1
WOITLD GIVE $100 TO GET ALLISON. Mr. Train Nettled at Failure of Police to Arrest Darlington Owner. Tn* failure oT tre pr-Hr* ti arrejit E«*n<( A:it- F «»i of the Allison Realty Company, who was in- \u25a0 | about a rortalgM \u25a0•• SB account of the t> , king Ins? of life due to th«! c^lUpM * '»"» «n- finish Hotel Parlingion. has annoyed District A'toreev ftasßaa and Ws a«=sii«tar.ta. There have beer, report- that Allison has been ***" In * h r_ r 1 "5 frequently »nc* !il« indictment, hut the Dj*««^« . Bureau las made repeat. reports of failuie to f '"l IZi \u25a0\u25a0! mi why the polio do not f.r.d aid Sr£t nor.- Assl-tant District Attorney TraM yerterdar. "I i~.car that he Is In 'he J?y WA 1 k:rw that the police have failed f to fl-ICI v m although a general alarm for his arrest P-as Sent out sorno time ac« I ;.e^,.r. a::y WO •\u25a0 ar- SIW out of ir.r own pocket to have This man ar- rested." Assets in Trust Companies Attached— Aeti« Brought by Woman. rrs Ettseae Charles, Baron •>:\u25a0 it-Roaafst of Waaee, w<->:i aaoan bj - tattoo la thai ftj ty ' '- fall rl ir: t):e Frer:..-"i ;;:;•••' .vritir.? cf " :'\u25a0:•• ! S:are.* Batpaataßßl comnar.;.-. is '-\u25a0\u25a0-< \u25a0 . aliiias ;o aai ! Into in ht3 native .ountry. OB De-ember Ji HO*, it ta sail. t!ie BBTCS T.tere.l into a corrtrtct with Maw. Rachel Ht*timi Wasass Ai r. rr.i::-.-. Marquise 'le Isioc. fjr ths porehass f-om h?r o* No. S ATSSSH *!•» Mont ilff:ie. ihs -^nsideaMsm a^r-.^.l nr. bflr.g iZ»,<yK> francs. An averment wss si&cr^i in F- . \u25a0 -an extension until April 13 of th^ tim- for err ;.!e';r.< the purchase A: thi outnet 4.J".» frank - k to 1 .ir.l th.- h.tron h:i«! ~z\: :. i :--.fe f.,r C/< \u25a0 ,'n,-s, \u25a0 - \u25a0 .-;:-•\u25a0•. Tl-:.T 1 -:.- r.ote wns not paM. ami wa Jesse Myers, nf New- Torf City, who baj brousbi suit through Cassr* '\u25a0 \u25a0 V rst d H '. •\u25a0• .v.-> ;.". Broarf-.-»t.. •» - nt of tl - note, and has aft.i>-i"l tha baron may ;-..ive in tne Mer- \u25a0 :'-.: '-. Trust companies. Lorenao Brorpto. of Co-jii^rt T^r.-.t^ers, who has been the twr.m'n '»!,i! r»:ref?or.t:itive h»r». <iai(l VBSterday afternoon th.it ha«l on!;: •:r.oHciai imowl«<lK> of ths sort bavina N »'n broug:;', MDi •vice w wild probal :•.- be rr.?A^ apes Calret-RocnhU n> pabHeattea. THE REV. DR. HENRY M. FIELD ILL ..-> taxaoasm tb tss iaiatuia\] fittaflsM, Vasaw April aY— las R?v. Dr. H«rr M. FW4 Caraaai DBsaraf Th- BKaaaailat' and a we;; haaara nM CasaQ) ' ?-v-k- bei:-.£- a ! r -thfr Ot I'yriis YV .. ar.il EXstM Dodlr] '.' \u25a0 it th» try pis >-. tn St.n kbriiisj.'. i[» was bora .: St rabridge, and beoane \u25a0 D kaMn as i •writer ur.d traveUer. BIG CONTRACTS FOR U. S. REALTY. The Osor gs A. Fuller Csaspaax ths batutaeds 1 rar-m.'-.-.t a 4 Urn Datt .-'• ,-.s Raaltj aad Caaaßna> tion Cocapaay, yeatexxlaj n . \u25a0 t.:» aasi i 0 •\u25a0 !\u25a0\u25a0:.; OMd tha CM ,v v-stem Raflraad Cwmaan> in Chteaco aad tar \u25a0 ass Ai baMIM r-r -T: Ball » •* Udci ."." in EafcJ- more. These contracts wj:i exceed J"J " \u25a0 work \m> un ron ail may be ured bj u^ine rh«» Tribune BBBSSB •«• ii moo. Olypha.it (Perm.) Contractor Was on W«f Home from Trip for His H w.|! -inton. i \u25a0 BABIHI KOGNIA7 SITED HIRE DIES IN PULLMAN BERTH. Want Grade Crowing Plan Orig- inally Adopted Used. A netltlon signed br abo::t sixty taxpayers anf. residents of Morris He!sht:i has been sent to tb» Mayor and the Hoard of Estimate, Hs«liln< that the plan adopted for the overhead crosrln^ of the bbjbv York Central tracks ;t the Morris Heights station be withdrawn and the plan originally approved br the Heights Taxpayers' Association In January of 1302 substituted. The Heights Taxpayers' Association, as th« r*. «u!t of aeyeral fatal aocldenta al th» Morris Heights station. ca!ir<l a public meetlnsc In Janu- ary. 1202. to consider abolishing the rrade '°**>sg at that point, chief Knitinccr Criggs of The Bronx submitted a plan for doing away with th? grade crossiner. as dM Chief Engineer WiU";n for tha New-York Central road. The ..ne sssnsaal by Mr. Wilgus w.i^ unanimously approved, as It In- volved as eh.inge of grade, and m ide tlie statSoa and dock at tlie HarieM Kiver front more \u25a0'•"esai- ble. The f.ri^^s plan. l! was declared, r \u25a0jntnd fa| raising of the grade of Cpdar-av--.. Vhka Is «i- rea.fy curbed flaKged nnd macaJamiz 1. ar.'J has trol'.ey tracks on it: would leave the bulMtnga h*. low grade and entail expensive claims for dam»;ei«. It wa aattasstad that the plan aasjroTsi would cost mcM hsBI rhan the IsriK?rM plan. Those who oppose the lirisus pi.'in <',':<~.\^r» tact it was adopted without r.otlrlcatlon to the tax- payers directly Interested, ssass of whom. It [% alleged, had appeared before tke Hoard of ttasMs and Apportionment, and advocated the adoption of the plan under the supposition thr.r it was the one appro !<>\u25a0 Ihs llei?htj Taxpayers' A.'.^octatlor the North Bide F!. aril ..f Trafle aad o:h-r bodiei* When a ommitt.'e from t!,-: Height-; T.ixp:iyers : Association called o.i Horough Preside:-.t HaSmt rrsardms th" plan h" sent for Mr. Hri?;j3. wlm Stated thai the reason for rejectjn^ the taxpayers' plan TTi«s because th» grade was too Th» corrmittee was refrrred to Nelson I». r..-.v; chi«* er.sir.f-.- ( ,f th" Board of **—»—««\u2666 who ;:. formed Its m> mm v 'i-rs th.it, m tho plan had been a»lnpt»t ;t wooM be metes* to MtNmpr to "ri;iv- it chi-.ged. Chaacellof SdacCrackei oi Sew-Tors r-r.-e-jity wroti a W> r of protest jg;iir:«t the Criggs aUa to Mayor McCleQan. as di^l Albert C DaTta forthi North Si.le }:.). t r(l vt TraJ.-. The petitior; >.-r - lo the municipal authortt'.M baj among i;* signers rhsnevDor MacCracaai Eprrraim r:. Lery, owning «W feet lr 9eitgwlck-aW^ M'--. Ott»tav S -hwa! . :-\u25a0: Idlng UM i: \u25a0 j,,^ t 1 Amorr, BmilQ L'Cird. \V,l!s Sponabie. J,,h.i r.^Kar-' the R«v. Edwin A. Cnrr. the K-v. Charles l> Sar Djr Harold l Walworth Bell, K. F. BranniiV«a Charles F. K:nie. cwnlns: 1" fe«t in S-.igwlck-aV* MORRIS HEIGHTS WROTH. SEND PROTEST TinjWOß. Budweisers Greatest Triumph Declared superior to best Bohemian Beers by the Experimental Station for the Brewing Industry of Bohemia, at Prague. Bohemian Beers for centuries the acknowledged standard of quality have been patterned after by brewers of allcountries. Budweiser me rtonuct o: Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass'n IS BOTTLED ONLY AT THEIR HOME PLANT AT St. Louis, U.S.A. A visit to the World's Fair City should include a trip to and through the Anheuser-Busch Brewery. All are welcome. Order* Promptly Filled by m^mm—mmmmr 0. MEYER & CO ACKER. MERRALL & CONDIT COMPANY, PARK & TILFORD, Distributors. New York City. 'JOAN OF ARC* DISPOSSESSED. REWARD FOR FARMER MURDERER. Norwich. Corn.. April M—Governor Chamberlain has authorized a reward of QjM to be paid by tho State for the capture of John Marx. tli« Colches- ter farmer, on whose farm the (llsm.-mbere.l baty of Joseph raiSfl. a farmhand, was found last Fri- day. This makes the total offer for the Ilirsslng man Jl.l'A the sum of $:•«'> ha\ iriK b- en POStld by the town authorities M a reward. No -lew to where Marx la has been found thus far in the search made for him by Sherifl Jackaon an.l hi* asststanta The BbertfTs posse i? stlU hontlna fen the awassp n»'l woods three or four miles south of Colchester village. The company held Its annual meetlr.g at Long Branch last month, electing etrsctara, aceofdlaaj t.i th" bill, cetoeM Ood3T, 1-ewls 11. Baker an.l Julius Keen. la a report just tiled with too court the directors are given as Colonel Cody. John S. 1- '.'. Oi Newark, and Lucius F. Crane, of New. hteedet pays he left the entire management of his Ht.ick to Salisbury, urn. llns him proxle? ta vet* th--> Stock Whenever requester!. OB the fienth nf BallS- bury in 19"2. Hasdat says be applied t>> the admfn- l»trati>r to account for the dividends paid oa the stock, but was Informed thai there had b*ej none collec'teil Maeder declarej be waa told by Cody t K . >• he had purchased all th« Inter. «i Salisbury sod had entered Into an apfttiTit with Jam-? A. Bailee of the H.irnum Ac Bailey ctrcus. by which Hailey'had pot a half Interest la all the BTODSTtJ of the piimwinv Cody as-erte > that the shows WOQH be given In the future by the fins of Cody * BaDey for their exclusive profit, .iid that ths coraenUoa would have no interest or claim on nny profits. Stockholder, in Suit. Declares Buffalo Bill Has Withheld Them. [bt TPt.r.:!-. \rn TO Tar. rRISLXBw] Trenton. N. J. April It— "Boflalo BUTs" WiM Weal Company was made the dsflPdsnl t.->-*!.iy in a son in the court of Chancery, in which Frank C. Msedcr of St. Looav charges Colonel Cody, presi- dent of the company, with betas party to a sehl to "freeze him out" of the corporation and >•\u25a0 prti him of his interest In more thin ttUkJKt <.f a. lated profits, whl -h M;te»lor says the company had on h£i. at lbs doss "i Its fltsl year <<n February 23. It is also charged that Colonel Catfy has \u25a0 fused to aDow JtssflUT to «cc the books of th- pany. and that there may be an accounting it is asked that th(> directors be compelled la bring the "books hits this St.it* for examination. The bill contains what purports M be the hlstorr of the 'Buffalo BUT' company. arMea wvs organized in 1«T :\u25a0>' Colonel t '>><!y. Nate" S:iliaaory and MaeJfr. It says the company had a caaWai stock of |i'\ono. of watch Cody aad Badsavry »-.-\.;i beM \u25a0 shares; Maedar, It; Melton E. MUner. la, and William I>. <;uti;r!<\ ;,. Codl ii-is alwa- > been presi- dent, an.! until his death Salisbury was iks avast dent, Baaaaaai and treasures Sin.-c then. M say.o. Oody has benr. aU three. WANTS HIS WILD WEST PROFITS. The litre fellow was dead Ions: before sh*; ar- rived, but she frantically rushed to a neighbor's house a;. 1 naked her to co for a doctor. Th..- dor-tor Biid that Johnnie had died almost In- stantly. When he get had to the office he told the police, and Captain Kenny went to the Weyh house to make an investigation. It v.ur. easy to .«ati«fv him that the shooting had beesi entirely accidental. but he paid the law compelled him t<» place the unhappy slayer of his brother un- der arrest. The protests of the mother were of no avail, and Julius was tahrn to the station house, arid later to the Children's Society shel- ter. Little Julius was playing in the Weyh apart- ments over his mother's millinery store at the Fulton-st. address. With him were his brother John, and his siter May. Fix years old. The mother was downstairs in the store. In looking round for new amusement the children found the toolchest belonging to Joseph, an older brother. In It was a .22-calibre revolver. Usu- ally the toolchest was ker>t locked, but Joseph left it open yesterday and the children were de- lighted at all the new toys they found there. After playing for some tlm* with hammers and planes and saws Julius picked up the revolver. He had never seen one before, and did net know what it was. While he was examining the shining weapon there was a flash ar.'l a loud re- port, and Johnnie dropped to the floor. Jullun was startled, and then delighted, because he thought he had found some new sort of fire- works. He saw Johnnie on the floor, but. as he said afterward, he thought his brother was playing. The little girl, however, saw the blood coinlnp from a hole over Johnnies heart, and ran in terror to her mother. FOUND IT IN OPEN' TOOL CHEST. Julius Wcyfa, jr., the eight-year-old son of a carpenter, livingat No. 1.7t»4 Fulton-st.. Brook- lyn, ran across a revolver in his brother's tool chest yesterday afternoon, and. while playing with the atiaanyi toy (he never saw a revolver before), shot and killed his four-year-old brother John. Much against the protest of his mother, the boy, who was overcome with srief when he realized what he had done, was arrested by Captain Kenny, of the Atlnntic-ave. station, on a charge of homicide. He was placed in the care of the children's society for the night and will be arraigned in the Gates-aye. court this morning. Lad Eight Years Old Had Sever Seen Revolver Before. Woman Who Leads in East Side Fight Forced Out by High Kent. Berth* X T^ib?nn. who by her efforts on beha'.f of the East Side tenants In their campaign sgasaat the rent raising extortions of the landlords, has earned the * .briquet of the "Hast Bide .loan of Arc " was evicted from her home at No. 2«6 Second- et. >-e«t»rd«yVith her are,l father and pother and her voungcr brother. She declared that Henry R^^?h*r landlord. had^rUsed the rent from "\>Vnnif frorr ttiasis to c«( ••.;•• oppression, Fhe pa . \u25a0 •'but we >..,v. round an even greater tyranny b Ther» were mere than mrrer.ty-flve dispossess eale^Tn the Fourth Muni lpal «^>.urt yesterday, and ione in the Fifth The bearing on the ma- jority" waa postponed asJB assnaay LIEUTENANT RESCUES DROWNING MAN. Uteuiermrit Herman Kotxsrhmar. \u25a0( the revenue " cutter Macklnac. yesterday rescued from drowning - Otto Mneck. a civilian employe at Governor's I*l- 0 at;d. Just a? the OeMßai Hancock pulled out from ' s t^e Battrr>- landing on her >:» a. m. trip Mu»ck .ran down the peer and Mat to lagan shasj He * mls»e(i his footing *r.d fell to one side, hitting his 1 btafl aralr.rt the fantall e.f th- Hancock. Oscar Pi-trrsen. a boatswain on the <"a!umet, lowered a - lander over the Bide e,f the cutter to the mar. who mr+*xu*&to !et go of the urr.br. I'a he was still hold- - Jr.r to «rra*p the la.lder. He was rapidly b«comlrig ' -xhauftiV. nnd wan sltiklug when IM •\u25a0 \u25a0 : from tli*- rcr.m*r made n flying leap to the Calumet from the \u25a0 Macklnac a el-ren f.-<-t i.w.'.> and ».!iri down ih<- :' toSder held by the ••«*!• Neck v- pln theley ' \u25a0»-.'•.-' be jiaFju-U •\u25a0 rope around Muerk « body, and 7, Va- hauled aboard. •••\u25a0 being attended by ; Dr. _lIIT— . of the Mar.:. Hospital, he -'• sent I to hi> honw. Still the Sales Increase The Daily Tribune made a net gain in sales during March, 1904, of COURTS ADJOURN; JUDGES WITNESSES. [bt BSjaasP Ito mr nxSCaw»] » Chicago. A;r;i !4 -A'.l the Judpe? ° the Cook County Superior nn<S Circuits courr» adjourned * their court* ks-d to an;»car in Justice rtraaws court a.« witnopse». All. twenty in nunlitr, had been rummomd a>- character witnesses ssr Harry o PtilUliMi. m. hf set. wl.o was to be triad on the < hursre of filing a bog bond. The ca»e was con- - tl'r.-ed to next week, arid the jurist.-, hSRSSI away " to their chamber* much relieved. Special Session of Grand Jury to Examine Tucker Probable. Boston. April I*— Chtßt Bhaw of the MaFsachu- BBttS Btata police said das that he felt more confident than ever that the authorities were work- Ing i!i the right direction when they had arrested Charles I* Tucker on the charge of murdering Miss Mabel rage at West on. The State police have practically ceased work upon the case at Weston. the case, so far as their efforts are concerned, hav- ing been completed. Counsel for Tucker announce*! to-day their de- cision to apply to the courts for an order com- pelling the government to grant certain privileges. A request that a chemist for Bat defence be per- ir.ltt.d to work with Professor Wood, the govern- ment's expert. In examining the stomach of the murdered woman and alleged stains on a knife and on Tackar*a ciuthinjj. it Is claimed, has been re- fused by Attorney tjcneral Parker, who also baa declined to permit Tucker* counsel to examine the Page \u25a0me. CJenera.l Parker stated to-day that he was seri- ously considering the calling, early next week, of a special aeseton of the Middlesex County Grand Jury in connection with Tucker's ca«e. Such action would be taken, he raid, chiefly In order to bring before the cAuid Jury thi» evidence while it is new. and while the various Incidents are fr-sh and dear 111 the mind* of «uch witnesses as the Dis- trict Attorney may call. I'nder the regular course of procedure the case might not reach the grand Jury before June. WORKING ON PAGE CASE. Refused to Indorse Lindsley for Deputy Po- lice Commissionership. Deputy Police Commissioner LJndsley was ap- pcir.t.a by Commissioner McA«loo despite the objec- tion of John J. Scannell. Mr. Undsley's district leader. Mr. LaaaSßß** was a e-andldatn for another e>fflc« in January and ask*d Ex-Commlssloner Scan- rell to indorse him. Mr. Scannell said he did not know him, and knew of nothing that Mr. Lindsley had doro in the district that had benefited Tam- many. Mr. UadStey was not appointed. Later hie friends urge/l him for the deputy rommlssloiurshlp, and although Mr. Seann«-ll would not indorse him. Commissioner McAdoo appointed him. The ap- Vointment has created bad feeling in Scannelra dlatttet. SCANNELL OBJECTED IN VAIN. Mr. Lindsley Fines Two Who, He Thought, Were Lying. Harris Lindsley; the new Third Deputy r<Mi<-e Commissioner, conducted police trlait at No. SOO Mr'. l.«rr\-M.l .«rr\-M. yesterday for the first tim«. Thirty- ight patrolmen wr* before him on charges. Sev- eral of the men who mads their excuses first got off with reprimands, ani the I thers seemed to R'"t the Impression that :t was B>s to be easy to "lie out of a eotaptaSnt.*' Twn pettooßaag in saeoaaataß declared that they had gene off their posts into liquor store*, not to (ret drinks, but to !«• il tioke.s for the right r.efit. Mr. J,!r.d.«ley !«oked tead- lly Into their eyes until they ntnrhed, and said: •'I Boß*t bsßosej your story; five days' fine." < M patrximaii. who had been .aught by a roundsman drinking In the hallway of a taloon. de- clared th.it. he was trying to Ret evidence against a room there, and said he had bet $5 on a horse with the bartender. "Aro you expecting any disbursement for th« money jou wagered?" asked the trial commls- "No ft." replied the ratrolmnn. "Did you n^ake memorandum of the money you spentr CouasrJ \u25a0ugg*atefl that the patrolman had been tacky in tba wager, and was "in" Instead of "out." •\u25a0This uimttea n timsUoii I wart to look up." said Mr Uadsley, res»rvin(t doetaioa. He showed he was not up in police "Hg when a policeman who was ..rg.-d with failure to appear tor !> .u.ir.'r l::?i.eMion said he "pleaded | illty to "What suit? A efvU jruitT 1 e«ke<l the trial com- onaaVanar. , .. •There was a titter Jn the courtroom, and th» . an explained that the Fult was "a Mouse and a pair of pants." COULDN'T FOOL NEW DEPUTY. Official Programme for the Year Announced —M Music. Qcmmb Oreve, N. J.. Arril m iSpv.-inn—Ooean Qrove'S snVtai ri aune for the summer of 1904 has Ju^t be. n COCBpIOtcd by P«Skl r.t Bishop lames N. ntaQerald, \'ire president Aaron E. Banard nr.i atoslral Director Tan i>. n aforgan. A feat- tre of the new rrofrramn:« Is the prominence even to anaocal evects. These bsesaas "Wdlk and Talk" concert*, tl Batata of "The Ross ttalden." and ttsrtso of "Stabfit M-tt' r ' "Fall of Babylon," "Kliiah." •"IIo:y City." . atlon' and •M- SS iah." TJu-so oratorios will be nu<tr»J by the Ocean Festival Chens, assist, d by m \u25a0:- 1< srgaal- ;:.ii. ..t;s tPBB N. a-.Tork and rhiladelphia. The Fcatlva] Orchestra will consist of sixty-five c*> lycra, «n;.l those will a!.<o tafes i>art in the H::n.la: r* rvlres in the Auditorium. The Chll- .-\u25a0. -\u25a0 . - Chores will, as usual, be composed of one md rolcea. The Boys 1 Etoosh EUdor Brlsada, the aflkado M..:n!.-.!".r. < - .^!' ><t fifty uiumhsrs. and the Etoyal Qyi ry Chorus of or.c hundred votoes win ai-y'st the children in thrir imitfrl festival. Th^ young people"* meetirps Win be held daily in tha Tesapfc) at :• »\u25a0. m.. under the hadnshlp of the Ret Charles H. ratssac At this service the Mima U aa and Goorc'.a I.irk will bo the cornet Its hT.'l Kay ntsGerald. the son of Ulshop FttaOeraU w .:: ba tha soaatst The holiness i:i thS Taberna ie. at the same boar, will i..- In Charge Of the devotional committee of the i"am;> ItecUßC fttTr 4 ***" 1 T'ne Boaday sftemooa BUao Class win be in rharpe of the Rev. I >-. 1.. H. Hta I :'. of rillllßllluail Venn. Joseph A. Hudaon, of PMtedelpras, will have charge of th# Interme- diate department of the summer Sunday school. \u25a0ad Mi^. mmaa EL Bktrm. of Trenton, will act U5 laaaar of the primary departmf-ut. AU lbs musical events \u25a0» . : be la charge of Tall r.s. n Morean. I f NeW-Tork City. Th» ureat camp me.tlr.p will begin Saturday. Aup'ist St. Bad con- tinue dally until Mondity, AUCUSt -.'. The •'.-amp" win l>» in charge of Etbraop FltsO«rald, who Will be assisted by noted evaageUsts aad preachers of world-wi.le reputation While this crest r< lijrlous fe;<st is in Bcagreas lea aarvtcsa win be held dally. OCEAX CiROIE SERVICES. II mows plainly thru tho brick pillar under the Dlumn wall tampered with. They wanted to lower the flf-FKlng on the area around the corner ,).>\u25a0•' nix Inches nn »<s to put down mosaic «'\u25a0'• concretp. It was found that the eJectrtc light wires and qa* pipes were directly aaderaeaO the side- •ralk. AV'-r.i was seat to these Pfoplt to lower then, and they knocked asaJast the brWi i>) »r and tampered with it. Tfce naa who was fettled jii-o t..• .;.•.•.: arltli '.t. In worktas in the baseneat^ found that ih.r- waa eery little nortar be- !«,,:: the bricks sa the upper Boors. The bu«l<xin« \u25a0raa «o <•).! that the Dtortar had crumbled away. The oraO crambh d ar.d the brick pillar. having been tampered with, k-iv^ »ny. and th«. structure then collapsed. Three Men Rcarrcstcd. Charged with Homicide in Building Case. While p.-.-mhir.s the rtdns of thf> partially col- ! bttfldtac at No. Bi .... on WtidlMa d::v :iip':t. swaajueu Bsand the body of s a»aa tn the . Mar the foaadatloß walls. Lotrr it was .1 M !!:,; of Alfred Hind. \u25a0BppooedlT of •\.^ B '• km. The man bad evidently b*en work- .. ... whm the ceOaaas taefc place. This n.iK-« the I:-' 'Be <l'-. - id und ?ix lnjure.l. . Fonowtat the SadbUt of Hind's boay. thrr.^ K'n \u25a0nested oa W«doeadajr tor rlaalnal negligence i-.i coaaortlea wi:h B :t(r;iiiot:«i on the b-.ii!dine. and w!.o lUIISSIIIWIIIIj were r-1> a.«e,l on H.M ball each, wrre r.-arr« Bted ar.l UTahtßOfl SB \u25a0 homicide terge. ;\u25a0'.\u25a0 v n<-r. r< D BlkaM to »be CUStOfly or the coroivr. •n esnes are I< I n Yoraaa, of No. *3 We«t Twenty* atetb-SL. « pautiactor; faeob Froehiirh. of No. M Oak fmsoje, PlOualfU. SaM to- have been In . .> af the work for Derteth & <>.. and John rc:r. of N<>. :S6 K.i>- < >i.. : sadred-and-etztl a roretaan. Oeroaer Beaotar beU rroehllch in ILM t.aii Parr hi tM ban. a-ui parelet Jordan. The Inquest will b*> BOM on Ai>ril \u25a0 Spraktas r ' '•'•' !• vcftijratiou made yesterday the nurHßTf Faid: FIND BODY IX RriXS. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 LYNN COUNCIL HOLDS DANCE. The I,ynn Council of the National Provident Union held aa entertainment ar.d dance at Harlem Casino sat evening The council takes It* name in.m Its for- ' mer rre*ldetit. Preston V. L>-nn. locjil manager for John Wanamakei. Jn th- ere r.ing a va^gjevUW^ayr- "~~ lormance w.u. (.•:•\u25a0' .+ National Provident C BaOl •a an American beneflclal »ocict order, with a \u0084...,...„\u25a0 of SBOOt seventy thousand, \u25a0Hill among nearly one thousand «üb-coui:cil* You can absolutely roly upon **" ' The natural laxative QQQ Et Stiff water (or m 7a km half m glaum on jtr'*lnq. ARRIVALS OF BUYERS. it. M Illtby \u25a0 CO., Man, Masi i H. It. Blxby. car- n«is Wemtnilnater. I). W. Honne. Newman. <in : I> W. Iloon«. dryetvxls an<l notions. Broadway Central. Ho»ton Store. ManlHtce. Midi . : H. McK*>nile. ilryroo/ls, notions an.l furnlnhlntr «<x><ls. Westminster 11 <*hoate tc Co., Wlnona. Minn.; 11. Choate. carpets. lMckinnon * Co.. PprlnßfleM. Mass.; M. Klnr. house furrUdhlni? (ronil», Albert. \u25a0 Dtres J'omtroy & Stewart. Reactnc: B. D. riousher, cloak«. - «utt*. ••«., NO, 2 Wblk.t at William Kll-n» - s Sons Company, Boston; T. P. May»r, irrappvrs \'lrti>r: i Jacob Epstein. Ilaltlniore; ijr>7!oo<ls, tic. . anj H. Kauf- man rtrjrgocKls, Huflnmn. M Ettllr.Ker. rrovlJence; clothing, furnishing goo-ls. ftc. York. <Jnml.l<-I»emnon.i Comiiany. New -Haven; Mr. litiainonil, NOt BM Broadway. U. Griff A Dm., Baltimore; S. Orlcf, woollen r>l«^o goods. Herald Square Halle. S<hwarz & Stall. Cleveland; W. K. Halls, hosiery, (clo%«-s. underwear, etc., N.>. 107 FVaiiklln-jt., Uelvedere. HnuKhton A Dutton. Bostoa; .T. J. Curry, house fur- niahln«c «\u25a0»>\u25a0!». Wolcott. C I. Hoyt Com;>uny. SprlnjtfteM, Mad.; C. L. lloyt. clothing, cloaks, etc.. Navarre. \V. I^iurle Coiinniny. InHanarollw; A. Taylor, white goojii. linens, etc., Cadillac. I>»vy Brother*. Houston. Tex ; H. Levy. ilr>(fi~ir;s. no- tions "an.l furninhlnif kcmkl*. No tM) Franklin-St., Hoffman. I.lli{ilncott. Johnson * Co.. i*hllndeli>hfa; A. F. Uppln- cott. woollen. (Irand. Mannhrlmcr Hn.thers. St. Paul, Minn.; H. H. linn- rhegter, cloaks, eullt and w.»lßtn. No. 4r.d Broaxlwity. York. Murphy * Robinson. Knoxvtlle, Term ; \u25a0;-\u25a0-«:. \u25a0. W. Murphy. millinery. Hoffman Newman * Uevlnson. San Francisco; R. Newman, upholstery roodii. No. <S2l Broadway, Earltngton. l)(flrsby-I)e Witt Company. I.ynrhburg. Va. ; R. S. O«le»hy. furnlahlttK goods, No. ISit Church-«t . Navarre. Rhelnsteln L»ry Ooo<l» Company, Wilmington. N. C. ; F. Blutnenthal. drygoods. notions, cloaks and furnish- ing good*. Ho. 86 Franklin-st. H. Roth«chlld. Chicago; -lothlng and furntahlng gooda. York. Schun«-man & Evan". St. Paul. Minn.: A. Murdock. cloaks, suits, waist* and furs. SpaMlnr. Scruggs. Vandervoort * Barney Dry Gooda Company, Ft Louis; C. A. Moe. men'a furnishing goods. No. 874 Broadway. Navarre. Slhley. Lindsay * Curr Company, Rochester; J. Cook. 11n*-np. flannels and blankets. No. 464 Uroome-at . Ca- dillac. Smith. Neal ft Co.. Knoxvllle, Term. ; F. R. NeaU woollens, piece roods, Rt. Denis. William Taylor. Son * Co., Cleveland. Ohio: W. N. Guthrie, white goods and linens. No. SI Leonard-st. Waldorf Manufacturing Co.. Syracuse. N. T. ; R. Rouz, cotton piece goods. No. 61 Leonard-it-, Herald Square. Welnberg Cloak Company. Baltimore: S. Weln»>erg, woollen piece goods; I. Welnberg, woollen*. Marl- borough. W. M. Whitney * Co., Albany: J. P. Reed, house furnishing goods. No. 335 Broadway. Navarre. Williams & McAnulty, Scranton, Perm ;R. J. Will- lam", carpets. St. D*nii«. Woodward * Lothrop. Washington: J. O. Moque, carpets and rags. No. 418 Broadway. Herald Square. Ithelnsteln Dry Ooods Co., Wilmington. N. C. : F. Itlum- i tlil«-l. Jewelry, No. •« Franklin st M. EttllnKer, Providence; hats. York 11. R. .Sachs, Baltimore; boots and shoes. Eirllng- ton. The particular Je*n Rlehepta play, which Otis Skinner Is to produce for the first time In this country next month has finally been revealed. As some Of the shrewd ones have gnesood, It Is "l.« Cbemloeau." The play will have for Its English title .'The Harvester." The first presentation of •"The Harvester" will be nt the Davidson Theatre Milwaukee, on May . r ., and after a brief tour of the West Mr. Skinner will conclude this years work an.; sail at once with his wife and daughter for a long summer's rest in the Bavarian Tyrol. Ho will begin next season early In October, either at the Grand Opera House. Chicago, or_ at the Lyric. Theafre. in New-York, with The Har- estrr." I^nst night two of the mest Interested spectators of The Secret Of reltrhlaelle ** at the Garden Theatre, were Alphonse and (labrlel Chanteau, the twin-brother artists from Paris Seated prom- inently In ana of the boxes, the French twins, by their distinctively foreign appearance and extraor- dinary resemblance to each other, shared with the actors the attention of the audience. Although understanding but little English, th-> Chantenu brothers appeared to take great interest In the iday due In part to th" net that the French n. ;..r Huguenot, who created In Parts the part of Juvenel miccessfully portrayed here hv W. H. Thompson is their personal friend, and they we *-. therefore eager to see his American successor. Between the nets the artists visited Mr. Thomp- ron In his dressing room and obtained his consent to Fit for a portrait which the Messrs. Chanteaq Intend presenting to M. Huguenot on their return to Paris next summer. Boom eight hundred clergyman of various de- n'rmnatlon* witnessed a special p«rformar.c-> of •Tho Shepherd King," at the Knickerbocker Theatre ye?it»rday. "A Venetian Romance,' a new musical comedy, is to come Into th« Knickerbocker on May 2. .Miss Carlotta KlUsoa appeared at Wallack's Theatre yesterday afternoon for a single perform- ance In it new four act play by Horace B. Fry, of this city, and her work was watched by a largo audience or fellow players, managers, playwrights, authors and many of the familiar Broadway figures who are neither actors nor managers nor authors, but who have ttmbitions that way. Once hi th« first i:.-( and ones in the last ad Miss Kinsoa seised a Hitting opportunity to create the semblance of nfo and passion, and played with poignant snd thrilling akin. For the rest of the play she railed because the play Called. That is the whole story. It Is indeed herd to understand why Mr. Fry. who could write "Little Italy" for Mrs. Flske, COUld so signally fall In 'Loves PUgi image." even if th« former play was but a single act in length, the more us the Btory of "l.ove^s Pilgrimage" has alemcnU of an Interesting. If' conventional, drama. Th..' ;v rformance reatsrday was marked ay careless Stage management, by a painfully slow tempo, by Inadequate settings and a poor cast; but even with due allowance tec these things, it Is a failure as a- play, colorless in characterisation, limping in con- struction, seldom inter-sting at dialogue and with- out the mystic powsr If It Is mystic— holding the attention. a power which even commendable plays, like commendable actors, often lack. In such .1 pluy Miss NUtoon had little chance tO \u25a0BOW Whether she has the ability to assume a Char« acter and carry It through to the end with force and conviction. "Moments." as the actors say, were all that she could lay hold on. one of these momenta came hi the first act. when, after seeming the k< \< to the prison which would open her lover's u.,iv ta liberty, »h- clung sobbing to his breast. crying thai she could not let him g->. Her other "moment" enm* ta the l.i*t a<t, when, after fol- lowing ;.,.- l,, V to America and searehtnu for him in vain rot five years, at ln«t she stood, quite Suddenly and unexpectedly, before htm. face to face, and the Joy which sometimes kills surged ov.-r her Maw Ethel Barrymore. who 'hang _«ver Urn rail or aa upl>er box In her enthusiastic fashion. «lv v. way at thi» point and sobbed, and she was Sm Of many. In both these scenes Miss Mllson siiKgente.l th- manner of Mr^-. Flake, with whom has playe.J. and achieved something of Mrs, Flske-a ix.lgnant eff.-,-t on r.er audience, as well. But two surely do not make a play, and perhaps It would DS not rerwlse to assert that they mak« a player. Miss Nillson Appears in "Love's Pilgrim- age." NOTES OF THE STAGE. Coroner Will Investigate Case of Person Thought Suffering from Rheumatism. A rumor wont aiound yesterday that hypnotic Influence caused the death last Sunday of Abraham A. Whitney, seventy-four yean old. of No. 727 Monroe-st., Brooklyn. As a result, Coroner Will- iams will conduct an inquiry on Saturday. According te the story of Herbert Whitney, son of the dead man. his friths died suddenly from rhf.i- matlsm. Dr. Wuest the coroners physician, who Investigated the c;.se. made out a certificate of death from endocarditis A relative Btarted the story of hypnotic Influence, lie s;iid it was due to t!-,i<= ' t h^t Whitney went to Brooklyn from Man- hattan. SAYS HYPNOTISM CAUSED DEATH. Hope to Stop Suction To-day Air Still Pumped to Hoar. Boonton, N. J . April14.—Though William Hear, the Imprisoned diver, has now hsea under the water atxty-sevea hours ana the engineers have not the slightest bops that he is still aliv*, the work of pumping air down to hint h;.s not ceased for a moment. Six mei< are working by relays at th 3 pump and "ill continue to do so as long as Hoar's body is feat The dhrers are no loner trying to release t!io ban that is holding Hoar in the pipe, as it has been found that no effort will avail In this tii- rcctloa m long an the powerful suction of the escaping water Is continued. J< hn ni< •. a <ilver deceadad the flume to-day and has been working on the valve that hi.s caused the trouble. He worked more than six hours to-day and wad com- pletely exha&StOd. it hi hoped that by noon to- morrow th*> valve will be repaired ami the water controlled so that the Kill can be removed. Meanwhile th" engineers an working on another scheme They beiievi that by Inserting a large bose near the ball and running it >\er the dam and down to a point below the entering end. thus forming a syphon, the* can relieve the pressure enough to move the bull without waiting to BMSS the repairs. So Counterfeiter Now on Trial Wrote to Secretary Shaw. Boston. April li.