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OUTRADITED i ie ‘ Se on Germanic, Which 3 AN Night in Mudbank, Thick Weather Did Cause Mishap. at her pier to-day after having) Wet of the night stuck on a we Es t outside the Hook. There SRS Several versions 6f how she went! the passengers taking sidep Neeltac the captain, who declared that peta weather was responsible for thc ne WWE 2. W. Richards, of Lehigh Uni-| , Inaisted after he landed on the there had been no thicc throughout the voyage. He) Bthere must have been something } with the steering gear, Bwo'clock test night, when the i struck her nase inte a! P of mud, the stars were blinking | aclear atmosphere. | Cas Vertes Different. | ge ©. A. Bartlett, on the other “4 that the instruments | . ‘Wh good order, but as they ee through the main chan- 2 mile east of Sandy Hook Went aground and stuck in the al 46 o'clock this morning, “ENG tide Ufted her off, the of the boat created no W, speak, of among the passen- Ae the Germanic ran on the mud ali@ ta with a swishing sound to cause alarm. & great deal of norvou ® aumber of achool te who were due in ite oh pms jn the New York public schoo O'clock this morning, It was an Of the sehool. term, Hater when the big liner arrived ut | The Evening World ta pier, and the pretty young women yyung husband, yao af PP almast tearing their buir when mys ago from thelr apirtme h paw that they would be late fur ign Wes HUSBAN, SEQUE. te be \ Mrs, Alexander 8, Lovison has asked find ber a ten at No. One Hundreth and ip Columbia, of weventh eet, They ware marric jumbla, the Aa-|'3 without the knowledge of thelr pi hia. i nu [ m Sarried w DUMbEF Loins by the Rey. C. Helraré: Taylor al ‘alvary parish-bouse, 41 One Hundred A the delay. Jand Twenty-ninth street The bride, a eh 4 irr LO! pretty blonde, was formerly on tive schoole that tey | Hianche Ward, daughter of a freman td diminiah their tardiness, th Back. the well-known Was a passenge * 4 the extravagence of an a PS father of young Lebison is a mer-| Oiarnte arebitect, we | Senator Hoar still, informed that the ven~!| ble lawataker was living he was | that he had spent the entl ml Suropean cite lane for the «! that Senate hae for beautifyiy in ‘he plan» call for a and a $6,000,000 terrm:e Y tans the Poromue whieh is u anything of the kind in the uth sald that the terraces, on Feaaoe in Burp ds \ b in P aity ald him ly Wtoratian of his scheme. He! : - city he vi ited In A any ooh @ vial in Ge Rast WF SURE GAA ‘gong lelarkt City Colonigs Ter. ‘{tocized by Many Bold Thefts 1) Gang Uses Chicrofirm ard £ Good Hauls, 7% Sees jon mT Gays to get the wire, wire nail n blooming mille in shape for start-| : men reported Wire drawers were notified of a cent. reduction, They refused to, Qn@ struck. None of the other abs were started as a conse- of Resiguing Work Shope; for an Indedaite Yeried, | this mereing) immediate settlement of ts not looked for, | —— | NIAN’S LONG TRAMP. from Constantinople to Geta tere On erie ye nie, His first inquiry of BOR chant tailor, residing if No. 111 Weat One Hundred and Fouriventh street. “IT had known Al for aver a year be- fore we were married,” gold Mrs. Levie “He seomed very i of me and was always asking me ty marry him tefuaed him several timds, but he per- RE WIE HOLS BY OF THE Unknown Man Is Found Drowned Off Tilyou’s Wharf, Coney Island--Fape and Body Badly Torn by Barbs, ‘The body of an unidentified bather was found to-day (angie in the barb wire that protects the lower part of Tilyou's wharf, «Coney Island The man's face and limbs were badly cut and torn by the wires ever which the wash of the water had dragged the body. Last night the manager of Ward's bathing pavilion reported to the police of the Fifty-ninth precinct that the clothing of a man who went in bathing at 5 o'clock In the afternon still re- DISAPPEARS,- TO AN ELOPEMENT, -| whe I] her to our house. J single and double breasted styles, materials rich PBL FOR TRIE BLING WAR Board of Education Aske Settle- ment of Tie-Up So Far as Schools Are Conoerned— Unions to Discuss Proposi- tions To-Day. Trades Alliance will hold meetings to- Gay to disouss propositions for a settle- mont of the tie-up, The appeal for a truce in the building war, so far as the fn a letter from Chairman Adams, of |the Board of Education, to President Charles L. Eidiits, of the Employers’ Association, and William K. Nason, t of the Bullding Trades Al- Hance, will be considered at a meeting of the Building Trades Alliance to be held thig afternoon. There is @ division of opinion among | members of the alliance, especially care pentera, as to the terms of settlement, Bome of the old union men believe that the unton rules must be lived up to and | that mo settlement can be maintained |unless the union men who have gone to work have been disciplined and the Bon-union men discharged, An agitation has been started to form three sections in the Central Federated Union, At present there are two eec- (long, the Building Trades and the Miscellaneo ing Trades section, ho 8 a number of trades not immediately associated with | buliding It 19 proposed that one section shal! consist of trades directly connected with bullding. A second section Is me about sted In calling and folowiag 9 4 until at last [ consented, Wo kept the 5, § marriage secret for a time and w in | Proposed constating of building ma, people le of it they were angry. terial handlers and others indireetly He was ra Rad hie Pepieet. “4 connected with building, and the third (nent Ia Washington plage Al section is to be the regular Afiscellan- his Le ied discharged him | eous Section. Weaened OC OnE marriage When the Central Federated Union ts feared bis family had induced him to o away, but T sent_to them and was | thus reorganised it {» proposed by the informed frat they a not bpd hig delegates of the building trades unions he was, Tam afraid something terrible re 6 | has hapnened to him. J am sure he| Who are pushing the movement to try | would write me If he were able to do so, | to make the munieipality Its own con- for he WAS Very affectionate and con tractor in the erection of schools. ‘They Oo eee oe a month,” ay that there is no reason why the city should not bulld the schools as well ae the docks, and if the city were its own contractor vhere would be no delays caused by the general building strikes taon's mother, “and do or lockouts. mained in the bathhouse rented to him. | The clothing was taken to the station douse, At 8 o'clock this morning Po- lweman Nicholson found the body of If he is married We have heard of the man off Tilyou's, The manager of | Ward's place was sent for and identt-| fled the bathing sult, Miss Ward, but my son never brought We can throw no Vaht on his whereabouts.” The bather's clothes consisted of a soft brown felt hat, gray mack cout, a | black fancy sweat ery tous “Sought Shelter in Florence Crit- pe balk, HEREROS ESCAPE GERMANS.) ‘enton Refuge and Was Found Later on Sidewalk—Skull Be- Natives Thousands Strong Hreak Through Ring of Treeps. fleved to Be Fractured. BERLIN, Sept. 12—Advices received | here from German Southwest Africa show that the main body of the Mer! Josephine Peterson, twenty-one years eros, several thousand atrong, have jold, who obtained shelter last night in broken through the ring of German the Florence Crittenton Mission, at No. troops disposed for the purpose of en- |21 Bleecker street, fell from the third. circling them, and have escaped towtrd | story window early to-day, the southeast with the loss of fifty men) No one at the home knows how the aceldent happened. The nolse awoke the superintendent of the mission, and she found the girl groaning on th ment but still conscious, She sald was not badly hurt and was ‘lesioned killed. This !s Interpreted to mean an Indefinite prolongation of the campaign. Lieut.-Col. Von Estorff on Sept. 9 4’ tacked Chief Samuel Maherero wh le the latter was breaking camp. Samuel offered little resistance, abandoning a ottion of his carte, Luout.-Gen, Von 9, her rom rotha, Commander-in-Chief of forces water in the day the you in German” Soujnwest. Africa, wires |'becaine unconscious end an minberemes from Otjosondu fiept. 10 that the Ger- was sent for, She was takén to Belle. man losses conaiated of one man slight- vue and confined in the paychopath' ly wounded, ‘ard. Nothing Is known of her identity The First Call e First Call. , Our first announcement for this Fall we propose to make notable. We have the repu- tation of always doing something surprising at the most unexpected times, and this will be no exception. To-morrow, Tuesday, we shall inaugurate an extraordinary ad- vance sale of Men’s Fall Suits. We shall place on sale all heavy weight clothing carried over from iast season, and augment it with the advance shipments of 1904, Here's a big chance to save. Put this offer to the inexpensive test of investigation. You will then be convinced that here are the pod surprising clothing values ever shown. \Men’s $25, $22 and $20 Suits, Artistically designed, masterly tailored, 5 e B. Priestley Cravenettes. 180 agents’ sample Rain Coats, purchased by us at one-half their value. These coats are the perches the highest tatlor’s art; all the fabrics are the fihest imported weaves; they are simply mar- vels of beauty; don’t overlook this rare chance, 19.0 $35 Cravenette Rain Coats. e worsteds, tweeds, Thibets, serges, vicunas, cassi- meres and Seotches, This offer is so truly remark- abie that your wonder will be excited. An offer in which the purchasing power of your dollars will break records. $32 Cravenette Rain Coats. $30 Cravenette Rain Coats, $28 Cravenette Rain Coats... THE WORLD: MONDAY BVSNING, SEPTEMBER | Beveral of the unions in the Bullding | | t schools are concerned, which was made MLO COE PLC NTI —— Frank $. Wethere# Disappears from Marlborough Hotel and His Relatives Are Alarmed— Was Ill and on Way to Home, a ‘The police Rave been asked to look d | for Frank 8 Wetherell, a millionaire of New London, Conn, who disap- peared from the Marlbotough Hotel last night while his wife and two friends had gone to the dining-room to ‘have dinner, Mr. Wetherell, who ts middle-aged, has been a sufferer from nervousness for several years, and was on his way from the Catskills to his place in Mid- dletown and practically in the care of and nurse, of his affliction he was com- o retire from business three JAMES W. CLARKE DEAD, Werld Méiterial Writer Expires at Jackson, N. H. James W. Clarke, one of The World's editorial writers, died at Jackson, N. H., on Saturday. Born in ir, Clarko was When a youth he e, but soon turned rnaliem and became kno a on e press Tie guived breadth and acquired Much Information by reporting many of Pewee important speeches of Brigh' tone and other great leaders o lish politics In the earl jo this country. He ton and at once was 1 ployed guee: Yoon th of the ‘Times, the He the Gi hy-two years lawyer's fon to wile te if, Clarke married in é mare of that elty. i of Emerson ward Ever- Phillips Brooks and Senator id he possessed the confidence active politica! leaders of the him to ce, f ago. Few writers p: intimate ag was Eni Hities ded at Ka ‘ving him are Mi with bim when he Charles T: ‘Mrs eaying that if he did not get to Mid- Gistown he believed ho would die, There was no train until midnight, and the party prepared to remain at the hotel until that hour, Mr, Wetherell was left alone, declining to eat, and when the wife returned from the dining-room he was gone, had seen boy was certain he had not gone down- stairs in his car, A search was made about the hotel, and at midnight when he had not re- on his person when he disanpeared, |))gy' and Mrs. Wetherel! thinks he may have! eon Ahort that he was fallen int Mi During the short Women’s Gloves in the most approved styles and colorings, for Autumn wear, : : Including the exclusive MARVEX quallty, also fine grades in Lambskin, Cape, Czstor, Antelope, etc., from the best foreign and domestic makers. : + A novelty glove for dress wear Is also shown— Glace finish, with Suede cuff embroidered in floral design and fastened with two pearl clasps. : : + B. Altman & Co. Eighteenth Street, Nineteenth Street, Sixth Avenue, New York. Lord & Taylor Announce the Opening of Their Milhnery Department on Monday and Tuesday, September Twelfth and Thirteenth. Broadway & Twentieth St., Fifth Ave., Nineteenth St. Guarantee Clothing Co. omer 127 Street & 3™Ave. OMMENCING TO-DAY we shall offer, in addition to our usual popular.priced line of Clothing for Men, Boys and Children, a large variety of Men’s Clothing manufactured by The Stein Bloch Co., famous the world over for high-grade ready-made clothing at reasonable prices. The Stein Bloch Suits priced at $15 are equal to any custom made at $25. This addition to our own large assortment of ready-made clothes should bring us the patronage of discriminating men who wish to dress well and stylishly at moderate cost, Our new fall showing comprises BUSINESS SUITS, OVERCOATS, $ 10 to $30 FROCK SUITS, RAINCOATS, Bre. Every other thing for Fall Wear—Hats, #hoes, Furnishings, ete. Guarantee Clothing Co., “icr" 127th St. @ 3d Ave. AALNAMM, Fulton 5$t., Brooklyn. 30 Trading Stamps FREE Tuesday. lections of quadruple plated hollow-ware that we have ever offered under-price. The beauty of the designs, the seemingly unlimited variety and the completeness of the assortinent of pieces, together with the remarkably low prices, make a store feature thn ciate the moment they see the display. are always wanted, and the prices are the lowest for which they have ever been sold: . Five-piece Tea Seta, $9.60, $10.75 to$14.75 ’ d bterplece Coffee Seta) $4.50 and 4 Chocolate Pots, $1.50 and $1.76 | 92. $16.50 to $35 Tailored Suits at $10 Fifty Suite of fancy homespuns, tweed, cheviot ai tures, Jackets In varlous styles, a number with box co: pocket, Handsomely trimmed or plain tallor fulah. $26 to $45 Tallored Suits at $15 Lage ap Sults of tweed, cheviot am vol trimmed and #ilk-lined Walking Skirts of broadcloth and sharkakin id gored plalted atyles. Wang Skirts of broadcloth; red, fi Walking Skiris of cheviot; gored 7 —Fancy Corded Uryst, ome valien trimmed with strap- well assorted, v shades, JOHN WANAMAKER. formerly A. T. Stewart & Co., Brosdway, 4th Ave, 9th and 10th Ote, \ccomeamgeetagensepamincnimeateres On 125th St ] Gverything That's Good in Parnitare and Carpets pany, Alex. Smith @ Sons, Sanford & Sons and the Hartford Carpet Company. We quote below special prices on these standard makes, $1.50 Axminsters at.. $1.75 Wilton Velvets at,, $1.50 Velvets at.... $1.00 Tapestry Brussels at,,..., A Home Complete, Cash or Credit, $44 Freight and Carjare Aliowed on Out-of- When served with food a¢ the it ts asserted, he put it from him, say- = ¢ ing that he belleved (t was poisoned.’ Mr, Wetherell is forty-nve years ol, 5 feet 8 Inches tall and weighs 1% pounds. He wore a long ruin and No une| dark clothes. His appearance Is ininis- 0 out, and the elevator | terial, rapaic messages to Middletown land's fw London have failed to locate’ him, At 6 o'clock) hed b: own Mas. Lenahan, twenty-three years old, of No, Tl State street, Brooklyn, had a gold wateh.) way taken yesterday to the appearance was reported Lenahan told > Easter: some valuable jewel vas! Distrlet Howpital guitering trom. « hai : ¢ @ valua! Jewelry and 9100 in bills a a tab Wounds on r t walking i jure a gong he hands of confidence men, | Roebling street, meee Bie hed Vee Vetherell | known man who, without the ®- | provocation. stabbed him, Store Opens at 6:15 A. M. and Closes at 5:3 P, M- September Sale of SILVER-PLATED WARES This present movement presents one of the finest col. t housekeepers will appre- The Rogers spvons, forks, knives and other table-places Quadruple-Plated Table Silver One-fourth to One-third Under-price 4 lechore, $2 and 63 Hy . $2, $4, 3508 Vegetable Dishes, $6 and $7.25 Serving Trays. 75¢, $1, $1.26, 62, 5 | Tea und Cottee Pots, $31.21 ‘hea fet $5.25, 96.75, 910 | Sugar B h Cita Wikeesyatten | Seana Te Bpoon Holders, $1.75 and §2 Cheese Holders, $: aiteed Trays, $1.50, $1.75, $2 to Bonbon Dishes 3e and 61 re Boao Tureena, $4.75, $5. $5.25 Water Bets, é a ilaaiclatl ovale taes ete, jus and Salad Bowls, $2.50 and “Rall 8, $1 and $1.75 Hutter Dishes, $2, 92.50, 93, 83.50} “*™494PrRt, 99.50, $4. $5.28 haw Pitchers, $2.75, $3.50, ‘te $9 cH ice Pitehere. $5.26 ana $6. Bait and Pepper Shakere, 10esach Tea Rottien $0487 a oe ere \ Rogers’ £xtra Silver Plate Forks, Spoons and Serving Pieces at Special Prices ‘Tea Spoons, 85e a dozen Gravy Ladies, 45¢ each Devsert Spoons, $1.50 a dosen Oyater Ladies, $1 each Table Spoons, $1.70 udosen Soup Ladies, $1.25 each Coffee Spoons, Berry Spooné, T6c each Orange Spoon Ple Servers, ‘Tc each Dessert Children's Sets, 60c a set Medium For cup nese Medium Katves, Penal Forks, $1.25 and $2 a i: Mrer4 kai cea Raper Spocee steess Tripleplated Frult Kaives, $2 0 Butter Knives, 25c each dozen Cream Ladies, 85¢ each Tenth street aisle, Fine News of Fighty-/Fine SILKS bh gto ' ’ five ety) ing some Women’s Suits :, pay.| At About steak ad- and Skirts ored Suits justing—a a ae Half Prices jist, pr en are divided into two|of season, to be sure; byt tempting price-groups, at)that makes the resultant & savinga of $6 to $40 on 4@/gayings the more of # plea» suit! Then there are three spe. ant and timely surprise, cially low-priced lots of} Thereare rich foreign silke, Separate Walking Skirts—jand handsome kinds of about a third below their| American make; brocades value. That's the news in a nut- — vargas in black and |[ shell—and splendid news for |Colors; and new prices aver. the middle of September it | age less than half the former ia, And here are the details: | ones. These sorte; At $1.50, from $3—Rich Black Novelty Silks; satin grounds, Ele gant goalies in # variety ol hand. some designs. At 76c yd., from $1 Silks in a variety of acetates weaves; very serviceable and popu. jar. le: one ot a Cn fl @ number |} id At 45c yd., from 75¢—Black Crepe de Chine; Ane quality. At $1.25 yd., from §2.50—| ing Brocedes in Tose tat fra eupectally adapted tor whole dresses; choice colorings, such as ciel, tur guaien, Nile green, pink, mais and At 75c yd, from $1.50 and $2.50 a hata and Rotunda, d canvas wmix- 3 with patch Walking Skirts at $6 Walking Skirts at $7 niahed with plaite. Skirts at $7.50 ‘Walkin im evening Second Floor, Broadway. near Madison Avenue R Carpets are the product of such mills as the Bigelow Carpet Com- $1. “$i sign Town