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> MORE WS; | —_— " <€ * interfere with our political identity and TERY Loss Both McMahon and Curry Claim Victory In the Primary Fight In the Seventeenth District of Manhattan, GOV. ODELL’S CANDIDATE LOSES IN TWENTY-FIFTH. _— Old Tammany Leavers Are Re- @ected—The Hot Fight in the Thirtieth Sets Paul Uelfer’s Dog Barking Wisely. Looking as ond as though he hed lot ‘ QB bis polttical prestige, a gold watoh, @ @amond stud and a large sum of @oney, Senator P. H. McCarren ap- eared on the streets of Brooklyn to- day,- From his appearance one would Rever imagine that he had shown him- Gell a real boss by carrying sixteen out @ the ‘twenty-one Assembly Districts fm the borough against the combined Spposition of Tammany Hall and what Femains of the old Hugh MoLaughlin influence. Deputy Fire Commissioner Doyle suc- @eeded in winning out in the Seventh District against MoCarren, though de- Gerted by the most powerfll interests St Coney Island, Sheepshead Bay and Bath Beach. The only consolation Me- Carren can get out of this defeat la the fnet that Doyle won by a reduced ma- ich was to be expected, % feature of the election was the thorough aquelching of Bird 8, Coler, Who lost his own election district, The @entiment of the people was that @ man Who was once a candidate for Governor Ghowed a sense of smaliness by de- Sending into @ district fight. ‘The dav” paid Senator McCarren, “w Vindidation of the attitude of our or; feation in maintaining its right to regu- tate Its own internal affairs and to re- aiét the attempt on the part of Tam- Many Hall to, in any wise, attempt to autonomy. There is no political division in the State of New York or in the United States that will more jealously Suard its right to exercise every politi- cal prerogative than the Borough of Brooklyn, and any attempt on the part of any man or organization outside of this borough to dictate its policy will @lways be vigorously resented, Au fj rsement for Parker, “The victory was in no wise due to By personal stand, because anybody who had taken the attitude I assumed would have found the people of Brook- lyn sustaining hith as well. “I think that this also ma spelled out of the result. Judge rker has been significantly indorsed again by, the people, and we may assume that Brooklyn will give hyn a very large majority.” William A. Doyle's majority was feduced from 2,000 at the primary @lection in March to 235, The otal vote in the three wards for the Doyle ticket was 3,108 aga’ 2,871 for the ticket headed by Judge Cor- nelus Fergueson, McCarren's candidate for leader. Doyle carried the Thirtieth Ward by @nly 229 and lost the Thirty-first Ward by 64. In March Doyle carried this ‘Ward, which includes Coney Island and Sheepshead Bay, by 700 and o' Bird Coler Defeated. In the Seventeenth District Bird 8. Coler and John L. Shea, the present leader of the district, were defeated by forty-two votes by Joseph Donnelly, the McCarren candidate. Coler lost his own election district by @ vote of % we 2 MoCarren, by the addition of tne Geventeenth District, now controls six. | F teeg of the twenty-one Assembly dis- triots in Kings County. In the Fourth District, James B, Bouck, one of the Tax Commissioners nd MoCarren’s leader, defeated Robert F. Gillin, the Tammany candidate, by ®@ majority of between 600 and 700. The MoOarrenites had felt some doudt @bout this district and Bouck's victory ‘Wer the cause of wild rejoicing. Regan's Big Victory, James 8. Regan, the leader of the Six- teenth Assembly District In Kings, put UP & great Aight against his opponent, Patrick Lynch, who was backed by the Doyle and Tammany forces, Regan is Deputy Commissioner of Public Works and a hustler for McCarren. When the Vote was counted last night Lynch was @nowed under by 80 votes, “That'll hold him for a while,” said Regan when he heard tho result. In Manhattan and the Bronx Murphy hed everything his own way, the Tam- Many leaders holding their own easily. [primartes to-day. Mere's a Wise Dog, The muazie was taken off Paul Hel- fer's dog up in the Thirtieth Assembly District to-day and he barked out sone observations on the hot Aght put np between Harry Hart and George A. Burrell. Hart won by a vote of 1,700 to 1,100, but as 1 votes wold have changed the tesult. the victory is con. sidered to be a dublous one, Bald the dog: “It doesn’t do to under- estimate an antagonist In a primary fight. The