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WRECKED TWICE SIX HOURS, New Yorkers Among the Pas- sengers Who Were Injured When a St. Louis Express Went Over a Cliff. SECOND CRASH FOLLOWED. Train Had Scarcely Started to Re- sume Its Journey When the En- gine Jumped the Track at High Rate of Speed. INDIANAPOLIS, Nov. 28.—The Sst. Louis flyer from New York, running over the Lake Shore Division of the New York Central road, left the tracks @ half mile west of Avon early to-day and plunged over a high embankment. Although the train was broken in sec- tons, some of the cars rolling down the hill, only three passengers were danger- ously hurt, a dozen others being cut, brulsed and badly shaken up. ‘The train was delayed until 6 o'clock A. M.; then a new train was made up and the run to St. Louls was resumed. The train was hunning at a high rate of speed thirty-five miles beyond the Boene of the first wreck when it ran imto an open switch at Carbon. The engineer saw the danger, but was run- ning too fast to stop. The front trucks of the engine left the tracks and another delay was caused. Nobody was hurt In the second wreck and little damage was done. ‘The following were injured in the first wreok: THE INJURED. MRS. ANNA ENGLEHARDT, Middle- port, O., badly cut about the head; in- Juries may be fatal, MRS. STEPHEN ENGLEHARDT, Middleport. O., seriously cut about the head and bruised on body, TRA L, KLEIN, Cleveland, face badly bruised. C, W. WOOD, Los Canos, Cal. head injured. GEORGE BRAND, Norfolk, Va. slightly injured, H. J. WENDORFF, of New York, slight bruises and shaken up. W. H. RAY, St. Louls, body brutsed. J. C, HARRIS, St, Louis, Pullman car porter, body badly brulsed. GEORGE C. DOAN, 8t. Louls, Pun- man car conductor, hips and back bad- ly injured, . SAMUEL ELLIS; Jersey City, N. J., Pullman car porter, arms sprained and hand mashed. ‘The injuries of the others were slight. The train was running at high speed and struck a broken rail. The engine and two mail cars passed over it safely. but the other cars left the track. The New York sleeper on the rear end rolled over twice and down the embankment of twenty-five feet landing bottom side up. It contained three passengers, H. J. Wendorff, of New York; Ira L, Klein, of Cleveland, and; W. H. Ray, of Bt. Louis, and the porter and the conductor. Got Through Window, Next to this was the sleeper from Buffalo. In it were eleven passengers. This car turned completely over. ‘The imprisoned passengers got out by break- ing one of the windows and all escaped with slight injuries. The next sleeper broke down at the forward ent and stdod across the track. No one in this car was hurt, The two forward coachts next to the mail cars left the tracks, but the occupants es- caped. ISRAEL HARRIS NOT SUED BY WOMAN, Denies Story from Middletown that He Was Accused of At- tempting to Kiss Mrs. Hook. Israel Ha: West Houston street, has been troubled by reports from Middletown, N. he had been sued by Mrs, Hook, that place, for damages for attempting to kiss her. Mr. Harris declares that some other man of his rame must be the de- fendant In the sult, as he has never heard of the woman and was never Middletown. ‘Many of my friends have asked me about the case aga result of the Mid- letown reports," he said to-day. “L have expliined to them that It has nothing to do With me, but the story has annoyed me considerably, My father and 1 have been in business a long time and nothing of this kind ever happened to us before. There not the slightest foundation for connect- ing me with the story, “As a matter of fact 1 do not know where Mid ‘sown Is, ha there and so could not hi woman there.” —— TO SHOW WORK OF F ‘The trustees of the Hebrew School for Giris will hold a re next Sunday PILS. echnical eption will be exaibited, the affair are: Mrs. 1 Henry C. Bernheim, Bloom, Albert Blumenthal, Mrs, George Blumenthal, Maurice Brill, Annie W. Calman, Mrs, feopold Cahn, Alfred A. Cook, Miss Belle Dittenhofer, Lud- bert Heinshelmer, Joseph Hernshelta, bam M. Kridel, Arthur Lehman, ) Olivia Leventritt, Adolph Lewisohn, we! Ferdinand L, Loeb Ferdinans A D, Louis, Mra, HRS, FORD WEDS BROOKLYN MAN Former Wife of Malcolm Ford, Who Murdered His Brother, Paul Leicester Ford, Quietly) Married to J. B. Leavy. TREASURER OF BREWERY. Mr. Leavy ae Widower, While Mrs. Ford Obtained a Divorce from Her Husband Four Years Before the Double Tragedy. Announcement is made of the wedding of Mrs. Janet Graves Ford, who was until 1898 the wife of Malcolm Webster Ford and Joseph Britton Leavy, Treas- urer of the Brewing firm of Britton & Leavy, of Brooklyn. This wedding recalls the grim domes- tie tragedy In which after a bitter quar- rel Malcolm Ford, known for years as America’s champion all-round athlete, shoc and kiled himself after he hed taken the life of his brother, Paul Lel- ceater Ford, the distinguished novelist. Probably because of the shadow of that event Mrs, Ford's marriage was ex- ceedingly quiet. Only a few of her immediate relatives and friends wit- nessed the ceremony, which was per- forined In the parish house of St. Vin- cent de Paul's Church, in West Twenty- third street, by Rev. St Elmo Smith, the Fire Chaplain. Mr. Leavy is a member of the Crescent Athlette Club, of Brooklyn; the Calumet, the Collectors’ Club and the D. K. B. fraternity. After the death of his firat wife two years ago he went to live at the D. K. E, Club, Mrs. y is one of the four beautiful daughters of the late Robert Graves, a millionaire wall paper manufacturer of Brooklyn, Her family and the Fords were neighbors in Brooklyn and she fell in love with the handsome young ath- |), lete. ‘Their marriage took place in 1892) 16 at Beach Lawn, Irvington-on-the-Hud- son. Malcolm Ford was at war with his brothers at the time, but the family skeleton was kept in the closet and Washington Ford served as Malcolm's best man, while Paul acted as an usher ‘The bride's three sisters were her maids. ‘They are now Mrs. Herman J. Harjes, wife of Mr. Morgan's Paris banking partner, Mrs, James J. Fay, of Sands Point, and Mrs. Percy Pyne Lewis. Mr. and Mrs. Ford went to live on the Johnson farm at Babylon, L. L, once the home of Walt Whitman. A son was born to them, but six yea wedding they separated and Ford obtained a divorce. After the tragedy of last May, Mrs. Ford came to the defense of her hus- ris, dealer In glass at No. 76 8 never been ve seen this wig Dreyfuss, Simon Guggenhem. Nor- | 1 Morrls J. Hirsch, Soi H. Kohn, Abra- 3 band's memory, and In a letter to the press spoke tenderly of his memory and pleaded that he was mentally irresponsi- ble. BANG WENT PISTOL, DOWN SHE DROPPED Mrs. Jessie Edwards Thought Husband Had Shot Her, but the Ball Never Touched Her. —_—__ Gates avenue station, Brooklyn, with a revolver In his hand, He gave the nw of Fred Edwards and told how the m der had been done at No. 223 Madi a young woman in a faint on the door: door shattered by a bullet. When revived the young woman said her name was Jessle Merritt until last September, when she married Edwards. the son of a wealthy baker who lived across the strect at No, 214 Madison street. They quarrelled and yesterday tried to make up with her. She turned him off and he followed her to her mother's door, where he threatened to Kill her: She screamed he shot and she fainted. ang bend been lying. on the steps for fifteen minutes before the police ar rl but no one heard the shot or the scream or saw her lying on the steps for it was Thanksgiving Day in Bro k lyn, She only thought she was hit. MOTHER SAW BOY CRUSHED BY TRUCK Three-Ton Wagon Rolled Over Little Fellow, Killing Him, and (special to The Evening World.) PASBAIC, N. J., Nov. 28,—Joseph Lan even years of was crushed to de by the wheels of @ three-ton pip. nm ‘The boy, who lived in Main xe, ran into the street and jum on the back axle of the wagon, dri William Burchell, of Whippany, s passing his hom w sill ncoaselous. a BOHOTLE