The evening world. Newspaper, September 23, 1901, Page 4

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~ dplea pemay, remain unt! eleven sufferers are being treated ut V USTRST UL HE THINES TRAGEDY MIGHT HAVE BEEN AVERTED. Seeret-Service Hurean Come In for n Severe Shaking Up. The (Special to The Evening World) WASHINGTON, B—It in not yet decided whether President Roosevelt Will Cine at the White House to-night, Dut it,fs pretty certain that he will sleep there for the first time, He had his trunks brought over from the house of his brother-In-law, Commander Comte of the Navy, thls morning and followed them on foot about 9.90 o'clock. ‘The President came swinging down N street and thero wasn't a Secret-Service man within blocks of him. He refused absolutely to be ginfrded by Chief Wil- Rie's men. Indeed, he has a great distrust of the Secret Service, and one of the first rer! ‘ous tasks of his Administration will be May; “ally WOLD: arn mentee tsheimyheintet nen manners f thorough Investigation of the whole fervice, He is not satisfied that every precaution was taken in Buffalo, He thinks President McKinley's shoot- Ing might have been prevented, and he Intends to find out for himself just what the facts are, The Becret Service is not under the clyil service. As a consequence pollti- élite who have small influence, but must be taken care of, are thrown in there when there ie nothing elre for them. Ik fs sald that the men In the service cannot get places ete cognized de- testive agencles. 5 Pinkerton’s because real acractives know that they ate mainly politicians and not detectives atall, It is expected that the service will come in for a severe shaking up Within the next month, Sever det ted President Sue Word that it was no time for office Seekers nnd that ihe. manor men who 0 Ket his favor by applying ni places would Ket his db Matone and woud te pr Tecelve tho office he wa Tels understood that Serretary ¢ fae Cortelyou. who will re: ident for a time. Roosevelt's tern about the late MAS. ROOSEVELT READY 0 MOVE! FINAL PREPARATIONS MADE FOR LEAVING OYSTER BAY. President Wife Will Start) for Washiugton on | Wedneaduy. e OYSTER BAY, L. 1, Sept, %—Mra. Theodore Roosevelt, wife of the Presl- dent, has about completed plans for her Geparture for Washington on Wednes-| 7 day next. William Loeb, jr secretary to Mr, It the office of Vic to be the awaintant to Mr. Cartelyou, the ‘President's secretury, is here to] assiat Mra, Roosevelt in the tinal arations for her company her t Henry Pink ored attendant, after the ibaegine BRITISH STOP THE CERIMANS. TROOPS IN ANOTHER RAIL- ROAD DISPUTE IN CHINA. who was private sevelt when he held esident, and who Is Dverny. <A railroad dis- Analo- Huse | TIENTSIN, Sept pute, slinilar to the recent sian’ misunderstanding here, territory. ‘The matter hus “bewn Te- ferred to the German and Britivh Gen erals. FEVER SHIP AT SANTIAGO. leven Men Sh the Lumber Steamer Ethelbry thn, BANTIAGO, Cuta, Sept. Tew cases of yellow fever h Seped among the crew of the British steamer Ethelbryths, which arrived here iy last from ckaonville, © thre cases of the fever on board, The ‘yellow fever hospital and are all well. The remainder of the er ¥enIx men, are held in quarantine eario of the b road th antleipated ead of to this city, het wanitary conditions are per: “Fires Destroying Property Colorado aud Wyoming. R, Col., Hept. 23.—The most Fest fires of it years are in Colorado and Wyomini Jnot Mxurtous, srietelte elebininiels store of Levi BP. Morton Was when L was only a lL remember Mr. Morton on the head one day and! vata flne Uttle girl 1 was. He Congressman, Senator, Gov- Ambasnitor and Vie mident ) f-iet Mt the age infirm, Mre witured and re eleqanes and tax hn the . landlord who secks te ha with oor, of ay evletion, f anything better th te her own fath the par: ninety. ye of his © Inte the Thomas Murphy, was very | wos educated in. the My teachers we dons wife. After-| Mr. 1 am became a lawyer, nor of Vermont. He had 8. his law part M nown me all my Hfe and “My father, weal) cot radtford Warnham Hitue Mre Sealine t was other Cle Ho was twenty-cight years older than 1, | he waited for me to grow up and we) 1 forty-five nid and