4 SERVICES IN LONDON FOR TITANIC DEAD Lord Mayor, American Ambassador and Other Prominent Men and Women Present Other World News Events '--.- V- f r -. ... it-: 7': 1,. s '.:( - NEW YORK. Mr 11- (Ppcclal.) Aa avcot of onusual solemnity wu th memorial arrlc In aiat Paul's Cathedral. Loodun. for thou lost In the Tltintc disaster. The Mrsmonlsi were attended by the Lord Kayor of London. Ambassador and Mrs. Wfcltalair Reld and other promi nent men and worsen of different na- uoaa. The heir to the throne of Monaco attended the annual Motor Boat Show at Monte Carlo. Monaco Is the litlie principality on the Mediterranean which derives an enormous Income from erambllna;. Prince Louis la the eon of the Prince of Monaco by Die first wife, who was Lady Mary Hamilton. XJemtenant Bcott. of the Vnlted Rates Army, baa Invented an aarw bomb which la at preeent the subject of expert meet In France. It hanirs be low the aTtator and is released by the pairm of a trtvrer. The propeiler Uae arrana-ement on the end caueea tt to fall nose down and to explode as It strikes the earth. rful novelty In hlpptna; Is The "Eelandla." owned by the East Asiatlo Company of Copenhagen. She Is the first ocean-folr.g motor boat of Jar; tonnage and the whole marine world la watching1 her performance wtth In tercet. Her pos toana-e la 4.M4. while her earlnes develop 150i horee power at 140 revolutions a mln vte. Her carrying capacity la 7u0 tons and her speed, when loaded. Is about It knots. She has accommoda tions for paasencara She Is plying bo tweea Copenhagen and China. She wees oil for fuel. Hex propelllna ma chinery consists of two main Diesel motors driving- twin screws. The en irtnes work on the four-cycle principles They are started and reversed by com pressed air. They hava two sets of auxiliary oil enciae. each with four cylinders. e e e Now that the Countess of Warwick has cone back to br home In Enarland carry Ins; only a very few American dollars with which to keep up hlstorlo Warwick Castle, It Is reported that a member of her family has come here to lease the oastle to an American. It Is superfluous to say that It will tak the traditional "American millionaire" to fulfill the requirements, American millions are malntalnlns; Blenheim and soma other historic estates In England. Whoever sets Warwick will have one ef the most picturesque and Interesting; homes In the world. Warwick Castle Is quite the oldest of the feudal castles of Enjrland still used as a resldooce. Part of It Is kept open for the lnapec- 'v a a fit riC&T7 ys-ar yS&vs' oj? -iTO? cf SZoj7&cc . zf SuhsZoT 3oart. Ss4&jtr- tion of tourists and that part contains many quaint relics of feudal days. e e President Taft visited Trenton a few days ago on his campalirn tour. Those who know President Taft realise how disaxreeablo this canvassing must be to him and that ha would never have undertaken It If he did not think It necessary to answer the attacks made on him. e e e A photosrraph re col red from Hobart. Tasmania, is the first picture of Capt. Amundsen made sine his discovery of the South Pole. With him In the irroup are Hansen and Lindstrom. Hansen Is one of the three men who were with Amundma when he arrived at the Pole. VnUke Peary, he did not refuse to share the honors of the trip with the asso ciates who had done so much to make success possible. Hansen and Lind strom were with Amundsen when he discovered the northwest pi esse some years ao. see Women will serve as part of the military establishment of the United Klnttdom. They are to be members of the Women's Sick and Wounded Con voy Corps. This corps Is a new adjunct of the army. It takes part In practice, drills, makes Its own camp and trains for active war service. The women do Til K MTTTVTlATr sia; 5 1 St. r I 1 stretcher drill and other stunts while In camp, under the direction of male Instructors. Their " commander rides a horse. BOY LOCKED IN BOX CAR Watchman Rescues Lad, Half Ktarred Who Wanted to See City. NEW YORK. May 11. A desire to sea New TotTc was the explanation for his plight given by a starving- 1 5-year-old boy who was discovered last night locked in an empty box car In the Har lem River yards of the New Haven Railroad. James Cullen. a night watch man In the yards, heard faint moans while, be was Inspecting- a string of empty cars that had Just arrived and his Investigation revealed the youth In a semi-conscious state. , He feebly gasped for water and fslnted. Watch man Cullen Informed Patrolman WI1 ner of the Alexander avenue police station. The policeman took the lad to the station house and gave him food. There he told the police he was John Gllloren. IS years old. of 171 Franklin avenue. New Haven. ConiL. UKKUtJTIAZT. mTCTTATVD. WAY 13, 1913. ft ". . .. 4 1 if1 r i: and that he had been locked In the freight car, without ' food .or water, since early Wednesday morning. The youth. -with deep black circles under his eyes; hollow-cheecked and wan, was partly rev'ved by bits of food given him every few minutes by the policemen. Propped up In one of the station house chairs he told how badly he had wanted to see New York and, - having no money,' boarded the freight train In New Haven.' "I didn't know they were going to lock the door," he said, "and I got frightened when the lock snapped. 1 was ashamed to shout for the man to open the door. I thought some one would let me out by night." He was taken from the station house to the rooms of the Children's Society and a telegram was sent to his father, a machinist In New Haven, who Is ex pected here today to take bis son home. 'Sheridan Hear Fine Concert. SHE RID AX, Or.. May 11. (Special) The people of Sheridan had the pleasure of hearing a ' fine sacred concert Wednesday night. The conoert, given under the auspices of the local Catholio church, consisted of aacred se 61 A It ft-.? w ' Wk.v -STU. kvf j.jr 4 t . - : . lections In Latin, and was rendered by a chorus of 20 voices interspersed with vocal selections by the different mem bers. The concert was directed by Father Raymond. Some of the musi cians were from Portland, among them being Messrs. Qlanelll, T. Bernardo, C. Raymond and IX Wheeler, and Mrs. C. C. Osborn, Mrs. T. Warren and Miss R. Friedl e. the latter being a contralto of unusual merit. BABY FINGERPRINTS PLAIN Expert Say They Remain changed From Birth. NEW YORK, May 11. That the fin ger prints made by a baby at birth are Just aa distinctive as those made at a later period, and that they will re main unchanged In peculiar llneations until the day of his death are the re sults which Captain Faurot of the Bureau of Criminal Indentlflcation be lieves ho has reached from experi ments Just made at Bellevue Hospital. With many prominent physicians and offloers of the Police Department look ing on. Captain Faurot took the finger prints of a S-weeks-old baby and sub sequently gave them a thorough microscopic examination. He believes that tha result of his experiment wlil VERY IMPRESSIVE Caught by Camera. r St m . ' -Jflfe A. : KVAW . . n do much toward the advancement of the science of identification. Captain Faurot now suggests that this system of identification be Intro duced Into all maternity hospitals as the means of future tracing of children born there. He predicts that the sys tem will also soon be introduced into banks and business houses, and perhaps be substituted for the present form of passports for those traveling in foreign countries. ALL WOMEN CALLED LIARS Authoress Says by Nature Can't Tell Truth. They NEW YORK, May 11. Mme. Karin Mlchaells, author of "The Dangerous Age," caused much Indignation among the women at Carnegie Hall when she declared that "all women are natural liars and cannot tell the truth If they try." "The idea!" "Women are not liars!" and other such exclamations of dis approval and contradiction were heard as the audience left the hall. "The Psychology of Women." was the subject of the ''ecture given by Mme. Mlchaells, who Is known in lit erary circles as Mme. Stangeland. "There are not enoagb. men to go - u. " x,riU.v . 1 around," the lecturer complained. "You youngr men and women hero should marry. Do not fear poverty. You have only one thing to fear, and that Is loneliness." Declaring that women always deny that which makes them less attrac tive, she said: "When the fashion dic tated tight corsets women adopted them, but individually they denied that their corsets were tight. They always deny nervousness; It is unpleasant to be nervous. Yet every woman is nerv ous. "I have yet to meet the woman who will admit that she is hysterical, and I have met only one who would admit that she was Jealous. In the same way they attempt to deny the danger ous age. y "It has been said that I betrayed the freemasonry of my sex in writing 'The Dangerous Age.' I have really done do more than say aloud what all women whisper among themselves." Off on a Hunting Trip. Harper's Weekly. '1I'm going off on a hunting trip with Blnks, Dawson and Blldad," said Hlckenlooper. "Fine!" said WIgley. "Big game or small?" "Oh, we never go beyond the 10 -cent limit." said Hlckenlooper.