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| tives Trail. Fo z pEeUND TO FIND HIS SON. a Murder Theory Now Advanced and Police Still at Work “Trying to Solve Mystery of ~ Physician’ s Disappearance. Several private detectives ae ; been employed by Charles A. Bates, ae of Wathington, to look for his son. > Dr. William H. Bates, who disap- | peared from his home, at No. 567/ a oad avenue, on Aug. 30. q “While I believe that my son has 24 een robbed and murdered and his Dody disposed of, I want to make wure, and, if he is living, I want to) find him,” said Mr. Bates, sr., to- day: “These detectives will work /Miceasingly on the case and I ex- “\ pect | results. I am going to Wesley, ‘Mass., to-day and I hope to learn) #omething there. which points in that direction.” Hint in Letter. The fetter which Dr. Bates, who Js an Onthalmologist, wrote to his wife the Gav he disappeare? has just been made Public, and in jt the police have found @ posuidle intimation that he intended to remainaway a considerable time, but Would return. It was regeived by Mrs. Bates while she and her child were at Saratoga, on Sept. 2. It read: is “My Dear Wife: Iam going away for a -#ome little time. I have an appoint- ent for a consultation with Dr. For- She, and it ix important. I expect to Mind a bonanza and make lots of money. Do not worry about me. 1 will be back. I will eee you soon, WIL ‘Aug, 20. Mrs, Bates, who {9 a friend of the Low family and an intimate acquaintance of “Mrs, Roosevelt, wife of the President, called on Mayor Low and asked his as- sistance. The Mayor gave hér a personal letter to Chief of Detectives Titus, with inmructions for him to proceed on the ease and not drop it until something definite wax heard of Dr. Bates. The chief asked for a photograph, but thapnly one In existence was one taken the doctor was playing tennis in rt, and snot a good one, But the elty detectives are still working. Diq Not Know Bate Every Dr, Forshe in the country, #0 far as known, has been ‘heard from. ‘There are ten of them. The tenth sent " a telegram to-day from his home !n, Mc- Graw, Oakland County, N. Y., saying » “he did not know Dr. Bates and had > neyer seen him. The replies from the > 2a ‘others were of the same nature. 4 A-reward has been offered by Mrs. “for the expreasman who called Bates home a half hour before ctor left and who carried away a weighing about thirty pounds and We have a clue ie h. gontained the doctor's instru- sand a few books. By tracing theidestination of this case, the detec- tines hope to get a clue as to the doc- tora whereabouts. Every express and rayvotfice in the city has been visited, Dit no record of the trip has been found. Marder Suspected. At first It as believed that the doctor had been enticed away from the city | on an offer for a consultation and that he had then been abducted and was held for ransom. Hut the fact that not a word has been heard from him or his suppored captors hus led those intercat- ed In the cave to change their bellef, £0 that now they are of the opinion that Dr, Bates has been murdered for what- ever of value he had on him He visually carried $75 or $100 with him, but may have nad much more He ‘had made a number of collections during the two weeks his wife had een in Saratoga. tr Seaman, mother of Mra with.whom her daughter ix now Barletta Villa, Newport, saya t ra Bates ts prostrated and under of physicians. Mrs, Seaman added: fe both believe Dr. Rates has been | . ‘That is the only explanation, Were alive he would have sent us me word. We thought he had been tit was not for ransom Bates, lying May Have Gone to Newport, Tt was Larned this afternoon that Dr tes Was an enthusiastic tennis player Bnd had once Ngucred in several of the Hational tournaments. It is belleved that he was {n attendance at the cham Plonship matches at Newport this Which occured during tie first week In mer. this ts so, then he must have lett New York on the day following his mysterious disappeerance from his home. The statement that when he left his| Spartments on Aug. 30 he only had $76 ® Possession, is unwarranted. Mrs Bacos had been away for two nd in that time he had had dos of cash patients who paid him anywh frOM $5 to M5 a visit. He nv bly his’ pursession wh Jeads to the bellef that he was a vic tim of foul play. MR. SERGENT” DISCHARGED strate Brann Lentent | Tarrytown Celebrator. UThe nan who described himsel: ay hares W. Sergent, of Tarrytown, and Was arrested in tho New York Club-House, in West