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¢ MNT MISH 10 | FROM BG LEE HEE CHUGH es Out of 300 from ‘Nor- way Accounted For. STORM ‘Trondhjem to the asistance of the fish. ing fleet which met with disaster in a if if a2 i i ; £8 i ii pi ig i Hf ag i é that the attitude of the | Ported townni ‘the Catholic ‘Proadered very much in jen years Owing to their ap- lof the great work of Pope higher criticlam which is the faith of good old- tants! The stroag ‘the ‘socialists is’ gaining AtW ‘ali ‘classes, ~@ttention of the serjous- “character of the Cath- ope oa conservatisn: our institutions. ire to talt people. set forth Qwar and to. § -)Ohristian 4ust er atiesth we ia} to The Bvenins World.) % “OLPY, Ny d.,’ March 8.— @ bodyrof Khe man’ who jumped from Xoung’s Pier last aigtit) was- washed 4 aa ‘Atlantic City early, to- jody sibstieg = penumiacnes ieee 3,000 AT PRIEST'S BIER. (Gpectal to The Eyentr~ World.) BRIDGEPORT, Conn., March 3.—Thy thousand persons viewed remains of Mons, Cremin last alght the body t St: Augustine’s Church kid "afaper as of purple and black ries ‘Two hundred priests and bish will agtsod the pontifical mass at the Funeral ‘at 10 o'clock this morning. —————— WORKS HARD, BUT GETS NO PAY. ree Fer Nine Years js Extraord! nary Man Has Kefuscd to Ac- cept Anything but Board and Lodging. Nine years ago there landed on West street in the early morning a remark- ‘able man, He was then forty, but did not Jook more than twenty. "Pall, erect, with exceptionally reguiar features and thd luminous eyes and thick, wavy, black hair of the Oriental, he presented an example of perfect physique rargly to be seen, In man- ner the had the statelness and gentle- ness bred of complete self-mastery, ‘He had a misaion to perform, but for his labors ‘he would take no pay. surrounded himself with a little coterie, who would have been only too anxious to reward him ‘with money, but all he would accept was food, clothing and lay ‘he has hundreds of followers, who declare that this ema ilosophy hag enabled them to Jead Potter fives and Keep in better health. His philosophy is one easily followed, and his, views of life are of thé simplest gort, though he does not much sympachy with the modern New York way of living. Among hi Hunclamentoes are these “The great trouble here is that the; thelr views of life. “ZL cannot but wonder when I see ‘this whole great city struggling day afer Gay and night after night 10 earn more ‘and t send more to keep up the style she. feenion, of the “day (to be in the Swim, as you say), by fulfilling | the ustedsdnaile demands of society or by thing worthless things which but grat ig, ‘the wihlta of the moment! ‘evil eftects of your so-called eiv- are appalling. York the ruling principle of induig: Parents t they are. yar ccusing Khemselves task of preparing’ saith iit he peak, The dove aud . e ye ani vane, therefore, tang! tr iaek on Aneary, ahd glegsure, fot only as the jut their; right, ~ even ‘9 he! AN Y . on “once, thus Irom’ the .4ii ORDINARY. DUST MIGHT GE MADE OVER INTO By F. Susway ‘Sreer PARTIES) ETS TO RESCUE FROM SUBWAYITIS ter than a Ton a Deputy By Ruth Earle. Pulmonaris-subwayitis or subway con- tian, just discovered by Dr. O'Han- 4 a queer affliction. ‘The curious i by @ is FTE E et 4 g ie i newest be the ‘result of innumershle’ steel clogging the cavities of the ‘Recent investigations of the Subway dust show that one ton of steel per mile has been worm away and scattered oy pulmoneris walkershave already died from it That'e how we came to knuw the jus. Dr. O'Hanlon per- . » Mysterious Enough to Be True. Now, microscopic dust is nearly as good @ cause for disease as microscopic bugs. It’s just about as mysteribus to the herd. No one dreams pf having housemald’s knee nowadayg,.because is 60 vulgar, couldn't possibly arise from anything iso, People all about us aren't dying from painter's colic for the «ame reagon, And” it isn’t probable that “mine's ta “clergyman’s score throat” oF bends,” which is plain caisson dis- ease, will ever be as popular as the automobile eye promised at the start But subwayitis and its intangi! iteel particles ought to be almost as good as pneumonia and its pneumococcus. Does any one suppose the city vital stetistios men could figure pneumonia as the surest death dealer if pneumococous’ were big enough to play solar plexus te & good blow from the shoulder? if there are any doubting Tommies who discredit the existence of this malady and its fllusive steel dust let them weigh the testimony of our Even- Numbskull, © Prof, Nosey ‘s an indefatigable in- vestigat@r, Since the discovery.of Dr. O'Hamlon he has made exdgtly, 100 ex- perimental trips in the sub’ ping the loop from terminus to And he positively assures. the that nd Jungs, unless equtpped withy: Tae! ronine World magnet, hat, Sy Ten Pounds of Preventive. Prof. Nosey, after extensive experi- ments, advises for all subway com mitiees a .ten-pound horseshoe magnet ‘worn about the hat crown with the negative, and positive poles protruding over the forehead, A powerful magnet of thin size will gather one pound’ of steel particles trom the hafr, clothing of the wearer, and the surrounding air, in an hour's trip in the subway. This Siz0 magnet is a positive safeguard against taking the ateel into the lungs When Prot. Ni took this investigation he regard O’Hanlon’s statements wi tific distrust, He jad no faith in the steel-choked. lungs of Subweyites, and. he reiterated with the gett f of @ rival scientist; “O'Hanlon Js silly!’ about it is that it is not pro-| bat shoe. tng World subway expert, Prof. Nosey | © or Autopsy by Coroner, bon tests In vain. But on holding a magnet a few inches from the material under investigation Prof, Nosey got a result. Zip! And the steel bits leaped across the Uke toy fe, swimm! im the at the point of the as the steel fever. has Chesp mi design will to ithe Subway at @ nickel magnets aro small horse- . attached to the nostrils by a clamp, in the fashion beauty writers advise for the wearing of clothespins to induce Grecian lines to the nose, So, no venture into the underground without ame s¢ Nembelenttte ang pa al DALAL BABY DIED BY. Ga. ‘en Pounds of Preventive for New Menace ’Bet-|Constant’ Parade of Bankruptcy of Wealth Long. WHY NOT EXTRACT. 7 SAFEGUARDING ANGAINST GREATHING THE STEEL, usr, “HOW TO GET DUST OUT OF WATERED SUBWAY. STEEL DUST FROM IT. FOR BUILOING NEW SUBWaYs2 ~ |MILLIONAIRES’ MISERY. "MADE HILLIARD gui i Caused ,Ablest Hotel Manager to Leave ‘Waldorf with His Limit Attained. : ~ CHARCOAL FUMES|<="= Mother and Another Child Rescued from Same Asphyxiation. The thirteen days’ old boy baby ‘of Mr. and Mrs. James H. Lacy, who live at No, % West One Hundredth street, was suffocated by the fumes from three charcoal praziers in the basement of building, and the mother and an- other child of the Lacys, five years old, nerrowly escaped death from the sam camse. Only the ‘timely arrival of a neighbor saved the lives of ‘the. two latter, ‘The Lacys live on the third floor, the second and first being occupied’ by Shinas! Brothers’ lHvery stable. On ri Ht FS a8 i 38 if 4 g - Sui 8 Fy B Thursday the National Waterproofing |‘ Company sent a gang into the base- ment to coat the floor with paraffine, Three charcos! furnaces, were’ used, Thursday afternoon, Mra, Lacy says, eho began to feel faint and giddy, but did not kmow the cause, A woman neighbor called’ at the Lacys’ apartments last night, to find Mrs, Lavy onthe floor unconscious. An another room was thy five-year-old hoy, ‘also unconscious, Ons bed in the same toom with Mrs. Lacy was the, thirteen-day-old infant gasping for breath, The neighbor hastily \threw,open a window and dragged Mra. Lacy to it. ‘The. she carried the older child ‘to fresh air. By this thne Afra’ Lacy be- gan to revive. Mey Dr. Zimmerman arrived. within halt an. hour, bat the ‘baby abortly afterward. , In‘fact, Prot, Nosey lobked 8) two. beac walking vicrlme, of thet a , D aon vi onl | | ocket his winnings amd IF @ cleaner, wholesomer atmosphere "don't really see whr action should yale Raat til a tid ut ih i aa Joseph Medill Patterson Disap-| "to Help Divide, WEARS FINE CLOTHES. Five Dollar Shirt, $80 Suit, $12 Shoes Mark Dress of the ; Joseph Medil Patterson may be as soctalistié a6 he pleases without cs- tringlhg his father, Robert W. Patter- son, publisher of’ the Chicago Tribune, but the'sdn need never look to his fath- ers paper for support in his orunade for & general division of the good things of life," © Tndoed, the young men himself, al- though ao convinted @ socielist that he considera Mayor Dunne of Chicago for too conservative gné das >eatened his post in the Chicagd city government. hae ne immediate intention of suftering any martyrdom for his new creed. “You see,” Mr. Patterson at the JOSEPH M. PATTERSON, © impress me as it seems to have im- Retite oes 5 ty pe tng. thous! ‘ht, Single tax i aid not 0 m6. , Pattereon Jeft to speak with his sister, who is here from Patt their i with R. W. ‘tergon, a The father took breakfast at 8 o’closk gon and in the grillroom, while mane OO Oe. at , but then the er is not a So- Become a collere Then | the, interyiewer- “Swell, then,” said nilles | teravn,/ “think Sock when | the wildest farjaticisms ‘built |my sn should run «light bls pargs AS the | wil ‘tn ay way aff ‘an $80 double-breasted suit. /TelAtions. He a of sotne $12 shoes, and about} mv 14 i Besa Tae it ie : F se Fs u g : i , gl t E : iH : i 4 ae ts i 4 i i ing In Chi uf fe i by Hy Ei; ee # ist is 'H k BE. £8 lung Patterson went this afteinodn a J, Ge ns one ‘Soctal~ Al last four dave. EEE ——ooo Jo" proae be Velen’s Sweetheart 3 in cette