RELIEVED, ning’s flying colpmn relieved Bohoiic, in} Myers, ‘Moses | c stds THE WORLD; FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER °°, 1902, DO YOU GET Conta te WING MOEA: Pain or dull ache in the back is un- not clear. worst form of kidney trouble, may steal upon you. sample Lottle iree, by mail. Among the many cures of Bwamp-iooi to-day for the beneft in the highest “Pye shot my wife!" shouted a breath less young man who darted into the street, Two policemen sent there found 3 and the glass of the vestibule he met her as she was golng home and | Woman Became Unconscious. | F} h} is thirty feet long and is w . Tt Ww > daw the acci- d ux held on @ charge of ADEN, Arabia, Noy. 23.—Gen. Man- ‘sample bottle of reat sufferer from hada matiam and urinary trouble, also ex Urie acid, After tryong the sample bot: bought a large bottle here at the drug sto aid der Bo much good she bi effect of Swamp-Root was won joe Immediate. She has felt no ‘old trouble since. “october, 1901 F. THOMAS. “427 Test St. Nuffalo, N.Y." wite Lame back is only one symptom of kidney trouble—one of many. Other symptoms showing that you need Swamp-Root are: Obliged to pass wa- ter often during the day and to get up many times at night, inability to hold your urine, smarting or Irrita~ tion in passing, brick-dust or sediment in the urine, catarrh of the bladder, uric acid, constaat headache, d ness, sleeplessness, nervousness, Ir- mistakable evidence of kidney trou- It is Nature’s timely warning to show you that the track of health is If these danger signals are unheed- ed, more serious results are sure to follow; Bright's disease, whic. is the The mild and the extraordinary ef- fect of the world-famous kidney and bladder remedy, D. niJmer’s sw Mp- Root, is soon realizeu. It stends the h ghest for its © onderfui cures the most distressing cases. A tral will convince a y .ne—and you may have buck Ache, Uric Acid and Urinary Trouble, ed by the New York World the one we er WITH A LAME BACK? Have You Uric Acid, Rheumatism or! Bladder Trouble? To Prove What SWAMP-ROOT, the Great Kidney and Bladder Remedy, Will Do for YOU, All Our Readers May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. bloating, irritability, wornout feel- ing, lack of ambition, loss of flesh, sallow complexion. If your water, when allowed to re-/ main undisturbed in a glass or bottle for twenty-four hours, forms a sedi- ment or settling, or has a cloudy a pearance, it is evidence that your ki neys and bladder need immediate at- tention, In taking Swamp-Root you affora natural help to Nature, for Swamp- Root is the most perfect healer and gentle aid to the kidneys that 1s known to medical sclence. Swamp-Root is the great discovery of Dr. Kilmer, the eminent kidney! and bladder specialist. Hospitals use it with wonderful success in both slight and severe cases. Doctors rec- ommend it to their patients and use it in their own families, because they recognize in Swamp-Root the greatest and most successful remedy. If you have the slightest symptoms of kidney or bladder trouble, or if -|there is a trace of it in your family ory, send at once to Dr. Kilmer & Binghamton, N. Y., who will gladly send you free by mail imme- diately, without cost to you, a sample bottle of Swamp-Root and a book of wonderful Swamp-Root testimonial! Be sure to say that you read this g erous offer in the New York Evening Wor! If you are already convinced that) Swamp-Root is what you need, you can purchase the regular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles at drug stores everywhere. Don't make any mis- take, but remember the name, Swamp- |Root, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on| regular heart-beating, rheumatism, |every bottle. Porous Plasters Thad pains in my back and thought I had kidney disease, but two Allcock’s kidneys gave me immediate relief, Get Alicock’s. Newer accept substitutes One or two BRANDRETH PILLS tak night is a sure cure for CONSTIPATION. Bright