The evening world. Newspaper, April 19, 1907, Page 4

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and Widow “Silent’’ Smith, FAMILY PLANS TO FIGHT WILL "Relatives Hitherto Un- known Want Share of $75,000,000 Estate. pic BATTLE PROMIS piVast Fortune Now Said to! ® Have Come from Cousin, a Not Uncle, f Retatives of James Henry Smith | Sahoni thare was not thought to be one fn the work, bave suttenty come forwent, and to-day {i is mud that his | Sride-whiow wil! not xet entire poss Bion of his vast est | mated to be worth 975,000,000, without « tiven of Sintth are fo prove thetr kinettp a € a share In the formme left t Gmith, a firet cousin of the N man’s father Heretotore it haus deen Henry Smtth ‘Sent lopea Bea fs lve yee at No. 12 Bridge avenue Dvanston. Smith. now eight HL; a sister, Lady Mary Cooper, is toe | wife of Sir George Cooper, of Loncont Bs @ second sister, Mre, Victor Ross, i the wite of a Chicago b: 4 thint sister, Mrs. J. N. qife of & prominen Injured as Fire Blocks Way to Street. to Liability in Suits Follow- Which 1s being brought to ing Darlington Collapse. from Japan.” Sir Georg (Cooper and their daughter sailed from grange ted to arrive shere next Thursday ney Will go to! ) Chicago Without delay to Jain the other | ts to part of the estate. Relatives a Surprise. An award of $15,000 damages mad> to-day by « jury in Justice Guy's part of the Supreme Court to Emil Haen- schon, as administrator, for the loss of the life of his son in the collapse of the Hotel Darlington, was the sec ATHENS, Pa, | Campbell April 1%—The Hotel | Eu to Ket out and lost The fre sta near the etatrway and here was completely destroyed | m Kendal, a} provides for every relative in a way | Wat leaves no grounds for a contest Smith was born on s farm near the Village of Milburn, Ill, on Noy. 10, 1854 ) He was just like other countsy boys | barefooted in summer, a pupil! at th ‘nearest schoo! in winter. With him in Bis boyhood rompings was his his of hopetess invalid for Ute. mil Haenschen, jr, was only nine- teen years old. He was a plumber and| & member of the labor organiza! “| trade which, in turn, was a p of the People's Security C Se the rest CONTRACT LET FOR Mary, now Lady Mary Cooper | Their parents were George and Bea 5 a Grice Smith, both natives. of Aberdeen: | a mee Ratu eae Be sane ton lates Wo Shire, Bootiand. Visited His Mother Yearly. They contended that uae ngton was being constructed Brings the Total to During his lifetime Janes Hens avenue and Forty-sixth street | eae @mith went once a year to visit bi i $10;000,000. Mother in Bvunston. No mention of his visite was ever made in the nawe- “ pepers, and few friends of the Sith ally prmpany every © ontragtor A Yarme @elegntion from Staten Island family knew when the New York nee . ee, Sosstreton appeared before the Board of Bstima‘e fas jn Bvanst urs. And’ the *yumtaing | 8 Apportionment to-~iay to protest “Bulent Sin! * body is due to arrive 2 a jeon S@mingt the proposed change of g™ude he fm San Franctyoo April . ‘ , i-o4 n Richmond Terrace. hey told the ; eity May « The interme ructur vind Bolo & bonwandt-| Board the “improvement” would tnjure Ja Woodlawn Cemetery. Mr property elong the water front. Lawyer ‘s Mother may cone 10 this irae Fepresented | Shert, representing tho Sailors Boug il > tend the funeral. Some Hubert” fro kha | Harbor, protested on behalf of that in tives will x ° is 1 wi the sts ei ol e aliter stimu ‘tion. tus of & Me will is read ak the ‘The matter was jaid over, after One of them at least is sanguin ie " 1 pat 12) Mayor had fd thet oe paid ense | Islanders did want >veme is Now that Mr. Smith is deag 1 am pon-| he did not intend to fer 4 et Uberty to say that he w Mneee Buch CASS. | for the time being al! ef many benefa the expense his near an # and t dint Are ai present tw: 1 A reong Attending ine Brough the A woma of & be pe west bidder was the Jot ° re inst any, — $9,530,00 nd the Bon: ges Acer's ntract to th pe Drought is brings the cost ef the bu! t M, 110,000,000. rat IRISH LAND ACT PASSES THE SECOND READING, TRIED TO HANG HIMSELF IN CELL. ‘The Comptrolier told the Board that | for the Mbrary aftes $900,000 | Under LOND » © passed Introduced yf seinending the new inw Commi ssiccers . DAVIS STATUE I HAULED BY 3,000 CHILDREN, MONI a the Tests of the city © yesterday by 40 who did the heultng by means PEACE PACT 10 END THE ‘ot, “im snes "wore ige rts |CENTRAL AMERICAN WAR :"1 net tem i urn were beaded by = April A tentative be yp aha be ae ET rey of pieces for ace | ranged betweet Wiowmgua and Barve | wr will probably end the Cer — HIPS ai American wer $400,000 LOSS BY "FRosT. yrders have tesued for the witt CHATTANOOGA, Tyan,, Apel 20-—A4- wen ; e er on ti vices from this dlstriet report eons dures, si @ negotiations | to inter * ne wih on Se Eu e's erties | Pca OEE The very closest friends of “8! CONtINCtOns Within’ the rose A Jury | CHE off all means of escape and the | Smith were surprised ( jin. Justice Deyton's” Court awarded | S¥ssts ware forced to Jueno frdm win BU wtory of his life and death of mye | sis500 to Masry @tubley, « foreman| %OW* Several were injured ‘ary was unravelied to them. | steamfitter, who was worse than ‘kill-| 7% origin ot the fre of the fire ts not known re those who believe that Smith's will | 4 having been made a paralytic and i} | Saved Life. THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY,” Who May Have to Fight tor $75,000,000 Fortune SCUED BABY BY DASH INTO BURNING FLA Brave and Timely Work’ aout dat of Aloysius Brennan _APRI L 19, 1907. NATION RULES THE STATE IN ANY | ~—TREATYCONFLICT Seclaial Rook Defines Powers in Discussing Frisco Case, | WASHINGTON, Aprit 18The Amett- | can Soctety of International Law met tn this city to-day in tte firet annual session. There was « large attendance. SecretaryRoot was the firet spencer. ‘The Gecretary in hin address dealt with “the real questions under the Japanese Treaty and the San Francisco school board resolution.” After dis. cussing the national authortty under « treaty and the rights of the State, in woh he held that the @tates must eub- | ordinate themselves to the national «ov- femment, he said Tt ls obvious that three distinot ques. tions wero raised by the olaim orig inating with Japan and presented by our National Government to the courts In Gan Francleoo. The first and second weee merely questiana of construetion of the treaty. Waa the right to attend | the primary eohools w right, Uberty or Privilege of residence? and, if ao, was the lmitaion of Japanese ohtidren to the Oriental school and their exelusion from the ordinary schools « deprivation of that right, liberty or privilege? These questions of construction, and eapsctally © second. are by no means free from aa they concern only the maning of & pertioular clause tn a pardoular treaty they are of permanent importance, and, the particular ooca- sion heving passed, they need not now de discussed. “The other question was whether, tf [the treaty had the meaning which the To the bravery and presence of mind | Government of Japan ascribed to M&% of Aloysius Brennan will Nittle John | the Government of the United States Connolly, now lying badly burned tn | ned the constitutional power to make Bellevue Homptta’ 5 life such a treaty agreement with a for- "marketing hen the key was turned tn the look out three years The sequel later wl later of Chicago, and Georg: | ees brother, who formerly lived tn | Piigeerlh anieagebee a baa | BIG AMAGES FOR | HOTEL GUESTS JUMP | * George Smith tof news, Tney| - \ pre: William S$. Mason, Vice-President of the Byanston (Ill) National Bank, | and George 'G. Masor tf Aberdeen, @ Dak.. Superintendent of the Untcago, DMwaukee and St. F Raiirosd. Then Bit hips There is a niece of George Smitn, sre. ; | investigate. se) vanston | Jones Establishes Precedent as}One Man Killed and Others| minsces ot street screaming FINISH OF LIBRARY = Was needed to aoquire property already | Smoke was floating from the window | of the Connolly ef the women in heard the # From a room as! reams upat ren Tul Fire fat waa seen five a crowd of very into ed and the joy of resented being pu 1 and his grandmother | Above the the house could be f = child in agony, 3 Brennan rushed s and almost lite John in his . treaty made um nearest drug | unority of the United Seat as itt eutlerer, wit by ee ‘National Government, Po tay ‘1 was aireot ‘sore represen ative oF T “ cluaen ea) United @tates residing in OC fa equally with every citi aa ee ie United States residing else- |MRS. DONALD M’LEAN AGAIN HEADS D. A. R. ters to-day New decaus® A most ex- ki uded the exist York, on. for the enauing two one great and sertoug Lean received 611 votes, ing the whole subject date, Mrs. El ade all questions of const Howard, of Alexan-| u of ac ape and of effe. t cted are as fol eign nation which should be superior to ‘olling upon the laws of the Slate of Pallfornia? A correct ya- derstanding of that question ls of the ‘| utmost importance, not merely as re |gards the Btaie of California, but as | regards all States and ail citizens ef | the Union. ‘It has been widely asserted or aa “that thia treaty provision and ‘enforcement involved some question of State's ignta, There was and is no question of State's rights involved, un- lesa it be the question which was -set- to the cries | ‘ied by the adaption of the Constitu- tion. Th mak.ng power ila not cuted is all vested in the Ne nth Gkhal Government; no part of Jt is open the door, | Veaed in of reserved wo the Bute ‘affairs there are no pat one pation, acting | to and representa- Beat’ or international id lying wauere it te, | under pretense making power, urse, conceivable that, os of exercising the tresty- the President and Ben- to make provisions ule might attempt regarding mattera which are not proper jects of international agreement, 7 \rnloh would be only « colorabie— |—exercise of the treaty-max- Ba the real exer- ower, Dut po far seem inimportant t war with Japan. foolink A By Mrs. H. 8. Chamber was never {re Baldwin Gpilman, | Sven’ Srietion thetereen the toe! Mra. Lindsay Pat-| Governments. | " Phe question was, What state won w he created between 5 . a “Were the two. p other across the Pact with angry and resentful foelings? All this was IneyMable if the process whion seemed to have begun was to continue in f ure years rh sad the Government of the Unitet rian Btates looked with eat solbs- li. ¢ude upon sitaifiy Ging tine lat ler om. bs sod ‘nla aor clgn om and Ambassadors and) famall fire when he was arrested. costs. Ministers no | peace, toward every ofber. ‘The keep are surely whirlwind eful: hatred can never be a work! Againat much a feeling treat les are waste Paper and diplomacy the empty routine of idle. torm: crwed all usajon of the Trea oot was the c Guestion Ate the pestle of the United States about to break friend with the people of Japan? hat question, IT believe, has been besser newered in the See 8. T.ADDS VICTIM TOITS LONG LIST Mrs. Julia Erb Fractures Her Skull in Fall from Car. Mrs. Julia Erb. of No se Jamaton avenue, Brooklyn, died at the Rradford street. Hospital to-day of injyrt osived jest night in falling from a ing trolley car. Mre. Erb, who was fifty-five years old. had deen visiting relatives, and was «o ing bome on a Jamaica avenue car Dut the gonduct ot each people wat question which mrermnac. | When near Wyona street she asked the! conductor to stop the car, and he polled) tie bell cord. Mra. Erb is #ald to have stepped off too s00n, or the car started before ahe had reached the ground. Sh fell headlong. and her skull was fri tured: She was taken unconactous the hospital and \never regained en son, her TYPHOON KILLS 230 IN CAROLINE ISLANDS. Belated News of Death and Threat- ened Famine to Survivors Is Brought to Berlin BERLIN, April 19,—Colonia! Director Dernburg informed the Budget Commtt- tee of the Reichstag to-day that a cable theasage had been recelved from the Governor Of the Taland of Tap announce ing that a typhoen had swept over the | Caroline Islands on Good Friday inst and chat 280 of the MO natives @f the Ulultht group were drowned. Cecoanut trees were destroyed and famine threat the surviving natives eo steamer Planet. of the German Navy, w aa deen engaged in geo- Getic ‘work, and the steamer Germania proceeded to the as many of the ing natives as possible to the and Mariana (or Ladrone) gut CREMATED RAT, FINED $10. BCRANTON, April 19.—Wrapped up in hie desire to torture a huge and trouble @ome rat. which he hed caught fn u trap in bis store, Moses Heroowttr Sovth Scranton business man, forgor Gime thery te an. ordinance which torbida! the building of free public Streets. With the rat still fastened in} the trar he was crematl ine bowits was fined $10 and T noLts TRCKLLENOK. EVERY DETAIL. UNEXCELLED FOR FIT AND WEAR. WHITE AND EXCLUSIVE FANCY FABRICS mre! vy enimre, Loon Fem CLUETT Laem CLUETT, PEABODY 4 CO. Manna OF ARROW COLLARS, food and help | j “i, WORKMAN KILLED ere warned by @ shout from ¢ ema pach of a tralo. A rth-bound tra wees een ree south ouwe % Pezar Lingered on Track and) ‘" ; eqatoce Motorman Couldn't See | P ital ak Win oann bla bag in the Storm bend i the etpress not see Pesar becanse A wang of laborers at work on th t whirling Snow. “Detectives t7om south-bound ress tra o wee - Avenue Sixty-e arrent tt Will Positively nae 2 .oose Teeth fg The Oly Successful Cure for Receding Bleeding Gums and Loose Teeth. A Highly Fragrant end Prophylac Wash, Delight- fully Refreshing. -Will Prevent Decay of The Text Rooks used to-day in the Puble Schools the Teéth and Purify the Breath: (43° a) are written by Dr, V.C, Hell, A. B., D.D.8,, Reoog. nixed by Boards of Education as the Dental Authority. Astrir American Dentifrics Co., $1 East 50th Bold Everywhere. st. N. Ye ONeill-Adams Co. Stores Occupying Two Blocks. | Sixth Ave., 20th to 22d St N. Y. | Special Sales for Saturday Full Particulars in the “Evening Journal.” O'NEILL BUILDING Splendidly Skirts for $7.00. ADAMS BUILDING Tailored New Spring | Sa of to-Wear Hat women at $5.0 Great Reduc ction Sale of one h dred high-class Lace Waists. Men’s Custom-Tailored $1.00 each; ‘value $1.50. Shirts | aDams BUILDING—Sd Floor | W. L. Douglas Shoes & Oxfords For Men & Boys, Worth $2. 50 to $4.00 $1.98 | | Saturday’ fs offering includes about 3,000 pairs of these famous | | Shoes, including many Tan Oxfords, so repay this season, The Douglas factories reject all that are in the least da We receive all these, and by DR them at a red unusual opport a this High Shoes Box Calf Sizes and styles to sult everyb ; All the new Spring lasts in tan, b Oxtords Russet and patent _teathers $1 98 Bilas . en | choice to-morrow Russia Calf Sample Douglas Shoes, jEvery Style $2.59 and $2.95. ' These are all perfect shoes; the road Every Size | ples used by Douglas's salesme | | The very finest products of his fac | __ltory. Three hundred pairs. ety Vici Kid Enameled Every Size jO'NBILL BUI BUILDING— Ist Floor Women's Neckwear—Spring Styles. NEW SPRING RUFFS—Of Chiffon] MULL TIES—Latest novelties, in (damp proof), in white, Dlacky) white and dainty colored ettects, to navy, Value up to be worn witht linen collars, Value at 25¢ Crepe Value brown and $5.50; spectal at $2.25, $2.98, $3.25 each. tach RUCHING Lisse, Chiffon, per yard; special pieces of Net and Lace special at EMBROIDERED — STIFF LINEN COLLARS—New designs, excellent | values at 25¢ and 50c A Delicious Spring Food Gives the joyous backbone Good, Morning, Noon or Night MALTO-RICE Pure rice baked like a cracker malted into a piquant sweet-bitter, crisp golden flake, satisfying and most nutritious. All grocers, 1c, PACKAGE. NEEDS NO COOKING, MORTON & CLARK, bole Bolling Avents, 90 W. Broadway, My te

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