The evening world. Newspaper, June 7, 1902, Page 2

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is WRT a TN WRT EN ae ae ie 1-H fala Nl aa a DECIDED Little Ada Howard Goes to Her Uncle and Mutual | TUNNEL ORPHAN’'S FUTURE BY THE COURT. Trust Will Look Out for Her Interests. ning World.) (Special to The WHITE PLAINS, June 7.--The fight ever the guardianship of little Ada Howard, known to We as the “tunnel orphan,” father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Will- fam E. ‘Howard, met death together in the Park avenue tunnel crash, wis ended to-day when Surrogate Silkman, handed down a decision appointing the Mutual Trust C chester, as guardian of the estate of the child, who is only five years old ince the wreck there has pute between the relatives of her fatier ‘and mother as to who should take charge of the little girl and have th right to eue the New York (Central Rail- road Company for 200,00) damages for the death of her parents. Mrs. Ann Augusta Howard, of New Rochelle, the paternal grandmother of Ada, brought proceedings before Surro- gate Silkman at White Plains shortly after the wreck to have the letters of a als guardianship issued to James Wood- ward, of Washington, D. C., who Is warden of the jail there, revoked, the ground that he was not a pri <| Mr to hi a jailer ne contention Woodward Is that the «uardlan York resident. Judi ice the lett was was also raised foreign resident and should Silkman declined on that ground. be a to nan, becomes thi because } er mother Surrogate Silk guardian of the child ng the Hfetime of same FIREMAN PINNE D TO FLOOR OF BLAZING BUILDING. e+e Comrades Kept Playing Hose About Imperiled One and Final ly Saved Him. Fire destroyed the three-story furni- | ture house of William Reubdel, Nos. | 2029 to 3083 Third avenue, to-day, caus-| ing a loss estimated to be In excess of | $60,000. One fireman was severely ‘-} jured. Reubel had permitted his employes to attend the funeral of Dr. Murphy, in| the neighborhood, and while they were | away he discovered smoke on the third floor among the cases of furnishing goods which had been stored with him by familfes which had left the city for the summer. By the time the firemen had arrived the whole building was in flames. The first and second floors held a stock of furniture valued at $20,000. In the basement were stored the un- opened boxes of furniture, James Bar- rett, of Fire Patrol No. 6, was covering the rolla of carpet on the first floor with tarpaulins when the fire broke through from the floor above, and he and hig companions in getting away fell ci ight Barrett, holding him to the floor. A line of hose was quickly stretched nd the water kept the fants from him unt he could be carried out, He was sent to the Lebanon Hospital, where it was eaid that he had been severely In- Jured, For a time {t seemed that the fire would spread to a frame tenement-house next door to the burning building, and many streams of water were kept on this structure. A panic ensued among. the tenants and the pollce were kept busy scuing the excited people. 7 ‘The building occupled by Reubel'r store extended back 10 feet from the street and bad a frontage of 7% feet.” It was owned by John Frees, who valued it at $2000, It and the stock were com- pletely destroyed, The value of the stored goods on the third floor was not known, but from the quantity Mr. Reubel estimated them to have been worth In excess of $10,000. When once under way the building and stock burned like tinder and it was feared that the whole block would go. Three alarms brought an army of fire- men to the scene and by saturating the neighboring buildings a conflagration over a table, A roll of carpet fell and was prevented. WOMEN FAINT IN CRASH OF EAST RIVE R FERRY-BOAT, —— One Hysterical, Makes Desperate Effort to Jump Overboard—Passengers Bruised. ‘Through @ misunderstanding In signals the Long Isalnd Railroad ferry-boat Southampton and the Catharine street ferry-boat Republic crashed {nto each other under Brooklyn Bridge this aft noon. A number of persons on the Re public, among them several women, wer Injured and @ small panic resulted. Immediately after the collision the boats parted and the Southampton ran into her slip at James street. The Re- public listed to starboard and made for her slip at Main street, Brooklyn, ‘There her passengers were taken off, A score reported #light bruises from the shock, Dut the most difficulty was with a num- ber of women who had fainted, and one young woman became hysterical. She made several efforts to jump Into the river and it required several men to quiet her, All of the women were revived in the forry-house at Main street and went to their homes. The Republic was towed to the dry dock at the foot of Atlantic avenue, where she will haye to be re- paired, The oMcers of the Southampton, as well as the officials at the James street ferry-house, denied that there had been any accident, The crew of the Republic say that the Republic pilot whistied that his pont would cut @head of the Southampton, and that the latter paid no attention to the signal. 1214 REGIMENT {8 HOME FROM CAMP, “I've Had the Time of My Life,’’ Enthusiastically De- clares Lieut. Vanderbilt—All the Men Hearty. Bronged and hearty, every one of dhom, the Twelfth Regiment returned from the Btate Comp at Peelkskil) this afternoon and marched Into thelr ar-| mory walle the crowd that had waited for the soldier buys cheered a lusty welcome. ‘The men came fifteen cara euch at Bixty-kecond sireet and Eleventh av hue and from there marched to We a mory, at Columbus avenue and Sixty- two trains in on They were detraine third etnect. Colonel George Dyer led the parade of the nine hun men from (ie dep and a proud commander he Beriuinys oside the first rank of ( pene was Léeut, Vanderbilt — tanned rt y 1 ‘five time,” be wald, “and en- every minute of it 1 wouldnt ve misgod the experience for wy In the world. My heal ain tremendoualy and 1 have the ite of & cannibal. Htowether I've had the tine of my ' Mr, Vanderbilt, when ask 3 to & i he was MYpS, Ws has been reported, ¥ bt Proven but I may go later tn Ving at the fawered rolt ‘cal Baas wi armory the nd then dinper rooms, where ch them for thelr we Ate. —— G, Dun & Co. report 216 falluros in the United Btates agains u ‘ewe allan of good, ral sar} 4 he correspondin ri re TH Yallures: 1h more, tia BROOKLYN BOYS IN CAMP NOM, Forty-seventh Relieves Twelfth Regiment at Peeks-| Lane against for kill—Warm Reception Newcomers from Crowd. PEEKSKILL, June 7.~/The Forty-sev- uh Regiment of Brooklyn relieved the the Pwelfth of Yew York to-day at {| Bute Camp, and ahe Twelfth at | murted on its mnth Is expe |the Ninth will leave for Manhatt | The Fi \'fve hundred | Col, John G. ty-aeventh, ly | Hook and marched the camp. The {in line to rec | Wight-noers we: large delegation of Peekwitiil girls. | Iircoklyn regiment was warmly greeted. The regiment at onee we the North Pat camp mor for Lake Mohegan on iv and will remain at Camp Ro unt) Wednosday. day tn Muojr Himer, i t| Jor 1, ajor J. place amt tnsp H, Townsend will or; fam 8, Beott will succeed. © charge of the orphan, that New|? Park rogular| Path the| Brooklyn, once turn home, The Sixty- in the afternoon, when pumbering about and commanded by disembarked at Roa up the long Rl to welfth was drawn up e the newoomers, Many on the hill, including @ The t into camp de grounds, in the Monday A number of changes will be made to- the staff of Brig.Gen, Smith, Austin will muvcoed Ma- B. Fisher as quartermaster; take the f MaoJr Auwtin us acting asslet- Major Fred C, Thomas will bo relloved by Major G@. M. Car nochan as commissary, and Capt, Will- ~y { LOCAL. CABLE. and Spanish Ambassadors to the Vatl- can were present TO REPRESENT CUBA, Memorial windows will be unv HORSE DIDN'T KNOW RL