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AULD BY CAR Seven- Year-Old Child Runs Against Fender While Cross- ing Street and Is Thrown Un-| Hire Him to Thrash Him and TY SCOLERL der the Wheels. MOTORMAN EXONERATED BY EYE WITNESSES. Little Victim’s Grandmother Sees Tragedy from Window of Her Home—Child’s Mother Very Ill from Shock. Caroline Fisher, a pretty little school- mirl of seven, was killed to-day tn front of her home, at No, %7%8 Third avenue, by a Westchester avenue trolley car, ‘The child attempted to cross the street \in the middle of the block between One Hundred and Forty-sixth and One Hun- dred and Forty: nth streets, and war blind to the danger from the south- bound car which struck her by a north bound car which had just gone by, The fender rolled the child over twice and then slipped over her body, allowing the wheels to reach her and crush out her Ufe, Public School No. 18, which the child attended, Is at the corner of One Hun- dred and Forty-seventh street and Courtlandt avenue, Polleceman Elory Quick 1s posted at the One Hundred and Forty-seventh street crossing to look out for the children, Those who live east of Third avenue have been repeat- ediv cautio about crossing anywhere but at One Hundred and Forty-seventh street, In spite of this many of them -eross to the west side of the street at One Hundred and Fo sixth street, usually a safe thing to do, as the mo- tormen keep a close lookout for children there, Child Ran Into Car Fender, The southbound car waa No. 101, and fta crew consisted of Motorman John A. B. Glore, of No, 202 Alexander aves nue, and Conductor Hurry Delong, Glore is a new man, having had only one week's expe but, ding witnesses, the fatal acctdent to-day was not his fault He stopped his car at One Hundred and Forty-seventh street and started south at a moderate rate of wpecd, Little Caroline Fisher, with her school books under her arm, came out of her house, {nm the middle of the block, and etarted across the road, She stopped for the northbound car, but as soo s# ft passed made a dash for the opposite side, running right Into the fender of Glore's car, Glore made every effort to check his car, but was unsuccessful, und the child was crushed to death by the wheels of the front truck, Motorman ta Pro ited, ‘There were about thirty passengers on the car and they rushed off anu, With Policeman Quick and two other officers, raised the car from the childs buwy, An ambuuice Was suuitdoned, Dut one giance at We girl was suibowns W SUUW ual Bau Was Ueda, Wen tae chowu bemused were mMuUterings, and QuicK duet ere Oe Lie padi agai, aod With The vther vineets eluvd Budi Over Mig. he Cat Was JUN Wo 4 point near tue Alexander avenue stacion, and there Gore lett it and went (oO the siation- duyusy, The man was completely prostrated by the affair, A number of passengers, ameng them P. ©, Sontana, of No, Hi East One Hundred and Porty-seventh Street, wont to the thelr opinion that Glore was in nowise to blame for the Weasdy, The dead child live: and her grandparents, Mr. and John Henkel. She was an only child, ‘And (dolized by the family, Her father, John Fisher, lett his wife sx years ago Pil nothing tas been heard of him nee. Grandmother Saw Accident, this there Bul Mucor Every morning Caroline's motver ana] the fre’ ‘ grandmother would sit inthe window |and was painfally bruised, * > away for! School. For gome reawoa, the mother] yur of Canada and the United States Henkel was, and she swooned when she ia and wateh the child start saw the car #1 hn When the news of the accident broken to Mrs. Fisher, she was prostrated that a physician had to be 2 the chi was 80 to stativa and gave! d With her mother! Mi f WAP HSBMD ‘Cohen Swears that George | Herrmann’s Wife Tried to Showed Him the Money. HERRMANN SAYS HE HAS SQUANDERED FORTUNE. Declares He Has Information that Before He Married the Woman She Had a “Check- ered Career.” Additional aMdavits In oposition to the alimony application of Florence Crosby | Ilerrmann in her sult against George Herrman for separat on were submit d) to-day by Jacob Stiefel, counsel