The evening world. Newspaper, August 26, 1903, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

prewrer: id WORLD; WEDNESDAY RVENIN WIRELESS RIVAL ‘CRAZY SAILOR GLCKS MARCONL SLEW COMBE Erests a Station and by Using Cornarad Two Young Members 4 Stronger Currant Stope All of Brietot City’s Craw in For Reports From the Yaont Races, SHOWS A GREAT DEFECT Loon! Manager Asserts that It jean Lowi \s Only a Temporary Annoy- noe and that Inventor Plans to Stop It. The Hehavior of the wir ayatem yesterday had ralend the quee tion whether It Is @ complete success when there ia any sort of opposition. 19| tnited states other) put | 49 from the steamer Aeiatot cry | whten acht race-the | wounded another in @ flerce feht in the one that | roreen @ anything idem: tatio tmp al, For two one that © race and the wae tha = Marcont workat Ike a charm. more t useful than the wonderful fraaka of aclenca? daya at the a system the Ocean the progress of the race was Las Palm flashed to the station at Atlantic High-| ays ago 1 lands elty Dress, ¥ @ bit of from there was sent to this |} was altered or canvas added ty the en of either of the yn ported. It looked to tha been observing yach that the lution o: sea Was at hand and be any more worry. Yesterday there was a rude awaken- tng. The rival of the Marcon! Company {# responsible for the failure to report the races yesterday. For nearly two hours the yachts might have been at the bottom of the sea or wireless tele- graphy might as well never have been drvented or discovered. The yachts, out of sight of land far to the east of the Gootland Lightship, were lost to the world. man wno has reporting races at here never need Messages All Lost. Message after message was sent from the floating station as to the progress of the match, but they went to pleces somewhere in the thin air and travelied on unrecorded. The trouble was that the rival compang was using a stronger eurrent and the Marconi system was put {out of business temporarily. Try as the Marconi operators would, Ro Marcontgram was recorded, but oo- casionally there would be an intelligent Word or two and then {t would be mixed 4m with a poem from the sender of the rival company so that {t read altogether much like a line of “pl. For nearly two hours the Marconi- @ams were wasted and tne yacht bulle- ns Were recelved in some other way or not at a! fhe work of yesterday has Faised a serious doubt as to the practi- \ eabliity of the new system of telegraphy, "The question now ts if.a company can ystart a rival current and thus deatroy the etMvacy of the svstem where is tts @ommercial value? Will It have a com: mercial paiuc? Those 4n charge of the reporting of the yaclh races yesterday admitted that ithe wireless same had failed for the day and that th ure was due to the sending out of other messages by tne Other wireless company Shows the Wenk Point. ase was deplored, the fact, and his was did not ater Bmount of regret will change c amount io Be the facts. fered both their the other sy em was inter- Fesult wan that demonstraun| ess under certain conde ~that condition being when one current, a cudenc emanaung from one wireless sender, came in contact with )@ weaker current or the tall_end of j current by the other, the office of the Marconi system the actual facts of the Inter- erence Were unknown. ‘The man in ange sald t best qualified to ak of the Interference were the men the Highlands station, Tt ts a simple proj person in charge. * With any electrical cable beneath the sea over ft Is frequently usele * said the interfere current. A message goin; Interrupted an destroyed when {t come in contact with| @ heavy discharge of olectricit ; Cause a heavy electticur discharge to take place near vwle and. the di ‘charge is taken up by ‘the cable. It ;Useless for the time being for the tra: imission of messages. Storms in. which ithere is much electricity put telephone jand telegraph lincs out of business at thnes, so that the fact that a stronger \Wrrent interferes with our system’ is t surprising; neither is it discourag- iN i ft hi i sent from this station naturi wants “Interfere with our service Working on an Improvement, “We are now working on an Improve: ment that will prevent. interference, or wat least minimize it. Of course any one Jean interfere with the sending of © [wireless message if they are permitted ‘to do so. If in our ocean service some | one should establish a station near us [merely for the purpose of Interfering {that would be remedied by the courtee | Tt costs money to rig up a station, and : No one Intends doing dt merely for’ spite| except for a day, . “The failure to get the messa, through for the last yacht race lent Miscouraging, The system is not on trial, Tt is perfected, so far as a system 1é soncerned, and’ Mr. Marconi jg at work n plans ‘that wtil prevent interference, nis yacht-race incident does not worry, us inthe least.” ——— YACHT RACE PATROL. Complaints Agatust the Captains of Excursion Boats, Capt. ‘Thomas M, Walker and Lieuts, Carmina. Chiswel! and Boedsicker, of the revenue cutter Gresham, appeared before the United States ‘steamboat inspectors (to-day and presented their case against Capt. Daggett, of the gamer City of Savannaa, whom they accuse of breaking through the. patrol Hines off the Hook at last Saturday's jyacht race, Capt. Walker says Capt, Daggett dis- eyed the Gresham's sinals and de. berately went ahead when ordered to Btay stil. Capt. Daggett admittted disobsying the cutter's signals, but wld that he tad been watching another cutter and Was not aware that the Gresham's slg- inate were for him. ‘i ‘board reserved decision, and has Wartundec cousiacretion, tne, ceice at Wat. Hardy, of the Richard Peck, and Thomas J,.Mahon, of the Edmund who @re charged with similar, the Interference, I take It, was at recelving station, Near our recely- station the other company probably established a station. A ‘messa, ? ut no} IN THE NEW SYSTEM. | From a abtp on} the Aasociated | and another was M. And=a area Lewis was also a fireman, was re-| older than Andras and Zadok!, both races for yeara abuse from other memsbers of the « | |other members of Take @|1 found Zadok! covered with clood, sup- castle and Attacked Them with Dirk and Club, SECOND YOUTH ALSO NEARLY MURDER is Thought They Mad Reported Him to First Mate for Pestering Them and He Planned to Kill Both Tean tows Newed * Die Prenoh to be cragy, wna tak OMMIeMoner Ahiette to he Killed one of the craw and The Bristol City, Capt Rarctay, in the Canaries, ha polym@lot crew the firemen was DP. Zadok! lett tw One of ve a a Turk both being little more than boys Jean much whom aid to have taken much ow Lewis is anid to have infllcted much of t abuse on the boys and for this the ship's officers censured him. He be. came morose and disagreeable and the| the crew avoided) him as much as possible. Early last Monday Lewis cornered the two boys in the forecastie and went af- ter them. Armed with a long dirk knife and a heavy club he first saw that the hatch was down and fastened and then attacked them, accusing them of re- porting him to the first mate. Drove Blade In to Hilt. As Zadok tried to huddle in a corner the knife dlade reached his left side and went in to the hilt He dropped to the floor and never recovered conscious- ness. Then the mad fireman went after Andras and cut him twice. He used his club and was despatching the young Turk when other sailors, attracted by the screams, broke off the hatch and Lewis ran out, striking at all who came near him The crew dcdged him and when he had gone aft, carrying his dagger, from which the blood dripped, the sailors en- tered the blood-spattered forecastle and took out the wounded youths. ‘The noise of the struggle aroused Capt. Barclay, and members of the crew declare that {t was owing to his stanch bravery that the crazed Frenchman did no further injury. Capt. Barclay {s not unlike the well- known sea character of ‘Capt, Owen Kettle.” He 1s English, sparse, red- haired and strong, but a» bit taller than Mr. Hynes's hero. “Big Jean” Threatened Capt Running out on the poop deck, alone and unarmed, he confronted “Big Jean,’ who stands over six feet and weighs 225 nounds. The fireman swung his club at the captain and made a pass with the knife, but the captain dodged both. Showing absolutely no .fear, Capt, Bar- clay stepped back to “Big Jean’ and commanded him to surrender, The club knife were again raised, but the ymmander's order was repeated so in- sistently that the Frenchman threw down his weapons and submitted quiet- ly to being ironed and shackled by the captain and locked tn a cabin Capt. Barclay is modest about his share in subduing the maniac, This is the way he tells the story: ' “1 was awakened about 7 o'clock on Monday morning by some one calling for me at the door of the chart room, in which I was sleeping, I jumped out of my bunk and opened the door, and there ported by two of the crew. I put him in my bunk in the chart room and went aft to the cabin to get some