The evening world. Newspaper, October 20, 1902, Page 12

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—————— ——— eS “a How these golf players do love one! Another singular triumph for the S mnother! ublquitous common pin is one of the) {This Is the Only Thing Injured Mem- \ ber of Erwin Park Club Cares \ About, as It Gave Fight on Links » Undue Publicity. B. Hampton, Here comes Benjamin advertising agent at No. 77 West HECOT AY COLE. Hampton, Whose Head Was \ Broken Under Lawyer Under- | wood’s Putter, Says People Get Petulant When They Play. BROTHER CAUSED ARREST. PN PICTURES BY TELEGRIPE Electrograph, Operating with the Common Implement of the Woman’s Work - Basket, Achieves a Great Triumph. MANY MILES TRANSMISSION BY CURRENT. Photograph May Be Sent from Chi- | cago to New York In Fifteen Min- | utes and in an Hour Be Ready for the Newspaper. incidents of the successful transmission | of pictures by telegraphy, which is seen THIS PICTURE WAS SENT THE WORLD: ‘MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 20, 1902. BY TELEGRAPH. LED Sea Ee lterday. He was asleep on the sofa last night and his wife says she did not arouse him for fear he would go out again. At 5 o'clock this morning when Policeman Allen, of the Bast Sixty- seventh street station, was notified, and Dr. Van Ingen, of Presbyterian Hoe- Coroner Investigating Case of Morton, Whose Wife Says He Was “Sleeping Off a Spree.” pital, summoned. Morton was lytng on his face and had been bleeding from the mouth. He had two bruises over his right eye and there was a cut on the back of his left hand, The Coro- ner's office was notified and Coroner Jackson will investigate, ——___- MAY LEESON IS SAFE. Whore Relatives The police of the East Sixty-eventh| peterson Girl, street station are Investigating the| Worsted About Her, Heard From. death of Patrick Morton, fifty-two! parERSON J. Oct. 20.—May Lee- years old, of No, 122% Second avenue, | son, who lives at Ninteenth avenue and who was found dead on a sofa in the| Mast Thirty-ffth street, and who, it aes : was feared, had been abducted, has been Kitchen In hin home to-lay. He wan a| Was feared, had bee abduc printer, The irl declares that he is perfectly According to his wife, Morton was| Safe and holding a position she, left érinking hard Saturday night and | home to accept. Her whereabouts have not been disclosed by her relatives. Stern Brothers Twenty-second street, who had his head) to-day for the first time In New York. wplit open by Walter Underwood, law-| Attaaeed by a comparatively simple Yer, on the links at Montclair, and! qeyice to one end of a telegraph wire, gays he has no desire to proseciite Mr. tne pin, with tiny flashes of electricity Underwood. \«napping from its point, takes the fea- “Peopte get so petulant when they tures of a man from an ordinary half- fre playing golf," explains the forgiving | tone plate and the current carries the Mr, Hampton | record faithfully through space and re- Mr. Underwood 1s willing to let [t 0) peats them at the other end of tho At that, and the Erwin Park Golf Clu) wire hundreds of miles away. n that the matter will be dropped| 5 before the opponents of Sunday golf} ane Blecrremran es re Baye a chance to make a horrible ex-| By means of the bibaseay Mel aip STste ‘ample out of it. . strument wonderful in tte Septet Mr. Hampton went to his office to-day | 974 In apite of it, a photograph may mith hin head nicely stitched by a{#ent from New York to Chicago in fit- skilled surgeon and a sharp pain over {teen minutes; and within little more his eyes. He confided to his clerks that |than an hour from the time the pin fhe, was lucky not to be lying .n a casket | Sets to work the picture may be seen fm the parlor of hia Moncialr home sur-|!1 @ Chicngo newspaper, a faithful re- Bounded by flowers and weeping friends. | produen ot hel iaeuaen at pas the details of a street scene or - Lele ahi |pearance of a wrecked train or bulld- “Really,” sald Mr. Hampton to an! ing Gvening World reporttr, “it doesn't] he electrograph, which takes Nettle @mount to much beyond an unpleasant) more space than a typewrting ma- ‘Gre ee for me and ball for Mr. Un-/ chine, Jy the Invention of H. R. Palmer, |. The precipitate action of my | _ young mechanical engincer of Cleve- Drother Jesse in swearing out a warrant |jang, O., and Thomaa Mills, a practcal While I was getting my @calp sewed UP! oecirician, It reprenenta five years of Brought on the publicity, whieh I deeply | ERIE PLOT TO (CITY WINS FIGHT Art Objects & Bric-a-Brac Are displaying New Importations of FINE BRONZE STATUES, BUSTS & CLOCKS, ELECTROLIERS, CARRARA MARBLES, PEDESTALS, Limoges Enamel Vases, LAMPS AND LAMP SHADES Special Offering To-morrow **Kayser Zinn’? Ware A large assortment greatly below usual prices. Silk Rugs & Oriental Carpets Turkish Carpets, To-morrow, a Later Importation of Silk Rugs, average size, 3 ft. 6 by 5 ft. 7, in cream, rose, light green, blue and red, for Decorations, Hangings and Floor, Value $85.00 to 125.00 $3.65 & 4.75 a $56.00 Fegret. heeauee of the opportunity it gives people opposed to Sunday golf to Tall at the game *T was playing over the Erwin Park Unka yesterday with my brother and a patient labor by them, and many more lvears of experimenting by other amt- tlous Inventors, | Working Value Shown, This marvelous instrument is on ex- GRAB STREET Railroad's Plan, Mentioned FOR MILLIONS Justice Steckler Hands Down |in light and dark colorings, a $48.00 © 165.00 Also a large and choice collection of Fine Kirmanshah, Iran, Sennah, Bokhara and Shiraz Rugs and Hall Strips at Very Low Prices. SORQSTS THE BEST GHOE FOR WOMEN, $3.50 per pair. Sorosis Shoes recommend themselves to all who demand much in the matter of clothing, They are of practical use and comfort to the sportswoman, the athletic girl, and to the business woman who, unconsciously, walks many miles. The materials are good,—pliable and durable, —and the models are as numerous as there are types of feet. Sorosis Shoes are fitted according to measure- ments, not according to any particular size, Misses’ and Children’s Boots and Shoes are made for the comfort and care of grow- ing feet. A custom shoe room is provided for patrons who desire to have boots, shoes or slip- pers made to order. JAMES McCREERY & C0., Twenty-third Street, : JAMES McCREERY & C0, Upholstery and Oriental Rugs. woung man of the name of Anderson, |Mbition to-day in the office of Arthur Between the third and the fourth holes | there {8 a pond and a little further on | Two Decisions Upholding the Title of the Municipality to Quietly to Alderman Dowling, Fourth Floor. ‘there Is a brook. “"My brother's ball went {nto the pond and Mr. Anderson's ball went fnto the brook. We recovered my Brother's bat! and then Mr. Anderson and I crawled down the bank to the Brook and got his ball out, As we fame up over the bank we found Mr, Underwood—whom 1 did not know— Close by. “He had lost his ball, and seeing us come from the brook I suppose he thought we had It. You know peopie get excited and Irritated while playing wolf. If there is anything that will make a man lose his temper, It Is to Jose severi:] balls in a game. ‘T heard Underwood say that It was to bad there were so many thieves @round. I wasn't mad myself, but It ‘Was plain that he was, So, thinking to mollify him, I took a brand new wolf ball out of my pocket and started toward him. “Offers a» New Bat. QIr. Underwood t« the agent and ad Yeftising manager for the conce Manufactures balls such as the took out of his pocket. “T asked Mr. U to Insinuute that any his old golf bali, 1 was smiling when T asked him and held out my hand with the new golf bail in it. But he was od if he meant #0 irritated that he did not see my good intent. “'Go away from here,’ he sald, ‘or TH smash you, “And he made good, He hauled oft! and smashed me with right on top of the head. and thick hair prot other point. in my favo: that he was close to me a brass pute vi vas the fact and did not ly brother sWore out a warrant ti fore T knew anything about it. When my brain got clear I tried to have the Warrant withdrawn, but was unable to do 0. As It is I do not, the case. I know that Mr fwas irritated and petulant. a think a man should be countable for what he fost a few golf tis Mr. Underwo ing of a Broad street lawy. differs from that of Mr. Hampton. Gives a Different Version, “} do not accuse Mr. Hamptoa of se@tealing the ball," said Mr. Underwood Ro-day. ‘The official scorer, whom I asked if he had seen my ball, asked Mr, Hampton if he had seen st, Mr. Hamp- ton sald he had not, and then the official tion, sald that T) ficult My. Hampton had seen it. Hampton, whom L had r to me and y K A a threatening would strike me, 1 th to ward off the blow the forehead “1 hear that Hampton tried to rant for my arrest have the noon. It would be h drawn yesterday aft ' irawn, vo" engaged Beebe, of No, 18 Wall street and there will be a to say ‘on both sides pro €ase comes to trial,” bly SOLD CIGARETTES TO BOYS. Cigar Dealer Nenr School Arrested jon. dent of Pub for Law Viol John J. Casey, Supe Schoo! No. §3, in ‘Fenth street, nt ‘guspicion for some time that his bo: ore smoking cigarette: ith Capt. Michael Smith, of the I “undred and Fourth matter. found Samuel Albert, who run for trial | nae were in- igar, de it ‘ass ur party took | with M ast One Hundred between Second and | Urhird avenues, has had a well-founded He conferred | eet station, fissigned Detective Carter to look motion store at No, 232 East One d.and Tenth street, selling clg- to schoolboys at the rate of cent to-day and arrested him. id in ball W. Leslie, . Ne ww Fult street, where It has already been seen by many Suddenly Approved, Then Re- practicability, The actual working | considered by Alarmed Board | value of the invention Is demonstrated | with only the accessorles of apparatus for the reproduction of photographs ‘such as newspapers every day use for the illustration of thelr pages From the photograph of a man, for! «pyntic notice ts hereby given that instance, a half-tone plate of somewhat) tng Committee on Streets, Highways coarse mesh {a made. This Is bent intolang Sewers, of the Hoard of Aldermen, ja half-clroular shape and put on A) wit hold a public hearing In the Alder- cylinder, Attached to what looks Mke}manie chamber, City Hall, Manhattan, and ia like an ordinary sounder of Alon Monday, Oct. 20, at 12 M., on a telegraph instrument, is a common pln./ragotution to permit the Erle Railroad Sealing wax having been rubbed over|to Jay tracks on Thirteenth avenue be- the half-tone plate, the cylinder is set/tween Twenty-elghth and Twenty-ninth , jto revolving by the power of a small| streets in the Borough of Manhattan. dy 9% and the pin ts placed to touch} “Ail persons Interested in the above the plate Hghtly. matter are respectfully requested to al The Pin's Work. cend.”* Pas:ing over the wax, the pin comen| ‘The foregoing notice has received more In coutact with only the higher por-|than the usual publicity, and thereby tons of the plate and an. electrical | hangs a tale of Aldermante versatility. connection Is established. These Inter- The Erie's Way. | rupted connections may be compared to NO PLEDGES TO THE CITY. | the dots and ¢ of the Morse code} When the Erle Railroad corporation nd are transmitted Ike that code. determined that it would be a good tie other end of the wire a similarl ining to grab one or two west alte} ‘olves In un Ba point On with Chat ike | Streets for the development of Its prop- | To a devic pies een holds the common pin, 4] erty It made no application to the elty fealls ted With Take ae automat-|girest for the privilere of acquiring the touches a high paint on the half-tene! public highways. It did not ask for a Date, the pen touches the artist's paper | tranchive or suggest In any manner that ere AN GRASE Fepmiductionn of is] the city should receive one dollar's com- sof the half tone, with whit, | pensation spaces corresponding o the of the plate. axed parte! The corporation merely mentioned the ‘The resulting pleture on the pa In} matter to the a Alderman Dowling. | black Ink, looks lowe scrutiny. to bel who ly known as the “silent man"! on Somewhat Vagte desta tae ee teh, Of the Board, and is the ward representa: | static of a few feet, | tive of ti stlon of the elty through and meaning, and fs tn | which allroad desires E ioture. Wien tt whieh th Railroad desired to lay rate jown extra tracks | 1 process of phot the eee aes No other mov saa 1e, here ve “ pont » eraldin of the Intention of he Bleanty perio iar fonaly Jnl Anema eeeimenvmwielcormel) Fadueainl wadieilo | No Limit to the Namber, the cles | Hermie ilustration which accompa It was all done very quietly, Just as! ‘ -Jquietly the matter came up before the Board at its meeting Tu a general order re Alderman Dowling, The matter was moment when the point of uajournin: inattention which B's resolutl: from ons tit ; wht up at a Rourd was on the and 1} followed ) BIVINE t f the genera Alderman Hiilon ty to ay J and grab the requested clty highways, was passed, The Alarm Given, Then one of the Aldermen suddenly awoke, Alderman Dowling was leaving the Aldermanic Chamber a satis- fled smile and the dest document ally in his Inside ket { teCall_ who! Aldermanlc mation on d upon. olution ? her parts | | supplied hour after whatever, features of a man Successful tests hav been tis, made and V y that the they encountered in the machine was In xynotro: motion of the two evlindere » jpen would follow Instantly and ly the movements of the pin. ‘That was | by A device that test to which It now stood every hae was put at was th. came from the Aldermen in ot of the chamber. i dh For Use with Any Wire. ;{ An imports | these instru with any te! \ ye minutes, ams as ¢ i | Tecate a picture egolation — just ie the hn by { | ) Melnnes, treat deration adopte Vice-Chatr- the acknowledged Par- may aner graph llustrations to Jesnatches; milltary send war maps: travellers may be td pondents can tele r oon made a determi put and y the part of {land if the Methoat Valuable Water Front. THERE MAY BE MORE SUITS. Justice Steckler, In the Supreme Court, to-day handed down two decisions up- holding the city's ownership of millions of dollars’ worth of property under water and abutting the banks of the waters that surround Manhattan Island. Heretofore {t has not been clear that the city had unrestricted title to thts property. Justice Steckler’s deciston, if sustained in the higher cou will confirm New York's title to a vast amount of valuable water front. The most Important of Justice Steck- ler's decisions was in the suit of tho! Knickerbocker Tee Company against the | Dock Board and Grand street and For-| ty-second street railroad, in which the fee company asked an injunction re- straining the city from using the water- front on the Hudson River between Forty-second and Forty-third streets, | Known as Thirteenth avenue. This property the Knickerbocker Ice Com- pany sought to sell to several years ago for $120,000. Board refused to pureh Justice Sttckler now holds that this ts the clty's property, to which the munict- paltty acquired an Indisputable title under the Dungin charter of 1636, Justice teckler held the same opinion In other similar sults brought against the city involving property valued at nearly a million dowddurs, | Mm \ Dock Board | The Dock | e opinions of Justice Steckler are ong and Iny ex. The and claims all manner of conveyances, , wills and other extremely Ive a maze of ite Involve onfueed | rants, instruments of | gitt On the result of these decisions of Justice Steckler the titles of many cor- porations and private citizens who own, hold Jands on the water front will be called in question, and more sults may be brought GIVES LAND TO M. E. CHURCH Former New Yorker Donates 12,000 Acres for Industrial School. (3pectal to The Evening World.) NORTOLK, Va. Oct. %.—Bishop Fitzgerald, of St. Louls, who has been here presiding overthe Atlantic Mission Conference, of the Methodist Episcopal Church, left to-day for Elizabeth City, N.C, for a confernce with G, T, Zim- merman, & wealthy Methodist lumber dealer of that place. who has agreed to give twelve thousand acress of valuable tpiscopal Church will establish thereon an industrial school for the education of young men of the South, Bishop Fitzgerald goes to investigate | immerman’s offer and yeport to Board | 4 at A special meeting to oe | w York. pmerman Isa New Yorker moved South forty years ago CARROL BECKWITH BACK. Artist Did Little Work Daring Hin! Stay in Europe. who | tiled by their likenesses, and the police | 4 ra ansmit tograph from ke Committ t no ————___ pour! MRS. BAIRD, MODERN DIANA. fF M. votod: th. 1 shave fc fhe 1 ut boars 1 bringing Not Only Shot a Moon » but Birds | Too, and Caught Trout. | Friends of Mrs, Willlam T. Batrd, of 8} South Orange, N. J., think ehe deserves to be calldd the modern Diana, for on «| recent hunting and canoeing through the Tobique Brunawick, {n company with her hus- band, Mrs, Baird shot a big moose hav- in| ing a spread of antlers of 42 inches. In addition to this Mrs, Baird the camp larder other small su \ Board ¢ whieh the Interested tak ny whers and a delegation ra atiended ene hearing in the City Hall. The committee has expressed iteelf in favor of going over the whole situation carefully, binding the railroad to and dt AERC Og EM {ith sald that he and his wife had visited Paria and Belgium and taken the baths at Aix les Bains, He added] Carrol Beckwith, the artist, and Mrs, wiel ve ay on the Re ar line steamship Zeeland, Mr, Beck- 18 work he had done} a copy ‘ding that the only was of tin Diy His. Nes. bel.” Mr Horatio Pa and I. Cha ton, . Runyon 3 er, Miss Julia B. Runyol a Runyon Woman Dying from Wounds. PORT HENRY, N. Y., Oct. William Bruce, of Blue Ridge, who was accidentally abot just’ Friday by “a woman friend, with whom she Ranting, te aut But wore flee ‘ ARGUMENTS California & Eastern Blankets Very Much Below Prevailing Prices $2.45, 3.75, 4.95 $2.85, 4.50, 5.85 $3.95, 5.65 10-4 size for single beds, 11-4 “ “ double beds, 12-4 “extra large beds, A large collection of imported Silk Comfortables in lace and plain effects, exclusive designs and colorings Also the following Special Values Fancy Silkoline, winter weight, desirable colorings, for double beds, 85° Of Figured Sateen, down filled, 6x @ tar double beds, $3.45 West Twenty-third Street. JAMES McGREERY & CO.| JAMES McGREERY & CO. Sale of Lace Robes. Black Point d’Ksprit Robes, ready to fit. i Skirts, with two shaped flounces, handsomely trimmed with applied taf- Household Linens, Japanese, hand-drawn, open work. Linen Scarfs, tray cloths, and squares. Tray cloths, 18x27 inches....1.0c0each Tray Cloths, fetas silk edges, and floral 20x30 inches....115 “ designs. . 4 Scarfs, Bodies trimmed and ready 18x54 inches....1.75 “ These robes are made of fine quality ma- Scarfs, terials,—43 inch skirts, full width,— 18x63 inches....2.00 “ tastefully arranged. Scarfs, 21.00 per robe, 18x72 inches....2.25 “ Squares, Twenty-third Street, aoinchy....... yoo “ Squares, 24 ACh. cen secXeron | Squares, BOIDCRe. cechpatco | Tea cloths, “ 45 inch, 5... ..1.75 and 3,00 “ Heavy Scotch Damask Table Cloths, atyle, there WHIRD AVE, Gist and 624 2x2 yards........2.25 each 2x24 yards......3.00 “ 2x 3 yards,.. ....375 “ SETTLE ALL 2}4x2% yards.. ..3,65 “ “ 2}ox3 yards.... ..4.50 Napkins to match, Breakfast size, 2.35 per doz. Dinner size....3.50 “ BY CONSULTING THE World 1,000 Toptes Teretly Treated fm the 1902 World ne Bec Twenty-third Street, fleanee: AT Fine Point Arabe Lace Cur-]Antique Feraghan, Iran, tains, Daghestan and fine silky Senneh rugs,—handsoine 13.50, 18.50 and 25,00 ; patterns, per pair. Sash curtains to matcb- 400 pairs Renaissance lace curtains, 35:00 to 60,00 each, Value 48.00 to 85.00 Antique Guenjes,—average size 7ft, 6in.x3ft. 7in. 16.50 to 24.75 each, Value 22,00 to 35.00 3625, 4.50 and 8.50 per pair. Sash curtains to match. Bonne-femmes, on net or fine mull, various patterns, 30 Hall Strips,—all in per fect condition,—fine silky 6.00, 8.50 and 10,00 pile. each, Bedsets, finished with deep flounce, — for single or double beds. 8.50, 12.50 and 15.00, 37.50 to 60,00 each, Value 45.00 to 80,00 200 Shirvans, average size 4ft. gin.x3ft, sin. 12.75 each, Value 18.00 400 pairs Portieres,—Repp, Armure or Tapestry. 3.50, 6.50 and 9.50 per pair. Usual price 5.60 to 13 50. Twenty-third Streets Persian, Turkish, India and Cashmere carpets, var ious sizes, —H_—SO:: aan»$__=_a=_=E eE eee JAMES McGREERY & CO. Sale of f Fine China and Cut Glass, Old blue; ro inch Wedgewood Plates. Ivan- hoe subjectSsceeseseceeecees eee. 25C each, Fine China Ramekin and plate ,—violet deco- ration; finished with gold, 25C- Austrian China Salad bowls........25¢, each, Limoges Breakfast plates......++ 000020 Bouillon cups and saucers.......++.50C Sets; Porcelain Dinner 100 pieces; attract- ively decorated -o+++8.75 per set, English China, old blue and gold patterns, IOO PieceS......+++e++ ee ee oe T6.50 per set, Limoges China, 100 pieces......++19,50 ow Cut Glass | Vinegar and Oil Cruets Water Bottles... “ Rose. Bowl -2.95 Sugar bowl and cream pitcher...... 3.00 per pair, ++95¢. each oe se cower ere eene

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