for Herrmann, to Justice Amend In the Bu- premo Court. In an afMidavit Herrmann says that while he once had large meang he bas litte left, having lost $100.00) backing a {company produciug the musical comedy, “The Is.e of Coampagne, le says; “1 admit I dissipated and disposed ot the whole fortune jn an improvident manner, This plaintif€ well knows tnis | fact, ause she alded and avsicted me | in ¢ (ng and disposing of the same. Tam practically without a penn He also gays his mother is supporting | bin, Herrmann further declares that his wife has a large fortune and ts paying Herrmann also submitted an affidavit occasion “this plalntift offered me the told her ehe sould get some other per son ag J am not In that line. I positively assert thet this plaintiff! at the con- clusion of a poker game asked me to kiss her that night so as to create some {Jealously on the part of the defendant I have seen this plaintift during the summer have a $1.00 bill In her pus- jSession, which she had taken from her | ® wn to me,"* 9 |stocking and st Cohen a Herrmann leas 0) asserts he has seen Mra, wear diamonds worth no tae, ey My own affidavit, Herr. ¥8 Gf his wite: “Upon informa. tion and bellot this nlalntite has been jleading a ot red life, and I belleve | the same to be true, that plaintiff? haa ied inh a Mr. Farmond, a Mr. Mnr- [tin a Dr, Conatable, a Mr, Thurston | (who took her to Mexico, where they resided as man and wi and a Mr. Pike." Toese men, he says, lived in New York and Hoston also. “On infore mation and belle Herrmann says, “the plainuf was evicted from the Cectl and Carlton hotels in London, and the Regina Hotel In Poris on account of her behavior,” and adds: “At the Regina I was informed, and believe the sime to be true, that she associated with the noturious Payne Moore at that resort,” SE SSEC CECE GRLELSIGSOESOIBEGEG £66-0660644 6 64244464464 y 2 ra ¢ ® @ o ® 4 4 @ #0 a month for her apartments in Which there are five van loads of fur- | niture, bric-a-brac and rugs worth at| ® | least $20,080, which sie obtained from| @ him, > by Arthur Cohen, who says that on one | }sum of $1.00 to assault her husband. 1]? rs 4 2 > 3 \ \ \ OF.$4-06-0-6.046.804-0.000400@ Hy iil ve ~*~ (OORT) | MECCEN's GASSES ENG EO HGEDLOG FENG HEE HE OED EEPEP ELON DDEDTO CHAE OCH OEEELODDE POE ELEDOO DOE LILES : AH WHA ANC i HT | On Mecren 4 TRACK FARM RAISING Have’ COMsNG THROUGH MIS . re aah LATEST FOR COM By T. E. Powers. ANnAANANNH/ ‘Tat TIM PAN EXPRESS mM We HIS CoMMUTORPE DE witn me LIVE Stock FIREMAN HURT AT EHITIO DAL Hines’s Hands, Burned by Rope He Lets Go and Drops 35 Feet Into Life-Net—Leg Se- | verely Sprained and Bruised An unfortunate break occurred to-day in a demonstration of the working of the New York Fire Department a: Fire Headquarters, in East Sixty-seventh street, before Sir Fellx Semon, the Eng- lish surgeon, now visiting here; Lady | Semon, and other guests, when one of men fell heavily Into @ life-net | Sir Felix and Lady Semon, after a are now guests of Dr. and Mrs, George M. Lefferts, of No. 212 Madison avenue, and Dr. and Mrs. F. 8 Dennis, of No. $2 Madison avenue, Through Fire ASKS $60,000 FOR HER MAINED Bt Mother Demands Damages of Contractor Whose Truck Ran Over Child, Causing Loss of His Arm and Leg. Nestling {n his mother's arma with one empty four-year-old Clifford Weaver was y ent at the proceedings before Justice Dugro and a jury in the Supreme Court | Jay in which $#.000 Is demanded from | ptract« boy, On the fummoned t0 attend her. Mies E. M.|(chtef Croker, who personally conducted Biss Foltser, Caroline's weaning ky and the demonstration, the exhibition, which | unin primary department, immediately went | included work with scaling ladders, life. "haha to the house and did all they could to console the bereaved family, The child was In Class 2A, primary department. and was not on:y one ot the brightest of the youngeters there but also a general favorite with every. ¥, Mca WE BEAT MULEEO GN Louis Mormonstein Sent to Isl- and Six Months for Abandon- ing Helpmeet and Must Face Bigamy Charge. |nets and similar apparatus, was given to-day at the schqpl oftnstruction, in the evidence if ve and one leg gone, a r Thomas Leherty for the table between the opposing lawyers is u tuy truck with @ team of fron horses drawing tt. ttle Cufford’s toy, gigantic truck which, laden with steel girders for some new building, ran over und crushed him as he played in front of his house, Hundred and Thirty-fitth street, Bronx, It 1s a model of No, (8 East One 2B last J, Donovan will put that toy permitted by Judge lia Weaver. the mother of the the jury of how he was Mr, Leherty's «lant truck stopped be- rear of the Headquarters building Dare " Mrs. Be! P, Hines, of Hook and Ladder | oo og 1, who joined the department last ti ted, February, was sliding Gowi a life-line, | Mutilated when the plece of leather whien pio: tected his hands sipped and*hia palm was burned. Believing himself only a few fect above the and dropped thirty-five fe Jon hiy right aide, aud |hurt that several of his to lift him out of the net Dr. Ramadell, the department siclan, found that Hines s right le | badly sprained and bruised, but after a life-net he let go | He lan hia quarters. (fa | under it ly |complaint, presently clambered up to his seat phy-| Baby Clifford was not qufek enough tn was | Ketting out from under the truck, and ta rear wheel ran over bh little attention he was able to walk to injured so badly that at The rest of the exhibition was per-/|putate hi formed @ manner which delighted) For the the visitors. \lered a PRET GIRLS MAY i | Y I “Mr, EB fore her house, and all the children of the nelxhborhood swarmed upon and The driver, according to the d started off down the street, He was tue Lincoln Hospital {t was found necessary to am- and rieht leg. a) dental, The girls are against Senator Elsberg, and, not satisfled with having [sent forth an endless chain of letters asking support for Mr. Pinkney, they Jare buttonholing the voters In person c, UEAT ASEERG berg ts our for, and we want But tt 1s not} ntractor Sidney Berry en-| a. The MELLEN Paton POET TIRR EERE AG DREAD DD D ee gebtnb bed FE DPGEDD DDD ADE IDET DE DAGEDADEIGIDOEDD TNT ITE ey REE TAL EN O REO TPE MUTERS. VE ee b Oe Ghee | > TRISH INSTITUT * b 3 ' Contributes for a Lecture by * — the Rev. Dr. Shahan to Aid a | Deserving Hibernian Project. @| GETING A STORY OF PROGRESS OF Twn one THE IRISH IN AMERICA. WF You HAVE A ° COMMUTORP EOE 3 | to the Work of the A. 0. H—| Good Programme of Songs and Music Follows Speeches. Three thousand persons filed th m in Cornog'e Hall 1 tracted to the Lo.uss on “FE nian” by the very Rev. Dr, Thomas J. 8 yahan of the Catholic Universits |were oceupled by noted men In cv ry sisters or sweethearts Some of th observed were Recorder Juba W. Gott jVictor J. Dowling, Park Commissioner | John J. Pallas Judge Morgan J Obron, & |Rev. Father Brady, Siate Chaptain of the AO. Hs P. J. Conway, President t the Greater New York Ish Ahietle | Aswociation; Justice John Henry Me- Carthy, Gen. James BR, O'Beirne, ex- Sherif Thomas J. Dunn, Mar. Jessphy “The MTVERNON WELCHER, —NE Nevern PAYS For THE CARDS |. Mooney. Rev. Father Lavelle and Po- » | Hee Commissioner M-Adoo. ¥| The Catholic Protectory Bint of sixty Di pleces, under the leadersh p of Direct r @ | Ryan, furnished inspiring muse us a troduced the Rev. Dr, Shaba | Whe object of the lecture wes to ald | the fund for the erection of a Hiber= ® ‘tion Institute on the ground owned by ® the organizition at One Hundred and % | Sixteenth street and Fifth avenne, ‘The Inatitute ts to be a repository of Trisin $| and history, It ts ex jurt, literature J | vected to be to tue irish people tn this f jcomery what the Louvre fs to Peance and to be a monument to the genius fand Industry of the children of fyoland It Is planned to be architecturally one jof the great sights of Greater New | York | | ' | The lecture was practtoally the story lot the Irish in America, It traced the hardships and trlaly of the early Irish ® settlers in this country, their arjent | participation in the struggle to shake oft the yoke of England and to keep It ® | off when once removed, It told of the bitter hatred fomented against the race and of the warfare waged agalnst it! that resulted in the blotting out forever | jot prejudice against the exiles of Erin. | In many of the vicissitudes of their his- ONLY ONE FORT LEFT PORT ARTHUR DEFENDER + Gen. Stoessel Driven Back to Liaoti Hill Is Makivg His Last Stand— Surrender of Besieged Fortress Ex- | pected in Few Days, LONDON, Nov. 7—Russtan troops at dead while the battle rages. Thore are Port Arthur, many times outnumbered, | thome who declare many more Japanese have lost fort after fort and a despatch have fallen than Rusetans, Japanese to-day says that they have been driven | wno have dropped close to the Russian back to the Linoté HIM fort, the oDl¥Y | fortresses have ben stripped of their Important one not In the hanps of 4) warm clothing, and their naked bodies Jananese. | are freezing in the biting winds, The despatch adds that the Russlans) qcey was a rumor in Chefoo to-day have also been forced to flee to the | that Port arthur had fallen, Chefoo ig strongly fortified Liaotishan peninsula! 140 nor bed of war lies, and the rumor which is now being swept by the guns). 4, aia Wes, end the from Admiral Togo’s ships, There is no doubt that Port Arthur) {In dire distress and that its fail 1s at| PLAN GREAT BATTLE ALONG THE SHAKHE hand Is belleved by every correspondent with the exception of the representative MUKDEN, Nov, 7—The Russian and | Japanese armies, extending from Pen- of the Telegraph now stationed at Chefoo. He says that the Japanese are sand a half from the Russian at Liaotishan, but that else- | ‘aputze, on the east, to the Liao River where they have wormed their way to] 07 the west, at places are almost with- within a quarter of a mile of the outer |!" & Atone's throw of each other, At enclente, The fighting, according to thie| Bentslaputse not more than four hun- correspondent, is now prineipaily being | dred yards separate the advance posts, done with rifles, With the exception of | 4nd at Sinchinpu, Afteen miles south of the naval guns few cunnon are being | Mukden, the opposing troops occupy the employed, extreme ends of the same village. The conditions of the Japanese and) At Huangshantse the Russian centre the Russtan troops ary in 1are contrast, has thrown advance posts across the Many of the Russians are without shoes, Shakhe River. Both armies are Thelr clothes are ragged and thread-|Stfengthening their positions all along bare. The men are unfed, gaunt, ana the line. many of them are limping from wounds, Undoubtedly the moat decisive if not | not healed. Thelr cheeks are sunken | t® steatest battle of the year will be | from ilinens, and their hair and beards fOUsm, In the vicinity of the Bhakhe. are long and unkempt. They are 4&/ ability to hold thelr positions. The aol- ragged army of brave men, diers are bullding mud huts for winter On the other hand, the Japanese are | Warters. | well fed, well dressed, and those of ther pumber who are limping from tacked some of the Russian outposts Io force, but were repulsed. They were not able to take away all their killed Louls Mormonstein, twenty-fv im beaten,” explained one of the | wounds or weak from Illness are Not! OP wounded and left twenty-eight bod- old, of t Sixth street, woe [misses to an Evening World reporter, | on the fighting lines jes on the field. The Russians lost only held (In $20 ba MaAcléirate Pool jn “Our bil} asking for a separate board| No attempt can be made to bury the! nine men, the Essox ri to-day fur tral " of trustees for the Normal College | an a charge « y and was se Normal College Students Making wootd have passed but for him, It was | vody and hie throat cut, wae not mur sence to six moifihe on Hla kwel’s in Introduced In the 4 ¥ by Repre- dered a8 the result of incurring the ele Yoland for abandoning ble wet House-to-House Canvass tO cencative adams, o + gentleman, | pleasure of an Itallan secret society, aa The trouble of Mormonst in begin nd passed the Lower Houge, It was . ani 49) ‘ at first supposed Batordny. He hae beer In the. Un. ol Persuade Everybody to Vote jr Senate, and