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Bi 5 sad 5a a * To Be Held in Dublin in 1907 and « py 0 take a ballot. Each man wrote his u ELIND PANN FO 8G EATON ss Fund of $250,000 Is Decided Upon for the Initial Needs of the Enter- prise. @pecie) Correspondence of The Evening World, From Our Regular Correapondent.) DUBLIN, Ireland, Oct, 29—On Monday night one of the largest meet- ings ever held in Dublin assembled in the Mansion House to promote the project for holding a national exhibition of Irish arts, industries, manufac tures and resources, The Lord Mayor presided, and the speakers included the High Sheriff, several members of the Corporation, representatives of the Gaelic League and prominent citizens in every walk of life, A number) of letters from men of al! parties, including Dr. Douglas Hyde, John Dillon,! ‘William O'Brien, Thomas Sexton, and from manufacturers throughout Ire-| land, were read, warmly indorsing the project and promising it every sup- Communications wore also received from the Irish in Great Britain and fm the United States to the same effect. Resolutions of support were received from the governing bodies of the Gaelic League and the United Irish Ieague, and from over a hundred county and urban councils throughout the country. > It was unanimously resolved to establish a company with a capital of $250,000 to crect the exhibition buildings and to open {t In Dublin in May, 1907. | As at present outlined the Irish National Exhihition of 1907 will be the! most remarkable and attractive one ever held {n Ireland and should prove of lesting benef to the country. It is intended to demonstrate not only | what Ireland does at preseut in the arts, industries and manufactures, but | ‘what she has done formerly and what she {s capable of doing In the future. HOSTS EXPECTED FROM AMERICA The Irish in Great Britain have arranged to “Invade” Ireland in 1207, ‘when the Exhibition opens, and {t is anticipated that a huge {nflux of Irish- ‘American vistiors will take place in the same year, Ireland, once famed as “the Island of Woods and Forests,” is now the | most treeless country {n Europe. Recently a vigorous effort has been made to focus public attention on tho vital importance of afforestation and with a large measure of success. At the last meeting of the Dublin County Counc! {t was unanimously ,Pesolved to take steps to plant tho waste lands in County Dublin. The re- afforestors are naturally jubilant, and when it is considered that there aro , 8,000,000 acres of waste lands in the country at the present time {t will be geen there is cause for the jutilaton, TRADING NOW WITH FRANCE. The first direct regular trading veesel between Ireland and the continent that bas entered the port of Dublin for a couple of generations steamed up the Laffey one day last week and was cheered by the people assembled along | the quays. It was the Entreneuve, one of tho vessels of the new French | line of steamers which has started between Dublin and Treport, in Nor- mandy. The opening up again of a direct Irish trade with the continent {9 rejoiced In by nearly all the population, except those whose interests Ile in the railways and steamship lines of Great Britain, On Tuesday an anti-emigration conference was held in the Manston House, under the presidency of the Lord Mayor. It ds now recognized on all sides that usless the terrible annual exodus of the young and strong from | Treland can be materially decreased the country will fall to pleces, Letters Of sympathy and promising support to the object of the conference were read from Cardinal Logue and a number of prominent persons throughout the country. The speakers included clergymen, Journalists, representatives of public bodies and-doctors. The Bishop of Waterford Suggested as a rem- edy that the help of the Irish in America should be enlisted to promote {n- dustrial undertakings in Ireland, AMERICANS TO HELP MOVEMENT, It would be impossible, he declared, to exaggorate the import , an bringing Irish America into the movement. “Tho Prepald vases ted ‘Was declared by one of the priests who spoke to be “the most fertile cause Of Irish emigration.” Among the speakers were John O'Callahan, of Bos. | ton. The general result of the conference was a resolut i the Irish abroad, and especially in the United States, the § » alarmin; to which emigration {s reducing Ireland and to seek their pea rege discountenancing it so far as in their power and thelr support in establish. ing manufactures and industries in Ireland to keep the people at home. ‘CLOCKS GALORE FOR KEPT HER JEWELS AIMS PRESENT) IN THE ICE-B0X Friends Chose Duplicates by the! Chinese Merchant's White