Because his horse cropped the grass Then Mrs. Howard sought to become SUAY P 4 eunrdian of the estate of Ada and the| 0? Seventy-recond street, near River- Pbk Gn aa tA aclu aan lt matter was finally compromised by hav- | side Drive, William Herts, the boy driver | Government of Beundor has decided that eeeeeint the. trust | fa butcher's wagon, was urraigned the United States Consul here is to con- HY the aTFORRLS She before Magistrate Lariow at the West 4 epresenting biel interests in | company to have exclusive charge of th| side Court Heundor ‘until Brasident Palma appoints | ’ : ‘one nis place. smpany to have exclusive chars of lgayssgy "7 ron: the little one's property. ; io ale he phe: TORPEDO-BOAT ACCIDENTS. Mr. Woodward, under the decision of SE Titel, whe dived iat NG for| LONDON, June 7.—Tha frequency of | British torpedo-boat destroyer and tor- pedo-boat collisions and other accidents was emphasized to-day in a reply of the Secretary of the Admiralty, Mr, Ar- yuddenly ifth avenue as Fifty-etgh atore at about to Le st he w ! airl/tived ti Washingion sha /BROTHEI SUICIDE) TOO, nyld-Forster, toa question in the House for a time way a member of the house-| yyy gy McCarthy, forty-four years [of Commons, showing that there were hold of Mr, Woodward | ota, of No, 198 Fulton strect, Brooklyn, | RGo ene than 110 such occurrences in 1 does not xeom to realize that her] committed suicide there by cutting 2 father and mother aro both dead. She! nis throat with a razor, He had been|REFUSE TO REAPPORTION. plays with her dolls, One of them, a] despondent sinc sulcide of is} BERLIN, June 7.—The Conservative Ig life-aize doll, whe eays was give brother eeveral weeks ago. members of the Diet gave their usual her by her father, and then she added: | ROBB DISTRICT-ATTORNEY. annual refusal here to. the proposal ‘Oh, he was such ag a. He is| Burglar are active in Nassau County. | {0 teapportion representation in the Diet with the angela nowy. bw, bur T| ‘They visited Wednesday night the|of Garmany. ‘The present roprerentae am sure he looks after me Just M®) youses of Dr. Hutcheson and Rey. Dr.| tion was based upon the census of 1858, Varney, on the Merrick road, and Thurs- oe HEN = Gay night they paid a visit to the house | ence HENRY CHILDREN, BURLIN, June 7.—The children of Ad- of District-Attorney Niemann. WAS, FOSTER FUND 94,847.03. |miral Prince Henry of Prussia have in- herited tho larger part of revenues Capt Norton Goddard announces amounting to $500,000 from the estate of the following subscriptions to the fund the late Prince George of Prusst for a memorial to Mrs, Rebecca Salome STOCK EXCHANGE PANIC, Foster, the “Tombs Angel” Wiliam) YOKOHAMA, June 7.—The sudden ac- perneven Bur %, ae G, % Gray, | tion of the Japanese Government in 0; Dr. BE. Li. #2; Rev, George C. | increasing the minmum of capt - Groves, $2; ‘Renle, $1; "Robert 8. Holt, | tion and” imposing ather “salutary: Tes 25; Mrs. Charlee T. Cook, $20; Robert C: | wtrictions upon the stock exchanges of Cornell, $10; C. Oliver Iselin, $26; G. G- | the country has caused a panic on the Haven, jr., $10; NN. Stranahan, $10. | Stock Exchange here. Previously acknowledged, 4,847.63, total, | $4,967.63. OONCERTS BEGUN AT BATTERY. | Children from every section of the south end of Manhattan flocked to Bat- tary Park early in order to hear Bayne's Sixiy-Ninth Regiment Band the concert season. There was a | @ and enthusiastic audience. The be given every Friday ATE SUGAR MONOPOLY. BERLIN, June 7—The Sugar Commit- teo of the Reichstag has adopted a motion having for its object making the saccharine industry a state monopoly. GALE ON GRAND BANKS. ST, JOHN'S, N. F., June northeast gale is sweeping line of Newfoundland and doing mu amage to fishing boats, fishing gear 1 other property. VILLAGE DESTROYED. VLADIKAVKAZ, North Caucasia, Russia, June 7.—The village of Ca nbu- lata, in a mountain pass of the Uruch 7.