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U S DEAD US HE S
•p. Mcminger, of Christian Mis-iry Alliance, Expires While Stepping from Platform.
iME HERE FROM OREGON,
NBW5 YOBK HBBALB/ CEH1JBSBAY, OOTOBJSB % iflOft.
DUDLEY BUCK,WELL KNOWN COMPOSER, DEAD A>T 70
•
Organist Who Won International Reputation with "The Light of Asia," "Golden Legend" and "Deseret,"
Succumbs to Heart Disease,
lelist Planned Journey t o Northern
[Hew York and Was Preparing for
It In City.
^tr F. Maminger, aged fifty-two, jpperlntendent of the Christian Mis-
Alliance, whose N e w York head-are at the northeast corner of
lieminger arrived recently from •uddenly last night as he finished a fail discourse during an outdoor
of the alliance tn front of the Barters.
Msniioger arrived recently from and. Ore., and intended going to iorn New York tn a few days
•«»- York he affiliated himself with the branch of the organization. H e to a crowd of persons last night
tired himself. As he was stepping the platform he staggered and fell
the arms of several of his colleagues, f took him Into the headquarters and moaed Dr. Smith, of Flower Hospital, pronounced Mr. Meminger dead, i ambulance surgeon said heart fall-
Ecauscd the evangelist 's death.
OBITUARY.
Dudley Buck, an organist and a com poser of International reputation, died iud
Jdenly of heart disease yesterday In the home of his son. Dudley Buck, Jr.. No . 65 Northfleld road, West Orange, N . J« where he had resided since his return In August from a two years' residence In Europe.
Few Americans have evar held the position in the musical world occupied by Dudley Buck at the t ime of his retirement from act ive and public work In 1903. For twenty-five years the musical director at the Church of the Holy Trini ty In Brooklyn, his work was looked upon as a standard in devotional music. Outside of his profession he was widely known both In this country and tn Europe, where he studied as a young man.
H e was born in Hartford. Conn., on March 10, 1839. When scarcely mora than a boy Dudley Buck went abroad to study music. After a period as a student of various masters he was graduated from the Royal Conservatory of Music at Leipzig, Germany, among his c lassmates being
While S l r Arthur Sullivan. From Leipzig he went to Dresden, Germany, and studied composition under the famous Reitz, and later received instruction from the court organist, Herr Schneider. His education was completed In Paris.
Returning to this country for a time he was organist in St. James" Protestant Episcopal Church at Chicago and afterward at Boston. From the latter city he went to Brooklyn to accept the position of musical director at the Holy Trinity Church of that city. He w a s one of the foremost musicians in the Apollo Club and w a s a director in that organization for more than fifteen years until his retirement in 1903.
Friction between himself and the officials of the Holy Trinity Church of Brook
lyn regarding the church music- led to his resignation from the musical directorship tn January, 1902. Although numerous of-
WIFEPLAYS'DEAD;' HE IES NO. 2
Mrs. Hertler, Pretending to Returns in Five Weeks to
Husband Wed.
MAKES CHARGE OF
Leaves Clot t ing at Beach t o Indicate Sui
cide—Longs for Children, Th
Reveals Secret 1
CHAW.ttg A. HODGMAN.
A. Hodgman, for fifty years a Iber of the Hodgman Company, manu-
i of rubber goods, died Tuesday at flonw, at Tuckahoe, N. Y. H e was
Z>lZDZ*Enr
fers were made for his services by other churches he retired.
In composition Mr. Buck was unusually prolific. With apparent ease he composed songs, chorals, overtures, orchestral pieces, voluntaries, cantatas, oratorios and operas. One of his odes was sung at the Boston Peace Jubilee, his "Golden •Legend" received a prize and his "Light of Asia" created enthusiasm both In England and America. His comio opera, called "Des-eret." written to a libretto by W. A. Croffut and dealing with misadventures among the Mormons, was very successful.
Mr. Buck Is survived by a widow and two sons, Dr. Edward T, Buck, of Indianapolis, Ind., and Dudley Buck, Jr., of West Orange, N. J., and a daughter, Mrs. IPran-eis Blossom, of Orange, N. J.
ward R Karweise, who held the revolver whioh was accidentally discharged, has been exonerated by Coroner Robert M.
