The evening world. Newspaper, April 23, 1900, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

* from men and women who came freeh| police there found the lad at the Dixie and Quit Work, from the strange scenes about which| House H. id that he was induced to | Spe lal to The Bvecing World) they talked. These meetings included | rave this city by an actress named) siqcivAX. N. #. April 2-8 LONDON STOCR STOCKS DULL, talke on Japan and Korea at C Mabel pk a ogg . Begs: PS Tn settle ” 2 ___ THY WORLD: MONDAY MISSION WORKERS _ Will STREET! : ~ GET TO BUSINESS. 1G FEVERIGH le - Ecumenical Sa Restsnence Begins Actual Work |Stock Market Prices by Discussing the Au- Mixed and Changes Sharp. thority and Purpose of Foreign Missions at Two Meetings — To- Morrow for Women. TRADING QUITE HEAVY. Some Losses of Over a Point Iron Issues Were Well Supported. The great Ecumenical Conference of Foreign Mission got down to act work to-day, having been “introduced all around and domed" to the State and nations by the Executives of both ‘The first business meeting was bei ook market opened be tone was very this morning in Carnegie Hal! and (he feverish and anges extremely un- Central Presbyterian Church con : rently, and both places were filled to the i wan evidem ta the. lin doors long before the appointed hour Federal Stee! running up a point The business session was preceded by opening &@ half-hour devotional service, beginn tig neaction. Steel d Wire dropped at 9.9 o'clock. erm point, but arp The subject for this morning's oon fraction and the preferred was also sideration was “Av(hority and Purpose and {t was discussed from 10 o'clock +11! Mirsourl Pact on sales of 4.0% noon, ‘The Authority and Purpose of | shares, Way quoted at S24 up to S1-4, Foreign Missions was discussed by |compared with %33- Saturday. Sugar Dr. Augustus H. Strom, President of and « few other stocks showed smal) Rochester Theologica! Seminary, at Car- negie Hall, and by Rev. Dr, Herrick, of Chicago, at the alternate meeting. “The Source of Power” was treated of by Rev. J. Hudson Taylor, founger of the China inland mission, and Rev the other hand large offerings e made of stocks throughout the recently the a tise were Menry Y. Chapman, secretary of the ve I . in ie pio MR hg egg gien poeta ; ai- How @ spenker looks from the top | faulavitle dr toss 1-4 on the news i t R. Bpeer, bs ainone by a along The ith the Board of Foreign Missions of ‘he nents, Tene ay and | throug the Church Mission | Rh Presbyterian Church in America, \sepea Perkins ree on the * ie al 1 Avenue Presby- ; ‘ej vebahaas | mn Was very large in the one Determining Aim" at Carnegic Hall. | ior, h t . Rev. RR. Wardlaw /OSfly Geatings, but the support was pow: 2 f | y offer steadli While Rev, Paul De Schwein ‘America, at th mpson reviewing ai the alternate | ite Teataad RN aatenat Feniee Were ads tary of the Bohrd of Missions of the and Hebrews tn all tands, at ting. | 1" litted to iM 1-4 Moravian Church, and the Rev, Dr. H pter Room, Carnegie Hall ‘Statistics will be given by Rev, Dr Roos janie h a0 tha ©. Mable, secretary of the American BSimultancour neetings at Carnegie Jam 8 Dennis, au Coristian wae, i a ‘it ‘led ‘Sgain, the Baptint Missionary Union, discussed th®! Hall and the Central Presbyterian Miesions and Social Progre and Dr. |Grangers, Pacitice unk lines and local same question at the Central Presbyte-| Church at § o'clock this evening will/dohn G. Patton, of ¢ " ufterers, Prices fan Church. (have for the topic “A Century of Mis- | 3U intending ro idence oeks were 2 tp i . tc ‘oreign Missions” will be div oe, SCOPE OF THE WORK, | Sian Noch’, A Sarneato Malt cvere ac Me Nrthiie 4 Wlerson nd Dr the bast tite . will he a re of by i Je . \e pe dale: “the eS Beary Pees __|nveket rallied ‘quite vigorously before NH o'eloek BOY SUICIDE S DRANK ACID, Young Bauer Over a Skin Eruption The whole stage and three hundred) Seats in the ffont part of Carnegie Hall! Were filled with delegates, come volun- tarily from all parts of the world in} responte to a “call” emanating from no Conatituted authority, but more In the! natiire of an “Invitation articipate in the great conference. One hundred and four Protestant mis#onary societies are represented by twenty-two hundred Tone. Kong Whom s7e over nix handred men and women who have de- Voted thelr lives to teaching their re- timion to the black and brown and yellow heathen of Asia, Africa and the talande TOOK 1 OUNCE OF MORPHINE. May Bep- < were arked oS * were: May i duly, 638 ¥ cork, 377-8] Sister of the Late Mar- garet Mather Attempts of Oceanica, These devoted men and women car- continued | ried. the work into Janda. theretofore Suicide. on His Face. ix ahow of strength and te Bieel tn | jdunteials he Tobaccos rote to the VHeXPted by White people, They have mae \ rest striven to educate afd humanize th I, arket hardened, go that Wncivilized, and they are now here in! Anitn Haleht, forty-two years old,, Charles Bauer, fr. ew cold in death € uced to fractions all New York in attendance on this most| who claims to be & sister of the late{in the ruined home of hie indulgent | Wipeay OUT BPH Fae remarkable religious cathering for the | Maresrec Mat wwallowed an ounce! parents at 78) Amsterdam aven ming was active and strong at Durpote of evolving rome plan of vo mo e 4 he wioop of ST West) 4 inree-ounce bottle, tr t | Operation in missionary work whereby | liftwent y‘clock this morn Baia i aes ae Pe mates toceny, were the $15,000,000 spent annually in mission | ine. 1 phymiclans » ts ¥ work by the Protestant foreign tlasion-| ‘he overd ved } m the sergeant Pa | the etree, | me Hundredth atreet police} Ary societies of the world may be made| \ j Mi station, mute evidenc the man | Hie death of take oniy cbiid, just afer) Aw his sixteenth birinda; with a Miss An- ft is purely a among the rey sof for several hours . ve know, ny many denominational int nce an-| were walking over Fifty-ninth stree bes : * 4 or tagonist, but now come top when Mies Haight war taken 1 ate want to die work in harmony for the for| Bhe sat on a stoop and asked Mise| his father and mother \ Which each had heen striving alone Driesoll to ge: her 4 glass of water | fom an evening call, at 115 last night VALUE TO COMMERCE | Miss Driscoll returfled and found her] they found their darting boy aittion | i ‘ue ti P 1 of A . i bed mtv vial dead ina kitchen chadr, with the bottle One object of the conferegce Is to | we bagulant dbus ‘ iS munity of the scope of the work of the | a wevelt Hospital and took acid, close by on (ie table | Young Bauer at siateen was taller MME! work 16 comimirce, Uducativre: {than the average man, end one result Pee one a 1] sald Mine Haight was | bis own growth was a skin eruption ot |anie missionary work, take un nearly halt) ® *ater Margaret Mather, and had face whioh #o annoyed him that nel : FEN Gadi tdits on ihe secgTamime of to worried « great deal after the actress's | Worrked about it, e. ¢ Fifvieth-elabth Miswionaries and the inestimable va plow for discussion, illustrating how the mi reath Decaune she had been ieit out of | Hut yesterday he accompanied sonary methods have advanced alone | her will chum, Rob Wolf, of 7% Columbus ave the line of modern thought, which looks | Ee sar emer ue, to Dr, Peters's St. Michael's Pr pon education as (he handmald of ctvi- ‘SUPT. DU PUY 10 RESIGN, tan Kniscopal Church, where W Higation and religious advancement. | 2 Many of the misstonaries are physicians munion, though @ member of the Lath And echool-teachers to thelr charges as | Lackawanna Rallroad OMcial Quits |!” si OE Well a¢ epiritual gulles and the epirit Company Because of 2 Dis- Of missions is eradually outgrowing the ‘a eat: ELECTRICIANS | ‘HOLD OUT. | purely theologica! and assuming a 3 , humanitarian function Raymond Du Puy, of the Morris With + sin iden of | ® vawex branch of the Lackawanna]. vs oe Aelita ue ail: 1 Waa axl In Hoboken to; orking Forces on Wroadway Shy- MUR cr onaahince, the J6 en resign on May be suc-| scrapers Want Yon-Union the conference sent invi o lead-| Cotded by Charles M. Ketcham, now Men Called of @re in commerce and to statermen and | S’perintende Fansportation of the! Ajthough the contr who are} Moulders of thought in Europe and| Morris and E { doing the work for the Fuller Construc- is America, and have achieved gra | Supt. Du gnation, it WAS! Von Company on Broadway bulldiy AK | hy FeBUita, as the presence on the platform | Maid: was dye ement he had /eay tha: only twenty men are involved tn |t a: Pe of the President. an ex-President tn the zi ape h ty clans’ strike on the new stru » | Pon 18) u chair at one meeting, the President of mF tures at Broadway and Chambers street | pe yak the Chamber of Commerce at another| DEMENTED BOY CAUGHT. and Broadway and Cedar streets, there ty RR HS and an impressive array of great men . Atle or no electrical work being | ys SEs. 38aute- | omen of all branches of endeavor | t elther place this mornin, 7% the meetings attest | ® Atlanta, Saye He) The str jeclared that none 0! Ge . | Wine Kidmapped by @ Pretty numper ed for work none | Ht ® &y SECTIONAL WORK i Mae Tertaahe none tee, ee me 5 ees. t te % The conference was scheduled na ed at Poi " us ter this afternoon into “section: uarte ing and sald STRIKE AG I ST | “uy ings’ for a survey of flelds of hiw 1 -old nephew A N |ACAINES. Ny result being m: Mghtful and en-| Marry Dur. * deranged, had th ing “meetings” at 2.9 o'clock injrun away and was probably in Atlanta 2 @ Gowen city churches, where the at-/ Ga te Bar- a ftendamt could hear graphic jectures| Word wan sent to that city and the mers ae “Bhe just toted me off.” he sald | dred coopers have gone on strike be-| Reid UNttl relatives from! cause of the Introduction of Parrel-mak- him jing machinery, The str.ke ts the most] duii to-day and were inctined to develop seriowr in the history of the city Ki} weakness involves (he tying up of tne entire Ash.) American secur unfavorably oacking Dusiness. affected by the weak apne 4 a ia Five hundred the loca) parties Setereay . ite nd the lomses emt Mey struck because a 4 per cent. o ow 4 been introduced by howring Bros., = representatives were instructed & ve returned to work, the ob: le machine having ‘besa Raiellte, Sew Yor Cee e nathern ife, Seclined sharply The Cotten Wet Church by Mre J Wi Me is be Land re lie this city clatm ‘Thre London securities were generally NO HOPE FOR CARTER. INGTON, April %—The Su. ‘ourt to-day refused to grant « writ certiorari in the care of Ober M. Carter, convicted by court mart op | for Irregularities while in charge of en Sineer works in Georgia fo re ot F. Reed and at the Union Chureh by Bishops Turner | Walters; Rev. Dr. Merensky, for ty years a missionary in South, and others; india and Ceylon at} J Presbyterian Church, by Mra + oy Miss Swift and others; at the Fgh hand Tabdernacie ‘Rémeade, joseph King Patton; China, at the Fifth who eia'deaea’ "| STRIKE OF 600. MIN WHEAT WAS LOWER | |Twe Workmen Were Discharged ON WEAKER CABLES.