wise Alecks who wanted \o |® ‘Bet two to one that Hart would get two ‘votes for each vote for Burrell were @iving false odds, Of course 1 knew that Burrell had to buck against a hot Proposition, but I never thought he ‘would poll sich a big vote. I'd give fifty phonograph records If I could only call the name of the voter who saved Myer from losing his election district,” Roush Road were pleased with the Tesult, but there was no red fire burned by them tp the district when the vote ‘was known. Burrell’s men claim that it was.a tough scrap to try to met away with Mart, backed by the Aigon- it quin Club, the liquor dealers, the Tam- many General Committee and. the office. | jorti holders of the district. The, Hart men go back at them by charging that the Gorillas, as Burrell’s young supporters Tesult of the primaries yester- | ; iH | il i BRYAN WILL WORK HARD FOR PARKER He Writes Chairman Taggart That He Will Devote All of Octoher to Speech-Maing-- Gorman Sends Good News, Letters were received by Chairman Taggart, of the National Democratic Committee, to-day from William J. Bryan and Senator Gorman. Mr. Bryan wrote that he would devote the entire month of October to active work In the campaign, speaking in Nebraska and Indiana and perhaps other Western States, Senator Gorman, assuerd Tag- gart that the outlook for Democratic success was growing brighter every day. John P. Hopkins, Democratic leader of Ilinots, arrived in New York to- day for a talk with the Democratic ecutive CommXtee over the advise bility of opening Western headquarters at Chicago or Indianapolis. Mr. Hop- kins will ugge that headquarters be opened in Chicago, where a branch of Chairman Cortelyou's machine {is al- ready hard at work Congressman Cowherd, of Missouri, Chairman of the Democratic Congres- sional Committee, called on Chairman Taggart to-day. It is possible that the headquarters of the Congressional Com- mittee will be moved from Washington to this city, Former Secretary Walsh. of the Demo- cratic National Committee. has a job. He has been vlaced im charge of the department of advertising and supplies Hereafter Mr. Walsh and not Sergeant- at-Arms Martin will attend to the dis- tribution of soap, towels and ciher tale let necessities at headquarters, There will be a meeting of the Execu. tive Committee of Talmany Hall to- morrow afternoon, Léader Murphy re- fused to talk adout the result of the McCarren's victory in Brooklyn, he sald, did not interest him, ae it was strictly @ Brooklyn mut- ter. were called, stopped at nothing to boost thelr candidate, They are charged with colonizing, repeating, basis» work and high bindery. “Bosh!"' said big Dick McMahon. “Tt takes money bring out a crooked vote. Burrell hasn't any dough. Hart has pig wads of it, Bo there you are, rt.” rhe hottest fight was that in the Seventeenth District, where John F. Curry put up a stiff fight agiinet Daniel F. McMahon. The count showed McMahon to be elected by @ vote of 1474 against 141 for Curry, Curry inaista that he was defeated by fraud and that his opponents voted more than 400 tllegal voters, Eugene BE. MoGuire won the most prowounced victory, carrying bis dis- trict, the Thirty-fourth, by @ vote of more than four fo one. Pervival £. Nagle, who has pa of the district,’ a “With the exception ‘of Howard Conk ¢ jon of Ho " . Gov. delle cqnciteies succeeded Gou carn tr HE THINK'S HES A FOOLIN’ oF ME’ Business of Pressing Import- ance Having Been Disposed of the President Will Enter- tain at Oyster Bay. OYSTER BAY, Aug. 81.—Several vis- ltors interrupted the usual quietude of Sagumore Hill to-day, The President having disposed of a large accumula- tion of meil and of some important bustarss which had been referred to him by the Departments gt Washington, assed the greater part of the day in entertaining his callers, two or threo of whom were long-time friends of Mr. Roosevolt, * They Included G. D. B, Hasbrouck, of Kingston, one of the Judges of the Court of Claims; James A. Whipple, of jalamanea, Clerk of the New York State Senate; Willard A. Marakle, of Rochester, and Rev. Dr, William D, Ward, pastor of the Reformed Chureh at Brookville, L, 1 While some of the visitore talked politics incidentally their calls for the inoat part were of purely personal nature. Having transacted all business of pressing importance that has been pending since his arrival at Sagamore IM the President will give more time henceforth to visitors, A few