The evening world. Newspaper, July 31, 1902, Page 10

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Pa | THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, JULY 31, 1902, “MAYOR LOW’S GREAT PLANS. 'DONNELLY’S MOTHER SURE -FORINTERBOROUGH TRANSIT HE DID NOT KILL DETECTIVE. 4 o————_— ' —_—— a Wants to Rebuild Brooklyn Bridge and Build Connect sing Lines in Manhattan— Increase Its Capacity 60 Per | Cent. by Cross Town Lines to Ferries. | Steam with Electricity in New York Central Tunnel—_ Great Terminal Station | Atove the Harlem—'L''| Mrs. Ellen Donnelly is heart-, hut, She suddenly turned away trom her was awake and Frank was in bed. Cas- . - work saying: “I can't finish this Job to-|sle said she wanted a drink of water Road to Connect Piers. broken to-day night, the Ieht hurts my eyes." Skeland { got it for her. I then went back | Her son Frank has been held bY thon went to bed and was followed a| to bed. a coroner's jury in Long Islan) City | tew ‘Tate later by Rose. I, too, went of the Long Island City Murder. + Tn his “Thursday Talk” Mayor Low MELA EM this (question, cand of AM NOW That he was held solely on th@)vijecy in ped It was his usual time for | cause the first thought that ) ALT HE eame to me RL RY TH i y matured te deal wisely with such a al Mp his bana il ibNelnaten i a % <blem ‘for the murder of Detective Sheri-;to bed. 43 usband is a night wate About 3.30 o'clock we were aroused by fj pincurse the question of New York's Ainoe thi wasouiisent ORTH: lonalh . man, so he waa not at home, two detectives coming to our door. 1 # ls in the development of its) lature, Tohave Kopt in close touch wiih Both Kove and Cassie saw Frank | was frighteied when they knocked, be- ie i PRESIDEN ‘ HAL testimony of her other son, Philip, | retirin OF OTHE NEW YORE Sono ae co eesc UD Reus and. ‘The detectives entered th BALHACIAD nM) BAY THAT HIS OAD | who ja nine, is more than the moth-/0'e! ee ory mor ning i be In time for , One of them had a drawn re | MATION WITH {E er's heart can bear. ERAS RS MADRID Ao demanded ow Ww frank Interborough communication be- | i offi ; lief { ras $1.50 a week. vas, 1 eal” he ie tn ed oF Soures, Ayreen Manhattan Inland and Long K Fiiled with a mother's belief In| a, 1,9 ok ‘Chase arose and took Vea, Waleed tito ‘th ( the Innocence’ of her son, Mrs. Don=|ho» medicine from a bottle In her room. buried Frank out af Bed, Fe feation with Manhattan t TR SET : nelly declares that her little boy |She had to go near Frank's door for was told t Le a i Sh - ae i OR THEIR THROUGH | wy, cally bribed to give the|{h® bettle and saw him then lying in Gd eG at Island from the north. ee nd that they will sign a| VO® eeu tee ‘Ge aiacuct the |Pe4 els and, beat and eurted im |The twprovement of the city rection of power. | testimony whiel ~| Henry. who Is eleven, sleeps with |band from the hat they had found near th oof thes the appro pur! cap of the murderer found near the | rank, ond was lying alongside of him| Where Sheridan was shot. This was al by t “| scene of the shooting belonged to|that night, Casste could not sleep after | @gne to make the hat ft Frank. taking the medicine, Pommercial facilities in connec- Mon with the development of the : water-front of Manhattan Isinnd. MAYOR SETH LOW. JF) Interborough Trannit. ‘ tion of Interb gh com 7 Been ot eiatan inna || MAVOR’S PLAN searched the “rooms without nding . whatever they were looking for, Sore He Was tn Bed. They are ttying to make him’ out She threw herself on the bed partly | bad boy, but we never knew any but nthe night befere the dressed and lay there fully awake. She) Foor, Oi frank: aie attended Bt ine Detective Sheridan Frank came home| heard the clock strike one, two and|me $7 of his salary ularly. Besides ibout 9.0 o'clock. three, then she dozed off, It w. | he was good to his sisters, and always My daughter Cassie, who Is nineteen [o'clock when