The evening world. Newspaper, August 5, 1908, Page 2

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PH REET SS ~ FAPLSINI ISDE BT MN OO Four Girls Among Seven in Launch Wrecked on Lake Hopatcong. MATCH FINDS A LEAK. Flame Runs to Tank Like a Fuse and Destroys Vessel, — LAKE HOPATCONG, J, Aug. 5.— Through a search for a gasoline leak | fn a motor boat with a lighted match | ‘there was an explosion here early to- day which resulted in the death of one man and the narrow escape from @rowning of four girls who were in the party. The drowned. man was Carl Pfelener, of New York, ‘The boet wes in charge of William Dater, of Paterson, who is visiting his brother, Frederick, at Sterling Springs, Besides the four zirls there were two other men in the boat, ‘While the craft was off North Point Dater noticed that the gasoline Mad pegun to leak from the tank into the dottom of the boat. Dater lighted a match to investigate, He got down on his knees and poked about with the lighted match, In an Instant the oll ignited, and the flames ran like a lighted fuse to the tank. There was an explosion whioh tore the Inside of the boat asunder and upset tt. Tho seven occupants were sent flying in all directions, One man sank at once, while the others floundered about In the water, Many persons on shore witnessed the accident and put out for the wreck. C. Levy, Maurice Appel and Peter and min Pfeifer’ succeeded in getting to the four girls out of the water. Was in an unconscious condition and it ‘was an hour before they were revived. Dater and his uninjured companion managed to swim ashore without as- Each nee, NEWSBON'S BRI FIGHT T0 ESC e spot first in a rowboat and pulled | RU ac OR OLA SEONG CR FTE ACAD Little Victim’s Body Tightly | Little Fellow Falls on Track as | Wedged Under Wheels || He Jumps From an in Brooklyn, | Ice Wagon. . | | A large crowd, composed mainly of | push-cart peddlers and sweatshop work- Jers on thelr way to ‘unch at noon to- |day, saw a Ittle boy ground to death Junder the wheels of a Grand street | electric car, near Cannon street. An ice wagon was before a saloon on }a corner, and the driver had gone into the building. The little boy, a well-dressed, well-formed lad ten years old, had climbed up on the step at the rear of the wagon to | get a plece of ice, when the driver, | coming out of the saloon, saw him and ed: “Hey, get down there!” It took the combined efforts of a score of men this afternoon to hoist a Lor- imer street, Brooklyn, trolley car high enowzh to permit a policeman to get the body of seven-\bar-old Joseph Marino, of No. 12 Kinselyea street, from beneath the wheels. The boy's body was cut in two. Joseph had been watching a parade of | the Joseph Gaynor Association, which had an outing, With companions, he was standing on Metropolitan avenue, between Union and Lorimer streets. He Tan across the street and had reached the opposite track, when a car came along at a high rate of speed. The Itttle fellow was knocked down and dragged a dozen yards before his! The startled boy turned to jump, and body rolled under the wheels. Mean-|in doing so fell from the step on to {hile the motorman was trying to stop |the street oar tracks. At that moment the car, but, according to witnesses, |q Grand street car was even with the was unable to do so, because of the high speed. When he did bring the car end of the ice wagon and as the child to a stop, Josaph's ‘body was under the rolled under the front plpatform one ear wheels, ao tightly wedged that the /of the wheels passed over his head car could not be moved without further y I mangling the body. ‘i He wee OnLy ae Then the volunteer bystanders put Bay ee thelr shoulders to tho side of the car) Who lives in Astoria, Long Island, did and the body was extricated, | not see the boy, and kept right ahead HIGHLANDERS little fellow. A. score or more persons (Continued from First Page.) | who had seen the aoctdent cried out to him to stop, that there was @ under the car, and he put on the brake, with all his strength and backed the car, | “There was great excitement and a |dense crowd formed in the narrow street. Women screamed and several of them who thought the boy belonged to them rushed and fought to see the body after it had been taken from on third. Wallace out stealing. Blair to Niles, Ferris fanned. NO RUNS, Eighth Inning. Conroy out, Wallace to T. Jones. Kee |OO4y. the car, ler ditto, Chase ditto. NO RUNS. [Under eman Fdward Rosenfeld, of the Chase squeezed onto Hoffman's liner.’ pelancey atreet station, had great dim. Jones popped to Conroy. Spencer! culty in keeping them ‘back, Dr. Wea- walked, Waddell singled. Stone forced gle, of Gouverneur Hospltal, came and Waddell, Niles to Ball. NO RUNS. saw that death had been Instantaneous Ninth Inning, The motorman was arrested. The boy's body was taken to the sta- Hemphill walked. Delehanty fouled to| tion and has not been Identified, The T. Jones. Ball's liner went straight. to * ult was of dark material and the jad’ Renee Blair lined Hoffman. NO complexion is dark. ica WRIGHT AGHIN T ——>— SECOND GAME. BATTING ORDER. New York. St. Louis, Niles, 3b, Stone, it. 8b. Hartzell, rt Keeler, rf. Willlams, 2b, Chase, 1b. Wallace, ss, Hemphill, cf. Ferrie, 3b. Delehanty, It Hoffman, ct. Ball, as Jones, lb, Slevens, c, NCE First Inning: Niles walked. Conroy sacrificed, T.| Jones to Williams. Keeler out, Pel T. Jones, Chase ditto. NO RUNS. Btone fanned, Hartzell tripled to cen-) tre a hard bounded that got past Hemp- hill, but died at the plate, Hemphill to Secretary and President Will Thresh Out the uestion William Schechner, | AMOST CST U Ball to Sweeney. Williams flied to Kee- ler. NO RUNS. Second Inning, With Col. Scott. THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, YEAR-OLD BOY BOY CRUSHED 1) LIGHTNING STRIKES | ZEPPELIN’S AIRSHIP, air for twenty-four hours followed a series of accidents. at 6 o'clock last night when the great trom Oppenheim, Sometiing went wrong with one of the motors and Count Zeppelin was compelled to descend. Jon the surface of the river and was |soon secured. The repairs occupied sev- jeral hours and a great crowd gathered |The airshin reascended at 10.4 ‘turned and the homeward to |Lake Constance was begun. Tweather were favorable through the ‘night and everything progressed sinooth- |ly until 8 o'clock this morning, when |the piston box of the forward motor | became overheated. | Dropped on a Plain, | The ouoyancy of the seventeen gas | bags in the aluminum of the balloon had been affected by the long flight and the great altitude that had been | attained—6,000 feet. Count Zeppelin made an attempt to land on water, but was forced to drop | on a plain, An enormous crowd was soon at- tracted, Two regiments of grenadiers were ordered out to protect the airship from curiosity seekers and souvenir col- llectors. Suddenly the sky became over+ cast and thunder and lightning in the clouds betokened a coming storm. The wind gathered force and was soon blowing a gale. Rain fell in torrents and the spectators scattered in every direction. A fierce gust of wind dragged journey the airship from its moorings and for 8 moment it appeared as though the awk- ward monster, weighing hundreds of the Swedish Army, under condition that tons, would go up into the alr, to descend the Swedish Governnrent Is free to use later perhaps in the heart of some city, killing and maiming scores of people. Then Crash Came. | The bailoon raced to the southwest, gradually rising for about fifty yards Then the rear end of the great en- yelope holding the gas bags drooged and there was a terrific clap of thunder and a blinding flash of lightning. These | third for mountain work were followed by a loud explosion and | a column of smoke and flame shot into the air, The airship was soon afire from end | to end, but the buoyancy of such of the | gas bags as had not been reached by | | the flames kept the envelopa in the alr, |The motors and frames attached to the under side crashed to the ground and | several bystanders were knocked over. Finally the aluminum shell settled to the earth and was blown to pieces by | se successive explosions of the sevan- teen gas bags it contained, Count Zeppelin has devoted his life- time And his. personal fortune to the | development of his airships. The vessel | | (Continued from First Page.) \the machinery at 8 o'clock this morning caused him to descend to terra \firma on a plain at Echterdingen, five miles from this city, The unfortunate end of Count Zoppe- duct further experiments, and No. 4 lin's effort to keep his airship in the was the result, The first occurred purchase this ship on condition that gas bag was over the Rhine, two miles, principal gne being that it remain in He #0 mantp- | | ulated the airship that it settied gently | and | about | sailed to Mayence, where the prow Was| underneath with two independent plat- Wind and | FIRE CONSUMES IT The German Government agreed to it fulfilled certain requirements, the the air twenty-four hours and land on terra firma. This stipulation has not yet been fulfilled. Airship a Mammoth, The airship was 443 feet long, with a tUameter of about 4 feet. It tapered to a blunt point at the bow, while at the stern were various rudders and frames used in steering. It was fitted forms, each carrying a motor capable of developing 14) horsepower. e As many as sixteen passengers have been taken aloft at one time, Sleaping accommodations were provided for the crew, and an apparatus was installed for the despatch and receipt of wire- Pless telegraph messages, The inflating gas was distributed among sixteen sop- arate interior compartment were contained within the outer rigid envelope of aluminum. The occident to the Zeppelin airship recalls the end of the French military airship Patrie In December, 197, which | was then considered the finest dirlgible| ralloon in existence. The Patrie wa undergoing repairs to her machinery at Verdon, A sudden gust of wind struck (the airship and the 20) men who were holding the gulde ropes were dragged along for several hundred vards before they let go, The balloon then shot up {to a great height and disappeared. | | Five days later the Patrie came down | in Treland. | —— AIR TORPEDO RIGHTS BOUGHT BY THE KRUPPS. ESSBN, Aug. 5—Notwithstanding fre- yauent denials, the Krupp works have pparently acquired the rights to the ir torpedo Invented by Col. Unge, of the device, The particulars of the Weapon are a secret, but It is un- | derstood that the Krupps pald a great sum for the Invention after prolonged tests, so it 1s assumed that the projec- tile Is really effective. Report says it can be used by war ships in sea fighting, and also on land| against fortifications, three calibers be-| ng used, one for sea fighting, a sec- ond for ordinary land fighting and a —-.—__ ‘BOLTS START MANY FIRES IN CONNECTICUT STORM. | Aug. B—An electri- cal storm, which for spectacular accom- |paniments has not been equalled in| many years, passed over Northeastern | Connecticut to-day. The lightning flashes for three hours were weird, vivid and incessant, and in Windham County It $s estinated that boits ‘sft PUTNAM, to and destroyed fully twenty bans, | with contents. Many catlte were kilied, The terrential rain bore down crops, crippled wire service and made high-| ways impassable. At Jewel City the Lester homestead, 125 years old, owned Hundreds Watched Young} Brown’s Efforts to Bring | Drowning Man Ashore. | (Special to The Evening World.) ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Aug. ml Risking his life in an ineffectual ate | tempt to save Frank W. Brown, a New) York visitor, John Brown, an eighteen year-old newsboy, dashed from the boardwalk into the surf to-day and made one of the hardest fights for the Mfe of a bather ever witnessed in the Atlantic City surf, Alone the youth swam out to the drowning man with a hastily snatched Mfe buoy, and in a struggle that took almost all of h rength finally man- aged to lift Brown to the buoy, Una- ble to drag the life craft ashore, the newsboy, bidding the exhausted bather hold tight to the ropes, struck out for the shore to get a boat, Throngs of early day promenaders cheered young Brown and shouted é couragement to the man clinging the life bouy. The youth had started back in a boat to h when Brown, battered by the rolling surf, was unable to keep his hold end was hed off and drowned with ald near him and hundreds on the boardwalk w Young Brown, see. the m: pear, dived for him repeated) Gn the point, of drowning w ard named Penny reached rguRht lum ashor Foung Brown w nconsc the boat and it lifted fro ok Beach Surgeon Beckwith an hour to resusci- tate him Teh newsboy {e hailed as a h a purse fs being made up for visitors here. een LYNCHED ALABAMA NEGRO AFTER MASS MEETING. BIRMINGHAM, Ala, Aug Wille fam Miller, a negro, was lynched Iast night at Brighton, ten miles south of Birmingham, near Woodward mines. Deputies brought Miller to Brighton last night, as a mass meet- ingewat being held. He was charged with=complieity in the dynam! t the house of Finley F night, To-day, wh was 86 Brighton to , it was dis the jail ‘oken tn of Miller was found hanging to a Excitement 1 and further 1 the comma ¢ VETERAN ENGLISH BARE FIST FIGHTER |S DEAD. LOUIS, Mo, Aug wright, a veterar who fought with knuckies King Edward when the King was of Wales in the f aged seventy-elght nom de guerre Blacksmith auch m ST. rince ar Be o ler and ‘Jack’ Gilbert. He have won elahteen of his nineteen He @ied at the home of ‘a Caughter that was lost to-day was the fourth he | by Mrs. Andrew Lester, of New York| | third strike and threw to third Instead of Hemphill out, Willams to T, Jones, | Delehanty out, Ferris to T. Jon Ball out, Pelty to T. Jones. NO RU? Wallace fanned, Sweeney dropped the WASHINGTON, Aug. 5—It fs not im- probable that Secretary Wright of the first. He must have forgotten him-| war Department may visit the Presi- it Wall hed first In safety. Set Wr AUavon renee : y | Gent again this week to consider further Ferris sacrificed, Chesbro to Chase.| Hoffman fanned. T. Jones out, Chesbro| the case of the elght West Point cadets fo Chaves, “NO AU whose dismissal from the Academy has Third Inning. Bweeney popped to Williams. Chesbro | lined to Hoffman. Niles walked. Niles aling, Stevens to Wallace. NO been recommended. The likelihood {s that Col. Hugh L. Scott, Superintendent of the Military | Academy, will be a party to the con- evens out, Niles to Chase. Pelty | ference between the President and Sec- ditto. Stone scratched a single through | retary Wright. Be rte eee arizell taking| The Whole question then will be t Willams stole second, Sweeney|threshed out and a_ determination not try him. Wallace doubled) reached as to what shall be done with , Hartzell and Williams scoring. the cadets under investigation. sored Chesbr with a sin- . oring, Hofman “"0*G0T TWO CAR JOLTS ON THE BROOKLYN BRIDGE. James O'Connor First Thrown to ——__— FAMILY NAGGED HIM, | IS SLAYER’S DEFENSE. | ROCKVILBE, Conn,, Aug. 5—John | Floor and Then Hurled Zet, who killed his four-year-old grand- to Roadway child with a knife a ed his wife | 4 veatardas (old kiheupolicautarday sae James O'Connor was slumbering Eira Tally Rese lean nagging Peacefully on the rear seat of an open Pee ERR Flushing and Graham avenue car aun 5 bound for Manhattan over the Brook- had stood made moon. Thomas vania, man of the car. employed on the road- Manhattan tower stum- je track in the car. O'Brien | his might, the In, J avenue car {nto the road THAW HAS TROLLEY OUTING ta fut im gut ane Mekercia Savery Greenpalnt. WAITING FOR COURT CASE. SIE. has constructed. When his own money had become exhausted the German Reichstag voted him $125,000 to con- | Clty, was burned, the loss being $3.0) The chief places at which there were fire losses were Columbia, Lebanon, the Windhams and Card's Mille. FORT ERIE RESULTS. FORT ERIE, Ont., Aug, &—To-day's| | races results aa follows: FIRST RACE—Two-year-olds: and a half furlongs.—Floreal, 10, B Ter, 4 to 1, 8 to 5 and 7 to 10, wo Malecon, 9, Kennedy, 4 to 1. 2 to and even, second; Samister. 109, Pow- érs, 4 tol 2 to land 4 to §, third. Time 1.10 4-5. Tt} part, Pink Linen, Opponent, Luxar, Coatoutter, Stowaway also ran | SECOND RACE—Steeplechase; short | course —Laveita, 135 (Archibald), 5 to 1, |§to 8 and out, won: Little Wally, 147 (Dayton). 9 to 5, 7 to 10 and out, second; Pebble, 135 (Carrier), 30 to |4 to 5. third. ‘Mme—8.60 1. ence, Chancellor also ran. -§. Impertin- Third Race—Three-year-olds; mile and) a sixteenth.—Quagga, 188 (Powers), 7 to 10 and out, won; Hostle Hyphen, 100 (Butler), 7 to 2, 7 to 10 and out, second; Fancy Bird, 108 (Delaby), 6 to 1, 6 to § jand out, ‘third, Time—1492-5, True | Boy and Prytania also ran. Fourth race declared off, FIFTH RACE—Two-year-olds; five and a half furlongs,—Aralla, 9%, (Ber- gen), 5 to 1, 2 to 1 and even, 1; Serenade, 103 (Powers), 7 te 2, 9 to 5 and 4 to 5, 2; Madrillino, 100 (Kennedy), 6 to 1, 2 to 1 and 6 to 5, 3 Time—1.@ 3-5, Sir Cannon, Mabel Henry, Catherine Card | well, Low Heart, Admonish, Land Lord, } Lurid also ran, SIXTH _RACE.—Five furlongs—Theo. 1, 4 to 6 and out, won; Alice, 100 (Bur- ton), 3 to 1, 6 to 5 and out, second; Glorl- ole, 100 (Lelbert), 20 to 1, 6 to 1 and 2 to 1, third. Time—10 2-5. Guy Fisher, Diccoon, Jolly, Green also ran. SEVENTH RACE—Four-year-olds and up; one mile and seventy yards.—Anneta Lady, 101 (Butler), 7 to 5,4 to 5 and out, won; Camille, 107 (Madden), 5 to 2 4 to 5 and out, second; Usury, 101 (Steele), 8 to 1,5 to 2 and 4 to § third, Time— 147 Nancy, Eminola, Delestrome, |Glena McBride also ran, and one-half POUGHKE naw Was ¢ This Coupon Popular Mai Beautiful Woman, Who. Will Be KING AND Carnival ot the A Week oi 1 vote for....... ———- WOULD STOP DOG KILLING, At an executive sexs Healt President, Mall VOrbs to BYeALNU W Box 1354, Ne ste odeoke ote of be handed In Be 149th ats C Brooklyn. 292 Wa: zzied and society wi it the plea of i \ * 1 t He abs of oh oe cfs MARDI GRAS FESTIVAL AT CONEY ISLAND, Contest Closes Sept. 8, a, 1893 Broadway: Harlem, 249 Vote for the Most ote for the Most . 1908, at the on Bent, 1 Crowned QUEEN of the ge of Progress Sept. 14, seeeee efor King (or Queen) 908, KX (EEE — Secretary. LD MARDI GRAS EDLIOK, P, 0, at The World's various branche Sash ahs ahs ofs afe af ahs af ope ahs spose x Ww. Ineton at. and Pulltizer Bulldins wis he fe oh hs Fecha afe spe five} 1, 8 to 1 and | Cook, 198 (Butler), 8 to! eke ete ole eho obo oe ebeofe feof nfo ahah ne she 6 2 ve Official Voting Coupon. Latitles the Holder to Cast 01 in Greater New York, or 01 | | | | | KEENE’S MASKETTE WINS THE $10,000 | SPINAWAY STAKES) (Continued from First Page.) taking the track, led all the way Squire ran lapped on her for a then dropped back behind only to come again In the stretch and beat out Javobite for the place money Aster d'Or, the only other starter, ran jlast all the way, but made up some ground on the stretch turn, He began to close on the leaders, but was sharply cut off by The Squire and compelled to |puli up. Kennyette, was bid up after the race by both J. Jones, the ex-jockey, and Cad Doggett to 82/709, at which fig- ure she was retained by her stable. Kennyette was entered for $1,000. Two Horses In Steeplechase. | The Saratoga steeplechase was a two ‘horse race between Jimmy Lane and Bat. It was one of the prettiest races throurh the fleld this season. Jimmy e won in the ive on the flat through the stretc! by a_length . a grand jumper, led al] the way to the last sixteenth. He hel zamely, but Jimmy Lane had more speed in the stretcl Boadwee, however, had to get every: ounce of it out of the Tompkins jumper to win, | Finish Spoiled by Rain. | Rain began to fall heavily after the | Spinaway, and the track was soon deep| and sloppy. The jockeys were drenched |in thelr parade to the post and were badly spattered with mud at the end. | George (. Hall and Orphan Lad ran! like a team all the way, Out Brussel on Hail made a very wide turn, and this coat iim the race, for in ‘the drive| through the stretch Orphan Lad out- gamed him, After he saw he was beaten Brussel stopped ridin, id at the tnd was second simply because couldn't heip it, for D'Arkle, closin, | strong, nearly caught him. D'Arkle and Greeno were weil played In this race, | Orphan Lad's prico receding Helen Harvey Good Mudder, Helen Harvey was an easy winner After breaking badly, Not on the outside, When f Inj Night and then came away easily. and at the end she breezed home by | severa llengths. Summer Night held| m long enough to save the place money from Plume. Merry Gift d race, having a rough journey on the backstret iB CAME FROM FAR TO WED. Dr Thomas Pugh McCormick, Atty- Ave years old, of No. 1421 Butaw place Raltimore, Md., and Mias Leonora Ciif- ton Franklin, a lbrarian, fitty-o years old, of San Antonio, Tex., too out a marriage license In the City Hat Bureau to-day. The doctor and his bride are to spenii thelr honeymoon In this ety. Mine | Franklin came from her home to mest him here. They said they were to be married to-day in Grace Chapel. The doctor has heen imarried twice before sapien Reckless | n the Washington Towa) Democrat | amp chimney, and it msted three year He got a! $s and bought or | for 18 cents and it lasted exactly thre, days, So he went back to get another b-cent one. ran a bad| ~ | NI CANADIAN PACIFIC HLWAY STRIK All Stop Work as Whistles; Nine Deaths and Thirty-two, Give Signal for Great Tie- Up Across the Border. WINNIPEG, Aug. 5.—The digest labor dispute which the industrial his- tory of Canada has known culminated to-day in the form of a general strike when employees of mechanical denart- ments of the Canadian Pacific Raitroad from the Atlantic to the Pacific, some §.000 In number, and quit work because the decision of the conciliation board, which was an- pointed under the Lemieux act of the Canadian Parliament, was not in ac- cord with what they wanted Not merely in the number of men in- volved {s the magnitude of the walkout Indicated. but In the fact that great financial Interests are affected and also | gig, No. 63 Siegel street, Brooklyn; from | 8Md Tock were emptied ov that the strike covers more territory than any which has heretofore been recorded in raflway circles. The total number of men on the Western lines 1s 3,500, The total num- ber on the Eeastern 4,50. Bell Hardy, head of the Canadian Pacific Railway lines committee, wired from Montreal that 2,200 men nad left thelr work at the Angus Canadian Paci- fic Railway shops there, and that ile order was obeyed to @ man over the entire system, Second Vice-President Whyte, has been to Skagway, js hurrying home, He will be at Vancouver to-day. The management of the company’s side of the strike is now !n the hands of Gen- eral Manager Bury, who claims he can pull out successfull As the United States alien law, how- ever, prevents the importation of atrike- breakers, under a penalty of $1,000 fine, the strike leaders here say they can- not see how Bury {s going to make good, AROKER'S FAILURE FOLLOWS ARREST ELTASTMAN Partner Alleges Head of the Concern Fled With Its Accounts, The suspension of the firm of East. man & Co. was announced to-day on the floor of the Consolidated Stock Ex- | change shortly after the news of the arrest of ‘Lame Bob" Eastman at Ch cago reached this city, Rovert E. Eastman was head of the firm. He was arrested in Chicago on complaint of A. A. Knowles, vice-presi- dent of the Mechanics’ National Bank, of No, 3 Wall street. John T. Garrison, Eastman’s partner, complained to the police last Saturday that on July 29 Eastman removed from the office the books containing the ac- counts of five customers, together with $15,000 In cash. Eastman lived with his sister In the St, Francis Court apartment house, Riverside Drive and One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street. Eastman left there last Saturday and his sister moved the | furniture away on MoMday, At the office of Eastman & Co. was given out this brief statement, signed by John T. Garrison: 5 “Robert E. Eastman left New York on Wednesday, July 2%, In the absence of his partner, and, as has already been announced in the press, was a rested {In Cnicago yesterday. He took with him the books of the firm, and | ts therefore impossible to give any ac- curate statement as to the firm’s Ila- bilities until Mr. Eastman returns to New York.” The firm has been doing a general brokerage business for about five years. ——»—— GIRL PICKET ARRESTED, DISCHARGED IN COURT. For doing picket duty Ida Bravaoff, president of an association formed by girls employed by Company, in Newark, who are now on strike, was arrested to-day near the factory. It was alleged that she in- timidated those Who sought to secure the strikers’ places. The arrest was made by a private detective. young woman Was taken before Jud Herr, who after hearing the detective's story, discharged her. The girls are on strike because Miers Sadie Silverman, the vice-president of their union, was glischargéd by the company. laid down thelr tools | who the Lewia Cigar! STURN FES “HOT WEEE OF TORTURE Prostrations Before Wel: | come Relief Appears, (Continued from First Page.) tlon, Fulton street and Hudson ave- nue, to Brooklyn Hospital. FOX, WILLIAM, thirty-one, No, is Grand street, Brooklyn, from Wythe avenue and North Third street, to East- ern District Hospital WILSON, MAR}, twenty-one years | old, 2% East One Hundred and | Twenty-third street; from residence to| | Harlem Hospital. HERMAN, LOUISA, fifty years old, | Tenth avenue and Seventeenth street; | from No. % West Eleventh street to St. | Vincent's Hospital, | | GOLDSTEIN, JACOB, nineteen years| | West Boadway and Bleecker street to) | St. Vincent's Hospital. SULLNAN, HBLEN, froyt-five years} old; from 0. 69 Pike street to Bellevue Hospital SCHNEIDER, ISAAC, thirty - four| years old, No, 104 Pitt street; from For- | ty-fifth street and Sixth avenue to Belle: | vue Hospital. | | SULLVAN, HELEN, forty-five years | old, of No, 69 Pike street. From Tesi: | dence to Bellevue Hospital. i WILSON, MARY, twenty-one years old, of No, 2% East One Hundred and) Twenty-third street. From residence to! Harlem Hospital. | HERMANN, LOUISA, fifty years old! jof Tenth avenue and Seventeenth street ; Overcome in front of No. 80 West Blev- jenth 6 Bt. Vincent's Hospital | NNY, BERNARD, thirty-five KED ot Maple avenue, Morristown, N. J., over- come at No. 4 East Twenty-second street; New York Hospital KELLY, KATIE, twenty-four years old, ut No. 311 West Thirty-fiteh street, | overcome at No. 8} University Place; | attended at home. MALONE, ANDREW, _ thirty-two years old, of No. 14 West One Hun- | dred and Seventeenth streat, overcome | at East Fifty-first street station, where | he was detained as a prisoner; Flower Hospital. Refreshing relief from the enervating heat and humidity that held New York | In {ts grip for twenty-four ® came a little after 3 o'clock this afternoon, | | when a thunderstorm swept over Man- hattan, coming ¢ southwest and bringing a eze that seemed almost too good to be true. Storm Brings Relief. up from cooling Big black clouds began to gather over the neighborhood of South Brooklyn | shortly after the mercury reached the §9 degree mark at 2 o'clock and wim a rumble of thunder rolled over the swel- tering city, Up to that time there had been re- ported nine deaths and twenty-nine prostrations from the heat. On the east side and in the crowded tenement sections the storm, which is | evide a part of the one which the forecaster said would arrive the middie {of last week, seemed to bring new life |to the thousands who had been eufter- \ing for hours from the moist, sticky warmth, The rain came in @ mild shower at | first, and then fell in @ liberal down- | pour, #0 cooling and pleasant that the children In the narrow streets of the east side did not bother to run In- doors During the first half hour the tem- {perature dropped elght degrees, from 87 degrees to 79, Father Wallace-Nelll Dead. The Rev. Father Edward Wallace- Neill, organizer and rector of the parish of St, Edward the Martyr, In East One | Hundred and Ninth street, and one of the most widely! known and best veloved of the Ritual.st clergymen in New York “ued suddenly at about four o-clock in the rectory, No. 14 East One Hundreu and Ninth street - Dr, Jacob Goldsmith, who lives at No, 22 East One Hundred and Ninth street, received an urgent call over the tele- phone from the Rev, R. A. Ruasell, a pole curate who assists Father Wal- Neill la id Mr, pros- tome as soon as possible," Russell; “Father Wallace Neill trated from the heat.” When Dr, Goldsmith arrived at the |rectory he found the rector expiring in ithe arms of the curate, who was recit- ling the prayers for the dying. The clergyman was beyond medical aid, and in a few seconds all was over, He died Hin great suffering. “He was too weak, when he called me, to receive the Sacrament,” said Mr. Russell. Father Wallace-Neill was fifty years old, and came to this country more than twenty-five years ago, shortly af- ter receiving his degree at Oxford, His first charge was ag assistant to th chure? C. Gray, whose was at Garrison-on-the-Hudson. In 188% Father Wallace New York and organized the Ep! parish of St. Edward the Martyr, In this work he received the encourage- ment and ald of Commodore Elbridge T. Gerry, who \s now Sanior Warden of the church. The bullding was erected several years ago. Rey, Albert SPECIAL FOR TO-DAY, THE STH ADULATED FRUIT SPECIAL ASSORTED CHOCO. 196 VATES, (20 hinge)... POUND MOCOLATE PEANU OORURTERS pounn 25¢ | SPECIAL FOR TO-MORROW, THE 6TH CHOCOLATE WALNUT 10 DIAMONDS .pounn Wé FIG 19 WAFPRS . pounn 196 H0CO. SPECIAL ASSORTED i |PIATES Cao unde) 195 POUND Park Row store open every evening until 11 o'clock. Barclay and Cortlandt Street stores open Saturday evenings until 11 o'clock, E DELIVER FREE 54 BARCLAY ST, ov! y ¥ goomh SiR 0 all Brooklyn Cor. West B'way. revger RT 29 CORTLANDT ST for 290, to points In Manhattan above Core! a 200th St., Hoboken and Jersey City. “as ‘or. Church St, No goods sent CO, 1 Candies (3¢ st” PARK ROW¢ NASSALL our out-of-town customers carefully 3 At Cit 'y Hall Park. shipped from our special peeked and {i order department 4 ma iT WORKMEN E IS TUAS OF A EAA Giant Bucket Turns Over and Empties Its Contents on Them. = Six laborers were digging with pick? axes and shovels in a ditch for a new section of sewer in Gold streat, near Navy Brooklyn, to-day, filliag a piant bucket, attached lo & crane, with earth The bottom of the excavation 1s about street, tron twenty-five feet from the level uf ine street, and the big bucket had been swung to a height of thirty-fve feet over the heads of men, on Its way to dump the earth a wagon waiting by the side of the ditch Suddenly the bucket turned com- pletely over and the two tons of earth te labore ers, They were entirely covered and not even a cry was heard from them, Other workmen set to work to dig them out) The two first reached were unhurt, except fora little sand in thelr eves. two did not fare so well twenty-one years old and Joseph usea’s skull was fractured. He will probably die. Thev were taken to the Brooklyn Hosp ‘The other two la- borers were taken out unconscious and nearly suffocated, Tuev were taken to the Cumberland Street Hospital. The section around Gold and streets ts thickly populated, and so large a crowd formed that inspeotors Flood and Hollohan and the reserves of two precincts had great diMeulty In forming _a_line. Navy WAS DELIRIOUS WITH ECEMA On Chest, Back, and Head—Pain, Heat, and Tingling Were Excru- ciating—Nerves in Exhausted. Condition—Sleep Badly Broken. —_+——_ CURE BY CUTICURA SEEMED LIKE MAGIG coe ee “Words cannot express the gratitude TI feel for what Cuticura Remedies have done for my cau ter, Adelaide, {s fifteen years of age, and had never anything the matter with her skin until four months ago, when. an eruption broke out on her chest. The first symptom was a redness, and then followed thicken- ing and blisters, which would break and tun matter. I took her to a doctor, and he pronounced it to be eczema of & very bad form. He treated her, but instead of being checked, the disease spread, It showed itself on her ‘atl and then quickly epread upwards unt! the whole of her head was affected, an all her hair had to be cut off, The Pas the suffered wes excruciating, what with that and the heat and tine gi her life was almost unbearable, he became run down in health, and af times was very feverish, languid, ant drowsy, and occasionally she was lirious, Her nerves were in such a low state that she could not bear to be left alone, In spite of the cold weather the would Insist on having her bedroom window open, and would lean out on the window-sill, She did not have @ roper hour's sleep for many nights, The second doctor we tried afford her just as little relief as the first, and really do not know what we should ave done if we had not read how Cuticura cured @ similar case. 1 pire chased Cuticura Soap, Cuticura te ment, and Cuticura Pills, and befor the Qintment was three-quarters finished every trace of the disease was ne, It really seemed like m Fier hair fg coming on nicely, an¢ atill apply the Cuticura Ointment a8 find it increases the growth wonder, fully, Mrs. T. W. Hyde, 1, Ongar Place, Brentwood, Esser, England, Mar, 8, 1907, ticura Soap (28e.) to Cleanse the Bin ce Binet RSG toldieat ihe. Skin, and eit cura Resolvent (50c.), (ot in the form ot Choroiat Coated Piiis ‘We. er vial of 60) to Purity the Bie Bod throughout the world. Petter Drug & Chea, Gor 8 ‘, » Boston, Maas. Free! Bor \ Culicura Book on Skin Diseagats $ oz. duck, complete, (atexerett 7 7 ft. x9 ft. 0% ft. x 9% ft. A 8.88 Tents, any size or style, made to order. CAMPS COMPLETELY FITTED, yACHT SUPPLIFS | BOATS, DORIES, SMITH.—On Sunday, Aus. 2. MARTIN J, SMITH beloved husband of Mary Crowe © ley, and son of the late Patrick and Awn — &mith, Funeral from Washington st Aug. 0, at 9.30 A. M.; thence to Mt, Bernard's Church, West 14th st, and Oth av. Interment Calvary, : PHELAN,—The Society of the Friendiy. - Sons of 8t. Patrick In the city of Li York announce the death of JAMES J. PHELAN, at Allenhurst. N. J. on Ai 8, 1998. Members are resnectfully r ed to attend the funeral rervi eld at the Church of Sacrament. Tlet at Thursday, Aug. 6, STEPHEN FARREL WARREN LESLIE. Seer hia Inte New York. residence, 7 on Thuraday, , 1908, at 10,13 A. Mew Y. President, ary. Sunday World Wants Work vie Monday Morning Wonders,’ phillies i

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