callers will be received almost every day. Members of the International Arbi- tration Conference, which Is to be held in Bt, Louls in the next ten days, will be received by the President at the White House on’ Sept, 4. The dele- gates w'll be the guests of the nation i) this country, Congress having Appropriated $50,000 for their entertain- ment. Many of the delegates already have arrived In this country and others are cS sted In @ day or two, President's letter ot (acceptance aken to New York last night by Asstant Bee: rnes and placed in the hands oj Printer, It will re fh several ys to have it ready for distribution and publication, —— PIPE BURSTS ON STEAMSHIP, Fourth Engi helm I, By the bursting of a steam pipe in the tngine-room of the Kaiser Wilhelm II at her pler in Hoboken to-day J, Maggepen sc fourth engineer, and Se- Kayser, an oller, were serious scalded. The men wire directly in the path of the escaping steam, which knocked them down, Both inhaled some by hot vay eed ey wer edrag, out dy oth ¥ sinters and sent to Bt Mary's Hi splat, Little hope is entertained for Viech- schmidt’s recovery, He was burned the Hoboken ‘tock fire eer years ago. COLOMBIAN DIPLOMAT DEAD. | Dr. Herran, Who Répresented Re- pablic Herp, Dies up State, Dr. Thomas Herran, who represented Colombia at Washington for several years up to the time of the Panama incident, died be ws at Liberty, N. ¥. He had been ii for some time and went ¥ Liberty fabio that oe of his health, Bo 464944 GOO0 94098895 dP FODIOTEG DS 94 965-9006004464404000 ROOSEVELT READY VERMONT MAY TURK FOR CALLERS NOW TIDE OF BALLOTS THE WORLD: \ WEDNESDAY EVENING, AUGUST’ 81, 1904‘ PLAYING ‘POSSUM. (By T, E. Powers.) PLD EDIDLG LAD IDIAADEODE LOE 14OG-H04-08 OFF THE BEATEN PATH AND You FIND YouR SELF IN THE P8-5G-0-9609-56-0046-06-0-9-25-0-6-5-43-5-04 3 et hi anh \ iH) \ “MN Ay 8-2-9S-OBE HS4-2-955-9-24-F59F99845-934-455-964-F6-05-5-20-8-9 0-5 96-90-0462 + NEWSDEALERS ARE GOING 10 ST. LOUIS Twenty-second Annual Conven- tion to Be Held Sept. 6 and Delegates Wil Hold Gather- ing at World’s Fair Grounds. Senator Proctor Says if the Republicans Do Not Carry State by 25,000 It Will Indi- cate pps Defeat. " The twenty-second convention of Beye BabA i gen newsdealers, booksellers and station. moked ers is to be held jn Library Hall, day to see Chairman Cortelyou, fur- nished a line on which to base the re- sult of the Presidential election by the result of the approaching State election (n Vermont. In effect he says that if th eRepublicans ddJnot carry the State by 25,000 it Is a sign that Roosevelt will be defeated. “We are glad.” said the Senator, “that the Democratic National Commit- tee sent some good speakers into our gation by newsdealers along the route, State. It woke the Republicans up to | Jt is expected to be very enthusiastic knowledge that this is a very important at Albany, where A. Picard ts presitent election. Of course we will win, If we of the Albany local. wet 25,000 majority It is a sign of cers The same is promised at Buffalo, tain success for the Republican National where William F. McCourt Is president, Ueket. If we get over 2,000 it will be and Is seconded by the famous Moxey an Indication of a Roosevelt landslide.” |the newsboy, Then things will quiet In 190 MoK.nley's plurality In Ver- down till St, Louis Is reached, which Mont was 29,719, In iMe the majority | will be about § P. M., Monday, Sept. 5, Cee ee enor, Wan 240), Only {Supper will be served at the Mammoth 7,884 Democratle votes wer Hotel, Bt. Louls, which will be the TE COUNTY FR World's Fair Grounds, St, Lows, Mo., Sept. 6 and 7% The delegates in and around New York will meet at |the rooms of the United Dealers News Company, No. 23 William street, New York City, next Sunday, at 1 P. and proceed in @ body to the W Shore Ratiroad Depot, taking the 2 P. M. train to Bt. Louis. Receptions will be tendered the dele- » ast, After supper a trolley ride rranged running along and around the Fair Ground, a which the delegates will turn or Non-Return System Good or Grounds. The convention will open Tuesday at 10 A. M. Among the many questions to be considered are; The Education of the Newsboy. Pub- lishers Sell Direct? Can Publications Te Sold at a Given or the Same Price With Mrs. Parker He Make$/in ait states? Can the Post-omce Make a Cheaper Price on Returns? Is the re- turn or NoneReturn System Good or Ba Journey In Simple Fashion |e or em Good oF By Trolley and Train From|\ haan Amalgamation of Publishers and Newsdealers Be Beneficial? Are Esopus to Ellenville. Subscription Books to the Interest of the Trade? a LONDON STOCKS DULL. KINGSTON, N. Y., Aug. %.