—A flerce HARRY C, HIBBARD DEAD. Harry C. Hibbard, Secretary of the | Carter Medicine Company, died yester- day at his residence, No, 687 Putnam | avenue, Brooklyn, He for many years Was connected with the Jewelry busl- hess, For the past twenty-three years a he had been Assoctated with the above | Tare, has been destroved oy a Lind- company. wilde, "A large rent suddenly appeared in the mountain, which, shortly after. ARTIST R. F. PHILLIPS DEAD. ward, toppled over on ‘the village and the ring farms. The inhabitants Robert Francis Phillips, a newspaper ereapede artist, died at the Seney Hospital, Brooklyn, yeaterday from virulent acar- TO TRY AN M. P. jet fever, after wt Aline ve days, Te cea cH enree aay SLIGO, Ireland, June 7.—A special jears ago. He leaves a widow. ils /Court has assembled here, under father Is ‘rector to Peterborough Ca- the Crimes Act, to try Patrick A. Mc- thedral, while his brother, Stephen | Hugh M. P., among a number of Irish Phillips, iW an author and pdet, METROPOLITAN DEAL UPHELD, Harry and Walter Content and Isidore Wormser, who fought in the Supreme Court the proposed lease of the lines of the Metropolitan Street Railwa: Company to the Interurban Street Rall- way Company, recelved another set- back yesterday when the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court aust Justice Gildersleeve, pines BOY KILLED BY WAGON, Maurice Fischman, @ nine-year-old boy living at No, 29 Hester street, was run over by a wagon while in front of No. 2h Henter atreet and died half an hour ‘ater, Wolf Hyman, the driver of the team was arrested by Oficer John Lope, of the Madigon Street Police Btation, on a charge of homicide. ROOSEVELTS SOON COMING. President Roosevelt's horses arrived at Oyster Bay, L. 1., Thursday night. trom Washington in a special car, and are now at Sagamore Hill. ALLEGED HIGHWAYMAN. George Adamson, a manufacturer of fut No. 1255 Broadway, was passing Thirtieth street and Broadway Thure- Leaguers, on the and intimidation, JAM AT PRINCETON WHERE GRADS RULE Commencement Exercises Are Fairly Under Way and the Orators Heard—Phi Beta Kappa Men Named. (Spectal to The Evening World.) PRINCETON, N. J., June 7—Exer- olses marking the one hundred and fitty- fifth annual commencement at Prince: ton were begun in earnest to-day. Som» of the ardor was dampened by a driz- day. night” when ocked hi day tight when a man knocked bm zling rain, but this did not keep the himacit as Gdwin. Kennedy, thirty-| students from parading up and down elght, of No. 120 Pear! street. MRS, LANE GETS $28,000 VERDICT. Long Island City Fire Chief Killed by Trolley Car and Damages Awarded on Second Trial. the streets and keeping things going at a lively rate. The town 1s thronged with odm- mencement guests and a large number came for the Yale game this afternoon. At 10 A. M. the junior oratorical con- test was held, the following men from the juntor cliss taking part: Axtell Jullus Byles, who spoke on “Phe Reta- tion of National Id to National Problema;" Henry Goddard Leach, “Walt Whitman; Corwin Howell, “John Wesley and the Beginning of Methodiam;” Robert Cadee, “Dutch In- American Institutfons;'" ‘The Dngiten Privateer Sentury;"" James D. Dante! Webster;” Robert B, Reed, “Useful Citizonahip,” and Her- ben W. Hopkins, ‘Nathan Hale.” The judges were James F. Riggs, D. D., J. Ritchie Smith and Prof, Nheodore W. Hunt, ‘The following men from the 258 mem- hers of the «raduating class have been siected to Phi Beta Kappa for good manding In scholarship during thelr course: R. W. Anthony, R, G. Busoh, Ly H. Cooke, Bond Houser, EB. H. Kellogs, R. J, Libenderfer, R. Mackengle, C, M. Mervin, A. T. Mount, D. B. Pfelffer, H, K. Post, J, B, Sommes, jr., H. D, Simp- son, H, F. Stambaugh, F. Swain, G, H, White, Jr, F. Ro Whitman and R. G, Wright. Prot. W. B, Boott, the geologlist, held & reception in Geological Hall and had charge of the exhibition of the Pata- gonian expedition, This expedition to South America is considered the most important of late years from a solen- Uo standpoint. ‘Tne glee club concert will be held this evening. To-morrow President Patton will deliver the baccalaureate sermon, In the junior oratorical contest, Ax- of Browtles, Jr., Justice Gaynor, in the Supreme Court, to-day confirmed a verdict for $25,000 awarded to Mrs, Gara Irene the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Raliroad Company for the death of her husband, D, W. Lane, who was Chief of the Long Island City Fire De- partment. Lame was killed in @ colll-~ sion between hia buggy and a trolley car on Aug. 16 of last year. Five months ago @ jury returned @ verdict in the widow's fayor for $26,000, AL the tme of the trial 1¢ waa brought out that Lane wae driving with @ woman, Her identity wae not known and she did not appear at the trial, The railroad company learned, however, that she was Mra, Margaret Louise Hinchiey, of Mount Pleasant, Westchester, Bhe made an aMidavit for the company to the effect that she wae driving the horse when the accident ocourred and that Lane was not paying attention to where he was going. With this affidavit the case was again ken into court, and it was on this that Justice Gaynor rendered his de- ciston. tell Jullus Kyles won first prise; Robert A ne 11 Reed, second: Corwin Howell third ol Jandee, foul 4 - NO TRACE OF MISSING WIFE, | iesn prize of #100 for composition was awanted to Candeo, Quarters (hut had been occoupled by the oe Twelfth. The latter tovk @ train for) Mi Now York at Roa Hook, mented, Absent Since ENGEL CASE GOES OVER. ‘The Forty-weventh will leave the main) tre, Jessie Heflin, thirty-Ave years old, has been missing from her home at ¢ | No, 44 Weat Dwenty-third street, since June 6 @he ie of medium height and weight and haa fair complexion, brown bate, and blue eyes. hen e dl ppearsd ab dlue mkir yeula: alk ows eh ry aw hat and black |i hoes. Fi ieappearanve was veported by her tr Jenae, who eald whe wae te Co with interfering with an offloer, mane Olp Cities vilD nmapy abe wavens eairowsulined be Mia Mme Pet " « CHILDREN'S DAY AT CHURG MEMORIAL FOR MARTINIQUE. JOHN STETSON DEAD. Children's Day will be observed to- ROME June 7.—A memorial service BOSTON, June 7.—John Stetson, father morrow at the Second Collegiate Re-] was held in the Apostles’ Church here} of Boston's mililonaire financier, pub- formed Church, Lenox avenue and One] to-day for the victims of the volcanic} itsher and theatrical manager, John |iundrea and ‘Twenty-third street. ‘The | Outbreak in the West Indies. Cardinal) Stetson jr. now dead, passed away pastor, Rev. E Tilton, jf., will | Satolll represented the Papal Court, and suddenly ‘at his realdence in Charles. ch, At the ‘morning. # two | fifteen other Cardinals and the French | town to-day. He was ninety-slx gears the coast | jarge of conspiracy | “lof speeding his automobile a Time to Bring Wite TELEGRAPH, of ag U, §. GUNBOAT OVERDUE. SEATTLE, June 7.—The United States gunboat Manila, from the Philippines, ts overdue since May 30 at Puget Sound Navy-Yard, Fears are expressed for her safely. T, F. CUSHING’S DEATH, NEWPORT, June 7.—Newport heard with genuine sorrow of the death of Thomas F. Cushing, in New York, ‘The flag on the Gaaino, of which he was @ governor, was half-masted. Mr. Cush- ing had been for many years a summer resident here. MOTHER FOUGHT FOR BOYS. WINSTED, Conn, June 7—Willlam Billings, a highly respected citizen of ‘Thomaston, tried to take his two sons from their’ mother, but was unsuccess- ful. The wife came out victor, although her clothing was badly torn. $30,000 FOR THEOLOGS GENEVA, N. Y., June 7.—Matthew O'Neill, of Buffalo, bequeathed $39,000 to Hobart College. The interest is to be used In the education of students study- ing for the ministry in the Protestant Episcopal Church, FURNACE STRIKE SETTLED. YOUNGSTOWN, 0O., June 7. — The sirkle of the blast furnace workers has been settled, the men recetving an increase of 10 per cent. for twelve hours’ work. The settlement affects the inde- endent furnaces, the Republic Iron and Eica Company making slightly different terms. RIDDLE A NEGRO. BRISTOL, Tenn., June 7.—At Tom’ Creek, Wise County, Va., Wiley Guann, a negro who attempted to mur- treat the twelve-year-old daughter of Franklin, Green, Was surrounded by a crowd of men, who riddled him with bullets and left his dead body where it | tell. |SEVENTH REGIMENT PREFERRED MONTREAL, June 7.—It has been decided that a New York, Brooklyn or | Boston regiment of the National Guard would be invited to participate in the | big military review to be held here on June 26. ‘The Seventh of New York, which pald a pleasant vislt to Montreal geveral years ago, is the regiment pre ferred. COLORED WAITRESS CREATES TURMOIL. Representing Herselfa Trained Nurse, Insists on Giving “First Aid’? and Is Ar- rested, Bthel Scott, a waitress in a colored fooarding house at No, 94 West Twenty- eighth street, wae fined $5 by Magie- trate Barlow, in the West Side Court to-day, for Interfering with an officer, Representing herself as a trained nurse, she insisted on giving “first ald” to Reynold Miller, an aged man who had been run down and killed by & truck at Seventh avenue and Thirty- fifth street. Pollceman Maloney saw that the man was dead after he had carried him into a drug store, and he told the woman to go away, She raised a scene acid he placed her under arrest, taking her to the station in the wagon with the corpse. ‘The woman protested that her nurse's costume should have protected her from such an indignity. She wore the al- leged costume In court to-day, It was a dark green velvet gown with a pink silk front, partly subdued by a white nen apron and cap, similar to those worn by nurses, ‘The woman admitted #he was not a trained nurse and that her husband, DMunsey Scott, was a colored man em- ployed at No, 15 Wall street. She ac- knowledged that she had been drinking. | and reached there none teo soon. WASHINGTON. CUBAN CONSULS CONFIRMED. WASHINGTON, June 7.—The nomina- tlons of the following Consuls were con- firmed by the Senate here: Buehr, Nebraska, at Clentuegos, R. E, Holaday, ‘Ohio, Santiag: Joseph’ 1. Brittain, Ohio, at Keht, many; Benjamin H. Ridgely, Kentuc Nantes, France. POWDER FOR CAN WASHINGTON, June 7.—Representa- tive Richardson, of Tennessee, the Democratic floor leader, has intro- duced the bill reviving the trust bil! which passed the House in the Fifty- sixth Congress and failed 4n the Senate, It amends the Sherman Act by making more stringent restrictions against contracts and combinations in restraint of trade. LIVES LOST IN LAKE COLLISION. Several of Crew of Steamer Known to Have Drowned When Boat Sank Outside of Duluth Harbor. DULUTH, Minn., June 7.—The whale- back steamer Thomas Wilson, Capt. Cameron, and the wooden steamer George G. Hadley, Capt. Fitzgerald, col- Ided just outside Duluth canal to-day and the Wilson sank within less than a minute. The Hadley made a run for the beach The eral mem- ‘on, but sev= drowned. night crew life-saving crew picked up se bers of the crew of the Wil eral are known to have by None of the members of th escaped, ERNEST HALL FOR SUPREME COURT, Well - Known Resident of the Bronx Named This Afternoon To Succeed the Late Justice Beach, Gov. Odell announced this afternoon that he had decided to name Ernest Hall, of No. 52 William street, a resident of the Borough of the Bronx, to succeed the late Justice Beacn on the Supreme Court Bench. A successor to the late Justice Andrews bas not yet been chosen. ‘At the time Justice Steckler was ap- pointed the name of Mr. Hail was under consideration. ‘Mr. Hall was born In London, England, in 164. He came to this elty with his varents when only six years old, and fas lived ever since In the Morrisa' section of New York. He has lon been known as one of the leading clt zens of the Bronx. ‘He ig a machine Republican, but has many friends among all the factions in his ‘panty. Tn 18% Mr, Hall was defeated for the Supreme Court Justiceship on the fusion ticket, VAN WYCK SAILS AND CARROLL, 100. With C. W. Morse and Miles O’Brien They Go to Eng- land, Where Croker Will See Them. Among the New Yorkers who sailed on the White Star steamship Celtlo MILLIONAIRE UP FOR SPEEDING AUTO. Edward Copeland Wallace Faces Charge of Lawyer Lovatt and Is Served with Papers in Damage Suit. (Bpecial to The Rrening Works.) NYAGK, N. ¥., June 7.—On a charge nd refusing to stop upon signal from a horseman, Edward Copeland Wallace, the New York mililonaire tron magnate, was on trial here to-day before Justice Fisher, ‘The complainant was Lawyer Kdward T. Lovatt, who with his wife was injured on May 2 by their horse running away after being frightened by the avtomo- Dile, in which was Mr, Wallace and his fourteen-year-old son, Mra, Lovatt had her right arm broken and was seriously injured. Mr, Lovatt was not so badly hurt, At the time Mr, Wallace was on his way to Tuxedo Park, After causing the acoldent he was captured by John Loveat, won of the lawyer, who barri- eaded the road at Spring Valley and dragged Mr, Wallace from the auto, Mr, @ullace arrived in Nyack to-day for the trial in bis automobile, accom. panied by his son and Lawyer C. N, Bovee, As he entered court he w Aw tho result of an attempted raid on] sorved with papers in « an alleged gambling house at No, 193| damages troushe ty Mie. Lavrang, Weat Thirty-fourth street last night by three detectives of Inspector Harley’#| declared that the auto was runni wait, George Hngel, a lawyer, was ar-| thirty miles an hour, and his horae bes vaigned before Magistrate Mayo in the |ooming frightened he stood up and sig- Jefferson Market Court to-day charged | nalled to Wallace to wlow down, The) Lovatt, Mr, Lovatt, who was the first witness, letter, he Don't reiioek bound for England to witness the coro- nation ceremonies, were ex-Mayor Van Wyck, John F, Carroll, ex-President Miles M, O'Brien, of the Board of Bdu- cation; Oharles W. Morse, whose good- ness to Mayor Van Wyck in the J ‘Trust helped lose two elections for the Democrats, and Mrs, Morse; Jehn W. aMckay, Mr. and Mrs. Ben T, Cable, P, L, Cable and Mias Cable; Mrs, D, H. MeAlpin, Mr, and Mrs, B. K. Btev. Mr. and Mrs, H. B. Tremaine and Mi. Dorothy. maine; Mr. and Mra, J. Hobart Warren and Miss Viola Alien. Miss May Irwin, Mis izabeth Wil- ‘d, Capt and Mra. J. M. Halliday and ‘Minses Halli gaiied on the Min- nehaha to-day, Before thelr return Mayor Van Wyck ‘Johnny Carrol -will visit Want- age and uy to square themselves with Squire Croker, es A BIG BARNER. Good Food Pays Better than Any Other Investment. Money put into properly selected food that brings health and matn- tains it 1s better invested than any other wa; A man who had spent hundreds of dollars in medicines to try and get well writes that the past year he has used 166 packages of Grape-Nuls, He says: “Beveral years ago I had two severe shocks of paralysis, bringing on general nervous debility, I was not able to do work of any kind for eevera: years, “I doctored hundreds of dollars away, About @ year ago I began using Grepe-Nuts Breakfast Food, and have #0 steadily gained in etre! and health that since last July I have worked every day at col- lecting for @ large company, walking sev miles a day, and have not enjoyed better health for over 20 yeare than | do now. I am able to use all kinds of food but do not eat much besides Grape-Nuts and Pos. tum Food Coffee,”—-W, z Ale, 207 BLOOD POISON, which destroys both body and mind. scourge, the pestilence, the curse of civilization and of the savage. It has caused more misery, more anguish, more agony than all other diseases combined, doctors used mercury and potash to relieve the disease, to hold it in check, but the fatal day was only postponed for a few years, until the patient would be attacked with tumor on the brain, paralysi: locomotor ataxia, consumption or some other equally deadly diseases DESPAIR has given place to HOPE by which eradicates all taints from the blood, and makes a personas welll as one who never contracted the disease, moved at last, removed in so far as Dr. Sieber's discovery is or bee comes known to the world at large, and that it will be made knowm is a certainty, for it was in order to give world-wide publicity to Dre Sieber's serum treatment that this company was incorporated. Red, Rough Hands, Itching, Burning Palms, and Painful Finger Ends. One Night Treatment Soak the hands on retiring in a strong, hot, creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAP. Dry and anoint freely with CUTICURA, the great skin cure and purest of emollients. Wear, during the night, old, loose kid gloves, with the finger ends cut off and air holes cut in the palms. For red, rough, chapped hands, dry, fissured, peas feverish palms, with shapeless nails and finger ends, this treatment is simply wonderful, and points to a speedy cure of the most distress ing cases when physicians and all else fail, MILLIONS USE CUTICURA SOAP Assisted by Curicuna Orntwent, for preserving, purifying, and beau- tfying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crasts, seales, and dane druff, and the atopping of failing hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and chafing, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and pursery. Millions of Women use Curicuxa Soar in the form of bathe for - annoying irritations, inflammations, aod excoriations, for too free.or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weake nesses, and for many antiseptic purposes which readily suggest theme selves to women and mothers. Cuticuna Soar combines delicate emollient properties derived from Cuticura, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients, aud the most refreshing of flower odours. No other medscated aoap is to be compared with it for pree serving, purifying, and beautifying the akin, scalp, bair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic touet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines in Ong Soar ut One Price, the west ekin and complexion soap, and the sxst toilet and buby soap in the world. Complete Extermal ana Interna! Treatment for Kvery Humour, Sl. Denaeuink af COTIOUMS HUA (25C.), OH cleanne the EkiL of Craste 4 Scales, AoA sutton Rho CDIckened cuticle, CUTINTRA (UNTS tor aod othe and heal, and Cunonna Kean.very Fie (26c.), Ws ena! end ceanee the biood, A SINGLE NET te often eum The Set Bt Sent to core the mim earning. diahguring, Meminn. tral Ano qaly skin, sostp, and blowd Mumoure, rashes, 1Chinigs, aud leritekioun, with tuxs « harm, wuer. ai) elas falls oid thrvagnout the word Britich Hopot Gay Charterhouse Bq Londo. srench Depot, 5 hvedeia Pas fais LOrrm 100 AMY URES COMP s to Prope. Horue BA CDTIONRA Rison FEN fon! substitute for the celobraten! Nyunt CUTIONNA RRL VENT, a@ well as for Urihers and hawous Cures Put Up lu screw cay pucks! Fain, containing M® 10308, YTLOe Be CUTOURs PILLS ore alterative, auliseptiw, conic, and digestive, and beyoud Too the purest éweetest, woul successful and evuuumiual Lied and ékia bumou cures and tonte-digems. = yet cumpyuaded 00 PO Can Be Cured; IS Cured. Of all the diseases that afflict mankind none is so deadly as It is the enw, casteinns, odourings, Why? Because there was no cure for it. True, Dr. F, A. Sieber’s Serum Treatment, ? ‘The world’s curse is re- The International Serum Toxin Company, , SUITE 723, St. James Building, Brosdway dnd 26th St» HOURS: 9 A. M, TO 4 P, I. Founder of Siegel, Cooper & Co, id SUNDAY WORLD WANT ADS -WOoORK— ) Vie ao t : r MONDAY MORNING WONDERS ¥* ‘ ’

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