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i a >) i WINERS LEADER TO SEE MORCA President Mitchell Coming Here to Ask Financier to EndCoal Strike. WORKING AT MALTY MINE Operations Resumed To-Day Behind Stockade with One! Hundred Armed Coal and) Iron Police on Guard. (Special to the Evening Worit) WILKESBARRE, Pa, Aug. 18.—In a final effort to end the coal strike, John Mitchell, President of the United Mine | Plerpont | Workers, will call upon J. Morgan as soon financier lands in this country Mr, Mitchell will reach here fr the West on Thursday. He will probably arrange to go to New York on Friday. ‘Work was resumed at the Malty Col- Nery of the Lehigh Valley Coal Company to-day. One hundred Coal and Iron po- | Mcemen, protected by a stockade, are on | guard, The Hghting of dozens of electric | lghts, which make the territory outside the stockade nearly as light as day, was the first intimation the residents of the town had thet work was about to be re- sumed. The workers will be kept within the) stockade so that the strikers shall have | no opportunity of interfering with them. | The company officials will not state how | many men are working, but say that enough are engaged to mine coal and] they will shortly begin shipments. It is/ quiet to-day at the Duryea washery and the Franklin mine, where, in anticipa- tlon of marches, Sheriff's deputies were on guard. At Duryea the barricades broken by the mob on Thursday have not yet been repaired, but the owners | report that work will begin to-morrow. | Tt is still expected by the Sheriff that if this is done the leaders will be unable | to control the crowd, that another out- break will ocour and that he will have to call for troops. ROBS TENANTS OF THOUSANDS. Janitor Netherday Sacked Apartments in the lowa Owned by Police Capt. Thomas. as possible after the Tenants of ‘The Iowa,” an apartment- house at No, 135 West One Hundred and Fourth street, owned by Police Capt. Thomas, have been hurriedly summoned home from summer outings to determine the amount of thelr losses through the operations of thieves. William Neth- eway, the Janitor, has disappeared. How | extensive are the robberles 1s not known, but it Js believed the aggregate will be several thousand dollars. Netheway was formerly janitor of “The Tower.” at Ninety-fourth street and Central Park West, but went to the “lowa"' in November of last year. He is thirty-five years old and with his wife and two children occupled apartments in the basement of the house Anxious to Pleane. The house has twenty-one ap ail rented. Early in the summor nents, | more | than half of the occupants left the clty for the season, leaving their apart ments furnished and giving Netheway pass-keys to their rooms. Many « them, too, intrusted Netheway with money to pay their rents to the agents of the property, the Frank L: her | Company. of No. 4 Columbus avenue. | Besides paying their rents, eway | was [frequently given m the ten ants to purchase their groceries, and in | return, after sending the groceries to | the apartments, would give the occu-| pant a receipt purporting to be signed | by the grocer Frequently of late the tenants have missed pleces of jewelry and clothing. but no suspicion rested on Netheway, | and the tenants went to him with their | complaints. He promised to do what he | could to ferret out the thieves Netheway disappeared last Wednes- | day, and the next morning his wife an- | nounced that she was going to find nim, She left, taking her children with was found that all with the exception her, and then it their belongings a few small articles, hal been already packed and shipped away Miss Haines, who lives on the fourth floor, says that her losses will amount to something like $1,000 She sald that among the articles taken were an opera searf valued ut $125, a Persian Jamo goat and a mother-o' ri tan, Miss Shirk, another tenant, who lives on the fifth floor, sald that a sunburst cor taining twenty-nine diamonds was taken from among # Jot of veils in the rear of the first drawer of her dresser aken jast Monday or Tuesday a was valued at $000, Other tenants fhe house complained of losses, but re- fused to enumerate them or give their pames for publication ‘ —— _ HENDERSON AT OYSTER BAY. he € dent nt Dinner To-Night, OVBTPR BAY, 1. 