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ON AN OCEAN LINEA 42+—____—_ Refugees from Kishineff on Board the Blucher Are Held in Check by Armed Ship Officials During a Ter- rific Gale. Fourteen hundred steerage passengers on the Hamburg-American steamer Blucher, most of them refugees from Kishineff, excited by the fear of death and wholly beyond reason, raged in the hold of the big + German steamship in mid-Atlantic last Saturday night. They were only prevented from breaking forth to the upper decks by the pluck of four stalwart officers, who stood at the head of the companionway with drawn revolvers. It was a thrilling story that the Blucher brought into port with her to- . Buffeted about like a feather in the awful seas that ran mountain high, unable to make a foot of headway, the big propellers whirling in the air as she rose on the seas which constantly beat her back, the officers at » their wits’ end to keep steerage way, there were trouble and anxiety efiough for all of the crew without a panic among a steerage full of ignor- , aut refugees to take their attention. “THE BIG STORM BREAKS . The Blucher had had one serious accident already when this trouble arose. A day out of Hamburg, running at half-speed through a heavy fog, she was run down by a small steamer and had to put into Cherbourg for répairs to her battered hull. She left Cherbourg in a weakened but sate condition, and early Saturday morning ran into the big storm. The offierk say that it was one of the worst that they ever encountered, and ag hour after hour passed and the ship made little or no progress, Capt. | fi realizing the danger that an outbreak among the motley crew in the hold would mean, ordered ‘the hatches battened down and stationed men at the companionway with orders to reassure the immigrants at the first signs of excitement and under no circumstances to allow any of them to pass up to the deck. ‘ The steerage passengers made no outbreak until about 11 o'clock Sat- urday night, when the Blucher was rolling and tossing so that it seemed ‘aa. though she must turn turtle at any moment, There began to be rumb Ings in the frightened little groups that gathered in the gloom of the hold. ‘The crying of children and the wailing of seasick, miserable women added “tothe feelings of uncertainty and finally a man tossed from one side ot the ship to the other emitted a scream that Jarred the nerves of all. | PANDEMONIUM BREAKS LOOSE. * Everybody broke loose at once. Men and women rushed to the com- panionway only to find it guarded. They attacked the battened hatches, but found them firm. * The tumult increased and hurried word was sent to Capt. Kopff on the |) Bridge. The Captain had had trouble with frightened immigrants before and ‘he hastily inquired if there were any ‘priests aboard There were two. Capt. Kopff wduld not leave the bridge himself, but he asked the priests 1n mércy to go into the steerage and reassure (ye frightened passengers. holy t eloth might get them audience when no one else would be listened to, The priests didn’t hesitate. They pushed down the companionway. The 5] sight that greeted them was enough to daunt the stoutest men. The immi- 4 grants were beyond control. Petty officers among them, trying to tell them. ’ everything-was all right were being dragged back and forth by the po a men and women, whose one cry was to be let out. The only “s thought in any mind was that to get on deck was to get to safety, to stay where they were was to be drowned like rats. ~ The priests exhorted the men to keep quiet and thus reassure the wom- en and children, and partly succeeded. After the priests left the immigrants started to rush the companton- ‘way. Four officers sent by Capt. Kopff stood at the companionway armed ) and held the crowd in check. The sight of the armed officers helped to subdue the most violent, and as the storm was gradually dying down the panic abated, Officers of the Blucher were inclined to belittle the demonstration to-day, but they admitted that there was considerable alarm and exvite- SAY BIG BUILDING Oe ¥ ~ PASSENGERS Ne | TRAIN CRASH BID 1S FRAUDULENT Several Injured When Buffalo’ Allegation acne that the Pro- 3 Express on the Lehigh Road) posal for Building the College Was Derailed and Cars Piled! of the City of New York Is in Heap. Illegal. (Bpectal to The Evening World) In the fight over the contract for the ALLYNTOWN, Pa, Dec. 