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+ % @fagged for over a mile through the) _- 49 the office of Dr, De Foe, at Ramsey — anf a physician was summoned. She man and Mahwah Pwo marked robbers foaght a due With Charles Mann, watchman of the) Jate Theodore Mavemeye: | J, 0a Vodge near Ma! ih, N morning After shooting him down, |hey gagged} him, bound him to a tree, then broke) into the houre and leisurely ransacked it, taking two sacks full of guns and) Valuable hunting trophies ‘The place is known af Mountainside Farmhouse and was « favorite resort for the late Sugar King's friends. On leaving they forced the wounded Watohman to accompany them. woods, The robbers finally bound him ©) 10 & tree on the outskirts of the estate Of the late ex-Gov. Price, of New Jer oy. Farm hands found him after day- break almost dead from loss of blood exposure, He had lain helpless and for seven hours, ‘He was placed in a wagon and driven Story of the robbery aroused the rs, and posses were organixed ‘0 -GISSY LOFTUS FELL FROM PIER INTO SEA. ——a NORFOLK, Va.. April 20.—Cinsie Lot- tos, the actrees, who is a guest at the Chamberlin Hotel at Old Potnt, fell from the pier at Old Point into the Water last night. ‘A private of the Marine Corps saw "Miss Loftus fall, and plunged into the Water and brought her to shore. Miss Loftus was taken to the hotel was in an extremely nervous condition And Was suffering greatly from the i Tt was said at the hotel this morning ‘that she had fully recovered Miss Loftus came to Old Point a day oF two ago from Boston, where sho had ‘been filling an empagement at Keith's ‘Theatre. Bho had been compelled to discontinue her work, owing to illness, and her phy- siclan had advised complete rest. Tn Boston last night her manager gave out the following report from Miss Lof- tus’s physician “I consider Miss Loftus to be in a Pendition bordering on nervous prosira Hon, her energy and vitality being at a Very low cbb, and that |t is imperative P| she take a complete reat for awhile. that | — fessional work ad may avoid an entire collanss vite tmmedio'e ae meetin’ commation of att STEEL LE) THE MARKET Stocks Advanced at Start in Wall Street. the ‘The feature at the opening of Meck market to-day was the irov and Beel stocks. Wederal Steel, Steel and Wire Tennessee Coal, the loiter veiling dividend, and showin: the Jar Tose from 1 1-4 to Wite preferred pursued course, The late rally in the London m Reiped ratiroad stocas to a higher plane There were points of weakness amongst the spec! Sugar ru o ints the downward | ning WASKED MEN R08 MVEMEYER HOM —-+¢e —___- ‘Shot Millionaire’s Watch-' Plundered Mansion. scour the « ere. One of tae x hotguny was four near the Where Mann was found {i from the apot led toward they ed the t sid his captors had rift oughly, They staggered under the weight of the fire their sucks They secured @ three hour he fire. shootlny t me « in my mo: bound me to window and entered the | “They could have taken thousand: dollars’ worth o eee » too heavy t whet londed down win euns nnd They went off in the direc: ville. 1 worked myself loose toward me ng and dragged myeelt down to Meve to give the alarm.” CIS LOPTHS, not credit o end her life ame * jon of Green the oar { utes. THF WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL 20, 1900, BRYAN MEN IN meth icsinemeciann 4 @ensaemneniennemans 1 Ben Hannisont © Steiner, twe paire of glineses, up the law and the ap defend Democratic State Com-, | mittee Meets and De- |" | cides to Hold Conven- | ‘| tion in the Academy of) Music, This City, on, June 5, Hill Permitted to “Run the Committee" to Prove that There Is, Nothing but Demos, cratic Harmony—Ses- sion Lasted Ten Min- Bryan at) ‘was Wiliam J Hlouse this morning, There for Admiral aod Mr> vetue Van Wyck, and a few rouse a sentiment In favor Sulzer for Vico-Pi it owas Bryan fi end all the time David BH ompletel | jowed (he In the week and Kings County me » have Nis own way in arkable jehard Croker was To be sure, Tammany | ucceeded in getting the Convention for ve y. but Mr it) could have voy had he been ¢ i As it ve yeild here on June 3, in the Academy jor Must The dominance of Hil is agnifierr inasmuch as it indicates that the siten Man of Walfert's Roost will run the Il retly campalay in New York ; is this Fall, ‘There can be 4 nt | | 7 about that, Ut was said at che Meffman | nell, Aqueduct Commissioner Ryas, House where the coms net for a | Thomas PF. Smith, Croker's private sec- severi-minute:selalen Kt noon, (hit Tan. ielary, Dr, Conway, of Ution; ex-Magis- tn was tired of hav e Daniel F. McMahon, Senator bad bunaled jn state: pollt | a af Westchester; Register t. and had determined to up: | TAS TIGER Susi (hal oe Fromme, J, Sargeant Cram and Dock ate men have the cutire ¢ things from now on. SOLID FOR BRYAN. Induced a few persons to don buttons} Academy of Must bearing the vis-a-vis portraits of Bryan! kx-Senator Murphy was not on the snd Sulzer, @ but was represented by ex-Mayor = | Commissioner Murphy. MR. BELMONT TALKS. Perry Belmont, in talking over the af- ne, The meeting iteelf wa f the moat) It ls evident Senator Hill receives the} lloy, of Troy. faire of thy part id harmonious character It way all cut! leadershiy from Messrs. Danforth, “The Populists will meet in Sioux Summer 1 Fail, and the deep to | Here t that will not oppose the} There was an informal conference | Bryan for President the Ka City Convention wil go nt Th is the sum and sub-| heid by ea-Henator Df. Hill and the Will the Democratic Convention In ted, ! Ge solid for) * of the whole situation, and MY. | up-the-State members in room at) Kansas City July 4 ify the Populist Jer and Mr. MeL@ugbiin will be al-/ 11 o'clock, Afler the conference Senator | nomination? That is the great question TT Perry Belmont to| lowed to rum thetr local affaira to sult] iit sald: nor awake ewey ont _ Ho very | th ives “It is our yeor thie year You ean fiat indeed. None of the commmiiteemen | Jolin F, Carroll and Corporation Coun-| ayy that there © harmony in the Dem-| THE DELEGATES"AT-LARGE. eoned he dlath e! Whalen were the Tammany Chiefs ocratic party of tthe State with a ble! op ed to prevail that e . * and Henator MeCarren had the leader. | ‘I! Tha Richard Croker, al! have to ray." Tl nd probably James 8 a* ait ho braves t prevent | 5 . ine: @ Mr. Whaten, at. the If ‘aee We ; Wit be the delegate re oof the regarding ‘ammitiee at noo ela : }oon and wa t 1 ight that this provabie se- f Augustus Van Wyck meet! tution designating this efty ae the | President Murphy, of the Health B « large would great. th r . t > t ‘ “ | Norman EB, Mack, the Buffalo . my mer ane , ‘Ming the Convention for Senator “Tom Grady, Anthony i ,may come in after all. Hryen buttons we ory t naming delegatesat-large to Kansas j trady, of Albany Benator Li ht he be mollified by ols alihough Emmett Blair, of Bchobarte, City, the date June 5, the place the lof Mrooklyn; Pire Commi * an alternate. WOMAN JUMPED FROM BIG BRIDGE. their adopted daughter, lie Dinse, | their entire possessions, (Continued from Firet Page) driving by in a ward the bridge, from which hum-| street, Jersey City, | dreds | Wagon, lay and finally Cabman Moss paid the ! down in horror. volunteered to take the wo- | going over * | take chances ‘The captain of a Long Isiand ferry- and she was boat saw her as she fell and blew | about to be driven away when an blasts from seemed that ald would not jman to the hospital, A $400 CONTRACT. The other paper was a contract be- |tween Maric Hosalle Dinse and | Naudin, conveying to her an interest in a boarding-house at 312 | West Twenty-third street for $400 cash. This was dated August, 1899, and was the first clue to lead the po- lice to believe that the woman who toll himself, saying as he was only! to Brooklyn he would It ambulance summoned from the Hud- t Hospital arrived. CABMAN’S STORY. 21 Hudson its buoyancy street, this borougi, was taken to the sink, Soon her bead went under) Bridge station on the Brooklyn side seta and gradually the rest of the and there he told his story, shrill his whistle. reach her | son Strr The cab had just got beyond the weet tower when Moss beard a yet, Defore she sank | looked backward and saw the [er clothing was gradually losing | stows, who lives at and slowly che began to woman in the roadway making fo: the atting POLICEMAN TOO LATE. ® polnt ; hedy began to follow * = » th . ca Immediately after the opening St ceman Joseph Bowen was only! : 1 never saw the woman before.” nq jumped from the bridge was ead Wire reached « puint and the thirty feet away rom her and gave! SAVED HER LIFE. | besald. “And I didu't know ste bad | searte Rosalie Dines, ain the alarm. Several trolley inspectors | Meanwhile the tug Tacoma whose! Wit my cab until T heard the cop] SAW HER FALL. Meiropoitian and Brooklyn Rapid nd trucks . shout. I never so much as heard her rans! moved upward eddaunte .jan kmen rushed from opposite | captain had seen the black object Bae | Michael O°Rrien saw the woman as _ Won. The former opened flat at “| directions jrhoot down from the bridge, was ope" the cab door and get out eke. came: suming Gowa, fren. the args Seeste to 361-4 and Brock (Be She climbed up the ironwork and|coming to her aid under a fuil head] “There was nothing about her t0 j:j9¢¢, Buger fully spurted to above 06 [Ree Srl 2 af; had to squeeze her body through the | of steam, that fatriy made the little; 4rouse suspicion at all. She was! 1 was standing on Pier %, just be- us “hon an — demand for #100%8 | ments + iu* 4" | Space between it and a heavy iron | craft tremble. quiet like, bnt no one would ever sus-j neath the bridge.” O'Brien said to an q Fealising, and short \ “ 5% oN : | ‘ bm World ter." P Sftendes. 1 some of tne « op a Just as they reached her she! The body was mearly submerged as, Pct that she intended to do anything | © yea la erear dart lest os nee exceeded » polnt 3 ‘ i. ike ¢ up the river an lifted my heat Steel & Wire |Uniea : +|Was banging over, and as they the tug came up and one of the crew] ke ° fh it rise toward the sky. The eee ae Une 74 | gralibed at her she let go [leaned far over the side and grasped] MOss was, nevertheless, held until, bint shot upward toward the bridge end PPacine and the Hivaing Valley |Win en. 4 Quite a number of pe the police completed their investi vee tonewes BT Oke & Coe Ms Minette eoeicrie | Sees ‘ : | Quite a number of pedestrians tak- her by the foot. A second more and| the Po P ie ibid weet’: eo teeh. the telat 25:2 be. advantage of the fine weather it would have been too late | Mon as to whether he had any actual | pig xiructure above. upward move the the lending to 32-4 Central and Pennsy strong. while Ba.timore and the best i to smal! proper being reuctant ts make for either account peno-| Atre;ican 8 ok of tha pend 11-4 % 21-4 onda | WHEAT WAS LOWER AND MARKET DULL, | 82" &! the fret shout ran to see} dead, sure,” said the captain, | what was the The closing prices were: wer oper w ant ther iqw ee traded moderate t f the market. Corn was al nnd lower York's opening prices were: M. % July, 2 ok May *gPening prices we 18: July, 8 1-3 H May corm, I+4, at —~ The Cotten Marker. April, 9.42 to % to r May "cats, |lyn and Manhattan eldee of the river] prevailed on the bridge. The men | height | + tong] Mel’ Shouts quickly drew large women from taking the suicidal leap | were all written in German. One was May, 94 to Ou; i “As the object came closer it took the shape of a woman and as she shot downward to the water 1 saw a white face, wh” covet staring eyes and such an agonised exprersion as | hope never to see again. I was paralysed tn every | muscle by the shock. FELL WITH A SPLASH. rent into the water wits a “Bhe’s | COMPlicity In the act “No| LEFT UMBRELLA IN CAB. | woman could live after a plunge lite | Bealdes the ring. which the toll- j that . man refused (o take, an umbrella wi | left in the cab. SHE STILL LIVED. | The woman is well formed. She ae et dock *as reached it| wore a black skirt, a black silk waist n the river, fifty feet) was found (hat the woman was still | immed with b braid, and black ; from the end of the pler, with a great | breathing. stockil She wei about 105 splash. Men at work on the Brook-| Meanwhile the “ye oy talon leanwhile the greatest excitement | pounds and is 5 feet 3 inches in rowded the footway of the bridge,| She was’ hauled aboard, tter. STRUCK NEAR PIER. They were just in time to see the} womar fall | She struck raw the plunge cf the woman and/ who had made a chase to prevent the The papers in the woman's pockets | could’ stil who suds Tet crowds to the water front, surrounded Moss's cab, The crowd a copy of a will drawn at 61 Lang-|Gstner” The woman's chithing caught the}on the promenade cried out against fesse street, Dansieg, Germany, by alr and she floated with the ebb of! him, {Johann Cari Dinse and the ove Maer, ot 8. Somey mine snag tee ARRIVAL OF D. B, HILL AT THE HOFFMAN HOUSE, 714 15 10 } COME HOME. New York’s Dandy Regi- ment Will Return Sunday. THE RIGHT THIN AT THE RIGHT TIME AT THE RIGHT PRICE AT| Byex Bres 75 RAGLAN OVERCOATS Per those who don't like the Ragin Major-Gen, Roe said this afternoon: “The Seventh Regiment will leave for New York on Sunday or possibly on; Monday. The strike ts p teally over, | | and I stall withdraw al) but one troop | | of cavalry.” © rinalest dee ‘The seven strikers arrested yesterday) by Sherift Molloy’s deputies without the} formality of warrants were arraigned | Sis morning before Justice of the Peace Baker, of Cre Five of thein asked for a regular ex- amination and two walved examination. All were held by Justice Baker, Deputy Sheriff Fitzpatrick arrested Angelo Castello this morning. The old man | hack driver and is the father of John Casseilo, whom the authorities now claim is the real ineciter of the strikers. John Carrollo has disappeared. General Supt, Goldsborough said this morning that seventy-two men had joined the force of seventy-seven at work in the quarry yesterday. These, he claims, make up two-thirds of the regu. lar quarry force, Three Anarchirts have tnvaded the amp of the Italian strikers at Croton Dam, They are urgivg ihe strikers to keep up the fight and seek to spur them on to deeds of violence, The presence of these trouble-makers vas neutraliaed the good effect pro- duced by the arrest of Rotella and twen- [ty-flve disorderly Itallans An Itallan deputy has been at work smong (he strikers ever since the pres- (o-day and to-morrow, 15.00 We show good reasons why you showld not go to & shoe Bore for shoes nor te 4 hat store for hate. The same goods 2 per cent less cont, Byck Bros DOWNTOWN, S. W. Cor, Fulton and Nassau Sto UPTOWN, 158 to 164 East 125th St. ne. 3d Ave, CANDY SPECIAI. SALE Friday and Saturday. BUTTEROUPA, Fruit favore 1 $0¢ PRANUT BRITTLE . aii iF BUTTERSCOTCH TAPLETS tb. ence of the Anarchists was learned try-| jelly PRUIT STRAWBERRIES, mae ing to identify them and to arrest them |” trom Ci Frait ». $26 if possible. The appearance of the three bey) BD CHOCOLATES, Nute, val 8 156 men is known to many of the deputies jour 7 i an and Raturday ooe- eoand Sted and soldiers. DCOLATES, of ALL 04 Baron decidedly GtlocotatEs DRLATOUR Brand Rapertine. BONBONE ant CHOCOLATES, topped off with Freeh Fruits, the . Kind: our price ESTABLISHED 1848. GREENFIELDS SON Ax CO 44BARCLAY ST. . the Italian Ambassador at Washington, ts at the Hotel Cam- bridge, this city. He Is sald. to have) come here to consult with Consul -Gen- | eral Branch! about the trouble at ba ton. All the men eay that thelr arrests wer unwarranted and that there {s no dence that they did anything wrong. They protest agains: the forces of the Btate Invading thelr homes and march- Ing them off to the White Plains jail. To-morrow is pay day, and the con- tractors will hand over $92,00 to thelr striking employees. hTe men are pald by the month. It ts expected that this money will be used for liquor, and, in consequence, trouble is looked for Sat- urday night and Sunday LABOR FIGHT SETTLED. Cents, Reform Club of Masons and Pins- fashion terers’ Laberers Lost Ite Case A cage of great unions has been decided by Justice Lev- interest to labor entritt in (he Supreme Court. It was Pos claimed by the Reform Club of Masons’ a and Plasterers’ Laborers that none of 1b their members were permitted to work ae. et any of the jobe in the clty of New York because they were not meme the Laborers’ Union Protective Soc Messrs, Alfred and Charles Steckier, yho appeared as counsel for the defen: contended that they did not vto- ‘ny law of the land—Lhat they sim ply refused to work where these ot! men were working Judge laventritt dismissed the com- plain LADY canvassers once in New York and Brook | lyn on a new article for Serge salary. Call between 9 & Il, Leonard st., New York, room 10%, Miss Barrett. nous caw This is the will found In the pocket of Marie Dinse, OMce of D. F. Rieck, attorney and counsellor at law, Danzig, Germany. The will of captain of the ship, John Collar Dinse, and his wife, Annie Amelia Alice, whose maiden name was Schepke, filed In the County Court, at December 13, 188, i together and have no ch We have, in the year 1860, made Hi, whieh we deposited March 11, 189, at the County Court at Danatg. In the meantime we have made the ac- companying compact. March 6, 1879, ao- cording to the Guardians’ Court, at the County Court in the City and County of Danzig. We adopt Marie Rosalie Hinch- mann to be our own child. We will have that her name shall be Marie Rosie Dinse, who is not yet come to her age of majority Be we cancel the old will and this adopted chid, Marie Rosle Dinse, shall weer hetr of all of ovr estate, if t ed. It o> a vented document, creased Blood Humors POLITICAL CONTROVERSIES ° Manifesied in boils, pimple and similar are becoming more interesting as So rc, eitraies ia ae eee the time for holding the conven- Wericn ana fail ot ruler, ‘i gira | "10M approaches, but they are lees clear, healthy complexion, cures nervows-| acrimonious when resort is had to tints the wthmarh ‘aod ‘restes an apperre {f@0ts. Guessing tends to confu-. sion, The election returns in S roses THE WORLD ALMANAC AND arsaparilla ENCYCLOPEDIA FOR 1900 Ie America’s 8. Price s1.| WEPE specially prepared for use in eae determining the probable outcome DOURNE-On Priday, Avett 90. aravuixe 2. [Of the present political struggle mee Convicts ton tne Tare vesttence, [f0" Supremacy in the Presidentia 3 wes te Latermest private. contest soon to be waged. ' ~— | The popular vote in 1896 for Bryan (Dem,) was 6,502,925; raft sak [for McKinley (Rep.), 7,104,779 : ‘casing }and the total popurar vote in 1896 ” is a and