Wite| Score for His Surprise Wed-| Acouses Housekeeper of Steal- ding Gifts and They Are Stil) ing $260 Worth of Diamond Puzzled at What to Buy. Rings and Garter Buckles, fon to impress on Tt fs hard enough for one man to de- cide what he will buy for a wedding Present to be given to @ friend, Na- turally, it is twenty times harder for ‘twenty men who have contributed to @ Wedding present fund to reach a ae- elation as to what shall be purchased with the money, which explains why James Monaghan and his charming bride, of Ninetleth street and Third avenue, who have just taken apart- ments at No, 1633 Second avenue, have Yet to seo a present that twenty en- thusiastic friends are anxious to give them. | Mr. Monaghan is one of the prom!- Bent citizens of the Thirtieth Assembly ee District. When news of his marriage MAIL WA feached his friends, ten of them, ve | bby John A. Henneberry, chiet cierk for | GON IN DIFCH. eect ies tor pple & Sub | Topples Over with Horse Into fx. "What shall we buy?’ asked Mr.| cavetton an Brestway, ~ ‘Henneberry of the other nine, A United States mall wagon hurrying Opinions ranged all the way from a| up Broadway early to-day fell into an Mechanical viano vlayer to a feet of \excavacion about two hundred fee: below | bulators. Finally it was decided Ninth atceet. The driver, Charles Coben, tried to swerve his horses over to one| ride, but thelr momentum wos £0 great could not be stopped. One of! fell into the diteh, whlch Is ut feet deep and wide, while the other aninal sprawled on the pavement above A » hour end a aalt & wrecking he New York City Rallwa; he hutwe back ¢ Mut hurts eave a $01 Mre, Lszle Lee Chung, the Caucasian wife of a Pell street merchant, accused ler housekeeper, Carrie Moy, with the larceny of $%@ worth of Jewalry In the Centre Street Police ourt to-day. The jewelry Cconsisted of diamond earrings, rings and or buckles, and Was stolen trom the ice-box, “Rather @ queer place to keep valu- able jewelry," Magistrate Cornel) re-| marked, “The safest place in the worid,” ce Plied Mrs. Lee Chung. “Nobody would ever think of looking there for jewo:ry,’ The Moy woman was held n $00 ball for trial. ce on a alin of paper. in the count hate Were chirteen clocks and seven ehalrs. P Another ballot was taken and every Voted for a clock, each thinking the others would vote for some- eine, A clock war decided upon. raat.on Pe ively deckied upon id th repo room table, a : Bs rod ws maghan hasn't got is a Pana- ma hat and @ compass." rplexed contributors | John J, Curran, Thoma: Phetan, T, William Sinnott, Thomas Gill, John aingham, A: + Go oll paint- a silver set, ie. DWATOR EXKERD J. M°CRYSZL HARRY THAW ISN'T WANTED AT HOME _-— Pittsburg Millionaire Reported to Have Married Evelyn Flor- ence Nesbitt, the Actress, Will Be Ignored by His Family, PITTSBURG, Pa, Nov. 6—Whatever Harry Kimball Thaw's plans may have been for smoothing out the tangle in which he has beco..e Involved through the reports of his marriage to Evelyn Florence Nesbitt, the chorus girl and mode}, he hus evidently delayed his trip to Pittsburg too le Tt is now sald on good authority tha his family does not care whether he comes or not, and that they would really prefer to have him remain away until hia prevent entanglements are straight ened out. Lils mother, Mra. William Thaw, has returned from St. Louls, where she went to ee the exposition, ‘and through a riend has issued a statement, She sad she did not believe her son was married to the Nesbitt wo- man, but that she did believe the stories of many of his escapades, She aid she had not sent for him, that she would not seek an explanation, nor did she expect him home, May Return to Europe, It Is believed from the tone of her n with the friend to whom she gave Interv'ew that the Thaw family will utterly ignore Harry, and that he is not wanted at Lyndehurst, thelr home, It 1s belleved that he will return to Europ: hat Miss Nesbitt will also reorc Mrs, Charles J. Holman, mother of Miss Nesbitt, is reported to have re- covered somewhat from the prostration due to the excitement caused by her daughter's actions, It Is sald she has heard from her daughter. None but her husband and the physicians and au are allowed to see her. Cable despatches from London reiter- ate the statements to the effect that Harty Thaw and Miss Nesbitt were registered at the Motel Carlton as man and wife, Thaw and Actress Keep Their Whereabouts Secret, Thaw's whereabouts and . Miss Nesbitt are stilla mystery, It is reported that both have gone to Bumtalo, where they will be in easy reach of Pittsburg. Misa Noabitt was reported to have Broad- lette, dined yesterday afternoon at way restaurant with Magle who recently returned from an xe ment in London with "The Prince of Pik = a Miss Follette was well acquain with Miss Nesbitt before elther of went t> London, trey having be the “Wilt Rose’ company at the same time. They were with each other much In, Lon h Miss ¢ could not be found and would probably keep her friend's toca. tion a secret anyway, SAS I HIS WILL WIFE DESERTED HIM —>— Jacob Koenig Left Only $5 to Woman He Wedded Last) March, But She Sues for Her Dower Rights. Although Jacob Koenig, jr, tn the petition for prodate « of his father, Jaccb Koenig, estate would not exceed $ In valu his willow, Jacobine Koe though she only marr 1904," has brought a sult for her dower mittee made its Anal report | rights in the big store and fathouse at| yy thi orthwest corner of Seventh ave- d ‘aston, 4 0 | the nortbweat Sorner 0 and on ong occasion, seconling to her the fact that she | in d last Maroh, he died, Sept. 2%, tory property whl $0 big that Property Ich » and she ema: » and Charles, his brother, 1 en 3) ROBBERS GOT SILVER COIN. © State Bank of this village was entered by the entrance to the apart- ments ie No. 21 West Twenty-seventh | nda that Jacov {WILL PROVE | —— So Declares Woman Whom Louis Wants Permanently Enjoined from Using His Name, "Tam Lows V. Rell's wi’e, and 1 will! prove the fact in court. Furthermore. my revelations thero will be a distinct surprise to the soclety that receives my husband and his friends, I have papers In my posse that will convince a Jury that my husband, and not myself, is posing.” So says Mrs. Evelyn M, Clarke, whom Louls V. Bell, broker and horse owner, ts seeking to restrain by injunction from calling herself “Mra, Louis V. Bell.” She wears valuable gems, samples of | the $150,000 worth Bell says he gave her. | Sho is confident of her ability to con- vinze any jury of her rights to the name of Mra. La foparation from Jamalt but rleht: at No, 12 Ea wan there she gave t ment Says She Took First Steps, “L did not intend to say a word unttl the case was called jn court, My hu b artin fon for an ti 0 restratr om using his riyefirat following state an a n on nme fi name, seeks to create the impressio that he dragmed me to court, As a mat. |ter of fact, I started an action first, | "When the break with my husband appeared Inevitable I took every pre- caution to protect myesif, As he him- | self admits, I was received everywhe Jas his wife for eight years. He m | large fortune by plunging In Wall | street and on the race tracks, and we entoyed It together, “L have good proof that I am his | legal wife, and it will not take long to prove the fact to the courts. My man fear was that he would at- tempt to dispose of his property, and it w to forestall this th: began an action to make him }books and show the dispc his wealth. | Han Offers of Ald. | “During the years I have lived his m Now York soctety I have made many friends, doth among men and wo? men. Many friends ot Mr. Bell have written to me, to ask If they could w of any service of sym pathy from women ha n received by me, and they are from en whose acquaintance I am ad to clatin, T havo a surprisingly long liet Jot witnesses, who will tell some ex traordinary things about Mr.. Louls Bell,’ Mr, Bell seems not at all concerned over the legal battle with his sup. posed wife, He refuses to discuss the | affair at all, and says all !nformation on his side would have to come from his attorney, Mr. Seley, Bell's announcement that the wo- man who had lived with him for eight years Was not his wife was a distinet shock to soclety, and partic- ularly that section of it which had partelpated in the many social even | given by the Bells, The case Is to | be heard next. week, ee SAYS HIS WIFE DRANK. < declares Hopwood Has His Lapsed Separa- Calendar Again, William Hopwood's sult for separation from his wife, Margaret Colan Hop- fhe lawyer in an. affidavit ¢ all rommering in Ulster County rs. Hopwood wes addictal to drink, foil down stairs with | ir arma READING, Mich, Nov. 6 utors their fa nt fe, ber Tor er’ wid; aK, sie “Foaice ts ~—-AMMIRS, BELL" | V. Bell, Horseman and Broker, ' Mrs, Clarke la thirty and handsome. | 'n | rooms, contro: while he and the Hopwoods | . TAKS SU Went to Police Station with Husband, but Neither Knew | What Charge to Make Against | the Other. | Sorely grieved because the romantic had worn glamour of her marriage off, and because she thought the fove lot hi had waned, Mrs, | Ma: ‘ en English girl of twenty, a bride of eight months, a 4 polson at Twenty-third s 1 Third avenue, walked half ggering from weakness, and us, To-day she is in I yue Hospital, She ts tired of life, she says, and death would be a