Mr, Ela. Two men who were with him at the ved wath bis Wate, 3 di, und H ij berg ts responsible.” | } time he was killed, but afterward fed ; tet for Cornelius S. Pinkney. Mr. campaign begins to have been arrested, and they way @ ic ts = look promising to tho watchful eyes in third man, one Andrea Murillo, who Four weers i | ,, | Fourteenth atreet, His getting the girts |was alan of the pa killed Romano vote for Mr. Pinkney,” | of the Normal College to go forth in} during a drunken brawl! ship m Saturea wity young woman Of 4 pairs to the number of several hundred Romano Killed in a Brawl When The prisoners, who ure told ax wit- Mormonstein heard of tt sh ety went Is only one of the many Ingentous) F nesses, are Andrea Rocco and Michact the marrage, ead with her for Risberg, b!#| methods which he has brougt Into pl He Refused to Bring More Capuallo, They were drinking wits Seted ach btortied the place’ ard tes ur Normal Beiool) In his Maht he made the keynote A Romano and the missing Murtito, bones and Stormed the Place aid Mer | ih panion, another | “Odetly-berg.” thus linking the name of| Drinks, Two of the Men Tell s1 the fight started when, Romano erat by Veleciiven Weone: ara, Lonel coe leks ts perspire | used to buy mo geese by Br Sle, ng ard Lon-|pretty girl | the ¢ r-Chairman with that of his they say, did the stab Mormenstein he did not marry If Sthte Honator Nathan A. Elsberg | opponent Mr. Pinkney bas the active Police of Matewan. | drunken ‘rage. The * Bodie, bu. nad only contracted to ive|'a defeated he will have cause to re- syepert ot Hany nyne Whitney, Ward | out @ general ‘em for Murtilo and ¢ “th he ber th o or. | McAllister an her young men of pect to arrest him soon WR dstiate Pool No, 149) member the young women of the Nor- | Velitn, and it was not uatht Saturday When the murder was first discovered draw up & cor nicnmen.| Mal College, who are to-day conduct-| (hat Senator Eisberg woke up to the| MATTEAWAN, N. Y., Nov. 7—Fran- ft was sald that the dead man had fre. On the agains: hee hue Wy el he wag held to pay 350 i, be ata ed lek wank te ary in the interest of the youthful , Cornelia & Pinkney, ve Demgeratie Soters tiling & house-to-house canvass of the fact that he faced a very much alive e quently expressed a fear that he had | se ena vf oc allogenelt bind ren marked for death by a society to i= hb be belonged. On “inves! aight with four stab wounds in bie ed The Japanese on Saturday night at-| vory the Iriah people in America had been sustained by the activities of the Ancient Order of Iibernians, Major Edward T, MeCrystal warmly | commended the lecturer for his scholarly and Interesting address and moved a vote of thanks, Recorder Goff followed with a re- markably clever and Incisive postscript | to the lecture In which he seconded the | motion, The Recorder said; “If the Hivernians had done naught else but) eradicate that wretched caricature, the | stage Irishman, it had performed a| duty deserving of the gratitude of thelr people.” He pletured the present | persistent effort of England to In-| gratiate Itwelf with this country and eaid: “Let it be remembered that Eng- land tried to destroy this government twice and again attempted to disrupt it during the civil war, She was beaten twice by force of arms and on the oc- casion of her menace during the ctvil war the action of Kussia prevented her from resorting to the actual violence she had contemplated. Since that time she has repeatedly attempted to In- jure the prestige and prospertty of the United States, but now that she sees | to what. mi Hous strength and) power and influence we have growi and finding herself scorned and hated | in the courts of Europe she tries the arts of intrigue and diplomacy to oon. vinee the American people that she is their friend, MORGANS AGREE TO SEPARATE? Society Man and His Wife Re- ported Reconciled, Now Said to Have Signed Papers That Part Them. (Special to The Evening World.) HARRIS ON-THE-SOUND, N. Y, Nov, 7.—According to the report around Harrison-on-the-Sound to-duy, Mr, and Mrs, D, Percy Morgan, whose marital troubles have been aired quite often in the newspapers, and who It has been re- ported have become reconciled, have aigned separation papers, and it is sald that Mra, Morgan is going to keep their ehildren untt! spring and that then Mr, Morgan wili have the little ones the next gx months, husband and wie al- ternating in keeping them, Bunce the three younger chiidren, Joho ~ TRG FIND FORAN [CIT HAL PAT SHOCKS HAVO. Fine Gathering at Carnegie Hall Artistic Exterior of Venerable Pile Being Renovated by Sand= | Blasting, by Order of Borough” President Ahearn. 4 Recorder Goff Draws Attention) Municipal Art Commission Is Aroused Over What It Cone siders an Act of Vandalism, and Mr. Ahearn Shudders, udl-| There ts tre : , at-| President John F, ‘Ahearn and a tome ~ mining by the Munielpal Art Commis ston, and all because he bi The boxes that the weather marks of @ century on the marble and sandstone of the City walk of civic life ond thelr wives end roit should not Slot the 'seutcheon of n administration. nogzies of gasping, odoriferous sand blast on the facade and the eastern and western wings and set to work om the northern exposure a crew of patntera, with orders to lay on a eoat of white, thick and lasting, Mayor McClellan, who has been up the State for a week, returned early to-day, ‘ny one's breast should harborsudh: \ spirit of vandalism as would suggest preliminary, and Judge O'Bren tien in- y straight, the sand blast, repidly obliterating the bringing {t out In a whiteness so much admired in these artless times, @ wane dering gust of wind lifted his derby and inoldentally pushed into his nostrils the — odor of fresh paint, His nose followed the scent and to hie horror he beheld the rear of the northe ern exposure of the prectous architege _ tural pile daubed and streaked with white lead went into his office, & Now it will come to pass to-morrow. afternoon when the Munteipal Art Come mission mevts that this sandblaa! 5 and this painting of the Clty Hall wil * be matie-s for grave consideration, 4 ‘The » jover ths absence of the artistic sense from the make-up of President Ahearn and they are to put some windows In him, They ane sure that he needs light, Maycr McCtellan will attend the meste ing of the Art Commission, and he will recommend Ahearn makes a. provements in the a), City Hall the Commission uscertaa if it cannot assume the right of a director, ‘There is @ contract let for recanpebe ine and repatring the Governor's room, — but It is feared that unless som is done Father wake up some morning to find thet hw old mahowany furniture hes been palnte ed white and trimmed with gold. Referred to Art Commisdion, 4 "There is this much to It," sald the Mayor this afternoon, "I shall refer the matter of refurnishing and repairing the Governor's room to the Art Comite — sion,” and the Mayor sighed. . He would not add why he had come to this conclusion, but there was @ note of hope in his voice when he added tha possibly the law might permit the come “ mission to step In and take a hand ip making the City Hall “presentable.” . ‘The contract for covering the floor O@ the Governors’ room says that there shall be three red rugs. “Tr suppose,” sald the Mayor, the proper shade of red is obtain will be all right, but tf the law wot permit any Interference by the Commission, way all one can for the best.” President Ahearn sald he Dy believe his critics were serious In tl . Percy and Kdith, were kidnapped by their father from the Morgan home at Harrison, last May and taken by (eir tatner to & country mansion near Kad-| © her, in Pennsylvania, airs, Morgan had lived alone with her eldest daughter, Helen, in toe big Jay manson at Harn: | on, Then Mrs, Morgan created considera. | * Does England, Love Ust “But deep in their hearts there burns tred of Uncle Bam and his kreat family of prosperous sons and hters, for aa we og? ped Kid the Industries and ambi rand fpngiand contract, and re in nutshell the situatl be he needs us, but we ble excitement by going to Radnor and Mf bottom, aplriting her three chidren from, their | ate able to oe liner f father's place and taking them to Harri- T | ried by ton son, where she has Kept them ever] Wi? ThcNully, State Prosident of the Miss nh Morgan has endeavored | Ancient Order of Hibernians, made a to reconcile her parents, but in vain, | few Mittin remarks, The lighter part i romramme was then preserted, ovale repctarttng Mee Meernae | triers: was some fine rlneiog of wnt old Irish songs by Mr. Edward O' Man- famous basso, who rendered ‘em in both the English and their suit- lable Gaelic tongues His “Shan Van made no at| Vocht” was remarkably tine, Miss Jo- |sephine Murphy's rendering of “The | Leprehaun” in an excellent votce to the ture of that fine old ballad, “Rory o m we taken there and thas hi tempt to regain Mra, Morgan aincy her husband has lived very quietly in| the Hill” brovght such an outburst of the big Jay mansion. She atti! has two 9 ~ detectives In the house to look after| applause that she Sesponded with “irs the children and see that they are not) land Machree”’ Miss Grinnen < id 4, She refuses to talk to re-| “Killarney” with soulful effect. Miss saying | Harbara H. Casey, the noted pian ‘see why my private affairs! virtuoso, almost made the strings Sot any interest to the public and| breathe the essence of the why they should be alred in the news-| accompanied the singers : : papers. I shat! make no further state-| About [2.0 was realized for the object ments.” of the Institute, FURNITURE VAN TO. el us she dow, through which they entered After they had collected what goods they wanted, they opened the front door and carried thelr booty out and lomded it ono thy van and thea drove CARAY OFF PLUNDER ~:: While they were « up the goods were going with the load Burglars Clean Out a Cry-Goods! v1 soar they were moving | Store While the Owner Sleeps . emu ‘any new store —Moving, They Told CurioUS a iensiy toid a watenman what . b refused to give his name. Man. Fedderman and bis family live over = # store, but knew not rf robbery until long after the thieves MOUNT VERNON, N.Y. Nov. f. departed. The stolen goods were valued Teo men with a furniture van commit. | at 1,00 No arrests have beon made, ——_— ted @ bold robbery at the dry-goods | . store of Jacob Fedderman, at No. 2 991 Calis | West First street, before dawn to-day For Male Help | They drove up to the front door of the were through the syNDAY | made ¢ | ware and ajghting from the van went cround to the fven ant dorcel 6 wine! WORLD WANT DIRECTORY, | tanfessed admiration for dirt, even If 1 was yatskde walle of City Hall, and n 8a heiuty in & weather stain on the ve buliding than he could see in @ her stain on his office window, As a mat outside of ¢ vote of thanks to Father Shahan | ¥ Art mh is sund-biasting pais ‘ity Hall is from the remainder spool When the vnd-binst ein Bw if the M might ask it what aston which When Coffee, Tea, Cocoa, Chocolate, even Milk, disazree, wise peop’e > POSTUM FOR A REASON Wellville,” in DM ‘* | WOULD OBLITERATE ‘ 3 ALL SIGNS OF AGE, a % ble In store for Bo He has turned) entered the park from the y side, he ha in amazement, of Trt was shocked. To thinlg carb for the exterior of such @ pile as the Clty Hall, h Patnt Shocks Mayor, ‘ Mayor doubted that he saw | As he gazed on the work of He eritted his teeth and ia * of its member re racked” joing to try to find a Way ther before = President “4 so-called time cance of she os Knickerbocker may ty KE oie hope ancient dirt. sii 3. If, Hail, of the Scente and ine toric Preservation Society, is ‘ to have denoun ag an cu the val of the “mellow color” could see To of fact, he added, the City Hall was thor pout ten years ago now in progress of rem titled to any immunity on the Is of antiquity, Versas Steampipes. with which ni ter ed moury tion he got some time singe: » Duilding sewer con i addenly discovered that the was thi ly one On the ithe fanhottan that emptied into @ wanted to © to do the Comptrotler ¢ would take pa ch a portant part in effecting cipal Art Comm! Vresident Ahearn too art hes ta of steam pipes. was this sused no end of @ je steam pipe im Street- Woodbury'a ver a poor it Iitte hook, the, to > hee J