Forty. Street, last night for intoxica Was arraigned before Magistrate 4m Yorkville Court to-day. He she aa that he had been Bo other explanation to Fe oe Te wis beck was in @ large sum to a 2 Biter of Missing Phy- sician Starts Detec- East on New have | | Gibbons ba 8 ais Ly WAIT ONLY ON ._ THE PAPAL BULL Plans Halisa for the stallation of the New | DELEGATE FROM ROME ? Procession of Priests Will Be an Affair of Splendor, the Most Gorgeous Ever | Held in the New World. The time ts draw near when | Rignt Rev, John Murphy: Farley, Bishop of the dlocess of New York, will be tn Arch: stalled as the successor of the lat bishop Corrigan Word i expected by every mail that | will put the oMfclal seal of tae Pope# lapproval upon the semi-oMclal an nouncement of the bishop's elevation t the archbishopric, and until that time comes all arrangements for the coming | Installation are at standstill, The an nouncement wil come In the form of a Papal Bull, and it is 1 that the | Sicilia, of the Malian line, which came Into port yesterday, in all probability brought the announcement from the Holy See. Bishop Farley now exercises the pow: ers of the archbishopric, vested in him its the administrator appointed until the dispensat! Vatican is recetved climes ty | temporalites. and the tualities of the diocese of New York absolutely, and | | the Papal Bull will only mean the con- | firmation of the appointment to the ofttce | which he to-day pri ly holds, | jendor, ding the installa- h from the Ceremonien of The ceremon te tion of an a hop will be upon a lo of splendor not known In Roman | Catholte Church annals in the do. cese of New York in many years, The venting of an archbishop in the Roman Catholle Church Js an occasion which will bring together the entire American hierarchy: There will be a Papal delegate in all probability, © thin Is the greatest diocese in the New World, and Cardinal Gibbons, the head of the Roman Catholts faith In America, will ofMfciate the conferring of the Pallium, which is the istinetive emblem of archiepixcopal rank, There will be hetween 80 and 1,000 priests In the procession that will con- duct the new archbishop to his Cathedral | throne, while preiates of the church will be In attendance from all parts of the | country. | The procession will form in and around thearehteplacopal palace at Mad non avenue and Fiftieth street, and wil! proceed up Fiftieth street to Fifth ave- nue, where it will enter St. Patrick's Cathedral. The procession will be headed by a boy bearing a cross and pported on either side by acolytes swinging Incensers. Following tha bearer of the cross will be the procession of priests in plain black cassocks and white surplices. These in turn will be followed by visiting monsignor!, mitred abbotts, bishops, archbishops, the Papal Delegate and then by Cardinal Gibbons. “Reece Sacerdox Magnunt” Following these high members of the priesthood will be the new Archbishop, garbed In surplice and cassock, but with | the superb cope or vestment upon his! shoulders, with the mitre of golden cloth upon his head and with the crozier | in his hands. ‘An he enters the Cathedral a glorious | burst of music will greet him and the | high priests of the churoh will call out in Latin “Eoce sacerdos magnus!" (Be- | hold the high priest!) ‘The Archbishop will then ascend his throne and another of the same sort will be occupied by Cardinal Gibbons. ‘The Archbishop's throne In St, Patrick's Cathedral {s one of the most beautifully carved pleces of wood in existence. It is twenty-fve feet high, of solid ma- hogany, wrought into wonderful de- signs of a sacred significance, Here the new Archbishop wi!l sit while Latin prayers are sald and then high mass will be performed by one of the officiating prelates. At its conclusion the Paliium will be conferred and the new A shop will then dell his address. — THREE FORTS TAKEN. Gen. Chaffee Sends Report of Per- | shing's Teh | WASHINGTON, Sent The War| Department has ved able de spatch from Gen, Chaffee dated Manila, re Bept. 2, in which he says Capt, John J. Pershing, Fifteenth Cavalry, left Camp Vickers 18:h of 8 tember with battallon of infantry, tro» ot cavairy and platoon mountain battery, | Marched toward Himlg, nine miles} southeast of Vicars, and in that vicinity | took thr at Gonan, 19th visited | Rayubas, took two forts; 2th, marched rthward to Santr, took two forts, Has | communt. ith two sultang, Myclit FUlll obat arrival of Machu to-day. P fired on frequently when approaching Sanir: no loss of our troops. Moros report thalr logs twenty- five killed. Mactu about elghteen miles west af Vica, “Hrig.-Gen, Samuel 8. Sumner In- 10 the use of flrearma| | as and not to destro: erty, the object belng obt omise ‘of non-interference with our| 3 In the future, » Vicars,” rtion of the made putbile. eee DIED UNIDENTIFIED. | F. 8. Found Lying in Grand Street. | An unidentifled man who was found in Grand street, near the Bowery, at 7.80 o'clock last night, died in Rellevue Hospital to-day without throwing any Hight on his identity, He appeared to be suffering trom aphasia. Wien found Me" was poorly dressed in dark clothes, in wore, a Blache derby nat with the ete 5 feet ven fishes ts “i Sumner now en, derpatch was not] | whe In J. Ceremonies of the In-| Catholic Archbishop, | ‘Rush |Miss Ethel Louise was led atherdral 9 Lerch nu Wemans Patrick's Count Hu us wht a feld 2u Ko ts looked on Arep Farley perform the simple but Imposing marriage ¢ mony Several priests assivted and adied to the pleturesque effect as the Lrldal party gathered on the altar ste; hero were bridesmaids, the bride Jsimply being at r sister, Miss Florence Wymans, as maid of CAN'T RETURN —LINER’S TEST OF FROM ABROAD. of from Europe SoGreat that There Are Not, Enough Steamers. honor, ‘The ushers were Mr. Hartley Davis, Mr, Ralph Cooper, Mr. Cornetius Sullivan and Mr. Samuel Grimpson Count Otte Lerchenfeld zu Kolfering, brother of the bridegroom, acted as best min ‘The decorations of the church were} tlons and greeneries beautifully ar- “After, the ceremony intess held lef recept mo of her nts. Mr. an cgene Wy- ns, in the entral Park’ West, Many gitts ig of rare value were re- THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER. 24, 19 NEW YORK BELLE.BECOMES COUNTESS | AT IMPOSING MARRIAGE CEREMONY. ymans, Bride of Count Hugo Lerchenfeld Zu Kol- fering Will Figure Prominently in Berlin Society. ceived by th The mination of & cou! p. years ago ia Munich, wh Wymans was studying mv: Count rial lomatic « Hils nember of the Ba- varlan Ho ds, and his uncle is the Rava esador to the Ger- unt the honeymoon, which will be in this cou Count: will Vis bride where the Countess will fi Inently In society charge. uttered, in height, Dyke plexion, tent's been Russian, | dialects, languages of Korea, >and where she met the vho Is an attache of the im: nd is preparing for a dip- Guest OIL FOR FUEL. Americans The Kensington of the American Company May Use Petroleum on Coming Trip. 17,000 OVER THERF YET. SAVES TIME AND SPACE. There are over seventeen thousand Americans in Europe who are unable to return on account of the annual homeward rush of the summer tour- fats. The steamers are booked to their full capacity for weeks ahead, and in their anxfety to return to this coun- try many people in comfortable cir- cimstances have gone second cabin and even steerage, Since last April over 42,000 people from this country booked passage for European ports, and of this num- {ies only about 26,000 have returned. They have spent over $21,000,000 of good American money. At Liverpool, Havre, Dusseldorf, Bre- men, Genoa and Naples the booking offices of the big trans-Atlantic lines have been besieged for weeks by Americans desirous of securing accom- modations for passage home, Notwith- standing the fact that from twelve to sixteen great liners are sailing weekly from European ports for New York, Philadelphia and Boston,*the rush, al- ways great at this time of the year, Is unp: ented. 4,000 in Italy Alone. Of this vast army of Americana with money to spend there are at present over 4,000 in Italy alone, who will be unable to procure passage to this coun- try for several weeks, although the boats of the Royal Mall Steamship Une, of the North German Lloyd, of the Hamburg-American, Fabrian and An- chor lines are leaving Genoa and Naples loaded to thelr full capacity, Yesterday the Sieilla came into port with over three hundred cabin passen- gers, the lirgest number on record for this, the largest ship of the Italian Mne, and It ts the same with the other ships salling £ Italian ports, Vr, Cyrus 1 passenger agent of Italian di informed an Evening World reporter to-day that never had there been so many Americans in Italy at this time of the year 0 that waile the homeward rush invarlabiy rowds the capacity of the steamship Ines until the end of October, this yoar t* a recor! breaker, Stay There or Pay High. At the offices of the White Star line it Was stated thatthe September rush ts always the heaviest of the year, and that ¢ tions would not be relleved unt) the first of October. ‘The result of it all ts that unless tour- {ets oud visitors to Huropean countries have not had their passage booked for weeks ahend t have elther to un- dergo the expense of remaining In Eu- rope longer than they had Intended or they must return by second class or evel) stecrage. In the London and Paris Papers advertinements offering pre- miums for p A promine forth Gi. age are dally seen, t representative of tho man Lloyd line informed an ening World reporter that the vast number of Americans travelling abroad this summer indicates the prosperous condition of the Untied States. He said that every year more Americans were } When the steamship Kensington, of the American line, which arrived here | from Southampton on Mai makes her nek? trip to American shores ‘ake Will probably use oll as a eybst:tute, zo- coal. Petroleum 1s the fuel which promises to take the place of coal, for {f further’! experiments on the same line 4s those | conducted by Chief Engineer Pirrir, of | the Kensington, are as successful as| the Initial ones, there scems to bo Httle doubt that coal on ocean steamshi, will be largely supplanted A complete test will be made on the return trip of the Kensington and a re port ‘of It will be submitted to the offi- | cers of the company. ( If petroleum. is adopted, Engineer Pirrlr says, it will offer m: Ivan tages, of which will be | a saving of labor and greater speed. mean less smoke, well as stokers. There will not be a saving In the price of {uel If Texas 11 1s used, for the prives of coal and Texas petroleum are about the same, but the esonomic value of the aubsiitute In other ways will be great. It {8 stated by experts that the best method of carrying the petroleum will be to bulld open tanks where the coal bunkers are now situated on ocean ves- sels, and to have them connected by sluices with the fires. So long as the reservoirs are opened at the top, that gas may not generat there is little danger of combustion. The experiments have shown that a lighted torch may be plunged: into a tank of petroleum without setting the ofl on fire. Under the present system it is neces- sary to employ half a dogen stokers and as many trimmers all the time in order to feed the fires, while with the use of petroleum one man could do the work of many. Engineer Pirrir explained also that in these days when -speed means so much in ocean travel, the use of petroleum would mean a shorter trip across, b cause It would be unnecessary to slow down in order to give the men a ance to clean the furnaces. In a run from Newcastle to Southamp- It will alwo @ eaving of space, as duction of the danger to the ton, a distance of about 400 miles, the saving of time with oll as fuel amounted to about an hour, ——__—- TWO REPUBLICANS PUT OUT. Rompus in Thirty-fourth Di and Club Takes Action, With joyous acclaim the Republican Club of the Thiryy-fourth As: y Dis- trict, which has headquar fo, 158 Rast One Hundred and Twenty-fourth street, expelled two members Inst night The two who felt the club's displeasure were Lipman Paer and George Anger- man Some of the members made the charge to the police that there was no politi at the club, nothing but gambling. Capt. ret, McCluskey, of the East One Hundred and Twenty-ifth Strect Station, made an investigation. He found nothing ex- cept that several disgruntled members had lost some money at poker. ‘There was a rumpus, It was charged travelling abroad elther for pleasure or | that Angerman had voied “the: Demo- for business reasons. sult wshided a a con puro! As 4 natural re- nt increase In the Passenger sts ng oi ea meet ratio ticket for the past and that Paer had ac! watoher in the sixt o elections rd which | irict at the p ervasad ere ay SAVOY CHAUFFEUR AUTO KILLS A MAN! Runs Down John Molz at Wallingford, writing a “| for his a “A. Larne! and Hubert} pronounced his right and he has been “tried’ languages and dialects, spoken a word. The Superintendent Is puzzled to know how to dispose of his }hy fe had made thia discrimination, yet has HAS KOT SPOKEN. [PARTRIDGE IN FOUR WEEKS. Charity. Patient Just charged Has Been Tested in Vain in Every Language from Yiddish to Japanese. The Superintendent of Wutdoor Poor has a man on his hnds who since Sept. In twelve | mitted not On Sept. 1 the man, whose name and 4 from the Hudson| tion with charges. address are not Jnown to the authorl- Ues, was transfél Street Hospital to Bellevue. He was suffering from malaria and was placed) Ments were: J. in Ward No. 18 From that day this morning, when he was discharged , Hundred and Twenty-fifth street as cured, not a word had the patient until The man apparently is m foreigner, About thirty years old, 5 fect 3 inches | Whitestone; welghs about 130 pounds and but 3 fe has en olive Nnationailty he Italian, questions in has a small mustache and small Van beard. com- In the attempts to ascertain the pa- name and spoken to In Japanese, ¥iddish, has Spanish, German, . Swedish, Gaelic and in various to all all he simply shook his head. 3 ap Se ry NEWARK, in New J. Bept. Y¥.," shot Jt is belleved that he may be a native SUICIDE LEFT NOTE ASKING PARDON, of Hotel Begged Proprietor’s For- giveness for Shooting Him- self There. ark M.—aAfter note begging the proprietor | of the Palace Hotel here to forgive him + & guest, who regist Albany, self In the left breast. The man was found dead, with a re- das him- a New York) Volver ¢lutched in his right hand. Marble une He kad dark hair, a light brown mus- Hotel, Is Arrested. tache and was of light complexion. He 3 fot, bearing the struck last “You CAN BE EASILY DISAPPOINTED IN A HAT—BUT NOT AT YOUNG'S. YOU CAN x name of a New York firm and the re- " bob fade mainder of hia clothing, which was of ior Ntalanstordy ona | $000 aualits; had wiso been bought in by an automoulie In that’ town) Manhattan, ha did wily’ morning trom! In his pockets was a golg watch and hi mobil ehauitenr of who was accompanied py of this city (and given a pre day rup at ond. vauped The police think H-O Attached to oa stirrup «trap and with an oxidized stiv- the suicide may have been a spor’ the We change the starch into digest- ible deliciousness in H-O; we-are the only millers who do. Starch is the only drawback to oatmeal, Steam cooking settles that. steam-cooked kind. You have to pay five cents more on account of tha tegrity of its grains after cooking. casy eating. H-O keeps the in- It makes THREE OW LST Dis-|Preferred Civil-Gervice Men Promoted with 22 Other Policemen Who Were Not Made Roundsmen. men who were on the eligible -liet sud- to ‘him by Board. The Commissioner would not explain but it ts khown the trio—Michael A. Downe, Patrick H. Fern and Perey N. Du Bols—have heen named in connec- The men promoted and their assign- C. Amon, Mulberry F. Maher, West One w. Newtown; P. J. Joyce, Mul- street; J. Ievers, Grand avenue, Island City; W. Enright, Patrick Kelty, Fourth street. Long Island City; T. H. Barry, Grand street, “Brooklyn: Charles. J, Schlusen, Hamburg avenue, Brooklyn: Archibald McAuley, Stagg street, Brooklyn; George W. Maxwell, Mac- dougal street; Jamea J. Clore, Amily atreet. Brooklyn; Samuel G. ' Belton, Highvridge; Richard FH, McNally, Coney Islandy Thomas F. Ryan, Central OMmce; John 'L.. Faleoner,” Delancey street Henry Helwig. Voorhees avenue, Broo! Wyn Eaward J, Walsh, Old Slip; Samuel Vernon avenue, Brook’ John H, Cooney, Bedford avenues Broo lyn; David J. McAuliffe, Bedford av nue, Brooklyn, and John D. Ormsbee, Eldridge st ips GONE WEST 10 GET THEIR FORTUNES, Carl Stratton Chamberlain and His Sister Off to Draw $50,000 Each from Vast Es- tate of Their Uncle. street station; W. Atherron, berry Long Carl Stratton Chamberlain, of No. 315 East Sixteenth street, Brooklyn, has gone West with his sister to enjoy the | fortune left them thelr uncle, the late Winfield Szott Stratton, who ranked second among Calisornia's multi-mill lonatres, Most of Stratton's millions are to go to charity, but $460.00 is to be distrib- uted among the deceased man’s friends) and relatives. Of the latter sum Car. Stratton Chamberlain and his sister get $50,000 each, while the young n also Kelsall the millonaire jable hous hold furniture, Jewelry ; paintings and the family heirio: Catt ts an undergraduate University and Is part: r among his fellow-students. been Hving for some time in villa in lanl, po Hi summer vatbush with his glster an the only friend PAY TOO LITTLE OR TOO MUCH—BUT NOT AT YOUNG'S. 190 Broadway, near Dey. ) Broadway, near Duane. 005-000 Broadway, cor, Houston, St) Broadway, near 14th, 1197 Broadway, near 28th. ) Broadway, near 36th. Only Brooklyn Store, 871 Fulton St. Derbys Alpines Silk Hats $5.00 & $6.00 YOU'RE SAFE HERE. $3.00 & $4.00 $3.00 & $3.50 Commissioner Partridge, in promoting twenty-two patrolmen to roundsmen to- 1°has not spoken a word. 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