romance. | were once bt thal equ Was Our Mount Vernon. your bay ath out his busin: » built a ma pester HAM, and w Mr. Ormaby paying a year, Ormeby's History and his eminence r had attracted the at nor and he as: to Jefferson Davis chy Intion of the litte it ix declared that Bennett's usual level head ane Phim and he suffers old T y to turn his aged danghte ites Mr. her son, who Ik @ deaf mute, out, be Whby Party Will hear from them. Vermont An Evening World reporter found deat mute son at tye home to-day, 1) In With Her, of the! at the his aALswe to question® written on a pat jer Savin he he wrote In va splendid hand rik “My name dward Everest Mr. Ormsby died suddenly at table Orma My fa’ was ft. fy test Ln IS To married Mr, Ormahy'a Or: the famous Inwyer asse y dearest friend, Major Lindisey, My with Charles O'Conor tn the de father hated the Major and we went to of Jefferson Davia on hin trial live in New York City, He dled in a treason, year 1 remained and kept boarders two years, My stepmother, who tdol- lzed me, was Ml and L came home to “Lam forty-two years old and have been deat and dumb since Thad se: | Rob MRS. LINDSLEY’S SAD STORY OF EVICTION BY FATHER. Hebb bbibiebietes of a eleinicivicink * MeriehirieP reek ery lofe! inictetteleteinteletebetetelet: Aged and _ Destitute, She Is Ordered to Leave Home by Non- ogenarian Parent, Who Prefers Strang- ers — Mount Vernon Residents Take Up the Case and Will nme peices Por Soy an eerie ePert si WERR CASE OF MASKED MEN ROB BIND TWO WATCHMEN. USE DYNAMITE AND ESCAPE. BOY LEFT WITH PLEADING LETTER AT HEBREW HOME. Man Who Accompanied the Five- Year-Old D! ea aS Gang of Elght Work Successfully nge One. Magistrate Crane had a peculiar cane of an abandoned child before him in the Harlem Pollce Court to-day. | Yerterday a man accompanied by a | Uttle toy went to the Hebrew Sheltering PHILADELPHIA, Sept. %1.—Elght masked ‘men, early to-day entered. the car barn ofthe Holmesburg, Tacony and Frankford Raltway, ‘n the extreme northeastern ection of the city, and, Guardian Soclety, One Hundred and] after binding and gagging two wat 4 Fir -tirst street and Broadway, und{ men, proceeded to the office, wi irked to nee the matron, Mrs, Fardwick.| they blew open two safes and took about $1,200, George Nolan and. Clarence Depew, the watchmen, were the only occupants of the building at the time. According to thelr story It was about 2.90 this morning when the elght masked robbers appeared. Each man waa armed with a revolver, Without ceremony the {intruders bound the watchmen securely with wire, and after gagging them pushed them Into a corner. With heavy hammers the robbers broke the combination knobs from the doors of the safes and Inserted dyna- mite in the holes. “The explosions blew off the doors and wrecked the office, After securing their booty, the robbera went to the Tacony waterworks on the banks of the Delaware River, where they stole ® rowboat and escaped. Nolan succeeded in loosening his hands after & half hour's hard work. He released Depew and they notifed the polite. PASSENCERS IN TRAIN CRASH. SEVERAL REPORTED KILLED} IN MICHIGAN COLLISION. | While the attendant went to look for her the man disappeared, leaving the toy behind. On the boy the following letter was found: yo Sept. 22. littte, toy who hes thie ind 1 wish toa ak @ favor 1 am uit of and Twenty-ffth etreet and also! from Cinetn- 1 do pot care to say my name, but you Fardock summoned a policeman questioned. He sald ug! father was ut he did not know where he That Is all that could be gotten from him. ‘The care was too much of a puzal Crane, xy he turned the ver to Agent St, Jobn, q Society, who will try i out som thing about the boy's parents by Frida: the day set nt ordinal Rrinees the turther examinatio MINERS TD MEET MAGNATES EFFORT WILL BE MADE TO SETTLE ALL GRIEVANCES. = Special Hit a Freight on the Grand | National frestdent Mitchell and GRAND RAPIDS, Mich, Sept. 23. A passenger and freight train collided on the Grand Rajfds and Indtana Rail- road at Bonds Mills, near Cadillac, early to-day and asdengers are re- Ported killed. is vs *) ——<$——_-- Not Unlikely, Uonal President John Mitchell, and Di trict President's, Nichols, Fahey, and Duffy, of the United Mine Workers’, will meet in New York to-night, and to-morrow begin making an effort to e the coal magnates, in order to ar- nge if possible, for a Joint conference adjustment of all the existing ces and a recognition of the | | lumbir 16 cone| waa round? ell, his expertence with| Bright F 1 owas anything but | it proved square. Roy—Wi that |. Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co., Bros ABANDONMENT.) RAILROAD SAFE, |r S TALL SHOE SALE| Logical Losses Afford Extensive Economies The special shoes provided for this sale seem like a tremendous, stock, and indeed the distribution of them would be impossible ex- cept by Wanamaker’s. And yet they aie but the crumbs left over from factories whose combined ‘product supplies the annual needs of eighty 1: illion pairs of feet. How insignificant are losses on these thousands, when factories have harvested their profits.on so many millions! They are glad to wind up their season’s business with clear stock-rooms; and the saving which is so great to individual purchasers, is a mere trifle of present loss, and a positive eventual profit to the manufacturers. But we skip the unworthy lots—the Wanamaker prestige gives us the privilege of picking what we will; and the present offering stows how carefully we have selected every line. Fall and Winter Shoes, for Men, Women and Children, were never before offered in such variety of worthy and stylish sorts, at such little prices as these: Women's Oxford Shoes, $1— Black kid Oxfords that are valued up to| $2; good styles and all sires Women’s Shoes at $1.20— |Children’s Shoes at $1— I Black ‘kidskin; plump and durable; spring heels, full round toes; sires 8% to 2 Children’s Shoes a. $1.20— Black kidskin, im fine qualities; shapely, Fine kid and calfskin, lace and buttons finely ede, and grates that sell eee] all spring heels; calfskin, sizes 11. to larly at $2, | 2 keidskin, sizes 234 to &. |Men‘s Shoes at SI— Women's Oxford Shoes at $1.40— pS FRilskny with heavy. soles: fal roond| BUsck satin calf laced shoes; gobd style id well made. t id Cuban bh for Astam C. weir < a = ”| Men‘ 's Shoes at $1.50— | Mostly large sizes and few of a kind, but Women’s Shees at $1.50— | thi 1 Pateal leather and kid lace!shoes; splen-|. ings fital! Prices, ranged fiom $3 fd shoes for business wear. Men's Shoes at $1.90— Women’s Dress Shoes, $1.60— ‘And not a pair worth less th: ati sopa Lwiib hide foniog fand| Tansee eR en and wax calfskin, kid, patent and en- patent leather tips. amel leathers, w solid soles; in Women's {eal Shoes, $1.60/— uf swagger styles; all sizes to start. Kidskin laced and buttoned shoes wit n’s Shoes at $2.40— flexible soles. ime Women's Oxford Shoes at $1,60— | Patent leather button and lace; box calf, velour and kid lace in swell shapesy Fine kidskin, with thin turned soles,! $3.50 grades. patent leather and kid tips, for dies Men's Shoes at $2.90— wear. Shoes that sell regularly at $4 and $5) Women's Shoes at $1.60— | velour enanel, box calf and kid. Dress shoes of fine kidskin; a dozen|Boys’ Shoes at $5c— sorts of tots and heels, including Louis) For small boys; spring heels, wide toes XVI; medium and stout soles; kid} and solid soles. and patent leather tips; $3 grades. Boys’ Shoes at $1— Women's Shoes at $1.80— Black satin calf lace, with stout soles; Women’s kid and patent leather lace and, _sizes 11 to 544 with heels, sizes 9 to button shoes, in the most fashionable 1354 with spring heels. shapes and weights. Boys’ Shoes at $1.25— Woman's’ Shnestat’S2i4005 Black kid and calf laced shoes, stardy Dress shoes of fine lcidskin, welted soles) 81. durable, but made on sightly of medium weight; stylish lasts, Boys" Sho CS *p to 526 Women’s Shoes at $2— SO er Shoes at $2 ich cut, calfskin with colld oak soles welted and Yomen’s box calf st 3 high cut, | titched; bigh-cl: i Wick welted soles also kid dress shocs| Iie oe ee ee in fine grades. Boys’ Shoes at $1.70— Children’s Shoes at 75c— Black calfskin laced shoes, with welted Spring heel shoes for girls and small boys;) soles and square heels; sizes 2% to kid and calf, in sizes from § to 2. 515; all widths Bto E Taremeat JOHN WANAMAKER., way, ith Ave, Sth and 10th Sts. &. HAVE YOU ANY _ BUSINESS property to let? Sunday World Wants find tenants quickly. PATIENTS DEAD Fight the Father in Court. ried, and in Mageh, 1900 he borrowed IC | $0 of my savings to go Into business. “They were married last January and it was the grandest wedding oMunt Vege r had, with a grand reception at r house afterwards, [ loaned them te last of my savings, §%@, for the wedding apd I have thelr notes for tt. Ordered To "Since the wedding @father has not the same. He keeps to his own room, eating and sleeping there, and there have been times when Ned and I hadn't even a morsel of bread. The Fallons™lved upstairs Ulla fow weeks ago. I was all run down and went to 1 Brooklyn friend's to recuperate. ‘Three weeks ago Ned wrote to me en- ; closing a paper written by Annte on his It read: ‘Tell your mother t come and get her things, Your grandfather rent- ed the house for $% a month and she [ muat get out! Re ne home. Father was ugly, but said nothing tll last Thursday when he went to his lawyer, Charles H. Os- trander, to evict me. Hut Mr, Ostrander was so mad he sald he would not have Janything to do with it. “Father went before J a disposs to-day, dnt get a lawyer, eo he dge Bennett Simself and warrant ordering me haa been postponed, out It | however, and [ don't know where I am," “Well I do," exclaimed Mrs, Pettinger, who had entered. “I've been to wed Muor Fiske, and I'm going to Judge .|Bennett this afternoon with a letter from the Maor. We will seo if a poor car helpless Uttle lady 18 to be turned Into the street by her own father.’ r. Murphy, the nonogenarian father, still makes hla own clothing and ts re- puted ot have a great deal of money. He 1s a grizzled and bent little man scoreely sixty inches high, and with a strong, clean-shaven face, and retains his facultiesin tact. He said: ty daughter is violent. She deats be, and she knocked poor Annie Rose downstairs and kicked her after ashy was down. She and her son have live me ever since 1891, and I can't affurd to keep them. I have all I can do to pay my taxes/and the assessment for macadimizing the avenue, and they have to get out.” The Fallons moved their furniture Into the hoilge three weeks ago, and are now viSiting in Willlamabridge, while old Mr. Murphy Js turaing bis fever, when five years of axe, I wax) nurse her and remained, educated at Dr, P “When she dled in 184, my father Mra, LAndsley was found at a nelgi- sald if 1 Id stay and keep house bors house, She t# a wee wisp, thin| and and frail and very deaf, but she | bright and brisk, and her mild gray: | lived. blue eyes snapped now and then ax she And now ho wants to turn us out. told her story. She is educated, polishal ‘The only fault he finds with mo i# that re of him, he would give and'my boy a home as longs as he F, muirround of El- ireountalns, are ‘ablaze. The its for a week, in of ® volunteer army fey, oa square mil ding, Srnaiig campo £{] been @ hard father. of the he even once In my life Rave me a klas ow and refined. Bho sata: {1 read the newspapers, But I am very "Yes, at sixty-five, and with nothing deat and it Is the only way I can keep in the world exoept my poor, helpless |in touch with the big world, and I coulll doy, I am turned adrift by my father. | not keep house without The World, It Is charitable to say that he ts under | morning and Evening. jevil influence, though he has alwayn! ‘ne trouble tsn't there, though, Five T do not recall that | years ago I took a nice young girl, Annie Rose, to board with us, She va nico to father and he says now ¢ ‘ Fetted by Morton, adopted her, Anyway, she had an faa “t was born tn! Vt, and my| mirer, a nice young fellow, Frank Fal- 3 te ‘ornare department ja Jes a pipmbar, bey, wears, Nod Lact mar- @ caress. daughter into the street. PHOTOGRAPHER ROBBED. Two Men Accused of the Crime Held In $500 all Each, Josiah C, Day, twenty-two, of No. 454 West One Hundred and Fifty-frat street, and Albert Vallord, twenty- neven, of No. 49 West One Hundred and Fifty--first stret, were arraigned iq Do. Harlem Police Court this morn- ea le bali 5, Guo ttundeed and 3 Lid an Port Hitta tet Bae ‘on ra bept it and avenue, ree aS rr en each of 500 Unde foe ise ga ae IN ASYLUM Le THREE LOST IN BLAZE THAT WIPED