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V IN HUNT LABEL

WORKING WONDERS FOR

TRADE REVIVAL IN El

its

Use a Guarantee of Good Texture Second

Letter From The Evening, World's

Special Correspondent.

41

frond of a srrks of article! on the great transformation now tn

progress in Ireland, which it fait tailing the Orcrn Isle out of the

wiicrp that earned her to he described as "the most distressful conn

fry that crcr yrf iro seen." Other articles will be printed from time

to time describing industrial, patriolio, artlttlo and educational

changes in the four provinces of the country.

(Special Correspondence of The Evening World.)

By MARY SYNON,

Special Commissioner from the Gaelic League to

Report on the

CONK, Ireland, June 25, 1912.

At t lie ciiBloni house In Qtitenitown, thai tow, red building that nftords

the Amerlcun traveller lilt flrsl experience of Ktiropoan bagKnKC-Binashlnir,

Ihere were to-day a hnlf dozen Irishwomen of the typo mndc famoim In the

'Sweat Kittle Huttercup" of "I'lnnforo" waiting for the fonder to take thorn

tut to nn nnrhorlnr atoamcr for the tllapnanl nf the gooda they carried in

heir wicker hampers. They wero o busy with tholr talk of trade, their

vna'aln nf Itia ntintiH tholr rimiiriitlt' nnriAttnns. ihni thnv failed In n n mv.

'enth woman, alio laden with n, hamper, until alio had nlmoat passed thorn

Jto the tender. When they did Bight her, they watted for no council of war

jo rjaicrmine ner rate, iney moveu lorwnru until iney nun uer at me wntori

dge. They told her In Irish their exsu t opinion of her.

Condenaed, tholr Idea of the other woman might be expressed

In the one word, "Saiwenach, If

tot the acorn an Irishwoman can put

IBrllnn. Aa she was not English, sho

answered them In kind. Hut they

were acven to one, nnd ahe had to

""trail tho banner of defeat.

"What did she do to you?" I naked

one of tho vlctora.

ii All of them answered. "She hadn't

Jthe trade-mark, ma'aral" "She wan

rylng lo cut across us." "Never a

algn of the twde-mark does sho ever

,bavc op the ware alio brings."

,3 "What trade-mark?" I had to ask.

jj. "Why, the trade-mark of Ireland,

jHia'nm, they chorused."

'Then they made haste to show the

Utile triangular pennant with the

jtfrcle of Garlic letters and the words,

'Irish Trade-Mark." that mark the

eoncretcucss of the country's Indus

trial rehabilitation. '

MUST HAVE THE LABEL OR

THERE 18 TROUBLE.

Tt wag very unbiislnearllhc, t til tag 'if

trade, nmt In a country that originated

the boycott Its effectiveness promlxeH

to become nlniuxt fdnlrter. For the

daellc words that translate Into ".Mailu

In Erin" represent thu national Idea ex

Teased In Industry in well as in

language. All the women who ra: ry

out their wares tu tho transatlantic

steamers that make stop nl Quini

town curry only tho gnoJs that nrs

marked with this label. Thi nutMler

- who breaks lit upon their monopoly tlnln

heraelf In ttje poMllmi of a strike

breaker, and. Korse than that, sh

makes heraelf an expatriate! by her act.

Kor she Is us.ns the fact of thn Interest

la Iroland of the paanlna travelle- to ll

article that Are 'ronfpctliiK with Irlili

trade. And In these ilays of the Uavllc

league and tit" InduMrlnl Developm-.nt

Society, coinpelltlon with Irish industry

of foreign made goods Is as rial a var

as any In the tid rack-rent time. Ami

the Irish trademark Is Its banner.

Th emMuni, secured hy an ct of

Parliament mthered by Mi. Unlit',

member for Kerry district, n'. first

marked only ihu goods produced under

the Immediate direction of thou schools

started by the Iaguo for thn encoir

agement of cottage craft. Its uaefulnjss,

however, was ho upimrcnt, standing a

It dM fpr a storllnK article In every

rase, that Hhopkoopers other than

patriots begun to to!e It up because of

Its giiBraniy.of iuallty. T.ie Irish alnp

k'aaper Is naturally more conservative

DO

"Nof EnOilgh Real Homes." A sncd Article by Hon. THOMAS R. MARSHALL,

O Democratic Nominee for Vice-President.

"D0Wtl Into Vesuvius." A F"t-Person Narrative by Prof. ALESSANDRO MALLADRA,

The Daring Italian Sclentlit.

"Why City Peovle Are Fat" A SiBned Articlc bv prof- Dudley s. sargent,

J J f Director of the Harvard Gymnasium.

"My Greatest Battle" A siened Article by john l. sullivan,

1 America's Greatest Fighter.

"The Astronomers1 Trust" A siBed Artle1Hb,y Pr E- c- Pickering,

World Famous Astronomer.

FREE with Next

mV TTIHI

Irish Revival.

print were able to give any Idea

Into that tsrm of hatred of tho

than the Irish peasant. He has more to

lose; ho N dependent for his livelihood

on the rules of the land, and he Is, in

turn, protected Iiy thorn to some extent.

Therefore, his attltudo toward the Irish

trademark was not receptive bcraiisn of

patriotism, except In Isolated tnstnnces.

It was tho reward thes.i Isolated In

stances reaped by their urn of guaran

teed goods that have brought about Its

use mora generally,

PRIDE GOES WITH TAQ THAT'S

ON THE GOODS.

There Is no denial, however, of tho

fact that patriotism has cticouraned tho

use of goods mnrked by the symtol of

tho trado revival. Tho cane of the

women on tho Qucenstown quay might

be considered typical of the attitude of

tho Irish salesperson toward the goods.

There Is a pride, attached to selling

the goods marked. "Will you 'be tak

ing that back to America with you

now?" one of tho women lace-sellers

Inquired of n buyer. "Then would you

mind leaving on tie mark to show

the (In e. people on your Hide of the world

that 'tin Ireland that can make lace,

like this?"

In order to underhand Just what the

Industrial development of It eland has

been In th.oe Jte ears of her ievlv.nl,

on niurt makn n brief review of tne ,

p.ist. Ami, le't a irsuine of Ireland's .

economic hlJlory be let down as pre- '

Judlccd jfcaii or any Celtic )nipa-

i

i

thlei, it would ce wiser to take thejmnlier or iumIiui. tlannel uinl bioad

sununaiy nf -Irls'.i Industrial Uestruc-' ''loth In Ihurhinil inn? up In nrme, mid

tlon" by tho Martini of DulTerln and

Av.l tlltl.s;

"From Wueen Kllin belli' telun until

within a few yeais, nil tho knonn and

authnrixed comnurclal confinternltle.i

of tlreii Hrltal'i neer for a moment

related their relentteta Krlp on the

trade of Ireland. Ono by one each of ,

our ncscent Induatrlf s was either strnn-1

Kled 1,1 Its birth or handed uver RaRKed

and bojntl to tne jealous custody or the , ,( ,.,t Mnt ,)onplo hut In tho In

rival Int'ieet In Kncland, until nt last nMHty .if tho lan.l to Klve Mumenanco

every iouiiioi m "r.im unjim-,,,,

Ically sealed, and oven the traditions of

commorclal enterprleea perished throUKh

ocsiienioc. i no onotns or i.nu -

land's factories opened the cimpalxn.

Ah early as the I'oiumencement of the

sixteenth centtny thu keevei of Ito--common.

Tlpperory and Cjueen'a County

undersold the produce of thn KnKllsii

grata counties In their own market, lly

an act of the twentieth of Kllzabeth '

Irish cattle wore declared u "nuisance," '

and laclr Importation nas prohibited,

Forbidden to eend our Ueasta

alive

across the channel, killed them at

YOU

In Next SUNDAY'S

Irish Worker 8 and Their "Erin-Made" Goods

Bring Trade Revival and Prosperity to Ireland

in w&m&:Ssfmm

H Jl . V I I t M X. SMM ' .aBWMBHasBSMapwjv-

ifcv.rv

Costume1 of irisr

popj-in amd cash

MERE HNtBROlOER-

tRrLTiroQois AND

home and began to supply the sister

country with cured provisions. A rec

ond act of r.trllamcnt Imposed prohib

itory duties on salted meats. The hides

of thn anlmal.s still remained, but the

same Inllucncc soon put a atop to the

Importation of leather.

CATTLE T-tADE KILLED THEY

TURNED TO SHEEP.

"Our cattle trnde abolished, we trleil

Mieep fnrmlliK. Tl o (hrcpbreeilers of

KiiKlnml liiiiuodlntrly took nlarm unit

IrHh wool tun I'pclared rontrahand by

i'ui iianirn' ir i-nuriex n. neauiil in

this illrei'tio'i We tiled to wmk up tlm

raw material nt home, but thin created

'he itreuteM u'ltc i- of nil. IIery

by nn act of William 111. tlie w Hen

, IniltiMtry of

liclnnd wits exlinnulshed

mituufiictiirern left the

I and SU.U'iU

. Ihl.llttl.

I "And It was o nlons the line of other

Industrie.'

AMERICA'S AID KEPT WHOLE

DISTRICTS GOING.

Them ititidltlons. IntetiHlflril hv tin.

poverty of tho congested districts.

, ,,t,,e W, tr,i coiltllltlej

fVt. utrr parllamentanry ineitBiireH

1 ,,ad Klven relief on ii.ttuTto ti, ,a.

; tor tv of r Kn i.coiile. 'h..1,. .tl-i. ......

or Ireland were lurxcly mipportcd, not

more than five year iiro, by American

remittance. The North of Ireland wan

nlniuxt the only Industrial centre.

nut to-day, between Queenntown nnd

Turk, tho piiHsriiKor train inn throunii

a country that I fludlnn cninp.uatlve

priority through the IndUMtrlal

1 e

chaiiKe. 'I Ut market for Irish wares

at

iuenn.slow 11 11ml Cork has opened

up th? cottiiBo liiduttry. Woni'.'ii nnd

Read

Sunday's

4aJUIlUClry 3

Klrls can work In their lurici In the

mnklUB of exnulnlto laces nnd em

brolderle. Iii ono of the Quccnatiwn

Hhop l u tablecloth of IrlBh crochet

nwiiltliiK shipment lo a rcat Now

York department store. It required the

labor or two Klrls working one ycir to

complete It. Remembering this, lt

lirlcc seoms low, nnd yet to-tlay I av

the cottaue where the two Klrls are nt

work upon nnother such cloth, and l

saw, too, the brother who did not

havu to cu to America because of the

reward of their labor.

Kor tho brother, too, a strapping

Inil of twenty, the Industrial revival

In accomplishes something. The Cork

schools have taught him market Hardening-,

heretofore neglected In Ireland

becauso of tho custom that any Im

provement made on the land by a

tenant forced him Into payment of

higher rent to tho landlord. Thus It

came nbout that Ireland, endowed with

a climate that should have made her

the market garden of Kurope, had no

Incentivo to progress In tlil line.

When the man who ralne excellent

peae'ies finds his rent o raised that

he has to emigrate, his neighbor has

no desire to go through a similar ex

pt rlcnce. Hut now, with the changed

rental syntem, Irelnnd has the land at

her disposal, 'and there nr schools to

teach her how to make the best of

her heritage.

TRANSFORMING FARM METH

ODS ALL OVER THE COUNTRY.

Aready the results HhuW In the mar

ketM where htinwberrle of huge tdxe

and wondrous lusclousness vie with

gooseberries big ns plums at mi sen

son. Already market gardens aro tak

ing prizes at the fnlrs. Modern methods

of funning have been Introduced. Mod

ern mitchlnery Is being Installed. In the

neighborhood of Cork there Is a farm

conducted by tho Brothers of Providence

that Is almost world famous for Its

ett! pment. Anil elm so.rtc hundreds of

boys nra In training for good, sol'd fit

lr.enshlp at the Institution, the signifi

cance of tao ngrl u".urnl tr.ilnlng cun

not bo iinilcrer'.'mated.

Here In Cork tho I'orlt Industrial I

elopment Affn.-'atlon Is luv'ng an exhi

bition of Irtth indnstrlei that Is inter

esting In ehow)u' that even If lrlh Uu'o

should go out of fashion, a L-ontlinvncy

not anticipated by thosn who know the

many varieties and the pxipilsltn beauty

of many of the hardly known lates, the

Irieh Industries would receive no seri

ous sethuck. Tor there aro here dls-

J played such linens nnd embroideries ns

Magazines?

World: A Pattern of a Child's Romper Suit

TTUl lUi (CUT QUT THE COUPON) : : Designed by May ivfhnton.

A

DISPLAY

OF IRISH

GOODSAT

. F-E.IS,

fashions never change, so perfect are

th'-y In thtineelvus, "nnd every thread

made here," says the rosy checked guide

with prhV.

lleleeks of fit I ry flnetieas, Connemara

marbles wrought Into magnlllcont brlc

Hfbrnc mid quaint Jewelry, potteries of

rare colorings, Jcwolry of charming act

t:ugs. all hearing In some way the re

vived designs best known to the out

side world through the beauty of the

Hook of Krlls, th, finest Illuminated

manuscript In tho world, gleam in tho

ahop display. I3ut for genuine Impor

tance the llnens.from the sheer handker

chiefs to tho sMIiiy t&bieelnMs, prom

ise the greatest future. The poplins,

tho bnlbrjggans. tho Youglul wool coats,

light as thistledown and warm as a

blanket, Mand for heavier service and a

more lasting commerce thsn the lace

could cym to Indicate. Hut. apparently.

Ireland has caught the fancy of the

commercial world by the beauty of her

products, Just as ho caught the fancy

of the Mcrary world by the beauty of

br poetry.

All through the dlstrlit covered by the

Industrial Development Society, schools

for lacemaklns have feen In oporatlon,

ao that now there aro very few girls In

.Southwestern Ireland who do not com

bine with their beauty the art of lace

making. Official visitors report . gen

erally Improved condition of living, re

sulting from the Increase of work and

ltn consequent emolume its.

Noticeable throughout the Cork district

Is the fact that everywhere the language

revival and the Industrial revl.-al nre

more closely allied than merely in time.

hercver the Gaelic tongue. ls spoken

0119 Is almoKt certain to find some phaie

of the new economic Interest. Ono cot

tage Just on the outskirts of the city

reveal tills distinctly. The father and

mother know no (ladle, having boon

tHiight nt the tlmo that Gaelic was ban

ished from the schools. They had re

mained on tho tiny farm, probably bo

cause of their unwllllnguesi to emi

grate, rather than berausn of any hopo

! for a brighter future, nut fieir clill

jdreu have something to loo'.i forward to.

. Thb two eldest, girls, aro expert croc ict

lacemakers, practically supporting he

fnnillv by tholr earnings. Tho third, a

con, has Just transformed tho farm l.ito

a market garden, taught by his Indus,

trial collegu training of methods and

values. And tho threo younger children

are attending schools nnd learning

n..ii(. In thlH household the father and

mother have been taught their native

language their children, us well as

taught method of Industry that .ire

making the lanuiy raiiiMriivwy pros,

perout.

WORLD

"Alone On the Road." A Real Experience Story by FRANCES M'DONALD, Girl Drummer.

"Is New York Kind to Women?" Answered by helen Christine bennett.

"The Hermit Of Street" A Fiction Story by ANNA KATHARINE GREEN.

"Platonic Friendship Not" A Kitty Cobb Picture by JAMES MONTGOMERY FLAGG.

"A Yankee Millionairess." words and Music of a rose maid song hit.

"A 16-Page Joke Book" The Funniest Issue of "FUN" Ever Printed.

GIVE MEN RIGHTS

IS THE DOCTRINE

OF SUFFRAGISTS

N'o Wife Should Take Alt of

Her Husband's Wages,

Says Mrs. C. A.

Hughston.

VVIVIfS OUGHT TO HELP.

They Should Not Keep .Their

Earnings Out of the Fam

ily Fund.

marguerite Mooera Marshall.

That much-abued and grossly ner

lected peraon, the American wife, la

again to the fore. Now it Ii William

Hard, magazine eocloloflat and author

of "The Women of To-morrow," who

submlta a legislative programme In be

half of married women to the General

Federation of Women's Clubs, meeting

In San Francleco.

"The wife earninge should be

long tf her," T.hemenUy Toolfer

atea Wr. aTard. -There la Jnsi one

caee In which wife ahouta be

charred with her husbaod'e anp

port when he la In Ann end un

able to work.

"Husband and wife should have pre

cisely equal rights In tho custody of

their children," he adds. "They should

have eqjul rights to tho services slid

earnings of their children, nnd to the

management of their children's prop

erty." THE WOMAN GETS HERS

WHETHER OR NO. ,

It seems to me that most sensible

men and women will agree as to the

Justice of this latter paragraph. Hut

wny anouid a wife bo entitled to the

whole of her earnings any more than a

husband Is entitled to the whole of his?

fc.ven If triors are no children, a man

has to give a certiln perccntago of Mi

wages to .the woman he marries. The

courts have so decided over and over

again. A man may bo separated or

even divorced; he has to divide his pay

envelope Just the same. The only ex

ception ever made to thla rule la when

the wife has been guilty of grora mis

cenduot and. presumibly, will be looked

after by some othtr man.

The "gentle grafter" has always been

one of my pet aversions, the lady who

believes that while It may be more

blessed to give it l certainly more

comfortable to receive. Suspecting

that I might find a sympathizer, I

asked Mrr. A. C. Hughaton, chairman

of the Public Demonstration Committee

of the Woman's Suffrage party, If ahe

thought a married wage-earner shouH

let her husband pay alt the househo'd

bills.

"A wife ought to be aa rateable

an economic factor aa her bnaband

In the partnership of marriage,"

Mrs. Kaghaton declared. "If, !

thronfh Improper education, ahe la

not hla economlo equal, ahe should

five aa mach aa ahe can. Certainly

If ahe la a waffe-earaer aha has no

more rirht than her husband to

keep all her salary oat of the com

mon fond.

"Probably the money question Is re

sponsible for more marital unhanplness

than any other thing. There are two

very wrong but very common ways of

solving this problem. In one ease the

husband has the only pocketbook. His

wlfo works for her board and lodging

and such few clothes as she can

wheedle out of her lord when he Is In

a good temper. Sho becomes tho house

hold drudge, and the man of tho house

swaggers about loudly declaring that

'women ain't fit to handle money."

MANY WIVES TAKE ALL THE

MONEY AND RUN UP BILLS.

"This (s of course an abominable state

of affair. But tho wife Is not always

the patient, uncomplaining victim,

Many an American husband turns orer

every penny lie makes to the woman he

marries, receiving back from her a

meagre allowanco for carfare and

XlrZi

MAGAZINE:

lunches. Perhaps aha run up extra

bills; If she does, he struggles meekly to

pay them, and consoles himself with the

fact that Mary and the girl a look

'bctter'n any body In town.' He break

down from overwork In hla early ma

turity, and nobody has anything but

pity for his family,

"Thla lan't the rtffht way to do

bnsineaa, either.

"The only fair and acoare settle

ment of the rased qtustloa of mat

rlmonlal flnaaee is the three pook

etbook ayatena. That la. the hus

band should hare hla private al

lowance, the wife hers an exactly

eqnal one and the rest of their

earnings should go Into the Joint

fond for home and children.

"If a woman continues to go lo her

office after marriage her household ar

rangements must he ona different scale

from thnt which they would be If she

stayed at home. One or more extra

servants will be required. Or perhaps

It will aeem best lo llvn In an apart

ment hotel or at a boarding house.

WIFE SHOULD BE HER- HUS

BAND'S HELPMATE.

"Now It would be manifestly unfair

for thnt woman to spend all her Hilary

on her own clothes, or deposit It to her

own account at the bank, and let her

husband pay rent or servants' wages

or board for the two of them, and per

haps, later on, for the children. A.

woman who marries takes upon heraelf

certain obligations. She la to be her

huaband's helpmate, and that most em

phatically does not mean that ahe should

alt back and let htm pay the bills."

"Then you believe In men's rights, as

well as women's?" I suggested.

"Indeed I dot" Mrs. Hughston as

serted warmly. "So do all suffragists.

We have always said that things are

too hard for the men. If they weren't,

Kipling never could have written his

bitter bachelor's creed

" 'Strong hearts faint by a warm hearth

stone. He travels the fastest who travels

alone.'

"Everywhere nowadays you hear men

saying, 'I'd like to marry, but I simply

can't afford It.' So they put marriage

off year after year, delaying their own

and some womnn's happiness until per

haps It disappears altogether. Because,

other things being equal, peoplo who'

marry In early life are apt to bo hap

pier than the couples who wait. The

young husbands and wives are moro

easily adaptive and grow togother with

less difficulty.

"The remedy for the delayed marriage

Is simply the popular chorus, 'Put Your

Wife to Work.' Only the self-respecting

wlfo to-day doesn't have to bo 'put' to

work. She was a wage earner before

ever sho met her husband, and she asks

nothing better than to continue doing

the work sho has come to love."

DEAF AND DUMB BOXER

HELD FOR KILLING IN RING

New York Youth Dies From

Effects of Blow ill Fight

in Yonkers.

- Joseph Dragons, ninetce'n, of No. 143

Thompson street, New Torlt, a wagon

driver when not lighting In the prize

ring, was arrested In Yonkers last night,

following his Hght with George Nussem,

known as Young Ducey, before the

Getty Athletic Club.

In the second round of what was to

have been a four-round bout Dragons

hit Nussem a wicked punch In the

stomach and the latter toppled over with

a crash. The Injured fighter was rushed

to the hospital, where Dr. Krull found

he had a fractured skull end that he

had suffered Internally. He died at 12.M

this morning without regaining con

aclousness. Fight fans sitting around tho ring

had yelled to the referee to stop the

fight right aflcr tho second round

opened, as Nuisem was getting much

the worst of it.

Police Captain Lent also placed under

.irrest Referee Thomas Hrodcrlck of No.

Ii Vineyard avenue, who once fought

Joo Gans; also the manager of the

club, States Wllklns, of No. 36 Purser

place. They were both charged with

violation of the State Boxing law.

Capt. Lent notified Coroner Alfred

lies. Niusem lived at No. XI West

One Hundred and Twenty-flfth street.

He was eighteen.

Dragons Is deaf nnd dumb and hns

fought In preliminaries for about two

years. He Is a featherweight, while his

adversary was a welterweight.

NEW AUTO DIRECTORY.

Tell at (ilanee .11111n of Owner of

I'iisslnar Car,

An automobile directory which will

enable persons touring to tell at a

glance tho name of the owner of a pass

ing car or cars has Just been published

by James Robblns of No. 1777 Broad

way, press representative for Luna

Park. The directory, the first of Its

kind ever Iwued, contains a list of more

thin CD.OOO cars In New York State, their

license numbers being given numerically

with the owner's name and address op

posite. The new book Js known as the

Bobbins Motor Car Directory.

BEATEN WITH BANJO

BY WIFE, DECLARES

Charles Hinman, Importer

Says She Used Pitchfork

at Other Times. j

ISpeHil to The Etenlns Wortd.)

MOUNT VKHNON, July .-BanIo

find pitchforks, not aa musical Initra

mcnts nnd Implements of husbandry

but as weapons of atrlfe, seriously

marred the domestic harmony of th

Charles Jay HInmans, according to the

testimony that Is piling up before Jus.

tlce Tompkins In the White Plains Su

preme Court.

Mrs. IUnman, who Uvea In Kew Ro

chelle, appeared before Justice Tompklni

as plaintiff In a separation suit, and

asked that her husband, a wealthy

Brooklyn Importer, be compelled to pay

her alimony and counsel fees. Justice

Tompkins dented the motion on tha

grounds tha: Mrs. Illnman was well able

to support herself.

The wife alleged that the tmportor

deserted her In October, 1910, taking hla

daughter with htm. Mrs. Illnman de

clares that when he left her Mr. Hin

man said ho waa "tired of supporting

the bunch." This Is her only allegation

against her husband.

On hla side, however, Mr. HI n man

declares that his wife po-scescd a ter

rific temper, which s1"! manifested

without provocation. He declares that

sho frequently beat him wllh n bau'o

and when tho banjo wasn't handy sho

wuded Into him with a pitchfork.

On ono occasion, says the Importer,

Mr. Hinman threatened to kill htm

mid the child with t: c pitchfork. Ha

refers to u number of instances when

his wife "administered Inhuman beat

ings" to their child tnd he refers to

her "cruel treatment" and "aisaulta"

upon htm.

MANY OFF TO EUROPE.

.Nine Mcnmers (0 Sail To-Day with

Their Cabins Full.

The tide of transatlantic travel la at

high tide to-day. Tho Olympic, Phila

delphia, Vaderland, lVcrlin, Frledrlchder

Grosie. Moltke, Columbia, Martha Wash

ington and Pennsylvania will leave with

cabins full.

Moie than CVD first class passengers

are booked on thn Olympic, Including

the Marquis Cusanl Confalonlerl, Italian

Ambassador to tho United States, with

thn Marchioness and their daughter.

Donna Beatrice Cusanl Confalonlerl; J.

J. Jusserand, the French Ambassador,

and Mme. Jusserand, Henry C. We,

American Mln.ster tu Spain, and Mrs,

Ilegtnnld Vanderbllt nnd Mlsa Kathleen

Vanderbilt.

On th Philadelphia are booked E. R.

Bacon, Prof, and Mra. B. U. Bacon, Mlas

Dorothy Garden. Justice nnd Mrs. J. W.

Oerard and Andrew J. Onderdonk.

MISTAKE LEADSJO ARREST.

Joy Riders nn Bridle Path L'linrsjrd

Willi (iranil Larceny.

Because two youns men who went

joy riding through Central Park In tlm

eurly hours to-day mistook the bridle

path for nn aulomobllo drive they ara

under arrest on tho ohargo of grand

larceny. They wero Petur OX'onner o:

No. 3CS West One Hundred and Thirty

fourth Mreet and Arirtldca S;:ubouner

of No. tiu Third avenue, employed In

a fjaraso In West Tlfty-atcond ktrt-et.

Mounted Policeman Taylor taw tho

automobile speeding aion the br'dln

path at 3 o'clock this morning. Ho

stopped the car nnd asked tho driver

If he did not know ho was driving on

the-wrong road and -wanled to see hl

chauffeur's llccnae. O'Conner, who waa

driving, a alii ho had lelt It at home.

When tnlten to the pollco station It

was teamed that the automobile was

the property of Harry Frazee, theatrical

manager, of No. 1SJ Broadwny.

FIRE IN HOTEL ST. DENIS.

Early this morning Manager E. A.

Downing ot the St. Denis Hotel, Eleventh)

street and Broadway, saw smoke pour

ing out of the main corridor and dining

room ot tha hotel. He turned In a llro

alarm and the blazo was put out without

any of the one hundred and eighty-two

guests knowing about it

MAN

"I '"J1 "'"taasili