dressings for his wounds, Mumbled His Answer, “At the door of the after cabin I met Lewis armed with a club and a Knife, and I asked him what he had done, and he mumbled something which I could not undersiand, and I asked him to give me the club and knife. He gave ne the club, but wouldn't give me the knife until I promised to protect him from the rest of the crew. I then took Lewis below, handcuffed ‘him and put him in charge of the chief engineer, while I returned .to the chart room to dress Zadoki’s wounds. When 1 re- turned Andras was also there. I dressed the wounds of both ana removed them ooo Pees stabbed in the left side “Zadok! wa: . He did not bleed much under the heart. He did not bleed much was unconscious. pufned consciousness and died in about An hour. Andras was stabbed In the left breast and left forearm, and was bleed- ing profusely, Andras is better, but ts in-a_eritical condition. Zadokt’s body was buried at sea Mon- dav afternoon. ——————— NO POLISH BISHOP. atican Against Appointment for the United Staten, ROME, Aug. 26.—The Rev, Wenceslaus Kruezka, rector of St, Wenceslaus's Chareh, Ripon, Wis., and Deputy of the Catholle Pollsh Congress of the United States, and Rowland B, Mahany, gen- eral counsel for that body, have been in Rome for some time, trying to ob- tain the appointment of a Polish Bishop in the United States, not for any special diocese, but having jurisdiction over all American Polish Cathalics. Their proposal has been recelved coldly, both by the Vatican and the Congregation of the Propaganda, and is not likely to be accepted, being opposed to the spirit of the eccelslastic hier- archy as established in the United States and also against the rules of the Counell of Baltimore. ———— BOY RUN OVER. Edward Enzsen, eleven years old, of No. 765 East One Hundred and Sixty- first etreet, was run over by a horse and wagon In front of No. 771 Eust One Hundred and rst street to-day, Bixty-A Albert Weazand, of No. 370 Mocris ave- nue, the driver, was arrested. Tho boy Was taken to Lebenon Hospital uncon- ireek, | “RIG JRA! WIS, WwHo ME SAILOR ON THE ATRAMAHIP BRIATOEL CITY, RDERED YOUNG FIREMAN AND NEARLY RILLED WOUNDS GREAT Battleship in Brooklyn Navy- Yard Dry-Dock Shows In- juries That Justify Her Offi- cers’ Fear of Her Safety. Battleship Massachusetts, which went on Deg Rocke at Bar Harbor a week 280, was dry-docked at Brooklyn Navy Yard to-day. Divers were eent down @s soon as the veme) had been blocked, and thelr report goes to sustain, if not to emphasize, the fears of the ship's officers, It is highly probable that the Mamsa- chusetts will go out of commission and that her repairs will occupy at least four months, the term which was neo- essary to repair the Brooklyn when she was similarly injured last fall. The divers reported to Assistant Naval Constructor Nutting that two blades of the Massachusetts’- port pro- peller were bent and that evidences of severe grounding were visible from a point 15 feet from the bow and ex- tending to a distance of from % to 0 feet aft, and then at intervals of from five to ten feet clear to the stem of the ship. All the damage {s under the turn of bilze. Assistant Constructor Nutting roughly approximated the damaged area at avout 3,000 square feet. He sald it would be impossible to tell what length of time would be required to effect re- pairs, and added: “Personally I have been through, the entire inside of the vessel, going from one compartment to another, about fit; teen in all, and I found evidence \of severe straining. The keel is buckled in two or three places right aft. It may be that ithis {s not serious, but it will be impossible to teil until the full body of the ship Is exposed. There is much water fn her:now and that. of course, goes to prove that there must de a serious break somewhere. AB to the time it will take to make: repairs, it. will depend upon the requirements of the department. It may be that they will want her patched up iso that she may join in the manoeuvres and later put her out of commission for com- plete repair. This may be \impossible and If It prove so she will have to go out of commission immediately. I may add thas the bilge keels are badly dam- aged.” MAN FOUGHT TO JUMP INTO RIVER. Policeman at Last Overcame Him and Locked Him Up In Alcoholic Ward. A crowd of about fifty persons wit- nessed a struggle between Patrolman Morrell, of the, East Thirty-sixth street station, and a man who had attempted to jump off the pler at the foot of East ‘T'wenty-sixth street to-day. stranger, it Is said, was suffering from deliriic’ Wemens ‘and was pos seaged of great strength, Several time he nearly the policeman, but Morrell manage) to lrag the man away from the edge of the pier. ‘At Bellevue Hospital, where he locked up in the prison ward, he recognized as Robert Collier, thirty years old, a painter, of East Moriche: L. 1, who was a patient in the alooholl ward several days ago, D ‘Phe man applied for treatment at the hospital again to-day and was directed to the alcoholic ward. Upon h that the man nan out of the hospli grounds to the end of the pler. He Is charged with having attempted to com- mit suicide. ——$<—<—a——__ WIFE HUNTS FOR WHITMORE. Be Has Been Missing from Home for Nearly Two Weeks. Mrs, Josiah Whitmore, of Richmond Hill, L. 1, accompanted by her sister, ts making a search of the Brooklyn hor- pitals hoping to find some trace of her husband: Whitmore left home a week ago last Friday, saying he was golng In search of work. He had been a grocer’s clerk and hoped to And emplosment at higher pay.” His brother, Ralph Otis White more, an electrician, accompanied. hlin Neither has since been seen by mon bers of thelr family, and Mrs. Whitmore fears some mishap bas befallen them. MASSACHUSETTS'S /JUDGE DOBBS CATCHES STABBER Scarsdale Justice Sees a Pas- senger on Trolley Car Use Knife on Conductor, Pursues and Captures Him. ‘Pagsengers on a White Plains trolley car, among them several women and Judge Gilbert Dobbs, of Scarsdale, took part to-day in a hot chase after Frank Morono, who stabbed Conductor Haill- day, amd the Judge, who, although nearly fifty years old, ts a sprinter, finally caught the man in a partly Mnished house. ‘The car was bound from White Plains to Mount Vernon, and while passing through Soarsdale, the conductor « Morono persisted in placing his feet on one of the seats. When he told tim to stop the man drew a knife and slashed the conductor across the face, then stabbed him in the back “I get even," he shouted, as he leaped from the car and ran across the fields followed by the enraged passengers. The prisoner after the capture was arraigned and committed by the Judge. who took him to White Plains, where he was locked up in jail to awalt the result of the conductor's Injuries. At the White Plains Hospital, where Halliday was taken, it was said that he is {n a dangerous condition, ‘GIRL HURT IN FALL FROM SHEET ROPE Escaping. from the House of the Good Shepherd, Mary Sadler Drops Four Stories, Breaking All Her Limbs. In her effort to escape from, the House of the Good Shepherd to-day Mary Sadler, eighteen years old, fell from a fourth-story window do the yard, breaking both legs and doth arms and lying there more than an hour before one of the sisters found her. ‘The girl, remarkably pretty but ad- judged to be wayward, was committed to the institution, which ts at Ninétleth street and the East River, on ug. 13 The work was haed and the surround- ings uncongenial. Anyway, she longed for the pleasanter world outside. Just before daylight the yourtg woman ted the sheets and bed clothing to- gether so as to make a long rope. Then she tied one end of this to the .bedpost and dropped the other end out of the window. It was not long enough to touch the ,bottom, but the girl thought she could jump the remainy i cr aie qu danger, UT Why." said the policeman who called inter, ‘she tied the -sheets ton gether like a woman tles a‘ knot, and the result way that as soon as sho climbed over the window sill and put Her Meenr on ae tefl knot parted and she dropped, tothe yard, forty feet below." TAD neagy, Unable ton because of her bro- ken bones, the young woman remained where she fell for more than an hour, A sister heard a girl's groans of pain in the yard, and the investigation ‘she made resulted Jn finding Mary Sadler. She was sent to the Presbyterian Hos. ital where the doctors sald she would be confined to an almost motionies ex- {stence for several months while her broken legs and arms were {n splints. SON PLAYED WITH MATCHES. Set Fire to “Bob! Nelson's Apart. ments and Caused Facitement, Fire caused excitement toe Apartment-house, owned by son, at No. 78 West Bighty-second streot. The ten-year-old son of Mrs, Fmma Kennedy, on the Afth floor, set fire to the bed while playing with matohes, and the floor was burning Whea ihe fireinn arrived, The camage done id not exceed $1,500, rY THE Ficnr un: “THE (FORECASTER 1G, ALGLAT IH 1008, DREAM MEDIUM A COURT HER Told Mrs. Cohen Where to Find