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ORY 15 SURE SAYS MURPHY Tammany Hall Leader Declares that Low’s Voie in Brooklyn “vill Be About Seventy-five; thousand. _ NO TAMMANY HALL WANTED IN BROOKLYN. , Ex-Bridge Commissioner Shea Says the People of that Bor- ough Will Not Stand for the Wigwam’s Methods. D Leader Charles F. Murphy braved the | Beluge of rain and arrived at Tammany Hall this afternoon. He appeared in bet- ter humor and spirits than lately and When surrounded by newspaper men did fot hesitate to express his satisfaction, J “Last night's convention,” he sald, | “was an old-time Democratic conven- Yon, an open convention, full of en- Uhusiaem, where every one had his say. The candidates named ought to ratisty every Democrat. Grumblers can't punch any holes in the ticket that has been | mamed. + “Now that the converitons are over we'll get down to business. “The election !s over for that mat- ter," he concluded with a laugh “Some of the Fusion leaders are claiming that Mr. Low will carry Brook- | lyn by at least 00,000, do you agree | with thom?” was asked. Low’s Brooklyn Vote, “On! was the smiling reply, you've got things a trifle mixed. They Probably meant that Mr. Low would get about 75,000 votes in Brooklyn.""t Then after declaring that the entire Democratic ticket would be elected, Mr. Murphy retired to his private office. Senator Pat McCarren was at Willoughby street quarters to-day, he did not see Hugh McLaughlin. Benator remained in the outer room and | was not received elther by the chlet ore the district leaders. Once when he moved in the direction of the sanctum where the leader holds ‘forth, the door was shut with a bang land McCarren was swept about face bv the noise and sweep of the alr. Congressman George H. Lindsay was | there, too. McLaugalin when! Shevlin interfered. The latter was heard to say: “Yousde- eyered emery stow 00 deliver the goods, you can. Ths was vrobabiy @ rap at the sup- porters of Grout ani Fornos, No Tammany for Brookt “I guess the but The | | hy's intention’ is to ‘Tam-| ut he will not succeed. with district ople wil decide at the | election if bis methods are to be sana: a Ba {ou a indorse Mr. McClellan?" was | ea. ihe will be elected, too," wae el t MvClellan as much a Tammany candidate as Grout Fornes, and isn’t there some 1 aistency in vour attitude?” “There ja no Inconsistency "* replied the chairman, "“McCtellan ‘was nomi- nated by a convention at which we were f Grout and Fornes ure a part conspiracy to. Tammi We wilt not atank Brookly n. 1 not FELL 6 FLOORS 10 INSTANT DEATH Laborer on Steel Building Makes i Misstep and Plungss ts the Cellar, His Whee'barrow Fol- lowing Him in His Descent, Edward Lyons, nineteen vears old, fell through five floors of the sseleton steel structure of the new No, 42 Broadway to-day and He was employed in taking wh = fowa filled with mortag from the ele- “vator at the fifth floor landing. ‘fe do this it was necessary for him co walic backward over a plank, As he was walking backward to-day he made a misstep and went crashing | own through the net-work of steel beams, dragging we wheelbarrow of mortar after him, He was dead when his fellow-labor- @rs reached him. The body of Lyons, who lived at No. 2075 Third avenue, qwan sent to the Morgue, and later taken 02 bis home Se ool BRITISH CABINET BEGINS, ' (idgew Mininters fet Seals of Office at % Kings Counell, “MLONDON, Ost. 9.—The now Cabdjnet Ministers have assumed their duties, the @ea!s of office having been exchanged @t a Privy Council meete held by Bdward at Buckingham Palace to-day, All the retiring officials and {their succeseors were present with the ‘exception of the Duke of Devonshire, {no late Lord President of the Council, and Mr, Arnold-Forster, the new War Beorotary. ‘he latter ‘was indlavoned, and the for- mor was subsequently received in pri- wate audience by the King. ey eat eA { FOR THE CZAR’S SAFETY. (ROME, Oct, 9—A Russian poitce om- @lal has arrived here and is conferring oi the police for the protection of the 4 is y | Pression of injured feoling and an ap- He started to speak with! of on hurt tho candidacy of George B. roo DOBBS 9OO6-HO- Jas.& muneny’ FACT. Reig CE Ree iF YER CANT LOO WISE, LOOK AS as INSTRUCTS A GS OLLeOATE. | $00666006-8609640080456060OC800$6$006 0060096000008 ©000000050609O9S0900 9890 2OGHOP DOSES SOOO SIOTOGOIOOP THINGS THAT HAPPENED AT TIGER’S SECOND CONVENTION WHERE AHEARN AND ERLANGER GOT MUCH SOUGHT NOMINATIONS oPOPOHHSSSOHIOS $9499H9HH9SSHHHHD FOTOHOODE Lat noaNawntin $$8O90900000O0O STOnN & ANBARN GETS away With THe NOMINATION GAPENEY, 5 ‘orun, JEROME PUTS A POSER-10 GROUT ‘Asks the Comptroller if He Is’ Loyal to Low Why He Runs on a Ticket that Aims to De- feat the Mayor. District-Attorney Jerome to-day gave out the following statement: “Mr. Grout’s statement of yesterday remely interesting. It is aa ex- peal for justice. He 8: ‘IT shall japper! to the people to say whether Mr, Low ought not to have been as loyal and unselfish to maas I have been to him." ‘The last municipal campaign was one of unanswered questions on the part of Tammany Hall. The experience of that campaign does not show the ex- pediency of candidates dodging per- tineat questions see e that the question of Hoyalty’ne between Mr. Grout and Mr. Low ‘wil! be determined by the nich Mr. Grout gives to simple questions, if he can convini People that, his ‘replies are alncere. think that if Mr, Grout would frank tained even by gard to his condu: Why Grout and Tammanyt Does Mr. Grd nk that he was nominated |b: AY Hajl because lot thé‘admiration that that orgunization (felt for his personal character und re ord as Comptroller and asa t Of dts -sespect for: apy xfiiel Grout think that his nomina- | ‘ammany tsall would help or ah Clelian ST If he Vihouent it would. didacy of George B. 3) nomination, Rracettl spossh ot hich the notii the national colors and flowers stood in a jar on Timothy L. Woodruff, Corn Cort, Judge” J M. Bruce, Francis C. Huntington and se era} others were proment, In. his notit cation speech Chairman to Grout and Fornes, © Ikely these two men hay. KindHes, of feelings toward the Citl- zeny’ Uhion, but thelr record as. public Smiciats had’ not been surpacsed by thelr predecessors of any yo and many conferenc vt he Grout-Fornes controvi Dut these conferences were not diss: ons AS OUT enemies in Tammany Hall tried to con- yoy. Wo ate pressing on ax one host. apathy which we found in our det uit two Weeks ago, due to the condition of affairs, has now pelied. In nominating you the Union has made no mistake: ving, Mr. Hinrichs | praised administration of Mayor Low and spoke of the duties of a public off who, “like Cearar's wife,” he, sald, always be above suspicion.” The speech of Mr, McGuire in accept- ing the nomination was heartily ap- plauded, He said: Clean Government Now. “I have seen for two years past the administration of the city government from within in an Impersonal way, for we lawyers do not directly, with administrative matteri have had some insight into the municipal con- folence, ax It were, as the Law Depart- governor of the great mu- fuolpel engine, enables it to. be seen, I have admired the devotion to duty, ‘the cleanness, the courteous jee of the ubpic Interests which have been shown, officers have not been per- are hitman; they have erred fe The And failed froin time ‘to time, but al- most uniformly they have been tnspired by right principles and they have strive: with intelligence to carry them into et fest. Befure all, they have not Rolled with, the taint of foul, mone; Their salaries have been their at profit. No mysterious fortune has gr Among the present city officers. Politi: cal magnates have not waxed great in spoils by the indirection or worse of the uardigns of the cliy's treasury and its ——__—_ GIRL LOST CASH AND LOVER, Her Fiance and Brother Ar- rested for Approp ting $1,700, Sophia Kivowltz appeared in Essex Market Court to-day as complainant aguinst her former sweetheart and hia rother, Morris and Charies Taxier, twenty-seven and thirty-eight years old respectively, Tho girl, who lives at No. 798 Hartford Avenue, Brooklyn, sald that on May 9 she advanced $1,700 to Morris to enable him and as LN gaahe Chartes to go Into business. ney opened ee Clanlaethiod goods store in rchard. ws in August. the gir learned that the eer during his visit to King Vigtor ae) which {8 expected to begin respect to the ph tra nse in stew Esjtomjnn the example of the] the brothers had disposed of the store for $3,800, destroyed @:] of their books and deft the city. A fow (Tide i! two. Eien had returi eRe, arrest, gine te! go she found and caused aS al, -|Murphy's part, for the office ts next in jtook his medicine, :|langer is a lawyer GIRLS’ ERLANGER RUNS FOR SHERIFE Fight Between Fritz Lindinger and Civil Justice Joseph Was , So. Spirited that Tammany Put Up Third Man. TOPE! stage o} in the fight be! pieces. Tammany Hall has completed ite ticket for the county and borough by nominating John F. Ahern for’ Borough President and Mitchell L. Erlanger for Sheriff and indorsing Henry Bischoff, Jr., for Justice of the Supreme Court to succeed himself. The convention was exceedingly nolsy and enthusiastic, even warming up to Messrs. Grout and Fornes, Chairman Charles W. Dayton attacked President Roosevelt, Senator Platt, Gov. Odell and Mayor Low for trying to Republicanize New York under the guise of Fusion. Congressman William Sulzer defied Brooklyn Democracy to knife the ticket. The nomination of Ahearn is regarded as a piece of political bravery on Mr. sleep, me. importance to that of the Mayoralty. In tne sclection of ex-Senator Ahearn the leader of Tammany has sought to placate the organization men and show that the reward of the faithful 1s office. Reward of Merit. Ahearn, after years in the Senate, quarrelled with the Sullivans. Big Tim invaded his district and obtained con- troi of it, fe sent former Congre. man Dan Riordan, who was turned down by Cro! to the Senate. and Ahearn has been fighting ever since. Ho in the giving 9) which Murphy was a consulting phys!- clan, without a murmur. His rewar for loyalty afier his turndown is at CHE to two thin, 0 desire « hy to please I. tention of sh faithful tha “all things come to him who wa The nomination of Mr. a surprise. He was sugs eoarDaeuee can e, as the trie ds of netther could be many Hebrew charl His. brother, Abraham widely known in the nes When he was n: a the men in he convention cheered, and then {a- quired of one another if he was known, cae i med for Mayor, ¥., Oct. 9—Dr. James @ Mansfield nominated for Mayor by the wemocratic City Convention, | and John Fitzgerald was nominated for Police and Fire Commissio: John Smith and Albert are the Repuolican candi Physician OSWEGO, » College Platt Whil hundred persons, there was a flerce color and sophomore classes, in which thirty- five sophomore girls tried to forty freshman girls off the platform. ‘Tables the Presiden’ society. 5) ’ CANE RUSH A SHOW. jcene of Clash je Aadichce Looks On, KA, Kan., Oct. %—On the big ft the Washburn College chapel, presence of an audience of five And-tumble figh' yell each ot ore clash came. It tween the girls of the freshman “rush"| PARIS, Oct nd chairs were overturned, | |iMon of gior! re t he chapel seats. Suddenly one of t! freshman girls appeared on the waving the rival class colors. f / i Tonnay OMKen E08. wane 1 MATEON me 0060 aver Twine ayes CLD Tat more AT i0et OP Tube Bisceene : us and eyes blaokened In the flerce rough- t. The occasion was the annual cane rush, and the girls of the rival classes had been trying for an hour her down, from the tops 1 atorm he was at least twenty rains utes before the faculty could separate the two bands and restore peace. —— FRANCE MAY GO HALF WAY. 9—No Instructions have yet been received by Ambassador Porter In respect to arranging for the extradi- bribe recelvers. chalr was smashed to! that France is disposed to meet the hats were lost_U nited States half way in this matter. Tt ts believed Mrs. John Dixon Was All Run Down 540 Neville Street, Crafton, Pa., 1 beeame nervous, trembling spells and wantad to avoid | derful remedy, I tried various remedies, | two bottles, and my frimds tell me but without apparently benefiting) I am mysef again. August 11, 1903. Mrs. Dixon says: “J was com-| laine’s Celery Compound, and I feel pletely run down and could not|that my former good health has had | been restored bu means of this won- I have taken bu! Recently I have been taking|ve'lous nemedy.” Compou 2 *~s, cans, pails, pans, Paine’s Celery | nd Cured Her. “ightens allkinds of Me etc 113270146 W, 14 TH fabric with true Priestle: Black Thi Autumn HATS Boys’ 132 to 146 W. Idth St BETWEEN 6 AND 7 Ww eal Autumn Shirts in elaborate assortment......... SURPRISE SPECIAL SALE N° 212. THIRD AVE.NW. Cor. ONE BLOCK FROM ELEVATED STATION ST. | MEN'S GENUINE a few Cravenettes mixed in, Every one is of 'y waterproofed goods, attegted by the registered trade-mark and silk fabel. On sale one week, ending next Tan, Nut Brown and Greenish Covert, $5, $7- Smooth Black Thibet, $10 and giz. bet and Cheviots in SNAG: es elees'e Every standard Shape, 95c $L45 $195 SHOE indsome Blouse and Double-Breasted Suits Norfolk, Three-Piece and Noveity Suits, , LYER FOR TWO DAYS ONLY, TO-MORROW AND MONDAY, Boys’ Reefers, Oxford Frieze and Blue Chinchilla. Open Saturdays Until 10 P, M.; Other Days 6.30 P. M, The Surprise Store. SPST. Cravenctte Raincoats Every Garment Labelled and Stamped by the Cravenette Company. Phenomenally Popular Topcoats for Good Weather or Bad, Make no mistake—This is not a collection of coats of-nameless $6.75 All Wool Fall Overcoats, Short and Medium Cut. 50, $I5. Men's Unsurpassed Fall Suits for Every Occasion, $5, $7.50, $10 Rich Plain and Figured Worsteds, $12, $15, $18. Guaranteed solid $1.45 $1.95 $2.95 45¢, 95 $1.45 leather. Third Avenue, It is a mar- OMIT TIE OIL Tf Men “Shopped” — and clothing were sold by comparison— These Seven Typical Bloomingdale Clothing Barg. yous sae the clothing corner to-morrow with a record: breilanig frultitude of in-” erested men. The clothing spoken of here is made tight—made to fit right,.look right and wear right! Men’s Overcoats, Men’s Suits, all hand-tailored ae cut long and loose; made of all garments, the smartest and most desirable ma- e the ae that the very 9 terials and trimmed in the best pos- ‘ } sible manner; not; "ve and a a oe 350 in the lot; ea: o special to-mor- e row at, each, ca ’ A Men’s Suits ; 3 in al kinds of mixtures, chevios Men 's Top Coats cassimeres and tweeds, many black; worth $10, $11 fn all the smartest and most desir- and $12; special 8 5 able pro tan, covert and. gray: meron ie . exceptionally’ si i well made; spe- . . cial to-morrow, : Boys’ Overcoats. Four lots for the little féllows of from 236 to 8 years old; about 100 in all; every one elegantly tailored Boys’ Suits. Haein my little suits throughout; Powe from 7 = special sale 5 years og price to - mor- e Elie #4 e row, spec’l to-morrow ry3 me stiff hats are here in SS 9 Women’s Gloves. . Women who know real glove merit have marvelled.at the qual- ty) of these handsome gloves ich we are selling at 59c. a pair, They are really Regular $1 Gloves and sell daily at that price. of excellent, soft, I shegtee seta, i tio clasps, in tH, lack, white, ber fully al seas 50 Kae guaranteed; our price, i Men’s Rain Coats of Tan or Oxford Gray, $7. 95. We've just purchased 10,000 pairs of the celebrated , di be on hand early to-morrow. | There 1s sure to be one of tre tlegest crows the shoe departivech Bat ema j) ties, their style and individuality, Have Never Sold Before for 1. 59 % Our special price for this extraordinary shoe sale, Misses’ and Boys’ $1.50 and $3 Sample Shoes, 98c. Boys’ $2.50 Shoes, $1.49 Youths’ $2 Shoes, $1. 25. Box oy heavy, solid soles, Of calf; “rock-oak” extension soles. Of dongola and box calf; lace and button. Lace or button; songols kid, patent iy sats Second Floor, 50th St. Section. | These handsomely tailored sia aii! skirts are made of excellent gray mixtures. _ They are beautifully made, backs; new seven-gored.sn deep flaring effects, finished small buttons. No better value ever Regular $5 Skirts. On sale tu-morrow while the lot lasts pod 1 Floor, 50th St. Section. The little gic need not be without a smart and attractive coat if mothers take advantage of these splendid values for to-morrow. The 1 ocean: $5 and $6 $3.89 for oe cag teaes $7 “Imperial’’ Shoes for Women, | held, for these “Imperial” shoes, celebrated for their fit and wear-resisting quali Less Than $2.50 a. Pair. 1,500 pairs in the lot; all have spring heels, Misses’$2,$2.50Shoes,$1.50 | Children’s $1.25 Shoes, 196.1 Smart Walking Skirts, $2.49, | OwMen’sHatStore | most cor materials in blue, brown and blocks, with inverted pleat and habit at bottoms with straps and offered— Girls’ and Misses’ New Coats. Bie quoted are half and less than half regular. Made of the finest all-wool covert Many particularly jaunty effects In and paca cloth, cheviot and broad- the regular coat and sailor collar cloth; in tan, blue, black and cas- styles; in medium and_heavy- tor; beautifully trimmed with fan- weight materials; all of the finest cy braids and buttons; while man} all-wool coverts, broadcloths and are finished with dainty lace col- cheviots, , brown, lars; all sizes up to 14 years. red and caste Girls’ Silk and Velvet Coats Of taffeta, peau de sole and silk velvet; effectively trimmed with fancy col- lars, silk ‘ornaments, braids and buttons—lined with plain black and fancy light linings: $8 & $10 Coals, $4.95. | $12 & $15 Coats, $8.75. Second Floor, 59th St. Section, Women’s Smart SilK Stocks. Here is perha nS the greatest offering of high-class silk stocks that has ever been madé in New York. Just at the height of the season we quote these handsome and smart silk stocks in the newest shapes and all the prettiest and most popular colors, such as blue, pink, cardinal, white and blue, white and black, all white and all black. Regularly worth $1, At Ae, each. special sale Main Fivor, both St. Section.” Women’s Taffeta’ Petticoats, $4.98. Dainty, new petticoats of black and colored taffeta silk, made with accordion pleating, edged with hem-? stitched ruffle or two hemstitch bias ruffles, with underlay of near= and quality immensely at our special sale $4.98: iit price of Second Floor, 59th Bt. Bection,. ie Creamery Butter, 22c. Ib. Richest Creamery butter; ity the sind sold daily by ci stores for twice this pacts must be taken; special, per ths Basoment. Soth St. silk. You'll like the style Main Floor, Goth St. Section. BLOONINGDALE BROS., ALL CARS TRANSFER TO N, W. Cor, 83d St. 3d Avenue, 59th and Goth Streets, BLOOMINUDALES’,