Detective Sheridan was] DOURML then, little presents, like rib- years of age, and Rose, who is going] shot. At that hour Frank was in bed and stick pins, Frank. BY MRS. ELLEN DONNELLY. rough rs could hand thr to ation between Island the Mayor says: 5 Be ye crootivn rides: was (de: FOR TRANSIT want Higned it was intended, trom the rail- AT A GLANCE. ree cou ° e ‘wlth mand its Toad point of view, to be a bridge ‘wi mene aria ttle trains passing ‘to and fro upon Tree Or centren as Tae ee de ced Sekt fon ightecn, were In the kitchen when }as usual Once in House of Refuge. In the process of time it has be- f | lane: north of the Harlem River Frank entered, Cagste was curling some| The only way hoe might possibty have] He was never arrested for any crime. ‘edme ia railroad thoroughfare; wholly Mepaltd) “Hr soit ee co This attituc feithers over the fire. Rose was clean-|left the house without passing through | although when he was a mere boy he Boras to trolley cars, partly so as to) [that tt will carry atxsear (em PAE RaMer enot onto Ning up things and 1 was helping } the giris' room was by the window of /Ma% sent, (9 the House of Refuge for the bridge railroad proper. inatend of four-car ¢ ean Perey He Hevieealiad Ress the front room, off which his room is] "He could not have shot Sheridan, and "One need not be a prophet to be) Pwould increas Madison avenue, thus relle 2 situated. ason for it. for they Able t) foresee that its destiny is to be BRUREURO peRhuents the, former van of oh of Ite mont Frank baal te a clean iia ety Rut the winodw sash eannot bel 1 wnds, and ote layed 1 f vie mM erlous objections. In_ othe rds, went to bed, ‘That wa sabout 1 a wlth ; 5 5 er. T asked my boy Philip ereree ra iepoint: of vie ar nnect the B 1 h » railroad com of thi see SRL AIGR NEDO ae IFRSLIG OTF enleed without making a terrific solse. |why ne had ever sald that the hat found a@ railroad thoroughfure « now is to be p throw bd here are no cords or welghts on It par the sho ng was Frank's, and he LJ weet ri roadwry snue, {that of his sisters and when he enters fund whon It is raised {t rumbles loudly. me. th gions flow from this situation detectives gave. him th “Firat, That the suxpended stro Oy 3 oe Rete arty alee acre ea ASE Bay Ue aad Gp bas) Had that window been raised it would Ayercencant Bees sehollacve ine Be eriine Breoayn nridge ouou ntown ren mortonmer ah through that occupled by Cassie and] pave aroused me and Cassie, who was| sam SA aT UT CCB wholly Rose awake, and would haye hear Frank get- [Scene of the sho: ing. must be mistaken 4 to : n he rebullt as fess an eatte 18 nnect the Manhattan Bridge My daughter and [sat in the kitehen |ting out of bed and moving about the | last election Weent wanted F nk to adapt it to the large with the eaxt and went wating for Casste to finish curling the | room AVHEhe thaninwureene conta gr eas uthers, which she was to use on anew At 130 T arose and saw that Ca ste “with Frank “ane mx « rallrond thoroughfares | weco! that all the other Eant ——_giaealeealiee tolled | MR icacees vette atthe same tine watchs GIRL CUT OUT BY MOTHER, Fatlroad thoroughfares—that Im to/1),. ay underground road. shall sayy they mart not onty serive | "yaks w arent irannter sinton [|semorat ot every arate comin = GLAD, AS ALL ARE HAPPY, “GODDARD'S OUTING they it lead somewhere. at the City Hall, now maintained by the New York s _PWere this suspended structure tol] Arrange with New York Cen-]/ Central Com y within the lim —_———4 ——— a be retiullt to comply with modern ©O™ |Pieay for electric power in Park || Its of the city. | “ition, six-car trains could be run in- Perel iomsritiee . -|““Sweethearts Are Plentiful, ” Says Maud. | Btead of four-car trains; In other words, Hawkins, wns ME) Have Been Mrs. Gerard. “In thin connection I Inted th An arrangement shall ave atipa- ) the train capacity of the bridge would |] Provide m great terminal atn- "be Increased 60 per cent, I belleve this] [tion at the north, connecting work can go forward without Inter- || steam rallronds with the ander- dering with the use of the bridge. It|}] ground ayate y nteni the needs oe th eof the n'splan. far Captain Takes | 2,000 Women | Hawking until the young man gen in| &9dChildrenofthe Twentieth si i (Special to The Evening World.) Ought to be planned for at once, and : . the Brooklyn that “(Special to Th x of tt © eput under contract as carly as possi- ee posal oe tne Madsen tlic makes’ Ha cunton| BABYLON, L. 1. July 31L—Mrs. Eliza| love with Mrs. Hawkins. Assembly District to Forest He ible, ‘The estimated cost is $2,000,00. || tiver fromt quanecting with all Senge tn ate the Hawkins, who was quietly married to) ‘The newly-married couple will proba- Roy Gerard in Jersey Clty on Sunday | bly go on thelr honeymoon in the fai, ¥leW Park. 5 last, 1s enjoying life quietly at her home| and settle in Brooklyn for the winter. thaw iervaity [nere, (Mr Gerard tm still away and the) Miss Maud will probably reside with publle Trrjends of the couple are preparing to) them. | The annual outing given by Capt y being |celebrate his return with a blg serenids.| Mrs, Gerard's first husband, Martin Norton Goddard, the Republicaa leade: car | Miss Maud Hawking, daughter of Mrs.) W. Hawkins, who was long ago di-|of the Twentleth Assembly District, for ani, |Gerard, who was cut out by her ety |vorced, 1s one of the best-known mer.|the women and children of that district Teapid [Atllt augha and saya she does not eAre. | chants of the place. Mr. Hawkins again ‘Ook pla Preparations for So long as her mother ts happy, sne Is} amp rked on the matrimonial waters Banding a large crowd had been made satisiied, and “anyhow, sweethearts are| geyeral years ago, and Is very happy in and Capt. Goddard's expectations wer: east side. If almilar common ve all rade crominya of P| were Weveloped north o¢ the Marl think It wif) be apparent how Bixelien a, the convenience of the t would be subserved. ~ “The east side subw: west slide Elevated roads, as well an| planned’ for, should with those upon the east a ried to complet “The Mackwell’s Island Bridge should | 80d nelther sh be brought into immediate communica: | ‘Transit Commiasiots ton with the City Hull On the water front nthe Brooklyn [Of the city's commercial faelities in af With this work completed, we should the plers on the river front, ave @ modern railroad bridge, Instead |} Ren 7 of one twenty years old. the New Vork € ¥ "But, as I stated, a railroad thorough- Tare not only ought to arrive, It ought to. land somewhere. Now, where, In} “Manhattan, should these Hast River bridges lead? The Brooklyn Bridge, in- oontestadly, ought to lead south to the ae districts, and across the clty “The connestion betwe J t : Jea; and al MOnHAGtIE Lt as plentiful as blackberries.” All cons} (p, ty ltuny md mite Hudson River ferries: and a190) sag. and ihe Wiltamebure Bridge | wonnection with th RO oe eee eee ata rip Gata. ta ee commany. of hla presen twit fully realized pe ort! } via Centre street and other) ne ng cnderecouna ie dherdec|l (tree Manhattan Island Is ys o Few women jn this section are better Twelve thousand persons, were on (ames, to the Willlamsburs Bridge. (ties studies show It to be practicable,| “The improvements already made by |" ary .,| town than Mrs, Gerard and none have bord the ten barges and twd steamers, fe this would enable it to place Brooklyn Reoronas by Mr. Parsons in hia pes{ the Dock Department and. those that Maud is eighteen years old and Mr-.| received more marked attention in so- {the Wino and Tolchester, which left lde not only {Gerard is twenty-eight, while his wife tern plers, but |is cleven years his senior. a Mrs. Gerard ts a vivacious bruaette and does not look a day over thirty. tn which Miss Maud rard had been regarded by every |Hawidns and Gerard. would be the Mage {and Morgan and 100 pollcemen body as the accepted sultor of Maud Te! ‘pals hand to Keep order, but t ' BAYONETS NOW AWE i seer el Ist ane, i THE STRIKING MINERS, |stats soto se onic 9 ft would te replenished. ‘Th: ie down every pler. “touch with a large district of Man- ttan and the New Jersey forr “The southern connection can walt, but { think it will come. In the meanwhte | { 1 circles, {the foot of Bast Thirty-first street fer surprise that greeted the an- Forest View Park Staten Isl; ement of her recent marriage has| Capt, Delaney, of the Assed away, all ithe residents ex- fifth street station, with ‘llrond outlet for the] a8 avout to de begun 5 ii Ither une | for a large number of m ie fur. | also for an extertor str Vinal atrest| Width. ‘This street ts Hirely given | Pleted. with unimportant Blivckwella | Corthind! street to Ganse this bridge | and it Wil xaon be complet hue, xo that | Thirty-elghth street connected “with the aroad and that ight to the City Hull Thi rt alloy 2 on ytd thorou Ww business. » the northern connection is immediately | * amportant, because it will not only tne 1 erease the value of the Brooklyn Bridge | But it will alco bring the Williamsburg | 5: Bridge (which ought to be open by) 5 \ ‘October, 1903), In touch with the city |, “It atranes ita Mia Hall, thus making that bridge, in ite! thy vahatee hoc turn, a railroad thoroughfare. Phasame | ly connections will, of cours unite the | troll cars, 1 oan two bridges, and it ms to me posst- | ths crowing, but the reet In wile o the ere ion, unseen | ous crowding of the Captain sald the following had been | placed on board Oo) gallons of ekim oT a ™ wens’ ted r ‘ s er PBS ae, ena "y _ rot el * ate ‘cad. se ala a feo rT eRe eRe eIRNRARIRL OER ERE | Outline of Plan for Replacing )j, Her Own Way She Tells How She Will Prove Her Son Innocent) that some evil had befallen my | ne detectives returned later and | Thirty- Rothenberg &: West 14th St i August Furniture ‘Sale | Begins Next Monday Morning. ‘Bargain Friday. The Season's ied and Most Desirable Merchandise at Prices Unmatchably Low. Bargain Friday is always busy at Rothenberg’s. The season of the year Lincs little difference. Even unfavorable weather conditions have small ill effect u trade. Our well-founded reputation for unrivalled bargain giving such conditions possible. You know that never a Bargain Friday comes and goes but that hundreds of phenomenal values find new owners at this store. Shirt Waist Suits. Closing Out Ladies’ Shirt Walst Sults; Fine polka dot lawn in white and black chambray, handsomely trimmed with in- sertings. Polka dot duck ‘Sailor Suit, handsomely trimmed. J 39 Black and white and white and black, not all sizes of a style, ae sizes in the lot ; to-morrow will close out every suit on ind at. ve Peeeeee lee Tucked Linen Skirts. Ladies’ Tucked Linen Skirts, made from pure 98 Irish Linen, all-over tucks, full flare ounce, trimmed with embroidery to match; pone value at Loe To close to-morrow at White Lawn Waists. Ladies’ White Lawn Shirt Walsts, made in newest style, trimmed with three ase of 29e insertings, marked down to close at. Domestics Reduced. 36-inch Heavy Unbleached Sheeting, worth 8c. per yard, at.. Hemstitched Pillow Cases, size 45x38 34, at Hemmed Sheets (New York Mills), size 72x90, at. 18-inch Sanitary Diapering, per piece... 40-inch Victoria Lawn, per yard Wash Suits| Shirts. Men's Fine Bedford Enough of these for all the boys who will come to- Cord Negligee morrow. Pre-eminent Shirts, to be worn value! Linen crash with with white collars, wide combination collars of blue, variety of patterns and) or white duck, extra large colorings, at lined collar, Sizes 3 to 8; special to- Cc morrow at. Underwear and Hosiery. Women's Vests, low neck, Tlisses’ Fine Black Lace Openwork no sleeves, Richelieu ribbed, | Lisle Thread Stockings, openwork taped neck and arms, value | all around, the regular 29¢. 19. 12e,se06 eres | kind, all sizes, at, ao c Women’s Summer Vests, Richelieu! Women’s Fine Black Cotton Hose, ribbed, low neck, no sleeves, full seamless, the usual 12%. a) and low neck, short steeves, IC! Cc kind, at. the regular 17c, kind | Misses’ Black Lace orenwork| Lisle ‘Women’s 19c. and 25... Bk ck Hose,| Thread Stockings, very elastic and subject to manufac! 1| in beautiful patterns, regular 10c imperfections, at. 19¢. kind, reduced to, . “f tine white lawn, trim- Golonials med with bands of blue and Oxfords. w fancy tigured mate- | Qyfords ints down the front | aga ind sleeves, Colonial Misses and Children, In patent leather only, but patent leather is the most stylish and desirable sort this season, All are and the Colonials have Corset Covers, of tine cambric, round or V-shape, lace and embroidery trimming, have been 29¢., 19 . c now at.. (Continued from Pirst Page.) chowder, 1,000 gallons of milk Bae jlons of soft drinks, 30 gallons Ive | Jeream, 10 barrels of cracke of bread, of oats were leaving some on. dard that hi Nearly as large as that o of yesterd { “Ble; shouta it bo thought desirable, that |!) 42, maklanl Of al df the southern connestivn should one CHEN che cho haTT THEO ANSE @ay be built for the Brooklyn Bridge the atten t i 1 haya tou ined will trains from the Williamsourg Bridge away h the presen welling at | MEWEGstés crake use’ or tt the | Manhattan end of the Brookisn Connections of Other Hridges. | “The Manhattan Bridge runs fi point near the junction of Fulton s invatly Slava and Lithuanfans and In pre previous strikes have been the most tur- | "opi two of th bulent and violent men in the regton. | beaten MNOL recover, Phe spirt of lawlessness has been grow- Ward of 1,00 shots were exchanged ; SUEKEStE ing among then for over a week past The result would by | ic miei the rioting, and it is nothing | outing wo 1s comecting every per gett We land the strike leaders have all along | short of miraculous that. more liver | forme Mf Manhattan Island with the| been apprehensive that they would In-| were not lost, as almost the « nN =H | 8 of the police was momentarily ino Gaye gis of cakes nad a passing freight mM were caught and rely One of them, Siney Yavopskie, Centin ar sylvanta tunn xranted, {1 would. not Ke a connection betwe ia system and this. ¢ from the North, this situation on the is an unsolved and Flatbush avenue, in Brook: vtral and k Central and the Penas 5 ome outbreak which would re- | Population of ‘the town had | to De é BE eee borh ancy ai Ik a for 1 tems. AO Reniieyl=dulag ingame coutureak win Wows E8\/on Contre vatreets where the recs tah | DCD way. fd 3 the neighborhood of Canal street and] tunate ton affect- rin sult In bringing out the State troops A Ve: don't think Devery's BhaiGower, ‘The roliroad of thie bridge ine, the Grand. « al xi week Poxneet to clk about the ua) (an beat it Tf we don't have enough My aH ‘ Hi if ee DAS a sf : 7 ee if winter, | for AU wna: Bak At that t Propone to. This the strike leaders have been anx- ——.— to eat We can get more” veh | a o carried across the city in} Mand (panaed uni in M or A short tlme, if clre fous to avold. The presence of the pt rt a A much u way as (> give contact with the panle can seldom te aufiies Ill be als uted" my return PABH militia ‘in the neighborhood ‘bias been oR AN ONCESSIONS Sh Pa sn san — SS Be taken all along as the forerunner of the IONS TO MEN. 2B. Ma perating the Jeddo, Ebervale, | and Oakdale collieries, issued to-day that on and after Aug. ‘a’ picket lines, The men wore!1 no money will be collected through| Wol. ( MAYOR LOW AND THE BOARD OF ALDERMEN [tins et wove alt] aero gay BEGIN INQUIRY INTO ASSAULT ON JEWS, isis ie sentnantnt t escorting three non- | tighland union men to thelr homes through the ja notic atrike Iles Wish and Police, eof) New York, while our dep Beccenccantinued z Er ago Cres he ak Of{ not notitied in advance aNd strect cluthes, but one carried a bundle, | thelt office for the matntenance of the halaman Ms ep Pata Hab; is 1b Delancey tree Teareld boy. | crowd am did turn out to the funeral | This aroused muxpicion, The bundle was) the gelevances of which the miners nave | Miter of New York, and Col, Reuneg ) ~ and for revenge. PReUeSE SINE crowd MMH expected 19 pu In an appearance fern from ne hong: Jb a el blouse complained for some time. L, Pox, Secretary, called on Mayor Low ‘Lawyers have been retained to eat that Ht was with diMeuize |. Distect-Attorney Jerome sald he aia |*™ ° atc ub eRe Uae yes St today, Their conference lasted ov push the prosecution against the Hoe Horners were arraigned at] QE tee how he could take any official [age a ns REPEL EGQORI) HES D8 te: MING REG AT WORK pale hour, After leaving the Mayor's / employees who attacked the funeral ; pute aueinae Peete (OnE the | coe his three charges Into the Phila ) RESTORE PEACE i. unn Wan Asked about the | *Paraders and to press charges 1 Sedan ance ae Inapes Adam Cross said: “p way | phis snd Reading de rere he locke a ‘cananiniaaiael {IVa eaties'40) ‘pay Jour persona’ rs the policemen who ruthi who. eas ohare, with: (eet 23) thn pellce In thle matter, 21 eee eae eae ee re a EEE BARRE, Pa. sports to the atayor of this great ety | own women aad children unit aged rise Wiliam [28,,,2RUMD that they ehaved with {rs gy vsident Mitchell has issued the fol- |Me eld Sal pr Men with their fists and even with} t ntiition: loomparntively wenite, meet yee. Joseph Beddall, a prominent hardware & statement: Psi es vas Gtste and National | clubs, examination, | ed in using SHAT by merchant, pressed through che erewd to hile 1 not inforined of the We talked them over,"' ( In Seminole Hall, No, 414 Grand! gy, Nes a How's} tacked or thremtened, ‘There were only a | 8°. 22, bis brother's aaalatan ine ms auses of the regrettable occurrence this a result of the conferenc Be WiteAledo-nlaht, there will be a masse) South "entitled | agile men at frat to cope with the [tunes uuu the mob cought he waa |ft Stenandoah, and consequently not | hot aay Awae that, 1 hope w _ mesting to protest gilinst the brutal-; [hat he w tid Stock Mus ORS feeultan MM ues well DEK, in a position to say whether the]! * May pF Again at an early date us D Aty Of the police, and Congressman the 1 the home In hil atuir is that while the areat was ne Small Pollce Force. miners or the deputies are responsi: | Was waked Ie he dixcuased Goldtogle, Abraham Gruber and Rab-| tet Wan crag, Gime Rol paratively clear of tinalies auch nal Reports of the rloting having reachea {Dle for 1%. T am nevertholess much answered; "Well, yes, Ehstein will addr the ; lt und mii Tt aia HHL of itch wor | ove Headquagters, the borough police grieved to ven thet thera has been SSaeenaenaaeeetes t mibarde Pippen as oree, which ts composed of only six men|a serious violation of the law. a rae |: pied te AIRS oar ihe tome anova ot have opeialy area the| | FLAGS FOR EX-MAYOR. bn. guttan tHane| 12°" : akg late Hah Fee iar ER SINT Rene HETIL ae prHtl miners that rae person who violated | Ft fram Oly Halt tw Honor of ¥ wih o * madonmi to the station for that purpose. he law was the worst enemy the pram S. Hewitt's 80th Birthday, Fost Broads, a doaen mads a4 a | PROMOTION FOR FIREMEN, "son she eno eeniara inst shot | strikers could have | Mayor ae te tae the then hold in 84m bull « cltended vivtims were about to escape} a He ; ¥y ind tate to be flung. fro ° ring all tho Jewish orgunl Maatitent saad | tye Men Ke Unginerrn, © potice discharged a volley, wht lxrarthaeaerevtrer tien pee nacd of 9% Mayor hun m 8. Hewitt Pa eee See wal ens eieeals laine efamen I | Hire MALIK int a auzed the crowd to fall back momen: ne a for any he peace, his in the elghtieth birthday of the what the sre] Manager Collins, of the Ieee of the follow tarily and engineer Hes au! ns Our efforts in this direction will bed mayor and Mayor Low decided to ae hae et j fom Si ake advantage and turned on the TU! ye redoubled. honor him by having the atge shown. BAM Was sent vit for mew n Block: id play ae A thousand stones were fying about| “Z trust that judgment will be) summer home, Reverie Cove. FOF all the wiutorsionit. men ama | REFINE iy youre in Phasin | Bi i the heady of the police when Chief Hry | withheld until the responsability for| gis’ eh WOM, font, the following tel Bert the east sido und of all the) VP. Be wecUrity, bite Muwiatrite Muyo | iaidder Company di. | nave the order to fre the trouble at Shenandoah has been| _“! send my own and the city’s w lodges, sovietics and layor or-|!" (s mt ie vie. PCa a aviary iaisikacatwart hasan tani saline : i congratulations on your elghtleth bt tions throughout the elty Coninina ir uy] The tive me Wil enter upon their| the iret voites, and the mob was re-| Properly located Bane of the City Hall an Ahese meetings siops will be taken] MNO Aakod enning roporta W duties at S o'clock tormorrow morn: | pulsed for a moment, bat only for a spats AND carvies te the mieten oe Mea hat fabine tn a protest to Commissioner] #lteed brutality of the poles at the |" 6 moment, | co mene olty™ and your tellow-| fe, Acommitice will be appuini- | Ut Yesterday | DIED AT a | They turned on the little band of po- TAILORS GET CONCESSIONS, saetnanseeneeatd | e-agsinn IndWviSisi| gaa Work im proowiy w. COUNTRY HOME, | ice with revoivers and stones 40d 8) serine an aciit om, bus 200 Con-| SCHWAB OFF TO PITTSBURG. | eupecially active fow shotguns, and yoon had them fee- Lawyer Heb H. Duncan, of tractors Haye Siagned Agreement, ing for their lives up the atreet. the data will be} “Regarding the prompt action of the Steel Presid it Leaves Atlantic over to Commissioner Partridge. | irooklyn police in quelling the dis | Bte@Klyn, Stricken at Meridom, Steady Fire of Foil While the Strike of the East Bide ores it an wppeal will be made} turbance in thelr baliwick. | will say| MBRIDPN, N. H., July al—Robert H @halnaliaalnice Atlan/abiiuanisantand sellore ie AU oar of the sane Clty Apparently Recoy: rAttorney, the work of the New York police dons re i ae No. 207 Jefferson avenue, |e.’ jeast w score of men we poten po are eae Pe agrooronnt & cet ref hp M. ane not compare favorably at frst glance, | Brooklyn, died of heart fellue sorenee dence. SVE IL must be taken aio consideration [#143 country, home at Meriden, > fall, Dut the mob seemed determined In | workers, Of the 400 contractors, 200 have Steel Ws hus already" that the Brooklyn poll mg at war ie a ax core ante, sea hele ar lend nee hy already ened and nearly, 6,000 men|%j Phan voMty te (Deol ad beware “Ai the, Petit TONS, eg ; f By weet Infants” Wear. lirge Babies’ Regular 19c. J from 8 to 2; spi Long Slips, of tine ] wy) (e heels, Special from 9 Cc cambric. reduced to. 2 until 12 to-morrow at.. Basement Bargains. Jason Jars, porcelain lined, zinc caps. Mixed Paints in 1-lb. cans, various Pints, Quarts, % gallon, colors, reduced from 10¢, and 5 — 150, Per CaN tOsrs+r000+e. Cc 49c dor. 7 592 doz. 79¢ dor. A Special Lot of Shoe Polishes Pearl Suit Hangers, for coats or ladies’ skirts, reduced from 15c. 5 for all leathers, reduced to, each to. “ a C Silver Polishes, reduced to. tern Brothers To-morrow and Until Noon Saturday Ladies’ Pleated Golf & Walking Skirts The Latest Style, of Striped Cheviots, Real value $6.00 $4.75 Another purchase of India Bond Writing Paper in White or Azure, square size with long envelopes 120 sheets and 100 envelopes, F per box 48° West Twenty-third Street. NFORMATION For Summer Vacationists, You can learn all about Summer Resorts, Hotels, Boarding Houses, Etc., by consulting the World’sVacation

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