The evening world. Newspaper, August 16, 1904, Page 12

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” of Brooklyn, Who Is d by a Literary Spirit, is Advice on How to Get Rid of Midnight Visitor. REGARDED AS A CERTAIN REMEDY. ful Men Think There Be Something Real in the Mystery, but Majority Agree __ it? og iceageha to lay one if you ahe of him? Mien had any personal experl- with a disembodied spirit? ‘Were “ever favored with an introducthin | grim, gaunt spectre of one who : forsaken earthly activities and, like ' eat, spent ite days in semanolence fo up and down at night? 5) Af you did, as you are alive yet, favor hl “poor Brooklynite, an amateur tn the. Dusiness, with your advice Ad counsel on how to lay a ghost. ) A Uterary Gh + He writes: i ‘of your readers kindly tell me ew & ghost? A mysterious spec- ‘haunts my house, Exactly on the roke of midnight « velled figure er- Sepa my library, selects a bovk from the helt and proceeds to read. ade # of my family who have seen B® spectre, and who are nearly fright- Gut of their wits, can corroborate Matement. I,don't want to move, ‘Will have to do so unless I can paren’ Ray 3 TRE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, AUGU WANT TO LA¥ A GHOST?—HERE'$ HOW—TOLD BY PRACTICAL MEN WHO HAVE DEALT WITH SPIRITS IN ALL THEIR DEADLY' SHAPES. Hite heteed eds tecesesnossenets SES EDOOS CHES 4S 45900494645 5 HEL DEEDS ODEED HOE $4 4444-846 HF109 OOSHOO4 sume way to get rid of the thitig. HAUNTED, Haunted does not say so, but it umed that hi is confined ‘0 oo Peale he is interested Boott ratt,’ "sald a ay Lo 14 Kind of books. tn joean’t vapors over a now adowy reanimatl too deeply buried in the arth, in their face ol art Phantoms which at night terrl- spectator as authentic "I \ ‘a 4 either an illus! Playing 8 trick on nin and ‘ would cate . whole family is ter- it, First, let him get some ng about It and sea anything, If several impar- ons see it, if it proves to be a @ man of nerve might cap- Or @ network of electrical lied in the library would ederick Jatnes j d james Kuge! * riAge, member 6 AL) ‘american Wns: pt jation, t Meader t Heaten ‘and Instructor in 3 at Columbia, sald: metaphysician is pose t ho say they have are not lying. They could easily others, which explains the fact whole family ja in terror.” Mig Just’ as for the fanaticism of ite are creatures of the Cac ica a delety. for Prychical Re: Brooklyn man might not vd his ase) but It through ported thi the 8 for P.R. he will case exactly like his lalned.”* Simon, the famous nerve a ce to this troubled man is go to No, 3 Mulberry street < a jt to carry a pistol; that r lor @ bondsman, buy a ®- ‘eal fevolver of standard make, put he revolver in his right hand at the it of 12 o'clock, ty elbow on a trigger Sorry, BuT I HAVE NOTHING BUT THe LATEST NOVELS! ‘Ani!! He A BRICK-Lavar! CAGE IT FOR CONRY ISLAND Pur THe WORARY im THe weed BRODKLIN ASTOR DUNT VON ARNG AND U2 MEN LOST IN BATTLE WL BEEPOTED '! Washington Decides that Rec- ord of Rev, Charles A. Bur- leigh Hart |s Against Him and He Cannot Stay Here. Instructions were recelved here to-day from Washington by the Immigration Bureau at Bilis Island to deport Rev. Charles Alfred Burleigh Hart, rector of the Eplscopal Church of St. Mary arrested on Thursday last because he had been convicted of felonies In Eng- land, and, as a tcket-of-leave man, cannot be harbored by this country. ‘The minister will be sent to Great Britain either Saturday or Saturday week Hart submits to the decision of tha Department of Labor and Commerce) without a word. He knows that Wash- 4p- | ington is in possession of a complete record of the offenses of which he was occasion being sentenced to eighteen months’ imprisonment and the second to penal servitude for life. He wae re- Jeased under the good conduct act which governs in the cases of fe-termers. Island it has been found necessary to place him in solitary confinement. He peculiar conduct toward other persons | 11» ang 160,000 sheep, goats, etc, The approaches to the plain were dimMficult | ah passes, so the Germans had severe work forcing them. The numberr of any privileges, When the minister was | Germans is not accurately known, but as nine companies and four and one-| brought with with eome irregular troops, were engaged the total probably | telacted detained there made it