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The New York Times from New York, New York • Page 8

Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE NEW YORK TIMES. SATURDAY. MAY 1011. 8 $1575 DLF WIRELESS AND CABLE DISPATCHES TO THE TIMES MEMORIAL SERVICES FOR J. L.

GRIFFITHS Ambassador Page and Embassy Staff Honor the Dead Consul General. It holds to the like the hea car. That's its one of beauties of light-weir Studebakcr That's one reason! it leads in sales That's one reason) every owner is enthusiast. Another reason small-bore, 1 stroke motor balanced, full ed and econqmicajl. Another reason is its floating rear axle.

Another it its full equipment of Tim ken bearing! to the hubs. I Another reason is its 5 fu de- baker Warner stai and lighting system. These things are very HIS BODY LIES IN STATE Will Remain In Liverpool Town Hall Until the Carmanla Salle Guard of Veterans. even ting dent of Studebjaker value so evident can't escape them. They make for long li constant service-rfir comical service.

r. o. (k DMI rOX-K ToHrtm Car i MX Taurine Car 1 FIX Land Koadstaf I SIX fiadaa I MM "S-" Tvartes CKif MH -XS- Caup 1 I u-raaoar mix I 1 cvh you -for eco- 157 1 Phelps Motor Car Corporation, Metropolitan Distributors. Brearlvey and St tuj It Because It's i itjidebaker Epeclal Cabl. to THK New TOBK Tinas.

LONDON. May 22. Impressive me mortal services for the Ute Consul General Griffiths were held at St. ra ul's, Knlghtsbridge. this afternoon.

Several hundred persons attended them, among them Ambassador and Mrs. race, the embassy staff, most of the leading American residents of London, and two Catholic priests who were close friends of Mr. Griffiths and had worked with him in an East End boxing; club In the London slums. OIL FOR BRITISH NAVY. Government Invests In Persian Com pany to Get Large Supplies.

Br Mareaol TranaaUaalle Wireless Telegraph te The New Vers. Tinea. LONDON. May 22. The British Government has taken a big forward step toward obtaining- oil fuel for the by arranging with the Anglo-Persian Oil Company to supply a large quantity for delivery extending over a term of years.

According to the agreement, the fuuk a. i .1 ftkui debentures in the company, additional capital being required for considerable extensions of the company's plant to carry out the contract. Although It is unusual for the Government to take shares in a company, the precedent has been furnished by Great Britain's interest in the Suez Canal Company. OFFERS HYPNOSIS FOR THE LOVELORN Dr. Bertillon of Paris Undertakes to Cure Hopeless Passions.

TREATS ALCOHOLISM, TOO LONDON, May 22. -The British Government was officially represented at the memorial services to Consul General Griffiths by memoers of the staffs of the Foreign Office ami of the Board cf Trade. Before the altar wye placed wreaths from all the clubs and societies to which the late Consul General tmlonged. well as from the American colony in Berlin and from Individual friends. The Luncheon Club held a meeting before the service, at which It adopted resolutions of condolence with the lam lly.

and the members then marched to the church In a body. Among the distinguished Englishmen who attended the service were Sir Henry Mortimer Uurand, Viscount Heerhurst, Lord Charrwood. and Kir Leslie Heott The service was conducted by the Rev. Francis Boyd. Vicar of Bt, Paul's, Kn rhtsoridiie.

and was of a very tm presslve character. An address, writ ten bv Archdeacon Sinclair. ice presl dent of The Pilizrims. who was unable to be present owing to illness, was read by Canon Sheppard. Sub-Lean of the Chapel Royal.

At the entrance to the cluircn a guard of honor, composed of ctvli war veterans resident in London, carryu.g the American fisg. stood at attention as the congregation entered and de- Darted. After the service the body was trans ported by train to Liverpool. wnre it lay in state In the Town Hall. It will remain there until taken on board the Carmanla on Saturday.

ADVUTISEXCfil CORNELL UNIVERSITY STATE SCHOLARSHIPS am an hi to tit Bdwrettaa; (L. ten a i'i. MFitoa mjt. a ratnaettttv aaamaatlaa af tl1ataa far tH Ha- balarvftipa In Cnral t'Blvaraity. f' in tm is Oeaatr mf gar.

b'H at the Da Witt Tlai tHIss Bchoat. 10th Araau. aad Svta atraatlhi ta. Borough mi IbaUttu II SATl BtDAT. Ml.

mi is ring at II. lit. Caa4idataa tooat be at W.J 1 4 rra af aaa i aat of ssawaa ukiiu us romnoa itanta ar a-a-fcMBlaB o4 ih ate daring the yaar tm si i Iijiwh mmrmlnm: tT avsmlnatiaa. n4 iriul ri i Mil mt Uum t-4- Na portnm iln m4 aatae as tt4lnatUm -leas mmmr4 la accapt a scaVrfiraliip, aaoelS fca i Ta MsaiiMitasi will be tioa English, fctMary i mnrtrnl. English.

Am-f Iraa. plaae Sn'iiiry. sb4 aajr fub tat tka mi maaltlt of: ttf t-Mlowtng til nt, Ljit im. advaiM-4 gTanrg. 1 twac4 Gvr-Snaa.

a4va rw-art atat aiai-i Lm mm aitar- (MiiniT aav aa effaraJ I Tm papar aa Anwirtfi hlaterv lli tnrinT riil fMr, aval. t'aiOTa ta taa ata rre4ir4 atJcta ka i Thar arUI aa aa saaajf raa-e4ita appalnlad fma 1 Ma ranr aa tba 4- kaaambiy dla-IH-ta la I Ma nawai. Can4KAt-i wul bacema aiiua4 la ik.e scWartaipa la ha, ardar ttir atl iim4 mt i ha rii? af Saw Tarw. this aaraath jr stay. ll- v.

i WW. mLxwelu i ii i mt Sk-aaalal Tha Cltv af Tara. ainTER DEAD MAI1 A startlingly yivid icture I of life beyond the grave. 1 A book that is being uken by all are interested in the fiiure life. SLJS Net aayvbei a BANKER'S WIDOW A SUICIDE.

Frau Julius Stern, Crazed with Grief. Drowns Herself Near Potsdam BERLIN. May. 22. Fran Julius Stern, widow of the multi-millionaire Managing Director of the National Bank Fuer Deutschland.

who died hut April, committed suicide yesterday by drowning herself from a canoe in the River Havel, near Fotadam. At the graveside of her husband during the funeral she had said that she would not Jive long without him. Her friends thought she had con quered her grief, but the night be' fore last she disappeared from her Summer mansion near Potsdam and was never seen alive again. Her only child, a 14-year-old son. lnhits his parents great fortune and one of the finest private collections of paintings In Germany.

MRS. FLAVELLE IMPROVES. Victim of Italian Railway Assault May Recover Arrests Made. By Marraal Traaeatlaatle wireless Tele graph la The Naw Vara. Ttsaea.

FLORENCE, May 22. Physicians now hold out some hope of the recovery of Mrs. Flavelle, the Chicago woman who was murderously assaulted yesterday in a railway carriage. Mrs. Flavelle lived a very retired life, her only Intimate friends being Mrs, llernteit.

who had a Krahtiment of some disaster to her friend and requested her to telegraph to Dr. F. B. Noyes. 122 Michigan Buildings, Chicago, if she had any trouble.

FLORENCE, May 22. The condition of Mrs. Mary Flavelle of Chicago, who was shot on board a train between Florence and Assist yesterday, was Improved tonight, and the physicalns expressed hope of saving her life. In the course of the day the wounded woman was visited by h-r sister-in-law, several friends, and the American Consul. Several arrests have been made, and the police believe the assailant of Mrs.

Flavelle Is among them. A separate Investigation of the affair Is bring conducted by Leo J. Keena, American Consul General bere. PARIS. Vlay -In the Chamber of Deputies toaj several of the members suggested that the Government adopt measures to insure the safety of travelers on State railway trains.

FORD FIGHTS CUT PRICES. Tells His Patients They Can't Raise Their Glasses, and They Find It So. British Automobile Makers Obtain a Rehearing of His Case. Spm-iat Cable to THB NEW YORK TIMES. LONDON, May 22.

The right of the Ford Motor Manufacturing Company to fix the minimum price of Ford cars In England is again to be contested In the High Court of Justice, The Ford Company this year obtained a court decision entitling it to say what was the lowest price at which its automobiles should be sold here; but the Judges held thst It had failed to prove jnduiKPnc(. the damage resulting from one of its London agents underselling others, although It was entitled to collect penalties for breach of contract. It la said that one of the chief causes of the litigation la the fact that certain English automobile manufacturers are endeavoring to check the Ford enterprise on this side, the large sale of Ford cars here having had a disastrous effect upon English car sales. Application was made to-day to the Court of Appeals for permission to reargue the case before three Lords Jus tices of Appeal. This was allowed.

and the Ford Company received an extension of time to Its case. Automobile manufacturing concerns are watching the action with consid erable interest. Br Mseeoal Transatlantic Wlrrlcaa Telegraph ta The New York Times. PARIS, May 22 Dr. Bertillon of Paris asserts that psychotherapla.

or soul-culture. Is the medicine of the I future. I He does not put his patients into hypnotic trances, but places them in an environment which creates an appetite for sleep. He invites them to repose on their beds and think of nothing. Then he leaves them, and they gradually succumb to the tick-tack of a metronome.

When a patient is in a hypnotic slumber. If it is desired that he shall he cured of a tendon -to excessive In alcohol the psycho- WON'T SELL VILLA AURELIA. American Academy In Rome Denies That Moore Will Buy It. Enacts! Cable to THB NBW YORK TIMES. ROME.

May 22. Prof. Jesse Bene dict Carter, Director of the American Academy, emphatically denies that the academy intends to sell the Villa Au-rella to Charles Moore or any one else. He says that the academy, although It Is endeavoring to obtain a full en dowment fund to Insure the continua tion of Its work, has sufficient money for two years. Prof.

Carter thinks that the con fusion perhaps arose from the report that the Villa Miraflore, the Ute headquarters of the academy, was on the market, three offers having been made, on prtittably by Mr. Moore's agent. therapist suggests to him that he can not raise a glass of absinthe to his lips, and repeats the suggestion until the prohibition Is so engraved upon the brain that If the patient would he could not do so. Dr. Bertillon is frequently consulted by those who hare had unhappy love affairs, and It la said that through hypnotism they obtain release from their unrequited passion.

BUYS LONDON THEATRES. Alfred Butt Acquires the Queen's and Globe for $330,000. By Marroai Transatlantic Wlrrlca Tele graph ta The New York Tlmra. LONDON. May 22.

Alfred Hull hft bought the Queen's Theatre and the Globe Theatre In Shaftesbury Avenue for S3.m.n00 as a leasehold property from the Governors of Christ llos pitai, to whom a rent of has to be paid. Mr. Butt's Interest will be confined to leasing the theatres to other man agers. He is one of the most sue cessful theatrical men In Ixndon, be Ing Managing Director of the Palace, Empire, and Victoria Palace Theatres, and also controls a company which has music halls in Manchester, Glas gow, and Paris. British Army Grafters Confess LONDON, May 22.

A plea of guilty was handed In by seven of the nine British Army officers and all the eight civilians charged In January with re ceiving and giving illicit commissions in order to lnfluer.ee the allotment of con tracts for supplyng army canteens. All the officers emcept IJeut. Col. Whit taker were connected with the Quarter master's Department. Sentence was de ferred by the Judge until May t.

i i BMSkNBMhlsBBB. What jcounts isn't what you pay-r-put wna you get for what jyou pay. The Ford buyer gets the most value for his mcfiey. Big production, skilled workmen and 'best mater als make Ford quality high and Ford prices low. Five hundred dollars is the price of the For i runabout i the touring- car five fifty; tha town car seven fifty f.

b. Detroit, com plete with equipment. Get catalog and particulars from Ford Motor Company, 1723 Broadwar; also Jackson Avenue and Honey well StrcLt, Lonjf Island City, i IT 15 and feel your thirst slip away. Youll finish refreshed, cooled, satisfied.1 Demand the genuine by full name Nicknam-is encourage substitution. Whenever yon tee an Arrow think of Coca-CeUa THE COCA-COLA CO.

ATLANTA, GA. RUSTEM BEY CONVERTED. Former Turkish Attache at Washington Abjures Christianity. fpwUl CaliU to The Nkw Voiik Timfs. CONSTANTINOPLE.

May Hay. Turkish Ambassador to Washington, who Is of arl.stocratli; Polish Catholic origin, has Just embraced Mohammedanism, taking the, name of Achmet. The Sultan, in recognition of his conversion, gave lnm Jeweled wntch. Kustem leaves Constantinople to-morrow. Sru-rial to Thf Xrv York Tiiiir.

WASHINGTON. May 22. -Nothing is known hen- iixlh-atliiK that YotiMnouf Zia I'ushu. the Turkiali A Ik to be tranyfrrrod. or that A.

Kustem IJey is to succeed him. The Ambassador could not be reached at his hotel tonight, and nothing was known of any plan for him to ico away. Kustem Bey was Secretary of Embassy and Charge d'Affaires here in In the absence of the AmbaHMdur, Hussein Kiaztm Bey. Kustem Bey. who is of Polish atd Scotch extraction and speaks nearly all European and many of the Asiatic languages, was very popular in Washinston soHety REGRET PROF.

T0MB0. Berlin University Apprised of His Death by Dr. Butler. riper Inl Cibln to Till VoSK TlMRS. HKKLIN.

May 22. Announcement of the sudden death of Prof. It. Tomlio, of Columbia Cniversity was officially to th 1'niversily of Berlin today In a cablegram from ITesldnt Butler, and evoked widespread regret In German academic circles. Iruf.

Tnmbo, though a native of Germany, was looked upon as an ideal young American scholar and one of the coming big men in the American university world. Prof. TomtK) was expected in Berlin shortly to deliver an extensive series of lectures in Germany and Austria "on intellectual life, a subject on which he was considered In this country as a high authority. His lectures on student life and Ideals In the United States, delivered In Germany three years ago, gave Germans the best insight Into American university conditions they hud ever had. MATTHEW FERGUSON By MARGARET BLAKE Author of "The Greater Joy," "The Voice of the Heart." Miss Blake's new book is splendidly vigorous and forceful.

As one reader says, "There is so much in tlte book, so many phases cf life are touched, so many thoughts presented to think abojit after one is through with the book. And then, Matthew is such a charming A little unscrupulous perhaps, in his dealings until men, but such a thorough, likable, lovable gentleman in his attitude towards wonen, and best oj all, such an adorable lover!" The keynote of the book is Love without Faith is Not Love. And the secondary theme is that the man who is utterly upright in one way, cannot be a knave and. a rascal in another. Cloth.

Illustrated. At All Booksellers G. W. DILLINGHAM NEW YORK Nobby Here is a simple, practical tire cost test. It was suggested by one of the world's largest automobile manufacturers.

Buy two new tires one a "Nobby Tread" the other any make of tire you choose. Put both on your rear wheels and check the tire cost of each wheel. "Nobby Tread" Tires will solve any automobile owner's tire problems the day he decides to buy tires the way experts do, viz: Bsisii Automobile owners everywhere are rapidly leaniing to buy tires on a real business basis, viz: the basis of ultimate economy. And remember this investigations prove that with "Nobby Tread" Tires punctures are 90 less than with the average tire. These are the reasons why "Nobby Tread" Tires are today the largest selling high-grade anti-skid tires in the world.

Based upon their remarkable mileage records NO DM are now sold under our regular warranty perfect workmanship and material BUT any adjustments are on a basis of lii Thousands upon thousands of veteran motorists now use "Nobby Tread "Tires on their front and rear wheels through all seasons, because they give real anti-skid protection and the lowest cost per mile. United States Tire Compaq NOTE THIS: Dealer, who sell UNITED STATES TIRES sell the best of ererythinfa.

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Years Available:
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