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paympathy. i; > & york, this city next Monday, F for opening on time. U >) Btruck. vision can be made in the emergency. TIE UP SCHOOLS. between fifty and sixty onstruction ju Greater Nev be unadle to provide for the ~~ they had counted on . ‘This will leave the problem of pro Be Ahlldren as diMevit of solution as it Shas been for several years past Brainard, “4 Delay Public Library. Whe strike will also detay (he work on the now Public Library In the time limit set by with 4 fs believed. Th ‘ city in its con hers expires on Avg. -]. The b ry © Told by Log of an Old Iron " {Bark That Is Now in the Erie | Basin. Hare tant ttle old-fashioned tron k Ladstock, of Liverpool, now on he’s Ary-dock, in the Erie Basin, Brooklyn, came through a tumultuous] | Passage from Peru, feeling the violen “Of the Horn the wind increased to a and rolled heavily, shipping a ty tonnage of water. ing hail, snow flurries and rain, the engaged in one long struggle with 2 squalls hurled themselves \ wring iron hull, whics had to tyclone was now screeching through coidage. bending the spars and ing yards mn. The tops of| ds of leaping green) pO deck plates, burying! ehip’s hull co Wali | eine decks wero impassable even ta) < Tate's cat, whieh had a sailor's| 4 it of walking through water. forvard the « boomed with terrifyin 4 the for 1 ‘ecast! scuttle to bil | Serb Whe gait tops’! and the fore royal Wurst from their gaskets, ang forall Second were less than rice The hands VEAL T P.M. the ship seemed suddenly | With roar and bang the tremendous sea box and fi nda of fou the evening down'at before the wind, as «he wAt daviight Capt. Milburn « Paightening up. He found t g00n pump UP through the trades of the hothing happened more tragic} ™F the death of Mi Of Sandy! was Who was poisoned by cating dnt , —— NAN KILLED BY FA... VERNON, N. Y., Ava. 6 orders, ot John Ute, was kitle Work on a new bullding at the St Lineoln and Park aveny * Ae 1 street, children, H SIDES PREPARING FOR LOGKOUT AND STRIKE Bu Iding Trades Employers Bar Out _, Eight Unions, and the Nine Remain- - ing Unions Will Call Off Their Men _ © 35,000 Men Involved, -? Bmployers and employees in the building trades are busy to-day pre- om paring for the combination lockout and strike which {s to be inaugurated on Monday, Lockout orders have been issued by the Employe: against eight unions, members of the Building Trades Alliance, thus and the nine remaining unions in the Alliance will strike on Monday , ‘This is the point on which the struggle will be fought out—the sympa- 4 emetic strike. The Employers’ Association, through Lewis Harding, Chair / ) man of the Publicity Committee, renewed to-day its assertion that {t has ? Bo intention of enforcing the open shop rule in New York, WEINSEIMER KEEPS OUT OF SIGHT. “What we are locking fur is the continuance of our arbitration agree- it,” said Mr. Harding. ‘All we want from the unions is continuous A , 80 that we may complete our contracts on time.” i, Philip Weinseimer, the new labor leader who # in charge of the men , & this struggle, is keeping out of sight, Whatever his plans they are held + $m bis own possession. His lieutenants say that he goes into this struggle * better prepared than any leader has ever been in a similar contest in New. ade BY OF 12 PE MD LAL |Guy Carleton Holt, Son of Actors and Namesake of a Writer, Shows Remarkable Ability and Technical Skill. ADAPTS SHAKESPEARE TO UP-TO-DATE TOPICS, His Latest Production Is a Clever Satire on Modern So- ciety Called “Dunsby’s Marsh; or, The Tale of a Frog.” A twelve yearold boy who would rather write dramas or sit poring over & volume of Shakespeare than go out with other boys to play tennis or ball has been arousthg the interest of the theatrical and litesary summer*colony of Elmhurst, L 1. He ts Guy Carleton Holt- end as be 1g the namesake of the pleywright, Henry Guy Carleton, he thinks that he, too, has a right to try his hand at writing plays, This youngest dramatist yet die covered is the son of Actor Edward WILL NOT HAMPER SUBWAY. a At Mr. McDonald's offices it was announced that the Subway would be|periods during a few weeks, with a _ In addition to the unions already put under the ban by the employers, ), be other has been added to the list. This is the Felt and Waterproofin ‘Workers’ Union, members of which, employed on