The evening world. Newspaper, December 7, 1907, Page 1

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c BINGHAM TELLS - POLICE TO SIT ON THE LID SUNDAY ———_— + Instructs Inspectors to Stop “Amuse- ments of Every Nature in Public Places and Post Men at Theatre Doors. Police Commissioner, Bingham passed the up tight as a drum on Sunds day. As arresult of his orders ever. ai: entertainment is prohibited to-morrow. academies and dance hail: It does not prohibit music in Provided the restaurant people do not attempt to put on singing and ENT (ily REPUBLICANS order and mean simply the stonping « entertainment or performa National Gathering to Nomi- nate Presidential Candidate Fixed for June 16. sing New York een of his twenty Inspectors to- job of y to a QHaracter tn a place of public Ment on Sunday: that is the Key ro to exercise any discretion at M1 performances of anv Charact @ vlace of nublic am: fy the that decialon reads thet _Cammecte Hall as well nx the one an Tee-cent-vamteriitc and moving pletur Thows ie It Covers "Em AW ‘4 ¥t covers roller skatige and it coy- ers benefits-like that one they want’ to wet off a! the Hippodrome, They will spring on you that certain shows are for charity, Weil, {t Is up to them to rove it fe charit: YM. CLA. WWeriay nights are performances tn sce of public amusement. and whil co {nments on a Wey are run for the purpose of kelting | WASHINGTON, Dec. 7.—The Repub- ‘boys and young men off the streoi, |), é as ey under the decision it Is no Ko. It cuts)“ Sd) Rata roman steer tocae eut the Educational Allinnce witit|M*med Chicago as the plice for hold- thelr Httle arrangment that goes on ine the next Presidential convention. @unday nights, beckuse It Isa place Of; Juno 16, 1908, wan selected as the date. Bublic anuseméat. | Kansas City and Denver a “Then, In the course of the Judge airone. fight for the thonor, but ths @ut the Celtic. Park. attetanced aT and SRE everything was in {t« GENT Elinlwunleenclenn rhage! |favor, although It offered no. cash We Have no dlicrellon cotever ax (DOnUs ae did the other two cities, Ti @he Jaw js Jaid down. It cuts olt al! leareet cies ee eae a ce ae gamps of football, or any other kind o: | 4 és: RE tet bak. Naturally, It cuts out that dicyere | After the vote was announceds Chicago Face at Madison Square Garden unti,; W* declared tho cholce of the commit- e¢ by acclamation This was done amid enthusiasm, which #0 marked as to make itself known Joutside the doors Little thne was todt in fixing a date ‘and everybody: seemed | satisfed with Chicago, June 16, as the @aution to prevent the scenes of Inst | place and time*of meeting. With these yeer. 3f-they have not done so the| features disposed of, the committee @arong hand will be put on that bicycle | took pp some of the reports of sub-com- ace.” \ mittees, k ‘Nothing was said in’ the committee 32.01 Monday morning. and the author! Ues of the Garden have been warned of his fact. "They promise this year to have the Enitde of the Garden woll policed, and @ay they imve taken the necessary pre No Dancing. "Does it cut out dancing academ! @ue of the inspectors asked. ‘All performances anf entertain:/ @ents in;places of public amusement’ fa the decision, and that takes In dan- @ing scademies,” replied the Commis- @loner. re : “Juat tb repeat once more: Thia thing ‘te far-reaching; it ls sweeping; it is per- fectiy plain, and every one must be @tven a fair deal and treated alike, {Put your men by the theatres; let it Ge understood that all the theatre ‘men ave had notice and let It be understood ,@hat there :will be’no show. The pres- @aiee-of'a couple of men in uniform will ly indicate it, and the people, will ‘ask apeetleey and the reoly will be (There will bé no show.’ . If they go in, let them go, for you have no/authority to stop them, but you will arrest the first bunch of actors tbet appe after the curaln rises, and (t/ they keep it up you wil) arrest the bunch, and you will arrest the gellar and anybody else you can wet ‘hold of in the office, including the qpaheger and proprietor. Do mot de @ily Sor domineering, but assy almply, *Taose are our orders,’ ‘Now ;then,”” he Cantluded. “about “he ‘music’ in hotels and restaurants. Whey are Bot to whe disturbed, but 1 fwant you to watch out; in a good many of these places they’ will stretch @ut a point, and instead df -having dust a little orchestra playing music, they will begin to put on w larger show like yaudeville or something of: the kind, and, of course, In places now Jas to the bullding in Chicago in which the convention” ts reading of Raymond to be held beyond the telegram from and Upham guar. celng the Coliseum with 14,000 chairs, but It fs generally assumed that the onvention will be heid in the Coljseum. ‘The telegram is regarded aa fixing that Jocation, * Frank 0. Lowden presented the claims of Chitago by declaring that the next National Republican Convention would be the first real conyention that had been held since 1888—that Is, the first convention in which everything that was to be done. The good faith of ‘tho forehand. Chicago, hé sak, would offer ample facilities for all the needs of the gathering. He believed that all any olty should do was to pay ‘all expenses. of the Convention, and that Chane would do #0, The sum of $5,000 would be the {BP to %4135,000 would be forthcoming Chicago, he ral, would do-all four years ago, and then it carried out all promises that were made. “I am*not here so much In the inter- est of Chicago," he sald, ‘as I am in tho Interest’of the Republican party of the country.”* He said the coliseum In Ohicago would ‘neat 14,000 people and that he believed was as many ax should be present at a convention In which important-busincas waa to be done, The god falth of the 6its. he sald, would -be, guarantesd by Samuel B, Raymond and Fred W. Up- ham, of Chicago, and ho was sure their where they put on ahows of thin lasc| word was suMicient to every one kind meni ‘on J you know what 10°40." | vray thom, : who. (ep tl ——_o—___ SNOW BIDS TURNED DOWN, Foster Crowell, the new Strwet Uleun- Ing Commlastoner, has turned down alt the bids for snow romovel In Manhattan and the Bronx and has made temporary provision in cane it should snow beforo che can get new bids,” He re-advertised INDICT STEELE FOR MURDER, BOBTO: ec. T= An Indictment for, murder In the! frst degree aguinst Jumes A, Stecle, the H¥yrety mania: ;WH0 shot and killed Edward Cohen ‘eresident of tho State Branoh, Aniyri; Federation of Labor, at hg! Sttte) Sor ‘Thurway, was retiirned by the County, | Grand Jurys tarda yesterday, Thomats Crimmite & Co, arwing assault hay Det rates chan the Brcoirn ta planes tee tor fitate branch, and rp pais poe formance or The rule extends to dancing | restaurants and hotel dining-rooms, | Ein, the rcouraeotaiteoinveniontion ror Jeaat, and anything beyond that amount | It ata | eats f REA ABOUT IT:. MONDAY Sa a DT | WHAT IS IT? ENTER tell you “all about it. ther tongues, E RISE Ne. 199,024 Times. “A HUNT FOR TREASURE A’ FREEBOOTING EXPEDITION? NTED—Reselute men, thirty to thirty-five, single, of superior educati rards.ip and danger; honest, sober, geod-tempered, and abave everything able to held Apply by letter in own writing, giving antecedents, t8 DESPERATE WHAT IS Me 1» inured “The Adventurer,’’ by LLOYD OSBOURNE, which begins in Monday’s Evening. World, will You wilt find it thrilling and enteytaining. = S00 SS SS a a te INS INTERNATIONAL | TRU iate and Claimed in Were Not Held. pany, of Man‘attan, which wa ized by the Borough upon a cirealar of the trust company Th fasvat by It recites that, at the close of bust! omen fied fromthe church nearly all Oct. 11, the International Trust| TOM yonhing ottly and wiping the !Company tad on hand stocks and| io com thelr eves, bonds to the value of §316.798. 5 Kings County Grand Jury tnves- Q, H. P. Belmont Recelves. |eipation hax stiown this statement toj The aervicen were held at. noon, and an ibe false to the extent of Just SH68S. | hour before carriages and automobiles | “Due from banks, $1,206,180," Is an-' began, to arrive, O. H. P, Belmont other item dn the circular, Revelations was among the earliest, and for at least | made to the Kings County Grand Jury half an hour he stood out on the anh the Disiric: orney show that threshold of the edifice and fecelved: thix was. a. atement, the friends and relatives of the dead 1 the cir - of the omce | actress. furniture and fixtures ts given at 34,787.) ‘The body had lain all night in the 1 may have been worth that money, | church, whore {t was taken last even- didn't cost the International) ing from the undertaking establish- mpany a cent, The furniture | ment of H. W. Chapman, of Nol ‘3 sw ssat on sixty days’ East Fourteenth street. It was cnr- aid fo ried into the church at 11 o'clock and is real estate, which the | soon lost to sight in the great mound renresen tO be held by ‘the pf blooms and floral wreaihs heaped up Internanional Trust Company to tie Jabout tt, Lefore the main body of, value of $87,009. Tl Kings County; se who pngregated in the church Grand Jury has fotind that the Inter. boeets to arrive Mrs. Willian Collier onal ‘Trust Company owned no real! brought a Mttle wreath and inid it on ‘alle jthe canket. Then she knelt beside | oo and cave way to an outburst of grief. % When ste, became calmer she went away, fering too miserable, she said, | to remain. for the services. A qvartette sang the hymn earer, My God, to Thee,” “Abide With Me" and ace, Perfect Peace in This: | ish” Monarch, a STOCKHOLM. Dec. King Oscar ts gradually ainkt the action ofNus heart ts very the issue of this morning's bull thix hour he 1s yery low, Church jn Stockholm » As the afterioon progressed at the bedside of tHe King. Lindman also was present, ‘The of Stockholm! was summoned King had occasional moments aclousness, durtig which he bedside, but Ins ansibiltty ~~ Mra W. 8) {Rainsford former pasta Bank crowd. Clergymen Ate Summoned ‘ the Bedside of the Swed- has been unconscious almort all day His rallies are becoming briefer and ow ndministered the final sacrament. MRS. RAINSFORD HERE. NEW. YORK, BROOKLYN a | 0S N CO Powerless to Indict Manhat- tan Concern, Uncover | Facts. . HAD NO BONDS. ALL WOMEN Furniture Statement s organ- As the officers to the public in circular was widely dis- | FAST SIG “TEATS NER sO. Pp. ng. M— He feeble. The Associated Press was informed! Wolf and Grace Elliston. {by a chambertain of the King that the royal patient had lost ground ever alnow st. George's Church, but she wax mar- lotin, At The chief eccleslastics of the Swediah have been sum. moned to the bedside of the patient. Ml the members of the royal famlly gathered | Premier Etshop and he Tho of con- ahowed signs of recognition of those about tila nr wife of pp.| of 8G Georges, | In thia city, arrived on the Celtic to-day on a brief business trip, leay: husband, who has been abroad yeara on account of Ittess, ‘ing her for two on the SOCIETY Wwe ART. AT FUNERAL 0 O. H. P. Belmont Received Her Host of Friends in St. George's Church. | IN TEARS.}| Actress Buried at Woodlawn | Only in Attendance. St. George's Church, the B roug and the Brooklyn | Square, was thronged with notables in | Bank of Brooklys tHe Kingw County | the social and theatrical world to-day | Grand Jury jhas struck many trails} when the funeral services were held the International Trist Com-| for Mrs, Clara Bloodgood, who com- mitted suicide in Baltimore on Thurs. day night. banded In Baltimore yesterday, atten ed the services and gave way without remtraint to their grief]. When the ser- Dark World of Sin."’ the full congrega- tion ak in the refrain in subdued! voices, After the services the body was taken to the Grand Central Station, fol: lowed “by half a dozen carriages. It waa taken from there to Woodlawn foi {durial, only the immediate selativer | jand a few intimate friends attending. \ Some of the People Present. Among those socially prominent who attended the funeral services were Mr, and Mra, 0. H. P, Belmont, Frederick, Gebhard, Thomas B, Clarke, Mrs, Iselin and°won, of No. 177 Madison avenue; Ear! Dodge, Dr, am@ Mrs, Joseph Ham- en. John H, McCullagh, Andrew Miller, Mrs, W, J. Loew, Mra. Liovd Avpinwall, dir, and Mrs, G, B Painter The theatrical world wan reprenented by Mins Elizabeth Marbury, William, Courtney, who Was Mrs. Bloodgo:d's ding man; Clyde Fitch, John Drew, 0 drove to the church in an auto with Mra, Josefa, Oabrne; Elsie De Clara Bloodgood had never attecded rled there five yeara ago to Willlam Laimbeer, NO ONE KNOWS*LITTLE BOY WHO AS RUN OVER. Three- Year-Old Lad Who Stum- bled Under Wagon in Hospital in Serious Condition. -, been learned of the little boy who was run Nothing . tdentity of he quickly relapsed into; over and badly hurt at One Hundred and Twenty-seoond street und Second avenue vesterday evening. Albert sond- heim, © manufacturer of parquet Moors, | of No. 188 Second ayenue, who drove the Wagon under which the child atum. bled; was paroled from the Harlom Po- Hee Sout to-day until It can be found out who’the Injured boy Is, ‘The youngster {s about three years old, has blsck -halr, brown eyes and ¢ark skin, wore a check suit, email ‘cap. blank. pad and shoes, He, ia | {a tee ation ‘Woewital in, very SATURDAY, CLARK i 000000 After Services With Intimates | in Stuyvesant The nave of the church was vices were over and the richly gowned orld, 7 IF ef Circulatio: Books Open to All.” } DECEMBER 7, GYGLE STARS OF FRANCE. AND AMERICA RAGE TO-NIGHT 1907. CARMANIA | the Internatheal ‘Trust Company {x a{ filed and many were forced to stand in| | Man n institution It is outelde the! the aisles when Rey. Malborn Birck-| jurisdiction of the Distrigt-Attorney | head, brother of, the Rev. Dr, Hugh and Grand Jury of Kinga County, Birckhend, pastor of the chyrth, read Some new faci about the Interna-|the simple Epincopat service Uonweireaet y have theca dune | te mesoritusioc: those attending (he ae : fungraliwere women. and all were deep- That Start! e Jeovered by the Kings County Grand ly affected, Many: of the members of Hgury. which have a particujar bearing |strp, ttoodgsod’n company, Wich. dl — }mell rush to the deck. Capt. Warr sent word th{a afternoon to Vernon H. Brown, agent of the Cu- nard Mne, that the Carmania waa rest- Ing ¢: iy Takes Down Other Tugs, “I am hopiitg that.whe will Moat: un- der her own power," sald Mr, Brawn, !"put to be on the safe wlde I shall xo | down {n° one of the company's most | powerful tugs and take others along, to render the big Chapman tug. already down there, any vasaintance ‘necessa: Mr, Brown wits ‘soon speeding do the North Riven to the acene of the dis- j aster, Steamship men are not very optiniath regarding (he Carmanta'’s chances for | floating without a desperate effort. The fact that sho went nground at the full ; high tide makes the situation as bad it possibly could -be, they argue | During the slack at 5.20 o'clock this afternoon the greater portion of mense hull was out of water, 9 that enormous welgst was pressing hard fas {imi vane [on the keel. and whe may sink deeper Tinto the mud, The. Carmania was proceeding .cau- Jously and under réguced speed, but atop, the shock sent those who were not firmly seated spinning. The boat | was about a fourth of a mile north of Romer Beacon when she grounded and nhe grounded so hard that her great off the shoal. Blocks the Waterway. The big turbine, while her engines tolled under full draught, swung around diagonally across the channel, com- pletely blocking the waterway for vet sels of heavy burden, She displayed no signals at first, but when her .captain found’ that she would not budge, a wireless message was sent for tugs. the Chapman Wrecking Company. When the Mner went aground the tide was on the turn, but It ta now falling fast ‘and she will have to walt until the flood to-night before — proceed- ing on her way. Just before the mud gripped the Carmania, the Minnehaha, of the Atlantic Transport line, passed out safely through the channel. The Carmanta was the first turbine shtp built by the Cunard line, and un- til the Iaunching of the Lusitania and Mauretania, the queen of the Cunard fleet, The succesm of her turbine en- gines ‘wan watched with singular in- terest In the steamship world, as the opinion of many engineers was tha ahe was of too vast proportions for turbine propulalon, But she proved a great sutprise. to, these captious, grit: . turning out to be the steadiest! as as ona of the speedieat vasucis Line Won All the Laurels, Upon the muccess of the/ Carmanta, the keels for the Luwitania atid Maure- tanta were jald, wheroupon the Cunard Line harvested all the laurels of the od x Among the passengers who gailed on the” jwhen the vast bulk come'to a sudden j{ propellers struggled in vain to back her Several were sent down the channel by } HELD. ALL DAY IN MUD INSIDE THE HOOK +-—__1.— The Cnaenéior Soon After Starting Across.the Ocean Strikes the Sand in Ambrose Channel With Shock s Passengers. Voyagers on the huge Cunarder Carmania, whitch sailed for Europe this morning, were rudely jarred and considerably alarmed when the ves- sel ran her nose on a ber and stuck fast in the Ambrose Channel, about the breakfast hour and the scraping andj gprinding sound as the keel wedged in the sand.seMt the passengers flying from the table in a pell- Dassengers, steerage. She js of 20 One of her passenget Hopping about the deck able agttaton when the t wax Hurry tothis bonnie briar bush, When the wrecking tugs went to the aasistance of the tunbvine. j hundred feet ‘south of ti Ambro#o Channel and Romer Beacon, AUTO HITS CAR ONBROADWAYAND. THROWS RIVER Chauffeur Hurled Upon Head north-bound trafley car. when Broadway wax Qne of tho front wh chinery of th: and the street In a few minu “there: The-Cunarder carm(ld 165 first cabin 218 second cadin and 2.210 -Lauder. comedian, who after nis New York on- kagement is wildly anxious to get back ment and the machine crashed Into a Jan «and all the ma- @ AMOMODIIE Were Wi ar war also d It was! ‘0 fons gross. / Who was seen fn the Scotch Good ci nhé was two he centre of | north of the| (| NEW (Cease | close of | Park fa! that thr pened al the trac! which wu! Tho hai every : 01 been cir to mud, A steeplechase, \with twelve in Front of Opera- engaged. all of which liked the going i wos the secondary feature, rnd the House, other races there was a fair sprinkling of good horses ‘ FIRST RACE A low, rakish racing automoblle,| purse $400; three.yearcolde and upward; bound down Broadway, tumed out to wth ven tu Se decker: Buy 08. fotter . 4 f ck 0 % M13. Nicol S The wheels skidded on teToypave. | airship. Bt. Noel Tent Tinker aleo ran. m of vehiclen. woke abled: was uw tramic Midnight UPSETS FORM ause of Change in the most promi&Sax races provided. the class of horses that are not suited Steeplechase; purse #400; four-year-olds diaqualities fo) KILLED BY FALL DOWN STAIRS, WE AALS CA RIN RESULTS EDITION. and waemer fo-night and Sunday. PRICE ONE CENT. Kramer md Jacquelin in Sprinting Event and Walthour and Darra- gon Behind Pace—-Ready for Six-Day Race. EVERYTHING READY FOR THE SIX-DAY GRIND NEXT WEEK. Will Start This Year at 1 A. M. Formerly, as Instead of Owing to Judge O’Gorman’s Ruling on Sunday Amusements, a T CITY PARK Things Go Wrong Be-. (Special to. The Evening World.) ORLEANS, La., Oec, 7.—The; full holiday celebration of the the inaugural meeting at City ed ° to materialize, The rain eatened for several days hap- Jong early enough: to render | ka lane of soft slippery. mud. j peet calculations: {n several of) rdest part of it was that nearly | né of the hot tips that had} culated over night fell among BECON As a remult of the collision the autor | Rater Welent i mobile..stopped, but the chaffeur, ¢ | Pete, Vineear. 31 man named Walker, kept right. or |} Holi Siilivan $4 until he encountered the pavement jn} Time-ROO1S. Sam Hofthelmen Hen | (ront of Tirowne'n Choy Houne, ati | Ma essen hen Heke aettsay as Fah encounter with Hroadway damagog-| Peter Heckwt lost his rider hts head to some extent and « THIRD RACE = jot of mud to spoll a : Doran $000: for two-year-olds: five and 9 wich Mr. Bdwant Coi pale {UclONRF sieht. Jockey, Tettin ; eco atiheMeDantel oO de e8 accumulated at a me. La Jesinone Seen nena: el Ae shining parlor on the ‘Chirtysninth | Miiwetner cssee WT. cC: Koerner...0:1 6 0 wine collints Tine =L OC gina Staliand Dew sof Dawn The collision ocourred at an hour | Nenimore, Virginia Mall and pew of Dawn fouling, hock oxtending from Times Square to rt Frank Fava, ap engineer iiving at No. valet mes, not tadly injured and |) West One Hundred and Sixtoentt euparinten ded the removal of the wreck | street, died to-day in the Harlem Hos. mori, to ene to the | ital ‘a fractured skull caused by tort ride, a Took a o wa fight of ates ot his! ‘ As a curtain-raiser to the international six-day bicycle race a series of sprinting contests will be run off at Madison Square Garden to-night ‘between’ the French and American champions at short and middle dis- tances. Frank L. Kramer, champion of America and former world's champion, and Edmond Jacquelin, champion of France, will come to- i gether for the first time. Ellegard, world’s champion, will meet the dyce, Capt. C. H. Hill, Mr, and Mrs. | winner of this race later on during an intermission in the six-day grind. Harry Lauder, H, A. Leo, J. F. Me- cheat epee ee aa > dy as Kim, R. H. Moncrieff, Aloxander Mose- HrAmeraariaahsae openy.tral nian an ley! the Rov. Richard Pilkington, Mr. Bonen AUrlveuriny Nema xoreatiiaiat and Mrs, H. EB, Potts, James A. Rivh- Pe ReC MAT RGURLOn Giga race: | O1ey Was, mondiMilest aay Robes aRiEN ana te introduced to Jacquelin, who had just A TCHUEMN Vega AGN seri eciat umn aeee arrived from hls training quarters in Mra. °Scott, Mr and Mrs. Thomas D. Nem Aarks Waterbury and the Rev, H. Barrow It has always been a moot: question Willlanie 4s to who Js the faatest biéycle sprinter n the worldr and this race will settle the question for all time. Kramer has cen the American champion for seven Sears, having held the amateur title or two years and the professional belt for fivp successive years, When Kranter found there wax no man to defeat him n America he went to Europe and vice won the Grand Prix! of Paris, « at that never before had been at- somplished by any other rider, But nelther Jacquelin nor Ellegaard wore In the race, Following the sprinting contest Bobby Walthour, American champlon and world’s champion at middle dissances, will meet Darrogan, the best midd distance man that France has been able to‘develop, in a race at ten imies motor paced FActing tn acedrdance with Instructions from the-police the management of the six-day race will not open the doors of {udison Square Garden for the sale of tickets until 12 o'clock to-morrow night. | Tho race will start at 1 o'clock A. ML, | Instead of midnight as heretofore. Tn order ty handle the large crowd which wil be waliing for tho opening bl (Continued on page 7.) L CASHIER URGED Cn. CKS FCR AUTO RIDES Pretty elghteen-year-old. Martha Wellman, of Tuckahoe, N. Y,, who haa been employed as a clerk In the ladles’ loring establishment of Samuel Lau~ No. 463 Fifth avenue, was arrested day by detectives from the Central Ofice and locked up at Pollee Head- ‘quarters, charged with baving forged here! name to chooks on tie Hudson Trust Company, Martha had beca at’ work for mo than a with Lauber and waa trusted explicitiy in Handing che ace (UUNe of the tin and making deposits contesmion. to th nning Lat nid x after Ane enteved aio! ny She has fadmitied forminz thirter ckk since | October, and colivcied an amount which agyre- Ruted 25). " rl waid that sho, has spent all of tho money, entertaining Siends with homeo, rides errnee: oe

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