1, Aug. 14.—David Henderson, Spea of the House Hepresentatives, and Representative cock, Chairman of the Republican and in eat of Prent- 1 Committee, will be the| * guests at dinner GC. Travers, of Oyster fajor Jorn Crane, with the President \ ? hardt, Saperint pital of dent t on of to-night Bay York, adent of ew York, ationd This | THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, AUGUST 18, 1908. ‘$600,000 FIR HH. C. FRICK TO SUCCEED SCHWAB IN MRS. DIGKONS, | j | 'She’s a Poor ‘Mussel | | Bedder" at Canarsie, | but Fortune Does Not Excite Her. |SHE WILL AID THE POOR. | Her Pretty Daughter Soon to Wed Will Benefit by This Windfall from Uncle John’s Big Estate. | Although heiress (o $400,000, Mrs, Lire ale Dickons, of Stillwell's Lane, Canar { sie, got up at & o'clock this morning | did a week's washing and then went down to Schmelike's mussel shanty, on the shore of Canarsie Bay. to put in | the rest of the bedding’ mussels Sh w her mussels a | | wore a calico dress and torn shoes, | onan Evening World reporter found | she was pulling great bundles of | rt, washing them and sort ing them for pickling Mrs, Dickons has known that j would get a lot of money some day the fact caused her to act for years in A manner that did not please the people of Canarsie. She was regarded stuck up" for a “mussel bedder" with ® husband who supported himself by going out in a small boat and yanking clams from the bosom of Canarsie Bay. | L\hwab, But Mrs. Dickons minded not the sneers | of her neighbors. She pursued the even | tenor of her way year in and year out, | and now her haughty demeanor is justi- | fled. eee 6 ot Her Uncle a Millionaire. | My father,” said Mrs, Dickons, “was | Frederick Snrorder. | He oad three| Steel Interests to Go Into the Control Geant ier’ ametan” "| Of the Man Who Figured in the “John Schroeder left York eighteen years ago, when I was living in Grand street, a couple of years after 1 was married. He went to Australia, where he engaged in the sheep raising business, My uncle, William, who lives at New Britain, Conn., has just been informed that Uncle John ts dead, leav- ing a fortune of $3,000,000 in Australia and Germany “There are four heirs besides me, and 1 calculate that we will get abut $600,- 0 a piece. We always knew that Uncle John had a lot of money, but we seldom heard from him. Once In a great while he would write to his brother Willlam, telling how he w getting along, but he never wrote William that he was a millionaire. She Will Help the Poo “What am I going to do with my money? 1 don't exactly know yet, but you can make up your mind that I won't do as the Vanderbilts do—epend it fool- ishly. One thing I have made up my mind to do and that 1s to help the poor people of Canarsie.” ‘The noses of a donen other women who had ceased their mussel bedding and were listening open-mouthed to Mrs, Dickons, took an upward trend as the heiress spoke of "the poor people of Homestead Riots—Schwab’s Depar- ture for Europe Practically Arranged. The impression prevailed in Wall street this afternoon that H. C. Frick will succeed Charles M ‘Trust as soon as the latter makes his arrangements to go to Burope for an indefinite rest. This decision, while not positive, is greeted with murmurings of dis- pleasure among some of the heavy holders of steel stock. They argue that Mr. Frick's record as an employer of labor has been marked by several great labor uprisings, notably that at Homestead, in which many lives were lost. Mr. Schwab made it a rule to ¢onciliate rather than dominate his employees and the result has been a long period of prosperity for the steel properties he controlled. followed by extensive changes in the membership of the organization. There are many positions of importance in the United States Steel Corporation now held by persons who are there on account of personal ties with Mr, Schwab and who have remained with the corporation from a devotion to his interests, growing from former association in the Carnegie Company. _—++4-+—____ SCHWAB’S HEALTH BROKEN BY BIG BUSINESS CARES. to Canarsie.” They thought of the humble ; one-story cottage on Stillwell Lane, painted green, of the di ‘ly tofl of Mra. (By the Associated Press.) Dickons, of the struggle for existenos| PITTSBURG, Pa. Aug. 18.—De-| visitors are turned away with acRad ed by the hardworking husband out. the bay in ‘his old clam grabbing It war all they could do to keep spite numerous denials of the report that Charles M. Schwab is to retire as President of the United States Steel Corporation authoritative an- ceremony. The strange feature about all this is that during the day Mr. Schwab fs always in view of those who call to In sloop from ejaculating: “Humph! The poor people of Canar- sie, indeed!” & Was Mrs, Dickons bothered py thie | RUNcement is made to-day at Loret-| see him. It appears to be his desire display of envy and scorn? The an-| to, Pa., his summer home, that his}that no one shall approach. Orders attack of nervous prostration at At- lantic City was much more serious than has been supposed, and by the advice of his physician he will sever his connection with all business en- swer Ir no, She gazed unmoved at the cirele of faces arowid her, picked out a bunch of mussels from a basket at her side, and with fingers covered with mud and scarred from many cuts, began the separation of the shells. that he ts not to be seen appear to emanate from him, Where once he would advance half way down the lawn and greet his visitors with a handshake or a slap on the shoulder And She'll Live in Canarsie. | terprises. he shrinks from outsiders to-day, “Of course.’ she went on, “I shall| The retirement is for an indefinite Must Visit New Scenem build rit house, and I think I'll bulld| 7 = pulld. a tine Houde. and Lee doll pulld | pertod. As soon as arrangements | Since his return from Atlantic City be the swellest house along this shore] e de Mr. Schwab w: e| the sy ' [be the smclicat house along this shore) ean be made Mr. Schwab will be the illness that afflicted him there at it.” | taken to some sequestered spot has increased in force. It was With a deft movement she tossed @) wroad where no echo of the cares | thought to have been merely a tem- mussel into a bucket of water and then gazed calmly at the staring eyes about her. The noses of the other women re- mained elevated, but thelr glances had ard struggles that have overwnelund | Lim will be allowed to penetrate. porary attack brought on by over- | work. A few days in the bracing alr little of defla them. Iwas thinking.” continued Mes. Dick: | Broken Down Completely, | Of the Pennsylvania mountains ong, that Fd bay ae auomoblle: wut! rhe President of the Steel Trust| Would, it was thought, rest re 1 Depun to a TONE iar) can Das broken down completely. His | physical and mental vigor. justead: avigate almon ny kind ota boat, but physiclan, D». Goden, never leaves) he has become depressed and the Afraid he couldn't qu E > | m afraid he couldn't qualify a8 c8P' | the Schwab home at Loretto. Mr,| sight of his old love scsies cannot nuldn't run one myself, But I could) schwab is never allowed fo; a ino-| arouse him. get one for Carrie." " Once more the elevation of noses and| ment out of the sight of his wife or an exchange of significant glances | his parents, Lucky Daughter Carrie, , . | He is not confined to his bed. Most my daughter. She's nine: | id now, and if 1 do say it} of his time is spent on the broad His physician and other men of medicine who have been called into consultation, have decided that he must be taken to new scenes and en- “Carrie teen years isn'ta finer look | Pree ee or all “Brooklyn ind et veranda of his home, where he sits | tirely separated from anything hat matier, 1 guess when I get that money | yo. hours gazing off into the pano- | Will remind bim of his career in the Tl wet enouKh by to make Wililam and comfortable and give the rest to| rama of mountains and valleys. , When he walks about the grounds past three years, The No of Warning. When The Eventn, mons repor! ‘al left, Mrs. Dickons and the other women Rode While carriage riding tn Atlantic City were deeply canged in ap Raement a his wite is at bis side and Dr. Goden on July 26 last Charles M. Schwab waa [iowa i Rerat ein dividend” paving | ie auwaze within call. stricken with a sudden faintness, The 10CK - : Vinitors Not Allowed to See Him. | road Brew, misty betore his eyes, the} Mrs. Dickons was right about her, am + power in his limbs Weakened’ and be aaitliter being a hie looking gink-caste| ‘The bluff, hearty hospitality that sink back on the cushions unconscious fy'the belle of, Canarale. In. the lan-| always characterized the Schwab He was hastily driven to his home, as- xuage of one of the natives, "she made y | BiBte carriage and put to’ bed and knocked em | homestead is Known no more. No Hana were summoned cold. A certa young man who works . vab’ ar He 4 to leave his bed the next in & Wall Stre re office ia | One save Mr. Schwab's parents and day walk about the hou with is tom Carrie and her| his wife and Dr, Goben has been 4 On the following day he fond inoks. and if Mra, Dickons gets | ‘ Fs Ar rieerin 4 along the board walk | [Roee In time there will'he a wed | allowed to see him since his return Ig face wis pair, his eves ding that will repeat the, operation of » ene lstreless and his arms bung imply at \iocking Canarsie cold. Intimate friends are met at the en- We're p een trance of the grounds and told that) ‘as was a was nin Wn tie said “IT must take a rest 1 t PREISS NOT KIDNAPPED, | Mr. Schwab cannot be seen, Other {"{ike'a'rent” “De All right after +-—_—_—_—_—_——— Kast-Side Boy Works Willingly in Pitiaton Mine, t Titus, of the L \JUDGE GARY HOPES | SCHWAB WILL RECOVER. fective Bureau, uh afternoon announced that he had | received @ letter from Chief of Police| - - ~~ teton, Pa, ann that! , » een Keun located nit! Judge Gary, Vice-President of the stated that he believed that the stories Prolas je the east side boy who has been | United Btates Steel Corporation, said! printed of his bigh play had in d a tis ¢ eh play had injured him Eee ee ee activally, lananted fo) sua afternoon jim the business world LER a Rie Pped to) “Really, 1 know very little about how| Although assured that every one knew Chief Loftus said the boy told him he| Mr Schwab ts getiing along except) that his play wae quile small, the pub- as pertectly ant fed with situation,| What I see in the newspapers. AH Tecan | lioity attending it seemed to give Mr. Pee anne te end that’ he ia woing yo{ say #8 that J hope he will recover} Schwab great concern work until he gets a little more money, | #29 Hin friends at the time of hin visit Phen he will return to New York Mr. Schwab was in New York Jast| advised him to go away and (ake a long a week at the offices of the Bteel Trust, He | rent. It was said that it was notiog noticed Pew VANCOUVER, B. chen accompanied Liang Chen, sailed to-da that his mind was not exactly clear on certain propositions pending before the Aijrectors of the trust. He has long been regarded as a very sick man by the of- Acials of Lhe corporation. é stoted then he wae not feeling very well and apparently was greatly worrled at the prominence given his alleged play at lett | Monte Carlo during his European tip. dn salting with personal frieuds he, Schwab as President of the Billion Dollar Steel: STEEL TRUST. ! i | SCHWAB’S REMARKABLE \ LIFE TOLD AT A GLANCE. Born 1864 at Loretto, Pa. Educated at public schools, same town. At fifteen drove mail wagon between Loretto and Crescent. At sixteen worked in grocery store at Braddock Same year obtained place in Carnegie works as stake-driver in engineer- ing corps. Wages at Carnegie’s, $39 per month. At twenty-three years of uge became chief engineer. stead steel plant. Managed Homestead plant for two years. At twenty-seven years of age sont to manage Edgar Thomson Steel Works. Held position until twenty-nine years old. Married at twenty-one and had home of his own Rigged up laboratory and studied chemistry and metallurgy. ned overy detail in manufacture of steel. Received no technical education, study- ing altogether by himself. Became partner In Carnegie Company In 18% and was elected President. Does not believe in college education for business men; but great advo- cate of self-education ‘At thirty-eight President of “Billion-Dollar Trust” at a salary of $1,000,- 0% a year. Has control of 45,000 men. Sent to dulld Home- 4-2 MRS, SCHWAB HALTS VISITORS AT HER HOME. resulting from so many business cares. May Be Gone a Year. It was after learning that his health was very bad and that he intended to devote a year's time to recuperating that your correspondent passed into the LORETTO, Pa, Aug. 18—The people of this town, who still call him “Char- lie,” because of thelr early and Inti- mete acquaintance with him, are discus- sing the prospective departure of Charles @ Schwab. They know he Is a sick man. and are relleved that he will spend possibly a year in an effort to re- gain his health. | The presence of sisters belonging to the Order of Mercy in his home day = A srounds leading to the palatial home on the mountain top ad Schwab said a that her husband @eriving visitors for been y ab sat In a couch i our voices. A paper before his eves, He exhibited no Inter- st and made no attempt to move. Muat Forget Buxiness Cares, night since Thursday was another tndi- wit cation of Illness. The nuns were not visitors, but it Is generally known that they are nursing the man who has so many times befriended them and their His ‘busincas, associates institutions. ‘The special mission of the | have met with Aicsirie? ota one: Sisters of Mercy Is to visit and comfort|!s the past two days, Schwab the sick. 8 been CMs fed by his doctors to rid E dof all busi care! The knowledge of the people of Lor-|is. obeying t ed peas he etto js that Mr. Schwab ts going away, Inquiry among the people of the town somewhere, His destination will be kept! Jiny AM aT CHALE Schwabe | a secret, and he will do nothing but seek |ntends to. retire from metive. Ghetneny health until his nerves have been re- Mfe, His fr dts however, “deny. that 0 ormal ¢ o1 d he leaves the United Sta stored to their normal condition and bis Corporation it Will be at thee aetstion mind fully relieved of the great strain of any person other than mimes? 2++— SCHWAB SENDS A DENIAL THAT HE !S ILL AS REPORTED. | The formation that ad Evening Worl! has positive in- spatch was received am not ill have not resigned. | in New York to-day by a relative of am coming to New York this week. Charles M, Schwab, from Mr. Schwab] The reports printed in Pittsburg Himself, in which he said: ewspapers are entirely unfounded.” SUICIDE-MURDERER LAID FAR FROM HIS WIFE'S BODY. Rubsam's Funeral Service in Separate Room and Grave in Different Plot. Charles C, Rubsam, who shot and killed his wife and himself in their | apartments at No. 480 Willis avenue, was buried from there to-day. In response to the wishes of Mrs, Rub- sam’s mother and children, the fu neral service at the house was con- ducted on the third floor in the room occupied by Mr. Rubsam, while the body of his) wife lay in the front room on the second floor, Only the children and intimate friends of the family were present, numbering less than twenty persons, including the children, Rey. Dr. Reichter, of the One Hun- Middle Village, L. I., burying ground, The funerad of Mrs. Rubsaim will take place to-morrow from the Church of the Immaculate. Conception. A separate Mr, Rubsam, but his wife will be burled in the family burying ground. Bishop Farley is expected by the Cor- oner to turn over @ letter which Rub- sam wrote to him just before he killed his wife and himself, It i® believed that In this letter Rubsam wrote that the priests who had been advising his wife had driven bim to the act. To « number of sequal. tances Rubsam had said that priests were trying to cause hin wife to leave him and take the children and that she had planned to to Branchville, Conn., for the purpos of having them put in schools He had said that his wife wanted to plot was procured in the cemetery for | 20 HURT IN DASH OF TROLLEY CAR, Runaway Leaves the Track, Wildly Coast- ing Down Hill Over Rough Road. STOPS AT PIT’S BRINK Passengers Thrown in All Badly Injured Is a Little Girl, About twenty persons were injured, some of them seriously, early this morning in a trolley accident in Jer- sey City. The accident occurred on the Rutherford line of the Jerscy City, Hobokea and Paterson Street Railway Company, on the Paterson Plank Road, behind Bowers street. Car No. 608, in charge of Motor- man Walsh and Conductor Hamilton, turned into the plank road at Con- gress street carrying about one hun- dred passengers on their way to work. Some were hanging on the run-board, the car being an opea one. When well on the plank road Walsh opened the lever to m up for lost time. ‘The plank 1mad {s a continuous Incline from Congress street to the foot of Franklin street, a distance of over a mile, When two hundred feet north of Bowers street the front wheels of the car hit a locked switch and jumped the track, Walsh tried to apply the brakes, but they wouldn't work. The car was speed- ing along over the rough stone road, and the passengers began screaming in alarm. e jumped off. Near Bowers street the car swerved and headed for a Stone wall that Js protection from a precipice about one hundred feet deep. The front of the car hit the wall. The jar threw the passengers in all directions. Four or five were thrown against the stone wall, while thirty or forty fell aut onto the road. At least twenty of them, including a ttle girl, were badly Injured, Charles Buckel, Wirty-five years old, who resides at the corner of Congress street and Palisade avenue, fell under the car It went along on ‘ts wild run. He cut and has so many bones broken he Is_not expected to live. George O. McDonald. of No. 432 Ogden avenue, had his right leg broken. He was thrown gut of the car, William Abbott, of Ogden avenue, was cut about the head and hands. Charles Waters, of Patorson_ street, thrown against a stone , was fi jured internally, Annie Hilger, four- teen years old, address unkown, was probably fatally hurt. Several whose names and addresses It was unable to ascertain were Laken to Christ. Hospital on Pallsade avenue and had their Wounds dressed. Other pas- sengers helped carry the tnjured to Directions and One of the| 1S HOLLENBER® = *HW.BRINKLEY | Theatrical Friends De- , clare Two Are Iden. | tical and This Is Sec ond Disappearance, RECOGNIZED HIS PICTURE Two Met fim a Week Be» fore He Vanished and He Told Them He Was Not Married. Three men, who say they identified the missing Henry W. Hollenberg’s Picture in The Evening World as Henry W. Brinkley, whom they know well, declare that his disap- tpearance Thursday at Coney Island, leaving his clothes in a bathhouse, is the second time he has mystori- ouely vanished to their knowledge. The other time was in Chicago, in 1896, when Brinkley (who they in- sist is identical with Hollenberg) was the stage manager of Hoyt's “Temperance Town.” At that time, they say, he was very attentive to several actresses in the company, and that when matters looked serlous he suddenly disappeared, vanishing in the same mysterious manner, These men are Eugene, Canfield, co- median, and James Horan, translator of plays, who saw Hollenberg, or Brink- ley, a week before his disappearance th front of the Imperial Hotel and had a talk with him, and George R. White, a theatrical manager. Brinkley, or Hollenberg, and Canfield he wa He was handsomely dressed, wore a very Nght gray sult and a Panama hat and lots of rings and other jewelry. He sald he was handling concerts for summer hotels. He had shaved off his mustache and sald he was not married, Mrs, Clara Hollenberg declared to-day that she believed her husband met with foul play or had wandered away while suffering from some mental abberration. Her father, N. C. Foster, a wealthy resident of Farichild., Wis. arrived at the Hollenberg cottage in New Rochelle this morning and proposes to conduct @ rigid investigation. She visits Coney Island daily and haunts the spot where her husband of two months was last seen. Hollen- berg’s fe waa insured for several thou- sand dollars. Mrs, Hollenberg has been married twice. Her first husband was Lloyd Duncan, of Chicago. She has a twelve-year-old son. Lloyd, and be will told Horan “on easy etreet.” their homes. live with his grandfather. CRANK IN SAGE’ DISRUPTS While the Rev. Milton L, Littlefield, of this city, was preaching !n the First Presbyterian Church at Far Rockaway yesterday, a man, ragged and