| . Market. Mrs. F. i. Eve-| Owing (o caster cables wheat opened niasteh 10's ‘Augut John Barrett| fractionally lower to-day, Foreign] goRANTON, Pa. April ah = The anes Mahometan | houses sold considerable July wheat.! miners at Jermyn shafie, 6 In all, | UAFY, and | Corn 1 quater with provisions, but! went on attike to-day for the reinstate: of & polnt or over)* {-| Mayor did not ee TE Ae NE ME ae a in at el . " ee ee ” EVENING, APRIL 2, 1900, .Altman& Go. | PETTICOATS For MISSES. | Muslin Petticoats trimmed with embroidery, or Cam- bric trimmed with lace; sizes 4 to 16 years, 75c. Regular Price $1.25 Siik Petticoats in a variety of colors, changeable effects, length 36 inches, heretofore $8.95, at. $6.45 LADIES’ SHIRT WAISTS. A variety of materials, including Linon, Mercerized | Zephyr and Seotch Madras, Dimity, Percale, | Plain and Embroidered Batiste, All-Over Embroidery | and Lace, White Lawn, tweked or hemstitched. White Persian Lawn hand made Waints. | WHITE LAWN WAISTS, $1.45, 31.90. $2.50, $375 | MORE TEACHERS’ PENSIONS Mayor Holds Hearing on Bill to Pension Forty Old-Time Teachers. Mayor Van Wyck gave a public hear- noon on the bill to grant i teachers who were re- the Pensions bill went into Sale of Stiehtly Sotled pensions to tired before operation There are between | and forty in the old city of New York not receiving pene teachers now ret'red who « sions, and the bill p «to give them | . . the same amount that oiher teachers|13Q Irish Lines are getting who have been retired since the pasnng the Pensions bill ndlcate what his action would be Ee MANILA HERO GN TRIAL Killed «2 “Mae ip Saloon Fight and Is Charged with at greatly reduced prices. former price $3.50. former price $5.50. The trial of Charles Bohpenderger, and Kiled Togs ¥ shot former price $13.50. clatmed former price $21.00, that be had shot Wicht because the latter had threatened to shoot him dur- ing a general fgh( in the piace. The prisoner wae in the Untted States Army for five years and returned from the Phillippines shortly before the ehoot- tng occurred. He bas an honoratle discharge and a letier from nis for- former price $38,00, | Dinner Napkins, no cloths to match, mer = captat: 7 cr peerine® ing him F for S thie . Pree of cit Murela Plaine Anyi. | 133 dozen, at $2.85 dozen, — CIVIL SERVICE VS, DBVERY. Police Chief's Roandsmon May Re- cotve Only the Pay of Pu- trolmen for Year. value $3.75, Towels, $4.20 dozen, Six men appointed as Chief Devery during the past year may be paid os patrolinen if the Civil Mer- vice Commeson will relent and audit ‘Their salaries have been held up by m because they did net the Civil-tervice examination. men ate Matthew J. Cwivert, | J. Dempsey, Fred M. Kavay h, James J. Kiernan, John J. Me- Broadway & 20th St by Gas, eighteen years oid, @ Serva Rosela Tudur Tl servant at 19 West Thirty-fret street, wan accidentally overcome by gag in her room this morning. She was taken to New York Mospital, where she will Spring Sale Cotton RHEL N ATISM Wash b Goods. Scotch h Zephyr S, 25 ets, yard, 35 cts. Swiss Stripes There to we dewbt about tt. My Ahrumation Orare will de ath that ta elavined for it, In yrant of thia | have the teolimeny of thousands, Toby Congressman Ward, for insiansr, He tella you that it woe ne’ until he tried my Rhewmation cure thet he wan cured of rhawmatiom, It ro - special value at 25 cts. . . yard. Dimities, permanent core (na Sow Gage —MUNTOS. PRICE Sie. AT ANY DRUG STORE. i clusive desi , 1§C., 20¢. — Table Linens. We have in our linen stock Double Damask Table Cloths—so napkins to match—someare Several ol teachers appeared in favor of the: bil! and. told the slightly soiled and mussed that as a mnatter of just ” f *lteachera: the Bill rom handling; we placethem on our countersas an odd lot, | Table Cloths, at $2.35 each, Table Cloths, at $3.95 each, STORES: Tabie Cloths, at $8.75 each, -| Table Cloths, at $14.50 each, Table Cloths, at $26.75 each, 259 dozen Fine Huck, at or 35¢, each, Lord & Taylor, values 35¢c. to 60c, Silk & Linen Batiste, values 50¢., 75c. ys 00, WeMake $ &F Lace Effects,|s sui nat is tat vstae—snd good valve, Perfectly perfect! shales ign od cape ex- jesigns « | tures of gray and green, dark | Gee Brethere: The Sack Suit,[ either singie or double breast. ed, is one of the most service. able of a man’s wardrobe. This season the double or Single breasted vest may be’ worn with either coat, One! of the neatest materials for the Single-breasted suit is the plain gray check, which hasit rather a hard smooth finish, and wears splendidly, Mix- shades in stripes and solid blues and blacks, may be worn in either single cr double breasted styles. We have ali these at our stores---waitiny for you. 7 Spring Suits of Cheviot, in Oxford gray, 1 Seasonably cut and tailored, doubl breasted vest; one of the best values for the money we have ever offer- ed, a regular $15 suit for..... 10, 00 Suits of worsteds, cassimeres and chev- jots, all new colorings, in fine stripes, joe and overplaids, double and single- reasted vests, with or without coll four button cutaway sack coat; regular $12 and $15 suits..., 10. 00 Suits of cassimeres,worsteds and cheviots | and homespun weaves —all new shades and designs; single-breasted oy Vvests,three and foc button cutaway sack coats; regular $15 and$18 suits, 42. 00 Oxford Cheviot Top Coats, the ever} peer gray, three-quarter length, silk ined and faced to edge; cuffs self material, velvet coll a regular $15 10. 00 coat fi Superior Top Coats of all-wool tan Ci erts~ some all silk lined, others serge lines; a good, durable, dressy garment at one- third less than its actual 10. 00 ° Spring Suits, of all-wool Oxford Vie cut and tailored in tom style, f patie sack coat, sig ‘s form-titting; ice of si or double breasted vest......-ceees.ee 15.00 Suits of fine imported Tweeds, Ve Netian-tinished cassimer’s and worsteds, in| all the late color schemes and weaves; sin- gle and double breasted vests,with or with- out collar: three and four bute J 8 00 ton sack coat; a swell suit, for je! We abo offer to purchasers at this sale avery choice lot of Trousers, in checks and stripes—warranted pure worsted—cut - sp ay oa aul Se, - ‘0 Sell at $5.00—but our s 3.00 price of Oxford Cheviot, : 42,00 Oxford Vicuna Top Coats in handsome basket weave pattern, silk lined and Bf faced to velvet collar, cufls er} Stylish Top Coats allsitk im a ave garment: worth $18... worth: . seevee Swell Raglans, of Oxford or Cambridge Chesterfield lengthy a gales 15. 00 in three-quarter and extreme 47 Cortlandt St.. bet. Church and Greenwich Sts. of self material, easily worth $22 our pi alee eee 18. 00° th Top Coats of black untinished griy Cheviot, with or without velvet worsted, sitk lined and silk faced to cdge,- collar, silk-lined sleeves, made genteel garment.... .., lengths 18.00 Specials in Hats, Shoes and Furnishings for Men and Boys. TOP-TO-TOB CLOTHIERS. 279 Broadway, near Chambers St. 211 & 219 Sixth Avenue, bet. 14th & 15th Sts J25th Street, corner 3d Ave. It was the New Flavor of the new Veronese Biscuit that captivated the public so completely. Everybody that knows the best things of life is acquainted with Veronese Biscurt; and everybody else is iearning about that delicious flavor that is found in nothing else. No other biscuit is baked in the won- derful English ovens—the ovens that bake for continental gourmets. — = ae s package that keeps at caterers OF grocers. In bergeor emal! pack them fresh aud ctirp Veronese Biscuit Soe Help Wanted—Femene, | toOrder for LADY canvassers nvassers wanted at at once in New York & Brovke lyn on a new article tor lediegy Coe | salary. Cail bpd 2 «& AS ; to keep its Leonard st., New York, room of fine Worsted; choice-of trousers if desired. Sack or Cuta- way—seine price.

Other pages from this issue: