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(Mrs, Siegtried, of Buffalo, Removed . More than three yea Whe “ ALDERMEN MAY “SHE POOR RUSH Friends of Accused Lieutenant Will Appeal to Board to Pre- vent His Removal by Com- missioner Sturgis. LAWYERS INTERESTED, TOO. All Agree that Pardon Granted for Offense Committed in Boyhood Practically Made Hima Man Who Had Never Been Convicted. Adherents of Lieut. Rush, of the Fire Pepartment, will appeal {o the Board of Aldermen to prevent his removal by Commissioner Sturgis, and it 1s said that the members, irrespective of party, Will respond to the call. Alderman Suilivan eald to-day: “I do not know Lieut. Rush, and I fon’t care what his politics are, If he hav any. Ail I know about the case is What I have read in the newspapers, ich showed that he was a splendid man. Nothing can be done in the Legislature until Jan. 1, and it is for that reason we intend to take action at the coming meeting of the Board of Aldermen.” Act of Great ‘Injustice, This was eupplemented by this state- ment from Alderman Leo W. Harbur- ger: “The citizens seem to be aroused ever the case of Lieut. Rush. If he ts be dismissed because of his single misstep he made when a boy it will be} act of great injustice, We hope Mpmlesioner Sturgis will take a lenient ylew of the matter, and permit this brave tlreman to remain In the depart ment.” ¥ > Lawyers, too, are taking a great in- terest in the case, and some of the best fn the city are inclined to agree with the views of Gustavus A Rogers, former Assistant Corporation Counsel, who holds that Gov. Flower’s pardon gave Rush ‘a new credit, character and ca- pacity under the law.” Pardon Erased Record, Here are the views of Lawyer Eman- wel Friend on this point: "If Gov. Flower could eondone Rush's boylsh offense, s0, too, can Commis- sloner Sturgis. Tt would be an outrage to dismiss this brave fireman, who has ferved the city so faithfully for fifteen Years.” Tawyer Jacob Sticfel, No. 140 Nassau Street, takes a similar view. He said forday: “Mr, Rogers's point Is a good one, but fhe could have gone further. In Bou- yier's Law Dictionary, Volume IL, page #4, a pardon {s defined as ‘one which frees the criminal without any condi- tlons whatever.’ Bouvier's Dictionary ig a standard work, and so recognized.” THIRD RAIL KILLS TROUBLE FINDER, Castellanos Fell from Elevated Structure and Fractured His Skull—Found Dead. Edward Castellanos, a “trouble finder’ on the Second avenue division of the Manhattan Elevated Rallroad, was found dead in the street beneath the ele- vated structure at Stanton and Allen streets early to-day. His skull was padly fractured by the fall, but it ts thought that death was caused by a shock from the third rail, Castellanos was at the Rivington Atreet station talking with the ticket- pelier halt an hour before his body was found. He started northward to con- five his work of inspecting the track, it was the last time he was seen allve. The body was found by Policeman Den- nis Ryan, of the Eldridge street police Hatlon, who sent for an ambulance trom erneur Hospital. Castellanos, how- ever, was dead. It ts thought that he Wes shocked by the live rail and fell. SACRIFICE TO SING HERE. mot Ap- pear Under Cartel Verein Again, Herr Anthes, who has sung in Dres- fen for years and is one of the best- known German tenors, has decided to cept an engagement with Maurice frau without the permission of the Miclals of the Royal Opera-House in resden. He will appear here first as qprensrin on Friday, Nov. 37, at the etropolitan, Opera-House, Herr Anthes Js now in the zenith of By his breaking his gon- raot with the Dresden house he will be ble to appear again in any of the rman opera-houses that belong to Cartel Verein, the organization hich includes every important opera- Pouse in Germany except Bayreucn, "WOMAN MORPHINE VICTIM. to Bellevue Hospital. Mrs. Lillian Slegfried, of Buffalo, music gritic and patron of the Buffalo Sym- phony Orchestra, 1s In Bellevue Hos- tal, a victim of the morphine habit. ‘Gho was taken there from the home of Mrs, John 3. Black, at No. 47 West Mai¢-seventh street, Mrs, Blegfried is thirty-seven years 1d, was richly dressed and wore many @jamonds. According to f:.aus she has been a victim of the morphine habit for ho. Was taken Into the dospltal eption room sh was selzed with @ 44 attack of her delirum, and it oe ir strong attendants #0 peetealp nae to her cot. les Sat No, ot Hast North street # Most advanced and distressing kidney and Djadder diseases positively cured by Dr. THE MORTON HOUSE Widow of Astronomer Acquires Much Valuable Property from Cortlandt Palmer’s Estate. Mrs, Mary A, Palmer Draper, widow of Dr. Henry W. Draper, an eminent astronomer, is now proprietor of the Morton House. In addition she is in possession of much valuable real estate which has fallen to her in the final dis- position of the estate of the late Cort- landt Palmer, who died June 23, 1888, leaving property valued at $3,000,000, and two wills, in one of which he disin- herited his son, Robert Armory Pal- mer. During the attending litigation Mrs. Draper loaned much money to the heirs, as she had inherited a large estate from her husband. The final distribution came when there was transferred at $750,000, to Mrs. Draper, the property named, by Fanny, Arnot Haven. Mrs. Haven Is the wife of George G. Haven, the banker, Mra, Draper, lives at No, 271 Madi- son avenue and gives $10,000 a year to the Harvard Observatorv. A. L. ASHMAN IS DYING. | Proprietor of the SincIair House May Pass Away at Any Time. It was said at the Sinclair House to- day that the condition of A. L. Ashman, the proprietor, was so serious that his death was expected hourly. Mr. man has been proprietor of the Sinclair House for forty years and Is one of the best known hotel men in the country. Ash- | th ———_ lit New Resolution Is Passed Normal College Girls Will Have to Forsake Profession. More than one thousand young women, pupils of the Normal College, are excited to-day over the resolution introduced in the Board of Education by City Sup- erintendent of Schools William, H. Max- well, As this résolutfon provides that no young woman should be given a posi- tfon as teacher until she had at least sixty days of practical experience, It would have the effect of barring nearly every pupll from her ambition to teach. In opposing the resolution, which went over, Commissioner Abraham Stern, sald: “This Is direcf discrimination against the Normal College. Over a thousand young women are studying there to be- come teachers gnd this amandment will prohibit any one of them from becomliig teachers, ‘These pupils are all New York girls and they are to be discriminated against in favor of young women from all parts of the country who are study- tng in the training schools for teachers, where a model school gives them op- portunity to get the necessary sixty days’ experience as a teacher.” _——— Barring Iliterates Would Affect Itwlians. LONDON, Oct. 2 (Thursday) 4.30 A. M.—The Itallan Government has been Informed that the American Senate is lispowed to sa dill excluding iliter- ate Immigrants trom the United States, fo lume correspondent of the Daliy Chronicle and the news has caused much feeling, as such a_ bill would exclude three-fourths of the Ital- fan immigrants to America. THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 23, 1902, RS. DAPER GETS |RULE A HARDSHIP_JREVIVED WMA 101.00 TEACHERS) WHO KICKED ER Child in Court as Victim of Fainting Woman Tenderly Bathes Her Face. Bathing the face of the woman who was accused of having kicked and beat- en her and who had fainted when ar: raigned in the Flatbush Court to-day, ten-year-old Grace Grover, of No. 4142 Thirty-ninth street, Brooklyn, caused the Magistrate to put the case over for LAWYER FAINTS IN TRYING A CAS". Foster L. Backus Topples Over in Recorder Goff's Court While Examining Witness. Foster L. Backus, attorney for Ja Jackson. q roundsman accused of ¢ ding a man n baum du the Rabbi Joseph funeral riots Inst July fell fainting in Recorder Goff's court room to-day. as examining one of the wit- noticed that and it was seemed to hesitate he a day, until it could be more thor- ale. precoraay ate * é ‘ Of interrupting him W oughly Investigated. aad, The child is a daughter of Josie th : 1 Grover, an actress, whose stage name | Hi vived in a few moments and was {s Josie Lawrence, and has been bonrd- ins Cel teyaroosed|tt puta te ing with Mra. Fannie Peck, the woman| Recorder, “the Court will adjourn this who is accused of abusing her. case undl to-m s According to Supt. John A, Sauer, of the Society for the Prevention of Cru- elty to Children, Mrs. Peck locked -the child in a room at night without a Nght and when she protested, he saya the woman and a man named Charles Chad- ley kicked her. ‘The little one was sent by her mother two years ago to board with a Mrs, Brighton, who 1s now dead and who was an aunt of Mrs. Peck. When the former died the girl remained in the house, her mother paying $12 a month for her board. Soon Chadley appeared as @ star boarder, anf he and Mrs, Peck, it is sald, went out frequently at night, leaving the child alone til a tate hour and abusing her upon their return, Mrs. Peck fainted twice in court and was revived by the child, who procured water and bathed her face. w Backus was taken to the private room of District-Attorney Jerome. and aftor a brief rest was able to accompany his wife home in a carr TRIPLE JAPANESE MURDER. Y. Hidaka Killn Two Men and a Woman of Hin Own Land, SACRAMENTO, Cal, Oct. 23. — Y. Hidaka entered a Japanese boarding- house and shot three other Japs—Mr. and Mrs. Yoshimoto and M, Tokutlomi— killing all of them. He then made bis escape and has not been captured. It is claimed that Hidaka became in- fatuated with Mrs, Yoshimoto and tole lowed her and her husband from Seatte, When he met them In the boat house the couple happened to be In c pany with Tokutioml, and, drawing revolvers, Hidaka killed the three. At 350 Gwo- Ff. “ece ee Ya “ting their Fall and Winter stocks, the Double- Breasted Sutts~* egies coal ST. In the Boys J. | boats was about K-| Japanese lawyer NINE LOST TO LAND IN SIBERIA Two of Those Drowned in Heavy Sea Were Steele and Monaud, Americans. VICTORIA, B. C., Oct. %3.—Nine pas- seers on the steamer Sungari lost thelr lives while attempting to land at Kamschatka, on the Siberian coast, ac- cording to the offict 1 crew of the Steamer Kinshu Maru, this port. The Sungarl was sending passengers ashore in sn boats. drowned, 8 boat for a tin xo them. Steele and Monaud were the names of The latter was the Monaud two Americans lost founder of the Seattle. BAR JAPANESE, T00? Court Decides Subjects May Not OLYMPIA, Oct. 2 Court has decided tha not become a citizen of the United The point came up directly In the matter of admission of a young to the bar of this State, the law making citizenship a qual. States. {feation for admission, midway between the steamer and the shore it was capsized in the heavy sea and all on board wery ‘al clang to the upturn put were forced to their hold before he. Mikado's TRYING Just arrived jn he When one of the could Hospital had bes relf at Former Be Citizens, —The Supreme a Japanese can- vapors dat. to cail Cured of Consumpt in had Koch bas study of consumptt trely bi aid. y one SS fact that 1 bad consumptio: 3 new ai sympa toadt: | quan- ents u mal consumption, and beau I knew others who/ ure hem, and because Dr. for a Hfetime niade a spectal 1 met Dr. Koch bim. | id had every reason to| faith becau od the oMice, into my lungs, which are now en- ealed. I now feel fully as well as 1| 18 y case. ‘who will take the time and trouble upon mo at jome."” ME OLTMAN May we show you the n shades and patterns of Wilton Carpets for fine pari furnishing ? ‘ 260 PIECES OF Wilton Velvets, revularly sold at $1.10 a yard, Nothing more serviceable, and at this price a good bargain. Royal Wilton Rugs. Size 9x12, $35 value, now. ize 8.3x10.6, $: value, now. $23.50 ze OX, $20 value, NOW...e-» $1450 We have a few more of the L’ ArtNouveau WiltonRugs believe in this t nt “Although it took them four months to) cure me-it was Because T was a very bad | (Size 9x12) at $27.50, ‘ase—but gradually improved from the c {ime 1 began to. breathe those heating || $35 to $40 value. € oF small lilies on various tint backgrounds. J. & J. Dobson, | 14th Street & Fifth Avenue, Ro : BS + $25.75 | Che Boys’ Store And the Wen’s Store Witt Prove Gheir Superiority and Scope in a * Store---2d Floor. A total of 1,800 Suits will be arranged in four distinct sections, comprising: Gypical American 5 -go—A magnificent Sacdlor Sutts range of colorings could get no cloth to cut. Sale of Suits for Al Mankind The little toddler of 3 years, the schoolboy of 8 years, his big brother of 14 years, the youth of 17, his fathe at 30 and his grandpa at 65, each and every one, no matter what his taste or desire, may be satisfactorily outfitted here, Precisely What Makes Ghis Great Gvent Possible, Conditions have been far from prosperous among clothing manufacturers. Months ago, when they should have been cut- : b The great syndicate of woollen mills had a STRIKE. When they finally received the cloth they could not get it made into garments. The tailors were on STRIKE. When the tailors be KE interfered. And ever since the stocks came pouring in on them the ‘‘cold weather” has been on STRIKE. Resu stocks in all the great warehouses. Instead of duplicate orders came cancellations; and the best makers are hit the hardest. The Big Store, a Natural Outlet, has been the Mecca for scores of manufacturers since Sept. 15, gathering a ‘‘Harvest of Bargains’’ without parallel. Your Opportunity Begins Co-Mforrow Friday) Morning. In the Wen’s Store---Main Foor. A Total of 2,400 Suits will be arranged in six distinct rt of 40, his uncle Za ‘an to work the t: Tremendous and our clothing chief and his staff have been sections, comprising: Sengle Breasted Sack | -y_7All the very latést colorings Suits in pure wool fabrice for Fall choicest fabricsin fall and winter weights, mixtures, checks and overplaids; also navy blue and black, sizes 7 to 17 years, Chree-piece Vest Suits ~-Navy biue, black, Oxford and all the new designs in autumn colorings, sizes 11 to 17 years, Youths’ Long-Crousers S, pe A veritable sensation! Noth- ees ing like these suits ever offered anywhere; splendid Cheviots in navy and 3.) 3,50 the designe to be found only in pure worsted Serges and Cheviots, beautiful appointments, ailk ties, high- class tailoring, sizes 3 to 12 ye Little Russian Blouse S; ---Pure worsted Cheviots and UCUS Serges, collars and shields, show the touch of art, no baggy breeches, sizes 2}, to 7 years, Che Popular Yorsotk .y.—-English % Suc vs English and Scotch plaids, also solid colorings; many of it exclu- J 3,50 3,59 3.0 and Winter wear; Dark Plaids, Stripes and Overplaids, also Oxfords and Silk Mixtures; sizes up to 50 in. breast. Sack Suts of Black =z Positively the greatest Sabries selection ever gathered under one price; Thibets, Diagonals, Cheviots and Velours; sizes up to 50 in. breast. &- a Cutaway Frock Sues. Mace of pure Worsted, fast black, non- glossable Clay Diagonals, serge lined; mixtures, sizes 13 to 17 years, ip RU NE S—New arrivals, Fancy Santa Clara Prunes, large size, meaty fruit 6 per Ib., GRAPES—Extra fancy, large clusters Tokay Malaga Grapes, sound ripe fruit; per Ib., PEPPER S—Fancy largo Bell per 40 dozen, LEMON 8—Large, julcy, thin-skin Messina 403 12 Bp; Night, fal el CAULIFL! Long Island snow-white Cauliftower; per large head, 10 Ohe Boys’ Store THREE-FIFTY will make it a household word wherever one of these suite ie worn by Young America. i Specials from the World’s Sreatest Grocery. Fare, Wholesome, Reliable Foods at Lowest Prices. } CRAB Bott Shell Ghalbag bronded ana 5 epdked, gach, BISCUIT—The ol4-teahloned | CORNED REEF. fan- New England Tes Bis- cyl 10 3,50 Large aisles and PIES~—The Kind: finest quality, fruit light flak: ular family size 230; Taps, ¢hoice Canada Lamb, land Ib, y and ORANGRS —Vancy, large, ‘PERS, fancy stock, sweet, “Jamaica Or- — Choice Jersey | Ib., i 25 roiling PORK LOINS, fancy WER — Fancy 12 Jersey corn-fed Pork, TOP SIR- WHOLD LOINS OF BEEF, Ib. sive outfitters, sizes 7 to 17 years, ig the ideal place to fit out your boy. greater assortments, Homie - Made | CRACKER SPECIAL—Freeh fresh made 4 Marshmallow Y crusts, reg- rumps, | LAMB FOPSQUAR TERS, MUTTON HINDQUAR- J ally, Fiy, for o'clock Tea, Se.; per is} per Ib., CELERY—Kalamazoo; fancy Targo bunches, 4 nice- ly bleached stalks, —Armour’s “French Bouillon, can, CAKE-—Pound cake, SOUP. CHEESE—Fancy, rich, old full cream Cheese, 45 FISH—Fresh caught Long Island Floanders or 6 Weakfish, | Ib, Smelts 9 eltron, ib. regular 10 13 13 gree in tomato sauces 3-1b. U ean, 8¢.; 2-1. can, In its new location on the great Garment Floor (the 2nd floor) it has every advantage to offer you. Perfect Daylight. THE SPECIAL SALE OF SUITS at SCRAPPLE—Finest quality Philadelphia Farm Scrapple, new season's goods, Ib, POSTUM CERBAL-- MIXED GPICRS—Best quality, TEA—Exceptional values in black, or mixed 7ucles, Drugs and Medicines Con t sizes up to 48 in, breast. One All sizes, 10 plain, | With leather soles » raisin, 75 2e. alze, 19 PICKLING 25 marb! gaiters. 38 (Fourth Floor.) Wen’s Store values uf these High Class Suits. Shoes and Steppers. Women’s Kid Shoes, With Patent or Kid Tips, in button and lace; Women’s Felt Romeos, Of 36-Ounce Felt, with the best fur binding. Women’s Strap Sandals, Of Kid and Patent Leather, several styles. Women’s Warm Lined Shoes, and kid foxing. Women’s Winter Oxfords, Of Kid and Patent Leather, to wear with over Men’s Fancy Leather Slippers, In Opera, Everett and Harvard styles, in black, tan, wine and red colors, (Men's Dept., Main Floor, East, 19th 8t.) (Women's Dept., Second Floor, Centre,)) 00 AL. [ 00 Lee | ee Your Choice of Pair. ‘Double-Breasted Sack | Je —There are herringbone and Sucts. Plaid effects, wood brown, olive and Oxford combinations, black and Navy; sizes up to 44 breast, —Not merely one or | Short Wen, two styles of some high-priced suits, but anything your tancy desires. The man of 5 ft. 2 in. or 6 ft. 2 in, will find a perfect fit. Extra Large and Stout | —This is a very special oppor- Men. tunity for the men meastt- ing from 39 to 52 inches breast—either short or tall. Men's |\Very Gall and Very At J } has undergone radical changes and the improvements are many—and visible ata glance—The Store has hosts of friends, but this SPECIAL SALE OF SUITS at ELEVEN DOLLARS will spread its fame far and wide. We do not mention the We'd rather surprise you. Heavy Fleece- Lined Knit Underwear Many of the garments comprised in this sale were intended to be soldas high as $1.00, The extraordinarily low price at which they ore offered is due simply to the fact that the purchase i ther sions in price. The Shirts double breasted, exceptionally large one, and e brought with it unusual conces- These SHIRTS and DRAWERS are fleece- lined, have double sewn seams, pearl but tons, and are extra well finishes. e single or Included also are broken lots of plain cy Wool Shirts in sizes. a The price per garment is (fain Ploor, Bast, 18th