The evening world. Newspaper, October 15, 1904, Page 2

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ote | IN A NATIONAL EVENT DEDICATIN tee CK OF SHP i “THREE MEN THROWN INTO _ SEA RESCUED BY CREW. Vessel the Elwood Burton, on Her Way to New When Beaten Down by| : f i E 5 23227 i i i ee} Jong stroggic in the heavy and two other seamen from Woating wreckage and men, of the # fF i i Ps fli z g 5 tee HH WARRANTS OUT FOR COLONIZERS i : i z Ht! tise? i; HEB eas H Hah ig 1 p, fer U7 ali Sree ii 2 em AB sj WORLD: _SATTRDAY EVBNING, OCTOBER | AT ESOPUS, PARKER'S HOME; Bias G THE yaacnenininea Ae Sa ee NEW LAMP Artist Mortimer, the Pictorial Historian of the Way-Station Village on the West Shore, Again Introduces the 'amous Characters ana Celebrities of the Village to The Evening World Readers. 09499900008 = neighboring heights eat A tew Japanese RESIDENTS CHALLENGED. “The policy of the deputits is to stop every man whose name they have and ask him twenty or @birty questions. This takes time and cuts down | the registration. {t also scares many old voters who have naturalization “Tt is hard for @ mah to remember the surrounding the (ie pee plein pralipeapd llreng tngnlapdy es * ‘But the deputies want to know gill about it, and rather than submit to the in ‘ents can't much more than read print, and the bluffing tactics of Morgan's many Jeaders assert that hundreds of Pennsylvania for this election. ror WILL CALL UPON MORGAN, After a of the matter the meeting appointed a committee consisting of James J. Martin, John F. Abearn and Timothy D. Sullivan to call upon Supt. Morgan and learn from him what he is trying to do. The “ge committee was instructed to inform Mr. Morgan that his tactics are delay- i preroreee> ‘ ing registration; that in heavy Democratic districts captains’ reports show FROM that his deputies have caused a falling off of fully 15 per cent. because of the 1 SCHOONER, | inconvenience would-be yoters were put to at the registration places. Ar- _ Tangemeénts were made to establish temporary legal headquarters in every %5.~The | Aésembly district, where voters may be advised of taeir rights under the negroes have been imported from ’ 1 | SAVED ~~ & leading members of the Tam- {and substance of the matter is that Mr. B25 Hall M in claims that the oe eg Rena tecigh ey ver seg llcegea meni New Work who voted fat’ year Westward of het!c, Bartlett, ¢ormer Mayor Robert Vaa | ay Wyck, Jobp J. Delany. Fred House, enante 66 Chattenges Levy, Charles W. Out of the thousands of challenges Micees Loan bene o. Tiley |made yesterday there were only six ar rests, and thus far not 7 - farley Platsek and George M. Van |rested for attempting to register with: '* ae | Hoesen. Although many of them had |0Ut right has been held. They have all total wae Her | private business of importance to at- |Rege et they had a pertect right to and Fv tend to to-day, they went to Tammany| A flagrant case is that of former etling ashore | Hon to the meeting, deeming the ac- | Coroner Jacob Bausch, He has lived surt. in one election district for thirteen i one of supreme interest to the zation, Charles F. Murphy was on the scene early, and he was one of the busie men in town. Before the meeting he | o¢ years and at No. &2 Lowis street for 4 i last night man y was arrested by Police- the Delancey street sta- r i 4 of Rogistry, a man named the Democratic rote is heaviest. |of Elections. Mr. Bausch was jocked in a cell, but jut he found ttme to answer Mr. Mur- | tive of Supt Morgan oresent. phy's statement that the Bureau of Filestions is conducted as part of the | Odell machine. The reply is rather |. ao vague, but it appears to sult Mr. Mor- 7 gan. Jt reads as follows "The same instructions wer each member of the Board of Registry with the challenge lists. There been some complaints that In a number of Instances these direct fully carried out. The registra will be compared with the ch c Nets after the registration closes and will attend to the members of the Registry who falled to do y at that time.” insists that every man | the fe on the challenge ste | # ice formed at t He has 440 watchers. There | tion last night that ‘on the ete 908000 qmanes. The wum |! under ony circus — Magisirate Denodnce! Arrest, mm any Complaint against this asked Magistrate Moss of n. was the seply, “T ved ag him have Magis lock a am | court, by Gea We hull] ordeal many voters go away and do not come back. Many of my constitu- | _. Whenever there is a tod ratio to the cost. When is plumbers and othe Cune Fon primes, | Puilliog and with a ED re paseroye nt re eres ae Proaruaiad | tt . : atinin Bs meat cure te @ to 14 Gave. Boo. %e* Upon he adjourns sine die, { , os ma . NEAR THE STATION. LH NED 6.0.0 RA adacra) = —— Aare Gow J—»*., WHOLE REGIMENTS WIPED OUT IN BLOODY FIGHT ABOVE YENTAL fighting between the Shakhe River and Yentai during the last three days | 0 occurred at the village of Endotiula, west of the railroad, and on the i of the railroad, The Japanese had been driven trenches so withering was the Japanese fire, and only a few re- out of these positions, with terrible losses, but on Thursday they concen-| commanded by sergeants after all the officers had fallen, trated so murderous an artillery fire on the village that it became neces- sary for the Russians to withdraw, the railroad being held. } ‘The same evening the Russian commander gave imperative orders re- occupy Endotiula, The Zariisk regiment, without firing a single shot, marched under cover of the darkness and bayonetted several battalions of the Japanese, many of whom died as they slept. Few Japanese Escaped. escaped and sought shelter in stacks of corn, but the Ruseians, carried avay by the frenzy of revenge, rushed on the survivors ‘and literally tore up their bodies with bayonets, ‘The Russians then olled themselves in ihe Japanese blankets. But the next maraing the Japanese again shelled out the regiment, while their MUKDEN, Oct. 15.—One of the bloodiest episodes of the desperate , artillery came on at a run and secured a position east of the rallroad. Again Gen, Kuropatkin ordered the Russians to retake the position, but efforts of his troops were in vain. The Russians could not reach the turned where companies had charged. The companies in some cases wero Only, One Left in Company, One officer, his face streaming with blood, limped up to a General, who was furious, | “Where is your company?" asked the General, “This 18 all that is left of tt,” repligd the coor. “Tt was like a slaughter ‘The artillery fire Wednesday was the flercest of the war. The Japanese haniiled thelr guns superbly and chose splepdid positions, Their guns as Russian regiments were literally shot to pieces. The 4 climax at 5 o'clock in the afternoon of Weisuhiy, Wak Ge fore tried to envelop and break through the Russian left wing. WATER DRENCHES | TRIEDHARD 70 WED, When Supreme Court Justice Garret- gon convened his epecial term in the Quoens County Court-House to-day he had to turn up his trousers and wade on his toes through several inches of The court-room appeared to sy in @ state of total collapse, the walls | daughter of H. Burdett Goodwin, Prest- | | and ceilings were loose, the ol! paint, Jan. 2, 1682. His father, Exra Cornell, ings of famous jurists on the walls were crinkled and awry, the frames warped and the gilding sealing of. Great flakes of plaster threatened to fall, and in every corner of the celling wore dripping streams of water, The ruin was caused by the flooding | pughted her trot. of the room above the court-room yes- while Justice Kelly He and a jury were faasing' the cae of Gillan p Sa ere | aiated by Matatall to try and escape. Railroad Company | when a cataract of water burst from | the ceiling and drenched the jurymen, The flood continued and the jury begged water, terday afternoon was holding court. Brooklyn Heights for an adjournment, ever, and the Court tinued their battle, | flowed from a faucet | Repaira Have Coat $1,000 000, | @ince the building of t | the malicious damage t has been a matter of f injury te epted aa an ¢ t wants a job of airing the The fine structure cost $0 and has entailed a cost ¢ the city for repairs since The repairs progres in be found In socta man, wh and says, “F Jurors Held Up Umbretias. ‘The case was an important gne, how- decided that the eight years, When he went to register trial would heve to go on. The jury | box was floated across to a drier cor-| tion, upon the orders of the Chairmen | ner of the room and the lawyers con-| a, A meters tes na | and returned home. in @ laundry is paid to morning ne bu 4 you can't run to-day, JR CURT, S WERE PTE teen, in Last Desperate Ef- fort to Get His Sweetheart, (Soecial to The Evening World.) NEW HAVEN, Conn., Oct. 15.—After @ month trying to elude the vigilance of her parents, who sought to.prevent her marrying the man she loved, Frances C. Goodwin, the handsome dent of the Ellwood Pottery, at Ell- wood, Conn,, has been sent away to the home of Rev. Mr. Melody, of Newark, N. J., to prevent the marriage and com- pel her, if she can, to forget Robert Matatall, the son of A. H, Matatall, a | ell-to-do contractor, to whom she had Nefore she departed, however, it was not without an effort on her part, a» As a result the would-be bridegroom t+ confined to his home with « black eye and @ very sore nose Matatall and Miss Goodwin fell In |love when they sat at the same bench at the fashionable Eimwood School. ‘They told of their little love affair at home, but parents of both told them they must forget {t. Miss Goodwin was rent away to another school Bhe recently concluded her studies She had not for- gotten the youthful lover, who fs now saw cach of the district leaders and got | Melrose. aro | from each a detatled report of condi-| It was not claimed by Melrose, who Jjournment all of the jurors who had). year her junior, He, too, waa anxivus ldonm Me tound full for his | WA# Acting for Superintendent Morgan, | “mbrellaa had them up ls0 wea | warrant for his|that Mr, Bausch was not entitled to| This {# the second time that the h assertion of yesterday that the activi- pace hie mame on ‘the registration | court-house has been flooded in the, >%¢, Pair visited the town clerk, but thes of the Morgan deputies have besa ; list. TPs, oa oharee again Wm | Game way. and the darcage done has|*t Teused & license because the girl largely confined to districts in whied |fgrnished hy the Btare Superintendent | been estimated at $53,000. The water| Yat Only eighteen years of age ator boy seventeen. Then they mentioned the matter at their homes. | Morgan Busy Himeelt. yelenes® on ball Hie apeonses | above the court-room, and acconling to .d felensed on, ball, He apowared in Besex | membera of the Long laland City bar| Matatall’s parents did not object, but 4 Mr, Morgan waa pretty busy himself, | jiceman Lipe, There was no reprerenta-| thu flooding was done with a purpos Jwin's absolutely refused their ent despair the girl went to Matatall's Matatall at first reluct- girl in, as she said she re to go, Next dey her par- er t> the care of William urt-heuse building uncle, nad succeeded in obtaining rmiasion of hee parents to man of ber choice when she and Matatall intended to tn m Clerk to grant them a Mr. and Mrs. Bromicy e girl to the station to that Matatell tried >. Mr. Bromley ked him down fence while Mra willing to wait f age. but be rry bim now. —=————— AUGUSTUS THOMAS SAILS, plap, “Mra. Lefingwell’s Boots” age. It read in such @ way! Thomas and family sailed L-GOV, CORNELL THREE KILLED B ! DA AT TC UST RTA ‘Prominent for Years in Political "!9ht Other Soldiers, Three of and Business Circles of the Whom May Die, Badly Injured | tate, He Succumbs to a During Target Practice at Lingering Illness, | Fort Banks, in Massachusetts ITHACA, N. Y., Oot, 15—-Ex-Gov. I saat Me Gocaah, afi & tncotinn ov. | wighty-ninth degular Coast Artillery ness of several months with Bright's | Were killed and ¢tght injured by the ex- Gteease, died at his home in this city to-| Moron of a mortar battery at For: day. He was seventy-two years old, | Danks, Winthrop, to-day. It is feared | Bx-Gov. Comell was born in Ithaca, |*D&t three of the injured may dic. | ‘Those ‘cilled were: Bergt, George amet | the founder of Cornell University, was| Relig? °C vtt* Missing and Privace | one of the organizers of the present, The injured include Bergt telegraph system of the country, Leay- | **¥e) grivates, ing school in 1M7, he assisted in the {yest pruation BOSTON, Oct, 15.—Three men of the oley and ent ocourred were engaged in Tn operation of a line of steamers on ematuré explosion In the powder cavum Lake, ‘and In Is bought out chamber. of! wimortar.” ‘The ‘oreech the line. Several months later he as-| blown from the gun and every @ivted in the organization of the First an of its crew became a victim of jational Bank of Ithaca, assuming the | the accident. ition of cashier, which he beld untli 869, when he moved to New York. was defeated. After his removal to| the fort. New York President Grant appointed | === bim Surveyor of the Port of New York, | | a position which he held until 1872, when | | he was slected a member of the A, 206 Furnished Rooms and Boarders. poveay ced Vey are 444 Flats and Apartments, In_18% he became vice-preaident of 60 Business Opportunities, the Western Union Telegraph Company In 1877 he wes appointed naval officer by President Grant. an office he held until removed by President Hayes. In 187) he was elected Governor of New | York, defeating Lucius Robinson. He retired from active politica! tife In 1683, | and for years after devoted his entire time to private business, Several years ago, st was sald, arner! began to.@how signs of men ken jenied by h 69 Boys Wanted. 90 Houseworkers. 79 Operators. 18 Stores to Let. 56 Agents Wanted. 63 Pieces of Property For Sale. 44 Agents Wanted To-morrow’s Sunday World Want Directory will contain not cnly the above advertisements which already have been received at The Worlt's main office for insertion to-morrow, but thousands of others that will ar- le but tha was fe allowed many notes made |i checks for fabulous amounts, n| there were no funds to meet. He also interfered in many ways with the con _ ‘ornell Uatveralty. For the last | j I few. Nate ie Cornel haa lived “at| prive before closing time to-night Tthaca, Although It was reported at! } Last Sunday's World contained 6,448 ona time that he f raits, separate Want Advertisements, an in- crease of 8M Over corresponding | $Sunday last year. Every classification teeming with forerunners of success. |r probably On last Monday morning there were $,776 packages of mail matter re ceived at The World's main office alone—answers to advertisements in A Dinner Pudding of Grape-Nuts is “A DEAR” and the concentration | of nourishment. last Sunday's Want Directory. Last month the number of replies to “World Wants” was 80,284, which was 31,568 more than in September, 1903. These do not represent the total number of responses to World there were thousands of pertonal to-day on the steamship Finland, The Many Recipes in phe. to ad - ertisements ts the | Dlaywright goes over to accompany hii f callers <— answers tO s6¥ Malton | keraty “ha Paste, sptocminy te since vy 1 BAR AMR Wie teak THe Moet Df where the addresses were published ‘There: suoprintend the rehearsals of hla new and a box number not used. construction of the Erie Railway Tele. The artillerymen were having the graph line under the supervision of customary morning practlee {on the/ father, and upon its completion he mortar battery which overlooks the became dn operator, a year Inier tak- ‘entrance to Boston harbor. One shot ing charge of the Cleveland office of had been fired and the gun waa being the company. reloaded for a second trial, As the Ist he became Interested in the | breechblock was being clomd there came GIRL TRIED TO DIE BY GAS, —E Registered as “Miss Brown” at Hotel, bat Is Mary Meyers, NEWARK, N. J., Oct, B—A woman registered As Brown," Mulberry famened Jet and mouth The seemed to have every range measured. They would conceritrate the fire of |s: two hundred guns, first op one place and then on another, Some of the Tre jeune All the killed and injured were mem-| «Fa: |bers of the Bighty-ninth Company of| Wo | Wants, for in addition to the above} | to-day, from the effects of gas. Eo end of @ tube to ced Cy other end mas. the ubseq DARW I¢ Mik: WV RAGD WTCH! ITCH! ITCHI! oma young “Miss ‘This is. the- condition of thousands of skin-tortured may lieved and speedily. cured by warm | baths with Curicura Soap and gentle applications of Cuncuna Onrmment, the greauSkin Cure, ——————_—————— Deafness Cured, DR. GARDNBR CURES BT OSCUALATION Deafness, Blindness, Eye and Ear, A New York. Oct. 15. 1004. ~ BUSINESS OPPORTUNITI BUSINESS CHANCE—E\ectrical ay and contractit ‘eash required Brooklyn. near bride MeNi-ROY.—On sar AGNES, beloved &. and Mary “McElroy. Funeral from her late residence, 430 ‘Wen STD at, Monday at 9 A. M; thence to Church of St. Paul, where a solemm mame of requiem will be offered repose of her soul, Cometery WANTS! ting Seeretaty. us. factors, business for, sale; Wasdingson 's!1 der 18th year. fon the Interment In Calvary WANTS! Branch Office: THE WORLD. Tor the Reception of Advertisements at the Regular Advertising Rates, MANHATTAN AND BRONX, The year before that, 188, he wag|the United States Coast Artillery, which) FIRST AV.—At Nos 120, 243, 330, candidate for Mieutenant-Governor on| was with the Beventy-sixth Company, | the Republican ticket, but the ticket | and constitutes the artillery force at| SHCOND Ay.—At Nos. 445, O57, 1023, 1782, 1318, 1406, 472, 648, 650, 1020, 1101, =| THIRD AV.—At Nos, 259, 329, S76, 11632, 1341, 1900, 1516, 1608, 1712, 1034, 2110, 2000, 3104, 8400, « 5 SIXTH AV,—At Nos, G0, 153, 247,514, 060. SEVENTH AV—At No, 220s, RIGHTH AV. t Nos. 11, 08, 14%, 240, 254, USI, TOO, OZ, 2180, 2584, T46, 850, 004, cor, 24th at, 2 ant, 407 Wert, WHATY THIRD » IRTY-SEVENTH § Bast. FORTY 4 UTM ST At BINETY-SIXTH ST, & Le: LIOLH ST.—At No. 450 LITTH ST. At No. Te At a th « ALEXANDBR AV.—AC No, 374, 2855. | WINTH AV.—At Noe, 182, 528, 649, 102 Bm. Ne, 200 COND ST.—At No. 237 W, AMSTERDAM AY—At Nos, 06, 200, B15, 1hS3, BROAD WAY—At Nos, i804, 1020. jT—At No. 833, v. B4th at. t No. T48, WILLIS AV.—At No, 24, WEAT NNOADWAY—At No. 82% 1682,

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