Her Missing Husband—Was Embraced by Her and En- treated by Others. Mrs. Minnie Cohen. of No. § Delane street, could ot secure the arrast of hor husband for abandonment, as she did not know where to find him. This morn- ing she paid her fourteenth visit to Es- sex Market Court and excitedly demand- ed that @ policeman be sent with her to Pitt and Grand streets to arrest the issing man. vente will b there at 10 o'clock," she a. a iow do you know? asked Magis- te Flammer. ‘Abe Hochman, that man over there with the skull cap, told me. He waye he'll give me $50 if he's wrong. Just to satisfy her @ policeman was sent, and he took Cohen to court, where he was held until he could procure @ 8100 bond to pay his wife $2 a week, When the decision was announced Mrs, Cohen rughed over to Hochman and threw her arms about him, Half other women who were after Satrants for iniwing husbands followed him out of court and besought his hel “{ ghall have a dream to-day witha mystical smile, “and then 1 tell you all.” TROUSERS TURNED ONGAS, KILLED OWNER cS Dugan Hung the Garment on Chan- delier and the Swinging Opened Jet. Frank Dugan, seventeen years old, No, 668 Lafayette avenue, Brooklyn, wa accidentally .illed by escaping BAS al his home to-day. Dugan was !n trousers on the chandelier when tired, and he did this last night swung and turned on the cock: an ambulance surgeon berlend Avenue Hospital boy he was found to be de ————[—— he habit of hanging his je re- xa nined the a, KILLED BY LIGHTNING, POUGHKEDPSIB, Aug. %,—Thomas Blink, a farmer, sixty-four years old, Dutchess living nes taatsburg, County, was struck by lghtning — instantly killed. dle Was in a when a bolt struck a tree near Jumped from there to the building, passed through the roof and kilied Blink. He leaves a w and one son. a RAILHOAD STRIKE ENDED. ROSTON, Aug, 2%6—The strike of the Boston and Albany Railroad machinists from the Ciuns{ SEVEN MEN LOS SCHOONER W Her. SOUTH NORWALK, Conn., ing the storm of last night. As the craft wi turned, drowned. One body, believed of the captain, has been secured, TIN RECK Caught in the Storm, the Willie L. Newton Capsized and the Crew Went Down with}! Aug. %.— The two-masted coasting sohooner Wil- Reef Light, in Long Is!and Gound, dur- completely over- while the sails were being low- ered, it Is believed that the entire crew, numbering probably seven men, were to be that Mt having floated out of the cabin In the clothing was a letter to Edward Coombs, at Conn ter was from North Isleboro, body was brought here and the medical examiner. addressed New London, The postmark shows that che let- Me. The viewed by Tt will be held) awaiting Identification, The condition of the wreok indicates that the headsails had deen blown, away and that the lower galls were be ing furled at the time the schooner was capsized. Pig Wille L. Newton was bdullt at Bangor, Me, home port. She was of 338 She put into New London on for harbor and sailed from there two. days later for New York = ———__—_— A New Army Poste fn 1891 and that was her net tonnage. Saturday (From the Philadelphia Press.) At the or two ag! nited Service Club, re of animals are particulart bright young man Re ts of to pass ¢ 2 xamination and has a School education.” —— Boston Trans: -You are a gr Why don't y against you, and won't al was sectled yesterday, Under the new tor overtime atcer famliy to visit yours.” Mrs, Greene—I thought there ome good reason for it, ffect of n Sympathetic Strike. haven't been at our house for three| months,” Mrs wn-I know, but it isn't my now you discharged your cook for breaking dishes? Well, my par- lor matd ordered a sympathetic gtrike » & night some one called attention! worked out. and in bath the army um- to the fact that the medical department | Pires of the army has adopted a new form of recruiting poster, designed by Lécut.-Col, John Van R. Hoff, deputy surgeon-gen- eral, stationed at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. The poster contains a fac-simile of the United States coat-of-arms colors, and also the figure of a stalw: soldier in complete military attire of khakt bugle, the blast of that able-bodied men liflcations are “wanted rps of the army, It hose with some ex- in nursing, cooking, pharmacy, work, the handling of tools ay yd od ae sitanger, eal? Yo a 4 Blaze in (he Gatlar of Alftrod &. Pattigen's Mome at No, 369 Washington Avenua, Brooklyn w FINE PAINTINGS DESTROYED Actus! Caraga Waa Betwaen $14,000 and 990, Worke of Art tos 00. hut Ma Repected the arenas Greatly In Value yn account of the Wany men employed Mr. Patulson has made da sta to his house, Every- ine was sterday morn- = visit fit." 'ire was discovered, having ap- arently originated In the cellar, about idnight, by a policeman The flames maile too rapid progress before the fira- to permit any- men arrived. however, thing being saved The fashionable which the louse was ‘aroused by the fire, out the houses are so far apart that none wae in danger. Only the walls of the Pattison house were left standing The police at first reported a loss of put $3,000, and it was severn| hours later netghborhood — in situated, was before Mr. Pattison learned of the fire and told of the exact damage. “L have mo idea who could have set the fire,” he added, “but It certainly must have been Incendiary. I can’t ac- count for It at all. There wera somo paintings by friends of mine, which I Ralue Mor thelr associatons, and. the fact that I anticipated great worth for | them some day.” WARSHIPS STORM PORTLAND HARBOR Kearsarge, Olympia, Iinois and Alabama Enter with Guns Booming, While Forts Send Back Active Fire. PORTLAND, Me., Aug. %.—Through dense smoke and amid the tumult of continuous cannon ifire the battle-ships Kearsarge, Tlinols and Alabama en- tered this port early to-day, having stormed the main entrance to the har- bor, In connection with the great war game which Is going on this week In this vicinity From midnight, when the scouts of the hostile fleet ‘were discovered by the pickets of the army on shore. until jaylight, when the battle-ships came thundering up the ichannel, Portland was treated to an experience much like al war, ( “this continued until after 7 o'clock, the battle-ships entering ‘the inner har- bor in spite Df the opposition of the, fort batteries and the guns behind the forti- fications manned by regulare tn (the vicinity of the city. ite 1, Newton, of Bangor, Me., was cap-|“iiT)varsnips apparently emgaged $1 sized six miles east-southeast of Green's! the different dofending points und af: a time, passed on. As they did so, the forts, one after another, cased fir- ipg until only an occasional gun was heard. The battle-ships satled back and forth in the inner harbor, The smoke of the conflict rising only disclosed them as they steam about. At length they turned and passing crue aren tae oper rests is not ¥ the victory, y. apparent t9. shore Observers, for while ithe battle-ships passed the forts and other defenses. the firing was so mren- | Qrat and so terrific as to make it seem that only the umptre: acting unde! the rules and considering the “pointa’ as qallitary, and naval experts, could de- the result. ‘early in the forenoon, the scene. of ion shifted to the passa into - |Soy'egound between Peaks and Long Isiand. From this yicinity great clouds of smoke were arising and the roar | et ny guns was beard, and the Olympia, Admiral Dewey's old flagship, appeared, jeading a fleet against the tremendous ieietn of Fort MoKinley. ‘As at the main entrance, they came in slowly. The Olympla was closely followel by the famous Baltimore. There were four other sels in this | flee the principal one being the train- ship Newport. aD ede the command of Col. 8, H. Mills, ft ts believed, gained a gignal victory over f portion of the filet commanded by Admiral Barker. Two phases of the manoeuvres were claimed the victory. The first, i to land a force, was begun ‘ter one ‘Jock and was re- Pulsed with heavy Tae second ave wae the attempt to run the vriew and was begun in the gray Werte er the army claims thae the Attempt were destroyed }b. and the mines. very was made that the pow- lignts were able to pere- ye and the vessels of the ing fleet were picked up at a oo yard ————_—— Tom's Insanity @ Leavenworth Times.) ded of a much-negtected ng wife called upon to as to her husband's In- | the attem) | shortly is long-sufte! evidence must be santt n he was on trial for \7 J had set up that plea in de- fens, that she raked up every possiole incident in his life that t show his | ind te be unbalan Most of them were unconvincing Finally udge, she said Tom bas broken bls marriage vows re- peatediy for years back, and has al-} ways denied it; but lately he bas been | telling me two three times a day what a bad, unt husband he has | been all these years. Now, you know, | Woany of our] Judge, no man in his right ind ever owned up to such things us that.” The ed jury took that view of it and acquitt OT. pp mbez- {variably drank it In spite of medical ‘advice not