2%—The! masonry, steel and iron work of the Buffalo express on the Lenigh Valley "6 bullding of the College of the Cit of New York on Morningside Helgi Ch aS Pann Have git Malltgad was wrecked at Penn Haven 1,0 vnich ‘thomas Dwyer is the Inwes Junction to-day, and @ number of per-, yiduer at $142,000, John ce Mocord none 4 tons Injured and cut by flying glass. At tls point the Lehigh Valley and ' Central Railroad of New Jersey tracks [ing brought a taxpayer's sult to enjoin Edward Lauterbach and the other trus- tees from a the contract to him got-an from Justice Scott for the run eb, A train on the Central examination of Dwyer before trial and 4 stopped at the Penn Haven! temporary injunction stopping the station just as the Buffalo train bound ll BS h ramen Gerard to-day . ; for New York pulled in, There, wero rasa tecday capplied it Justice Fitzgerald for an order to Me- No passengers to alight from the tratr Cord to Join Dwyer as a defendant in fhe Central went aheud, and the Le-| the action, Dwyer being a chief party in interest ~}\ igh engineer ran his train through | ai BUTRCET raven’ yards and struck » Lafflin Kellogg deslared that this h th ) Was only a subterfuge to defeat the de- 8 i of the plaintiff to examine Dwy ‘The train was derailed, and the heavy | {\1" 0 oraraine thee express ran along for 20 feet, when) joy 5 ormay the engine toppled over and three cars; y, 4 behind st were piled up aes A nushber of passtngers in the Pull- Bats were cut by broken glass and ny to a suit sudmit to an examination uniess {res Kellogg said that inasmuch as ‘a ge injured. Bzrgcons were sum-|nid the ‘mdamen’ ofered eauqent: | Mebmed from nearhy places to render] "men of straw," he could noe be wae, fala to the vHtlms. The crews of » reat mona de party In tn GFralie ercaped serious injury. All were (it Thwver want mubitt ern peonle. ‘ uninjured passengers were sent to Hew York and Philadelphia over the ral Rajlroad. SIDENT FORNES SWORN IN Low Adminsters the ¢ "i of Ofice. to-day administered lefendant SEAONE SUZANNE ADAM ADAMS SAILS, Among those Ine steam Suzanne Adams, book yatil the ‘ho sailed on the White hin Tentonte to-dgyw the singer, She ald no! last minute. She re turns to Burope to Join her husband, th the McCord's action was based on the al-! had no objection tol VAve & 2P ES? LOOKING SOUTH F ever the shopping centres of New York were crowded, they are now. purses among the crowd, and the excited and worried crossing policemen If you want elbow room on Sixth avenue, Twenty-third street, Four- *houting and gesticulating to a traffic and a people who don’t care for him. teenth street, Fifty-ninth street, Third avenue and many parts of Broadway, you will find it only in the Especially true is this at night up to 10 and 11 o'clock. Sixth avenue from Fourteenth street to Thirty-fourth. The shoppers pack middle of the street. Christmas curb is lined with the small and itinerant merchants’ stands, on which are displayed his tawdry wares, Between curbs the vehicular traffic, including the electric cars and the elevated, ratt#®, bang and make the most hideous noises as they scoot up and down the Ing’ into the peddleri ADMIRAL WHITE DIES SUDDENLY Noted Naval Officer Stricken While on His Way to Visit the Commandant at the Brooklyn Navy-Yard. maareaamical win White, ative drepped dead to-day while walking down ! the main drive of the Brooklyn Navy- Yard. He was on hie way to visit the | commandant, Rear-Admiral Rodg a close personal friend, When stricken | the Admiral reeled, toppled over and} was dead before assistance could reach | him, Admiral White's home was in Princeton, and he left that place this morning for the express purpose of paying Commandant Rodgers a visit ‘The Rear-Admiral was a native of Ohio and entered the service in 1861 after the War of the Rebellion had run He was made the time of his a course of seven months rear-udmiral in 1899 at retirement As Commandant at Annapolis for many years he was known and beloved by the young students preparing for naval careers, Before that time his ser- vice was an active one and carried him to all parts of the world, During the clvil war he fought his way up step by step to a captalne During the Samoan troubles he was in command of the Baltimore, At the time the first manoeuvres off Newport Rear Admiral Wibite was In charge of the fleet, In 1892 he was stationed off Panama, and so conducted hifnseif that he was honorably mentioned by Con- gress for an act of decision and oour- a of George Emmons White, lls son, soclety a shock a few years ugo by marrying the widow of a wea Call- fornian, Dr. Toland, the founder of the College of Medicine of the University of California, Two WOMEN SAVE WORKMEN. gave Two men employed to do a plumbing job at No, 62 Tillary street, Brooklyn, were oy me by gas to-day and saved from probable death by two women, Mary Lind and Catherine Rowiskey, who live at the same address of the men gave his name as Hamburger, With bis companion fixing the pipe under the Staite where the gas was escaping When the women came to their rescie both men were unconscious. Limburger revived without medical at- tendance, but the other man had to be carried to a, hospital. SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY, 21/8un sets, 4.85/Moon acta. 9.18 THE TIDES. Wigh Water. AM. PM. ORT OF NEW YORK, ARRIVE Sutauma, Hishenzolern X Arapahoe El Rio, Galveaton INCOMING @THAMSHIPS, DUB TO-DAY. Naples. Byron, Pernambuco Vara." Seriphow, St. Michaels Bremen Prins Onkar, Fluminense. Brandenburg. to President Charles v,| Loo Stern, the ‘enlist, who ts very dil es, was re-elected. At the| Others satiins were Mra. William All time the oath was taken by/Alder- | port. W, Badgerow, Col. J. B. Bur- {Ferdinand ‘Haentetn, bank, | U: pin a regbert Cam. A. L, , George I » 8. H. Hen: derson, Alexander Jamieron and i T Knowles, ee “Cure Your Cold for 25¢, Marshall's Catarrh Gnutt, At any Drugglat's, %' l OUTGOING STEAMBHTPS, AILED TO-DAY, pocl,_ Tafturaon, No Antena Matendaun elle igs pores witeum, New Orleans: ; faeces, Galveston. Ae EEY, Tucatna Teutonic, 1.1 lan street, heavy transfer wagons bump- cavts and scattering popcorn or gaudy red and beaded TOLD OF INSULTS BY CAR STABBER Miss Hettesheimer Gives Details of William Gettys’s Conduct on His Trial for Stabbing Assemblyman Ulrich. Miss Eva Hettesheimer, nineteen years old, resumed the witness stand to-day at the trial of William Gettys in the Brooklyn Criminal Court and told of the insults offered her and a friend, Miss Loutse Selle, by the de- fendant while they were in a Reld ave- nue car, While efending the givis, who were | onted, Assemblyman Frederick of the Sixth District, in Brook- lyn, was stabbed by Gettys and now hus @nly one eve. For weeks he lay wt the point of death, ‘The doctors feared that eyes, he would be blind in both Gettys used an ink crager, Miss Hettesheimer did not see the as- 8 Jottys Was accompanied by is and Frederick Henck, Hetteshvimer’s Story. hoen to the theatre with a Miss Hettesheimer said. Assemblyman in the car as had known him for somo Three men got in a few moments “y friend,” noticed the entered. 1 tine, had fatar aud sat next to me, ‘Dhey made offensive remarks to me. One kept tap- ping my foot with his heel. They kept saying, ‘isn't she charming? Lovely,’ and all that sort of thing, ‘hen Assemblyman Ulrich spoke to the youns mer. He told them that they were dressed as gentlemen and should act as such One called him a Dutch- man, They made more insulting remarks and we «ot off the car, I did not wit- ness what Loppened atter that.” Assemblyman Ulrich was accompanied by Assemblyman Webber. When they sot off the car the young men who had been insulting the girls followed them. At MoDonough street they started to tell the Assemblymen that they had no right to interfere with thalr amusement, Demanded an Apology. Ulrich sald, addressing Gottys, “you me an apology.’ “~his 18 my apology,” Gettys is al- leged to ihave replied. as he hit Ulrich, 0 tried to separate the two. Suddenly Ulrich threw up his hands aya fell, He had been stabbed In the e, Gettys escaped but was caught next day, He says that he stabbed Ulrich In self-defense. After Dotective Reynolds had pr wented the cut coat worn by Assembly- man Ulrich and Capt. O'Reilly had told of the arrest of Gettys, Mr. Ulrich, with one eye gone and his face bear ing the scars of other cuts, took the stand, He sald: “T had just come down from Albany und was on the way to my home with Assemblyman Webber in a Reid aye- “Young man,” nue car when Miss Hetteshelmer, whom T have Known for a long time, boarded the car, She hee not been in her seat long when three y« men entered whom L now tdentify the defendant ck and Ellis, Regan to Insult Her, “Gettys took a seat next to that of Misa Hettecselmer and €= once began making Insulting remarks concerning her to his companions, Then I noticed that he was pressing his knee on Miss Hoetteshetmer's leg. She was plainly an noyed and I said to the three young mon: % “*You are dressed as gentiomen, Why don't you behave as such?’ “Gobtys then said’ to me: ‘Aw, baokto Germany foryou, you Gettys, and He 6 tre SLE Yet in all this confusion mirth fairly bubbles up from the happy crowds. else’s pocket. It makes no difference if their toes are stepped on or if their clothes are torn. They laugh, push harder and add to the general confusion. About the doors to the great stores the crush is impenetrable. If you would enter just get In the crowd and be swept inside, perhaps carried off your feet, but still held straight up by the mass about you. Women who have tried the plan of purchasing holly and evergreen wreaths and boughs and who have tried to carry them home with them have abandoned the idea, Nothing survives in its intended form in that crowd. Sixth avenue is dotted here and thore with a detective. Any one can | others in the crowd. Now, don’t make a scene. berry street.” The few complaints have been made. crowd into a side street and away they go for Police Headquarters. But this year the crowds are particularly free trom thicves. Most of the complaints come from men, |and women who have had their watch chains torn off on the buttons of SL - WEST SHOR tell a detective. They stand adout, locking keehly at the passing crowd. try- ing to fing some nimble fingered gentleman with his hands in some one They mix in the crowd now and then, following a suspected individual, and when they decide that the individual is really suspicious they tap him on the shoulder and whisper in his ear: boss wants to see you down in Mut- And he puts the nippers on him and leads him out of the At least COLOMBIANS SEND MORE WANT DIVORCES AS |BOND ISSUE TO PAY MEN TO PANAMA LINE) CHRISTMAS GIFTS| FOR FRIARS' LANDS’ Mayflower Meets the Pinzon with Troops and| Unhappy Husbands and Wives Arms at Gulf of Darien, and Washington Appeal to Supreme Court Jus- Suppresses Facts Obtained. tice MacLean for Judicial Separations. ‘ WASHINGTO! ing cablegram was received at the Navy Department to-day from Rear-Admiral Coghlan, dated Colon: “Mayflower reports met with Pinzin carrying 30 men and munitions bound for base at Titumati,"’ Official maps ‘of the Navy Department | do not snow any place by the name of} Titumati, but the supposition is that} the point referred to ts ‘Tumate, a group ‘of three Isl#hds lying halt mile from the Colombian coast In the Gulf of Di rien and about thirty milgs southoast of| Cape: Tiburon, Dec. %.—The follow-more Colombians who were landed there will be permitted to remain. It is said that a portion of Admiral Coghlan’s dispatch was suppressed and that the news held secret caused a com- motion in Executive circles here. Later jt was declared that practically all of the cablegram from Admiral Coghlan to-day, announcing the landing of Columbian troops on the mainland within fifty miles of Panama territory, was suppressed, Coples, however, were rushed to the President and to the general staff of the army, from which army and navy of- ficers inferred phat the suppressed mes- sage was of vital importance. “War on Panama means war with the Many husbands and wives appealed to Supremé Court Justice MacLean to- day to unyoke them from their marital mates as a Christmas gift. Carrie Allen, who was married to Chief Engineer Allen, of the Mallory line steamship San Marcos, July 28, 1898, asked that the marriage be annulled, as the chief engineer told her mother on returning from his last voyage to Puget Sound that he had visited his former wife and daughter in Spokane Falls. = | united States," is the suostance of| ‘That was like a thuuderclap out of a tombs Ys the Soloman Minister, is sending tolnen, mother of the young wife. "I he Bogota Government and to his more Influential tolowers throughout Colom- bia, Realizing the gravity of the situa- tlon, Gen. Reyes is endeavoring to brin, the Colombian people face to face wit! the situation as he knows it here. without any power: to act beyond ob: serving the movements. of this detach- ment of Colombian troops, | ‘The situation at the Isle of Pines,| taxed him and cross-examined him, and he owned up that years ago he was married to a Miss Lillis Lorraine Lee; that they had never been divorced and however, {s quite different, as that tsl- ft y 3 3 | ‘He ik convinced that the United States |that his daughter, Jessie B, Allen, is and is within Panama territory, and it) wii) not permit 4 Colombian army to land|now a young lady elghteea years old.” 1s not to be expected,that the elghty or! within the territory of Panama Robert B. Schultz, of No, 79 Morton street, testified that Miss Curie Gur- mall Was) married to. Chief Engines Allen at his house July The next case had an ‘all fy cast. Nhe plaintiff was Ezra EB. who {$ in the law of blyman Joseph 1. Gree last year for Supreme Court Justice, and his witnesses included Louis B! Allen and Jesse Rosenthal, lawyers, Ezra EB, Green, who lives at No. 21 Hast Bighty-fifth street, married Dora Green Sept. 8, 1898 Allen and Rosen- thal both testified that they and Green were at Twenty-sixth street and Sixt avenue on the evening of May 6, 193, when Dora accosted a man dnd’ went away with him, They followed to a house in West Twenty-ninth street, Charles Metzenke asked to be freed 'yers' Green, of exAssem- talked of WOMAN CATCHES THIEF ‘AFTER RACE She Sees Him Take a Pair of Cuff Buttons from a Depart- ment Store and Immediately BANKRUPT S DEBTS REACH $962,602 Filing of Petition Follows Fail- ure of Railway System in New England, and New York Banks ‘ from Catherine, his wife. Karl Neu- draughtsman, living at No. Gives Chase. Hold Paper. Po West ‘Tenth street, testified with wich’ hesitation and invevident morit- cation that the husband's charge was true. “[ have known both Charles and Catherine for mora than three years” “and while Charles was ¢n from September to I visited her every’ yn was reserved in all fe cases. — Sa ELLIS ISLAND XMAS. Mies Eva Payser, the clever detective for a Twenty-third street department store, ran an obstacle race In the great BOSTON, Dec, 23.—As a sequel to the failure of the Worcester and South- bridge and Worcester, Rochdale and harlton Depot Street Railways and al- Hed concerns several months ago Frank D, Perry, of Woréester, former treas- urer and practical manager of the lines, filed a petition In bankruptcy in the United States (District Court here Noyem- uluable cuff buttons from the jewelry department was all rizht 9s a stralght- away runner, but at dodging the young woman was his superior, and after a chase of several blocks she captured |), aay. Missionaries Basy Preparing An- him. bas nual Feast tor Immigranta, I Perry estimates * es at $962, i Miss Peyser suspected him when he | 4. ae eer te rR OM The missionaries on’ Hilis Island are entered the store, and followed him to! vow york, Philadelphia. and through-| busy to-day preparing for the Christmas the Jowelry counter. She says she saw festival they are to give the detained out New England are among the cred- him put the cuft buttons in his vest | iors, immigrants to-morrow. From present pocket and Ipave the store. She lot him} The petition ts one of the heaviest Ye: | appearances there will dé detween 1,000 Ko to the street and then asked him for | rea a Tine ei So ent [and 1,200 men, women and children to be the buttons, He darted across the street, entertained, . The Christmas tree will be set up on nd dealer In wood and coal. Prac- aly the winole of the indabtedne was Tncumred through and with the young woman after him dodged in| Wae tneurved thr Perry's Ponte’ | the floor of the main ‘hail, and at 3 o'cloc und out among the shoppers. Hundreds | ie, Sving individually indorsed notes | it. will. be lighted, after which the, im: stopped to watch the chase, not under- | agai gating $925,000 hela by about forty migranta will be marshalled in to view standing its meaning, until the man] binks and iintividuatas it. After the programme of addresses FE Te chelertedl de twol datectiven, The petitioner states that he js un-|and music each immigrant will recelye a ran into if , nie to give tye exaot dates of the notes | present from the tree. ; In the Jefferson Market Court the po-) nose dedinstely than that they On Christmas Day immigrants wil » said the man’s pleture was In the Slated daring 1d and Ishi for tie | be given. a dinner of turkey, cranberry He gave his name us|;eason that many of them were in-| sauce, vegetables and mince ple. pb cae aaa dorsed in. blank ‘The secured claims amount to’ $16.730. Of the $43,297 assets, $16,650 is real es tate, unepoumbered’ exc for, the rights therein of the wife of M AQ $20,000 {4 in dife insurance Yhe aftairs of the street railways have taferred by the receivers to the thus far no JEWS MAY APPEAL TO CZAR, Organisations in England Act on Threatened M. ore. LONDON, Dec, 3.—The Jewish Chront- He repeated this several times 1 then said to his compantone: "We'll wait until the Jews leave the and then we ll get them.’ een Miss Hetteshelmer got up to leave] qpeditors, but agreement ‘ye ear, and either Ellis or Gettys| hhs bean reached regarding a settlement, | oie announces {hat a jolnt meeting of tripped her and she fel in my lap. the Foreign Committee and of the Board Mr. Webber and myself left the car LINCOLN’S PARTNER DEAD, of Deputies of the Anglo-Jewish Asso- siso, and the three young men followed] CHICAGO, Dec. 23,—Hlram 'W. Beck- | ciation will be held Dec. 35, ty canelder the question of making representations us off, Gettys called to me: with, 4 law partner of Abraham Lincoln LQ hY don't you come bark and AR!) frog 1866 to INI, Is dead at St. Luke's |to dhe Russian Government, through a “tw. i IMoce, relative to the report f'vas going on when they overtook| Hospital here, at the age of seventy-two, | the Forelgn Office, ? and Gottys etruck me. we] His ifather wap one of ithe ploneets of] that fresh artiJawlsh excesses ure itiched, and f folt that Thad been cut} the State, and among the founders of threatened at Kluhineff on the Russian nthe eye. He was cutting me all Danville in, 1a, | isan, Beckwith be: | Christmas Bay, when soine one pulled him | of came one of Td ageet perea deh’ ‘Chronicle adds. that it After that. T lost conaclousne: Paewan ream Tap tO te San ipaderstands the matter js already en- T was in bed for twelve cic, Jogt} wag Proditeny of the State Hiwtorjca) the attention of Forelgn Bpore- one eye ‘am acusred for life.’ ‘ot ag Se ara da ikl woe. ¥ < Roosevelt, Root and Shaw Ar range for Closing the Pur chase, and Paper ane to Ba Put Out Here. WASHINGTON, Dec. 2.—Presiden' Roosevelt and Secretaries Root an Shaw had an extended conferente day regarding the tssue of bonds f. the raising of money with which to pa} for the friar lands in the Philippines, Secretary Root is in receipt of a ca: blegram from Gov. Taft arinounciny that the contracts for the purchase o! the lands were signed yesterday after noon. Unless new, urveys shall diffe materially from the Villegas survey the! exact amoupt of the purchase price of the lands 18 $7,239,784. ‘The lands to be purchased aggregate 391,000 acres, At the conferenceto-day it was de« termined to authorize the issue $7,000,000 of 4 per cent. Philippine bon redeemable after ten yeare and witht thirty years, ‘TD will be offered fo1 sale early In January. An act of tat last Congress provided for the Issu of such bonds. They will be accepte by the Government as security for tha deposit of public fund Sonre details concerning the issue of the bonds yet- have Worked Out, but no doubt is expresséd that a ready rket for them will be founa ‘in tata 33 GLASSBLOWERS DEPORTED. Englishmen Detained Ellis Island Two Months, After haying been detained on Elit# Island under theécontract labor law for the last two moriths, mime Enggsh glassblowers to-day were ordered de- ported. ‘The men arnived in Montreal on Oct: 10 on the'steamship Parisian. When they attempted to enter this country: by the Government; reasury issued for them. They were taken lis Island and their case appealed Washingtop. Twice have habeas apr- pus orponenth ee pee spat AE tee ‘fin their eh but they fall ZC ee a Business Notices. CHILDREN IN DANGER, Children are in danger from whoop. ing cough and croup. Father John’ Medicine cures and builds up the body, too. Mine DIED. ROONEY.—On Tuesday, Dec. 22, DELIA: ROONEY, beloved sister of Patrick and sMary Rooney. in her 20th year; Relatives and friend: invited to. at-| tend the funeral from her late residenc 940 Bergen st., Brooklyn, on Thurs- day, Dec. 24, at 9 A, M., thence to Church of Bt. Augustine, 6th av, and Sterling place, Brooklyn, where @ solemn reauiem mass will be offered for the re- poe of her soul. WUST.—On Dec. 22, 1908, CAROLINE’ WUST, beloved wife of Jaoob Wust, aged. 60 years, Funeral from her late’ residénce, No. 62 Devoe st., Brooklyn, N, ¥.. om Friday afternoon, Dec. 25, 1 x GADFNHY.—SUSAN, daughter of the tetel ‘Thomas and Mary Gaffney. Funeral from hers brother's residenss, No, 91 East 110th st., on Friday, Dec, 26, . ©