• Purdv. Karweise had fired five shots, ad ! n ^ \ Y o r k * c l t y * * l x
1t y " 1
8 e v t . n y * ¥ * the cartridges he thought were In the re-b 059 he went to Tuckahoe to assist " ? , » * " *,»« t h . tr<«r.r hit «ha sixth
fee enterprise started by his father. i the death of his brother, George F.
in. in I90«i, be succeeded to the Itsey of the firm, which he held un-
retirement, one year ago. Mr. __ aan was a thirty-second degree Ma-lasd belonged to the Union League and
York Athletic clubs and the New Geographical Society. Besides his
t. Mary E. Hodgman, two children, L and Frederick A. Hodgman, sur-
him.
volver, when the trigger hit tho sixth one land it exploded.
- • — M B . J. B . O ' D O N N E L L ' S F U N E R A L .
O b i t u a r y N o t e s . M, Wallace, president of the N a -
Wsx Paper Company, at No . 198 ilin street, died of appendicitis yes -
W i l l T a k e P l a c e a t T e n o'Clock T h i s M o r n i n g i n St . T h o m a s ' Church .
Funeral services for Mr. John R. O'Dou-noll, late news editor of the H H B A L » , who died Tuesday, will *be held 1 nthe Church of St. Thomas t h e Apostle, 118th street and St. Nicholas avenue, at ten o'clock this morning, instead of at eleven o'clock, as
I
L TELL IT ALL Telephone Newspaper Company of
America to Furnish News of World Over Wire.
had been intended. The interment will be made In St. Ray-
bis home. No. 230 Riverside mond's Cemetery. In the Bronx. •?•• He was born forty years ago In]
rille. N. C , and c a m e to N e w York 3 ^ t w o explorers day by day. In Fri-m y«ars ago. He had been engaged In , „ „ „ . J. n .„ »T „„j,7i.fc,j J J „ W «
jvax paper business for several years j day1* HERALD unll be published dianet was also Interested In other com- Qf the journeys of Dr. Cook and Mr. Peary
A widow and a young son survive . . . ik^ i^ ^.- ft &„$*, oroaress Ha was married only two years ago. J *» the "*V to the pole, «Htft aauy progress C. P. Beaman, tho Cornell Athlet ic \*cientiflo and weather, observations and
iation's physician, died In Ithaca,! conditions of ice found. |f.. yesterday. Dr. Beaman w a s wel l ! — -
in that part of the Stata and fol-t _ «•>••- **/~«ajr\a-'w the Cornell athletic teams in all of R O Y S M A K f c ( j l K J j I
g»m»s. H e w a s born in Philadelphia! • * v *** f , n " u v , , V f c " r-'i • n« years ago and went to Ithaca
SrMttan Frans , a retired boss baker, •^aterday of heart disease at his
•
OPERA SERVICE AT HOMES
•t»
WITH REAL SKULL
i. NO. 319 court street, Brooklyn. He Artificial Apparition Startled Brooklyn lorn in Germany seventy-nine years ** " . . , , . . „ , . ,
Janitor Until Policeman's Club Laid It.
Corporation with Capital of #100,000 t o
Use Patents Adopted by Similar
Bureaus Abroad.
md Is survived by a widow, two and three daughters. If. Fick, national organiser of the
M Order of Moose, died at Indianapolis,) i ^ suddenly Tuesda ynfght of neural- While he was turning out the lights
of the heart. | m the apartment house of which he is arles John Hobo, one of the founders j f t n | t o r at No. 23 Fifty-first street, Brook-fOr many years secretary and treas- * , . . . _ . ^ „ m <-«„~i«. ~ t t t a of the East N e w York Savings Bank, lyn, last night, Thomas Cordes met a Tuesday of nephritis, at his home, ghott . It wasn't the kind of a ghost one
fp; Vermont street. Brooklyn. H e r e a d s about, as there were no sheets or ,»rn in Germany in 1821. and whan ajt^jn-j , l l k e t n a t a bout It. On the contrary, |inan became a manufacturer of fur- J t ^ r ^ a n u p_tordate phantom, wearing ftn N e w York. He left a widow, t w o ; o o a t a n d trousers, and evidently just about Bi one daughter. j t 0 g t f t r t for a stroll when he came upon Eleanor G. Matthews Allen, wtfte of it in the lower vestibule. There was no
William Porter Allen, of Rye, N. mistake, however, about the grinning
inning- and , score of Other ^ J { f t & ^
The Telephone Newspaper Company of America, with offices In this otty» announced yesterday that probably within a year's t ime it will be in a position to furnish subscribers with news of general Interest, political happenings, baseball reports by branches of current events by telephone to a subscriber's home.
While this Is the first telephone newspaper company In this country, the plan of distributing news by telephone from central stations has met with more or less success in London, Paris, Vienna and Budapest.* It Is understood that the same general lines will be followed when the "newspaper" service is established here.
Mandey M. Oiljatn. who will head the new company as president, yesterday said that the "newspaper" would try to supply Its subscribers with every branch of news and a s an added Inducement will furnish during the evenings while the opera
After thirteen year* of marrted Ufs» during which three children were born to her, Mrs. Mamie Hertler, wife of Frank Hart-ler, a piano maker, became convinced a month ago that her hushand w a s faithless, and planning what she calls a "reasonable disappearance," she w e a l to Rookaway Beach with two complete outfits of clothing, engaged a bath house, left o n * of the sul tr there , and went into seclusion, the ra-sult being that she was supposed to have drowned herself.
This belief prevailed among her friends until last night, when she returned to her former home, a t No. 127 Bas t 149th street, where Hertler w a s living with smother woman named Justina Sandhoff, Wfcom, It Is alleged, he had since married. A s a result of this curious situation the latter caused the arrest of Hertler on a Charge of bigamy, and he was taken to Polioe Headquarters.
It was said by the polios that desire to see her children brought about the return of the supposedly dead woman. After marrying Hertler they lived in N e w Jersey and then moved to a house a t 161st street and Eagle avenue. The agent of this house was named Bandhoff. He died a f«w months ago, leaving a widow. After his death tho Hertlers moved back to New Jersey and not long afterward, Mrs. Hertler said, she learned that her husband was vls i tmg the widow. This caused her such grief that she decided to plan the disappearance. , She said that on September 8 s h s took two complete sets of clothing with her to Rockaway Beach and purposely left one In the bath house. When it was discovered the report went out that she had been drowned and she did nothing to dissipate this belief. On the contrary she went to N e w Jersey and obtained employment in a boarding house, but soon left there when the boarders suspected, from the o^iallty of her jewelry, that she was not a servant. Since then she had hold other positions in various places, but eventually she began to long for her children, and a few days ago she wrote to one of her friends fh this city, asking about them.
This friend Informed Hertler, who, after overcoming his surprise, agreed to take the children to the friend's house. By some means, however, the second wife learned the truth and confronted the couple* Ac-oording to the police they held a conference and it was agreed that the first wife should resume her married life with her husband and children, while the second should return to her parents. The latter changed her mind afterward and made the bigamy charge, alleging that she bad been married to Hertler on September 14.
Suffragist Speakers Win Meeting; of Girl Strikers
• e i —
Mrs. Loebinger and Miss Murphy Invade Gathering and Tell Necktie Workers That Only Women's
Votes Will Give What They Ask. • • i i i i • • ' • • •
CUlt necktie makers who are on a strtkei the necktie union's secretary, Mies Llllle r~. ~^ -i .. . w- -JU „ t ^ Bresser, Sound out who the visitors were
FIVE KILLED IN RAILROAD CRASHES
• ' o
Three Meet Death In New Brunswick Collision, One in Illinois, An
other in Washington.
and the suffragists met for Che first t ime yesterday afternoon, and inside of half an hour the ballot union and the labor union were ehaklng. hands on the struggle for greater freedom for the sex, while forty or more east aide giris, ranging from sixteen to twenty years of age. were wearing
&g)St buttons or oarrying the "Votes en" magazine. eblnger and Miss Helen Murphy, tional Progressive Woman's Buf-
tage "Union, armed, with quantities of eir society's literature, Suddenly mede elr appearance at Clinton Hall Just after
the large mass meeting of necktie strikers was over. Up stairs committees were gathered, and thither the two suffragists wended their way. much to the surprise of the Speakers who had been addressing the orowd of girls and boys. The suffragists did not come to speak, but as soon as
they were prevailed upoi suffrage. In a twinkling dragged forth a platform, dug
n to discuss equal several boys had
_ . ^L. dug m and gavel from somewhere and the lm
s p a table
promptu meeting began, Men, girls and boys listened quietly to
Mrs. Loebinger ten them that they would never get what they are striking for and what they ought to have—shorter hours, better pay and cleaner workshops—until the girls and women are allowed to vote.
The speech was given first In English, then in German, and, there still being facial evidence that not all the audience had Rrasped Its import. Miss Bresser rose and
speated it In Yiddish. After that the stolid expressions of the girls relaxed a little nd then Miss Murphy proceeded to further
enl ighten'them on suffrage questions. The girl secretary of the united Necktie
Workers' Union Invited the suffragists to attend to-day's mass meeting, which will be held at Clinton Hall.
W E S TWO MEN 1 — •
Passenger and Motorman of Municipal Car Hurt Severely In Rear-
End Collision.
In a rear end collision on the Qneens-boro bridge last night, between a car of the Municipal Car Line Company and a
WOMEN REVEL IN 'GOLD BRICK' SALE
«
Pay Real Money for Packages of Sawdust and Other Like
Articles.
Lotter ies are frowned upon by the United States government, but the United States Treasury was enriched yesterday
heavy steel car of the New York and because of the hope of several women
that Unole Sam w a s conduct ing a lot-
FOUR VICTIMS ARE TRAINMEN
Fifth Was Young Woman Among Hundreds
of Excursionists Returning from
State Fair. f
Great Britain's 1907 Railway Record
Passengers killed 120 Passengers Injured 2, aw!
Represent a ratio of one passenger killed in 70,000,000 journeys and one injured in 2,300,000 journeys.
Queens County Railroad, James Trainor, the motorman, of No. 1,907 First avenue, suffered a fractured leg and severe contusions of the head and face. One passenger, Pedro Dillevio, of No. 411 East Sixty-third street, who was taken to St.
SFRrxonELD. 111.. Wednesday.—One passenger was killed and thirty-five persons were Injured, in a collision last night between a special taking home several hundred excursionists who had been attending the State Fair in this city and a regular passenger train on the Illinois Central at, Paxnell, three miles south of Farmer City. The passenger killed was Miss Clara Watson, of Farmer City.
Three Trainmen Meet Death Burled Under W r e c k a g e .
Dir/HOtmru JUNCTION, N. B., Wednesday. —Three trainmen were killed, another burled under wreckage and probably fatally injured and two others were seriously injured early to-day when the Maritime Express, Halifax for Montreal, collided head on with a special freight train at Nash's Creek, on the Intercolonial Rs l l -
. way. No passengers were injured. The tery u n w i t t i n g l y . They bet on It and property loss Is estimated at about $25,000. lost, the g o v e r n m e n t p o c k e t i n g the
I n t h e N e w Y o r k H o t e l s . Breslin—Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Martin. Bal
timore, and M r . a n d Mrs. Walter C. Lewis,
A A* Social Service. Besides her nam ILPWIH IIW BCUI C W I « « H « I "SS~1 »1 she Is survived by two daughters^ ward Rush back with Cordes to invest!-1 gate and Cordes, with much scorn
his companion, strode into the hallway. H e started back presently and drew his nightstick, for the ghost was still there and was grinning just as affably as ever.
the bureaus which have made telephone'A. L. Shipley, Jones boro, Tenn "newspapers" a success in Budapest and' Plasa—Mr. and Mrs. John S. Hollsrook, Vienna. . I Providence, R. I.
.,, ; . , , -h ITie company was Incorporated on Mon-1 Prince George—H. C. Hunt, Belleville, of After trying to coax it Bora « ^ * « j R ? r ! day at Albany with a capital stock of'Ont.. and C. J. Felie, Toledo, Ohio. he ,executed a flank movement and c a ^ n ^ u , ^ ^ ^ ^ A n organisation meeting of the' Knickerbocker-F. T. Partridge, Boston.
Francesco Carleni, of Florence, Italy; jMiiw Harriet Allen.
rv Can field, secretary and treasurer e E v Watch Case Company, died LIT f | vpbold fever at his home. No.
• l e y place, Brooklyn, at the age one years. H e w a s a veteran of the th f>« ment and a member of t h e , o n e over *T Athletic Club. H e is survived appendas wH-»w and one daughter. (and the remainder , ^ . . ^ ,
mm*. t r w e y . a nephew of Admiral U n r a t e d Into th e ^ J « J ^ r o « « ™ « £ £ m and widely known in the dry goods ^Tl * h***, d'ed Monday of apoplexy a t h i s ™]K t _ a a m f t moment a chuckle was
(fa 13 Pay Thirty-nrsl^street. B « ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 1 ^ and pres H<» was forty-two years old. and ont.„ ,__• K n v _ w h o w p r f t o n the verge o
von Holsteln, Bay-shore, and John Tucker, Philadelphia.
Herald Square—Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Qreiner, Dallas. Texas .
Savoy—M. R. Brown, St, Paul, and Robert B. Waters , Troy.
Marie Antoinette—I* A. Clinton, Detroit, and L. P. Smith, Morganstown, W. Va.
Astor—H. Willis Qunn, London, and H. L, Connor. Muir, B. C,
Woodstock—H. C. Bernard, St. Paul, Minn., and T.' S. Crosby, PlttsbuTg, Pa.
Woodward-^J. J. Sutherland, Jacksonville, Fla., and Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Adams, Asheville, N. O.
Grenoble—Mrs. F. D. Wilcox, Denver, and Mr, and Mrs. F. A. Clark, Philadelphia.
_ _ , „ St. Regis—C. 0 . Blatr, Chicago, and a & season Is on, a "vocal and"'instrumental , B o , n d « LJ,on^on: „ . M TO _ _ musical sea-vice. Patents controlling the Bayard—Parley A. Russel and F. H. De
mand, Great Barrington. Mass. and
^ 0_ tBalassa, one of the directors of the com-!**> C Haynes , Jacksonville, Fla. pany. Mr. Balassa was identified with I York—G. V. Grass, Somerville, N . X , and
s takes . B y the same token Uncle Sam handed out several "gold bricks," albeit announc ing that they were "gold
John's Hospital, Long Island City, w a s ; bricks," and accepted in exchange therefor slightly injured about the head. Trainor j good currency of the realm, was taken to Flower Hospital a prisoner,! All th is happened at a sa le of uncharged with criminal negligence, and the'Claimed and abandoned goods by the
A * * *v. - rt^-.~. rs,™™i^..» Custom House author i t ies in the seizure conductor of the car, George C u m m l n f s , ^ r o o m o i : t h e Appraiser's Store, at No. 641 of No. 717 Forty-second street, Brooklyn, j Washington street. was arrested on the same charge. T e n cents w a s g i v e n by a w o m a n in
rriv. -^ , ;^««. ^„ ,,,-r. i „„ •*.- T > . « = ! o o m f o r t , a h l e c ircumstances for a large The accident occurred on the ^ a g ; box of sawdust . Some pains w a s t a k l n
Island end of the bridge where both cars t 0 i n f 0 r m her that s h e w a s buy ing noth-were bound east at the time. The cause ing D u t s a w d u s t . She was sceptical , of the collision could not be learned last j however, and, like the man from Mis-night, though it was eaid that both motor- isouri, required to be shown. It cost her men lost control of the brakes. T h e a dime. When she had satisfied herself municipal car was smashed in front. ithat she had bought sawdust , and noth-
Several persons suffering from slight i n - i i n g but sawdust , she threw her pur-Juries were treated by an ambulance sur--chase away, h a v i n g no use for sawdust , geon, but refused further assistance andj "I wag much amused by the gambling went home.
T H E O C E A N Q U E E N I S LOST.
N o r w e g i a n S t e a m e r S t r i k e s Sotrth P a cific B e e f — C r e w S a v e d .
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Wednesday,—A despatch received by the Merchants' Ex change from the Oceanic line steamer Mariposa, from Tahiti to this port, reports the loss of the Norwegian steamer Ocean Queen on a reef in the South Pacific. All on board were saved.
The Ocean Queen, Captain Johansen, was owned by J. Chrlstensen & Bergin, jone o'clock yesterday afternoon, when the
spirit shown by women," said J. H. Storey, Acting Deputy Collector, who was in charge of the sale. "They bought unclaimed samples that had no commercial value Whatever, merely, it seemed, because they were sold unopened. They thought, I suppose, that the appraisers might have been lax in examining the contents of these packages and that a fortune in money or jewelry might be concealed in them. They insisted on buying them In spite of being told exactly what they contained and of their worthless-ness."
About one hundred and fifty persons attended the sale, which began at ten o'clock Tuesday morning and was concluded at
One Kil led. One Badly Hurt , in Crask In W a s h i n g t o n .
SPOKANE, Wash., Wednesday.—Passenger train No. 4 on the Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway was wrecked last night at Fountain, 100 miles west of Pasco, by a bowlder on the track. C. A. Bigsbie, the engine driver, was killed and the fireman was injured. None of the passengers was hurt-
Crash o n the Several Badly Hurt in Santa F e .
HOUSTON. Tex., Wednesday—Santa Fe passenger train No. 17 was wrecked near Temple, Texas, early to-day. Several passengers and the engine driver. McGinnls, who was pinned under his engine, were severely Injured.
FREIGHT WRECK BLOCKS ROAD.
M suddenly at her home yesterday, [skull, with its hollow eyelets and dental Allen was prominent in charitable exhibit and as soon as Cordes saw that
tye and an act ive worker in the ! n , , fled[.screaming. P o i l c e T n a n B d . | a p p T u ^ e ~ o f " t r a n ^ t U ^ Mass, i ^ t ^ ! T t ^ S ^ H ' T i £ S ^ o n ^ 5 S - S f f s ho sa id , are ownld by Cornelius Nether lander . E . Bbersole, Toronto.
but was under charter to the Pacific Phosphate Company, Limited, of London. She sailed from Tahiti on September U for Makatea Island, about one hundred and twenty miles distant.
last lot of goods was sold. There were sold 1,068 lots, and the total amount realized by the government was $3,159.85. Charles A. Berrian, of No. 141 Broadway, was the auctioneer.
Abandons Hope to Save Cozzens r*>
Only Thirty-Five of the Ninety Feet To Be Penetrated Have Been
Excavated Thus Far.
iu w u g u i $100 000 the head—or skull. That useful j directors Mauley M. Gillam, of" N o
H e "Is "survived f appendage promptly dropped to ^the floor, ) W e a t Thirty-fourth street: William 110 and W. J. Balrd, Louisville, Ky.
oroppeci WJ. MI« """I'I West Thirty-fourth street; William H. Waldorf-A s tor ia -A. Werner, Germany, of the spectre d i s t n - | A l e x a m l e r o f N o s 1 ( M 2 - - - ••
IrrivM hy a tly two boys, who were on the verge of
rlrlow. j convulsions, were dragged out They ad-*» Park, of James Park St Co., W e s t m i t t e d that they had found the skull
mfnliants. died Tuesday at h is -while playing in the cellar of the old Be-» id Belalr road, Clifton, Staten J £ j | mansion, in Fifty-fifth street, and had
. He was born in England, and for m a d e it into a ghost to "have a little fun. conducted the New York house of.. _ _ _ _ — _ — — — Ita.tfadyen & Co.. a branch of Mil ii.,:; . . . » • « n n / v h i
iirm of London merchants. C O U R T H A L T b R O W ris E. Payson. s ix ty -e ight years old. p - ' v r ^ " " - . . - J L - -repr«^itfd the Ninth Illinois d i s - ! f\C M F M F D O I V I P O R K
ltath» Forty-seventh to the Fifty-first! XJi l U t - P l T I W I T I V ^ \ / r * l * lahunon, LX C. He w a s a nat ive of —
ace. R. T., an expert In land law,
Cornelius Balassa, of Twenty-second street, will be held this morning.
BOY KILLED BY TRUCK. L a d R u n s t h e W r o n g W a y When .
D r i v e r Cr ies a W a r n i n g a n d I s C r u s h e d t o D e a t h .
Playing In the street with three other little boys of his own age, Angelo Dan-brosl, three years old, of No. 841 Eas t 121st street, was run down by a truck yes terday and Instantly killed.
The boys were playing with the shafts
Old Slip, and and W. Alden Smith, Grand Rapids. Nos. 10-ia West , Gotham—F. B. Noyes, Chicago.
onr.
r. J
feT^ ^ " a y * 5 ^ m j ™ * 0 0 t 0 . o f a * a g n and John ,>yk,man. of No
Prevent Organization from Installing Rival.
Organized to
J62S East 184th street, driver of the truck, | cried a warning to them. Instead of run-|nlng in toward the sidewalk Danbrosi (Started backward and ran In between the
^promote fraternal love front and rear wheels of the truck. H e
John B. Rockefeller, Mrs. Hetty , the Harriman Interests and the
News Shipbuilding Company. •Rev Arthur Pot t s died yesterday in
prmioher « sanitarium, at Poughkeep-S.T. For many >ears he was paatorL-TVTTTirv _ . „ , , ~ a n Irishmen and the ir ,was knocked down, and before Dykeman
PresNyterian churches in Freedom a n d u n ' t y , ? 7 ^,,Z\T n^r\c Men's ;°°UW P"" ™e horses to a stop the rear N. T.. and La Grangevllje. N. Y. descendants, the County OorK J i e n s w h e e l h & d c r u s h e d t h e b o y M n d e r t n e
in his seventv-e lghth year and J Patriotic, Benevolent, Protective, social -weight of a big load of stone. Policeman l» widower with no children. : Association was on the verge of a big row j o r , anson picked up the boy and carried
last raight when Eugene Shebler. a o«p u ty n tm to a drug store, but he was dead when sheriff, served ah injunction obtained by rj r . Koescher, of the Harlem Hospital, ar-John P. H a y e s restraining the organization from meeting officially.
The trouble arose from a disputed election which took place a week ago. At that
Ihrops D e a d i n T r o l l e y Car. ';srtddle aged man, believed from
In his pocket t o be B. Vohve, . i:<53 Madison avenue, died yes - t l m e j 0 h n Hayes and Denis O'Connell re-
morning on a trolley car In ceived an equal number of votes. 185 each,
j n a i n s ™ a . The man w a s sitting I X n T h e ^ e J i r i n g 1 S S d S X ftlTn a S R a n Wm car when suddenly he arose, N o 12—there are eighteen members of _the
tod and toppled backward. Heart (order bearing that n a m e - c a s t the d e c k l e
rived. Dykeman was arrested.
Belmont—Admiral Sir Edward Se and (X H. Woodward, TJ. S. N.
I n t h e W a s h i n g t o n H o t e l s . H » R A U > BUUKAD,
No, 1,602 H STBKKJT, N. W WASHINGTON, D. C , Wednesday,
Among the arrivals at Washington hotels to-day were:—Shoreham—Mrs. J. D. Curtis and daughter, R. A. Badger, Mrs. W. R. Pryor, H. E. Felton, W. Bpirrill, B. F. Reist, R. B, Buford, and M. M. Klein, N e w York; Justice and Mrs, O. W Holmes, Washington; R. G. ftovey, Schenectady, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. C- D. Irwine, H. L. Burnham, Boston; Mrs. James Dun, Chicago.
T o V o t e for N e w E s s e x M a r k e t Ckrart After an Inspection of Essex Market
Court and Lndlow Street Jail yesterday. Controller Metas told Albert J. Weber. foreman of the September Grand Jury, that when the matter is brought before the Board of Est imate he will vote for an ap proprlatlon for the erection of a new court building. Ho estimates that 1150,-000 will erect a building to meet the Heeds of the east side.
[SPBCIAI. DESPATCH TO THB KBXALD.]
CBNTSAI, XSXJP, L. I., Wednesday.—It was announced here to-night by Piatt Gilder-sleeve, the wen digger In charge of excavating the well at Happauge where John Cozzens is burled under tons of sand, that it will be impossible to recover Cozzens* body before next Saturday.
Gild©r8leeve bases his estimate on the fact that to-day, after relays of men had worked practically without interruption
[SPBCIAI, DESPATCH TO THE HEEALD.]
N E W LONDON, Conn., Wednesday.—A locomotive and fourteen loaded freight cars are piled up near the new lift bridge spanning the Niantic River, seven miles west of this city. East and west bound tracks are blocked and all passenger trains running between Boston and New York make long detours by way of Plainfield to reach their respective destinations.
The wrecked freight train was derailed while the machinery of the bridge was being tested.
Borne of the strange customs of the people who made the finding of the Xorth Pole possible will be told in n^rt Sunday's HERALD by Harry Whitney, the first man to spend a teinter in the Arctic for the sole purpose of shooting game.
D R V G O O D S , * C .
for four days, it was found that they had gone down only thirty-five of the ninety feet that it will be necessary to excavate before Cozzens' body can be reached. "K-day less than eleven feet were cut through, j and to-night work halted with a quicksand slowly undoing what had been accomplished within the last twelve hours. '
Cozzens is dead beyond doubt, Glider-sleeve says. Efforts to sink an air pipe to him proved futile, and even if he lies under a shelter of beams and boards he must long since have exhausted any air that surrounded him. Giklersleeve believes Cozzens died within a few minutes of the time the sides of the well collapsed.
Funeral services will be held for Cozzens at the Catholic Church of St. John of Gaul, in Central Isllp, as soon as his body is recovered. The pastor of the church, the Rev. Nicholas W. Keating, has been at the Cozzens farm ever since the accident to Cozzens.
F T R S I T T R E , CARPETS, AC. I F U R N I T U R E , C A R P E T S , AC.
W A T C H E S , J E W E L R Y . <fcC ELGIN MINUTES
W A T C H E S , J E W E L R Y , AC.
Madison avenue address It w a s said Jl B»n named Bohn. answering the
M> of the dead man, lived there L**etu a year ago, when he moved to
IX, The police s a y that Bohn and *• M* the same.
Bullet K i l l s M i l i t i a M a n . Ml Buidmann, of the Fourteenth regl-,Brooklyn, who w a s shot a t Sea Girt V, died at the Monmouth Memorial
Long Branch, yesterday. Ed- jmons .
Last night w a s the — t -JO installation1 of the 1
new president, but Hayes had obtained h i s . H supposed to h a v e been the cause, [vote g j J g 2 S f ^ O » ^ ^ ^ « « > n of th
in function: The lodge room was crowded when the
retiring president. Sullivan, took the chair. "The meeting is called to order, h e de-
C "There will be no meeting to-night !*' shouted the deputy sheriff as he mounted the platform and served the injunction. At the same t ime he served a summons on John Sullivan to *PP©»r In court to-morrow morning. O'Connell a lso got a sum-
.SPECIAL NOTICE*. SPECIAL ICOTIOISS.
ICHOOL days are the days when most of the important habits of life are formed. Teach your children the daily use of *
EPdGSFEdBTT
©©th
HCORRECT watch is a time-saver. Its accuracy permits close
calculations. It avoids necessity of a
"watch-may-not-be-right" mar-
The guarantee of precision in a timepiece is to find oii dial and works the watchword
th*y will some day rise to call yon blessed. I t cleanses, fcrres and beautifies the teeth and gives purity and fragrance ^e breath.
6 . M. W H E E L E R Model 16 Size Pendant Winding and Setting. Seventeen
Jewels. Ruby and sapphire balance and cent™ ewela. Compensating balance. Bregoet balr
spring, -with mleroinetrle regulator. Adjusted to temperature, isochroniam, three positions. Patent recoiling click and self-locking; setting device. Ihigt ring. Plates damascened. Ea-
?raving inlaid with gold. Open face and hunt og csaes. IX FILLED GOLD CASES, ISO AND IP. IN SOLID GOLD CASES, $50 AMD UP.
Other Elgin models *t other prices, accordinr to grade of movement and case.
All Elgin models are sold by JeweQets where and are fully guaranteed.
ELGIN NATIONAL WATCH COMPANY, Elgin, Illinois,
CHAR] ©F ASSOCEATEOM
cTfaHE 8MHu-w&jraedl coimer off ami old pamielSed Liviinig Roomni
in Thioinnias H&irdy's Wessex—fte g&fte-legged ft&Me off shibibg oak, ifts sftireftdhieirs wonn by ftlhe ffesft off a score off gemieraftioiffis—the som-molaimt ftidkEimg off the "birackeft" ftiinniepiece in ifts imilaid case—ftlhe commffoirftiinig appeal off ftlhe capacious "ear
These are ainmomig ftlhie pleasuur-le associations recalled by otuur
replicas off old English Oak, Wal-emift amid Maliogamiy ffuurmiiftiuireo
T° iniJ
HJEMETUEE COMFAMY (Incorporated)
34 and 36 West 32d Street Between Broadway and Fifth Avenue
D o y o u r a r c h e s a c h e ? I t m u s t h a v e b e e n a r e a l
a r c h i t e c t t h a t d e s i g n e d o u r " P e d w e l l " s h o e f o r a c h i n g a r c h e s .
F o r i t ' s a d a i s y . T h e s p e c i a l l y s h a p e d h e e l e x
t e n d i n g w e l l o u t u n d e r t h e a r c h , a n d t h e c u r v e d s t e e l s u p p o r t h i d d e n i n t h e s o l e d o t h e t r i c k .
T h e " P e d w e l l " s h o e n i e a n s c o m f o r t f o r m e n w h o s e a r c h e s a r e b r o k e n d o w n , a n d p r o t e c t i o n f o r m e n w h o s e w e i g h t m a k e s a r c h t r o u b l e s i m m i n e n t .
$ 6 .
O f c o u r s e a n y q u a n t i t y o f t h e w o o l l e n m i x t u r e s u s e d i n o u r w i n t e r s u i t s a r e * , o r n a m e n t e d w i t h t h r e a d s o f c o l o r e d s i l k r u n t h r o u g h t h e f a b r i c .
B u t t h e r e ' s a c l a s s o f f a b r i c s i n w h i c h s i l k i s a s t i l l m o r e i m p o r t a n t f a c t o r .
S i l k m i x t u r e s t h e y ' r e c a l l e d — a n d h a n d s o m e , l u x u r i o u s c l o t h s t h e y a r e .
T h e s e s u i t s c o s t f r o m $ 3 0 t o $ 4 0 .
O u r S 5 1 . 5 0 g l o v e i s a s o r t o f s t e a d y b a r g a i n s a l e .
M a d e i n E n g l a n d o f r e a l t a n c a p e s k i n — i t s u r e i s a s p e c i a l v a l u e .
N o t h i n g m o n o t o n o u s a b o u t o u r D e r b y b u s i n e s s .
O u r o w n f i n e D e r b i e s $ 3 , $ 4 a n d $ 6 .
S t e t s o n D e r b i e s $ 3 . 5 0 a n d $ 5 . ^ V i c t o r J a y L o n d o n D e r b i e s
$ 5 ' M
S c h l i c h t e n R a m i e ( p u r e l i n e n ) u n d e r w e a r i n F a l l w e i g h t ' n o w .
R O G E R S P E E T & C O M P A N Y ,
Three Broadway Stores,
a t s t s t
Warren st. 13th st. 34th «t.
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