the Trinity Butlding, | entire work was @ correct rendering of * The Brotherhood of Painters are not included in the lockout notice. They ‘Bre still at work in the subway, having returned at the last moment. They Will hold a mecting to-night at Cooper Union to discuss the question of making common cause with the Amalgamated Painters, | two unions have been at war for some time it is not believed by the em- | ployers that the Brotherhood of Painters will vote to go out. . The lockout edict of the employers includes a radius of twenty-five miles from the City Hall. If it becomes effective it will Lave the effect of barring 21,000 school Adildren from their privileges unless some extraordinary pro- Inasmuch as the At tlie office of the Superintendent of School Buildings it was sald to-day school bulldings, or additions, are in course of York, Of these, eighteen, providing sittings for 21,000 children, were to have been finished in September, on of the work willl ing is now o Gelayed and the schoo! authorities will | other It Will be months before it ts fin- ished, even If unaffected by the atrike. It ts believed an applic Viding sittings for all the public school] made to the courts fur an extension the second on of Carrere & (astings, architects for the building, though technically pires 0% to expire unul A of construction in Bryant Park,| work Was delayed a the contract ex- Wally 4 shoud year by litigatio: Tf the marble cutters ana tp re he general strike now butldirg trades the library wilt be held up tndefinitely. wo ¢ TOW WAVE HIT CARS COLLIDE W THESHPLAOSTOCK. SHOPPING OSTALT Rough Rounding of the Horn Women Get a Bad Scare and a Few Bruises in Trolley Crash at Twenty-third Street and Sixth Avenue. There was a collision at Twenty-third street and Sixth avenue this afternoon yecars of the Sixth enue line, caused by the mistake of Bend of many an uprising of the sea, | {fh itchman In awitching « northbound etween two troll street just as a wy gale, and the compact vessel! qsyn southbound car came switchman mist ar for a Seventh avenue k the north. ander strenuous press of storm and] w), Twenty-third street. Motorman Joon canvas and ge Wille the surri-} Sullivan of the north-bound car started ahead and didn't notice the open switch, the ponderous bombardm M ck Hogan of the other Sullivan's car was al also started ahead. ivan's car went | to the southbound track shaken up, but no one was Mia, Della Wheaton, ired and Twentieth 4 im under the poop dodger for safety. | fright 8 were floc without intermis-| 14 4 from noon until § P.M All braces) /? — 4 pyasing gear were washed adr | should Bi at the base of a tidal wave. ana} f 4 man in a big red Ler up and Invited her to be carried to a doctor's. | hed over the poop. cr In the | & She ation and when | accepted the inv considerable er got} an ambulance in the jaz t \bout| Was n wit to traMfc © MRS, MIL an ten minutes delay ES BODY IN VAULT, Vive Generals Among Those Who Were Pellbearers, WASHINGTON down The body of | undergoing many” trials andl yr weer 6 wife of the for- | to-day to the where commit Ins were placed where they wil rest servation| Holt, and lives with his mother, Mrs. There are divergent estimates of the number of men who will be |Adele Durand Holt, Merself a Iiterary 1) involved in the lockout and strike, It 1s probable that about |YCms 424 4 former well-known act- © 6,000 men »wil| drop their tools on buildings :tn course of construetion in ress, at Elmhurst. Two years ago, during the coal strike, the boy surprised his family one day by coming down from the garret, where he had been secluded for various remarkable up-to-date version of the “Merchant of Venice." The ten-year- ‘Jold author had called h:e adaptation the “Merchant of New York,’ and the the play so far as meter and sense was concerned that showed an astounding famjliarity with Shakespeire's text and the condition of the labor situation as well Poet as a Child, and write, which was when most chil- dren are playing with building blocks, thig youthful dramatist poured forth stories and poems, many of them hav- ing deep thoughts that are worthy of a mind much more matured, At present he is at work on a clever satire on modern society called “Dunsby's Mareh; or, The Tale of @ Frog.” Like his favorite author, Kipling, this twelve-year-old writer shows in hia writing a technical knowledge of everything he writes about, In his ‘ale of a Frog” his knowledge of frog life, the vegetation of the marshes, is that of @ young naturalist, In the Frog drama the characters are: Ernest Pembroke, a man; Sir Richard Croaker, a frog, Horace Tadpole, His Majesty of Dunsbys Marsh; Lieut, Wi and other frogs. In the scenario the young dramatist gocs Into elaborate detal!, and the clever humor and the hits on mode society's frailties, sham# and pretense would inspire eavy in the breast of Clyde Fiteh or Henry Guy Carleton himself. In “The Merchant of New York" the characters are: Antonio, Andrew Car negie; Bassanio, Mr. Nit Cash; Solanio, Reggie § Vanderbi Salernio, Mark Twain; Gratiano, Mr. Dooiey; Lorengo, Rockefeller, Jr, Duke of Venice, Will» fam Travers Jerom Prince of Mo- rocco, British ¢ i Prinee of Ara gon, Prince of Blam, Shylock, Isaac Cohen; Tubal, Mr. Threeballs, a pawn- + Portia, Miss Haseoal, who has s, Rebecca, Cohen's daugater. etc. Time, during coal strike, Pia New York Boy Dramatiat's Hamor, A few extracts from fest scene of “The Merchant of N York" give an idea of young Dramatist Holt'’s adapta- ton (Enter Carnegi¢, Mark Twain and Reggie) CARNEGIE—/The truth je, J don’t know way It makes me tired, and it makes you tired, too, I suppose, but to tell me what it ls— That's up to you. MARK--Your mind t busy with your ibrar che Wherever they are eatablished In cition of towns, wheraln You have invested most of your money, Ld play @ quiet game or two To win or lone, aa |t happens. MARK—An, but, Regele, you will understand | That Andy ‘playa not 49 good @ hand As you Hesides, you know the the cope do niingle In And w us with rubberings, Again, when Dooley and Andy meet, the following adaptation of the Bard of Avon is given ure you look all bunged up, on Ad, the weight of knowledge ie enough to crush you. Where every man must do his turn, And haa not made a nit j theatrical managers and stars mer at Elmhurst say young leaat of his admirers is Henry Guy Carleton, who takes a deep interest in the boy's development. HS HP BY FL (Special to The Evening Wort ) NEWPORT, Aug, 6—Jonn Jacob As- tor is Ul in Bis villa here with an ia- jury to hip. The injury, while not serious, is painful, and will prevent him from being about for several days, While walking along the ocean front Mr. Astor stepped upon a stone, turned s ankle and thrown to tne rl bis Dip against an: ‘ walk call a conveyance and is home tions are feared, and it is i be about in a few days, a | No con thougtst b Pallbearers were Gen. James H. V. Summer, Gen. Wilson, Gen. E. 3 " Baird. Gen, R. M | SWEET SPRT 0] Huggins, Geo. G. W skull, Oster-| O'Reilly, Colgate Hoyt, Frank Wibor He and Henry C. Rouge, Secretary Ta: was present Ex-Senat Vest Near Death, ‘3, Mo, Aug. 6.—Ex- Senator George G. Vest was failing per- could not survive many PAINE HTS UC AT ACLS Corteze, Charged with Writing | There He Was, as Natural as “Black Hand’ ’ Letter, Says He Is Prosecuted Because of Knowledge of Swindle. Ever since he was old enough te read! The examination of Pasquale Corteze accused by Floreno Copporell, an Ital jan saloon-keeper, of No. before Magistrate Breen in the Centre Street day, brought out charges of naturalization of the Equitable Life Assur- ance Soclety of $8,000 by tha complain- ant and his brother. It was charged by the complainant's! ty. women and girls came along they Frederick Goldsmith was a member of! over the shoulders of the men at what threatened to Kil! Copporelll uniess he letter Was Dio- Juce@ in court and no dental was made as to the defendant Writing tt, Gave Marked Money, gave him $100 en that after the receipt had called at his saloon and demanded the mouey in marked bills and then had him arrested you have known this def tness admitted leme about ten years, him once to stand spou who- died re- Mr, Barra continued Feplied the compiainaht, “What “You collected $8,000 Insurance?” “And this defendant parsed the insur- ance doctors as That is not true,” replied Copporelll, urance Fraad, pose of all this?" Y Magistrate Mreen, “We will show, Your Honor,” Lawyer Herman J. “What is the pi 1 urance people, Coppor- Lawyer Goldsmith obfected to the troduction of the testimony, but Mag- istrate Breen allowed it that Corteae had written a letter threatening to inform Equitable Life Society of the al- fraud, but the defense produced In answer to other questions Coppor. throwing too many pam: |¢lli admitted having ha ¥ | Cor "oy itten to Superin ctlons Morgan that CARNEGIE—~The world ts but a vaudeville! eae, Dooley Voltizen. | 'Vnia Is wetting too complicated,” re- marked Magistrate Breen this hearing until which time | will \ttorney present.” was remanded to the Tombs of 81,500 to await the result of Monday's heart SERGEANT SHEL 8 E-AGTATE of No, % Nassau wi have tie District Holt has a great future, and not the| COL, ASTOR HURT word from Albany that Court of Appeals had granted an ord: me of the last resignation to tial campaign [on a queation of law. ‘Oroken” throu: tivities of the Pankhurst Sox The appeal was ma suppress a disonterly-house al! have been conducted by Laura ® well-known character, the desk at the Tenderloin police when he was Several other officers wer from the force at the same time as Shiels, but nane of them been, reinstated. Ghiels is now said to y, having amassed a ' cepiibly to-day. and it wae believed be! able fortune through real est hours. = tons, GUY CARLETON HOLT, WHO IS POET AND PLAYWRIGHT AT AGE OF 12. GIRLS OT APEX AT CONAN CUP Life, Pulling a Splinter from His Foot—Started for a Swim Without a Stitch On, About 9 o'clock to-day, at the corner vf Twenty-third street and First avenue, when crowds of shopgirls were coming » from the ferry from Williamsburg on their way to work, Polleeman William Flynn, of the East Twenty-second street station, noticed a crowd, wholly of men and boys, on the northwest corner, This was out of his beat, but the other officer did not seem to be around, eo he saun- tered over. He noticed that when any of! ‘ould be sufficiently curious w peek was apparently exciting their interest, but when they got a look they would anddenty hurry away with prim coun- tenances and elevated chins, Curious to know the meaning of these things, Flynn | took a look The Cutest Little Thing. In tho centre of the crowd, sitting J upon the sidewalk, Wow a six-year-old hoy, chubby ance, with d Cupid-like in appear- t same sult which he wore when he came into the world, He was calmly removing @ splinter from hig feot and seemed to be the most unconcerned of any ene present, Fiynn seized him and bore him off, kicking and indignant, to the station, There he exp'ained that when he awoke this morning and looked out upon the river it occurred to him that a swim would be the most delightful + thiog In the world at that particular drother, wien, in} moment. His name, he sald, was Joseph O'Hara, and he lived at No, 602 First avenue, only a little way from the ‘water, Tut Joseph had learned from sad expertence that if ho went to the dock at Twenty-third street and left lis clothes there, when he came out of the water he would be almost sure to find that some youngster had either stoion his clothes, or else, after qe time-honored fashion of boys, tied them in such hard and wet knots, that he could not wear them. 80 he deter- mined to do without clothes this time. Escaping the eye of his mether, wh was ih the kitchen, Joseph etole down- stairs and out into the street. Few noticed him unt! at the corner named he caught the splinter In his foot and sat down’ to pull ft out. Mpther to the Rescue, Soon after he had been taken to the station, Mrs, O'Hara arrived, looking for her son, and found him, seated on the table in the reserves’ room, tu the same state of unblushing nudity, and. ente ng and being entertained POPULAR-PRCED (CAPT. NALLY'SSON TTAGGAAT OUT OF \ THEATRES OPEN) TO BE ARRESTED MURPHS FHT «. List To-Night with “The Black} Policeman Stadtmiller’s Ante- Patti Troubadours” as the! Mortem Statement, Issues Attraction. —_—— “WORKING GIRL’S WRONGS” AT THE THIRD AVENUE. Order-for Alleged. Assailant. DYING MAN OECLARES YOUNG NALLY SHOT HIM. “Bob” Graham to Appear in| Alleges that, with Loud Cries, “Piff, Paff, Pout”? — “San Toy” to Be Revived at Man- He-Jumped on Him, and that Directly Afterward He Was hattan-with James T. Powers! Wounded, they are meny!—will be renewed at the Third Avenue Theatre next week: ‘The. People’s Theatre, on the Bow- ery, will be under the stremuous reign of the “Queen of the White Slaves.” ‘The Eternal City” will remain at the Academy of Music for at least three weeks. “Pitt, Paff, Pouf,” at the Casino, and “The Maid and the Mummy,” at the New York, will keep the lights burning along Broadway. In the Casino show Robert E, Graham will be put in the part recently vacated by Thomas Q. Seabrooke, On the Roofs There will be no change in the bill at Hammerstein's Paradise Gardens, where the features include Pewitt, the mysterious face; Spadoni, the can- non-ball juggler; the Gasch Sisters, in thelr head-balancing specialty; Willy Zimmermann, in his imitations of famous composers, and the ‘Parsi- falia” burlesque, introducing Eleanor Falk and Josephine Sabel, New acts at the New York Roof will tnelyde Sinon and Parif, “The Droil Greeks," who will make their uret American appearance in living {llue- trations of classic Greek tableaux and burlesques of the same; Mme, Schell and her African Mons, Fraster’s Inter national Dancers and Frank Whitman, the dancing violinist. Among the at- traotions retained will be Guerrero, in her pantomimie performance of “Car- men," and Ned Wayburn’s giris, “A TAttle of Everything,” with Fay Tompleten and Peter F. Dalley, will continue its successful career at the Now Ameterdam Aerial Gardens, In the autumn it will go to the Broadway Theatre for four weeks. In the Vandeville Houses, At Ptoctor's Twenty-third Street Theatre the headline attraction will be Edward R, Mawson and company ta “On the Verge,” Karsey will intro- duce a musical novelty, and the Aerial Shaws will be among the other per formers. At Proctor’s Fifth Avenus Theatre the stock company will present “Caprice,” and the Kiltie Trio will be among the vaudeville offerings, At Proctor’s One Hundred and Twenty- fifth Street Theatre a farce comedy, “Who Is Brow will be offered by the stock company, and Libble Blondel, ainger, will head the vaudeville con- tingent. “The Boys in Blue” spectacle will ba the chief atteactiqn at Keith's. Among others, the bill offer James Thornton, monologists; Cariton Macy and com- pany in “A Timely Awakening;” Bea- trice Moreland, monolo; the Three St. Felix Sisters in a comedy skit; Potter and Hart, acrobats; Dixon and ‘Holmes in a character sketch, and Thompson's Dogs. Jewell's Automatic Electric Manikin Theatre will remain at Tony Pastor's for another week, and among the pew acts will be O'Brien & Buckley, in “A Cyclone of Fun," Fiske & McDonough, in thelr new sketoh, “‘Brocky’s Baby; Crawford & Manning, bleck-face come dla. Madge Fox, “The Filp-Flap Lady: Danny Mana & Co,, in “Mandy Hawkins," and the Lovitts, European novelty acrobats, 8. G, Brinkley, whose beard is seven feet long, will be the main attraction at Huber'’s Museum, By the Sad Sea Waves, “San Toy," the charming Chinuse musical comedy, will be given @ now production by Manager John C, Fisaer gt the, hattan Beac: re. James T. Powers will ag be ceen 9 BS, yert he played during the run land others 1n, the compan; be George K. Fortescue a t MeKinney. by the officers there. His mother i creded to “wallon” him thoroug! and then wrapping him in her apran, she carried him back home. RECEIVER NAMED OR BUTTON TRUST 2 An involuntary petition in bank- ruptey was fled to-day against the United Button Company, of No, 603 Broadway. The petitioning creditors are officers of the company. The ‘but- ton company is a Delaware corporation factoried in Springfield, Mass., Easthampton, Mass, and in Boston, Its Habilities are estimated at $750,40 and assets at $560,000. Peter Alexander was appointed receiver with a bond of $50,000, The $4,000,000 Button Trust, which be- gan business two years ago, came to rief over & note of $25,000 given to fheodore M. Poe. When the Hote ey an Ww esented at the Citizens’ Central Na- id was not - “evied, ‘andthe trust ent's dis of fireworks in Mer the spectable of ‘Decatur Beach, after the 4) and the blowing up of « Philadel: poe, will bad on & more el te scale than usual. on Beach Music Hall, Rey Ce iho a & first-c! - aren will offer another ‘exceRent bill next week, orrison's Theatre, Rockaway pean a Us the Elinore cities, PL, ‘Anna Fenw' Johnstone Ben- Meet any nereatt the 0 ing howe Juna Park's elght Eras binds wi combing in an afternoon concert on ni the balconies at the entrance Park. ‘To-morrow's selections from Wagner; Monday's, Tuesday's. Reethoven: Bach; Thursday's, Chopin: Saturday's A now fireman is to be added to “Fighting the Flames’ jv Dreamland, This new fireman, known by the namo of Roger, is the bie elephant that per- forma several times a day in the animal arena at the Bostock shew. Roger has already learned the use of the hose, | but has had much diMoulty jn dfrect: ing the etream of water upon the burn- ing bullding. | In Bostock’s animal arena Robert Macpherson has a group of six lions, headed by a big binck-maned fellow he calls Nero, that do all sorts of things In the way of pyramids, and groaptn, ‘One large lion ea tight auction Soler’ ete of vitent fected by Pt eKane, of fam Nally, on the streagth-of Stadtmil- ler'a statgment. Capt. Nally is away on -his vacation, however, and #0 far the police have been unable to find his son, Stadtmiller is dying at St. John's Hospital. Btadtmiller's statement 1s as follows; “I went to Plannery's cafe, at One Hundred and Sixteenth street and Eighth avenue, on Tuesday, Aug, % to get something to eat. Two of Flan- nery's friends sat down at the table with me, Billy Nally, son of Capt, Nally, was in there with some friends of his. They came over.to my table and started a quarrel with Flannery's friends who were sitting with me I saw there was going to be some trouble and I started to leave. Flannery's friends asked me to protect them and’ escorted them out of the place, Says Nally Th: Him, “On the stoop at the side entrance Nally, who followed us, pushed two jadies off the stoop, I sakd to him: ‘That's not right.’ “He sald: ‘If you don’t shut up I'll knock you down, too.’ “Then I went to One Hundred and Nineteenth street and Eighth avenue ane feft Flannory's friends there, They went away, They managed to escape Flagpery and his gang. “On Thursday night I was In the Casino, At about 11 o'clock four friends of Nally came in the dance hall, About the same tUme Nally walked in from the barroom. Nally Jumped on Him, “Just then a dance struck up and I watching the dancers when Nally came over and jumped on me, knocked me down and sat on me and shouted t his friends: “Come on, boys, this is the man, Do him.’ “Then L heard some pistol shots. One of the bullets entered my back. I be- came unconacious. That {s all I know.” Stadtmiller's condition became so ser!- ous to-day that the physiclans at the hospital sent for the Coroner to take the ante-mortem statement. They say that the man will die, The bullet not yet been located. Until | Thursday William Nally owned 4 saloon next to the West One Huhdredth street station, It was then ald that the saloon had been sold io a man by the name of Lee. SHNTH'S QUT WLORANCROWOS Assembly District Leader Keahon Asgures His Friends that Next Tuesday’s Affair Will Be a Big Success, The annual outing of the Tammany’ organization of the Seventh Assembly. District will bo Deld next Tuesday at Witsel’s Pavilton, College Point, L. 1. Leader Patrick H. Keahon has assured his friends that the outing will be a success in every particular, A large number of tickets has been sold, and it will take @ emall fleet of steamers aud barges to carry ajl of the faithful to the grove who mean to ype the direction of .__Keahon, andl gested by his able Heutenants, the evening parade will be $ wares of tri- Smph from the boat to the club house. titer ® teh there wr oy fase co ducted" under the rules of the Amateur Mone eae of the/ affair are in qharge Tick H. Keahon, chairman. of the Committee of Arrangements; John H. Little, chairman of the Reception Com- mittee, and Edward W. Hart, chairman of the Committee on As tl are many promising ath- letes living in this Assembly district, It is expected that some keen competitions will occur im the games, 7 of the, young men of the distrivt already have fone into training, POOR BOOTBLACK Tony Gaglialdo, a bootbiack, killed himself to-day because his old mother is starving, and thre has been so much rainy weather he Couldn't earn enough to keep them both alive When he took a dose of polson he hoped that after he was dead charitable persons would look after his mother. It wasn't very brave of Tony, but he! General Alarm ge was so wretched and hungry and heartsick that he couldn't keep up the struggle. ‘Tony and his widowed mother lived at No. & Mulberry street, and he has|!" and ‘Com wi corner brushes Shane and Ford siceat, creat OF West i outook at ¢his time ts (or teary, i} the stuff will be bett: The Star to Be Added to the) Coroner Soholer, on Strength of] The NationaDemooratio Chait» man Refuses to interfere in Any Way in the Row Between Tammany and MoCarren, BURY THE HATCHET IS HIS ADVICE TO*FACTIONS., Scrap to a Finish Next-Year,4f You Must, He Says, but Keep Quiet During National Came , paign. Joe Bailey, of Texas, to the fightag Democrats of New York to-day ts to bury their differences until after deo tion then sail into one qnotier Again, if-they mugt, and fight 40 @ fin- ish, Neither of these national n mean to interfere in any way “ith local situation, they say,, as ence in Iccal fights by outsiders variably ends in making # ai worse and atirs up the resentmentegagit factions, Mr, Taggart, got up early 4oday started out with National Uwy ‘Woodsbn to find a sultable plate to establish the Eastern headquactere for the campaign. They looked ovea number of places and retumed cowie =f h Hoffman House for luncheon, “We haven't found a place yet,” sal Mr. Taggart, “but I am not discouraged, A lot of places were offered to us, bud my objection to them all is that they ame not commodious enough, What we wang is a big, Foomy place where all can have lenty of space, not a lot of lit! piss, Between now and next ‘Tuned expect to have just such a place, bu iv admit that [ haven't’ found i Mr. Taggart was asked what-he to do sheet straightening out the situation, he said. “That will trom “Nothing,” . Steelf out in time, It is not for me to / how They tell the Domocrats of New York they ghall settle their troubles, will attend to that and be on deck to support the ticko: on election day all right, I am not doing any worrying wbout that, I have no conferences on to-day and know of nothing of im tance in politics until the Execulive Committee meeting on Monday.” Mr. Saggart emphatically denied he had an appointment to meet Charids FP. Murphy to-day, Senator Joe Balley, who is Known to tke 2 keen interest in the Murphy-McCarren row, sald to ag sivening World reporter; Let Local Men Settle Fight, “This local tion is one whiel people of New York can tke rr tee themselves out outside interference, 3 rience ‘8 that such interference in ably engenders resentment, New York's Democrits are well abio to tak care of (hemselves. An appeai by ti local leader’ the Naticnal Commits tee might r in some advice being ven, but, a8 I say, I favor letting New ‘orkers attend to their own business, “For myeelf, I will not be « party to f 4 v any individual or committee ‘fe Hide senping in ahd presuming to ede / just the differences here. If | gave ar ‘ advice to the contestants at all, it woul be to bury thelr differences untij aft election, When they can resume tasm, Mf they must, without detriment to the national ticket. T think that Is the view of all the leaders from outkide of thig ) vacation, to attend. GALWAY MEN WILL“, \ PICNIC TO-MORROW They Will Go to Riverview Grove, tn the Hudson, and Enjoy , Thelr Annual Outing —Proe gramme of-Sports, Many of the brainiest and: most-schok arly cftisens of New York will be out of towh té-morrow, for every Galway man has arranged to go to the picniq of the Galway Men's Social and Beney. «) olent Association at Riverview Grove, on the Hudson, Mayo men wilt noteae barred, if they keep quiet about it, ‘The association will travel to River. view Grove on a big steamboat and barges, leaving the foot of West Thirty. Afth street at 11 o'clock and the foot of West One Hundred and Twenty-ninth ptreet at 1290 o'clock. There will bow programme of gam it the grove, The oMfcers of the Galway Men's Ag. sociation are: Patrick Lally, President; Thomas J. Keating, Vice-President; * Patrick T. White, Treasurer; Alfred B, O'Reilly, Financial Secr iT. Quina, Recording Secretary; T. J. Br Corresponding Secretary; T. Walsh Bere geant-at-Arms, and P. J. Cody, M. Cane nolly and T. McHugh, Trustees. Col. Cody will hi hments arrang: direction of the than that w! is dispensed in the Doxology ann , Tony couldn't find customers. Yeaters day and the day before he didn't earn @ cent, and he and his mother were hungry all day, There wasn’t a crumb in the house this morning, and the | Widowed mother was so weak from gS UP STRUEL | hunger that she scarce! | from her hed. = y crunk So Tony crept out of his roo-n carly and got some poison somewhere When he came back he bent over his mother ¢ and, Kissed. her. but find'couldn't say word, Yet choking He went back to his roc loned door and took the vad be the Mls" mother fou dead before noon, ui & little ees BIG FOUNDRY ABLAZE, nt Ont for Fire im Rochester, fa ROCHRSTERR, N. ¥., Aug 6-6 Rp, | M.—A general alarm has just been rung for a fire in the Co-operative Foun<