filthy, came in the side door, walked up to the minister and asked for a blessing. He said his conscience was pricking him for the sinful life he had been leading and he wanted to become a Christian, After saying a few words to the man, | who Was uttering apologies amid sobs, Dr, IAttlefield helped him down over the front of the rostrum and told him to take a seat in the congregation. As | soon as he got in the aisle the man| looked around and sighted Mr. Russell) Sage. He inade directly for him. Sev- eral womer, began screaming and a per- son In the rear of the church cried out, | He's an Anarchist!” | When he had arrived at the edge of) Mr. Sage's pew, Dr. J, Carl Schmuck, | of Lawrence, grabbed him. i Cried to Be Released, He cried piteously to be released. He] was soon overpowered and taken outside the church, Patrolman A. W, Skidmore took him to the station-house, where! he said he was Charles Ross, thirty-six years of age and homeless, In the Far| Rockaway Court to-day he was fined #5/ for disorderly conduct. ‘The police say that Ross was arrested last summer at New York and Farmers avenues, Jamaica, by Detective Osoar Jones, The fellow then carried a brace of pistols and a belt of cartridges. He was examined as to his mental con- | dition and committed to the sanitarium at Astoria, He was released from that) Institution In December last. When Mr, Sago was asked about the! He Tries to Approach the rested and Fined in Court. | they S CHURCH THE SERVICES. inancier, but Is Ar- occurrence at his Nassau street office this afternoon, he said: “Perhaps I was the only member of the congregation who didn’t share in all this excitement. There was a commo- tion in the church just at the close of wervice, and I learned at the railroad station this morning that a man had been arrested for having too much aboard an dmaking a noise. But I was not aware that there was any exclte- ment or anxiety on my account, I did Hot observe the occurrence spoken of and saw no arrest, “Our regula pastor, Mr. Morgan, was absent yesterday, and a young xentleman whose name I do not reci supplied the pulpit. He preached a very good sermon. The attendance was un- usually large. People were standing up all over the church. ‘The crowd was caused, I suppose, by the strange preacehr and possibly through the in- fluence @ protracted meeting that is being held at a mission branch of the congregation in Woodburn, a few miles further up. Just a Church Discussion, “When services were over there was some discussion about this protracted meeting, and half a dozen members of the congregation got talking at once. This, of course, caused some atir and commotion In the body: of the church, Posslh'y it was at that time the dis- turbo: “was arrested. I didn't notice because I wae not particularly inter- Iu the dlscuasion and lett” the I stopped for a few minutes until my carriage drove up and went home, then I “At the railway station this morn- ing I asked some of the church mem- bers how the discussion came out and told me that an Intoxicated man had taken & hand in the ‘iscusson and was arrested,” Boys’ Suits Washable Sults, 3 to 12 yrs. dred and Forty-first Street Lutheran Church, conducted the service, which was exceedingly brief, consisting of two prayers. When the hearse and carriages drove up to the front of the house an immense crowd congregated and the two policemen on duty had dim- culty in clearing a passageway from the door to the hearse, Thirteen carriages followed the hearse to the have his sixteen-year-old son become a priest and his daughters become nung, ——————$—$ ALICE ROOSEVELT LEAVES, President's Daughter Starts t Newport for Boston by Ante. (Special to the Brening World.) NEWPORT, Aug, 18—Allce Roose: velt, accompanied by Ellen Drexel Paul, of Philadelphia, left for Boston hy auto, 4 Heretofore $1.95 to $2.95 Stern Brothers To-morrow, Special Values in & Trousers 95¢ Trousers, 3 to 16 yrs., of all wool navy blue cheviots and mixtures, also English corduroy, 599 ‘alue $1.00 Norfolk, Single and Double Breasted Suits, of homespuns, cheviots and navy blue serges, 8 to 15 yrs. , Heretofore $6.95 to $9.75 $5.00 West Twenty-third Street. '