—At the trial of John Davis, Moses Novak find Jopeph Baumenblltt on the charge of counterfeiting, in the rnlted States Circuit Court, to-day, a letter which Dayls wrote while in jail to Secretary Shaw, of the Treasury Depart- ment, In which he suggested a plan for preventing counterfeiting, was introduced by the government. The letter explained a new mechanical Invention which would Improve the government process so as to make it prnctically impossible for any per- sea saceessfaUy to oouaterfsM paper currency. United States Inspector John K. Murphy called on Davis later, but the latter refused to explain the proc-ssi. The counterfeiting with which the de- fendants are .Miarg.d wms carried on at Revere. Show for St. Louis. Expected to Cost $2C0,- 000, Has Reached Nearly $1,000,000. St. Louis, April14—Colonel C. R. Edwards, chief Of the Insular Bureau at Washington, who wan called here by Dr. W. H. Wilson, chairman of the Philippine World's Fair Board, to investi- gate the charge* made by the railroads for the transportation of. exhibits and material to St. Louis, h.is departed for Washington. Colonel Ed- wards stated that the matter was In a fair way of amicable settlement. It is said that the cost of the Philippine partici- pation has surpassed all expectations. What, as originally planned, was to cost $a.") 0,000. already has approached the million mark, and the. total ap- propriation up to the present Is only J7o0.0»l. It U paid that tStjOol will have to be raised before the fair opens, and that It will require $600,000 to carry on the Philippine exhibition, including: all salaries, and at the close of the fair transport the natives back to the Islands. COULD PREVENT COUNTERFEITING. PHILIPPINE EXHIBIT COMES HIGH. The bill provider that th^ MkfWhai articles, when Imported into the I'nltcd States, shall l»i free of duty, and shall be added to the "froe list": Paintliißs in oil <>r water color. i>tatuar>'. sculpt- ure, drawings, <-ngr.ivln/s-s ami etchings; provided, however, that suih articles to become entitled to entry free of duty have lieeri manufactured or produced more than fifty years before the date of importation. These exemptions, however, are to b«i \u25a0übject to Fuch reasonable r«-sr'ilßtion» as to proofs of antiquity as th« Secretary of the Treasury may prescribe. Mr Ileckwlth wnld ye-.trr.lny. In a talk with a Tribune reporter, that the letter received from tiio Prealaeafa secretary more than a month ago say- Ing the President would confer with Congressman levering bad awakeaed hopes In th* hearts of mar.y at th<> aftMa thai Hum* pressure n-'f.:ht be brought to briny the. bill Into publicity. Hut. as they hud heard nothing, they were much nfrai<l that th« fear of arousing other tariff Issues had delayed the President and Congressman Loverlng from taking any utrp. Mr. Be< kwith said tho removal of the duty on works of nrt bad been so much discussed and had such BnfPanal approval of th« public and the preys, and even among members of Congress, that artists Ftrongly felt it deserved FpeclrU action. No doubt this summer many magnlncent mostiT- ploces would be purchased abroad by aaierlf n travellers and lir«tn<tit borne to enrich our private collections and public galleries if this obnoxious tariff law could bo repealed. The artists earnestly hoped The Tribune would exercise its Influence In j>olnting out to the Biauathre and others In power the needless fear, which was apparent; that it was entirely an educational itttme, and removed from \u25a011 elements of commercialism, and In no way set a precedent for duties on manufactured and raw materia!. Artists Here Expect Him to Act on Tariff on Pictures. S-.me action by President Roaseveti regarding a repeal of th " tarifT on ••«*\u25a0 of nrt Is c<»i;\lently expveted by lii.my artlsta of this city, uml 1h awaited with the mm \u25a0' Interest. After Mrs. John 1* .;.inli.-r. of Boston, had be^n obliged to pay OW.I duty on bar ptcturea It was reported that Republican meml-rs of the New- Knglan J < "ongr'-ss delegation would n«k for a re- jK-;,i of the tariff on painting* »nd statuary. A bill, however, had already been Introduced nt th« last ConwHS , \u25a0.• CoagreMßSaa LovetißK of Massa- chusetts, at the re.iv.-st of th« Fine Arts Federa- tion nr.d the National Frr* Art Leng'ie. bat th» artist* and members of the»« organliatlons were powerless to eel the bill advanc. d. It was accord- ingly asdasd to appeal Ate* tly to PreaMeat Room velt. to enlist his Interest la t;.<> noVSttteut to hrtae, about the removal of th« tariff on works of art. With this object in view, I. I .irr. U Pet a With. ninlfleat of the National Frew Art I<eag\i«, and chairman of the committee "i tii^ Fma Arts Fed- \u2666 ration which drafted th*> bill to put w.-.rk« of art on th« free list. wrote to th«- PreaMeat. Mr Beck- with received n. reply from the Preetdeafa secre- tary «ayitig that thn President WOUld see Con- gressman lIHSIIBB and would see what could be done.. WAIT FOR PRESIDENT. All but Ttco Locals Against the Agreement with Employer*. The New-York locals of the Lithographers' Int<r- nattenal Protective nn.l PeaeHclal Association, with the exception of two, have rejected iii« asreeßient \u25ba ipurd on th«ir behalf by the representatives of the aoooctatkia nfter a week*« conference with the em- ptoyera, Voting on the quest ton of ratifying the npreem.-nt. mbitsh oras n roaiprOßihw between the arbitration agreement proposed by the employer! ami UW one. pmpoSQli by Urn |S|WOSUHIS»»OS of ttia Onion. w;is p. -lnjj an for the lust two nights In •• i - eral halls, and was completed hist nljtht. , The unions which voted by a majority to ratify the Hgre.nifnt were those of the leedeti and of the arttsta aad «ie-i>;iier^. The total vote tif bII the locals was M for and v "4 ngnlnst ratification. The unions roted m follows: Subordinate Lodge Xo. I (|ll I MUM I). 11l for r.itl::calimi. .'.27 against; ston^ grinder*. *> i" ri r. ij against; ders, 111 "or, n against; artists and deanroera. IX for. H against; paper cutters, i for. US ai.-.iin>»t Tim irii.. ipal stumbling block in tim way of raii- Rcatlon was that the apprentice elans* was anaatl»- fa> tory to th» Batons sad that th.> ssreament did not i«rovldf for the dioeharso of the men who worked through the strike. As the strlkors wit* BOt to return to work Dendlnc ratification the situa- Uoa la now the Mm.- a." before the. conference bo far as this c);y is •\u25a0onc-rtuHl. The wind was from the northwest and drove the flames south along the boardwalk. This is Hi" newer part of the beaea and most of the large buildings are on the south side of the main entrance and were not touched by the fire. "Beit** Day quickly marshalled hie volunteer Bremen and In half an hour a lar^e chemical engine and .v smaller one and \u25a0 hand pumping <>iKine were at work. For half an hour the chemical enstnes did splendid work In checking the 11 Mines, but then the chemicals gave out and the ens:in«'s wen abandoned. A bucket brigade was then formed. The tide was out and the men formed I long line out over the muddy flats and passed the water In. LITHOGRAPHERS REJECT. The Ore broke out In a storeroom on tho around Boor of the scenic railway, to red with palnta and oil. Bpotttaaeeni combustion is pup- poaed to have caused the fire. About one hun- dred f<\u25a0*•[ of the railway was destroyed, but thf cars \\«r? saved. Scenic TtaUxcay and Eight Other Buildings Destroyed. Fire swept along throe hundred and fifty feet of the boardwalk at the south end of Dugca Beach. Jn linjlng tfa« scenic railway and eight •Cher l.uildlnps. In addition to the walk and the bulkhead, yesterday afternoon. To the volun- teer fire department under the command of Her- bert I>.v. sometimes known as the "Mayor of Bergen Beach." belongs the credit of amvtnc the entire aoutli end of the beach. Two engines from the thy department, trhtcfa had to be <lr.iKpr-d by trolley cars through the Bind for the last quart, of a mile, did not reach the scene for Dearly an hour, and It was half an hour later before they were able to set to work. The lops i<> the Thompson Scenic Railway Company will be between 18.000 and $lO.<K>O. Th« dam- n*e to tho boardwalk and bulkhead and th" i<>?s on the other buildings will be about fl&OOO. It will fall on the Ji»r«en Beach Amusement Com- pany. FIRE AT BERGEN BEACH. over March, 1903. DIVER WORKS ON GATE NEW- YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. FRIDAY. APRIL .15. 1004. SHOOTS BABY BROTHER. 0 WRIT SERVED ON GAYN'OR. He Mm* Skm < m Wk§ He Should \'t Sign Cane. Supremo court .Justin Wiiiiam IOMW »' :i h:-.« t.-, ;.-.•, -p.r baton thn aaaHla*a nvtatoa or th« a»l U - \u25a0i q \u25a0 Brool Punwgli Hatt at : o-io-v Ba« atari i I v " ' y :1 *" rlt rru-jidamus s!.oi:!d not te'ie to mm;-el him to dgn n rjw ta :\u25a0:•;\u25a0• laatleo Qayoor. wfcaa .--..! ti-.m. tl •• \u25a0 v. ..s ;•• ttaj : hou-e ye::t<rrtay m-ir:-.ltiK. v.a^ «=onr-whal taken •aw*, art !• ats9ol the paper b to pocket and w< ti' uii'Tt. ih* brr.cSi. T!.<- arter \u25a0«\u25a0 ributart br f-x-t \u25a0..r.rr*>--m :.t. rbotar* F Macr.er. from ••• \;.|^llnte I>' Ay Drool \u25a0 : taam««« ,-, , n ., ; . : ,y. Boa af ;«\u25a0: i>;'i bbl la \u25a0 DMtt I>:,^ 1\u25a0 \u25a0 tn. I v:.,:. J'--::- I \u25a0:> Jt ;., r(1 , •.., j. , paal \u25a0aa i- board by \u0084 . . | Til." rtw .- \u25a0 \u25a0 ' ' \u25a0 ' ataooxrajihorE- minute?. m«s» »«• filmed JMtfc* Mr. :i:ign^r » dbh v.a- aaoaad lo laaoea .\u25a0. \u25a0 rtea 1' :\u25a0"''\u25a0>• M *;' s I oat prtßtat aoeorilai I i ->' ; ar%at Imir IlHtcaaa. bavtag beea ptaco« \u25a0 ,;.m« up fo: anfuwent !a!«; M"n- nut"Wt. rtvrf wiih Urn prtated caao oa "*P«»- fuL.il i. t i •'•\u25a0 t\-p*wrltt«i cat*. «.u u"t 1 \u25a0 Sl™^S I ™^ . dtb« siT««a«it <n tho h;-; «-ii< » i^s a4joaaa4L MAX SWALLOWS TOBACCO. X*DOKALD GETS THE $200,000. Arrested m Intoxicated, He Searhj Dies -Still Comatose. The uttii \u25a0' Ifcs Oa*-«t. Ration sad Bsrgeoa Wells, o! the Hail 111 iTt tllS»tlsl had a hard time :ost jiigv.t awris* las Mi of « \u25a0«\u25a0 v--'-"v --'-" '•\u25a0l ' l sw:i: " Jowed n.ari> h whole payer of aiMking t.lar^v H H | v maaaon. tMrty«Jgßt >•••••» r « . . : to boo leas. Da had b«-n locked up lo- being '\u25a0 Twti.:-. D \u25a0\u25a0- !:'\u25a0\u25a0' CaatSai V.*«. th. \u25a0»»\u25a0"\u25a0 et t % ;e i- ..-\u25a0 Aattoa, f^;-;j Cluamn on the floor at hia <•<\u25a0;. sufllilm •\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0«ony. He v '™ »oss(ti« about like "a chicken actta !ta bead aft" :«> ihe \u0084.„_,.- expressed it. end rosi Uuesr a|M E r ' ,",.,\u25a0• p/r.i th. man o\u25a0' rhm '• •• m*ht «« mm '.•*••\u25a0\u25a0 «lr. '' '•\u25a0• ; '\u25a0" '" ' '\u25a0'•' "'"' -:' 1 to wad lI . T £mmMMmSm •• «-hat ;'!\u25a0•''•' to \u25a0•" J-^;-. luJrecaiw •\u25a0 :'•.;• n.al - moult,. •\u25a0<: *\u25a0 by \u25a0 ••• 1;; i'" Burceon W.-li* ai fac* The Mom.i. .. («W »j \u25a0 iurte-r. and l>.H>rni*u i'osf. rind ihr.o '.'•« "orkVc. rv.r Gle«sor, foi over an hour W«h Wi , - e :ir.,-d. and then tM wn« Lalun to th" boj- jVitaa. ]!« was atlU ta a comatose condition Late Aqueduct Commission Pay* for Jerome Park Reservoir Work. 1! I Aquedu-t Coir.mlssion yesterday vot< d to pay to McDonald * ondcrJonk. contractors for the Jerome !'..rk H.servoir. £.".'>• rron> the retained jiercc:.*."!? -s under the contract on onr.'lition that the contractors use tlie money for additional plsßt er.d material! tn hasten the completion the reservoir. Mayor Mc-Olellar Bad QuainTa** «-rout Mn .-.t tt.o ructlr.p. ftM Mayor did not veto. b— m** thr Merchants Asf». lation. «t» m*.l» a long an.i hard fight a«atnst th. jwyrr.tnt of th<» mon*y to the contractors, has filei with Mm : '*" rhmrfvs since the finance committee of the Aque- duct Commission reported against the "I. !-.•\u25a0;»:•* Controller Orout voted for the nsol'itior, **£"* V. thought M would hast.-n th- work on the re**f- "''',^" TIT I .... "i,, the c«j *a« amply protected by the ',orV lmiM*. He thoucht th« contract «. a logins «'»e. nmJ »«« oppow-d to making contracts too ''.*\u25a0"••' : "-- i.t »r making bonds i>«c**slve. as the c^> alway* Rot the worst of such precautions b> Tt££»*DUfl«. MM I*the Mer- chant," SSoCUvttoa. SJS pr S t,d soa. am«i<ltnen \u25a0 to the resolution authorizing the .--, red He the ' v b U t his c UKgr.sTlor.!« writ leered. H<s had Erepared .. printed brief in o, position to the pay- DMT.;, »l.i .i waf placed on file. A M

New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1904-04-15 [p 6]and dock at tlie HarieM Kiver front more \u25a0'•"esai-ble. The f.ri^^s plan. l! was declared, r \u25a0jntnd fa| raising of the grade

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Page 1: New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1904-04-15 [p 6]and dock at tlie HarieM Kiver front more \u25a0'•"esai-ble. The f.ri^^s plan. l! was declared, r \u25a0jntnd fa| raising of the grade

WOITLD GIVE $100 TO GET ALLISON.

Mr. Train Nettled at Failure of Police to

Arrest Darlington Owner.

Tn* failure oT tre pr-Hr* tiarrejit E«*n<( A:it-

F«»i of the Allison Realty Company, who was in-

\u25a0 | about a rortalgM \u25a0•• SB account of the

t> ,king Ins? of lifedue to th«! c^lUpM*'»"» «n-

finish Hotel Parlingion. has annoyed District

A'toreev ftasßaa and Ws a«=sii«tar.ta. There havebeer, report- that Allison has been ***"In*hr_r

1"5frequently »nc* !il« indictment, hut the Dj*««^«. Bureau las made repeat. reports of failuie to

f'"l IZi \u25a0\u25a0! mi why the polio do not f.r.d

aid Sr£t nor.- Assl-tant District Attorney

TraM yerterdar. "I i~.car that he Is In 'heJ?y WA 1 k:rw that the police have failed

fto fl-ICI

v m although a general alarm for his arrest P-as

Sent out sorno time ac« I;.e^,.r.a::y WO•\u25a0 ar-

SIW out of ir.r own pocket to have This man ar-rested."

Assets in Trust Companies Attached— Aeti«Brought by Woman.

rrs Ettseae Charles, Baron •>:\u25a0 it-Roaafst ofWaaee, w<->:i aaoan bj-

tattoo la thai ftj ty'

'- fall rl ir: t):e Frer:..-"i ;;:;•••'.vritir.? cf" • :'\u25a0:•• ! S:are.* Batpaataßßl comnar.;.-. is '-\u25a0\u25a0-<\u25a0 . aliiias ;o aai!Into in ht3 native .ountry. OB De-ember Ji

HO*, it ta sail. t!ie BBTCS T.tere.l into a corrtrtctwith Maw. Rachel Ht*timi Wasass Ai r. rr.i::-.-.Marquise 'le Isioc. fjr ths porehass f-om h?r o*No. S ATSSSH *!•» Mont ilff:ie. ihs -^nsideaMsma^r-.^.l nr. bflr.g iZ»,<yK> francs. An averment wsssi&cr^i in F- • . \u25a0 • -an extension until April13of th^ tim- for err ;.!e';r.< the purchase A: thioutnet 4.J".» frank -

k to 1.ir.l th.- h.tron h:i«! ~z\: :. i:--.fe f.,r C/< \u25a0 ,'n,-s,

\u25a0

-\u25a0 .-;:-•\u25a0•. Tl-:.T1-:.- r.ote wns

not paM. ami wa • • • Jesse Myers, nf New-Torf City, who baj brousbi suit through Cassr*'\u25a0 \u25a0 V rst d H '. •\u25a0• .v.-> ;.". Broarf-.-»t.. •»-

ntof tl-

note, and has aft.i>-i"ltha baron may ;-..ive in tne Mer-

\u25a0 :'-.: '-. Trust companies.Lorenao Brorpto. of Co-jii^rt T^r.-.t^ers, who has

been the twr.m'n '»!,i! r»:ref?or.t:itive h»r». <iai(lVBSterday afternoon th.it h» ha«l on!;: •:r.oHciaiimowl«<lK> of ths sort bavina N»'n broug:;', MDi

•vice w wild probal :•.- be rr.?A^ apesCalret-RocnhU n> pabHeattea.

THE REV. DR. HENRY M. FIELD ILL..-> taxaoasm tb tss iaiatuia\]

fittaflsM, Vasaw April aY—las R?v. Dr. H«rrM. FW4 Caraaai DBsaraf Th- BKaaaailat' and a

we;; haaara nM CasaQ) '?-v-k-

bei:-.£- a !r -thfr Ot I'yriis YV..ar.il EXstM Dodlr] '.' \u25a0 it th»try pis >-. tn St.n kbriiisj.'. i[» was bora.: St rabridge, and beoane \u25a0 D kaMn as i•writerur.d traveUer.

BIG CONTRACTS FOR U. S. REALTY.The Osorgs A. Fuller Csaspaax ths batutaeds 1

rar-m.'-.-.t a4Urn Datt .-'• ,-.s Raaltj aad Caaaßna>tion Cocapaay, yeatexxlaj n . \u25a0 t.:»aasi i0 •\u25a0 !\u25a0\u25a0:.; OMd tha CM ,v v-stemRaflraad Cwmaan> in Chteaco aad tar \u25a0 ass AibaMIM r-r -T: Ball » •* Udci ."." in EafcJ-more. These contracts wj:iexceed J"J

"\u25a0

work \m> un ron ailmay be ured bj u^ine rh«» Tribune BBBSSB •«•iimoo.

Olypha.it (Perm.) Contractor Was on W«fHome from Trip for His H

w.|!

-inton.i

\u25a0

BABIHI KOGNIA7 SITED HIRE

DIES IN PULLMAN BERTH.

Want Grade Crowing Plan Orig-inally Adopted Used.

A netltlon signed br abo::t sixty taxpayers anf.residents of Morris He!sht:i has been sent to tb»Mayor and the Hoard of Estimate, Hs«liln< that theplan adopted for the overhead crosrln^ of the bbjbv

York Central tracks ;t the Morris Heights stationbe withdrawn and the plan originally approved brthe Heights Taxpayers' Association In January of1302 substituted.

The Heights Taxpayers' Association, as th« r*.«u!t of aeyeral fatal aocldenta al th» MorrisHeights station. ca!ir<l a public meetlnsc In Janu-ary. 1202. to consider abolishing the rrade '°**>sgat that point, chief Knitinccr Criggs of The Bronxsubmitted a plan for doing away with th? gradecrossiner. as dM Chief Engineer WiU";n for thaNew-York Central road. The ..ne sssnsaal byMr. Wilgus w.i^ unanimously approved, as It In-volved as eh.inge of grade, and m ide tlie statSoaand dock at tlie HarieM Kiver front more \u25a0'•"esai-ble. The f.ri^^s plan. l! was declared, r \u25a0jntnd fa|raising of the grade of Cpdar-av--.. Vhka Is «i-rea.fy curbed flaKged nnd macaJamiz 1. ar.'J hastrol'.ey tracks on it:would leave the bulMtnga h*.low grade and entail expensive claims for dam»;ei«.It wa aattasstad that the plan aasjroTsi wouldcost mcM hsBI rhan the IsriK?rM plan.

Those who oppose the lirisus pi.'in <',':<~.\^r» tactit was adopted without r.otlrlcatlon to the tax-payers directly Interested, ssass of whom. It [%alleged, had appeared before tke Hoard of ttasMsand Apportionment, and advocated the adoption ofthe plan under the supposition thr.r it was the oneappro !<>\u25a0 Ihs llei?htj Taxpayers' A.'.^octatlorthe North Bide F!. aril ..f Trafle aad o:h-r bodiei*When a • ommitt.'e from t!,-: Height-; T.ixp:iyers:Association called o.i Horough Preside:-.t HaSmtrrsardms th" plan h" sent for Mr. Hri?;j3. wlmStated thai the reason for rejectjn^ the taxpayers'plan TTi«s because th» grade was too Th»corrmittee was refrrred to Nelson I». r..-.v; chi«*er.sir.f-.- (,f th" Board of **—»—««\u2666 who ;:.formedIts m> mmv'i-rs th.it, m tho plan had been a»lnpt»t;t wooM be metes* to MtNmpr to "ri;iv-it chi-.ged.

Chaacellof SdacCrackei oi Sew-Tors r-r.-e-jitywroti a W> r of protest jg;iir:«t the Criggs aUato Mayor McCleQan. as di^l Albert C DaTta forthiNorth Si.le }:.).tr(l vt TraJ.-.

The petitior; >.-r-

lo the municipal authortt'.Mbaj among i;* signers rhsnevDor MacCracaaiEprrraim r:. Lery, owning «W feet lr 9eitgwlck-aW^M'--. Ott»tav S -hwa! . :-\u25a0: Idlng UMi: \u25a0

•j,,^ t

1

Amorr, BmilQ L'Cird. \V,l!s Sponabie. J,,h.i r.^Kar-'the R«v. Edwin A. Cnrr. the K-v. Charles l> SarDjr Haroldl Walworth Bell, K. F. BranniiV«aCharles F. K:nie. cwnlns: 1" fe«t in S-.igwlck-aV*

MORRIS HEIGHTS WROTH.

SEND PROTEST TinjWOß.

BudweisersGreatest Triumph

Declared superior to best BohemianBeers by the Experimental Stationfor the Brewing Industry ofBohemia,at Prague.Bohemian Beers

—for centuries

the acknowledged standard ofquality —have been patternedafter by brewers of allcountries.

Budweiserme rtonuct o:

Anheuser-Busch Brewing Ass'nIS BOTTLED ONLY AT THEIR HOME PLANT AT

St. Louis, U.S.A.A visit to the World's Fair City should include a trip to and through

the Anheuser-Busch Brewery. All are welcome.Order* Promptly Filled by m^mm—mmmmr

0. MEYER &CO ACKER. MERRALL&CONDIT COMPANY,PARK & TILFORD, Distributors. New York City.

'JOAN OF ARC* DISPOSSESSED.

REWARD FOR FARMER MURDERER.Norwich. Corn.. April M—Governor Chamberlain

has authorized a reward of QjM to be paid by tho

State for the capture of John Marx. tli« Colches-

ter farmer, on whose farm the (llsm.-mbere.l baty

of Joseph raiSfl. a farmhand, was found last Fri-

day. This makes the total offer for the Ilirsslng

man Jl.l'A the sum of $:•«'> ha\ iriK b- en POStld by

the town authorities M a reward. No -lew to

where Marx la has been found thus far in thesearch made for him by Sherifl Jackaon an.l hi*asststanta The BbertfTs posse i? stlU hontlna fenthe awassp n»'l woods three or four miles south ofColchester village.

The company held Its annual meetlr.g at Long

Branch last month, electing a» etrsctara, aceofdlaaj

t.i th" bill,cetoeM Ood3T, 1-ewls 11. Baker an.l JuliusKeen. la a report just tiled with too court the

directors are given as Colonel Cody. John S. 1- '.'. OiNewark, and Lucius F. Crane, of New.

hteedet pays he left the entire management of hisHt.ick to Salisbury, urn.llns him proxle? ta vet* th-->

Stock Whenever requester!. OB the fienth nf BallS-bury in 19"2. Hasdat says be applied t>> the admfn-l»trati>r to account for the dividends paid oa thestock, but was Informed thai there had b*ej nonecollec'teil Maeder declarej be waa told by Cody t K.>•

he had purchased all th« Inter. «i Salisbury sodhad entered Into an apfttiTit with Jam-? A.Bailee of the H.irnum Ac Bailey ctrcus. by whichHailey'had pot a half Interest la all the BTODSTtJ ofthe piimwinv Cody as-erte

> that the shows WOQH

be given In the future by the fins of Cody * BaDey

for their exclusive profit, .iid that ths coraenUoawould have no interest or claim on nny profits.

Stockholder, in Suit. Declares Buffalo BillHas Withheld Them.

[bt TPt.r.:!-. \rn TO Tar. rRISLXBw]

Trenton. N. J. April It—"Boflalo BUTs" WiM

Weal Company was made the dsflPdsnl t.->-*!.iy ina son in the court of Chancery, in which Frank C.Msedcr of St. Looav charges Colonel Cody, presi-

dent of the company, with betas party to a sehlto "freeze him out" of the corporation and >•\u25a0 prti •

him of his interest In more thin ttUkJKt <.f a.

lated profits, whl -h M;te»lor says the company hadon h£i. at lbs doss "i Its fltsl year <<n February

23. It is also charged that Colonel Catfy has \u25a0

fused to aDow JtssflUT to «cc the books of th-pany. and that there may be an accounting it is

asked that th(> directors be compelled la bring the

"books hits this St.it* for examination.The bill contains what purports M be the

hlstorr of the 'Buffalo BUT' company. arMea wvsorganized in 1«T :\u25a0>' Colonel t '>><!y. Nate" S:iliaaoryand MaeJfr. It says the company had a caaWaistock of |i'\ono. of watch Cody aad Badsavry »-.-\.;i

beM \u25a0 shares; Maedar, It;Melton E. MUner. la, andWilliam I>. <;uti;r!<\ ;,. Codl ii-is alwa- > been presi-dent, an.! until his death Salisbury was iks avastdent, Baaaaaai and treasures Sin.-c then. Msay.o. Oody has benr. aU three.

WANTS HIS WILD WEST PROFITS.

The litre fellow was dead Ions: before sh*; ar-rived, but she frantically rushed to a neighbor's

house a;. 1 naked her to co for a doctor. Th..-

dor-tor Biid that Johnnie had died almost In-stantly. When he get had to the office he toldthe police, and Captain Kenny went to the Weyh

house to make an investigation. Itv.ur. easy to

.«ati«fv him that the shooting had beesi entirelyaccidental. but he paid the law compelled himt<» place the unhappy slayer of his brother un-der arrest. The protests of the mother were ofno avail, and Julius was tahrn to the stationhouse, arid later to the Children's Society shel-ter.

Little Julius was playing in the Weyh apart-

ments over his mother's millinery store at the

Fulton-st. address. With him were his brotherJohn, and his siter May. Fix years old. Themother was downstairs in the store. In looking

round for new amusement the children foundthe toolchest belonging to Joseph, an older

brother. In It was a .22-calibre revolver. Usu-ally the toolchest was ker>t locked, but Joseph

left it open yesterday and the children were de-lighted at all the new toys they found there.

After playing for some tlm* with hammers andplanes and saws Julius picked up the revolver.He had never seen one before, and did net know

what it was. While he was examining theshining weapon there was a flash ar.'l a loud re-port, and Johnnie dropped to the floor. Jullunwas startled, and then delighted, because hethought he had found some new sort of fire-

works. He saw Johnnie on the floor, but. as he

said afterward, he thought his brother wasplaying. The little girl, however, saw the bloodcoinlnp from a hole over Johnnies heart, and

ran in terror to her mother.

FOUND IT IN OPEN' TOOL CHEST.Julius Wcyfa, jr., the eight-year-old son of a

carpenter, livingat No. 1.7t»4 Fulton-st.. Brook-lyn, ran across a revolver in his brother's tool

chest yesterday afternoon, and. while playing

with the atiaanyi toy (he never saw a revolverbefore), shot and killed his four-year-old brotherJohn. Much against the protest of his mother,

the boy, who was overcome with srief when he

realized what he had done, was arrested by

Captain Kenny, of the Atlnntic-ave. station, ona charge of homicide. He was placed in the

care of the children's society for the night andwill be arraigned in the Gates-aye. court thismorning.

Lad Eight Years Old Had SeverSeen Revolver Before.

Woman Who Leads in East Side Fight

Forced Out by High Kent.

Berth* X T^ib?nn. who by her efforts on beha'.f

of the East Side tenants In their campaign sgasaat

the rent raising extortions of the landlords, has

earned the *.briquet of the "Hast Bide .loan of

Arc"

was evicted from her home at No. 2«6 Second-et. >-e«t»rd«yVith her are,l father and pother andher voungcr brother. She declared that Henry

R^^?h*r landlord. had^rUsed the rent from

"\>Vnnif frorr ttiasis to c«( ••.;•• oppression, Fhepa. \u25a0 •'but we >..,v. round an even greater tyranny

bTher» were mere than mrrer.ty-flve dispossess

eale^Tn the Fourth Muni lpal «^>.urt yesterday, andione in the Fifth The bearing on the ma-

jority"waa postponed asJB assnaay

LIEUTENANT RESCUES DROWNING MAN.

Uteuiermrit Herman Kotxsrhmar. \u25a0( the revenue"

cutter Macklnac. yesterday rescued from drowning-Otto Mneck. a civilian employe at Governor's I*l-

0 at;d. Just a? the OeMßai Hancock pulled out from's t^e Battrr>- landing on her >:» a. m. trip Mu»ck.ran down the peer and Mat to lagan shasj He*

mls»e(i his footing *r.d fell to one side, hitting his

1 btafl aralr.rt the fantall e.f th- Hancock. Oscar

Pi-trrsen. a boatswain on the <"a!umet, lowered a-lander over the Bide e,f the cutter to the mar. who

mr+*xu*&to !et go of the urr.br. I'a he was still hold--Jr.r to «rra*p the la.lder. He was rapidly b«comlrig'-xhauftiV. nnd wan sltiklug when IM

•\u25a0 \u25a0 : from tli*-rcr.m*r made n flying leap to the Calumet from the\u25a0 Macklnac a el-ren f.-<-t i.w.'.> and ».!iri down ih<-:' toSder held by the ••«*!• Neck v- pln theley'

\u25a0»-.'•.-' be jiaFju-U •\u25a0 rope around Muerk « body, and7, Va- hauled aboard. •••\u25a0 being attended by;Dr. _lIIT—. of the Mar.:. Hospital, he -'• sentIto hi> honw.

Still the Sales IncreaseThe Daily Tribune made a net gainin sales during March, 1904, of

COURTS ADJOURN; JUDGES WITNESSES.[bt BSjaasP Ito mr nxSCaw»]

» Chicago. A;r;i !4-A'.l the Judpe? ° the Cook• County Superior nn<S Circuits courr» adjourned*their court* ks-d to an;»car in Justice rtraawscourt a.« witnopse». All. twenty in nunlitr, hadbeen rummomd a>- character witnesses ssr Harry

o PtilUliMi. m. hfset. wl.o was to be triad on the< hursre of filinga bog bond. The ca»e was con--tl'r.-ed to next week, arid the jurist.-, hSRSSI away"to their chamber* much relieved.

Special Session of Grand Jury to ExamineTucker Probable.

Boston. April I*—Chtßt Bhaw of the MaFsachu-BBttS Btata police said das that he felt moreconfident than ever that the authorities were work-Ing i!i the right direction when they had arrestedCharles I*Tucker on the charge of murdering MissMabel rage at West on. The State police havepractically ceased work upon the case at Weston.the case, so far as their efforts are concerned, hav-ing been completed.

Counsel for Tucker announce*! to-day their de-cision to apply to the courts for an order com-pelling the government to grant certain privileges.

A request that a chemist for Bat defence be per-ir.ltt.d to work with Professor Wood, the govern-ment's expert. In examining the stomach of themurdered woman and alleged stains on a knife andon Tackar*a ciuthinjj. it Is claimed, has been re-fused by Attorney tjcneral Parker, who also baadeclined to permit Tucker* counsel to examine thePage \u25a0me.

CJenera.l Parker stated to-day that he was seri-ously considering the calling, early next week, ofa special aeseton of the Middlesex County GrandJury in connection with Tucker's ca«e. Such actionwould be taken, he raid, chiefly In order to bringbefore the cAuid Jury thi» evidence while it isnew. and while the various Incidents are fr-sh anddear 111 the mind* of «uch witnesses as the Dis-trict Attorney may call. I'nder the regular courseof procedure the case might not reach the grandJury before June.

WORKING ON PAGE CASE.

Refused to Indorse Lindsley for Deputy Po-

lice Commissionership.

Deputy Police Commissioner LJndsley was ap-pcir.t.a by Commissioner McA«loo despite the objec-

tion of John J. Scannell. Mr. Undsley's districtleader. Mr. LaaaSßß** was a e-andldatn for another

e>fflc« in January and ask*d Ex-Commlssloner Scan-

rell to indorse him. Mr. Scannell said he did not

know him, and knew of nothing that Mr. Lindsley

had doro in the district that had benefited Tam-many. Mr. UadStey was not appointed. Later hie

friends urge/l him for the deputy rommlssloiurshlp,

and although Mr. Seann«-ll would not indorse him.Commissioner McAdoo appointed him. The ap-Vointment has created bad feeling in Scannelradlatttet.

SCANNELL OBJECTED IN VAIN.

Mr. Lindsley Fines Two Who, He Thought,Were Lying.

Harris Lindsley; the new Third Deputy r<Mi<-eCommissioner, conducted police trlait at No. SOO

Mr'.l.«rr\-M.l.«rr\-M. yesterday for the first tim«. Thirty-•ight patrolmen wr*before him on charges. Sev-eral of the men who mads their excuses first gotoff with reprimands, ani the Ithers seemed to R'"tthe Impression that :t was • B>s to be easy to "lieout of a eotaptaSnt.*' Twn pettooßaag in saeoaaataßdeclared that they had gene off their posts into

liquor store*, not to (ret drinks, but to !«• iltioke.sfor the right r.efit. Mr. J,!r.d.«ley !«oked tead-lly Into their eyes until they ntnrhed, and said:

•'I Boß*t bsßosej your story; five days' fine."< M patrximaii. who had been .aught by a

roundsman drinkingIn the hallway of a taloon. de-clared th.it. he was trying to Ret evidence againsta room there, and said he had bet $5 on a horsewith the bartender.

"Aro you expecting any disbursement for th«money jou wagered?" asked the trial commls-

"No ft." replied the ratrolmnn."Did you n^ake memorandum of the money you

spentr

CouasrJ \u25a0ugg*atefl that the patrolman had beentacky in tba wager, and was "in" Instead of "out."

•\u25a0This uimttea n timsUoii Iwart to look up." saidMr Uadsley, res»rvin(t doetaioa.

He showed he was not up in police "Hg when apoliceman who was ..rg.-d with failure to appeartor !> .u.ir.'r l::?i.eMion said he "pleaded | illtyto

"What suit? A efvU jruitT1 e«ke<l the trial com-onaaVanar. , ..

•There was a titter Jn the courtroom, and th». an explained that the Fult was "a Mouse

and a pair of pants."

COULDN'T FOOL NEW DEPUTY.

Official Programme for the Year

Announced —M Music.Qcmmb Oreve, N. J.. Arril m iSpv.-inn—Ooean

Qrove'S snVtai ri aune for the summer of 1904

has Ju^t be. n COCBpIOtcd by P«Skl r.t Bishop lames

N. ntaQerald, \'ire president Aaron E. Banardnr.i atoslral Director Tan i>.n aforgan. A feat-

tre of the new rrofrramn:« Is the prominence evento anaocal evects. These bsesaas "Wdlk and Talk"concert*, tl Batata of "The Ross ttalden." and

ttsrtso of "Stabfit M-tt' r' "Fall of Babylon,"

"Kliiah." •"IIo:y City." .atlon' and •M-SS iah."TJu-so oratorios will be nu<tr»J by the Ocean

Festival Chens, assist, d by m \u25a0:- 1< srgaal-

;:.ii...t;s tPBB N.a-.Tork and rhiladelphia. TheFcatlva] Orchestra will consist of sixty-five c*>

lycra, «n;.l those will a!.<o tafes i>art in

the H::n.la: r*rvlres in the Auditorium. The Chll-.-\u25a0.

-\u25a0 . -Chores will, as usual, be composed of one

md rolcea. The Boys 1 Etoosh EUdor Brlsada,

the aflkado M..:n!.-.!".r. < -.^!' ><t fifty uiumhsrs. and

the Etoyal Qyiry Chorus of or.c hundred votoes winai-y'st the children in thrir imitfrl festival.

Th^ young people"* meetirps Win be held daily intha Tesapfc) at :• »\u25a0. m.. under the hadnshlp of theRet Charles H. ratssac At this service theMima U aa and Goorc'.a I.irk will bo the cornet

Its hT.'l Kay ntsGerald. the son of Ulshop

FttaOeraU w .:: ba tha soaatst The holinessi:ithS Taberna ie. at the same boar, will

i..- In Charge Of the devotional committee of thei"am;> ItecUßC fttTr4***"

1 T'ne Boaday sftemooa

BUao Class win be in rharpe of the Rev. I>-. 1.. H.

Hta I :'. of rillllßllluail Venn. Joseph A. Hudaon,

of PMtedelpras, will have charge of th# Interme-diate department of the summer Sunday school.\u25a0ad Mi^. mmaa EL Bktrm. of Trenton, will act

U5 laaaar of the primary departmf-ut.

AU lbs musical events \u25a0» . :be la charge of Tallr.s. n Morean. If NeW-Tork City. Th» ureat camp

me.tlr.p willbegin Saturday. Aup'ist St. Bad con-tinue dally until Mondity, AUCUSt -.'. The •'.-amp"win l>» in charge of Etbraop FltsO«rald, who Willbe assisted by noted evaageUsts aad preachers ofworld-wi.le reputation While this crest r< lijrlousfe;<st is in Bcagreas lea aarvtcsa win be held dally.

OCEAX CiROIE SERVICES.

IImows plainly thru tho brick pillar under theDlumn wall tampered with. They wanted to

lower the flf-FKlng on the area around the corner,).>\u25a0•' nix Inches nn »<s to put down mosaic «'\u25a0'•concretp. It was found that the eJectrtc lightwiresand qa* pipes were directly aaderaeaO the side-•ralk. AV'-r.i was seat to these Pfoplt to lowerthen, and they knocked asaJast the brWi i>) »rand tampered with it. Tfce naa who was fettledjii-o t..• .;.•.•.: arltli '.t. In worktas in the baseneat^

found that ih.r- waa eery little nortar be-!«,,:: the bricks sa the upper Boors. The bu«l<xin«\u25a0raa «o <•).! that the Dtortar had crumbled away.

The oraO crambh d ar.d the brick pillar.having been

tampered with, k-iv^»ny. and th«. structure thencollapsed.

Three Men Rcarrcstcd. Charged withHomicide in Building Case.

While p.-.-mhir.s the rtdns of thf> partially col-!bttfldtac at No. Bi .... on WtidlMa

d::v :iip':t.swaajueu Bsand the body of s a»aa tn the. Mar the foaadatloß walls. Lotrr it was

.1 M !!:,; of Alfred Hind. \u25a0BppooedlT of•\.^ B '• km. The man bad evidently b*en work-. . ... whm the ceOaaas taefc place. This

n.iK-« the I:-' 'Be <l'-.-id und ?ix lnjure.l. .

Fonowtat the SadbUt of Hind's boay. thrr.^ K'n

\u25a0nested oa W«doeadajr tor rlaalnal negligence i-.i

coaaortlea wi:h B:t(r;iiiot:«i on the b-.ii!dine. andw!.o lUIISSIIIWIIIIj were r-1> a.«e,l on H.M ball each,

wrre r.-arr« Bted ar.l UTahtßOfl SB \u25a0 homicide terge.

;\u25a0'.\u25a0 v n<-r. r< D BlkaM to »be CUStOfly or the coroivr.

•n esnes are I< In Yoraaa, of No. *3 We«t Twenty*

atetb-SL. « pautiactor; faeob Froehiirh. of No. MOak fmsoje, PlOualfU. SaM to- have been In

. .> af the work for Derteth & <>.. and John

rc:r. of N<>. :S6 K.i>- <>i.. : sadred-and-etztl aroretaan. Oeroaer Beaotar beU rroehllch in ILMt.aii Parr hi tM ban. a-ui parelet Jordan. TheInquest will b*> BOM on Ai>ril \u25a0

Spraktas r''•'•' !• vcftijratiou made yesterday the

nurHßTf Faid:

FIND BODY IX RriXS.

\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 LYNN COUNCIL HOLDS DANCE.The I,ynn Council of the National Provident Union

held aa entertainment ar.d dance at Harlem Casino

sat evening The council takes It*name in.m Its for-'

mer rre*ldetit. Preston V. L>-nn. locjilmanager forJohn Wanamakei. Jn th- ere r.ing a va^gjevUW^ayr-

"~~lormance w.u. (.•:•\u25a0' .+ National Provident C BaOl•a an American beneflclal »ocict order, with a\u0084...,...„\u25a0 of SBOOt seventy thousand, \u25a0Hillamong nearly one thousand «üb-coui:cil*

You can absolutely roly upon**"'

The natural laxative QQQEtStiffwater (or m

7a km half m glaum on jtr'*lnq.

ARRIVALS OF BUYERS.it. M Illtby \u25a0 CO., Man, Masi i H. It. Blxby. car-

n«is Wemtnilnater.I). W. Honne. Newman. <in : I> W. Iloon«. dryetvxls

an<l notions. Broadway Central.Ho»ton Store. ManlHtce. Midi.: H. McK*>nile. ilryroo/ls,

notions an.l furnlnhlntr «<x><ls. Westminster11 <*hoate tc Co., Wlnona. Minn.; 11. Choate. carpets.

lMckinnon * Co.. PprlnßfleM. Mass.; M. Klnr. housefurrUdhlni? (ronil», Albert. \u25a0

Dtres J'omtroy & Stewart. Reactnc: B. D. riousher,

cloak«.-«utt*. ••«., NO, 2 Wblk.t at

William Kll-n»-s Sons Company, Boston; T. P. May»r,

irrappvrs \'lrti>r:iJacob Epstein. Ilaltlniore; ijr>7!oo<ls, tic.. anj H. Kauf-

man rtrjrgocKls, Huflnmn.M Ettllr.Ker. rrovlJence; clothing, furnishing goo-ls.

ftc. York.<Jnml.l<-I»emnon.i Comiiany. New -Haven; Mr. litiainonil,

NOt BM Broadway.U. Griff A Dm., Baltimore; S. Orlcf, woollen r>l«^o

goods. Herald SquareHalle. S<hwarz & Stall. Cleveland; W. K. Halls,

hosiery, (clo%«-s. underwear, etc., N.>. 107 FVaiiklln-jt.,Uelvedere.

HnuKhton A Dutton. Bostoa; .T. J. Curry, house fur-niahln«c «\u25a0»>\u25a0!». Wolcott.

C I. Hoyt Com;>uny. SprlnjtfteM, Mad.; C. L. lloyt.clothing, cloaks, etc.. Navarre.

\V. I^iurle Coiinniny. InHanarollw; A. Taylor, whitegoojii. linens, etc., Cadillac.

I>»vy Brother*. Houston. Tex ; H. Levy. ilr>(fi~ir;s. no-tions "an.l furninhlnif kcmkl*. No tM) Franklin-St., Hoffman.

I.lli{ilncott.Johnson*

Co.. i*hllndeli>hfa; A. F. Uppln-cott. woollen. (Irand.

Mannhrlmcr Hn.thers. St. Paul, Minn.; H. H. linn-rhegter, cloaks, eullt and w.»lßtn. No. 4r.d Broaxlwity.York.

Murphy * Robinson. Knoxvtlle, Term ; \u25a0;-\u25a0-«:. \u25a0. W.Murphy. millinery. Hoffman

Newman * Uevlnson. San Francisco; R. Newman,upholstery roodii. No. <S2l Broadway, Earltngton.

l)(flrsby-I)e Witt Company. I.ynrhburg. Va.; R. S.O«le»hy. furnlahlttK goods, No. ISit Church-«t . Navarre.

Rhelnsteln L»ry Ooo<l» Company, Wilmington. N. C.;F. Blutnenthal. drygoods. notions, cloaks and furnish-ing good*. Ho. 86 Franklin-st.

H. Roth«chlld. Chicago; -lothlng and furntahlnggooda. York.

Schun«-man & Evan". St. Paul. Minn.: A. Murdock.cloaks, suits, waist*and furs. SpaMlnr.

Scruggs. Vandervoort *Barney Dry Gooda Company,Ft Louis; C. A. Moe. men'a furnishing goods. No. 874Broadway. Navarre.

Slhley. Lindsay *Curr Company, Rochester; J. Cook.11n*-np. flannels and blankets. No. 464 Uroome-at. Ca-dillac.

Smith. Neal ft Co.. Knoxvllle, Term. ; F. R. NeaUwoollens, piece roods, Rt. Denis.

William Taylor. Son *Co., Cleveland. Ohio: W. N.Guthrie, white goods and linens. No. SI Leonard-st.

Waldorf Manufacturing Co.. Syracuse. N. T.; R.Rouz, cotton piece goods. No. 61 Leonard-it-, HeraldSquare.

Welnberg Cloak Company. Baltimore: S. Weln»>erg,woollen piece goods; I. Welnberg, woollen*. Marl-borough.

W. M. Whitney *Co., Albany: J. P. Reed, housefurnishing goods. No. 335 Broadway. Navarre.

Williams & McAnulty, Scranton, Perm ;R. J. Will-lam", carpets. St. D*nii«.

Woodward * Lothrop. Washington: J. O. Moque,carpets and rags. No. 418 Broadway. Herald Square.

Ithelnsteln Dry Ooods Co., Wilmington. N. C.:F.Itlum-itlil«-l. Jewelry, No. •« Franklin st

M. EttllnKer, Providence; hats. York11. R. .Sachs, Baltimore; boots and shoes. Eirllng-

ton.

The particular Je*n Rlehepta play, which Otis

Skinner Is to produce for the first time In thiscountry next month has finally been revealed. As

some Of the shrewd ones have gnesood, It Is "l.«Cbemloeau." The play will have for Its English

title .'The Harvester." The first presentation of

•"The Harvester" will be nt the Davidson TheatreMilwaukee, on May .r., and after a brief tour ofthe West Mr. Skinner will conclude this yearswork an.; sail at once with his wife and daughterfor a long summer's rest in the Bavarian Tyrol.Ho will begin next season early In October, eitherat the Grand Opera House. Chicago, or_at theLyric. Theafre. in New-York, with The Har-estrr."

I^nst night two of the mest Interested spectators

of The Secret Of reltrhlaelle**

at the GardenTheatre, were Alphonse and (labrlel Chanteau, the

twin-brother artists from Paris Seated prom-

inently In ana of the boxes, the French twins, by

their distinctively foreign appearance and extraor-

dinary resemblance to each other, shared with the

actors the attention of the audience. Althoughunderstanding but little English, th-> Chantenu

brothers appeared to take great interest In theiday due In part to th" net that the Frenchn. ;..r Huguenot, who created In Parts the part ofJuvenel miccessfully portrayed here hv W. H.Thompson is their personal friend, and they we *-.

therefore eager to see his American successor.Between the nets the artists visited Mr. Thomp-

ron In his dressing room and obtained his consent

to Fit for a portrait which the Messrs. Chanteaq

Intend presenting to M. Huguenot on their return

to Paris next summer.

Boom eight hundred clergyman of various de-

n'rmnatlon* witnessed a special p«rformar.c-> of•Tho Shepherd King," at the Knickerbocker

Theatre ye?it»rday. "A Venetian Romance,' a newmusical comedy, is to come Into th« Knickerbockeron May 2.

.Miss Carlotta KlUsoa appeared at Wallack's

Theatre yesterday afternoon for a single perform-

ance In it new four act play by Horace B. Fry, of

this city, and her work was watched by a largo

audience or fellow players, managers, playwrights,

authors and many of the familiar Broadway figures

who are neither actors nor managers nor authors,

but who have ttmbitions that way. Once hi th« firsti:.-( and ones in the last ad Miss Kinsoa seised aHitting opportunity to create the semblance of nfo

and passion, and played with poignant snd thrilling

akin. For the rest of the play she railed because

the play Called. That is the whole story.

It Is indeed herd to understand why Mr.Fry. whocould write "Little Italy" for Mrs. Flske, COUld sosignally fall In 'Loves PUgiimage." even if th«former play was but a single act in length, the

more us the Btory of "l.ove^s Pilgrimage" has

alemcnU of an Interesting. If'conventional, drama.

Th..' ;v rformance reatsrday was marked ay carelessStage management, by a painfully slow tempo, byInadequate settings and a poor cast; but even with

due allowance tec these things, it Is a failure as a-play, colorless in characterisation, limping in con-struction, seldom inter-sting at dialogue and with-

out the mystic powsr If It Is mystic— holding

the attention. a power which even commendableplays, like commendable actors, often lack.

In such .1 pluy Miss NUtoon had little chance tO\u25a0BOW Whether she has the ability to assume a Char«acter and carry It through to the end with forceand conviction. "Moments." as the actors say,

were all that she could lay hold on. one of thesemomenta came hi the first act. when, after seeming

the k< \< to the prison which would open her lover'su.,iv ta liberty, »h- clung sobbing to his breast.crying thai she could not let him g->. Her other

"moment" enm* ta the l.i*t a<t, when, after fol-lowing ;.,.- l,,V to America and searehtnu for himin vain rot five years, at ln«t she stood, quite

Suddenly and unexpectedly, before htm. face to

face, and the Joy which sometimes kills surged

ov.-r her Maw Ethel Barrymore. who'hang_«verUrn rail or aa upl>er box In her enthusiastic fashion.«lvv. way at thi» point and sobbed, and she wasSm Of many. In both these scenes Miss MllsonsiiKgente.l th- manner of Mr^-. Flake, with whom

has playe.J. and achieved something of Mrs, Flske-aix.lgnant eff.-,-t on r.er audience, as well. But two

surely do not make a play, and perhaps

It would DS not rerwlse to assert that they mak«

a player.

Miss Nillson Appears in "Love's Pilgrim-

age."

NOTES OF THE STAGE.

Coroner Will Investigate Case of Person

Thought Suffering from Rheumatism.A rumor wont aiound yesterday that hypnotic

Influence caused the death last Sunday of AbrahamA. Whitney, seventy-four yean old. of No. 727

Monroe-st., Brooklyn. As a result, Coroner Will-iams will conduct an inquiry on Saturday.

According te the story of Herbert Whitney, son ofthe dead man. his friths died suddenly from rhf.i-

matlsm. Dr. Wuest the coroners physician, whoInvestigated the c;.se. made out a certificate ofdeath from endocarditis A relative Btarted thestory of hypnotic Influence, lie s;iid it was due to

t!-,i<='

th^t Whitney went to Brooklyn from Man-

hattan.

SAYS HYPNOTISM CAUSED DEATH.

Hope to Stop Suction To-day—Air

StillPumped to Hoar.Boonton, N. J. April14.—Though William Hear,

the Imprisoned diver, has now hsea under the water

atxty-sevea hours ana the engineers have not theslightest bops that he is still aliv*, the work ofpumping air down to hint h;.s not ceased for amoment. Six mei< are working by relays at th3pump and "illcontinue to do so as long as Hoar'sbody is feat

The dhrers are no loner trying to release t!ioban that is holding Hoar in the pipe, as it hasbeen found that no effort will avail In this tii-

rcctloa m long an the powerful suction of theescaping water Is continued. J< hn ni< •. a <ilver

deceadad the flume to-day and has been working

on the valve that hi.s caused the trouble. He

worked more than six hours to-day and wad com-pletely exha&StOd. it hi hoped that by noon to-

morrow th*> valve will be repaired ami the watercontrolled so that the Killcan be removed.

Meanwhile th" engineers an working on anotherscheme They beiievi that by Inserting a largebose near the ball and running it >\er the damand down to a point below the entering end. thusforming a syphon, the* can relieve the pressureenough to move the bull without waiting to BMSSthe repairs.

So Counterfeiter Now on Trial Wrote to

Secretary Shaw.Boston. April li.—At the trial of John Davis,

Moses Novak find Jopeph Baumenblltt on the chargeof counterfeiting, in the rnlted States CircuitCourt, to-day, a letter which Dayls wrote while injail to Secretary Shaw, of the Treasury Depart-ment, In which he suggested a plan for preventingcounterfeiting, was introduced by the government.

The letter explained a new mechanical Inventionwhich would Improve the government process soas to make it prnctically impossible for any per-

sea saceessfaUy to oouaterfsM paper currency.United States Inspector John K. Murphy called onDavis later, but the latter refused to explain theproc-ssi. The counterfeiting with which the de-fendants are .Miarg.d wms carried on at Revere.

Show for St. Louis. Expected to Cost $2C0,-000, Has Reached Nearly $1,000,000.

St. Louis, April14—Colonel C. R. Edwards, chiefOf the Insular Bureau at Washington, who wancalled here by Dr. W. H. Wilson, chairmanof the Philippine World's Fair Board, to investi-gate the charge* made by the railroads for the

transportation of. exhibits and material to St.Louis, h.is departed for Washington. Colonel Ed-wards stated that the matter was In a fair way ofamicable settlement.It is said that the cost of the Philippine partici-

pation has surpassed all expectations. What, asoriginally planned, was to cost $a.")0,000. already hasapproached the million mark, and the. total ap-propriation up to the present Is only J7o0.0»l. ItUpaid that tStjOol willhave to be raised before thefair opens, and that It will require $600,000 to carryon the Philippine exhibition, including: all salaries,and at the close of the fair transport the nativesback to the Islands.