OUT 8 BUILDINS. CHOICE . GROCERIES SOAP SPECIAL. BABBITT'S BEST BUTLER'S. BORAX, 8 CAKES FOR 25c. best New York « 4c Imeane Charges Homeless, tered in Tents in Nor- folk, Neb. Quar- NORFOLK, Neb,, Sept. 3—The Btate Insane Asylum and adjacent bulldings, elght in all, were destroyed by fire to- day. Six hundred patients were in the Institutions at the time, three of whom e missing and supposed to have been burned to death. ‘The patlents are quartered in an open eld for the present. They will be guarded by local authoritles ‘until they can be sent to the Lincoln and Hastings Asylum: ee LIKE OPIUM EATERS. Coffee Drinkers Become Slaves. Black Pepper, Butle Best, % pound can. “Thé experience, suffering and slav- ery of some coffee drinkers would be almost as interesting as the famous ‘onfessions of an Opium Bater.'”’ says a Boston mai . J..Tuson, 131 Ww. Newton St. “For twenty years’I used coffee at the breakfast table and, incidentally, througt. the day I craved it as a whisky drinker longs for his morning bracer, I knew perfectly well that it was slowly killing me, but _I could not relinquish it. “Rhe effect on the nervous system. was finally alarming and my general health greatly impaired. I had dys- pepsla, serious heart diMculty and insomnia. When I would He down I would almost suffocate. My doctor assured me It was due to the action of caffeine (which {3 the active prin- ciple of coffee) on the heart, “T persisted in its use, however, and suffered along just as drunkards do. One day when I was feeling unusually depressed a friond whom | met looked me over and_said: ‘Now, look here, old man, I belfeve I know oxactly what's the matter with you. You are a coffee fiend and it’s Killing you, I want to tell you my experience. I drank coffee and it ruined my nerves, affected my heart and made me aga! a box, Sc. or 3 for... F, Vente. Ex- Eagle B purest crei 1 1b. can, ees M% Ib. can, 17¢.;'% Ib. nd O81, best domestic, Salty own bottling; pt. bot. &c Olive O11, Dest Imported, our pin % own bottling bottle * 18¢ 9c Jelly Powder, delicious jelly; a Chocolat Sweet _ Triumph Brand, pure rich; a bocieesy ri oe 5c fing Catifornia, a pound 10c "ie orated Apricots: tic California, = Lic St. Louis Flour should appeal to eety, housekeeper. The famous Pride of St. Louis Brand, the most in Amenica, is to next three days at the lowest fries on record for many a month. 3 1-2 lb. bag, . 7 lb. bag, .. 24 1-2 Ib. bag, . Barrel, . . > You will do well to stock up with flour while this sale is on. NQ.I pair JAVACOFFEE, NO. 2 CHOICE MARACAIBO NO. 2 COMBINATION COFFEE ENAMILINE STOVE POLISH, Special for Three Days, ABOX - - - SC Here is a seasonable item which famous pertet flour milled sold during the 5 Brand, fancy Maino pack, a Can... - Oc ~l7c 49c 1 $3.95 ancy MeMurray’s Succotash . Mustard Sardines, new goods, just rece Ay canes obi Liberty Condensed MUlke/spectal, 2 cans for s Reann, Booth's Baitimore Ma a can. Pears, Defense Brand, heavy syrup, a can. Apricots, Besle Brand, finest California, a can salmon ColsetR aver Pitar Rock Brand, 1 1b. tall feng Salmon, Fancy Sock Eye, Purity, Brand, ib. flat can, BUTLER’S BEST NO. | TEA, Alf, kinds, a pound, 35c. CHOICE NO. 2 TEA, All kinds, a pound, 29c. BUTLER’S Xow Matest ” Brand, itted, Scans for Prunes, Fancy. Santa Clara,’ fine black fruit, “a pound, Sc. or 2 Ibs. for Scouring Soap, Butlor’a Famous Brand, a cake.. Washing Sod Church de ~_Dwight's, spe 61 Washing feraskcee wol| Brand, 6-oz, box....+ pound, 25c. COFFEE, a pound, 20c. A poung, 10c, \ \ low, billous old man, but throngh a friend who had been similarly affiict- ed I found a blessed relief, and want to tell you about it. Try Postum Food Coffee, a grateful, delicious bev- erage, full of nourishment, that will satisfy your taste for coffee and feed your nervous system back into health, rather than tear it down, as coffee has been doin; I took my friend's advic within a week from that time my ri gestion seemed perfect, I slept a putes retreahing sleep all night, and heart) quit’ its quivering and jaraping. ST ahvs been otoedly fn health and vitality. Sir CHOICE GRaC BRANCHES. PRICES QUOTED DO _[NOT APPLY TO SUBURBAN

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