relief, It a bh {a delleved, however, that she will re- | cover, Who this handsome girl was before her marrage to Clarence Fatchall, sald ) be a bookkeeper in the employ of |the National Republican Committee, wit offices at No, 1 Madison avenue, |i a mystery, That she is a girl of education far above the average, and that she has been used to refined sur- roun: } no one doubts who has hed her and her husband tn the at No, 36 West first street. wa warding ‘Twenty | Young Wife Devoted, The young couple came to this house less than a both bh house week ago. They were even extravagantly, saying that they had no difficulty in The man in the nelgh- ted rooms there andsome and wi commodations mother | 1 that he w ining his his former home, ‘i saw but little of the anther Inmates he house, She ve nalned in her rooms except when her ind was due home from his work. upproach she always was seen to srward and meet him in the hall, nto him was conspicuous, the pretty young wife was not was first made known to other in the house on Thuraday night. ald that Fatchall came home and silent, and that she ques him because of his treatment of “You don't me any longer |told him. “You made a mist of it all has worn away and the romance you ex- pected Is a tragedy." Fatehall told her that he had lost his jon; that he was In great trouble, ind that he feared they would be em- noney, The girl tried to t he refused to listen to t to the street alone. and, going to her ed her husband. I teld you that you were tired of me, and you are no more tired than I am { myself. I don't wear well.” With that the girl tried to raise o ttle of carbolle acid to her lips, The her and wrested the bottle her grasp. They talked for a time and then he left. The tenants in \the house soy that he carried a bundle with him, and that in this bundle was his clothing, He is belleved to have taken the bundle to his mother and then to have returned to his bride, | Young Man Moody, When Fatchall came home last night |he was again moody and downcast. Again bis wife declared that he was tired of her and that his marriage had proved a fatlure; that it had not brought him the contented happiness | that he had expected, He told her, tt ts sald, that he had failed to get a poal- | ton. Again she tried to cheer him up, r tro! raise. Then the girl lost vatience, One word brought on anothér until there was @ quarrel, Together they left the house, both | going to the West Twentieth street po- | lee station, jon duty. cbarge the other. The man said that he was uinhaopy atives on whom #he could call. Police Sergeant Advises, ‘ou children go home,” advised tae “lo and make this up. ner his is all nonsense. Tome re the man and his girl wife went. r baby | rhey repaired to thelr rooms, but some time during the nigts the girl left ber streot, wae phial that her from hee Thurs: usband’s side and slipped to the psy made her way to Twenty wirect and Third avenue and Chere swa! lowed the eontents of the me had wrested | telling him that they would get along somehow, but his spirits would not where Sergt. O'Neill was Neither knew with what to ‘The girl said she was un- he| Wood, Which lapsed, was restored to the | joved and in a strange city and a| he divorce court calendar to-day on the "| wpplitation of ¥. K. Clark, attorney for 1 me March 2,/ 4 strange country, without (fiends or rei-| CROWD TO HEAR FATHER SHARAN Famous Leoturer and Soholar to Talk on Hibernianism and To-Morrow Night. NOTED IRISH-AMERICANS PROMISE TO ATTEND, Justice O’Brien.to Preside and Many Well-Known Persons Have Engaged Boxes—For Institute Building Fund, ‘When the Very Rev. Thomas J. Sha- han, D.-D,, rises to deliver his lecture on “Hiberifanism: Its Mission,” to- morrow night in Carnegie Hall he will look upon a large and representative Gabbering of Irish-Americans and na- tive Irishmen. All: the. indications are that the auditorium wili be crowded with an enthusiastic assemblage. ‘Tho evening wil! not be gaken up ex- clustvely by the lecture of Father Sha- han, The Catholic Protectory ‘Band will play several selections, and some noted singers, including Edward O'Mahony, the famous basso, will ap- pear, There will also be addresses by well-known speakers. The Rev, Father Shahan is one of the strongest ‘and most eloquent pulpit ora- tora in America, As Professor of Church History and of Roman Law in the Cath- olle University at Washington he has long enjoyed the reputation as @ scholar, and has materially helped to ralse the study of Irish history io the | high plane it occuples at present. Father Shahan will undoubtedly discourse upon the development of the Order of An- jclent Hibernians in the United st The proceeds of this lecture will go to the building fund for the Hibernian In- stitute at Fifth avenue and One Hun- dred and Sixteenth street, After an introductory address by Pat- rick J. McNulty, of the State institution, Justice “Ee J. U'Brien, Who Wis preside as chairman, will deliver an ad- dress, The lecture of Father Shahan will follow, Among those who will serve as vice- presidents are: | Commissioner McAdoo, President John |. Ahearn, of the Borougn of manaat- tan; J. Van Yeokten Olcott, J, B. pas; ning, Mgr, Jowepu . duoney, Ma. J. Jennings, bv James R. O' Beirne, Cor. ery Rev, B. A. Brady, of Bete Cipuatn; Aviliam’>. Mokaughiin and Patrick J, Tausey, |, Bome of the x-holders are Arch- | bishop John M. Farley, Charles F. Mur- reg ajor Edward 3 Gilgar, Division A. O. H., County Monaghan Young en's Asgoreiion: gpa Pg Judge organ J. O'Brien, D. V. Clancy, Di- . H.; Michael H. Gava- vision 16, A. O. H.; 5 |nagh, Division 8A, O. H.; Michael J. Jennings, Thomas Birmingham, Divi- sion 13, O. H.; Rev, Bernard A. | Brady, State Chaplain; Gaelic Society, Martin J. Kane, Division 4, A. 0. Hy John P. Butler. Division 6, A. O, Hi; Matthew Clone, Judge D. F. Finn, T. F Loughman, Park. Commissioner John J, Brady, Victor J, Dowling, J. Van Veehten | Oleott, Park Comisioner John J. Pallas, P. president, GN. 1. A. A D. Fr Commissioner N, \J an Jacob Ruy pert, Collector of the | Pore of New York; John F. Ahearn, Senator James J, Frawley, M. F. Grath, Patrick Smith, Diwaton 2, O. HL Ernest Sulser, John T. Oak- ley, Gen, James 8. fiatkoon. Sur- veyor of the - Port; 8, Coolld, Charles H. Treat, ‘Thomas Trai Division % A. O, Hj; Willtam ree By ae i, . He; lohan, Divisio Murphy, Division 2, A. Saxe, igha, McG: Nulty, T, C. Cael : i BP. t is Chairman tne eommittee of Arrangements, and John P, Butler, Secretary, The county officers are: yt Edwar} T, MoCrys- tal, Thomas ‘eats, Dan ¥. Claney, Capt. Thomas Cunni m, James Moyna, Michael Mohan, Rev. Dr, Charles McCready. Cou Chaplain, and John J, Pallas, Chairman Hi 7 Yan Hall Bulldin) und, * IRELAND'S DAY AT THE FAIR. Address in Gaelic One of the Fea- tures of Dig Celebration. 8ST. LOUIS, Nov. 6.—Ireland Day wi observed at the World's Fhir to-day, and the regular attendance was con- siderably augmented by the members of the United Irish Societies of St. Louls, Exercises were held In Festival Hall, consisting of addresses and Irish bend melodies, President cls welcomed the assemblage and Judge O'Neil Ryan, of &. Louls, responded. Other were made a J, J. Glen- non, . D. 8 lan and Brother Bernardine, of Chris Brothers’ coreg, the latter belng delivered in the ie _tonxue. Stern Bros. THE LATEST PARIS NOVELTY * Extra Thin Gold Watches One- inch thickness, 18- Karat, Full Size Movement. Guar- anteed to be accurate time pieces, FOR MEN AND WOMEN, $250.00 each West 23d Street Its Mission at Carnegie Hall|- Mn TT AD VOTE! YOUR LAST CHANCE! $1,000 IN PRIZES! If you haven't voted in the Sunday World's Great Election Forecast Contest, don't let your last'chance go by. You will have it to-morrow. Full details for the last time. ALSO, LETTERS AND PRIZES IN THE “WHO & WHY?” CONTEST. Life and Death Mystery of the X-Ray. A startling phase of the effects of this wonderful discovery, and the fear of its influence which has sent Thomas A, Edison on the track of another invention to offset it. — The Phipps-McKee-Tevis Love Tragedy and Comedy. The full story of the most astonishing social and marital entanglement of recent years. Photo graphs of the principals, and many interesting and surprising facts, New York’s Smiling Army of Factory Girls. Langdon Smith refutes the idea that the girls in our workshops are unhappy, and writes graphically on the subject. The Romance of Nellie Gore. Letters of the unfortunate American girl who met atragic death in Paris that shed much light on her mysterious life, What Shall We Do With Our Boys? Excerpts from a new book which tries tosolve the problem and only makes it harder than kefore, A New York Tragedy That Turned a Man’s Hair White in a Night. The true story of a thief with a heart, whose hair turned white because of a woman's devo- tion, One of those rare tales of actual New York, oe ‘Charlie’ Gates’s “Vacation Party.” The remarkable outing which John W. Gates’g son recently gave to a party of friends, ——e—e A Day at Home with Ysaye; Smartest Horse Show Gowns; The Theatre, Qc, Final Advice Mr. Dooley’s to Voters SSS Mr. Butt-In for Congress, Phyllis in a fine place; The Newlyweds’ latest quarrel; The Angel Child and all the favorites in the Funny Side, —SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSIISSSSIEEE_ A Song by Anna si} \ a ) i « ra a < al v « ‘s