people get good positions through Sunday Worl ‘you seek help, a Sunday World Want will find it for you, de placed over the Ra en every ——_$—$—— z _ _-—_— or - or SIXTH AVENUE, 19th to 20th Streets. These Overcoats and Suits are the best value ever offered. They come in every new style, including breasted sack. The materials embrace the finest Thibets, Worsteds, unfinished Diagonals i with broad shoulders, military cut or the round cutaway re has been incorporated by skilled hands, and perfect fit is ) double and single fancy Tweeds. in the regular pr course guarantee Our $ are pre-eminently the acme of perfection in men’s tailoring: they The Suits are specially well made, Gportions only. Every little detail 20.00, $25.00, $35.00 and $40.00 [Men’s Suits and Overcoats embrace the highest art obtainable in men’s ready-for-service a| they are strictly hand-made throughout, with the same care ani conscientiousness that the highest-priced tailor bestows upon his best - ucts. Every worthy standard fabric is represented in neat and exclusive patterns, the very best obtainable. A Word About Boys’ Clothing. Second Floor. Our boys’ clothing {s as carefully and conscientiously made as the finest of our men’s apparel. We are only keeping pace with the thought of the century when we give to this criminating attention. carelessness in dress, youth. The well-dressed boy will be the well years hence, and a good appearance {s an excellent starting succese In Ife. BOYS' SAILOR SUITS, in a num- styles of serge. silk Soutache bra BOYS' — OVERC AND RPEFERS; all wool frieze; flan- warm and serv- $3.95 RFOLK AN IARE-CUT SUITS, for Ant to 16 years; of best quality 018, cassimeres, tw: mM ; all new fall patterns; also blues and. black: Made of Patent and Enamel Leather, Patent and Vici Kid, Black Russia Calf and Chrome Calf Skins, With Genuine Flintstone Oak Soles, department our most dis- As the twig {s bent so the tree will grow— ke other bad habits, must be corrected in -dressed man a few Many Shoes sold at higher prices do not look so BOYS' LONG TROUSER SUITS; | well, They are undeniably the best Shoes sold at..... sizes 14 to 19; these are splendidly terns and styles BOYS' SAILOR AND RUSSIAN BLOUSE SUITS, beautiful crea- of en's 1-clasp Prix Seam Cape Gloves; specially made from selected Cape stock; great value at. 33. Men's 1-clasp Real Mocha Gloves; new gray.... Men's 1-clasp Prix Seam Cape Gloves; spear point; first choice skins saeee Men's New Swagger Glove; no buttons; prix seam; R Kassan skins; spear point; Simpson Crawford Co. exclusive production ..... seceeeee Also full line of Woolien and Slik Lined Gioves for men’s per Our Doll Store. — BOYS’ LONG TROUSER SUITS, in a the latest fads for Fall wear; tailored and equal to m) thibets; excellently tailored. correct in every detail... Men’s Furnishings. Men’s Neckwear. Every Neckwear requisite for all occasions. the novelties at $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 and up to $4.00 each, we particularly mention our half-dollar Scarfs, which are selected with the utmost The shapes and designe are correct. Neckwear at this prive and you'll find it’s the best value for the price shown anywhere. Black. oure silk Barathea, narrow, reversible Four-in-Hands; fast color, 48 inches long, an excellent quality, such a used for 50c. Scarfs, at, each Men’s Silk Half Hose, 89c. Fine quality medium weight pure spun silk Half Hose; black, with fancy embroidered figures or woven vertical fancy stripes; im- ported to sell for and good value at $1.50, for 89¢c. a pair. Men’s $4.00 Underwear, $1.95. Small lot of Men’s colored pure silk and cashmere fine imported Shirts and Drawers: niedium weight, mauve and blue, in medium sizes only; a beavtiful, lustrous quality of goods; actually worth $4.00 a gar- ment, to close at $1.95. 