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é f e de VANDERAILT BABY NAMED Alfred Gwynne’s Little Son Is to Be Another Will- iam Henry. NAME DEAR TO FATHER. Babe's Great-Grandfather and His Father's Eldest Brother Bore the Name. of Vanderbilt, third nt the line, oj Thankegiving Day. Willam Henry the title and ent his eyes on his tir: @ named bab: It was decided this morning that the son of Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt should both Willlam and Henry, was his greatgrandfather, and so keep up the name that has so long been famous and honored, And the name has been loved. too, not ye Core nellus Vanderbilts’ father's siks but because his eldest son, brother to Al fred Gwynne, bore the name for the twenty-one years of his 1! The decision came after the name Cornellus had hung three days in the balance, this being the only o sug> Rested that was seriously conisdered. And not until to-day did the happy’ young father and mother cast a final ballot that the baby @randfather’s name. Though the matter Is settled for good and all, the baby, of course, will have @ formal christening. When this will take place Mr. Vandernitt said this morning had not b cided, butt will be at the hous Ta Fifth ave hue, some time in December. And the christening, although it will be wit- nessed by only a few members of the family, will be elaborate. For though Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt has given her grandson many beautiful and costly gifts, none that hav from her have been so notab Uttle christening gown. This worn only once, and not put on again after the day of the ceremony. The dress Js of the Mnest Imported lawn, the entire skirt covered with alnd em- bear his great- broldery, Above the hem ts an Ins tion of Valenctennes lace, of which the yoke of the dres# Is also made. gown came from a London shop, sald to be the most beautiful b gown evertdmported to this country ame Dear to Young Father. ‘As a matter of fact,” Mr. Vanderbilt id, “it's quite a gown to be named ‘Willlam Henry’ in. But the name is very dear to me and one | want my fon to bear.” Meanwhile, as the small Henry awaits hin christening da presents are accumulating at a won Wilttam his ful rate. Probably nm hy has r had such a collection of beautiful things showered upon him. The most remarkable of these have come from the baby's two grandmothers, Tesld the christening dress Mra. Cornellus Vandertdit has sent half a dozen ex- quisite lace collars and some very beau. tiful old lace and priceless linens tn the plece, for the future ward) the child, Ghe has also sent numerous Uttle trifles of silevr and geld, and a Uttle mosaic powder box One of the gifts of Mrs the baby is a carriage roby @lik lined with silver fox Gifts from Many F rie: AM of Mr. and) Mrs. Vanderbilt's friends have sent |ittle gifts Daby has, of course, had a ehower. Every one has sent a s9oon, some of them exquisitely wrought Freach to of soft RF Ay One of the first pre: ts ty come was fe carefully wrapped ym Marry Lehr, It way a toy sheep, which utters Marvellous suunds when the epring Is touched, and would be can: in| the toy shops umong the toys for two- year-olds. About Its ne ad cream vane Quisite Ittue gold Everydody's ingenuity has be to find something nov est baby in the workt kK was an ex-t | | result THE WORLD: ‘1HUtisvaAY EVENING, KU IMISS HELEN HAY TO BE THE BRIDE OF PAYNE WHITNEY. Announcement of the Engagement of the Daughter of the Sec- retary of State to! Second Son of For-; mer Secretary of the| i Navy Is Made. | | Oy 8. WASHINGTON, > tent of Mies Helen Hay The engage | the daughter of Secretary of State and Mra, Hay, to | Bayne Whitney New York, was | formally antiounced to-day Mr Whitney, second son of Will CO Whithes, ex-Seeretary of the Navy and Mies Hay have Known each other | since childhood, but the romance which is shortly to end in brilliant weddings of th Veloped In the past nu Whitney's sympathy the time atte other brother's traggt New Haven are sald to have heart of the much admired: belle Misw Hay made deout in W. WRIN veury ard tn adalttio: echety ac slmente has w A place third stort at won the wer he ROBBED HOME OF BANKER Frederick Stetterfield, Eng- lish Butler, Arrested on Mr. Thomas's Charge. tah Frederick Stetterttelt. 4 thirty y morning in 1 was employed banker, of N atreet Mr. ‘Thomas that many have chance! upon the new. est thing to give a baby—w little nand- made kimona, coming Just below the baby waist, Its borter hand-emorot dered. The fancy umong Mrx or dilt'’s women friends making the gifts they have sent much exquit ferings to the bany | ework ot: nursery, nthe which ts quite covered with pretty and | costly presents, ———— | FALL FROM TRAIN FATAL. Eleventh Avenue Scene MIM Man’s Joseph Jame, ty of Union Hill, ‘Thirty-third street > to-day and dled soon after from his in juries in Roosevelt Hospital, ———— SHIPPING NEWS, $ ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY Bun rises. 7.01/8un sete. 4.55) Moon sete c THE Tipps of Unton Dinaater, MWigh Wat ‘i AMD, Mu Sandy Hook . 1 9.0L 94T Govermor’a Island ..... 9.28 10 Hell Gate Ferry.. Wig an PORT OF NE ARRIVED. Ww YORI, DUE TO-DAY, Gt. Michaels. Mardanger, Gibraltar. e-stancbexteribtord, Gibraltare Nex Brooklyn Gity, Swansea, Mita rrinall Gale, Ser GTO iG STEAMSHIPS. BAILED TO-DAY, Masre, Jeffersoa, Nvrtolk, Bremen. North Mar, Rortlaad, Ma 1 warrant his which wou Mr where to have Him, 4 ate to pawn thewet Magistrate —— THE CHICKEN WAS STJFFED. and Duck Weren't Wan Meta. 1 found a chtek tof thls man's wt tor fat before toemorrow, en hang Ing in © Insw Health, pri day before Magistrate 1 Market Court The ua Morris Schreiner, butcher, of No, 016 East Houston street spoke up in trembling tones: “Your Honor, the chicken waa not real, It was stuffed. Here it is," and he unwrapped a bundle and produced a feathered fac-rinile of a chicken: The Court examined ks and found tt to be stuffed with excelsior, Thy laughh was on Morris, Ho flushed up und stammered out: "But your Honor, | also found a goose and a duck in front of the store, They were real.”’ That altered the case and Schreiner was held in 8 bail on » charge of vio- lating the Banitary Code, : Ui | Se mt that uiterman, twenty -fy amt Bitty An: | enventh att sux an admirer of employ | p girl, was her with his at- looked t ereld'a vitesté atid | tentions pawn tickets, Then The val eel oompliments and the polte start moro fhght A tte crowd ¢. Yorkville jered and Ao while there waa pande- ed Mr. Thomas; » Her earher nd th ot the Among ‘ having app works include ote 4 roman poet thern these was the following LOVES KISS. Kins me but once, ant in that apace supreme My whole dark shall quiver ty an ent meet sleath shall eee my heart and comprehend That lite te crvwned, and iu idiess gleam Will Ma the color of the dying stream, MISS HELEN HAY’S “SLEEP, MY HEART!” So, sleep, a ing, no For woking jeep a ere brok hapless stad. neroen deserted vy |p Se, mein, Me ne 1 love's hot aan he set. ty but weeping: nalcep, and cyoa forget. nowenry eye: but weeping endence, Love trating uste fal wo sailing a hear aleen For waking wn. but she gave him but f agement Her latest Hterary effort. ted “Ashes of Fo: hirletman num concluding st ashin a poem en peare in te Harper's Monthly nza reads thi Noses of love! And AN Time Killed you one by one, red up nished from the rua. eked my patos as aad T gat! ne tale That Lite and Death m = frend An “endless immortality to b Ins me teat onre, and ay shall wad eny dream And Lave heart me and 1 hte ies Ant ttrateht T erted to Death: 1 wilt not diet Earth (a0 fale when one remembers this The ve okie the ky Wu the grave une rget—torart han known soctety In many cities, | Jand, her birthplace, to Lon: | don her father’s term as Am- | bane She was presented at the| Court of St James and enjoyed great | Populartty English society. She ts petite, WIth regular features, [ht orown | hair and dark and Queen V torla tice toon her charm Mie groee two years ago Mixa | Hay wae the re: entef marked atten: | ton from first in seoretury AILS NWA KNIFE DUEL. — ’ | Pepsin Club’s Masque Ball Enlivened by a Fearful Slashing Combat. Dall at the | The Pepsin Club's masa Harlem iRiver Casing, On ndred and | tesINtA strees this morning was tween [wo 30) which knives atante tu man Care and in monty Twenty -nivth and a arated bomen ow 1 Wounds tg had ty profusely the first | on the same | It Acroas the back wound on the Jef Gutterman nek hada {hin 1 four es tong Donnetly had a large ot, a curved Slate nearly tive inches lo The men were trken first to the One Hundred Twenty-sixth «| station and then to the Harlem 1 fi When arraigned before Magistrate Mogan in nelly and Kem e Harlem Court beth Don- Uutterman refused to prefer ainat each « saying that ! they preferred ty Ko home and eat thelr Thankagivini di They were dis- | BATTLE ABBEY SECRET OUT. Ci Augustus Frederick Webster rohased the Famous Estate, LONDON, Nov. S.—Tho mystery sur- rounding the sale of Battle Abbey at public auction has been solved by the announcement that Sir Auguatus Fred- erick Webster ts the purchaser, The new owner t# a descendant of Sir Thomas Webster, who bought the Abbey from [tite tran my heart, w Vet tare L conquered! See the dead loves bless hols thelr beryl eup, fof my toseliness Warming the whose Wh nederbllt, brother, married Miss f the wo nitney Ha Bay Gertrade V. ary of vette Square 1 vayhond int vxsmate th had many Naneer four years varsity nk asa Willam « ty plea of nls over and : son Mise Tay BRIDGE JAM BREAKS RIBS. _ Policeman’s Wife Suffers Se- vere Injuries When Guard Pushes to Close Gate, White the guard ofa Brooklyn Brtd tr wie crowding the p Kers on a Mantvattaneteund this om «in order t Mrs Minnte jeeman, was fa door injuy oC her ribs were broken and her a hurt She « vken hy her husband arrested the guard took hm te a Hrekiyn poles | Whore the Magistrate refused. to entertain a cha Fol ‘ sto the Baa: On Hun 1 our station, his wife and three en in- adic Reewnts, with their wives, Were returning to Manhattan at lock thie morning from Herough they had all been Laat bridge plactorm just platform of a the start. 7] crows tng Ame deed Hear guard in charge, the passengers might clome tn Mrs, Gray v y handies of a rite broke she prenwed hard ear door, mod und a and fainted. socked were the passengers the uns with Tarkeys TARRYTOW . 23.—- Thanksgiving Day i belng duly ob- served at Woody Crest, Miss Helen Miller Gould's home for crippled b Miss Gould ordered a large supply turkeys and other good things for} proteges and came from the city her- self to wee that her young charges had 4 good time and were properly provided or, According to annual custom a fat tur- key was also presente! to all the mar- | AloKO LIFE: OTOPO HOR Policeman Edward O’Neill Clings to Madly Run- ning Animal. DRAGS HIM A BLOCK. Crowd Cheers When the Officer Fin. ly Guides Him Into ‘'L” Road Pillar. crowd man Edward venfth treet act bravery that nearly cost ng desperately to a lunging madly through Manhattan Mulberry street, ntooa fight svhe was! with a ccuntryman ant shot him in 4 cars| through the heart ‘rented Wee] Rernstein sprang for murderer court the was shot, Speddi fred at that h but the bullet went wide, Sped- PME BAL] AL kept on firing, but Burns sitecerded ried men on the place, so that. every Viscount Montague tn 1719, and whose family retained possession of it for one hundred and thirty years, be fe UN ria i a) nie Te IE fainily might be sure of a good dinner. The! re about twenty ys in the home and for them the day ja always one af the happiest in the TEN | y a Se Sse beak Da 1 Howhich was net ' Moerman had bees ind avenue and t when the ru oreo drawing a butcher's yA. Recker Hatan “Le POLICEMAN EDWARD O'NEILL. Keck poth w the pulled #0 hard on the Ines that Ute broken, te To save out, and ofall aint. con ok gpeed up dia cemin O'Neill «aw him coming hin ow driver ul se ran out to head him off. He the bridle, hut was instantly swung off hia feet. Knowing that two schools near bh about to t for the da thinking « youngs' Whose lives might be endangered, clung to the maddened animal, He waa dragged nearly ¢ AUre distance from Thirty-fourth to ‘Thirty-tfth street be- to head the horse and stop him i of wevera ON he horse nd stil, Bec owner, had not n hurt when he te out I Yell! «reward, but the | fined it Neill has been on the force for twelve years. In 1893, he Means of saw Y lives of 1 families at Firat avenue iT woah at 2 ocho in the morning, Brevking in the ¢ ro owith hi mi all BRAVE BLUECOAT LAUDED IN COURT BURNS MADE BRAVE CAPTURE OF MURDERER SPEDDI. night atick, he arous . women and child jut safely Hothe sleeping hand got them Medal from ¢ hy and Ie Mighty ed hy Magistrate Zeller. missioner Mu Pollceman Willlam J. Burns, of the Elizabeth street station, who received a medal of honor from Commissioner Mur- phy yeaterday, was highly complimente by Magistrate Zeller in the Centre Street Court to-day ‘The | was awarded to Burns for conspicuous bravery, He arrested a murderer, who, In attempting to shot Pe win Hoary Hernstein Mulberry and Canal streets on the night July 3t Burns and Rernatein we comer when Ge standing on in making him a prisoner. Speddt was convicted and to nineteen years’ tmprisonme: FELL INTO A BONFIRE. entenced Wdsm vo, UL [SHE DEMANDED $1,000 FOR SNAPSHOT OF MYLIN’S KISS. fro 2 SMA) , Rich Old Pennsylvania Merchant Laida Trap —Now Marguerite Guilday and Her Com- panion Are Each Held in $1,800 for Black- woman and a com- afford to pay so much money: ins Don't you let him down, Marguerite,” of my tla Mylin has been st gat the Gerard! is just loaded have a kodak Hotel in West 5 wrth street. £ h y every penny me some t 1 quainted th of | ‘This was the better chat Amos Th My Marguer! Guilday about two months Finally {twas that a wealth rehat a " 14 room at her flat, at) PR0Wwd pay $1 ve sd the ap neaster, Pa c st Eighty h gtreet. Myl nomarked bills. ‘This kuertte Gutlday ix rs old and the Guilday |! the reesipt given : that it would take Woman Ls about twenty-three. fromeAtel Leatanis Bil pa necelved his letters tha About two weeks ago the woman was| unit of balance to be pald to “ tempting to swindle | Me for certain letters [hold In my pos Mylin became fright. | Spsslon. Tpunccpalaunarsietecein ad ened und resolved to. e nothing more 1 i man hair to do with her. ‘Then he recetved the MARQUERITE GUILDAY." nd hurried demanding money last Tuesda; PEE ree eae ey amare f the detective, 3 the Guilday woman, ‘to-day in the Weat Magistrate Meade and ntment with the woman ; 1 « houime tn West Thirtleth street Lust ‘Alagiatrate Steade god Rienad i Dats In company with Acnes i . mn 51.800 bail eaeb. i charge of Mylin iMylin was not fn cod ake MANY DEAD IN WABASH WRECK. 2+ VIGEREINE’S MOTHER HERE | iMrs. Leiter Arrives on Ma- <e Between Eighty and a Hundred Killed and Scores Injured—Crash Near Detroit. a }} DETROIT, Mich., Nov, 28.—De- pressed into service, Others who w: jestic After Trip Through ! velopments at the scene of wr hurt were taken to Peru, Tad, and Fi S Squall . ‘ iieoail Montpelier, O. lerce onow oqualls. on the Wabash Railroad, ne All tantinight the ntty or sixty doctors Seneca, to-da have not tended to on the scene did what they could for ) minimize or detract from last night's tne cous nie ae aii eee 3 er oploushing her way through ; awful calamity, ‘The number of | ny vniy one tars hoves Woo neue the Norms nein and cealnijana " persons killed in the head-on train. of the aecilent, and this could |S20ws the White | Matitihibtererie 2 f, collision will ch from eighty to| not accommodate more than « Tati ieam collin yale Maarentarstie of the sengers, i ere wore a MAcasue = one thindred, | whlle more thamsjene | a ean aan ei t Thanksgiving dinner ashore. The hundred are suffering greater or rate] had a Very rough passage except Longer niurien Hodtes Senttered AM Over, during the first day, and, aa one of the if : : area Attention was pald to the dead | passengers said, “i wan all golng up, \ Atl t twenty-five of the injured ight, the bodies being BS and then coming down, and some= are seriously burt, and many of them ny the track for a quarter of {times the vessel went down so fast that may dic, The disaster the most 4 mile, while the ressuerm devoted their could not hold on—to our meals.” a UUme to attending ty the injured, atl A. M., Daunt's Rock appalling in the history ‘The flames of the wreck continue m that time until Iroads, not excepting ‘burn until the woodwork of the ’ p Was sighted, \ wreck on the Grand Trunk ro; Was consumed. The evene was lighted urs and forty-three 1 ae vorld's F he flames and the surg Was rough weather, 4 attle Creek during the World's Fair t « ’ Battle Creek ¢ hid al the wounds of the injured by » vessel buried I he Ught of the fire that w: the bodles of the dead. wager swept all the time she cremating, assenger trains, both heavily ind daring loaded and one drawn by two en-/| Wabash train No, rived not more than 425 knots were 4 7 Union station, Detroit, from th a ain met while running at full ‘ Mm several ho a : nthe goth t eae Cars were smashed and the) S°Y8F! bours late. Tt brought Engi bani a the wea dr was hitter trong and three uninjured passengers ted uring ‘y-four hours wrecks immediately caught fire. No.4.) Strong. relternted) hin, state: were hard snow, Many who were not Lilled outright | ment previously made, to the effect that a a eae Barua passers oo s derireat 4 z < fe was Mrs, Levi 2 were burned to death and the bodies wee a more a t as 3 nd Lali ugar ine ea itua Wee 5 supposed 13's order | A ei r entirely consumed, aimtipenece of India, With her were her daughters, ” s known as wi vund train ar, which, besides Miss Leiter and Miss Dalay Leiter, They were met on the The weate 8. 12 but two were No. and was ar yk by the gon and iin ordinary couches, had several curs | F brother, Joseph Leiter, Med with Italan fmmigrants going | xt roved. | The w York] Mra, Leiter and her two daughters 4 West from New York, ofithecnee DAMSODRERS Ate dead aed | bave been for some time in Br land and Inmediately the collision six of] ated after being take on the Contin nd are now returns the cars crowded with immigrants purst Among the ‘injured orgs, Ti] ing to Wastington for the winters 0 7 en | of No. #70 East ( i ‘ ¢ into flames, TH ; unt elunate nessa and Seventy-sixth street, N oy rie; } Senator W Clirk, of Montana, who fought madiy: in their attempt to crawl | ictop Greeniuum Victor | sailed from tis port on Oct. 3L in the out of doors and windows, thus hinder-| Cohen, 2301. Carroll, Tona-| steamship Deutschland, returned on the & : ros that the bulk of them | Wanda, N. Winifred Crehan, Bata: fi é ing C vin. Y., and Thonias Crehan, But- f were unable to escape, "alo, went over on business,” sald the iy rain No, $ the uh pial aLAcalteds eye Huma, of the) abanh ‘ayatem, nator, “LE stayed about two weeks. train on the Wabash, wa to-dny: z Strong, in Parts and one day in V wre | traln No. 4, was responsible for’ the f y nna. nind time and was running more | (Ain Ne Monae fOr they wt have not. purchased any paintings mile a minute. No. t had ¢ Mis orders,” sald he, “clearly dl- | noi ve Oug y than an nor have 1 brought’ over any art it at Seneca to meet rected him ta pass train ‘No. 43 ‘at Lo} walt, asas re Seneca. He evidently forgot’ them, for | feasures. gineer Strong, of Now 4, he «id not stop there and the collision; “I shall remain in the elty a day or order, but he re ast wenticnaat resulted. two and then go to Washington.” stead of “Sene ant Another interesting arrival was Jan Seneca at full speed, WRECK VICTIM WAS |x: . the young Bohemian violin'st. Engineer Jumped. iw to tour the country under the | : cma} HASTENING TO SON] Iti tev, me gummy, under the Conductor G. J. Mart pes — has given him a $.09,00) guarantee. ni when he read the one aa hot stop at| KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 283—George| As Ellis Island tn closed to-day, the noticed Ue ean ie lees hiaweit. | W. Youmans, one of the victma in the |stecrage passengers on the Majeatle Seneca he apy! Wabash Railroad disaster, was a well- | Will remain on board all day. The of- me instant Engineer of Nine Years in Hadly 4 Momen nine years oll, In come half a dozen comrades of his own was playing about a pon- fire In front of Zlegler's home at No, BG West Fitty-frat street thie morn- ing when suddenly, while the boys were running about the blaze, 7 T elther tripped or was pushed fell head foremost into the fir At the time he 5 apron over his clothes. He was quickly pulled out and his mother rushed from the house and throwing a blanket about him ex: Unguished the flames and then. took him Into the house. The boy was un- conscious and severely burned about the head, face and body. fe was taken to Roosevelt Hospital. ; Noy Burned Jacod Zi pany with and aie AL about Re ite of the other train | known building and paving contractor | fictiln have given orders to the chief Be oie oenite alae applied the} and a meMber of the Board of Public | eteward to serve them a Thanksgiving airecty Nah then he and hls freman|} works of Kansas Clty. He erected many | dinner. bra ote of the large buildings In Kansas City | Others on board were Mr. and Mrs, jumped. ing broken and he was| and has held heavy contracts through-| Henry I. Barbe F. P. Buchanan, Mr, Sto cd, Dut he will recover, He| out the Southwest, and Mrs, I. D, Dasrell. Mrs, Malcom badly) UU SS sileve that a per- Youmans was the father of Frank | Graham, Henry W. Rogers, Thomas y# that he does not gon In the second car of Bly train eas nd It was smashed lke an egR- a well-known young bro- rest In Detroit on a charge Youman: ker, under 4 Kearns, E, A. Loeb and Mra. J. Kens | sped. on es —— SAUL between the car in front and the| of embezalement tn Kansas City, Mr. { one behind tt. Youmans was engaged on a big contract } in Texas at the time of his son's arrest, and had arrived In Kansas Clty Tuesday and proceeded East. He Intended, he sald, to persuade his gon to return to Missourl and face the charge. (Mr. Youmans was fifty-elght years ol, He lJehves a widow in Kan- ens City, Special trains loaded with phystetwns were despatened from Adrian and De- troft. Seneca in a amall village with not more than 26 Inhabitants aad with no hotel, ‘Many of the Injured were taken to Ad- rian, where the hospitals were soon crowded and private residenssp Were QUICK ANSWERS TO HELP CALLS come to:ndvertisers who put their “Help Wanted" advta, in the 44. Sunday World. Competent workers Seeking employment look to Same day World Wants for guidanea,