—Judge and Mrs, Parker and the Judk®'s! qmerteans Rally After @ Siow Start brother, Fred H. Parker, came to ent Claes aslee, Kingston by the West Shore LONDON, Aug. %1—Money was in strong demand in the market to-day on the announcement of a new Treasury bill issue, Discounts strengthened. Operators on the 8! change were almost exclusively upled with the completion of the Settlement, many be- train from Esopus. They crossed the elty on a trolley car, a distance of about a mile, to the New York, Ontario an Western station, where they boarded a spectal train for the Ulster County fair at Ellenville, twenty-seven miles southwest of this city Mrs. Parker at the last moment de-| ing absent, anticipating Saturday's clded to go with her husband to the! holiday Consols recovered from an inl fair, which they have attended an-| tial di nually for many years, Mrs. Parker! Americ: el dudl, allied Be wan born at Ac@ord, not far from Ellen-| qhove parity, ame inactive and ville, and both of them are well known] closed easier ers were firm on personally to the people of that vieMity.| Paris, supporting Russians. Japanese ee hardened. 1 jal Japanese Govern- went Sixes of 19 were quoted at SEN. HOAR SLEEPS WELL. | 9°12. —$——>_$_$_$_— ——_- Change for Several Day WORCESTER, Mass, Aug, 31.—The condition of Senator George F. Hoar re- Mowing bulletin this fore- LONDON, Aug. 31.—The sudden death of Washington Hancocx, grandson of poor He {a resting comfortably, wand there|tht late Gen. Winfleld Scott Hancock, BULOING STAKE f NARNG TS EAD Final Settlement of the Dispute, Between the Employers and| Workingmen Expected by End of the Week, NASON RESPONSIBLE FOR BRIGHT PROSPECTS. Since Displacing Phi! Wein- seimer as Head of Alliance He Has Won Confidence of Bosses and Men Alike. Preliminary looking to the fina lockou and strikes in the buliding | | trades, By the end of the week it is | hoped that employers and men will have approached a basis of settlement and that work ¢an be resumed, The man upon whom rests the bulk of the responsibility for a settlement is William Nason, now head of the Bulld- Ing Trades Alliance, who displaced Philip Welnselmer, The bosses respect him and he*has a ble following among the men. He I+ the leader of the mar- ble cutters, and It ts through this or- ganization that the work of clea: the aituation will probably be plished, Nason and a committee from the unions in the marble trades held a con- ference thia afternoon with a committer from the Marble Industry Employers’ | Association with a view to settling thelr Individual strike. The whole queston of settlement has narrowed down to the queston of what shall be done with the non-unton men who were employed to toke the places of the members of the five trades that were locked out at the beginning of the trouble, At A secret meeting of the Building Trades Employers’ Association, held just after the lockout was declared, a resolution was adopted pledging the bosses not to discharge any of the non- union men. This is the atumbling-block jin the way of settlement just now, but there are means of getting around 't here ) non-union men at work in placea formerly held by members of the locked. and striking trades My re taken to-day settlement of the Inasmuch aa the unions have decided t stand firm on the proposition of refus |ing to work with non-union men, Should this course be decided upon and should any of the non-union men refuse to #0 into the untons, tt would open the way for the boames to discharge them. STRIKERS AM AT AT MEAT FAMINE Union to Call Out 15,000 More Butcher Workmen Employed by Packers in the Various Cities of the Country. CHICAGO, Aug. 31.—A meat famine ts declared by the strikers to be the prob- able result of their new move against the packers, Orders have been issued for a general strike of all butcher work- men throughout the country, They are expected to go out to-morrow. The or- der will oeffct tn all about 2,00 men tn Chicag, ‘ndluding the Independent plants, The order, if observed, will also af- feot Independent plants In large cap- acity in the following cities:*Kast St, Louls, Omaha, Bt. Louls, K: City, Bloux City, > York, Milwaukee, Sy- racuse, Stickney, Ill, and Mundreds of small plants throughout the country which employ from ten to twenty men. Altogethtr, the unton officials assert that 16,000 men will go out, and the meat supply will be seriously crippled, leav- Ing as the only supply the output of the big packers by thelr non-union hew To-dhy the pickets surrounding the Stock Yards wtre largely Increased, the yards being watched for several blocks away. Strike breakers were warned not to leave the yards. Bitter feeling ex- ists against thtm. The 0 stock han- dlers in the Stock Yanis quit work this forenoon, They were greeted by cheers by the union pickets. The packers say it is Donnelly's aim to create a meat famine, which he thinks wou!d arouse the public to such © pitch of Indignation that a settlement would be forced, “Donnelly is undertaking the impos- sible,” said a representative ¢: one of the packers, “There is litle chance of & meat famine, The Indenenden: pack- ers, who, by their collusion with the unions, have profited much during the strike, will suffer most,” WROTE HS FP THEN SHOT HIMSELF (Speolal to The Byvening World.) PITTSBURG, Pa, Aug. 31—“Jay ¢ Wilson, only a god fellow,” waa scrawl. ed acre big shet of paper which Jay wih of Brooklyn, handed his sister, Mrs, W. C. Stewart, fust before | he shot himself. Wilson had been visiting her for the past ten days. Yesterday afternoon without any warning he shot himself in the head and died about half an hour later, The shooting is shrouded in mys tery The man had been chatting with his mater, and after handing her the note went to her room and immedia ni, nO apparent change in his condition. is strength has not increased, but he takes nourishment admini: id by his doctors and sleeps weil. biDy ~ for no perceptible change for sev days." at his lodgings in London was the sub- ject of an inquest to-day. ‘The autopsy showed that he died trom) heart disease, and a verdict o that ef- fect was accordingly rend four children living in Brooklyn, ant Wa aa member of the Elks and Royal Areanum lodges of Brooklyn. His last address is given as No, 18 Albany ave- Bee i HONeill & Fall Sales of Women's Silk Waists, Pedestrienne Skirts: and Rain Coats. This is a seasonable offering of entirely new garment for women, and we offer them to-morrow, Thursda prices lower than will be possible later in the Perery New Silk Waists. (as illustrated), excellently - of Peau de Soie or Chiffon $5.00 Pedestrienne Skirts _ Unusually good quality, plait model, solid colors and mixtur New Rain Coats Fine twilled worsteds, just weight for Fall wear, tans ai oxfords, $10.75 Ready-to-Wear Hats Suitable for Immediate Wear. (Second Floor.) me we an. nga charmin, peer collection of a Hats (some of | (ag which we illus- Sm rate), in black, t ha navy yi); nd green, at “) ff $2.25 ana UR $2.48 “ NG Flannel Department (First Floor, rear.) ;? We are now showing our new lines of Fall and Win ter Flannels—direct importations from France, Engla and Scotland—in many choice, exclusive ni wide range of colorings. See window display. ee On Special Sale, Bargain Table No. 1, ve 35¢. Scotch Flannels, 22c. a yard, > 4,400 yards High Grade SCOTCH FLANNELS, suitable for). ladies’ and childre: ear, in new dainty stripes and checks, 2; A dark and light grounds—value 35c, per yard, Prretriity 6,300 yards PRINTED TLANNELETTES, choice of 75 de- sirable patterns—value 15c. per yard, at... on Laces and Chiffons At % and ¥, Regular Prices. (First Floor, 2ist St. Side.) v ‘oint de Paris, Valenciennes, Oriental, Cluny, Lp em anily. Guar and othe deal Lace ‘in Moons andin;sin black, w cream, butter, cl wer Ficn teeta irom 35 0 7 ache Wid vaoalor 190 (0 TE At 8c., 10c. and 15c. a Yard. 43 and 48 inches wide CHIFFON, MOUSSELINE DE SOIZ LIBERTY SILKS in black, white and cream, regular 68¢, 75, see At 430. a Yard. All the Latest Styles and Shapes of i The “Edwin C. Burt” Shoes 7) We are Exclusive Agents in the City © ~ |) Tor Forty years these celebrated Shoes have | | been the choice of women whose taste and fine discrimination demand the best. Perfect fitting, stylish and well made, they are the equal of any $5.00 shoe in the market to-day, Price, $3.50 per pair (Third Figor.) [Edwin 6. Burt al | Mew York | twa maaan OF anes queue Sixth Avenue, 20th to 21st Street i 8. Altman & €o. will continue to close their store at TWELVE noon on Saturdays, and at FIVE P. M. on other bu: days during September. Dinetezn:h Street, Sizth Rozns:, New York, SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY