The evening world. Newspaper, February 26, 1904, Page 3

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worked with energy and asslduity to reorganize and perfect the ariny, your work is not yet done. The hour has come when I must summon you ‘o head my valiant army, to defend the honor and dignity of Russia and her sovereign rights in the Far Bast. “Knowing your brilliant gifts and the imminent preparations for battle, Tam glad to intrust to you the responsible commana of iny Manchurian! army against the Japanese, on your leaving your work as Minister, “May God help you in your difficult task, which you with such self-denial have assumed. In taking leave of you and thanking you tor your six years work for the good of my dear army, I confer on you the Order of St. Alex- andor-Nevski in brilliants. Wishing success to you and trusting to you to) transm!t to my brave army my imperial greeting and my biessing, may Wou Keep you unharmed. (Signed) AMERICANS OFFERED AID TO THE RUSSIANS. (By Associated Press.) WAGHINGTON, Feb, 26.—The following bulletin was posted at the Navy Department this afternoon: “A despatch from Commander Marshal, commanding the United States eteamehip Vicksburg, states that he sent medical aid as well as boats to the assistance of the Variag! ¢ With@it waiting for any suggestion from St. Petersburg, though that! has since come, and more than three days ago, the Navy Department cabled | to Capt, Marshall, of the U. 8, 3, Vicksburg, at Chemulpo, requesting an | ,explanation of the facts connected with the reported refusal on his part to, “NICHOLAS,” ade ore Nisaiid ite Fern: take aboard his sbip sailors from Japanese. Touching the Russian complaint dhe other foreign captains jn protesting against the Japanese attack upon the ‘Variag and the Korietz in a neutral harbor, it is declared at the Navy De- partment that the officer certainly would not be upheld by his department | tn meddling in such a matter. LAWYER, SHOT DOWN IN OFFICE j Henry S. Schwartz. of the Firm “of Baker & Schwartz, In “Buffalo, Fatally Wounded "by Business Rival. BUFFALO, N. ¥., Feb. 26.—Henry L. Bchwartz, of the Inv firm of Baker & Behwartz, was shot and wounded in his office, on the third floor of the Marine Bank Building, to-day by H. A. Knowles, a well-known business man 3f Buffalo, who ten minutes later shot Aimself dead in the presence of Chief of Detectives ‘Taylor and Detective Ser- geant O'Connor. Schwarts died soon afterward in the hospital, ‘The shooting is said to have been the culmination of business troubles. Mr, Behwartz was attorney for Leo Frank, of New York, who in 1902 was uppointed receiver for the Knowles & Gardner Company. Litigation tn con- pection with the dissolution of the firm ans occupled the attention of the courts vince the failure of the firm. A fow minutes before the crime Mr. Schwartz and his partner, Mr, Baker, and Attorney Roland Crangle were in vonference in Mr. Schwartz's private office, As Mr, Crangle and Mr, Baker atepped from the room into tI ain vitice Knowles entered, Almost instantly two shots rang out. ‘’hone in the outer office turned tn time to see Mr, Schwartz fall. Knowles started for the private office with the olver still smoking in his hand, foci Crangle, Mr. Baker, a stenographer, aii clerk left the offlce and notified the police. Chief of Detectives Taylor and Detec- tive-Sergt. O'Connor were the first to arrive. They opened the door to the office and faced Knowles with the re- volver in his han “Prop your gun!" sald Capt. Taylor, who had his weapon in his hand. Knowles backed away into Mr, Bak- er's private office, still pointing the re- Volver at the officers, As hoe reached the door and, stepped flash he turned the m4 ‘eng dled, alin “4 fenmned masa ied almos c deep er Bohwarts vas well known and Sa aie fan aged man, in to have been in Newburg, Ni Xs. recently ‘schwarts was Afty-four years of ago. Lyman Baker, senior partner of the law firm of Baker & Bchwarts, said is afternoon that so far us he’ ever knew there had been no trouble be- Knowles and Schwartz, Mr, r believes continued trouble and fliness, together with the sudden death of his wife, resulted in the mental de- Fangem: of the former dry-goods merchant, ‘The gun with