impossible for the officials to grant him his liberty or first put in the room which he now occuples he sent a strong protest to Assistant Commissioner Murray, “T am not used to such bedding” he wrote, “and I demand that I be shown sides, it is lonely in these quarters. “Tell Mr. Hart," the Commissioner's word went back, ‘that unless he keops put him in @ cell without any bedding. day that he pitied Hart. He does not think that the man can be in hie right senses or he would not act as he does. When the minister was informed of the decision handed down at Washington and the Instructions to deport him, be abide by it However, I have written to Washington and I have told the of- clals there that It is all a mistake; ali od German Troops Fought All Night and * Goon ~ignr!- Ths HIGH CLapg GHOST,-I An}! TWO CARD SHARPS OW KRON PRINZ Hurried Away from Ship on Which They Cheated One Po- ker Player Out of $100 De- Day with the Hereros, Who Have] spite Posted Warnings. Given Them Much Trouble in Em- pire’s South African Possessions, BERLIN, Aug. 16.—Four columns of German troops attacked the Hereros Magdalen, East New York, who W4*) n4.° Hamakarl, German Southwest Africa, on the night of Aug. 11. with heavy losses. Five German officers, including Count Von Arnim, an were killed, Six officers, among them Baron Von Watter, and fifty-two men were wounded. Two are missing. Thousands of cattle were captured, General Von Trotha, despatohing the particulars of the battle from twice convicted In England, on the frat | tHamekari, adds that his soldiers fought with the greatest barvery. The! fighting continued that night and all next day, The natives were defeated When the Nortn-German Lioyd steam- or Kron Prins Wilhelm docked to-day jtwo men were in a great hurry to | leave the pier. They did not stop to jhave their bagaage passed by the cus- toms officers, but left it behind while | they called @ cab and hurried uptown, ‘When they boarded the ehip at Cher- bourg the captain thought he recog- nized them as ocean card sharps, and | 0f' he was quick to caution them not to 4 nineteen men P!®y poker on board. Signs wore posted {in the amoking-room cautioning passen- gers about playing cards with stran- gers, and stewards constantly kept the pair under eurveillance, But they got into a game of “show down” last night, and after it had| 7 been going an hour one of the players made an outcry that he hed been heated out of $100, That broke up the game, and the two men whom the cap- The natives, who numbered about 6,000 fighting men, under Old Chief tain suspected lost no time in leaving Samuel Maherero, to whom the younger leaders had turned after their the pier before the police could be former reverses, were concentrated in the Waterberg Mountains, With Bince Hart has-been confined on Ellis] heir women, children and flocks they orcupled a plain of meadow land, roughly estimated at 250,000 acres, half battertes, was about 2,000 men, Deserters from the Hereros reported that the arrival’ ite her father. of German reinforcements at Swakopmund caused great depression in the found & 0 the consideration due my position. Be] native camp, Chief Samuel spent much time in having the Bible read to cs him. Gen. Von Trotha doubtless will follow his success and finish the re- o gary oa her t. bellion with the Waterberg campaign, It seems improbable that many of coast for ‘Weetera ‘The assistant commisgioner seid to-| the natives can have escaped through the (erman forces holding the moun. tain passes. on which they had 60,000 head of cat-| ister, was a FATHER WAS BISMARCK’S ENEMY. Count Von Arnim-Schlagenthelm, one of the conservatives In the Reich- stag, came into prominence in 1894, when he took up the cause of his cele- sald: brated father, who was hounded by Bismarck until forced to leave his coun- “[ have no word of protest to utter,| try in exile, The young Count, flerce and flery of temper, sealous of the Whatever the decision may be I shail! goog name of bis family, went so far as to threaten Bismarck with « chal- lenge. All Germany was stirred by that momentous incident, and the Iron Chancellor found himself the centro of many harping criticisms, not only in Baroness von Kettler, whose husband was assassinated in the streets of Peking, where he was the German Min- passenger on her third t to America since her husband's death, on her way to visit her father, Cass Ledyard, President of th i whose J Adie! Central Nome ie in Detroit, The Baroi tie oy iigeim. He ta huge to her by Kalser it from his kennels for the , and she will give Roman, of Dallas, Tex, woman jin the steerage with al children and without money, Fearing that she would be 0. Ree arriys here, . B aa & large collection for her among the first cabin Rossen thus assuring her Jane, pf the Pacific Union, was ‘met Alm down ine bay and eacort. \ 4 eavthe Kron Prins to her dock. LOVE FOR HORSE WAS CHL’ DEATH SCULPTOR SUES MUSEO OFA Biondl, Whose Bronze Group “Saturnalia” Was Rejected by the Metropolitah, Demands $200,000 Damages. ACTION HURT HIM, HE SAYS, TO THAT EXTENT. Work Which Aroused Such a Storm 'of Criticism , Was Brought Here from Buffalo, but Never Put on Exhibition. Ernesto Biondi, the Italian scutptor, STREET CIENT OF ETH WC Trolley Car and Truck CoMide at |Report of Coroner's Piyaiater: Broadway and Broome Street] Weston After Autopsy on fet with Serious Results to Those] Body of Henry. stiller Santer No. 183 Norfolk to St. Vincent's Hos. whose bronze group, the ‘aturaalta,” | pl provoked such a storm of critisism, will affix his name to-day to a complaint which charges the Metropolitan Mu- seum of Art with doing him $200,000 damage, The artist claims that the re- Section of his masterpiece by the e0- oclety and its subsequent confinement in the museum “morgue” worked him that much faterial harm. The Saturnalia was exhibited at the Buffalo Exposition and there attracted | the attention of the trustees and direc- tora of the Metropolitan Museum. It was such @ striking group, so full of thought and seemed 20 to breathe the spirit in which it was conceived that the Metropolitan Museum opened nego- tations for its purchase, At the close of the exposition the bronze was sent to New York and was to have been exhibited in the Met- ropolitan Museum upon the completion Of the eset wing. I nthe store room of sumbered. It has not been opened, Decided It Was tmmoral, ‘When the trustees voted on the mat- ter of acceptance ‘of the statue they came to the conclusion that certain features of It were immoral, and on the whole that the work was not very good art. Their judgment was for a long time suspended, and it was not until the opposition against the bronze was firmly organised by local artists that the final action was taken. Biondi was #0 incensed that he appealed to the country at large and offered to send his group from city to city and let the majority rule. ‘The group recelved the Grand Prix at the Paris Exposition in 19. A replica was bought by the King of Italy id placed in the Museum of Modern Art in Rome. Biondi thinks that this is enough to show that his creation is & work of art. He cannot see how it shocks the moral sense in any way, In fact, he declares that the “woman in the group !s too plethorically clothed,” Ferious at Women Judges, Fuel was added to his fire when he learned that the refusal of acceptance was in @ measure dependent upon the Judgment of three women members of the National Sculpture Society, They made the same kind of opposition to Maomonnies's “Bacohante." The Saturnalia is 4 feet long, 12 feet wide and 61-2 feet high, and weighs 10,000 pou! ‘The group contains ien figures larger than Ie and represents imaginary group in the streets ot Rome at the [east of turnalia, All classes have given themselves over jo the revelry and the feast! A lave, & Senator and @ oriest ad In hand, taking part in en revel. The fig prominent Tt was the shock to the that it ie Suisetors f° oe one representative o1 le- int Rome, and the artist dwelled upon thie feature with strong effect. Biondi has a series of moral grounds on which he rests his conception, but they did not find interpretation when the judges finally vo! upon the ae- ceptance of non-acceptance of t sroup. The action of Bilondi’s attorney, G, R. Hawes, of No, 130 Broadway may be for damages incurred by prevented sales, for damage to reputation and loss of artistic preatige. tion. | ~ OPPENHEIM, CLLINSs. G Final Reduction. The Entire Stock to Be Closed Out Regardless of Cost. Ladies’ Tailored Suits, Suitable for early Fall wear— of Broadcloths Voiles; original prices $50 to $85, 25.00 Ladies’ Tailored Suits, Fall weight materials; original $35 to $50, 20,00 To Close Out $20 LINEN TAILORED SUITS 10,00 $30 TAILORED WALKING SUITS 15.00 $50 TAFFETA SILK TAILORED SuIrs 20,00 $15 & $20 TAFFETA SILK COATS 5,75 & 9,75 $20 RAINPROOF COATS 10.00 $15 COVERT JACKETS—Custom Tailored 7,50 In Addition Will Offer « Broadcloth & Cheviot Walking Skirts Suitable for present wear—also Dress Skirts; original prices $10 & $15......0....055 et Music Campaign Supplement Free with Every Copy of |NEXT SUNDAY’S pear his ‘not.”” 't he let ‘Im read?” asked : “ale probably wants his pretty mind.” raape A fi bricklayer way to lay a ignost fo with & mistake.” ‘his own country, but throughont Europe. Bince his confinement on Ellis Island Count Von Arnim himself told the story of the feud between Bismarck several women, sald to be parishioners , and what led up to it. Count Harry Von Arnim was ¢ of St. Mary Magdalen, have called upon ree be eget Paris after ath was declared. et wes arrested al ‘ leg of Big Truck Animal and , H h . | Ambassad reat ot. 4, eiien' ss pass hin, one “a beget 1874, when fifty years old and criminally prosecuted at Bismarck’s instance Was Crushed Lifeless in pe LOTBINIERE DEAD. ‘woman who accompanied him to the| for the alleged misuse of his official position and embezalement of official Sight of His Mother. ees insaed the Gay of hie arrest. ‘The other | qocuments. He was tried and condomned to two years’ Imprisonment, but Lientenant-Governer of | was a Foung Woman, a dlonde, remark. Switzerland. He died at Nice In May, 1891 for ber. bighly eolored check: managed to escape to . , 1891. eR atom i vere ack arureta ere ee In 1894 Herr Blum published his “Germany in the Time of Bismarck.” ils efit Hanty G. 2019 It was supposed to have been inspired by Bismarck himself, In that book pTatbiniare, Lieutenant-Governor ot BOY DRUNKARDS. it was averred that Count Harry had delayed the payment of the French pBritish Coluinbla, Is dead, aged sixty. war indemnity in 1873 80 as to give him @ good chance for speculation. as ths @aughter of Mr. Ham-|7"° of Them Are Sent Up from| Count Von Arnim first attacked the historian and then Bismarck ip Berlin, Gowen, of Quebec City. and mar.| Ladaashece GERMAN TROUBLES IN SOUTH AFRICA. Magistrate Tighe In the Butler Street + x of | Court, Brooklyn, to-day sentenced two Ever since the beginning of the year Germany has had trouble with t boys to six months In he Kings County | the natives of Germay Southwest Africa. The first concession was pur- chased in 1883 from a Hottontot chief, and ‘p the following year the Ger. Little Josey Ryan Clapsed Fore- - oY Fite of Calling to bis little playmates to look at “pitty ‘orseys,” Josey Ryan, a tod- dier of two years and nine months, wrapped his arms around a foreleg of a big truck horse at Bond and Sackett 5 / | streets, Brooklyn, to-day, and before ‘ Thomas Bassett, who was driving the animad could check It the child was killed, ‘Phe horse was one of a team draw- ing @ truck of brick. Bassett did not know that the Ryan child was in hid way until he heard his cries and those ate, Bhe ts survived 9 Penitentiary for drunkenness. en children, The re- iL FALLS FROM CAR. | Last night at the corner of Columbia] man flag wee hotsted in Angra Pequena, taken lo Yuever for tn- Potat ne ada ene Oe ac ig ing The native tribes which inbabit this country are the Hottentots, Her-| of Josey's playmates as they fled froin iy Injured at J oT a , a. yee and George Tyler, of No, 2% Pacific|reros, Damaras and Ovampos. The Ovampos and the Herreros have dis-| the spot. panic-strick a , street, were trying to stand up when] played the greatest hostility to the German settlers, and they can muster’ nappaned” ts be. faking childs motiee, ; Policeman Hammond found them. They] about twenty thousand fighting men. For several years they have been dow of her home, at No. 20 Bond street, r 4q said 50 many unpleasant things to the| supplied with rifles and have learned their use, iz ar she Z| peliooman tnat ho looked them up after| | The seene Of (Be proeent ostilies te in the eoathers part of Damara- to ald. him, a ge Se i sre ma station.| land, which is the southern northern part of the protectorate. rune wegirtias son coho, Tae MOTIGR ot the, Mutianes te, Jomunty wpe. soppesuant baiwees, Zan. 6 ‘occurred Sat was powerless Br aient ed aie sm the

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