COULD PREVENT COUNTERFEITING.

PHILIPPINE EXHIBIT COMES HIGH.

The bill provider that th^ MkfWhai articles,when Imported into the I'nltcd States, shall l»i

free of duty, and shall be added to the "froe list":Paintliißs in oil <>r water color. i>tatuar>'. sculpt-

ure, drawings, <-ngr.ivln/s-s ami etchings; provided,however, that suih articles to become entitled toentry free of duty have lieeri manufactured orproduced more than fifty years before the date ofimportation. These exemptions, however, are to b«i\u25a0übject to Fuch reasonable r«-sr'ilßtion» as to proofsof antiquity as th« Secretary of the Treasury mayprescribe.

Mr Ileckwlth wnld ye-.trr.lny. In a talk with aTribune reporter, that the letter received from tiioPrealaeafa secretary more than a month ago say-

Ing the President would confer with Congressman

levering bad awakeaed hopes In th* hearts ofmar.y at th<> aftMa thai Hum* pressure n-'f.:ht bebrought to briny the. bill Into publicity. Hut. asthey hud heard nothing, they were much nfrai<lthat th« fear of arousing other tariff Issues haddelayed the President and Congressman Loverlngfrom taking any utrp.

Mr. Be< kwith said tho removal of the duty onworks of nrt bad been so much discussed and hadsuch BnfPanal approval of th« public and thepreys, and even among members of Congress, thatartists Ftrongly felt it deserved FpeclrU action. Nodoubt this summer many magnlncent mostiT-

ploces would be purchased abroad by aaierlf ntravellers and lir«tn<tit borne to enrich our privatecollections and public galleries if this obnoxioustariff law could bo repealed. The artists earnestlyhoped The Tribune would exercise its Influence Inj>olnting out to the Biauathre and others In power

the needless fear, which was apparent; that it wasentirely an educational itttme, and removed from

\u25a011 elements of commercialism, and In no way set

a precedent for duties on manufactured and rawmateria!.

Artists Here Expect Him to Act on Tariffon Pictures.

S-.me action by President Roaseveti regarding arepeal of th" tarifT on ••«*\u25a0 of nrt Is c<»i;\lently

expveted by lii.my artlsta of this city, uml 1h

awaited with the mm \u25a0' Interest.After Mrs. John 1* .;.inli.-r.of Boston, had be^n

obliged to pay OW.I duty on bar ptcturea It wasreported that Republican meml-rs of the New-KnglanJ <"ongr'-ss delegation would n«k for a re-jK-;,i of the tariff on painting* »nd statuary. A

bill, however, had already been Introduced nt th«

last ConwHS ,\u25a0.• CoagreMßSaa LovetißK of Massa-chusetts, at the re.iv.-st of th« Fine Arts Federa-tion nr.d the National Frr* Art Leng'ie. bat th»artist* and members of the»« organliatlons were

powerless to eel the bill advanc. d. It was accord-ingly asdasd to appeal Ate* tly to PreaMeat Roomvelt. to enlist his Interest la t;.<> noVSttteut to hrtae,

about the removal of th« tariff on works of art.

With this object in view, I. I .irr.U Pet a With.ninlfleat of the National Frew Art I<eag\i«, andchairman of the committee "i tii^ Fma Arts Fed-\u2666 ration which drafted th*> bill to put w.-.rk« of art

on th« free list. wrote to th«- PreaMeat. Mr Beck-with received n. reply from the Preetdeafa secre-tary «ayitig that thn President WOUld see Con-gressman lIHSIIBB and would see what could bedone..

WAIT FOR PRESIDENT.

All but Ttco Locals Against the

Agreement with Employer*.The New-York locals of the Lithographers' Int<r-

nattenal Protective nn.l PeaeHclal Association, withthe exception of two, have rejected iii« asreeßient\u25baipurd on th«ir behalf by the representatives of the

aoooctatkia nfter a week*« conference with the em-ptoyera, Voting on the quest ton of ratifying thenpreem.-nt. mbitsh oras n roaiprOßihw between the

arbitration agreement proposed by the employer!

ami UW one. pmpoSQli by Urn |S|WOSUHIS»»OS of ttiaOnion. w;is p. -lnjj an for the lust two nights In ••

i-

eral halls, and was completed hist nljtht. ,The unions which voted by a majority to ratify

the Hgre.nifnt were those of the leedeti and of thearttsta aad «ie-i>;iier^. The total vote tif bII the

locals was M for and v "4 ngnlnst ratification. Theunions roted m follows: Subordinate Lodge Xo. I(|llIMUM I). 11l for r.itl::calimi. .'.27 against; ston^grinder*. *> i"rir. ijagainst; • ders, 111 "or, nagainst; artists and deanroera. IX for. H against;

paper cutters, ifor. US ai.-.iin>»tTim irii..ipal stumbling block in tim way of raii-

Rcatlon was that the apprentice elans* was anaatl»-fa> tory to th» Batons sad that th.> ssreament didnot i«rovldf for the dioeharso of the men who

worked through the strike. As the strlkors wit*

BOt to return to work Dendlnc ratification the situa-Uoa la now the Mm.- a." before the. conference bo

far as this c);y is •\u25a0onc-rtuHl.

The wind was from the northwest and drovethe flames south along the boardwalk. This isHi" newer part of the beaea and most of thelarge buildings are on the south side of themain entrance and were not touched by the fire.

"Beit** Day quickly marshalled hie volunteerBremen and In half an hour a lar^e chemicalengine and .v smaller one and \u25a0 hand pumping

<>iKine were at work. For half an hour thechemical enstnes did splendid work In checkingthe 11Mines, but then the chemicals gave out andthe ens:in«'s wen abandoned. A bucket brigade

was then formed. The tide was out and themen formed Ilong line out over the muddy

flats and passed the water In.

LITHOGRAPHERS REJECT.

The Ore broke out In a storeroom on tho

around Boor of the scenic railway, tored withpalnta and oil. Bpotttaaeeni combustion is pup-poaed to have caused the fire. About one hun-

dred f< \u25a0*•[ of the railway was destroyed, but thf

cars \\«r? saved.

Scenic TtaUxcay and Eight Other

Buildings Destroyed.Fire swept along throe hundred and fifty feet

of the boardwalk at the south end of Dugca

Beach. Jn linjlngtfa« scenic railway and eight

•Cher l.uildlnps. In addition to the walk and thebulkhead, yesterday afternoon. To the volun-

teer fire department under the command of Her-

bert I>.v. sometimes known as the "Mayor ofBergen Beach." belongs the credit of amvtncthe entire aoutli end of the beach. Two engines

from the thy department, trhtcfa had to be

<lr.iKpr-d by trolley cars through the Bind for thelast quart, of a mile, did not reach the scene

for Dearly an hour, and It was half an hourlater before they were able to set to work. Thelops i<> the Thompson Scenic Railway Company

will be between 18.000 and $lO.<K>O. Th« dam-n*e to tho boardwalk and bulkhead and th" i<>?s

on the other buildings will be about fl&OOO. It

will fall on the Ji»r«en Beach Amusement Com-pany.

FIRE AT BERGEN BEACH.

over March, 1903.

DIVER WORKS ON GATENEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. FRIDAY. APRIL .15. 1004.

SHOOTS BABY BROTHER.0

WRIT SERVED ON GAYN'OR.

He Mm* Skm < m Wk§ He

Should \'t Sign Cane.

Supremo court .Justin Wiiiiam IOMW »':i

h:-.« t.-, ;.-.•,-p.r baton thn aaaHla*a nvtatoa or th«

a»lU-

\u25a0i q \u25a0 Brool Punwgli Hatt at:o-io-v Ba« atari i I v • "' y :1

*"rltrru-jidamus s!.oi:!d not te'ie to mm;-el him to

dgn n rjw ta :\u25a0:•;\u25a0• laatleo Qayoor. wfcaa.--..! ti-.m. tl•• • •

\u25a0 v. ..s • ;•• ttaj :

hou-e ye::t<rrtay m-ir:-.ltiK. v.a^ «=onr-whal taken

•aw*, art !• ats9ol the paper b to M« pocket andw< ti' uii'Tt. ih* brr.cSi.

T!.<- arter \u25a0«\u25a0 ributart br f-x-t \u25a0..r.rr*>--m :.t.

rbotar* F Macr.er. from ••• \;.|^llnte I>' •

Ay Drool \u25a0 : taam«««,-,,n.,;.:,y. Boa af ;«\u25a0: i>;'ibbl la \u25a0

DMtt I>:,^ 1\u25a0 \u25a0 tn.Iv:.,:. J'--::- I • \u25a0:>

Jt ;.,r(1 ,•.., j. • , paal \u25a0aa i- board by

\u0084 . . | Til." rtw

.-• •

\u25a0\u25a0''

\u25a0

'

ataooxrajihorE- minute?. m«s» »«• filmed

JMtfc* Mr. :i:ign^r» dbh v.a- aaoaad lo laaoea.\u25a0.

\u25a0 rtea 1' :\u25a0"''\u25a0>• M *;'sI oat prtßtat aoeorilai Ii ->';

ar%at Imir IlHtcaaa. bavtag beea ptaco«\u25a0 ,;.m« up fo: anfuwent !a!«; M"n-

nut"Wt. rtvrf wiih Urn prtated caao oa "*P«»-

fuL.il i. t i•'•\u25a0 t\-p*wrltt«i cat*. H« «.u u"t

1\u25a0

Sl™^SI™^ . dtb« siT««a«it <n thoh;-;«-ii< »i^s a4joaaa4L

MAXSWALLOWS TOBACCO.

X*DOKALD GETS THE $200,000.

Arrested m Intoxicated, He Searhj

Dies -Still Comatose.The uttii \u25a0' Ifcs Oa*-«t. Ration sad Bsrgeoa

Wells, o! the Hail111 iTt tllS»tlsl had a hard time

:ost jiigv.t awris* las Miof « \u25a0«\u25a0 v--'-"v--'-" '•\u25a0l'l•sw:i:"

Jowed n.ari> h whole payer of aiMking t.lar^v

H H| v maaaon. tMrty«Jgßt >•••••»r«. . : to boo leas. Da had b«-n locked up

lo- being '\u25a0 •

Twti.:-. D \u25a0\u25a0- !:'\u25a0\u25a0' CaatSai V.*«. th. \u25a0»»\u25a0"\u25a0

et t %;e i- ..-\u25a0 Aattoa, f^;-;j Cluamn on the floor

at hia <•<\u25a0;. sufllilm •\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0«ony. He v'™ »oss(ti«

about like "a chicken actta !ta bead aft" :«> ihe\u0084.„_,.- expressed it. end rosi Uuesr a|ME r

',",.,\u25a0• p/r.i th. man o\u25a0' rhm '• •• m*ht ««

mm '.•*••\u25a0\u25a0 «lr.''

'•\u25a0• ; '\u25a0"'" ' '\u25a0'•'

"'"'-:'1 to wadlI.T £mmMMmSm •• «-hat ;'!\u25a0•''•' to \u25a0•" J-^;-.luJrecaiw

•\u25a0 :'•.;• n.al-

moult,. •\u25a0<: *\u25a0 by \u25a0

••• 1;;i'"

Burceon W.-li* aifac* The Mom.i. .. («W »j \u25a0

iurte-r. and l>.H>rni*u i'osf. rind ihr.o '.'•«

"orkVc. rv.r Gle«sor, foi over an hour W«hWi,-

e:ir.,-d. and then tM wn« Lalun to th" boj-jVitaa. ]!« was atlU ta a comatose condition Late

Aqueduct Commission Pay* for Jerome Park

Reservoir Work.

1!IAquedu-t Coir.mlssion yesterday vot< d to pay

to McDonald* ondcrJonk. contractors for the

Jerome !'..rk H.servoir. £.".'>• rron> the retained

jiercc:.*."!?-s under the contract on onr.'lition thatthe contractors use tlie money for additional plsßt

er.d material! tn hasten the completion o« the

reservoir. Mayor Mc-Olellar Bad QuainTa** «-rout

Mn .-.t tt.o ructlr.p. ftMMayor did not veto. b—

m**thr Merchants Asf». lation. «t» m*.l» along an.i hard fight a«atnst th. jwyrr.tnt of th<»

mon*y to the contractors, has filei with Mm :'*"rhmrfvs since the finance committee of the Aque-

duct Commission reported against the "I.• !-.•\u25a0;»:•*

Controller Orout voted for the nsol'itior, **£"*V. thought M would hast.-n th- work on the re**f-"''',^"TIT I.... "i,,the c«j *a« amply

•protected by the

',orV lmiM*. He thoucht th« contract «.a

logins «'»e. nmJ »«« oppow-d to making contractstoo ''.*\u25a0"••' :"--

i.t »r making bonds i>«c**slve. as the

c^> alway* Rot the worst of such precautions b>

Tt££»*DUfl«. MMI*the Mer-chant," SSoCUvttoa. SJSprS t,d soa. am«i<ltnen \u25a0

to the resolution authorizing the .--, red Hethe„'

v bUt his cUKgr.sTlor.!« writ leered. H<s hadErepared .. printed brief in o, position to the pay-

DMT.;, »l.i .i waf placed on file.

A

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