which the hooting was done was an antique one: fa second revolver fully loaded found in Knowles’s pocket, NOTHING LEFT TO CHARITY. Simon Borg's Vast Estate Goes to His Relatives, The will of Simon Borg, head of the banking house of Simon Borg & Co., ‘No. 20 Nassau street, and noted in his Mfetime for his many and liberal chari- ties, was filed this afternoon, It con- tainsno bequesta to charity or other public uses, but leaves the whole vast fortune of the man who at sixteen ears of age emigrated, {n 1066, from rune is widow and suven chil- Bron atter. providing a #00 annunity for a sister and cancelling the indebt- edness of his brotherisaac, of Chicago. he failure to make any bequests to tho charities is accounted for by the Uberal gifts he had made to them in SHIPPING NEWS, ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY. Bun rises, 6.20/Hun sets. 5.48/Moon sets, 2.44 THE TID! Mlb Wate AM. PM. PORT OF NEW YORK. INCOMING | STEAMBHIPS, DUE TO-DAY. Fs gos, Ainetetdam, a Numidian, dyaeres sgn ets AMBIIPS. Fa aes Mart roth. Ee | the Russian warships sunk by the! that Capt. Marshall did not join with | TRAIN PANIC IN CENTRAL TUNNNEL Engine Jumped Track at Grand’ Central Station Entrance, and Passengers on Montreal Express Had a Scare. ‘The engine drawing the Montreal Ex- press, a train of nine heavy cars, wan! derailed and thrown upon its side am {t drew out of the tunnel at street to enter the Grand Centra} Station P to-day, { John Mfller, the engineer, jumped | Juat in time to escape being crushed as the engine toppled over. The cars crashed upon the derailed engine with al terrific shock that threw pussengers out of their seats and created a panic in the train, According to the passengers on the train, It was going at a high rate of spoed when the accident occurred. A loose rail in a switch gave way, and, | I without warning, the big swerved out from the track and went | over, ‘The engineer was sitting on the sido upon which the engine was top- pling, and burely had time to jump and escape being smashed under its enormous weight, Like Hitting a Stone Wall, The engirs fell in such a way as to prevent @ barrier to the entire train, which stopped with the same impact tt would acquire in running against a stone wall. There were four sleepe: and two day coaches on the train, | ‘illed with pussengers, and the rear cars had not drawn out of the mouth of the tunnel when the shock came, So great Was the shock that many of! the passengers were hurled over seats! and thrown out into tho aisles of th cars, None, however, recel: any more) erlous injuries than a few bruises, ‘1 | crash of the colliding cars filed the women passengers with fear and their| screams could be heard throughout the yard, None of the cars was derailed ane the employees of the road backed awiteh engine behind the train, Dulled | it back iniv the tunnel, switched it onto) Another trac the Grand (eae MAID HELD FOR ROBBERY. Acouned of Taking #800 Worth of Jew Jane Murray, fifty yeans old, of No, 220 Weat Sixty-second street, and pulled it safely int niral ‘Station, 4 erioln station. While "the serg jotting down Jane's | pedigre casually examined Jane's retic fod sor warts ot Mra. Geamara Jewelry. Jane is now in a cell TWO SHOPLIFTERS CAUGHT. Detectives Arrest Young Women, and One Shown Fight, Mary Fleischer, twenty-one and at- tractive, of No, 18 East Houston atreet, | and Grace Klon, aged itty, of No. 406! Fast Seventy-fourth street, were Taigned to-day before Magistrate Poo in Jefferson Market Court and held for trial In $800 bail on charges of shoplitte ing. Betective-Sergeants Rotn un and A'Htore ditective eniployed bet Of the ‘big depar Co on Six Avenue took the women into Custely, or! On the younger Woman swaa fault fe cullur skirt, with an Apron sewed y inside, into Which, ‘bundles could “he dropped. A bolt of sik valy at 8 was found on the girl. Mi ahn. aged iwenty-five, of No ‘Bed with 2, Was id In BOD Dall for it Woinan ud detective had q| bret fig on the side BEAT WIFE WITH REVOLVER?) Gustave Schober Faces Charge in Brooklyn Court, Gustaye Schober, of No. 267 Chaun- | cey street, Brooklyn, was arraigned in Gases’ Avenue, Eolice Court to-day with beating bis wife two revolvers and torshoot her Tho man wept and bogged his wit forgiveneas when so confronted hin in aie, irae, bela | ita i Taal With fhe threatening were thousands crowding the scene of the disaster, dynamite that the firemen used to check the spread ef the flames could be | $250,000. heard in all sections of the city, and this noise was supplemented by ad et ea in stock of Rochester Dry-Goods Company, $150,000; insurance, thunder of crashing walls. HOW THE FIRE SPREAD. over Shoe Company's store. THE WORLD: FIRE-SWEPT DIS CN MA ALM TU AT West Male Street From Powers Block: MILLIONS LOST IN ROCHESTER FIRE (Continued from First Page.) building, occupied by the Headle & Sherburne Company, fell into the street Fitieth With a dull roar, carrying with it a mass of burning tmbers, brick and) plaster. ‘Yhe wall almost struck the water tower which nad All the money and books of the Sibley, Lindsay & Curr Company were pémoved to a fire-engine house. A. J, Townson, of the Sibley Company, said that the amount of money taken out was $40,000. According to the statement of Mr. Townson, the Cox Building, which is owned by the Sibley, Juindsay & Curr Company, and which was one of engine |tnose destroyed, Ja valued at $400,000, while the contents are valued at $1,000,000. | ‘Trotley wires snapped like brittle sticks and eight firemen had narrow escapes from Injury. bean doing effectual work in the Beadle Building, $40,000 SAVED FROM GRANITI) BUILDING. FRIDAY By baAinG, PBKULAN,s <0, svv4. SOME BUILDINGS DESTROYED IN THE TRICT IN ROCHESTER. i reeeners, a ashy ghd surance conditions and property values than any other individual in the city, summarizes the losses and the insurance to buildings as follows: Granite Building, value $600,000, loss $300,000, insurance $175,000. Sibley, Lindsay & Curr Company, wholesale building back of Granite Building, $250,000; total loss. Buell Building, occupied by the Sibley, Lindsay & Curr Company, value of building, $75,000; insurance, $60,000; total loss. Building owned by Ellwanger and Barry estate, occupied by Beasie & Sherburne Company, value of building, $20,000, insurance $15,000; total loss. Cornwall Building, occupied by the Beadle & Sherburne Company, value $75,000; insurance, $60,000; total loss. Kinley Building, occupied by the Rochester Dry-Goods Company, value $35,000; Insurance, $20,000; total loss. af aeleG occupied by Walkover Shoe Company; value, $10,000; insurance, 001 The loss to stock and Insurance was as follows Sibley, Lindsay & Curr Company, retail stock, value $350,000; insurance, $300,000; total loss. Sibley, Lindsay & Curr Company, wholesale stock, value $1,200,000; in- surance, $1,000,000; total loss. Loss to tenants in the Granite Building, $200,000; insurance, $100,000, Loss to tenants in Buel! Building, $26,000; insurance, $20,000, Loss to tenants in Kirley Building, $25,000; insurance, $20,000. a i a a ta BEARS AND CAMELS’ IN DEATH BATTLE One Hump-Backed Animal Is Dead and the Other Is in Bad Way, While One Bear Is Severely Injured. FIGHT WAGED HOTLY AT CONEY ISLAND. Row Came When the Patient Beasts Refused to Allow Bruin to Ride and Made an Attack with Their Feet. While two camels and three bears were being trained in a new ring act at Luna Park, Coney Island, they got Into a fight. One of the camels, Valued at $900, was killed, the other camel was probably mortally burt and tho thres bears were badly smashed up. Two of the bears are small, They are being trained to ride on the backs of the camels, with a big bear acting as ringmaster, The camels threw the bears from their backs simultaneously and began to attack them with their feet. They were rapidly making bear meat out of the little bears when the big Lear mixed in the game. Ho tore a wash in the long meck of one of the camels with his paws and then attack- ed the other, wrapping his huge legs about its neck and choking it to death. But he did not have it all his own way, for while he was doing the chok- ing the other camal was biting out chunks of his fur and hide, It took the efforts of Goliath, the trainer and ao degen assistantg to separate the fren- ated animals. The fight put up by the camale was a revelation. ere supposed cile beasts a re seasoned public ertormers, but the indignity of serve ng an carriages for bears was the straw that broke their tempers. —_—— PANAMA TREATY [5 NOW IN EFFECT Roosevelt Issues Canal Procla- mation After Secretary Hay vesterday | Minister Bunau-Varilla. WAHINGTON, Feb, 26,—President ‘The fire started so early in the morning that very few people were on the street, but the news soon spread as tf on wings, and by 6 o'clock there The explosions of Mayor Ciwler and Commissioner of Public until the fire department had the flames under control, Commissioner Gilman estimates the loss at this hour at $7,000,000. Almost at the time the alarm was turned in flames were seen Before the clang of the fire gongs was heard the entire five ‘The water tower was quickly placed in position. It was soon pouring a large and steady stream into the structure, and eyery minute was rein- forced by the arrival of additional streams, but the great flood of water ap- parently had little effect and the fire seemed to increase in fury. Twenty minutes after the fire was discovered {t was seen that there was no hope of saving the main store and the smaller building was also a mass of flames, : East of and adjoining the Rochester Dry-Goods Company is the Walk- It also was soon ablaze, ‘The flames from the two stores reached far above the surrounding bulld- ry. ings and the reflection in the sky gave observers the Impression that entire shopping district on Main street was on fire, obtained from the tallest of the dry-goods company's store, rolled wostward over! The flames, espeelally (ae bb alert dda Gervant @ tho root of the bullding occupied by the Beadle and Sherburne Company, | No. 15 West Thirty-seventh street, the "4 for a time it was dificult to tell whether that building was on fire or’ wite of a wealthy tron manufacturer, not. . after luncheon Mrs, Seam v Siena, seamen KLAMES SHOT HIGH IN AIR. : Mr € ‘ane, Mrs, ‘At 7.16 o'clock the roof of the Granite Building gave way and fell Into ounces wisely Trade Wo cavAt, HL E2° the soa of fire, transforming the entire structure into a veritable alr-shatt fawnshon. a pigce on Sixth avene, neat through which the flames shot high Into the sky. & When Mr, Cochrane entered the shop The fire chiefs at that time were appreheusive that the flames might leap lane Was calmly pawning the vetvs t > wt. Policeman Dan Rinn, the bie St- Paul street and attack the great Burke, Fitzsimmons, Hone & Company padway cop. took Jane to the 1 The fire spread from the Cox Building into Pleasant street and building. nt Rint threatened the Masonic Temple. The section used as a barn by the Sibley Company was next to go, the flames advancing with frightful rapidity and apparently unchecked, as the firemen bad hitherto concentrated their efforts on the main fire in the Rochester Dry Goods Company building. In a few moments {t was realized by the firemen that the worst struggle) was to be in the rear to keep the destructive flames from spreading to the big blocks on St. was a hurrying with apparatus, hither of companies, and Division street was soon choked Streams were directed against the walls from the roof of At | the Gibbons & Stone Building, but they scemed for a long time to‘be almost wholly Ineffectual. Siowly the fire crept west through the rear of the big Cox Building. SOME FINE FIRE-FIGHTING DONE, As soon as the dan-er was realized ind the firemen buckled down ¢+ their work some iirst-class fire-fighting was witnessed and great praise is due Chief Little’s men for the heroic way In which they faced what seemed for a time a hopeless task. Every bit of available apparatus was brought to bear on the fire that threatened to sweep Division street. The effect of this splendid effort was soon apparent in diminishing the columns of smoke and flame. But appearances were deceptive, for In a fow moments the fire burst forth with redoubled fury, enveloping the rear of the main part of the Cox Building and seriously menacing the adjoining edifices on St. Paul street Inch by inch the fremen were driven back from thelr perilous posts, Just as conditions seemed to give promise of a repetition of the Balti- mors disaster, the Syracuse and Buffalo fire companies turned to and the spread of the flames was checked, The engines are now busy playing big streams on the ruins, and al- ready plans are being drawn for structures to replace those destroyed. THOSE WHO SUFFERED LOSSES, Insurance men now estimate the loss at from $4,000,000 to $5,000,000, Safety Gilman were on the | scene shortly after the fire was discovered, and they remained at their posts to be! shooting through the roof of the main building of the Rochester Dry Goods, Company. floors of the building were a mass of flames. | Scaffolding in Dome of Chi- Paul street lying north of the Cox Building. Then there| Loss in stock Walkover Shoe Company, $15,000; insurance, $12,000, Gibbons & Stone Company, insurance, $15,00u, partly loss. Loss in stock to Beadle & Sherburne Company, $350,000; insurance, TWO MEN KILLED IN TEN-STORY FALL SAYS HIS WIFE IS AYPROTIZED Mrs. Lillian Fibree, Arrested with William Latham for De- serting Husband -and Chil- dren, Admits She Loves Him. cago’s New Post-Office Gave! Way and They Plunged with Wreckage to First Floor, CHICAGO, Feb. %.~A triple floor | scaffold in the domo of the new Pos Office building suddenly collapsed this | afternoon, carrying two men down with i. Mrs, Lillian Fibres, a handsome bru twenty-five years old, and William Latham, a young man of thirty, who says he lives at No, 320 Vande! , . % to the first floor, being buried in the yy, t9, ray ehinrass DUP the) wanes quickly summoned .to clear away” thel ere ir Honor. a ir rreerto aie debris and permit tho: recovery of the] 9 hypnotism. “(his woman wi vec bodies. . wife and mother until th: ‘Lhe men in thelr plunge had a sheer| Cue into her lite Look ar him, there escent of 260 fect through space. They] i.n% Attractive thing about him, Were at work on the big scaffold falsh-| Nothing about him to Induce a wome ing up the decorations on the Interlor | iike my wife to leave her husband pe OL ihe dome, ices ai, space venoath extending chilaren for, And yet he gives her one to the Ast Hour und it was down this |100K and she followa him around ike hole through all the floors that tons of | a do spuntered wos rounding the men fell witha crash. The imenewere. liters Innit, Fibre looked at the ‘floor aur. ally buried and after the,souud of the | !n® this recital, white Latham squirmed fall diod away no cries Ur moans of] Mbout uneasily. Fibree then {ormally charged Latham with the abduction of 3 wife and told this gtor; pain were heard, ‘Timekveper Walter Anderson, “In December, 1901, this man Latham nd was entertained Withta a week he and my wife had left the house together. Up to then my wife had been all that I could have who nding of wood, |The thought struck me that thi |peaffold would collapse and, t jumpe Roosevelt shortly before noon to- signed the proclamation putting Panama Canal treaty into effect, Previous to his action Secretary Hay and Minister Bunau-Varilla met at the State Department and formally ex- changed the ratifications of the treaty. Immediately after making the ex- change M. Bunau-Varilla cabled his resignation as Minister from Panama to the President of the Isthmian Government, The proclamation is as follows: “Whereas, a convention between the United States of America and the Re- public of Panama to insure the con- struction of a ship canal across the Isthmus of Panama to connect the At- ead signed by their respective tentlarles at Washington on t day of November, one, thous hundred and three, the origina which convention being in the Bnglish | language; Hetean ane sald convention Deen fod ‘on both parts and the Patincations of the two govern- ments ‘Nore exchanged 4in the City of ‘Washington on the twenty-sixth day of Februa: one thousand nine hundred and fou; “Now, therefore, be it known, that T Theodore Roosevelt, President of the United States of America, have caused the said convention to he made public to the end that the same and. every article and clause thereof may be ob- vorved and Culfilled with good falth by the United Btntes and the cltisens thereot “In testimony whereof I have here: unto set_my hand and caused the seal ghthe ‘United Btates of America to be a “Done at the City of Washington, this twenty-sixth day of February, in the Year of Our, Lord One Thousand Nine Hundred and Four, an dependence of the, United slates the One Hundred and erent sae “THEODORE ROO! ELT." “By the President, “John Hay, Sec: GAS CO. BLAMED. FOR KILLING EIGHT gallica abe ils of Btate."* from the platform to a window on the aside of the dome. had scarcely Jumped from the wooden scaffold when asked, and she and our five children were all very happy. I searched and | the thing Leouapeed and garcied Al tee Gada: for her and finally last Jan- men to the first floor, It was sicken-| uary I located ing tc realise what little chance the oF tn Liles On Pranks avenue wil then to tn Fear toa, Lane begned ine in ara ie children : Latham caught’ hel she ‘oguld 43, for sl ook men had for thelr Ilves, he playform was constructed largely Amn of 2 by neme, Re fogether Jensthw! had, t the Des lice say. been built lunaee mane soeree, of the Loinox Haldeman Company, sub-| him. nek bath oe contractors who have charae of the interior decor clears Uo ‘About one hundred plasterers and! Mron Nay out my wl laborers were at work tn and about 4 Soul: say wee ia? her. She seemed daxed, 2 een a ‘applied | to dome when the Rea y for warrante Ki thelr arr from: tha eattolding wiih 1 ‘s sata. termined to release my Wwite m i square o1 Kas this fan Influence over you?" mon hed eee asked the ate of. it Fibres, incorrect when the Slat oe Hs se sit was the induance Pf dove only, ‘ani bodies of the vice 5 fitns were recovered. only him, and OTR ete leave him while ant he wants me with hy Flow about you PRINCE HENRY’S SON DEAD.|™ ee ben en the should censure the gas companies, One %|thing seems to be certain, that the| !elp-—-Ferale Prussian Roxalist’s ¥ cause of those accidental asphyaiations | H*!P—Male Bey Had Been Mi) Sey Fibres pe | alther » poor quality of gas.or a low | Houses, Hoome ani KIBL, Germany, Feb. 2—Prince | with Re | preawui Bight ght cages are dus directly Pla ha fe Henry, the MA eee of Erines oF. indirect poor Henry of Pi M. to. | She. “The jury rough | ui ‘® Yerdict consur- | Real Bvtate 16 as aan yoare old and’ hed h were in the mapank For Sale... om: Bo Tate, Coroner’s Jury Censures the Monopoly Which Has Fur- nished Such Poor Gas or Low Pressure. . Coroner Scholer in addressing 0 jury this afternoon sitting €o asce: cause in nine accidental death: “Out of these nins cages olght are due the poor quality of it!uminating gas foram by the gas companies, )- luminating gas continues to collect ita victims. It is @ disgrace that there hae been no Improvement & the quality of the Kan furnished. “The jury should look Into this mat- ter and {f they find that the deaths have been due to the poor gas the: wee CUTICURA Soap, Ointmentand Pills the World's Greatest Skin Cures, PRICE THE SET $I Complete Treatment for Every umour, from Pimples to Scrofula. ‘The agonizing itching and burning of the skin, as in eczema; the frightfal scaling, ag in psorinsis; the loss of halr and crusting of the scalp, as in scalled head; the facial disfigurement, 8 in pimples and ringworm; the awful suffering of infants and the anxiety of worn-out parents, as in milk crust, tet- ter and salt rheum, all demand a rem- Exchanges Ratifications with) REI e Jantle and Pacific oceans was concluded | | edy of almost superhuman virtues to successfully cope with them. That Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills aro such atands proven beyoud all donbt. No statement is made regarding them that ia not justified by the strongest evidence. The purity and sweetness, the power to nflord immediate relief, tho certalnty of «peedy and permanent cure, the absolute safety and great economy, have made them the stand- ard skin cures and humour remedies of the civilized world. The grandeat testimonial that can be offered ihe Caticura remedies Is their world-wide sale. doe to the persona recommendations of those who have used them. From a small beginning in the simplest form, inst prejadice and opposition, againat monled hosts, countlovs rivals, and trade Indifference, »/ Cuticura remedies have become thes greatest curatives of their time, “i in fact, of all time, for nowhere in tl history of medicine is to be foun another approaching them in popularity and 4 Ip every clime and with every people they have met with the same reception. 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