for manyyears, owned by The Mexican government.It run? from Cordoba, on the MexicanRailway, to Santa Lucretia, a distance of203 miles, where it connects with theTehuan tepee National Railway, alpo agovernment property, and by "which con-nection is had with Santa Cruz, on thePacific Ocean. All of «ho $1,000,000 cap-ita! stock of the Vera Cruz <& Isthmus Rail-road was owned by the Mexican govern-ment, which also guaranteed the road'sbonds.

Other One Acquired Is Vera Cruzand Isthmus, Owned by the

Government.

Adds Five Hundred Miles to System.The acquisition of these two railroads

by the National Railways of Mexico, whichis controlled through stock ownership bythe Metrical government, will increase themileage of the latter pystem to the extentof bout five hundred miles, and will stillfurther increase, the hold of the govern-ment on the railroad situation in Mexicoand will si c; afford the government systeman out.'ef; into Guatemala.

The National Railways of Mexico wasincorporated In Mexico City in March,ifos. pursuant to a decree of the Mexicangovernment, to take over an.] unite theproperties of the National Railroad Corn-pa v of Mexico and the Mexican CentralRailway Company; Limited, with power toacquire, construct and operate other linesof railroad.

raced In the system are the MexicanInternafiorial Railroad, which recently be-came a corpora te part of the NationalRailways of Mexico, and the National Te-hnanrep'-r Railway, which, as already

-"-\u25a0" -\u25a0 is owner] by -•-government but Is

not a corporate part of the National Railways of Mexico. The total milea Ef. of thesy.stem. Including th« two roads it is Justreported to have acquired, Is ar>out seventhousand five hundred mile*.

NOW HAS PAN-AMERICAN

National Railways of MexicoAdds 500 Miles to System.

Detectives Finally Capture Two MenAccused of Robbing Apartment.

Detectives Isaacson. Curtayne and Bren-ner, of the Harlem Branch of the Detec-tive Bureau, saw thro.? young men whomthe; recognized as former inmates of in-stitutions for wayward youths, they say,leaving the apartment house at No 14East LOSt i street yesterday afternoon. Oneof the three hail a pillowcase slun] overhis shoulder.

The detectives followed the three. At107th street and Park avenue Curtaynestopped one of the trio, who says he IsWilliam Sachs, and who had the pillow-case on his shoulder. The young man brokeinto a nin and the detective started afterhim. Sachs ran to lOBd street where hesurrendered, six bullets from the detec-tive's gun scaring him. M- had the pillow-case, which as found to contain, the po-lice say, jewelry and silverware stolenfrom Louis Domboaky who lives In thelOSth street apartment house.

In the mean time the other youths fledeast in 101th street pursued by Brennerand Isaacson. As they turned into Parkavenue the detectives Bred at them, butthey kept .in running As the passed theNew Star Theatre between Park and Lex-ington avenues Edward Lynch, an actor,grabbed on« of them and threw him; H«-fore the officers reached him the youngman broke loose and Bed to an apartmenthouse in 108th street, with his companion.On the roof of the building he was cap)ured l.y the detectives and the actor. Inthe East 104 th street station he gave bisname as John Ms \u25a0• .sixteen year* old.Dombosky Identified the valuables, the de-tectlve* pay. rJ

BULLETS FLY IN THIEF CHASE

Daughter, Who Was Also Wounded, at

Bedside—

Held for Coroner.Frank J. Allgaier. a saloonkeeper of No.

114 Wyckoff avenue, Williamsburg. die.i inthe German Hospital yesterday from bul-let wounds Inflicted by his seventeen-year-old son. Frank Allgaier, jr.. on Fridaynight. The father had driven the boy fromhome, it is alleged, and the son had re-turned, bent on vengeance. At the manbedside when he died was his fourteen-year-old daughter. who was slightlywounded when she ran between the fatherand son. She had been taken to the hos-pital along with her father.

When it was seen that Allgaler couldnot live the daughter was called from herroom, next to her father's. She had beenwith him only a few minutes when he died.The child became hysterical and was car-ried back to her room, where she was at-

tended by one of the doctor.*.About the same time the son was being

arraigned before Magistrate Higginbothamin the Manhattan avenue court, chargedwith felonious assault. As he faced thecourt he grinned, and this aroused the an-ger of the magistrate. He reminded theprisoner that there might yet be a moreserious charge against him.

While the magistrate was reading thecharge news of the father's death reachedhim. The court ordered the prisoner backinto the cell to await the complaint ofhomicide, which was drawn immediately.As Ii" was led away the youth burst intotears. He was rearraigned and held forthe Coroner without bail.

Rescue Society Obtains ChinesePlayhouse inDoyers Street.

Instead of the oldtime flaring Hgns whichwere wont to attract the thousands ofsightseers in Chinatown by their announce-ment of Oriental entertainment within at

the old Chinese Theatre, in Dover? street,

a laree white sign now proclaims the factthat the Rescue Society of New York willopen a midnight mission in the buildingat 10 p. m. on Thursday, September 1.

The Chinese Theatre was compelled to

close its doors on account of its situation sonear th» dead line between the territory ofthe Four Brothers and the On L^ong ton?

that each was afraid to attend for fearthat the other would do some shootingthrough the windows.

The midnight mission formerly occupied

the building at No. 17 Doyers street, hutwas burned out there last May and movedtemporarily to the Mariners' Temple, inChatham Square. Thomas Xoonan, super-intendent of the society, who obtained thelease of the old theatre, is going to turnt"ie large basement into a. playroom for hisboys' club and a. :-e-a,in room for Mr?.Noonan*s srirls" sewintr club. Men arc al-ready at work clearing and cleaning upth* place.

Although the sitrns that •"•ere on the out-

side of th* theatre have been removed, thefrieze of Chines** lakes, towers, beasts andrivers dotted with little boat;- and crossedby quaint Oriental brideep. will remain.This frieze, which encircles the entire room,was painted by Chin Yin, of No. 3 Doyersstreet, for the sum of $35. and is consid-ered by the society as an attractive decora-tion for th« walla of th« mission.

MAN SHOT BY HIS SON DIES

RIDE PLANNED FOR MAYORMay Leave Hospital for Auto

Trip To-day—

In Fine Spirits., ;Mayor Gaynor passed a restful day yes-terday, and there is just a possibility that

»he may go out for Rn automobile ride to-

!day. Nothing definite has been decide*however, according to his secretary. RobertiAdamson. Mr. Adamson slept at home onIFriday night for the first time since the!Mayor was shot down by James J. Gal-lagher on August 9. Mr. Adamson spentIthe greater part of the day yesterday InNew York. He visited the Mayor in the

Iafternoon and returned to the city with\u25a0 William F. Meloney. the Mayor's execu-tive secretary, and Lieutenant William\ Kennel, who is in charge of the Mayor'sIoffice..

Father York, pastor of St. Patrick'sChurch, Huntlngton, Long Island, visited

the Mayor at St. Mary's Hospital. Ilobo-

ken. yesterday. The two old friends had a;pleasant chat. Father York brought a|message from August Hcckscher, of Hunt-

jington, the owner of a 200-foot yacht, who;placed his craft at the disposal of Mayor

|Gaynor if he wished to take a yachting'trip during his convalescence. Several

!other yacht? have been thus offered, butjit is not regarded as likely that MayorGaynor will take advantage of these offers.

The Mayor spent the greater part of theimorning reading a magazine. He appeared!in good spirits and enjoyed walking aboutj the room at times, although he finds the

|room somewhat small for his favorite ex-

ercise. He had some fun with his maleIattendant, Luke Clark, whom he has'dubbed "John the Baptist." Luke has

\ been out of the hospital only a couple ofj times since the Mayor was brought thereas a patient. On the first occasion he

'. walked right through the knot of news-

Ipaper men assembled in front of the hos-p

ital and none recognized him. Yesterday,jhowever, his namesake. Peter Clark, in-!vited him to come out for an automobile:ride. Peter, besides being an alderman, Is;a blacksmith. "When his shop was reachedhe went inside.

A newspaper photographer appeared at!that moment and got a picture of Luke.

ISome one started the story that Peter Clarkjhad been paid $50 to get Luke out «o that|he could be photographed. Luke was In-:dignant when this was mentioned to him.

"Is that what you call friendship!" he!exclaimed. "There will be a 'massacroslty'

'If Pete does not divide that money with\u25a0 me.

"

vvhile no definite plan? for the Mayor's

removal from th*» hospital have been madeas yet. ]t was intimated yesterday that hewould pr^banly leava Hoboken for good b;Wednesday or Thursday next.

THEATRE NOW A MISSION

May>r Gaynor was told of Luke s ad-

venture and of the supposed reward, andhe enjoyed twitting Luke about his ?hareof the money.

"In experimentation undertaken severalyeurs ago it was proved that the boose rtywas the direct agent in transmitting thebacillus of green pus, of typhoid fever andthe colon bacillus. The foot of the housefly consists of many small suction disks.A fly which ha^ hud access to the room ofa typhoid patient and then naak food in.i boring kitchen, will carry, hundredsof germs on lis fert. and deposit then onthe lip of the first bottle of milk It sip*from. While intrinsically fermented milk lanot so good ,i culture media for g^rnis asfre.sh milk, through much huncHlng In prep-aration It might even come to harbor germsclio ' product* produce ptomaine poison-

ing, which may mean acute agony andsudden death,"

Speaking of the teneiicia! action of but-

termilk on the walls of our arteries, Dr.Manning said that it must be rememberedthat the arteries will not b*> kept young

and the system at its highest vigor by animpure and germ laden product an- morethan health could be ssutained by eating

flesh foods impregnated with ptomaines.

The Bulgarian Butter Bug.

"One of th«* most interesting circum-stances connected with the fermenting ofmilk," said Dr. Manning, "is the bringing

into this country by natives of Bulgaria

of the actual butter bug -that is about thebest and most comprehensive term to de-

scribe It. Its growth is the same in prin-ciple as the yeast plant, which is sold in theresting stage in the form of compressedyeast, and it looks not unlike boiled tapioca.

This living, moving mass has been pre-sf-rved and sent down from generation togeneration for many hundred years. Thepower of reproduction is marvellous. Oneinch of this culture placed In the bottom ofa quart milk Jar and covered with milk tothe extent of half a pint will within twen-ty-four hours form a fluid that can bepoured off and used as an agent Itself forthe production oi more fermented milk.The original mass of bacilli is washed offwith cold water in an ordinary sieve, andthen for preservation and further reproduc-

tion placed in a Jar and covered with threeor four inches oi new milk. Tin-- i.s theBulgarian method which has been carriedon so far In the past that there is norecord of its origin: but it must be remem-bered that Bulgarians in their own country

exercise the greatest care in this process of

fermentation. The culture is used only ina darkened stone room to which no dustIs admitted and which corresponds in itsIgeneral principle* to a modern laboratory.

••It will require very little thought onthe part of the layniun who has made anystudy of the serious menace of the commonhouse fly !•> *cc the peril of the manufact-ure of fermented milk in the tenementkitchen.

Bulgarian Fermentation Process IBest, She Says

—Germ Nest \

inKitchen Laboratory. [Dangers that lurk in fermented milk were ;

;discussed by Dr. Jacolyn Manning, a well

known bacteriologist, at her home. No. 7

"West 92d street, yesterday. "We are but-

termilk craiy." said Dr. Mannlne, \u25a0 whileshe admitted the benefit of fermented milk.

"Americans are prone to take up new i

things, employ them to enthusiastic ex-

travagance and then abandon them and-denly. This national characteristic, which

has been carefully studied, has been taken |advantage of by shrewd traders," she con- jtinued. ,

"The harassed kidney' of the twentiethcentury. Joggled from its moorings by the jIvibrations of rapid transit, its delicate ex-

cretory cells insulted by dally doses of de- jbris from the most exciting food and

crowded in its work of elimination by asluggish digestion and a torpid liver, is

cleansed, soothed and fed by the mIM acid- !lty, bland action and highly nutritious \u25a0

ivalue of fermented milk. But—we are but-

termilk crazy!' "The authentic announcement that fer-

jmented milk retarded the hardening^ of theiarteries and postponed senility was *o!'

!lowed by a sudden manufacture under vari-

ous names in large quantities. Most of thisproduct is good, though the prices charged

are so exorbitant and so beyond ordinary

means that what promised to be a blessing

has teen turned into a menace. Ten cents

Ifor a little more than two gills is the price

Iof or.« bottled preparation, and 15 cents for

Ithe same quantity of another which bears

a different label, but in all probability is

of no greater efficiency. As a result of

these prices, which yield a profit of from-00 to 300 per cent, hundreds of families Inevery city in the country have undertakento prepare their own fermented milk by

using the inactive but livinggerm, sold in

jtablet form by druggists generally."

Danger in Kitchen Laboratory.

It is in the household manufacture of

fermented milks that Dr. Manning Fees thegreatest dangers. Her work as an investi-gator shortly after her graduation from the

Northwestern University, Evan6ton and

Chicago, followed by nor writings In "TheJournal of the American Medical Associa-tion" on "The Transmission of Pathogenic

Germs by the Common House Fly." has

!stamped her as an authority on the subject

of the transmission of germs. With regard

to the buttermilk tablet she said:"It contains what is technically known a3

a 'pure culture' of the germ, and that

means the germ alon«>, and no other. ispresent m the tablet. The preliminary

preparation for the fermenting of freshmilk in the laboratory would be to have asurgically clean mortar ami pestle, In

which the tablet was reduced to powder.

There would be no open windows through

which flies or dust could enter. The tem-perature, would be equable and the rand- ofthe person who handled the grinding stonewould have been previously sterilized withan aseptic solution. After the powderedtablet was placed in the milk, contained ina shallow vat previously sterilized, the con-tents would be protected with a sterilizedcovpr. No dust and no utrooepherir: germs

could exist within the laboratory walls.

The process of fermentation would con-

rtinue for twenty-four hours, and the. re-sultant product placed in the proper tern- iperature and then not t In a teriHzed ;jar for final consumption. That is the lab-oratory way."

The kit-hen laboratory is a. vastly dif-ferent thing. according to Dr. Manning,

who added :"Now, when we turn a kitchen into a

laboratory, the conditions are diametrical-ly opposite; and thig is particularly trueof the lower East Side in New York City,

where fermented milk is mad? by hundredsof gallons. Fancy a tenement with no in-

dow screens, where flies swarm in ard outday and ni^ht, where damp clothing isdried on lin-s strung from wall to wall,

\u25a0 ere putrefying ftaroagp is kept in a t*npail or porous wooden bucket, "her" theweekly or semi-weekly wash is carried onrr-kjardless of the relea.se of bacterial life,

from the clothing, where clouds of dustladen with the germ? of tuberculosis and.it may he. spinal paralysis are carried Inthrough the open windows; where the ket-tles and bottles -iiid pans in which the milk

Is placed for fermentation -are washed inwater that has not been distilled or steril-ized, w hero the dishrag is greasy andwhere the very milk itself lias hern dippedout of an unclean tin can that, according

to tli« milk inspector's reports, showed thepresence of ten million bacteria within acertain measurement as against the nor-mal quantity, .which should be five hun-

dred thousand— and then you may formsome faint idea of the dangers of prepar-ing fermented milk in the kitchen of thetenement."

COMMENDS THE BUTTER BUG

Bacteriologist Points to Dangerin Present Day Enthusiasm.

MENA RULES NICARAGUA'

MR. WOODRUFF EXPLAINS TAKES OVER TWO ROADSNEW-YORK DAILY TKIBINX. SUNDAY, AUGUST 28, miff.

SEES BUITERMILK CRAZE WOMAN SENT BACK [Continued from Srnt page.

-aid. and were, as a whole, an "xperier.ee

calculated to upset her r«-.. \u25a0• absolutely, jHer trunks and a.! articles of her -"-• -' :were held up- at tha custom-* offhr. nv<\ .d'lrlnß most of her stay in the \u25a0\u25a0 al \u25a0•' j

sanatorium she was compelled to wear the jclothes she had on when she was removed Jfrom the ship en which she reached th* Jport. \u25a0

"Inthe hospital to which they finally took (me. and where Iwas locke«i up for "even

week?." said Miss Hays te-nhjht "all thepatients were quite insane. Itmi horrible, jIcould not sleep. The place \u25a0:\u25a0-• over- .crowded and, illand nervous as Iwa«. the imad babbling about the room." and coitl- jdors almcst left me as badly oila3 the rest jof the unfortunate? confined there. It was |a nightmare stretched over \u25a0 whole seven Iweeha. Irepeatedly asked thai an Ameri-can physician be sent for and even tried to

pet a letter secretly to the American Con- jsul, but they only laughed at me." i

\u25a0

KINGDON GOULD HOME.Kingrlon Gould, s-on of Gedrge Gould, who j

weal abroad ne»eral months ago with «\u25a0 jbeard, returned from Southampton yester- \u25a0

day on the American lin«»r St Louis vrittt- jout the beard. He left i- somewhere tn a jbarber shop on the Mediterranean coast, off!which he bad been cruising with his broth- !er. Jay Gould. ;

THROWNOFF RUNNING HORSE

Patrolman Dashed to Street and

Probably Fatally Injured.While poinj;offduty and after itaHop "-hla

hor?»- across the Broatlwar bridge at rStii

street at 2:IS o'clock yesterday mormntT

Mo-jnted Patrolman >-• -G. Warren, nt

No. Zill King;>bri«lce avenue. •»\u25a0 throrvnto the .street. ll* suffered injuries which

it is thought will raiwc d*atir His skullwas fractured am. rlpiit collarbone broken.

AV'arren on !*>:«vinc th« BsKVi under ti*<*subway structure, which }-•; » \u25a0 »'\u25a0-\u25a0! a) tl> '.... swerved to the ripht unccr T- i-S*

-street station. HI? ."horjldrr «tr»«'k » cW*. '.an*! he was dashed to th»" parcrnent. \u25a0 ::*\u25a0 '•

horse pallopirip on until stopp***! by Pat.""!-.nan .Mcl^auphU;. at -CStli ?tr^et and Broad-way. Mcl*auphlin le«i "• hor«»* b««ck and

found the unconscfooa officer. T. I". Cur-ran, of Vonkera. driving an

- . "n4*Jß*aVwas passing at the tim^ and, stopped hi»machine, barren van lifted into the auto-

mobile and taken with all pogslbl*- speed

to Fordham Hospital. There Dr. Black.

a"fter an examination, said that Warrenhad little chance of recovering from hi"injuries. His condition was unchanced. ttwas aM at the hospital, last nlsht.

Warren was appointed a patrolman "•September 3. 1203. and has always beenattached to the Ka—i bi station. Itwaa saH by brother officers at that '•-tion y<~t*-rr!a:- that "•

\u25a0

—was to •-\u25a0)--•

been married to-day

The rov^rnmrnt ~inboat NoventiTr<»E, on'ak c NVirgpua. which has hitherto hrld

*~'~ apajnst th<" provisional governtnenr.

-MTT<?nti«T'id to GTi^ral Chaniorro \u25a0. \u25a0 Gra-"afla to-4ay. Th*> retirement of th«» Ma-r:ris Bt«am«?r Venus has \u25a0terminat'"^ hos-?; iT:r? r,r the Atlantic coa^t.

BluefieJds. Nicaragua, Aug. 27.—GeneralJuts J. Estrada, provisional President ofJkicara^TJa, is. as the first, act of his ad-ministration, syndinp to Dr. Salvador Cas-trillo. his persons! represent ive in theHalted States and Minister to "Washington

fixna the provisional -\u25a0.-•-.\u25a0 a note

petting forth the policy of the new admin-:*rrat.K>r!. In it he will \u25a0 rone .- for thenHestablishxnent of the mew of the

cmnm'v". the elimination or Zelayaism, theabolition of private privileges and conces-sons rfnd complete compliance with the"ems of the Washington convention, aim-in? to put a stop to the' perpetual revolu-tions in the OntxaJ American States and«T!'[Tr>schrr:enTs by *>n^ stale upon another.Ir t)K note, it is understood, he p!edp°s

hins*!f to ( nee-----

to the Presidency

e'. Nlcarag'ca! to be hold within six months.Onerai Estrada, with other leaders of

the revolution, desires the appointment asMinis:«r to Nioarajpsa Of Thomas F. Mol-fat the American Consui at Eiuetl^lds. and

in a :'rram 9»nt to Dr. '--" to-day

fc« Ee.:s: "Don 1 forrcu \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;-

ffeagnition o* the rerolutlonary govern-ra»ct. to gar«st strong to the Amcri-f«n C^T;<ir'rn«'nt of fftate tho -\u0084-•.•

cf Mr. M^ffat as Minister to•

iragoi

:n P^-po'-isf- th<= confidence *-xistinp b<»-r*«>T, the two co'jntrie?. \*r feel that this•Ppontuent will b» th** best pl*-dpe and?jarsrt»e of future good relations of thetws TOuritnes.""

The ci'.y is tranquil, but norm*] business

rondnions hire not yet been restored. The

courts and schorls are still closed. the tcle-

rhoT?" wit is interrupted md trafficr>v. t^t railroads has not yet bees resumed.

A dispatch received to-day by the acting

TTp.'-iornt reports a Snal success for theTTf-trada faction, the captain of the govern-

ment rtearo^r Noventi tress on :.sk<- Nic-aragua, who day before •'•-\u25a0•:.-.; refu.-edtn obey the aemard of the new "\u25a0\u25a0—"*

to i--arTTncer -\u25a0. threatened instead to

borrirard Granada, \u25a0 a—-

be«»n obliged by-*;«> rnenber^ of hit cr«w to surrender hisf*:p to' tr.e provisional povernment.

General Juan Estrada arrived at Granadat.\ 530 o'clock yesterday afternoon. Oneol the first arts of the acting: President »asto appoint a commission to gro to Granada«T-d escort the triumphant leader of therevolution to the capital.

-•-. final clause <->• the agreement signed

Isrt night provides that the free electionsfor the Presidency, which, according to me•propofals cf the commission of concilia-tion, should occur within six months, shall

be held within a rear from the present

None of the foreifrn consuls resident atVar^g-"* was present at. the conference.

The Prefect of Managua has issued a de-

cree to the inhabitants .-\u25a0 the capital, in-

structing them to decorate their domicilesIrs honor of General Juan Estrada, who is

coming to the capita].

r,»no-s! Mena arrived at Manapua over-'snd !aft night, accompanied by his staff.B:>c o*in:pe<i on th« penitentiary jrrounds.

On being informed of Mb presence there.O>ne"«! hamorro. commanderin chief of the army, appointed Dr. PedroGorr.ez to confer with toaf Estrada, theFrpvisional President. Half an hour befor*rr.ic'r.i^h: Dr. Gomez and Jos6 Estrada-.- ar, a;rreement. consisting of •••-\u25a0

erticle*, which -.a.- witnessed by Aurelio'.Istrscia. F«ibio Hurtado. Toms? Martinez,

FeTT.ar.do folorzano. Alfonso Solcrzano andB-Ilodoro Rivas. agreeing to turn over fullusxtrbl of the reins of povcrnment to Gen-rrai Mena this mominir.

•»*? r.ax"-'a. Nicaragua. A^s. 2T.—Jos*\u25a0j-v^;cr<.? Estrada, •«\u25a0> Thorn r*we*aVent Ma-

*srir turned ever the administration of th«Vii-araraP-r: c \u25a0\u25a0

—"\u25a0"

"f before. flr«?inp theepui.tiy. to~?ay

—.-.; from (Ik Presl-

gpjjcy 1n favor of General I•.;\u25a0< |f(M who--B5

lesignated by him as H.-tiv,c Presidentrr the republic. This» change of adminis-

\u2666 -atvvr: was in accordance with insrtmc-t'or.s from Estrada's brother. General Juan

.7 HFtrada. the head of the provisional_.. . -r- »nd leader of the successful-c \u25a0\u25a0'-:, apainst Matrix. General Menu

took possession of the Presi-tiaOZC mansion.

9