75c. Domet Flannel Night Shirts, 59c. Men's heavy weight soft, fleecy Domet Flanne] Night Shirts, made large ond roomy; 54 inches long, pearl buttons; exceptional offering of the grade, which until now sold at 76c., for 58c. $1.00 Silk Suspenders at 50c. Men's extra quality strong, durable, pure silk elastic web Sus- penders; made with leather ends, just navy blue and tan colors; the quality usually sold at $1.00 palr, for 50c. [Model Food Store, Entire Sixth Floor, ot Anderson's Con: While we have all ‘We have one of the finest collections of Santa Dolls that has evar been shown. The Santa Doll has become Zamous for its correct 5 tures and perfect make, It is the finest grade of bisque jointed 5%4-inch Santa Doll, with long curly hair and blue eyes. 18-inch size, with Nght or dark curly hair, dark eyes.... Rains size, with large blue eyes and curly hair, finely Let us show you our ve beat hair, light or dark halr..........ssseeeeeeee Baby Dressed Dolls, in long dreses; curly hair, blue $1.00 and Sects soeues eee ; German Dolls, Sleeping Baby Dolls, D. P. Baby Dolls, at all prices from 29c. up to. Girl’s and [lisses’ Suits,” Misses’ fine grade Melton Coats, Monte Carlo model, flat collar. inlaid stitched velvet and self; Mandolin sleeves, with fancy pot: strapped with self material, custom tailored, Mned with guat~ ae satin, sizes 14 to 16 years; regular price 75, at .. noes . Misses’ fu’ ‘oats oO} y Mandolin sleeves with turn cuff, patch pockets, tallor strapped, lined with Skinner's satin, sizes 14 to 16 years; regular 7 Saturday News NOB chocolate or vanilla pla, Chocolate, Co- o t Seed Bars, Mrs, Hotohkisa' Pig “Nowions, N iy under seal: dozen. \d Wants.’ Pee SIXTH AVENUE, Simpson Crawford Co. sstnte20th'stre For Saturday, Nov. 29. Another Stirring Clothing Sale. Second Floor. We've held a number of good Clothing Sales—good for you; good for us. And now we come forward with another. It will be the best { we've ever held, and should be the biggest and) most successful. We haven't had Clothing weather—that you know. That's a condition, sadly bad for Clothing manufacturers. p they should have clear decks—their tables are piled high. They're confronted with a dilemma _ \ —wait for Old Boreas and King Frost, or accept a cash offering? Which? We've found two merchants who accepted the latter course. & Result—great gain to the consumer through the channel of the Simpson Crawford Clothing — Establishment. Therefore we offer you Suits and $12 é Overcoats, e The Garments in this sale are of extraordi= nary value. a Among them are embraced a number of the © finest quality Kerseys, Friezes and fancy Coat= ings in regular proportions, in all the new and ™ desirable colorings; each garment is lined with — extra durable mohair serge, with satin lined sleeves, and is worthy in every respect. Of course, perfect fit is assured in every case before the garment leaves this building. Overcoas, DIO Ien’s whoe Store, Second Floor. Men’s Ess-See-Ess Shoes at $3.50. Excellent Shaped Lasts. [len’s Gloves. First Floor. Third Floor. sececcess e $1.50. Third Floor. $12.50 4 t collar, ly front, velvet coat “tall length Kersey Coats, with inverted box plait Gi back, double-breasted front, high military collar, small double and stole, effectively trimmed with bias bands of velvet, sleeve with fancy turned cuff, 6 to 14 years; regular price $15.75, At cece eeee seer eeeeee oe Girls’ full length Melton breasted front, high rolling collar, double capes over trimmed; a first-class school coat; sixes 6 to 14 yeara; regular price $8.50, al os . es Girls’ one-piece Dre ir Russian model, waist broad; side plaits with pipings of bright p silk; Bishop sleeve, with fancy band, or yoke of solld color pin tucked, large bertha over shoulder of self; embellished stitched bands of taffeta and fancy butto large sleeves; lined with deep hems; 6 to 14 years; regular price $4, oy bese Wines and Liqua Sixth Floor, ~~ : J. E. Popper Whiskey, bot. ED Monongahela Rye Walskey, Old Crow Rye Whiskey, gal, Monogram Rye Whiskey, gat. Mabattan and Martiat ‘Opera Reina, box 60... Jusior Havana (amall sin Cramtord Co. Havana