The evening world. Newspaper, July 3, 1901, Page 1

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nS) E D I T I ON “Circulation Books Open to All.’’ Che PRICE ONE CENT. NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, JULY . 1901. “ Circulstion Books Open to All.”’ | * A TRIP not Flatbush went rgot to put up red awnings. ‘The hated away and xew yellow a Now all Flatbush te fall of “It acrven bim right” glee. ne the dnek! cheapest A hat Chase the duck! “Tie the coolest and ¢ RAIN BRIN DEATH LIST ARTIST POWERS TAKES TO CONEY ISLAND. Some of the Queer fi Things He Saw and Did Before and Afier Picturesque Storm at the Seaside Resort. Thoms Evening World's cele / went to Coney Island hat he saw and did would fll an unabridged fonary Som the most martling stunte he telle in ples “The boat we Artist Pow) dowa nays beaut. Al the ft had a 4 ) starboard. Iw dat {> uncl i sot wise. “OWhat maker the ovat Up? said 1 ho came up on she ele fis arms fui of vec: asa Whar cure we fur sturms on lane or seat a coon-man vaied deck wit bottle: ‘ou's ain't next.’ repiled the coon man. I followed him down and found GO passengers pid ien deep against the starboard bar. There wasnt any bar on the otner aide. “First man I struck at the beach waa a fat man standing outside a tent yell- ing, ‘hase the duck! He had a glass of beer. hin 4 and said you could freeze your feet inside the tent for five “It wasn't true. ston perapiring fat wom ehing machine, was re r weight, she sald. body could do It for a cent, she 4 “was true, “Then | ran I weighed before and T welghed 10, ‘After I'd ul sweated good I She earned her pennies, bavhon when the storm hat woa a peach. The alr sand bal shingi and ‘There n't any string so [went along with the efore’ some thin seen Hed to crowd It Was a mad, merry chase. When I It 1 found mysef out at sea on {a bath-house, 1 climoed inside found an outrt of woman's clothing. an To put ‘em on, Moatet ashore and nearly wot arrested fo masquerac as a looke: {fferent. a hotel ten min- utes before thee Was nothing left but a portico and @ Doory fat man under it, “WN : t “Try the old mill. It's too hot te Whowp! Moora neha “He didn't Know the house was gone. - “ wn f noticed a nice, new Oo little off Flatvush, Papa had R K (e) > WO Just put up bright new awnings. a) (ON “On beck we saw papa, an mamma and the kids going home. They \ . didn't know their own house. The nice ribbons and the new awnings were chimney wax gone, “IL was hotter when I got back than when I started, “But it was great fun." ALPACA COATS + FOR POLICEMEN. ( (Cues Chief of Police Murphy, of Jersey City, to-day issued an order permit- Ung policemen to wear black alpaca coats during the hot spell, Many of the patrolmen tmmediately took advantage of the privilege. Mathers Chased by Hallstones. ! MADE INSANE | BY THE HEAT. J Annie Rock, twenty-seven yeara old,; date the Increasing number of heat © HEAT DROVE WOMAN INSANE. agus. Tae Flower Hospital is so full that c te no more cases can be trea’ lthe Presbyterian there Is plenty AY room, and, preparatons have bec made to receive a sarge number, The J, Hood Wright ls not overcrowded, out| Rose Sneelig, thirty years old, of No. made insane by heat, was removed from; her home, -No. 221 West Sixty-sixth | street, early to-day, Bhe screamed and| created considerable excitement before the police had her taken to Bellevue Hospital. DOCTORS NEARLY | PROSTRATED. | All of the doctors and nurses at Melle- vue are overworked almost to collapse. The Sturges pa n and the Townsend cottage have been opened to kccommo- a ¢ the Harlem Hospital is. If i i nue to come in tents will he erected on the lawn. so bad that she was remo Praia GeACaites peyton for the Tneane at Tielievue He BOSTON, of ¢: in N 100 been. 333 East One Hundred and Twenty-third street, was rendered temporarily Insane from the heat to-day at her home, The young woman's condition be: Heat Killed Farm Hand. usive heat wh.ch have prevailel |p 2oneph Taylor, forty years old, \ eich Bay feom heat In a barn on the f: f Kaye occurred ay Gat ® | Edward. Ohare, near Bordentown N. ta oe Wea oli dnd hata nn oe July 3.—During the six days Five Deaths tn Orange. There were five deaths reported port, ‘The number of prostrations In New Eng- land will reach several hundred. Boston there have been nearly 150 in went: ve prostrations, fo Orange, N. J., to-day. There were also] ci és SCHURMAN RAIDS TWO POOL-ROOMS. +--—______—_— Assistant District-Attorney Takes Up Justice Jerome's Cast-Off Job—Five Prisoners Taken. Two pool-rooms were raided this af- terngon at No, &% Waltehall atreet and No. % South atrect by McCullagh men Under the direction of Asalatant Dis- trict-Attorney Hchurman, who haa taken up Juatice Jerome's job, Diatrict-Attorney Philbin, and Mag's- Kauft and Harrigaa. The raids were made by direction of sent out after bail. to-night they will be locked up over trate Deuel tesued the warrants, all in| the Fourth, In the South street room three arrenta after an exciting fight. | Those Primonara were als taken to were made court. Magistra\ pone of L ec the name of the Doe family. |relngallectahtecn coi Mocullegh ae men 7 were gent oul + ve i, erven rn Two arrests were made at the White-| turned from. the ‘two raida reported, hall street room, which was on the top and it was oy that pia ulos¢ of other floor. The prisonera were taken to the| Places were being raldet. z y Joh Criminal Courts. Huilding by Officera| yURe, Prigonere.. John. trady. Jone Joseph Burke, R walting to dis . The prisoners all Tf it ta not mecured ns, Frank Lynn and bailed, BINGEANTON, N, July 3 the United States Weather York before Srturday. “You may ra breaker, nothing like number of deaths it causes, bad, stroke being numerous. SEGRE bre Rib 4OD-4 Db Bei 9-9 BA O26. FOURTH OF JULY WILL BE THE HOTTEST (Bpecial to The Evening World.) rufd Prof. Moore. it ever having been recorded tn the annals of the United States Werther Bureau for intensity of heat and the ON RECORD. —Prof. Wills. L. Moore, ef of Bureau, states that under no circum- stances can there be any relief from the present hot wave for New. “that this will be a record- “The two days that are to come will be something extremely The death-rate will mount rapidly, prostrations from sun- “The coming Fourth of July will be the hottest on record, anid this will add much to the average casualties of the day.” died | ELA LOALAE-OF OO EEEO4E EERE A EDOM BGeBnbr Bo Babr pdr d Gro’ MOLINEUX’S AUNT KILLED BY HEAT. Marie E, Molineux, elder ‘sister of Mdward (. Molineux and aunt of nd B, Molineux, who 4# in t ath Mi touse at Aing Bing prison f old, She had lived paat sine years a giace, Brooklyn, « Molineux's residence. thé Rot spell hud ‘be ‘om Gen, ith until nt. EL ONE CEN eS Hospitals Still Busy with Heat Victims, Although Tem- perature Shows Big Drop—Brooklyn’s Death Record Broken and Heavy Fatal ity List in Man- hattan—New York's Hope Is an East Wind. COCO COTHOCOCL CACOCET ON OOCOCCCO0OC00: HOT WEATHER DATA. Weather predictions . . . . Warmer 3 KAIRIE ISO 161 Deaths in Greater New York to-day VOUIMCAIIS we, eerste ses Prostratioas reported repiee ry Temperature al 5 P. M., official . GS O © EA 6 one Temperature at 5 P.M. street. 79 3 Humidity at5 PM... . 