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— ~ .. Weather He Has Just Now to Pass Out. ae ¢ PEACE DAWNS IN THE GREAT BUILDING WAR Skilled Union Workmen Agree to Dis- place Strike with Plan Proposed by Employers,, and Representative of Labor Declares They Will Effect a Speedy Settlement of the Fight. \ “iltbpsfiave teen taken by the newly WRerganized association of skilled butlding mecbanios to end the protractea bulld- tg trades’ lockout which has kept * 169,000 workmen idle for the past elght ‘Weeks. A strong oonmittee has been @ppcinied te confer with the Board of _ Governera of the Employers’ Associa- +, ton on the latter's plan of arbitration. | This committee meets this afternoon * tm Exchange Hall, No. 160 Hast Eighty- J qixth street, to draw up a working plan & ef arbitration according to the union ) man's ideas, This plan will be pre ) mented. to. the. Board.of Governors of tha = Employers’ Association on Monday af- * and\then both sides will try to ‘together on an‘agreement that will be mutually satisfactory. ‘The hitch in sight is on the ques- tion of bubiness dgents or walking dele- gates, The employers want them elimi- “pated altogether. The union men, Seo- ‘retary Farley said to-day, would inalst @m ‘the retention of business agents, ag they were necessary to the untons’ tn- gerests. They may be willing, though, to yield a point to the employers aud deprive thp business agents of the power to declare strikes. But they may not fhe willing to concede the employers’ re- Quest that the business agents be kept @@ the arbitration boards, Success Nearly Certain, ‘A successful outcome of the negotla- tlens is assured, inasmuch as the em- ployers are no longer insistent upon their plan of arbitration, but are willing $@ Gieouss “a plan of arbitration.” ‘The committtee named to confer with loyers is a strong, one consist- or Wwilllam H, Farley, of the Tile Richard Pottison, of the Sheet ‘Workers; James Nugent, of the Fitters’ Helpers; Alex Johnson, the Stone Cutters; Edward Skully, the Marbdle Cutters; Charleg Delaney, the Granite Cutters; Michael Stanton, Donovan, of the Plasterers. They will probably meet the employers before Monday. When the committee was appointed the board passed the following resolu- tion: “Resolved, That it 1s the desire of this meeting that this Board of Building Mechanics place itself on record as favoring any plan of arbitration to eliminate any atrikes or lockouts on buildings. Prince Sights Peace, L. K. Prince, of the Employers’ As- sociation Press Bureat, sald to-day: “It looks as If members were shaping themselves for an early settlement. Tha skilled mechanios have «gone ‘on record as favoring @ plan of arbitra- tion that will end the lock-out, and the employers are willing to disc a@ plan of arbiteation with the representatives of the unions. Some vety good sug- gestions for modifications have been made by the unions and they will be given careful consideration,” With the end of the tle-up, It is prob- ave tare ill be @ reuntting of the unions which formerly. o Inited Hourd of Bullding Mradea, but it is likely the sicdlied mechanics whl not allow the delegates from the un- skilled trades ag a direct vote on impor- tant matters. An auxiliary board of the unskilled unions ts Iikely to be formed in connection with the United Board and under its protegtion, The Housesmiths and Bridgemen's Union, of the International Association of Bria @ and Architectural Ironwork- hold its annual election thie afternoon at Maennerchor Hail. ‘wo delegates to the central body and walking delegates will be chosen uel Parks is 4 candidate for 1e-sJaction ag walking delegate, and in anticipation of trouble on the part of his adherents 4 detail of 100 policemen has been usked for and granted. President Robert Niedlz, of the local two 4 SHOT SINGER. WV MUSIC HALL Edward Teets, Electrical Stu- dent, Became Infatuated with Performer in One of the Re- sorts at Coney Island. NEXT FIRED BULLET AT HER. She Was Sitting In the Balcony and a Panic Followed in the Crowd Below—Young Man Had a Bright Future. Edward Teets, considered a model young man of excellent habits, steady. sober and Industrious, confessed in the Coney Island Police Court to-day that it was his mad and senseless infatuation for Ollie Foster, for many years a bur- Jesque singer in Coney Island resorts, which led him to shoot her last night He realized that he could never marry her, that if he did the union must neceasarily be unhappy and that rather than live without her he would kill both her and himself. Tects was not the sort of youth who frequents such places as that from which ue woman made her living. He was studying to become an electrical engineer, He was an orphan who had made his own way from the time he was a small newsboy and he had cer- tain patrons now who looked to him for considerable accomplishments But once he had been enticed into tho} beer halls the tinsel won him. Then, came the women who silt In the baxes while not on the stage, and among them was Ollle Feater. It was for love of her that he pined. He shot her and stampeded the audience from the room in a wild rush. Now he blames the po- Hceman for keeping him from killing himself. Teets, who 1s not twenty years old, was asvistant manager of the apartment house at No. 671 Park avenue, Among his patrons who were assisting him to better himgelf was Charles H. Strong, & prominent attorney, of No. 67 William street, who lved In the building, unton, claims that Parks hay only @ small’ following In the union, but at ts a disorderly one, that has before carried him to success by force. | Bvery Precaution has been taken to make this afternoon's election quiet and orderly, and ag the Judges of eection will ha until Monday evening to count the bi the Hlectrical Workers, ang John J, POLITELY PR Forecaster Apologizes, Care end-deapair were written on tho face which Weather Forecaster Emery raised to-day from a chart that looked Mke the pattern of a Japanese screen. Turning bis eyes from the fancy work fm front of him, he eald in @ hoarse vepatn to-night, and cloudy weathe: and probably showers to-morrow." “Is that the best you can do? he} wes asked. “The very worst,” he answered, with ‘@ slight return of professional pride. “Conditions are unsettled in the cen- tral and eastern portions,” he continued, jn a droken voice. Weird Weather Conditions, Tt was apparent from the snaky-look- ing chart that similar conditions pre- yailed in half portions like Hoboken, “Won't you tell a discouraged public when it's apt to clear up?" pleaded the, reporter, ‘ Me. Emery’s weather-beaten frame shook as if with sobs before he faltered: “I couldn't do It on a tiet. It's against the rules of the union to forecast for more than forty-eight hours at a time.” * “and you're quite sure Sunday wouldn't foe a good day for a young man to take fie best girl walking in Bronx Park?" “Btick to the partor,”” was the senten- tous advice, “ 4) you see things at night, Mr, Em- Tae unhappy forecaster buried his face his hands. It was eome moments be- he spoke, He even took the to shudder figst. His Dreams Are Troubled. “My dreams are troubled," he finally lots, the Pa: faction will hesdty have the opportunity to carry things with a R TO-MORROW MR, EMERY EDICTS; “RAIN.” but Says It Is the Only WEATHER FORECAST. Forecast for the thirty-six hours ending at 6 P. M, Sunday for Now York Olty and vicinity: Rain to-night; probably cloudy, with showers Sunday; Mght to fresh easterly winds, becoming variab whispered, drawing his chalr closer and telling the office boy <o close the outside door. “T see my home they are saying unpleasant things about me. Finally, In the centre of the wild, tumultuous mab, a strong-looking mai with water running off the rim 9f his hat, Is lifted to the top of 4 queer piece of ‘street “furaiture. Looking more closely I discern that the thing upon which he i# standing Is a nuge tank with a couple of 5 top. ‘The man appears to me, In fact, he's all but lool he cries; ‘we, aked and sore » warn you that unleas you’ cause the akles to smnile to- day w will mete out to you ly pr the fate ring for will drown is end has this tank upon which T stand been built. For two days it has stood in the open market place. It ts now two-thirds full of water. J e this eveh- Ing's sun should ould not seo t t. and the tank ts full to the hall be thrown Into the tank ! You have been warned!" The narrator pressed his hands to his temples and gazed hopelessly into the dull, foggy, Soggy atmosphere, which seemed to mock him from without, -OUNTERFETER ‘Nayulas Merely Used the Violin Case He Carried to New York ©: to Hide Bad Money. For months the residents of the south- ‘ern part of Bilzabeth, N. J., have won- dered much at the ullt by Geirgio Nayulas, a good-looK- ing youn Italian, understood to be a sviolin soloist, L) The cottage he occupied was quaint in eppenrance and stood well back by it- self in a clump of w: » Once a Bionth, with his violin WBsicae: nis woyld visit Newa¥ork. 1 times Italians liviag in lliza- A him f play at entertain- / Nayulus always pleaded he was YLINIST” WAS | Pecullar residence | § wilver-plating machine and several hun- dred dollars in wonderfully made couh- terfelt’ money, In Jers City Nayulas was arraigned before. United States Commissioner and locked up for th enight, and to- day United States Commlasloner Shields held him in $2,500 bail for the Federal grand Jury. wa no violinist" sald Chief 1 fe his teounterte y to New York in a violin. case that was all. He was convicted as Bar- Uuski In 189% and sentenced to five ye: {n the Eris County Prison, His’ wife —hin sweetheart then—walted him © come out. ‘Then they built the lt:le in the Elizabeth woods. — SHIPPING NEWS. THE TIDES, High Water, AM P Low Water. AMO PM, 8.50 9.34 O48 10.09 10.50 11.41 PORT OF NEW york, ” ARRIVED, | Campania - | Clryget Birt RL | Dante i Bantiago +. Southampton toc. Liverpoo} INCOMING HAMSHIPS, DUE TO-DAY. mbia, Glaagow. Dlueher, Hamburg, te, Liverpool. : c evening a tall man called at the Wttle cottage. Behind him came a iam ‘J. \Plynn, Ohlef of the eret Betvice,”* sald t ‘ fant (to. Br @ little talk with he caller, quietly, OUTGOING STEAMSHIPS. BAILED TO-DAY, Finiand, Antwerp. Vlandria, Haytt Konig Albert, Naples. Valencia, Jamale Landon. . Hamburg. adrew, Antwerp. ‘Newfoundland, Mevabs Protor! ‘ortolk, ali To a reporter for The Evening World Testa said in his cell, after he had been held until next Wednesday for fur- use she was going to the dogs, I loved her and could not marry her because of the iife she was leading. I wanted to save this fair Iit- tle Mower whoxe beauty was fast fad- ing away, to be lost forever, and she would not be saved. I went there with| p the intention of killing her and not my- WATCHES PIERO CET CRANDCHIL James E. Barbour, a Wealthy Thread Manufacturer, Seeks to Prevent Son-in-Law from Taking Girl to Porto Rico. James EB. Barbour, the wealthy thread | manufacturer, was at the State street self, If I am sent to prison for this| Minister of ¢ was «also Uniied|#ener on the island she feels she will| latet he lived in St. Wouls. He resided] rated for thirty years, Mrs, James Mc-| Years in spite of the fact that I kn ft will be in a good cause, I hope 1| grates Ministe ervia, has not been {YC Assured of six months! peace, here for a number of years, with his| Dowell, the aged widow of the owner| i ‘ld not care to live with me, Bvery saved her from sinking further. provided with credentials to the ¢ For eight years, Miss Putalog @sgert-| wire, at No, 15 Rue Eugene gue, and|ot the famous Foghorn Tavern, has roe a Received Anu allowance) A, panic followed the shooting. | Thelumnment of King Peter. In fact, old In Yorkville —Court Fes 8- baweacaath tortabl ile a ted : Cineean im and sometimos I saw him. 0 opped abruptly, purh test <Giifortably, a ese Thali made eraiid ask oe such credentials have been prepared, | 14M hag been the bane of hér existence, ly, receiving egular|been cut off in his will with a paltry! ‘The white-balred woman whose 1 about to present his papers, the United. St miutic relations, f the ———_ ance with Dalunt, When she wa =e A clause in the will refers to his wife | ng 0 [once wi Daun Wnos on thal aeAt he Offlon of Rapesrsit & Krobbe | who for thirty years les ween no site| a The wee oe en expuercea ae ONE OF REGICIDES |elubteen years old he saw her on the] At the offlce of Hoppevelt & Knobbo, fe dere « i | Street, followed her and at last suc- agtornoon by “a member of the firm | me. lnenta Park waking Of mor husband ta leete ile ceeded eu oduction, Sho| that Samuel Jameson nm celwed In her apartments on Park avenue MADE COMMANDANT ‘=i! ene tn Inteodutan, Se] HA Binet date ees reve a . neo atin Col. Mischich, Who Took Prominent a ts idl OO i fl ks Oe TE Soa ESAS? vovrm MAUCHAN, PRINCE (CITY. TAX LOSS OF CHURCH DEAD} ‘S $12,000,000 | Billion Dollars in Property Is Exempt from Assessment Under the Law, ” ———— Catholic Primate of England and Successor to Cardinals Newman and Manning Suc- cumbs After Long Iliness, iN In Greater New York property assessed at the enormous sum of $793,523,389 is exempt from taxation, This’ fact was made public to-day by President Wells, of the Department of Taxes and Assessments. It means that the city loses $12,000,000 annually by reason of the operation of the ex- empt provisions of the Tax law. = ‘The chief beneficiaries from this exemption are the city of New York4 and the United States Government, which own vast Property interests in’ the city. Churches and@ charitable {netifuions also figure largely among the exempt class. Old soldiers’ homes are also factors in the list. ‘The total amourit of the exemption roll is divided ag follows: Manhattan, FRIEND OF UNITED STATES. Often Used His Influence to Soften Situation Which Might Cau Hostility Between the Two Great Englsh-Speaking Nations. _ TONDON, Juno 9%.—His’ Eminence OS gos + $612,546,200 Herbert Vaughan, Cardinal Archbishop The Bronx . + 64,291,385 of Westminster and Catholic Primate of Brooklyn . + 118,320,400 Queens’ ., 12,834,636 Richmond 5,530,718 In the list of the Federal Government's exempt property is Governor’s/ Island, This island is valued at $5,500,000; the Post-Office at $10,000,000; Barge Office, $540,000; Army Building, $700,000; Custom-House (ota, $3,150,000; Assay Office, $1,300,000; Sub-Treasury, . $3,850,000. No Federal possessions pay taxes to the city, z Among churches the Trinity _properties, valued at $15,650,000, pay ne taxes, City peoperty represented in the City Hall, Central and other son ? England, died at midnight after an 11!- ness of three months. The Camtinal, who had been sinking for some weeks from heart disease and dropay, peacefully, His death was not expected so soon, Yesterday Car- dinal Vaughan was wheeled in a bath about the. corridors of 8t. Y lege, which he founded with ch he collected in America and elsewhere. On the previous day he appeared in the college chapel in full Cardinal's robes and made a farewell address to bis Bishogs and priests. His body will lie in state in the cathedral at Westminster, another mon- ument to Cardinal Vaughans work, and i dat St. Joseph's Collego. WIFE INSANE HE KILLED HIMSELF the Brooklyn Bridge, bulkheads and piers valued at more than $150,000, pays no taxes. ‘ Theft come’ the big public Hbrarfes and institutions of learning, hoe ] ptals and such buildings, representing hundreds of mllions of dollars, - ° “If the city were to be paid taxes on these valuations,” eald Com} missioner Wells to-day, “in a few years the city of Wew York would as rich as the Federal Government itself. It would be by far the wealth fest city in the world.” \ WIDOW 10 FICHT UNCLE SAN MAY CNGRE SER Suit WHIPPED HER MARRIED ADMIRER World reporter of the long from her husband. Tells of Her Marriage. “We were married in St. Stephen's arationt No Credentials for Our Minister| Then Pretty Marie Butaloz Had) Sad Story of Well-to-Do Ameri-| (if? : sifted, and a darsway ices sees dot , to That Country Have Been| Julius Dalumi Sent to the Isl-| cans in Paris Revealed After ered rreiparhenar albgeens a Prepared and Diplomatic Re-| and for the Summer for An-| Suicide Had Been Buried in se Reality: 5 “I was seventeen years old and new one knows how happy. We lived gether for nine nears, but after birth of our daughter, who died wi a child, I was taken with typhoid fevert which developed into paralysis. Wheni lations Are Discortinued. noying Her. Potter’s Field. They Had Been Married Forty Years and Separated for WASHINGTON, June 2.—The United] Unless he can secure a bond of $1,000 to] PARIS, June %.—The Prefect of Po- State Gov ent may adopt an atr-|Suarantee that he will keep the peace,!jice has notified Consul-General Gowd: Thirty, but He Left Fortune band learn: rig! a tule similar to that of England coward | Julas Dalumt, a designer and inventor lence Samuel Jamevon, an amenucen, wes paraiyend ane thai soe toile committed suicide June 16 and was bur- fed in Potter's Field, An investigation showed that Jame- $0n was born at Lebanon, O., and that he proposed that I go to live with mother,”" “That was the beginning of the e! We were Catholics and he could not a divorce, I have loved him all th Blackwell's Island. Marle Putaloz, a charming little dressmaker, of No, 123 East Twenty-ninth street, hag hopes that Dalum! will not be able to furnish the bond, for with the Inventor andde- aaste to recognia 1 by assassin bition a government nsence @ disposition to After forty years’ devotion to a hus- band from whom she had been sepa- John B, Jackson, who, besides being income through Roosevelt & Kobbe, at- torneys, of New York. The dead man was sixty-six years old sum, while the bull, of his estate goes to Miss Clara De Brave, a beautiful young woman for whom he had a deap ‘Although he has a wife and two chil- dren at No. 9% Park avenue, he has spent most of his time when not work- He had credentials to King Alexant thirty years silence on her tnterrupt which he had never presented, and he romance was broken when she crept’ side the con of her hu at was actually on his way from Athens funeral, spoke of the times when. to Belgrade at the time of the assas-| ing, she asserts, dogging the footsteps| and his wife sixty-four, friendship, saw him. 1 that day none of ‘M sination of the King to whom he was|of Miss Putaloz and sighing Ike a fur-| Recently Mra. Jameson became de-| The fortune which represents Miss De| Dowell's frienffs had ever seen his wil Brave's interest in the will 18 estimated by her attorneys, Hays & Hershfield, at between $100,000 and $150,000, The Httle white-haired woman who bears Me- Dowell's name gets $1,000 and a one- third interest. in a $40,000 house at No, st Broadway. ranged and failed to recognise her hus- band, This prayed on Jameson's mind and he cut his throat, | Mrs. Jameson's mental condition ts considered to be hopeless, Sit is con- fined In the Police Infirmary. The New York attorneys have been advised of the facts in the case. |nace in front of her house, The climax came night before last, when she was compelled to chastise him with the whip she uses ordinarily on her dog. | In order that Magistrate Barlow might fully understand the case Miss Putaloz went to the beginning of her acquaint- but the pitiful Agure of the little paired woman ated all to eympa: r her, Will to Be Contested. “The will is to be contested, of oot said Mrs. Riordan, Mrs. MdDow niece, “but my aunt’ Steockler, has cautioned the case.” It happens that the trade between via 1s trifling » two countries » so that there js wiesment likely to to establish diplo- fajlure lawyer, Geo! us against where she lives with her niece, grav- hatred Mrs, McDowell toid to an Evening’ |tearned that he was married and told him she wanted to have nothing to do with him. thelr Mog. the firm had something to do with the aairs of Joseph Addison Jameson be- tore the latter's death. They were ble to state positively whether the ‘were even brothers, James D Smith, Jr. juntor member of the banking house of James D. Smith & Co. formeriy that of Jameson, Smith & Cotting, said that he believed Samuel that, he left tite business to bis oes. men A Persintent Wooer, But she couldn't lose Dalumi. When she went to the theatre he followed her Part in Assassination, Made Head of Belgrade District. pler In Brooklyn to-day with a corps of private detectives looking for his son- in-law, Capt ge Cochrane Broome, who was reported to have age for Porto Rico on Ponce. Mr. Barbour was after his grandchild, a daughter of Capt. Broome. He had heurd that Capt, Broome was golng to take the lite girl to Porto Rico. Armed with a writ of habeas corpus he was ready to take possession of tue) child by force If necessary, But Capt, Broome did not show up at the pler and the Ponce sailed without him. Mr, Barbour waited until the b was well out in the bay and then went back to the Waldorf-Astoria, where he is Capt. Broome, who is stationed with the army In Porto Ric dered to go there and om «| Jong. Mr. Barbour has det | watch all steamships sailing for 8 porta from whlch Porto Rican passage | might be engaged. He ts determined to gain poasersion of his grandchild, as he foes hot believe that Capt. Broome cay | take proper care of the little one in Porto Rico. | The wedding of Capt. Broome to Miss | May Keyworth Barbour was one functions of | Bar-| was | Wasiiington mbit Misa for celal suclety of The Uride was| resents, | nnd a | Barbour Capt. ehh i ding Dinner 1 night of April 1 Broome way xiving a din terrap wht er to th ush- fat the Metropoiiian Club, a telegram | ume announ the serious Hines 0 his father in Bi! t The din h marriage it by guamton tmmed y after the mony, out reached Binghamton an hour after the elder Capt. Broome had from an illustrious uneestry, his fore- fathers being flahting men back in the His fath Ina) soo Songress and place in the rec cupying a prominent ords of the War I His ‘grandfather was Lie Broome, one of the early utenant- Governors of New York State, after whom Broome County was named. The nastow Excelsior Now Orleans, City of Macon, Savana: family had been famous as ploneers and foldlcrs since the middle of the ega- teenth century commandant of the military | det of Belsrade. Following Lord re- Itish Min- ves here Britain, W. G. char) British constitution was ether with a desree & y constitution, King Peter is due to arrive here Wed- nesday 1 : ge HOLLAND FOLLOWS ENGLAND’S LEAD. June 20, ‘The Dute THE HAGUE, tative at Belgrade nas been in- str 1 to assume the | attitude ‘oat Fritain. toward’the provisional of ————— SIMEON FORD TELLS VREELAND’S STORY, and when she came out he was walting into Insensibility, she declares, but when he recovered he was always around with the old persistence, She Cultivated Strong Men. "I cultivated the acquaintance large, strong men in order that man -might be so badly beaten he would cease to annoy me," sald Miss Putaloz, “but the more he was beaten the more insistent did he become in his attentlor A year-ago sho had him arrested. He was fined $10 for disorderly conduct and followed her to her home after he had pald the fine, She moved to avoid him, transferring her furniture in the night, but ne found where she lived in @ few weeks. For hours at a time he would tand in front at te windows P arly this week Miss Putaloz arrested and tried to secure Sree mitment to Bellevue for examination ne to his sanity. He showed no tracey of \isordered brain In court and was dis but the Magistrate he must keop away from the pretty dressmaker Miss Putalog a8 eating dinne: basoment —-dining-room “og yer {nthe ‘Thursday evening when she heard a noise at the window, Daluml was there g ng, the window he started to climb of this that ft her residence gazing warned home Through ‘his firm since the death of Mr. Yotting, to whom he was related. Mr, ing, he thought, did sent the man ney At regular intervals. Members of the Jameson a farm at C County, N SIX KILLED IN DYNANITECRASH Workmen Seeking Refuge from Storm Scattered by Explosion When Lightning Hit Magazine at Ohio Mine, Causing Ruin. fami; lve on Clinton Corners, utchess: NEWARK, 0., June 20,—Six persons were killed and twenty injured this afternoon by’a dynamite explosion at June 20.—Col, Mischich, Pia dock’ (No leas than five iotiner vemenin Faroe lek iBrosier of the former cominent. 9: he a a MOOR, Es senior member 0! nm. He was sure, eae tas, hay pcg [escorts have been compelled to beat him| however. that “he. received ng dneives | All: mammas, and papas too for that matter, dread the heat of summ: with it’s danger for the little folks, especially the babie: Safe trom Summer Complain fragrant, sweet little candy tablet, and are safe from colic, gripes 4 at! A It is simp}, heart-breaking to, read year ‘after ‘ye about the greatdeath tate among childfe caused by the summer's heat. Yet jit i easy to protect the infants against all sums mer complaints, because we know that all these,fearful perils have their beginn \ in stomach andi bowel troubles} i and we have ,a\ perfect family| ¥ medicine that will keep the dela #! icate machineryin‘achild’s body © clean,regularand inhealthy wor! H ing order in the hottest -weathe —CASCARETS Candy-Cathary tic! The p&imp, bouncing, cro’ ing baby shown here. is a-CA } CARET baby. He feels that way * winter;and. summer. Nursing mammas take a Naeepeertoi bed-time, and it makes the : mother’s milk mildly purgativa and keeps the baby just right, Older children like to take the; wa Upt. George Cochrane Broome comes: a eoaville, oO i ry She Pied a Dos Whip, Seneeaville, on the Caniee! Epi e jon diarrhoea, summer rash, prickly heat and all the meantroubles,th Early in Life, the Biographer Says,| | Miss Futaloz's maid, Hattie Barry, | of the aBlttmore and ies ie dl Samm ier tata gal alERNINe a ts 16 Skill in Water- | Clos Nem eaow down on Dalumi;| Workmen in the new mine at thai ees pret sore ti 4 | tho) Fealitene Man SLO NVSCC [pining buen ava true ate, Ges ims | at ess. Saad aeuaeent tees Fee raters At arettae ena oe easy be ing Stock Was Demo > Miss Putsloz got her dog whip and go.| thunder-storm came up, Some of the Bache Bample and booklet frees Ader ete New a § the life and rise of Herbert 1. Vree-| Ing to the outside of the house, Shol men in exposed places’ took refuge in a mantis) ‘ fy ed that portion of D: vhic! land, President of the M it is not inside until she men rch shanty near a dynamite magazine, and Traction C pany, hes been tole ras y | large, enthumastia oecct gathered ‘and| while huddled together Ughtning struck DIED. any of the best and most extra tie gun, putoile. speaker and writer, 4c |G, wae, weary of Welding the wnfyie” | the magaking, exploding the dynamite. | 1.44 oq qacneaay, Sune 17, attec « tae | familtes, raco! ry es en vats. Sala Mise Putaloz, ‘waa the| The group were scattered, glx being goring fiiness, ELLEN KEARNS, beloved! On the other hand, it is talk thad thal ig raleoa re aoa eremmaree ae, | eedeegithe mit. I could’ stand it no] sted outright and twenty others badiy | S*7ine Hiness, HAN AMEN, tert Hake the world go\trownd h however n Pew 45 Roth he F ‘Trainor, Mra. m i i Dalumt in defense sald he passed hurt. Katlo Collins, Mrs. Thomas . Love Ford elton ory of Mri Virealand’s rise Putalog's rome. by feslaent. Then eke | General culn was caused in the vicin- John MoNulty and the late Edward Colts credit for that operation, in the ‘popul: ihe real story ‘Qdown. in the {Fought witnesses to substantiate her | ity: Relatives and friends are respect |song. But nothing {s more elogui 4 t Pat Y cat stables, and one wt | Story, and Magistrate Barlow ordered | ''¥/ snes of the dead and injured have| —yiied to attend the fuboral on Sunday, aie | SONG: HM eloqueng tle dut was to water the horses, [the man to sive bonds of $1,000 to keep 2P. M. trom her ite residence, 490 | than love—unless it’s business. ! Be eminad ey ater when | the peace. Ho sald that he coula not| not been ascertained, fnst,, at 2P, M. Aish Bese eaisaeeetesick ‘ Viscland came araund, ‘They nourished | Rive bonds and was sentenced to. sail LES MARLO pase dines vue KS ee oe ie noreea on, WALGE Rad LIBR eee ‘ Se vertising never lo oe weather they” allowed thom the priv= Wife In Loyal, NOTED ENGLISH DIVINE HERE 1 der: when it is in The World. In that caso ‘ ng the water through t Mrs. Daluml, Aa slight, black-eyed s— Well, W. C, Whitney habpened ) woman, about forty-five years of age, is ‘Among the passengers who arrived here Laundry Wants—Female. talk IS money, * * It is money ta him engaged, in the proecution Hioyal to her husband. When seen at her a he Campania was the Rev. the talker ad money to the talked to, 8 duttes, Cand he sald toonimeelt: tome this afternoon,’ by an ivening| to-day on the Camp ‘ (Kern and takers off le. rey S ethi tor sale—hi man who ls ag skilful as that at|eeme, thie Roginald John ‘Campbell, the Englisi| FOLDBRE, shakers and takers of mangle. | | One has so! ie wants stock ought to, be at the head | Winnie ie a My husband has] qivine, successor of the late Dr. Joseph Saves} af to sell it. To sell it brings him profit, etropolitan been drawn into a trap and it will be my pleasure to get him out of It. He will not go to jail, for T will see that he {s released before ‘many hours. “A certain American artist, whone name I will not mention, is Jealous of! my husband, ‘This jealousy {s ‘behind all that happened to-day, the proper timo all will come out. Now my lips are sealed.” Moe wo one with some (35 so preterred. Rejlable Laundry, Another wants wlfat one has for sale To buy it-fills his need. Every mo: ing in The World tlre is offé Fi Sale what some one wants to There are forty-seven offers of bar« gains in this morning’s World. Among r them the reader will find a grocery store, Parker, in the pastorate of the City ‘Temple, London, Dr, Campbell Is a Nonconformist, In England he Is known as “Campoell of] WAN’ Brighton" becanse of his connection with The Cheapness of Talk, the Queen's ware Church at Brighton, “Talk is cheap.” Nothing truer. Yet ners on machine, Not a Wild Beast, but the Name of Weber & Ficlds'a New Plece. Weber & Fields have named the lat- est offort of Edgar Smith, “Whoop-Te- Sussex, which he left to occupy the more important one at the Cit; ‘emple. He wilh pessah tommercom, Saas tines jorning at 0) ¥ id fen wat 4 bolock, fn the afternoon at tho store fis igyt a sob of wall Depet, new and second-hai a -oal Do," which the actor-managers will] A Guaranteed Oure for Piles, — |1%71) Ai 9 clot Tt te aa evurah, As there is no serlous proposition to abol-| bookcase, &c., Sc. 3 as to open cher aeagon at chelr muste] ng, hod, meting, BF Le Paes Se rads RO ‘ 4 Ish tall, ou account of Its cheapness, in Sales,