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oo — [= | —O | eg om | cc ar] ——{ re Sipe Peay Message Can Cut} Strangle On | eet DEMANDS RELIEF.| “,.., * “9McMatus, McCall and Owens| jured Three. Scored for Betrayal of Tenn Relticos af * * | . of No, 10 W' Their Constituents. b battninienrs Clty, was arrested b: Atlantle avenue station, * Brooklyn, f Gay charged with carelessness in giving et {Bpecial trom « State Correspondent.) a fireworks display last night at Troy ALBANY. June 1.—Assembirman) ang gi. Mark's avenues, Broo! q ‘Wagner will appes! to Gov. Hughes to- F ofiay to wend to the Senate an emer! perier mache shell fel! scr message in favor of the tmme-| ciaren and exploded. | Minte passage of the Coney Island Five- nt Fare bill. ‘This will be the final effort to rescue e'ghe Bil! trom defeat. Gov. Hughes has e petitioned by a Inrge number of 4 ws of New York City to interfere fm their behalf and compel the corpora- | were severely burned. Thy were Loretta Thomas, eighteen, of No. Lexington avenue. avenue. ‘Gon Trust is raid to have ‘corsage the Governor as well as the public Sears, memanee, Mecan nna MISS JULIA MAGRUDER the railroad associates! Wiloox, the Comanittes, engineered iE mapped out by the railroads for » “the defeat of the bill Wiloox is the suave, evon-tempered,| tion of Mise Julla Magruder, the famoul|,who has held so many political a emy Cannot Recover. @lusive type of the corporation repre- than he in the art of promoting Patiroad « be or killing bills detri- dental to maiirond Intereste, He has s0lutely no chance for her recovery chairman of the Railroads Com- ment has practically been dictated by pected at any moment ay finterests favorable to the ratiroads Assembiyman Wagner said i] have implictt faith in the @ense of justice and 1 belle “fip ee that the interests of the t: (t/t people in Manhattan demand the 3 0 of the, Five-Ceat Fare bill. I the Dead” Ip an emerge akoy, formerly Amelie Rives, the ry that hg a ee one ounaee S French Academy. Miss Magruder was road lobty te Sewring on| born at Roarseiveertian, va. 9. “Loose Traction Trust's | bY FIREWORKS, |Papier-Mache Shell Fell irto| TWO AR klyn Crowd and In- | Fallen Man on e of the| |George Me While the display was in progress a (Street, refuse a crowd of ree children Ida Delfar, eight, of No. 1711 Atlantic |liceman came up two men were atand- Hazel Hall, eight, of No. 1698 Atlantic spies. Senators to pars the dill The ‘The children were burned about the 8 ra Gy ante ceed coreplay bodies, They were taken to ing by the B. R. T. and the Trac- 0%", vousitel | The second prisoner broke from the | HOURLY EXPECTED TO DIES | soars ioe sem-| Famous Virginia Writer Who Was | Pe Detecoll came from Gouverneur Decorated by the French Acad- RICHMOND, Va., June 7.—The cond!-|@n employee of the Park Department, Virginia author who is dying in ae] at Luke's Hospital, was said by the hoe nator has been better pita said dy @entative. No Senai pital authorities to be somewhat tm- proved to-day, although there ts ab- It | any fm possible that the patient may linger | " fetes for many years and his appoint- for several days, but her death is ex-/| lk “They may Mis Magruder. who is one of the best to-dayz| Known of the Virginia writers, t an In- timate friends of the Princess Troubet - @trooting occurred in some saloon that vorced wife of John Armstrong Chan- Yer, and the author of “The Quick and Miss Magruder wee sig- ‘action Gn tive DMlly honored Monday by the receipt of f he ‘this the people will imformation that the Order of Palms Sat ofr teafoat ide pr been conferred upon her by tho THE EVENIN G WORLD, SP DMING, HE WL WOMAN SWGER NOT AAME MAN PRVEATS PANIC | WH ATMO 6.00 —_.— yers Also Refuses to Te Where He Received Fatal Wound. ARE MADE ut: For Her, Flushing 1s Might Haye End. Men Were ot Flushing, Long enefit of Flushing Hos of-the rare presence \the pert Scrapping Over |: Walk When Police Came. of a wor vocal! prevented a panic end } e circus tent. at Franconia sons ay Tn the day througn, | succe: » Of No, £19 Mast Sixtieth | fo: posttively to tell where | tain he had been shot or who shot him Meyers was found on the sidewalk tn front of « maloon at No. 1 Rivington Street by Policeman MoCarthy, of te Elisabeth street station. AVhen the po itheagh he has been told he ts dying PG can scarcely 1! 1s haq been brought to a i] close and the concert, wht a the second part of the ente ent, Was about to begin when the sound of crashing wood, th mn lurohing of t h were about two h of the north shore, t noe to ita feet with a cry of followed by aud | fright The people tn the boxes were thrown hets, chairs or huddled against ried that tite ing over the fallen man fighting Mc Carthy collared both and asked from “What's the trouble here? ‘A man's been shot,” the partition ent was falling, and the sv |ment ghich prec Some one spoke up the smaller of the two prisoners, policeman and attacked the other man Before he could be overpowered he struck him several times in the face | and with -«- baX-hyecerioal laugh sat down again. The singer Jeft burst of che proceeded to ——__ | ONE KILLED, THREE HURT. that he !s known as “The Commission. | They Jumped eens Third-Story and Wilam Coyle, a Bowery char- eter, known as “Shorty.” “You will tell, will you? tform amid « lospital and emid the man who hat performance given his name as Meyers, had bee: shot through the stomach and would | die. ‘The other men were John Doherty, | Window During « Fire, Dohemy and | PHILADELPHIA. June 1.—Teaac Coyle were tax. bn Da jaler to the hospital ees Station | Greenbaum, aged sixty-two, was killed “Which one of these men shot your" |and his three stepohildren ‘ors wae asked. Abram and Blanche Go pot toll, ang Sying then tes Sying, I dont know ent and Coyle were equ com: na Bd The police be Ti not fe up- the had been open after hours. No revolver wae found on ether Doherty or Coyle, and there ts no ovidence that either of them Is gullty of the shooting a A 30c. 12-word “Furnished Room” Ad. in The World finds many a desirable tenant. EERE Clothin comer A2a street Corner Some Men Bay Their Spring Suit by the Calendar newest models. into four great lots, pricing them as follows: All Suits that have heretofore been sold at $8 and $10, priced now at STORE OPEN EVENINGS All Suits that were lormerly 415 and $18, priced now at Some Men Buy Their Spring Suit When the Weather Is Richt The Weather Hasn’t Been a bien (CC °'Saring Suits, to-day, we will inaugurate a Special Sale of Men's Spring Suits, comprising the highest grades of blue serges, worsteds, cheviots and many other up-to-date fabrics, fashioned in the very For the purpose of giving you bavgains that will make this a memorable sale, we have divided our entire stock of Men's Suits that were formerly that were formerly Guarentee Clothing Company, m Corner 127th Street and 3d Avenue. Co. 3 “Aye. They’ve Bought All Suits $12 and $16, priced now at All Suits $20 and $22, priced now at 9 Stores In New Yorks Fulvow i. 1) Brooklyn: “ah cau Hei, JUNE 7, 1907. r. KELLY/|| ONeill-Adams Co. Store Occupying Two Blocks, Sixth Ave., 20th to 22d St., N. b FRIDAY, 268 Sixth Avenue a ‘ Between 6th and 17th Strects fonty t antrance Through Furniture Store | ROVE NEES F "ADAMS BU 1LDI N | Stylish Suits for Men | At Remarkable Price Reductions | For To-Morrow, Saturday ‘d Floor | _ ~ (Clothing--Credit After seeing our large and superb $15.00 to $22.50 represents the actua’ worth of these garments. We care not where you go, you will not tind better | BBIBARSH TET et Cerro etc | and and ht ailoring—if you don’t say they are the best suits you ever saw for the money, tion. Men who have ak \ off buyingtheirSum- | | mer Clothing oa ac- | count of the long de- layed arrival of warm Ms | weather should not you will be an excep- Our Charge System Makes it just as easy to wear clothes that have the “hang” and “balance” that bespeak a fashionable tailor. ik miss this opporturity Take the Suits for $ for instance 12.50 | Men’ $ s Sack Suits proud to satisfy ticular .... in handsome rsteds, cassi- , in stripes and $12.50 | The Suits for $14.50 and $18.50 mixtures.” $12 $15 $20 $25 Young Men’s Suits in all the nobbiest fabric effects, in-smappy single and doub‘e-breasted styles, artistically custom-tallored throughout and cont néw-wrinkle and fancy, fully worth $15 to $25, $10 $12 $15 $18 Men's Spring Shoes, $3, 50, Open Saturdays Till 10 P.M. In Serge and unfinished W 46, single and double breasted. did v: alues in this sale to-morri aining every Every new shape in all the popular straws. | Men’s Straw Hats $1to $3. = || | Join the Crowd. Every season our sell more straw hats to swag- stores ger young fellows than all other hatters combined.