76 HEAT RECORD, OFFICIAL AND STREET. Ree Thermeuener enccrtay, Horag? BA. Messe a2 8s 90 nR 85 8% 2 6 ry 8 5 53 R 2 % 52 3 “ 7 53 93 93 9 51 85 tn oo 76 401 67 8 103 23 7 $00 16 “Barney” Morris, Brooklyn’s Oldest Inhabitant, Who Never Drank or Smoked, Dead. OG! O0000 @ § & M4 t $ vitant | st Was (hat he had never of Nquor or smoked, cellent until Jine next olde: Harney" Morris. thy His ut Brooklyn, te dead, Killed He was oye hundrod and old. The funera: will be trom of hla daughter, Sa Fulton atreet, on F when hi t He grew we Interment | wi be in Holy. Cro metery yesterday remained SH mn Mr. Morris was known to every fre: mr reprise aquentur of Prom Park, where ae /yy survived by a widow, daughter worked aa a c ner more years than (and @ son HEAT TAKES | Koentor, seventy-six year | Peter ignty-tacee ye Mr. Roe waa at acricken pester TWO OLD FRIENDS. |ais "Sha wire the doctor a= - - [Bax {the family went to the where Mr, Brandt ilved, to mn af te death of his old’ friend, H one house, 3 pter Mr. Urandt Was found overcome dy the trlenda from one house, No. 41 Sumpter Nt), "ind he Wied before a doctor could \e. street, Brooklyn, They were Henry! pe xummoned. ‘The heat took two old ant lifelong | M10" AT AGE OF 109. 2 | Hef ies in an east wind, 2} hope from the West. WEATHER FORECAST, ¢ ovecast for the thirty-six ing at 8 PLM. y for New York Clty & Partly clemdy weather toe NGE, OFFICIALLY. vine upa apd eo 1 gues thee be tape a clo * To make the raindrose run. ‘i The mercury went down the chute i As anita av fawn to oa, e The weber man he (et his chim | ‘And her sald merrily: 5 “Ot course, T meant,"t the weather mam ‘The weather man, sex he: There ain't co rain, net orem moo Trt 1, official-iat"* at » Real relief was brought to swelter- ing New Yorkers this afternoon by the thunderstorm that swept the city. When the biack clouds gathered over the New Jeraey shore and rolled Gothamward over the North River shortly after noon the temperature, whioh stood at 93 degrees, began to fall, and two hours later, under the influence of a stiff breeze and a-good rainfail, it had dropped to 76, ‘There was an Increase in humidity ing rather nuHifled its effects, A comfortable night was promised, although the official prediction was for more warm weather. With the welcome change, sovereN there was no diminutign in-the deaths {from teat, but all the hespitals were j still crowded with victims. * Brooklyn's death record was brek- en té-day, From noon yesterday to noon to-day there were 198 deaths there, The old record was 146. In Manhattan the death record was the highest since Aug. 13, 1896. Then tnere were 370 deaths. From noon yesternlay to noon to-day there were ‘The total deaths in Greater New York up to 5 o'clock to-day wore 161,, und the total for the hot spell 518, New York's hope of permanent re- There ts no, Another bot ve ig arising from that direction. fhe Fourth of July will be much to-day—hot, humid and partly + Emery returned to New ay from a brief outing. He pat he had been on a astlll-hunt and satd the report! arted by Jealous rivals, ot greeting to-day," he sald to piring delegation of reporter that it will not be so hot as yeatg But humidity la higher and will more than the heat, The thermom- will aurely’ go Into the 2's, 3 record ts 99 degtvos, In It will not be reached to-day. The th wil be much Ike to-day. There have been thunderstorms or showers from New Jersey north to Maine, in the extreme South \tlantio and Eastern Guif States ana in the southerly lake district, \lno in some Western and Southern/ States, “The temperature has risen west of the middle and upper Mississippl val- leys. It in still warm cast of the Mis sinippl except In the north lake re- gions. New York's hope of relies ies, (Continued on Second Fase |i.) was My ja | te of 14 points, but the fresh wind blow- >

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