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0 ' FOR IN ——--—— 2. WAR'S END LOOKED SIX WEEKS PO ee High Authorities in St. Pétersburg Say Peace Negotiations Are On in Paris, and Agreemen t Likely to Be Reached in Copenhagen, tained in these despatches for over peror Nicholas's attitude concerning the advisability of making a pacific} Proposal to Japan, is fully confirme Y (By the Associated’ Press.) ST, PETERSBURG, March 25—6 P. M.—The Information con-|MINISTER IS HOME AGAIN. a week regarding the change in Em- d, In very high quarters peace within six weeks fs regarded as certain, The positiveness with which this is affirmed would indicate that the Government is already in possessior terms which indicate a basis to which Russia Private Conference, PARIS, March 46.20 P, M.—It la waid in quarters having excellent means of information that Russia's steps foward peace have already taken a fertative form at a private conference eld within recent days at one cf the @mall capitals of northern Europe, The purpose of this appears to have been to bring together personages rep- Resenting both sides, neither having @redentials to discuss formal terms of peace, but to Informally examine what @ach aide expected and what tentative basis deomed possible. Mention Is made of Stockholm and enhagen as advantageous points, Buch a method of direct communication lg now considered to be more Lkely than through the medium of the French Minister at Tokio, It |s off- olally asserted that the latter has not fool een asked to act in any peace ca- ‘pac! ity. —— SEA BATTLE NOT CREDITED IN RUSSIA 8T, PETERSBURG, March %-6 P, M.—Although public Interest In the war haa suddenly been transferred from the dettlefield in Manchuria to the Indian @oean by the possibility of a great naval conflict between Admiral Rojestvensky amd Admiral Togo, and In spite of re- porte that @oouting vessels have al- n of informatoin as to the Japanese can agree, ready been engaged near the Island of Mauritius, the Admiralty declines to display any excitement. Indeed the tranquility manifested ts quite unnatural, except on the theory that pending the prospecta of peace negotiations, Admiral Rojestvensky has recelved orders to keep out of the way of the Japanese, Although without direct advices the Admiralty does not credit the report of the meeting of a@couting vessels off Mauritlus, The same thing holds good in regard to the report of the sinking of the Rus- stan battle-ships Sissol Veliky and Nav- arin, which, it {s declared, was probably an arrant Invention, Tt can be asserted, however, that the report that Admiral Rojestvensky Is awalting Admiral Nebogatoff's diviston to strengthen his squadron ts incorrect, ‘The vessels of Nebogatoff’s division are hot of the same type or speed as Ro- Jostvensky's, and are only intended to trail behind as a coftvoy to protect the fleet of colllers, en LOUIS, Island of Mauritius, larch 25,-—Ine oredit the Fone erscht Bay Mare Ss by a steamer which arrived at Port Louls that day from Colombo to the ef- fect that she had met on the night of Mares 13 a Russian torpedo boat. fol« lowed hy a squadron of warships whose numher and cha: ts {earned acter could not be WOMAN FALLS DEAD IN WEST SIDE COURT Conlapses in Corridor While Walke ing Down the Hall Toward the Stairs. " \m poorly dressed woman, about forty aay ot ne Tat dead to-day in the @orridor of the West Side Court Bulld- ing at No, 314 West Fifty-fourth atreet. he evidently had business at tho court, feut what {t was could not be learned. Every person in court at the time who fas concerned In a case was asked to per i the body, but none could iden- he woman was 5 feet 4 Inches In height and rather stout, weighing about 10 » She wore a black silk shirt. @ black serge walking skirt and @ black and ereen hat with a green feather in it. There was nothing on the body by which It oould be identified, Only five cents were found on her, ppeured to be vail right, Aeo ghe appeared to all right, Bhe Lind down the hall toward the stairs dead to the court-room and’ there fd An ambulance surgeon who ‘was summoned pronounced her dead, The body will be removed to .the morgue. The Soliloquy of A Money-Maker. " How de do? Here we are, bright and early—shrewd enough to realize the dangers of delay. So, at the time of going to press with this edition of The Evening World, we,| har the following business hustlers, have al- ready filed our ads, for publication in the Sunday World’s Want Directory— , 689 POSITIONS FOR MEN, ' 760 POSITIONS FOR WOMEN, {| 482 TO LET OFFERS. 218 REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS, ' 462 BUSINESS SACRIFICES, ; 64 PIANO. ADS. + 496 MISCELLANEOUS BARGAINS, Gaturday always reminds us of elec- ton day. Everywhere you go you will gee the followers of Mr. Prosperity hur- tying into The World's hundreds of branch want ad.-booths, casting thelr ballots, Some are striving to find work- ers to help out in the home, the office or the factory; others are seeking em- ployment; nearly 1,000 are looking for more suitable homes or boarding- houses; there you meet up with distin- guished looking business men, whom alcknesas or family troubles have over- taken, They are going out of business; they advertise, and are willing to m ® quick buyer more than half way, Aro there women voters, 100? Yes, a great many of them, They must have, you know, their cooks, nurses, dressmakers, houseworkers, &c., and then they are incessantly trying to find odd pieces of furniture, antiques and other house furnishings to add to the comfort or attractiveness of the heme, Is there any one characteristic feature that {8 specially noticeable about this army of “Want” advertisers? Why, certainly, Even a casual ob- werver will at once detect an expression of anxiety in thelr features, This is a good sign, however, as it denotes tholt eagerness to back up their advertise. ment with prompt action, Thus, people who are anxious to "buy" or "sell," “work"’ or “employ” are the most satis: factory people to do business with, Are there many of us so-called “busi- ness hustlers,” you ask, who uge Sun- Gay World Wants? Well, I should say @o, Thero were 6.044 of us last Sunday, and if history repeats itself there will be more than 7,000 to-morrow, Would I advise the use and reading of the Sunday World's Want Directory to- morrow? BY ALL MEANS, Sd calito ee GAS KILLS 600 IN THREE YEARS, Reports from Coroners’ Omce Show that 284 Deraons Commi i Suleide, The deadly oheracter of the 5 nished residents of this city fy shown before the Legislative Gas Com- mittee. At the requeat of Chartes B, |Hughes, chlet inqutsitor of the com: mittee, cierks In the Coroners’ office to-day compiled a lst of 600 persons Who succumbed to the deadly fumes during the years 1902, 1903 and 1904, These are the figures; 12—Aceldental deaths from gas, 63; suicides by gas, 63, 1903—-Aceldent. . Suicides by th deathy from gas, 123; 19%4—Acclden from ; tulcldes by eee es, 100; —— HORSE PLUNGES THROUGH WINDOW Kunaway Smashes Plate Glass and Knocks Office Clerk trom Hiw Stool, Policeman Sheehan of the East Fifty: ‘iret Street Station was dragged and slightly Injured to-day by a green horse Whioh was running wild do avenue after delng abandoned” "hy the German Emperor Tells Rev. John J. Hirshmann, of Brooklyn, of His Wishes, PRAISES OUR COUNIRY. Gives Warm Reception to the Pastors Who Attended Dedi- cation of Berlin Cathedral. Tella How Kaiser Wilhclm Treate the Visitors and Praises Him as @ Great Ruler Over Men, The Rev, Dr. John J. Hirshmann, pastor of Bt, Peter's Lutheran Church, Bedford and DeKalb avenues, Brooklyn, has juet returned from Germany, where for two days he was the guest of Kaiser ‘Wilhelm on the occasion of the dedica- tlon of the Lutheran Cathedral in Berlin, Representative clergymen of the Lu- theran Church had been ‘summoned from all over the world to attend these ceremonies, for the new cathedral will be to Berlin what St. Paul's is to Lon- don and St, Peter's to Rome, “Tt was truly @ magnificent occasion," guid Dr, Hirshmann to-day, "I cer- tainly felt honored and singularly for- tunate in being present, I was only one of a party of ministers of the Lutheran from New York on the steamship Bar- barosa on Feb. 11, arriving in the Ger- man capital on Feb. 23, “We were treated with every honor and distinction and Ambassador Tower spared no effort in making us comfort: able, Mr, Tower personally introduced me to the Kaiser and he treated me with the greatest courtesy and kind- n Praises the Kalaer, / “Tam not usually Impressed so serl- ouely In any one’s favor as 1 was when I met the German Emperor. I am not speaking of him as a king, but as a man, He treated me as man to man and not as king to man, and I have come to my judgment of him accordingly, “He took a great Interest in America and asked questions without number of me conceriting the country, the difter- ent churches, the people and the cus. tome, He sald that he could never for. get the splendid treatment we accord. ed his brother, Prince Henry, and he added to me In these words “I¢ woald be the wht of my heart to be able to #0 urrange my affairs that I could pay a visit to America, Kven before my brother WAR NEEDS TOLD BY ROOSEVELT Necessity of Being Ready for a Conflict Impressed on Medical Graduates by the President— To Serve in Navy. WASHINGTON, March 2%,—President Roosevelt presented diplomas to-day to the class graduated from the Untted States Medical School at exercises held Auctioneers driver with whom it heen sent out, After breaking the es lcoman's grip the horse changed through a plate glass window into the cca of James Fetrech & Son, No. 4077 Dark avenue, knooking a clerk, John Smith, from his chair and coming to @ halt amid the wreckage of the placo, The horse, which was being driven in ness for he first time, was In charge of driver John Sanders when he drove across Park avenue at Bixty- seventh street, A New York Central train whizzed beneath them, a puff of smoke blowing through the vent scar- Ing the animal, which bolted up the “anders 4 ndens Jumped out and th = man made a for the bit” clang It he was until thrown. The in the hall of the National Museum, He addressed @ large audience and de- lvered a message to the twenty-three newly made doctors on the responsibil- {tles of the service they have entered, After mus fc by the United States Military Band and an invocation by Rey. Dr. John M, Schick, of the Grace Reformed Churoh, of bhis city, the President was introduced by Medical Director R, A, Marmion, Prestdent of the faculty. of the Naval Medical School. The family doctor was eulogized by the President as one for whom every- body encouraged the greatest intimacy and affection, The duties of the naval equlpage was @ total wreck, the horse Fetret 5 aged to the extent of ‘eo CB cela WOMAN CHARGED WITH STEALING A WATCH. Owned by Another Woman, It Is Found in Prisoner's Pocket After Leaving Ferry, Mrs, Norah Storer, of No, 62 West Sixtieth street left a Desbrosses atrect ferryboat to-day at Jersoy Clty, dl. rectly behind Mrs, Mary Wismoski, of No, 614 Driggs street, Brooklyn, Na- than Feinberg, also a passenger, the third in the Une, ‘i Bi ee Mrs, Storer, accorting to Feinberg, bent over and stuck something In her stocking. As Mrs, Wismosk! was boarding her tram in the Pannaylya. nia depot she discovered that her watch was gone, “Help! Help! Ive been robbed!” she cried, Finberg then came to the conolusion that the watch was what Mrs, Btorer had stowed away. He told the police and a general alarm was sent out, La- ter In the day Mrs, Storer was arrested and searched, ‘The watoh was found on her person. She said she found {t, but the Judge held her for larceny, — 4-11-44 COMES OUT IN POLICY DRAWING, “Mager Gia” Makes Appearauce, but It Proved Forerunner of Bad Luck to Gannon, The faot that the 4-11-44 gig in polley came out last night was made evident |In the Centre Street Police Court this | morning, when James Gannon was ar- ralgned, charged with having policy slips In his possession. Gannon was arrested at Elghty-second atreot and Becond avenue by detectives, who alleged they saw him passing slip: He denied the charge, but had elghteen AK id 80 Was held in ion, Pho slips showed Ww Fe aa Pedal at 4-11-44, known of the asian vn iid ab a ase. doctors, the President sald, enabled them to be of advantage to thelr "‘stay- at-home” brothers In the opportunity they have for the study of troploal diseases, The absence of proper utensils with which to work was mentioned by the President as an inconvenience that will often hamper them in thelr work. “You bave a double standard of honor to uphold,'' said that President, “that He of doctor and an officer of the navy." Continuing, he sald the resvonsibilities thet rest upon the naval doctor admit| of nothing but the hardest of work In time of war, He sald he was not com- petent to talk of thelr professional du- ties, Dut that he wanted to repeat that {f war comes it 1s almost certain to.find the medical profession unprepared, and this. will entail greater trials to those st, aL re your best If you have nothing but @ jacknifo to do Jt with,” ho ad. Parnieel He sald that Jt would not do to dait for proper materials, as of- tentimes only makeshifts were at hand, H sald he had seen such conditions himself at San Juan, where doctors and surgeons worked hours over operating- tables with instruments not sulted to the needs and with eyes that told of trials and lack of rest. It Is such con- ditions that test the mettle of the sur- geon, the President said, and he urged each member of the class to be pre- pared. It would be foollsh to shriek at the person In charge of the Government If war should came, and the nation be not found tobe ready, continued the President, and he asked every one to reflect that it would be really a lack of forethought of the National Legls- lature that Is to blame, He added that whatever the unpreparedness the doe- tora themselves would do much by seli- preparation to make thelr work toll ——— TWELVE HURT IN CAR CRASH, CHICAGO, March %.—Twelve persons were Injured to-day when a cable car ran Into a Thirty-frst street eleo- trie car, Both cara were crowded, The Thirty-first street car was crossin; Btute street when the collision occurred, The Impact threw the electric car from its tra the windows were shattered of the passengers and by Ay leces of 5 tagdinn @ signals fr thougat to ‘iar Church in this country, end we salled | cut Ung. Tey, ks Aeremony while Sehmit tn ____| |THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 95, 1906. ReviDr dS J went to tho United States and was recetvyed no nobly and wv kindly by all, I had a wreat hope of some duy Veing able to see that great conn- | try. Now that L know of the kinds | ly wemtiment of the people to | us as whown im (hele mun. how | ble reception of Prince Meury, | jam, doubly anxious co go to you | and see yuu at home, tho lau | afraid I will have to content my- jwelf with recelving you at my | home for nome time to come,’ “The ceremonies that attended the dedication of the Lintheran Cathedral were the most Impressive I have ever fee? “Royal Family Present, “All of the royal family wore pres- ent and everything was conduoted on a magnificent le, The church edl- fice itself Js @ national monument, It has been building for eleven years and the’ Emperor took a great personal in- est in the work. “After the ceremonies In the day time there was a grand banquet In the pal- ace that cvening at which I was a guest, I gat near tho Emperor and he DYING AFTER 16 DAYS’ SLEEP Physicians Say Mrs, Heustis, Victim of Gas Poison, Is Sink- ing Rapidly and Have Little Hope of Her Recovery. Mrs, J. H. Heustls, who with her daughter Luella was overcome by ans sixteen days ago, the daughter dying yesterday, was reported at the Presby- terian Hospital to-day as belng in a much weaker condition, ‘fhe physiciang attending the aged woman have hardly any hope of saving her life, Ap autopsy by Coroner's Physician O'Hanlon showed the daughter's death was directly due to the gas she and her mother Inhaled when they were over- eome more than two weeks ago while visting at the home of Mr, and Mrs, John Henry W, Helfer, at No, 234 West One Hundred and Thirty-first street. | This poison, Dr, O'Hanlon said, had! subjectnd part of the brain to a soften- ing provess, from which doath resulted, ‘The finding by the Coroner's physician confirms the diagnosis of phyaletans | at tho Presbytettan Hospital, who say that the only hope now left of saving | the fe of Mrs, Heustis is that her own vitality will overcome the polson in her system, For the first fow days that Mrs, Heustis was under treatment at tho hospital she occasionally showed signs of consciousness, but Was unable lo Speak or moye, The daughter was In a ar condition, and for thirteen days they remained in this state, Then Miss Heustis developed a fever, and from hat moment gank rapidly until ner death. Before Mrs, Heustis was over- come by the gas sho weighed 250 pounds, She has Jost almost 100 pounds since, sowticeslitlbieaipneees GET MARRIED QUICK JERSEY CITY PLAN. Ernest Harr Met Christina Hajl Last Night and Wedded Her To-Day, Ernest Harr, of No, 215 Plainfield avenue, Jersey City, first met and tn- troduced himself to Christina Hall, of 272 Duncan avenue, at a coneert In her mother, Friday. 8.15 P, M.—She drops hor programme. Ho pleks {t up. “Thank you,” They’ talk, § P, M.—Nhey resume conversation on muste and th tgs, Principally things. P| 8 offers to esi) 0 PAS ee to esrort her h Wti-Home, Wil he step in for a mo- ment? He will | 1.20—"WHL vou he mine? “Phis ta] so sudden!” ““Blose my children,’ Saturday. 9 A. M—Jonn Schmitt, a neighbor, riding fuylously on bis bike in the pain jayne {ts Beer es the wedtng, q Wella Ms ving tngea- Charles” Shukert Tree tie etorms: Frirsah tr cre Elgs' Hall last night. ‘They were mar- rled to-day, He 1s twenty-three and his | bride Is twenty, The time hedule of | this Jersey rapid-fire romance runs thus: 8 P, M.—Ernest enters Elks’ Hall and|§ seats himself next to a pretty girl with | “KAISER WANTS TO VISIT THIS COUNTRY, DR. HIRSHMANN AND KAISER, aT talked to ine a good deal during tho dinner, He wanted to know much about the GormansAmericans and was very pleaned to hear that though they were Joval citizens of the United States Bity ailll ,Drenervedt thelr love of the ain | sfore golng Into the banquet I waa | Introduced to the Empress Victoria and itreated by her most cordially. She asked many questions about the United States, especially about the schools and tho different Institutlons for the traine jing of children, She is a lovely ; Woman, and {t seemed to mo that her ;Breatest Interest was her children and the children of others, Many Americans There, “I met a large rumber of Americans in Berlin, where there js quite an | American colony, There Js one Amert- \¢an church, of no particular denomina- tion, The Rev, Dr. Dicky, of Mary- land, is its pastor, and he treated nie with singular kindness, acting as guido on many pleasant excursions, “I remained in Berlin a little more than a veek, returning to New York on the Barbarosa, ‘We had a very rough ‘passage back. BABY IN SILKS FOUND ON STEPS Pretty Eighteen-Month-Old Child |s Found on Threshold of Brooklyn Home Eariy To- Day, A i Some unhappy mother dressed her elghteen-months-old boy In ailks, stole through the streets of Brooklyn before dawn to-day, and deserted the child on the doorsteps of the residence at No, 100 Nassau street, occupled by August Isola, and then stole away, Isola discovered the baby at 6.80 o'clock, He was leaving his home when he heard a falnt cry, He found the baby snugly wrapped In @ blanket, On seeing Isola the child crawled from the blanket and began cooing. Its cap, dress and yell were of white silk, and the wore black leggins, button shoes and gray mittens, The deserted baby was taken to the Adams street police station and its clothing examined oarefully, Not a mark was on any garment which could help in the identification of the child, which was taken to the City Nursery, Because of {ts age the police think they may be able to trace the mother, rr WIFE COMPLAINS OF CONSUL M’MASTER. She Asks to Have Him Compelled to Support Family Before Going to Zanatbar, Dr. Frederick D, MeMaster, against whose appointment as United States Consul at Zanzibar his wife has pro tested to President Roosevelt unless he makes provision for the support of thelr two children and himself before he sails, 1s the same man who was re- leased by Magistrate Zeller tn tho West Side Court on Christmas Day, 1901, on hls promise to support his family, Dr, McMaster was on the staff of Governor-General Leonard Wood at Havana during the proteotorate Pro- | vislonal Govyerament of Cuba. Mrs. McMaster declared that her husband often left her and their children with- out food or money in thelr tine man sion in Havana, and after six montis she returned with the children to New York, She found 18+ | ji th v4 still Tives, The doctor for Cuba again when | arrest, M became secretary to r Ebsteln, Brooklyn Deputy Bolle oner, dn 102, but lened using’a futile raid on a Brook: ater lyn cafe, | ———__— ETRURIA DOCKS TO-MORROW. | The Cuard Ine steame urla, from} Liverpool and Queenstown for Now | York, Is reported by wireloss te graph | as having pi dn Communication with the Nantucket Lightship when the ves- sel wae fifty miles east of that point at 1 A. M. The steamer will probably dock about 8.9) A, M. to-morrow. NEW ANCHOR LINER SAIL8, eons ‘Aoyele clothes stands to Gl chor Ine steamer Caledonia sailed on Y iictleves that Uhetr mother may have | committee was a MOTHER OF 8 BABIES SHOT BY POLICEMAN She Was ‘‘Belle,”’ a Russian | Wolf-Hound, and Joy Was Thought Madness, TRIED TO TELL MASTER, Gladsome Barking and Wagging of Tail Brought Only, Fatal Bullets, Tt was mother's love that drove “Belle” mad with joy, ‘The stork! brought nine Ii!tle pupples to her early | to-day In the basement of Staak's sa-| loon, at Ninety-sixth street and Colume | bus avenue, and "Belle as soon a8 she could tear herself,away from her darlings ran upstairs to announce the; glad news to her owner, Her joy was mistaken for madness and now “Belle iloa stiff and dead under an old sack in her employer's store and |her pupplea nave been taken away In pasket by tho agent of the Soclety for the Prevention of Cruelty to An Imola, who will drown them because he been mad. elle was a Russian wolfhound, and Stoak had refused $600 for her, Bhe had an affectionate nature, and all the patrons of the saloon had a kind word and a pat on the lead for her, Customers Scatter. Barly to-day, while the saloon was filled with drinkers, Belle came: bound- Ing up the stairs leading from the base- ment, barking furiously, The appear- ance of the great shaggy animal was followed by @ great/scramble to' the door, The men in the place thought that she had auddenly gone mado, and Instead of wailing to see that her tafl Was wagging reassuringly fled to the street In search of places of safety, The dog followed them out, but made no effort to bite any one, When she ot outside she found that ehe could not get in again and Immediately became terribly worrted about the nino puppies that the stork had brought her, She ran barking wp and down the steect, and dozens of pedestrians, who had seen the stampede from the saloon, rushed way, Clave’ Schlump, bartender in Staak's saloon, did not belleve that thie faithful dog was mad, #0 he started out after her, Intending to bring her baok at look her in the cellar with her puppies, where whe woult recover from her ox- ‘eltemant End Her Career, / /-» But by that time *' had worked herself into @ frenzy, ie would noc ran drom door to door, barking and scratching, He overtook her at Ninety. sixth street and Columbus avenue and tried to catch hold of her. She snarled and showed her tecth. That was some- thing she had never done before, Selum| Huned at her woltish and ted to the hardware store oj Benjamin Baum, at No. 748° Columbus avenue, Where he remained yntii Po- \iceman Snyder came along and, two well-directed bullets, ended Bel lite, was not until the dog’s body was ovis with a sack that the frightenet people came out of the surrounding stores and went on thelr ways, POLICE BADGE FOUND ON THIEF Roundsman Hackett Catches Peter Hughes, Who Said He Lived in Broklyn, Holding Up Man in a Saloon, — Roundsman Havkett, who Is detailed to the District-Attorney’s office tem- porarily, went Into the ante-room of the saloon at the northwest oorner of kilm and Whie streets today to wash his hands, There he found a man backel against the wall by another man, who had him by the throat and was goin; (ough his pockets, Hackett jumped on the thief and speedily subdued him, Then he took him to Police Headquarters and locked him up, The prisoner said that he was Peter Hughes ,of No, 288 Paciric street, Brocklyn, A Hoboken police badge, No, Bh, was found in his pocket, The man he had been robbing was Alexander Raines, a Swede, of South Second street, Willlamsburg. Hughes had tne man's watch, chain and money when he waa arrested, eager GATES AVENUE SUBWAY, Brooklyn Transit League Indorsen Comptroller Grout’s Attitude, The general comn.ittee of the Central Brooklyn Transit League held a meet: Ing at No, 807 Gates avenue last night and took up the question of the routes proposed by the Belmont people, who seem to have ignored the Gates avenue route laid out by the Plan Commit'ee ot the Rapid Tr ¢ Commission, A. inted by Chairman GLASGOW, March %.—The new An- ry ja has made g ine Wl be too eat of thls weak aut Irish Language Week Opens in Dublin. | 6,000 members of the Gaelic Athletic Association, 10,000 school children into the stores to get out of harm's! Wal Be but, by heavens, they have roused an answer when Soilump called her, but | 4, h | Usually quiet people: of oy with Largest Procession Ever Seen in Ireland—President Hyde Ad- “dtesses Audience of 80,000,: (Special Correspondence of The Evening World.) (from Our Regtlar Correspondent.) DUBLIN, March 16,--On Sunday the largest procession ever witnessed in Ireland*iahered in “Irish League week,” The Daraders, marching at @ quick pace, occupied nearly two hours in, passing a given point, The cession comprised the members of the Executive Committee of the G League the menibers of the seventy branches of the organization in Dub Saged In the study of the Irish !anguage, the members of Cumonn na n heal, the National Foresters, the temperance societies, all the trade labor bodies, and the Dublin Corporation, As they marched the Gaelic athletes chorused patriotic songs by Davis and other national poets, while the school children and the G Leaguers sang in Irish “The Men of the West,” written by the lat Rooney, and the “Rallying Song” of the Gaelic League, Hach contingent In the procession wits | roferoncea headed by standard-bearens whose | Hoxton vtandurds bore the legend: “No surrender to the Post-Office, Ad- dress all your parcels and lebters in! Trish The fight between the Gaelle Leaguo and the Post-Offiee, owing to the refusal of that Institution to accept parcels and letters addressed in Irish—although it accepis without question addresses in German, French and even Russian—still gots merrily on, and so far the League hay decidodly the best of {t. 9 Fine Industrial Dieplay. A atriking feature of the procession was the industrial display, in which the manufacturers of Dublin exhibited on drawn by horsea their varlous in process of making, Numerous tableaux were also displayed, one of which held up the Post-Oftice to derision and was greeted with applause all along the route, while another depicted Ire- land breaking away trom Britannia and belng welcomed into the circle of free nations, represented by three beautiful young women, as "trance," “Italy” and “Hungary,” } At Smithfield Dr, Douglas Hyde, Pres- Ident of the Gaello League, and Arh: wiahop Walah addressed the procesalon> {aus aud @ vaat multitude of sympathise ers, whose Aumuer Je computed at lace the days of O'Cunnail, it month: preys monthe ved wl ae the in Augustus 07 Beat ja ago war fet Of all Journalistie writers In died this week, Latterly 0 somowhat dropped out of th momory, He Was a resident |during the siege, and his tions of Iife In the beleay rd \ lock ire Pauedon ym of an by his nam Aged Couple Traually a ople 18 land, every rule, Whitewell, Relfart, was the aoe, merrymaking on Monday of @ youth n ton, "ot eben sh of elmhty-fiy severtyesoven, After Re oft ‘the marriage veremo) moudy (Caton the sco 8 country p In their ollday” aUAire, towa Ie, iin route the alngwlar prot met by fifty farmers wearh hats and ¢a) ‘isoned 80,000, he procession, which {s believed, no assemblage a0 vast has J vee been witnessed in Dublin, “Aronbiahop | 884 striking re TY arriv fish anounved that he had come especially to the meeting to protest dguinat the acon of the Post-Uftice, amid prolonged ohecrings went out With @ light heart, to chiaae & Guelio hare, room’ Use, BAA ih a Raa the day In NAPOLEON GREAT MOT True Spirit of Vine hood Byolved fro Mest Trish wolf hound!’ |, Double Murder in Wexford, Wexford the most orlmeleds county in ireland, has been horrorestricken by the perpetration of a double murder of @ most brutal desoription in its midst, n old man: named Connor and his wife, who revided ut Vorrycarig, near Wexford town, were found with thelr heads beaten to atoms on the floar of thelr cottage on Sunday last, The mo- tlve of tho crime was robbery, ‘and it 1s believed to have been perpetrated by tramps, It is sixty years aince a wiml- Jar crime was committed in the "Model County," and so exasperated are the Wexford, that they have threatened to lynch the oNm- inal when ho ts discovered, Marah Ann Pearson and Agnes recently Ue in Montreal and brought back to Dae inth on ree of murder by polsoning, wero convicted on Friday last at tho aasizes and sentenced, the] +o to be hanged and the»'latter| ‘How to to be imprisoned for life, Althougli| the ono of there js no Laird f whatever felt! nervous; ta for edther of the Panett there is a| ful 9 re e strong aversion In Ireland to the| the cure of this class of di ital sentence being carried out jn| physician you ah the cape of a ‘woman, and efforts are | 18 Greene tnd bls ie me. t I on or <2 therefore being made to obtain a re-| clate ti of 101 prieve for Pearson, York oan No woman had been hanged In Ire+ are @ ef petaonel land for a lengthy perlod until three | Dr. crates a years ago, when a woman named Daly ever jie yf Was executed at Kilkenny for the mur-| $f ¥au "tg what soge aunitiea te der of her husband, and the resentment you can get cu felt at the action of the Lord-Lieuten- ant in permitting the sentence to be | ~~ red. carried out, Was shown by the inhabl- The tants of the city a purering thelr shops ee and drawing the blinds of thelr windows ‘on the day of the execution, “Adams of America” In Jail, “Adams, of America," pa he wag wont to arity desoriba himself to hin dupes, hus. retired from public for ot teen months, James Adams and Elizabeth Ruth Adams, both of New York, were found guilty at Armagh on Saturday of detraivding various ers and houseowners in ba Vi elsewhere Jo troland, Rosine dams was wont to represent as a inillionaire, and lived in lebany fashion on the credulous Uulster men for months, whom ho deeply impressed with eee IT’S FooD ‘That Restores aud Makes Health Possible, There are stomach specialists as well as eye and ear and otner spe- clalists, One of these told a young lady of New Brunswick, N, J., to quit medi- eines and eat Grape-Nuts, Sho say's! ‘For about 12 months I suffered severely with gastritis. I was un- able to retain much of anything on my stomach, and consequently was compelled to give up my occupation, extraordinary last of } took junit ltleg ot medicine, and correct lines, ‘ad an idea I was dieting, but I con- e Y tinued to suffer, and soon lost 15 wu arch Suppor Shes pounds in weight. I was depressed ers this description, It aug in spirits, and lost interest in every- Ports the foot where support is” thing generally, My mind was so Most needed and gives ease affected that it was impossible to be- wear and perfection {i come {uterested in even the lightest i F pa Arch-Supporting ae For Men, Women Mm Cbidten, It is comparatively easy to fit thi ordinary foot at heel, ball and But to serve the foot norm if weak at the {nstep, re ra i olut Auseware Walsh to wait on Mayor reading matter | SOLD NOWHERE ELSB, MeClellan and Comptroller Grout as the! “Atter suffering for months | 1a only repreventatives of the people on] wiacntg. go to a stommeh eco teal JAMES S. COWARD, ~ the Board and protest against giving | cl 8 ihe Cy Spectalist.! 268.274 Greenwich St. NY. oe way to the interborough's wishes, and| He put me on Grape-Nuts, and my h 00 Ne Te ae the Coe Te Gel Bop health began to improve immediate. Mall Ord Wirt ii Adiouittt) 4 ¥ ‘Resolved, ‘Tha » Cor rooklyn ‘i Hite all Orders . Send ratete League heatily indorses the pube| ly» It was the keynote of a new life, for Catalogue, ed attitude of Comptroller Grout In| t found that I had been eating too) ntaining the Integrity of Henne much starchy food, which T did not #Z2O;CE U ‘ansit Commission's pc 8 in dealing " e cerea . With the transit problems as a whole, | gest, and rai lps sae which [ RY ind that it, and {talone, should deter-| had tried had been too heavy, — [ ming the laying out of subway routes, | soon proved that it is not the quan ALL: so, that the conventence of the public he] tity of food that one eats, but the subserved and not prim, son wis! quality vi the of corporations; we ¢ ad that th i are a te ae pted by the Committes on) “In a few weeks I was able to go 4 a ae Pian and Seope of the Rapid Transit! yack to my old business of doing Ny g Quality and fu Mease | Board from Fulton. str Lafayette | ‘erionl work, I have contl ure guaranteed, ay ie to Bedford, to Gates avenue, to, clerical wor e continued to by Neatt Dasoralor ti wd ‘in public com-| eat Grape-Nuts for both the morn-, \ ] Nearly 2,000 Decorators y shall be plac HT petition by the Comni en AMERICAN LINER ON TIME, It was announced at the office of the} a short time. I am well and. happy Uy American line to-day that the steamer Phikadelphia is on time. She docks at See omnighis Dospite bed weather morning with a clear mind and feel Hin Brooklyn and Long Island can show you our: sample books, i A postalfrom bring our nage ing and evening meal. I wake in the! restnd, 1 regained my lost weight in! ‘ y again, aud owe it to Grape-Nuts,"| 4 Re Ge Fen Be