to do so, and I could nat Ee — ACH MAN'S HOUSE FOR LITTLE Surqeona «Took Twenty-two Stitenes In Ton- Your Joseph Gradiey’s Fi Lacerated Lega, a TANGLED IN BARD WIRE, Me Wee Coasting Mount Morrie Parke Ml in Mie New Caprese Wager and Collided with the Fences. arente of ten-yanrold Joong of No 10? Parke avenue, te ted him wi An eRpreme * boy coasted on « BIN Sf + Park and crashed into @ Pendle wae wt Mor wire fence aman who aneweret the Goy'e Aw rien wire 1 him #6 entan@ied in the t was Impossible to extrionte him without tearing the flesh attit When an ambulance from Hage m Howpital arrived the surgeon out the wire and carried the Ind to the eae bulanee with the tmrbs still imbedded ‘The barbe were removed he ambulange, and at the tw It were taken in } own Tom ie lined an anaerthetic, his only Httle heing that his mother be not not the ncotdent, as he did not wish @ alarm her » however, amt A message wae sent | she toox her son hom SENATOR HANNA ON ROAD TO RECOVERY. He Must Remain in His Room fer for Several Days to Rest. ‘ CLEVELAND, Aug. %.—@enator Mage cus A, Hanna is gradually improving trom an attack of acute indigestion suffered in his office yesterday, but upon the advice of his physicians he will remain In his room for several days. ‘The doctors say there is no cause tor; alarm and that the patient will be able to resume his duties as chairman ef the Republican National Committee a week. + The attack was braught on by com tinued exertion In spite of the heat which has prevailed here eral days, and was similar to the trouble he had in the East a short time ago. Intimate friends felt considerable anxiety, but all were reassured by thy physicians. —a——_—_ TO REMAKE ARVERNE. Pennsylvania RR. Co. to Convert It to Mxclusive Resort. The closing of the big Arvene at Arverne-by-the-Sea, is followed the story that the Pennsylvania Rail- read Company will purchase the hotel ‘and @vrrounding property and make i an exclusive resort. i ‘The hotel, it is said, will be tom down and a large number of modem cottages erected. It is also reported that the Pennsylvanian Company hag purcaesed Colonial Hall, thereby giving it complete control of Arverne Beach A casino and park are among the contemplated improvements, i ROOSEVELT A BUSY MAN... President Gives All His Time\te Executive Business, iT OYSTER BAY, Aug. 2.—For two ¢ President Roosevelt has devoted of his time to the transaction of exeou- tive business and to the clearing up @f his personal and official correspondencs, No visitors were received to-d SUBURBANITES Breakfast on Coffee, a Roll and a for the Train. oe a | The commuter who bolts down few mouthfuls of food and hurries catch the traln usually catches pepsia as well. The “coffee and roll” road health {s not necessary, for th an easy, pleasant way to get health and shake off all the diseases by shifting to Postum Coffee. “For a number of was a business woman, rising ear! and swallowing a roll and a cup coffee just in time to catch o trai, A feeling of nausea or palpitation, and a continual dullness in the eyes ‘and head invariably followed my coffee breakfasts, until one day @ good angel in the guise of a woman friend bade me try Postum Food Coffee in place of coffee. “Always trying to be progressive in my dally life, I accepted the ad~ vice, and the result was I found Pos- tum a delicious clear coffee-colored beverage suited to the stomach and satisfying to the appetite, After us- ing Postum faithfully for a month I was surprised at the result in my health. All symptoms of dyspepsia jor nervousness had disappeared, and |because of this marked benefit I rea- |soned that if such a simple and inex- |pensive remedy could prove such lbenetit in my case, why was it not my lduty to let other sufferers know ‘about Postum. So I began to try to help my friends, and I have helpeg ‘many to shake off sickness by rec- fommending Postum in place of coffee. “There was one who was a victim of nervous dyspepsia ani who craved coffee to such an extent that he In~ Sep | | persuade him to change, so T got his wife to give him Postum In the morning for a few days without bo ing anything to him about it, result was really wonderful. He did not detect the change, but notloed that he got over his indigestion, . Then we told him the truth about {i and now he takes his Postum larly, and is so far relleved of nervousness that his physician dicts a speedy cure. He Iikes Postum just as well as love the coffee.” Name Postum.-Coy Battle. Creek;

Other pages from this issue: