The evening world. Newspaper, September 14, 1908, Page 2

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— eere wee fama, of Madinon, or Lioyd Colll of Wentchenter, State TreasurersAn Rrie County man, The number of visitors in Saratoga to-day was not large for the opening day of a State convention, but the con- centration of delegates and spectators at the United States Hotel made the seene before the opening hour and interesting. No Big Demonstration There were no marching clubs nor any demonstrations during the «morn: ing for any candidate, ‘he convention band, the only one on duty. played dur- ing the forenoon outside of the State Committee's rooms in the hotel. It was a fine, cool autumn day, with clear skies and bracing alr, The delegations were seated in the Convention Hall by Congressional dist- ricts, in their ning with the Long Island counties In the front seats of the section to the left of the centre. in ihe centre, from front to rear, the delegations were arranged in this or- der; | Saratoga, Warren, Montgomery, St. Lawrence, Hamilton, Fulton, Scho- harie, Essex, Clinton, Ulster, Otsego, Oneida, Delaware, Albany, Schenec- tady, Lewis, Herkimer, Oswego, Rens- | selaer, Erie, Washington, Jefferson, Erle, Collumbia, Greene. The right hand section, from front to rear, had these delegations: Onon- daga, Monroe, Chemung, Madison, Broome Schuyler, Steuben, Livingston, Seneca, Tioga, Chenango, Tompkins, Niagara Genessee Orleans, Allegany, | Cortland, Ontario, Cayuga, Wyoming, Cattaraugus, Wayne, Yates, Chau- tauqua, | The left hand section, named In order trom front to rear, is thus apportioned: Suffolk, Queens, Nassau, Kings, New| York, Rockland, Westchester, Orange, Syllivan, Putnam, Dutchess, The New York delegation overflowed from the side section on the main floor | Into about 100 seats on the adjacent | parquet floor. | Opened by Woodruff The decorations of the hall consisted entirely of the United States colors in flags and banners covering the great | sounding board back of the platform and in draperies over the balcony rall- ing. Pictures of Taft and Sherman—ten or twelve of each—were placed alter- nately between the flag decorations of the gallery, There was no picture of Gov. Hughes. The Convention convened at 3 o'clock to nominate a Governor and a full State| ticket. The first day's session will be} perfunctory, devoted to organization and| speechmaking, An adjournment will be taken to to-morrow morning, when will be fought to a finish the absorbing ques- tion of renominating Gov. Hughes. On the floor of the hall 1,00 delegutes sat as sedately as at a Carnegie Hall religious meeting, The galleries wera only partly filled with spectators, more women than men, o rough and tumble convention crowd is this, but} fine clothes on exhibition from plat- form to rear seat, carefully groomed men and latest autumn styles of feminine fashion, Chauncey M. Depew walked down the middle aisle to a front seat no longer among the delegates, but in spectators’ row, He receivext a faint hand of ap- plause When Mr. Woodruff entered there were thirty seconds of applause to voice the feelings of the reoals. Mr. Root received a heartier cheer, but all the applause was faint-hearted and spiritiess, Rev, Frederick L. Decker, of Sara- toga, made a brief opening prayer and Gecretary Gieason read the call for the convention. Cheered Roosevelt 30 Seconds. Becretary of State Root was Intro- @uced as Chairman, and some rea! ap- plause finally burst forth, lasting fifty peconds, and was approved with an unanimous shout of aye. Congressman Sereno F, Payne and John Raines per- formed the role of formal escort of the new Chairman, who at once began bis speech. At the menticn of President Roosevelt’s name by Mr, Root in the opening of bis wpeech, there | were thirty seconds of applause. [When he named Goy, Haghes there was a yell from a small part of the New York delegation, joined | by smattering applause from vari- parts of the hall. Atded by the band, the outburst continned for forty-five seconds, Out of the thousand delegates about two hun- dred applauded. The spectators nwere allent, save for two or three | hisses, Spasmodic applause greeted various | points in the first part of Mr. speech, but as he proceeded ex Hing t merits of the Republican party and ane felsing the faults of Democracy there was increasing interest and applause. All this talk of national affairs tended to make the delegates forget their state troubles and f a bit cheered up over @utaide triumphs in administration. Crowd Annoys Root Mr. R the mo! w en emphatica as the the fa ud in nating prin applause, most Resolution his birthday t him on ing with tion a every su + were urned t to-morrow first me name made by Mr, Root wa by cheers jumping to and " Secretary T helr heering Mr Tat Y w Dut his « acrdina i popularity « p an Masate of (ne Leoplet h spoke for) peroration lively | numerical order,’ begin- Root 8 aE T audience to Its feet with generous ap- plause Made Them Yawn. | But after hale an hour or mo: Republican self-praise, and the se tary began to wander through al co { the e in his paeans praise, the audience yawned. New |foundiand, fis Panama Canal ue Peace conferences, Pan-Amer! can confabs, Chinese exclusion, Jap-| anes ft dship, Santo Domingo, Janapese ndship, Sante Domingo, Cuba and the Philippines proved a | soporific of deadening force, “It might | | be all very Important, bot what h it got to do with this Hughes busi- ness?” whispered Abe Gruber to his neighbor. The New York district leadera were summoned in conference by Herbert Parsons before the convention assem- bled, Each was uestioned about Hughes and antl-Hughes sentiment in his district. Mr. Parsons tabulated | their reports and then announced that his attitude of support for the Governor | was unchanged. This means three-fourths, at |least, of the New York County dele- gates will stand by their leader, Keeps ! :ssage Secret, Secretary Root, when asked for a that |copy of President Roosevelt's telegram |of orders, replied: "Certainly, I have a telegram from the President, and relating to politics, too, but It is about politics In Moroeco, The President wants to know about recognizing the rebellious Sultan Mula! Hafed.”” “But what about the rebellious Sultans of Saratoga?’ was asked, The Secre- tary chuckled with glee, but would not answer. He kept the Big Stick message secret for the psychological moment and mounted the convention platform to deliver his speech that te to gl the keynote to the national campaign. Of the customary convention commit+ tees only that on resolutions will have any duties to perform, ag there are no contests, and the temporary organisa+ tlon Js to continue permanently, Job E. Hedges, of New York, is to head the Resolutions Committee and draft the platform. It 1s understood no mention 1s to be made of racing legislation, nor of direct nominations, but a plank will recommend that new primary legisia- tion of some sort be enacted. Will Name Hughes, but—, Of ine 1,009 delegates at least 1,000 | are opposed to the renomination of Gov, Hughes, but, despite this overwhelming personal sentiment, the Governor probs ably will be named on the first ballot, The vote will not be unanimous, as 200} Or more delegates are expected to de- clare for various candidates. If this were not the year of a Presi. dential election the convention would jeither decline to renominate the Gov- ernor or else let him be named in order beat him at the pulls with a Demos But the stern reminder has been en the leaders that their highest duty \s to the national icket, and that Presi adilaie Taft and tn nittee oelieve Mr, Hughes aronger than any other candidate, eee HUGHES SILENT ON CONVENTION, (Spacta| to The Evenine World.) ALBANY, Sept. 14.~Gov, does not expect to confer with any of the State leaders now at the Repub- can convention in Saratoga. He leaves to-night for Warsaw, Wyoming County, where he is to speak at the country fair to-morrow, and does not expect to return until late to-morrow | night. It believed here there will “go between" Albany at any stage of the Saratoga | Convention proceedings. that The Governor was asked 1f he had | the Hughes | | THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTE! M’CARREN MAKES THREAT TO BOLT THE CONVENTION ROOT SES “GOV. HUGHES A MAN IKE ROOS —_—.— ministered the Laws as He Found Them. PRAISE FOR TAFT, TOO. ! Secretary Gives Bryan Atten- tion Also in Speech at Re- | publican State Convention. CONVE Y., Sept. speech in assuming the chairmanship of the Republican State Committee this afternoon was lengthy and dealt al- most entirely with national Issues and was designed to voice the views of the national administration toward the can- didacy of Mr. Taft. The speaker, how- ever, took occasion in a way to liken Gov. Hughes to President Roosevelt. He id in part: ‘Just a decade has passed since we were assembled in this place engaged in the business of nominating Theodore Roosevelt for Governor of New York. We are now to nominate a successor to Charles E. Hughes as Governor, and we are to perform that duty according to our wisdom, our loyalty to party and to country, In such a way that the Empire State shall surely cast her | electoral yote for the Republican can- | didate to succeed the same Theodore | Roosevelt as President of the United | States.” Hughes Like stooseveit, Mr. Root here described both S: and national administration—honest, capable and efficient. “Nelther Governor nor President," he said, “has relied upon that view of ex- pediency in the conduct of public affairs which is gulned by secret con- ferences in closed rooms,” Another resemblance between the two administrations, he said, was the much more than ordinary vigor and sierness in the enforcement of law which have characterized them. He sald; “Does the constitution of the State say that no gambling shai, be allowed in the State? Then it seems to the State administration a compu.sory and inevitable conclusion, to be forthwith acted upon with all the power of the State, that such allowance musi be stopped at all hazards, no matter who is hurt or who ts offended. Do the laws} of the United States declare that there shall be no discrimination in railroad rates between shippers great or small? Then discriminations and rebates must} be stopped by the whole aggressive ‘TION HALL, Saratoga, N. | M.—Secretary of State Root's @ n | been consulted regarding the platform | | to be adopted or any other phase of | the Sohvention's work, but he de- clined to LES Sieceimmst HEAVY WIND FOR BiG GULF TOURNEY (Special to The Evening Wort.) GARDEN CITY, Long Island, Sept. 14.—For the firet thme in @ week there was a lively wind over the Garden City) links this morning, when the fours teenth annual National Amateur Golt hamplonship was started. It began se and began feeling in ther pockets for bills to wager on Walter J, Trav as low score winner in the q ng round. in @ rain or wind almost unap pachable on his, greatly advantage | ne ad h present but keen observers knew it wouid| {ity and round {g| candidate of higt | actua performance le] to do in the future we must test, force of the national Government, whatever the cost, however great and powerful may be their enmity.” The financial panic of last autumn, Mr. Root said, was checked by the| firm hand and clear understanding of | national financial administration, Hits at ryan. Mr. Root then went Into the work of the various administrative departments and told the accomplishments of each. Secretary Root made various allusions to William J. Bryan, and answered a number of the criticisms of the Demo- cratic candidate, He denied that the President's advocacy of Mr. Taft's nomination w a “violation of the spirit of our Constitution,” ‘Is there one,” he sald, “who do not know that had Mr. Roosevelt de- | sired to perpetuate his power he could have been nominated by raising his| finger?” Making direct reference to Mr, Bryan, the speaker sald: “What evidence of Democratic fitness to be entrusted with power found in the record of its candidate for Preatdency? It is with profound satisfaction th gnize the pur- up! Mr. Bryan's haracter, and we cannot withhould our admiration from the skill and attrac- veness of his oratory, but when a office @n furnish no derived from the | of official duty and | upon what he proposes 2 to be evidence of fitness relies entirely A a etie put) fa* ax we can, the soundness of his wit an unknown| Judgment oy the substance of his pro- Boston!a Laughlin, Of! posals, not by hi c te Pitsburg, drawn vad fated meter Leb ys emennens cin resen ts \ was w « +| “Is St prudent to place in his handa | pS crt CL ah Mui the great power of the Presidency, and, . 2/4 bove all, 1 it wise to give him rather 1, partion he had than to Mr. Taft, th expertenced judge, filing of the four vacancles in the) Court of the United States | si ipreme expected during the next In answer to Mr. Bryan's slogan Mr. Root said rule? This i a represe! It surely is not proposed to do e@ with repre- tation and have eighty-five millions e make and execute their laws without the ive and executive agents, charges of extravagance é 1 with this The expenditures of publean Administration | be n well within the means of the oo! and the ains to It tn the nau Irv a : evenues ed du ation over and above ee ey \SHINGTON, & to creditors of t North America in New York Far ent er ‘ : eink s to-day de A ‘ kW | be intr “ ‘ jr, Pittsburg, 4: R.| " 8, W. LoGitiiam, Fred Hetreshoff, jai Governor, Like President, Ad- | | takes the drastic | Carnegie Hall convention, (Continued fro gates from these d Credentials Committee, if Senator McCarren tion he threatens he will follow it up with legal proceedings to tesy the legality of the nominations | of the convention, He |s taking an ag- gressive stand and promises to figure in the forefront of the proceedings from the time of the preliminary organiaa- tion until the convention {s under way. by the It follows that No Allicnce, Says Conners. State Chairman Conners says he has not formed any alliance with McCarren. He {js on terms of fri liness with the! Brooklyn leader, he says, but he stanJs| just where he did at the time of the when prac- | tically the whole McCarren delegation | was ousted, “Senator McCarren,” said Chairman Conners, ‘cannot control more than one hundre. votes In the convention, I understand he threatens to make aj motion to reorganize the State Com-/| mittee for the purpose of putting him- | self and others who were deposed last | spring back into that body. | is 1s going to be an open con- yention and Senator McCarren con make any motion he chooses, But the convention will Be 360 to 100 against him.’ Chairman Conners ts talking stronger than ever for Chanler to-day, When riots are unseated | humanized {ni oud 14, 1908, FATHER BROP OF CONEY ISLAND, D OF WOUND Certificate Filed With Coro- | m First Page.) the Adam, of Buffalo, Before his departure from New York Senator McCarren very clroumapectly | launched the boom of Mayor Adam, of | ner Tells of Cut on Buffalo, and this same Mayor Adam is one of the abominations of Mr. Conners, | Priest’s Throat. But, previous to bringing forth Mayor Adam's boom, Senator McCarren had/ | talked at length at the Hoffman House, There was great surprse and deep | with Mr. Conners, | grief in Coney Island this afternoon, | Conners recognizes the false note in| When it became known that Dr. Emil F. MeCarren's indorsement of Adam, ‘Two | Hurtung had filed a report in the Cor- Years ago in Buffalo McCarren had g | Mers’ Office of the borough of Brook- chance to Indorse Adam, but went to| 8 stating that “incised wound in the Sulzer, | throat” was the real cause of the death Conners would throw Murphy in a | of the Rey, Joseph Francis Brophy, the minute, as Murphy tried to throw Con. | beloved rector of the Roman Catholle ners in Denver by getting him appointed | Church of our Lady of Solace, whone to the Democratic National Committee | funeral took place last Saturday. in place of Norman E. Mack and thus | 8 the first priest regularly stationed eliminating him from State politics, on Coney Island, Fathar ‘Brophy had Conners won out then, As the situa. | been admired by people of all denoml- | tion stands now he is with Murpny and |24Uons in the great amusement resort. person of Mayor he 1s also with the so-called “home| @e died rather suddenly Wednesday rulere”—McCarren, Osborne, Rattigan, |M0rming at the rectory on Marmaid Beardsley, Mott and other up-Siate lead: | avenue. He had been In poor health ers who were trampled upon in the Car. | ‘rom overwork. It was given out at the time that he had succumbed to vemorrhage of the lungs after a long ness, His funeral was attended by several thousand persons, Every flag) in Coney Island hyng at half mast dur- ng the services, These circumstances made the shock the greater to-day when Coroner's Phy+ negie Hall convention last spring. Conners has been playing politics up- State and McCarren has been playing poiltice in Brooklyn. | McCarren's statement, made a few days ago, that any candidate wearing Murphy-Conners collars was doomea to defeat has had its don't want to force does Murphy. Conners olite | sictan Hi yho was called vie he called upon Mr. Murphy this after.) goe8 9, Murphy. that” Chanter g te | sictan Hartung, who was calléd to view noon he told the leader of Tammany | man® but ‘he will fuppore oy |the body, oMctally certifled that deals Hall that Chanler is the choice of the A se, Murphy refuses to declares beay | bes due to a wound inflicted while the a jereyman, to quote the entry entered up-State delegates. Previous to the! “Chanier has headquarters in the Whit-|in the blank under the head “Re- meeting Mr. Murphy had expressed) comb House, where Conners has hi “Had been somewhat di e de- himself as perfectly willing to support | the candidate who could show the most strength. Up to this time Chanler is} Herman Ridder, of New York, who 7 the only candidate who has shown any arrived to-day said he was not a can-| attended the beloved priest in the { : strength whatever e | Sigate fet dst placenen tne Relokely nich preceded death, insisted that n tol a hair onne! a t “A number of candidates have been|deciared the sentiment of the male mtd] there must be some mistake, Dr. Ha! | discussed,” said Mr. Murphy, “but the/of the delegates to date was for Chan- sald the wound found by Dr. Hartung | tbe lett €or the convention |!eF, for Governor, Mr. Ridder might have been caused by the inser matter will be wad Oey CONE ‘0 deat Hugh tion of the embalming Imp. t of the to decide, Morgan J. O'Brien will) wel al gue Le a w undertakes ’ Headded that Naieih n iy Was always | preside as temporary chairman, and ““Congresaman William Sulger said to-| of hie mental facult Alton B, Parker will* officiate as the|day that he Is sure of the supper Of | suggestion of suicide permanent chairman.” | 1% delegates to hie candids Gov- ernor outside of Greater New York Mr. Murphy declared there would be no trouble in the convention, He made this assertion when told of the rumors that Senator McCarren and Mr. Cond ners had been in close conference until late last night, ‘.clegates for Chanler. Delegates arriving to-day from the northern and western parts of the] State are almost all for Chanler, He as bean working up a boom for hime seif in the farming districts for the} past year, and has succeeded in get-| ting together a good working organiza- tion. The ultimate choice of the con- ition will be the man who can beat hanler, and up to this time no ca awate nas appeared with enough dele- gates back of him to make a showing. Mr. Marphy solemnly avows thet Tam: many has no candidate. Judge D-Cady Herrick !s out of the race. He was supposed to be ‘n posi- tion to jump in and erab the come bined Murphy-Conners strength, The the g und only active candidates on are Clhanler and Sulzer The first thing that McCarren did following his arrival in Rochester last evening was to hold a conference at Whitcomb Houset with Conners, | Yenator McCarren comes to this con-| vention as a man armed with a whole! lot of swords, magazine guns, ub- md@ines and other implements of war-| fare, including a dirigible balloon, In this instance the dirigible balloon !s the SUBWAY LOOP headquarters, and it is the onty poll centre in Rochester where there has been anything doing. Dr. Charles H. Hall, the physician who These delegates, he asserted, were from ~ GAS INA SEWER. TO RESCUE MAN —_>— Police Hero Nearly Suffocated With Man He Saves From Dezth, CRACKS BUILDING With Its foundation undermined by the | new subway loop, which passes directly in front of it, the five-story office bull: ing at Nos. 8 and % Centre street, cor- ner of Leonard street, was sald this aft- ernoon to be in danger of collapsing, | and the police took precautions to guard | egal st pos: iry to persons Iiv> eighborhood. athe first evidence of the undermining | of the structure was noticed when huge | cracks appeared in the front part of While in the depths of the Ten Eyck building, and there were several ports, as if the earth were gly y | street. Brooklyn, sewer to-day and the st vere sinking. {Ghiels, an Inspector, was suddenly en- » Elizabeth nd of Capt y tenants from the! buliding a the structure ade joining at Nos. & and % Centre straet, Ropes were stretched around the of- tle building and work In the subway | at that point was temporarily suse | pended. Inspectors of the Building De- | partment are investigating the cause, that led to the cracking of the build. | ing, and efforts will be made to repair! ° ts damage and prevent further mis- ap. en from comm Twelve polis veloped {n a stiect of flame caused by exriodine eases and knocked uncon- sclous. He was fast suffocating tn the mira of the sewer when he was rescued by Patrolman Fagan, of the Stagg street police station, who, loweted into the sewer, gripped the unconsclous form of the Inspector and with his burden was hauled to the surface. Fagan was near- ly suffocated by the nauseous gases. Shiels, who lives at No. 38 Leo place, Y Brooklyn, was hurried to St, Catherine's LS BRESNAHAN LEADS IN RACE FOR WORLD PRIZE MEDAL] Roger Bresnahan now leads, with 3,229 votes to his credit, for the || diamond-studded medal to be given by The Evening World to determine the man who is doing the most work to win the pennant for the Giants. Roger took the lead Hospital, He’ is suffering from shock and asphyxiation, but will recover. Bhiels had entered the sewer through che manhole opposite No. 1% Ten Eyck etroet to make an Inspection He lighted q candle and the flame ignited the gases, an ‘explosion following which hurled him into the deep grime | of the sewer bottom. Fagan, attracted by the nolse of the xplosion and the cries of men and .o-day when a big bundle of votes was turned |women, that ‘‘a man was In tha in for him by a number of his friends who have formed the Roger || ower,” grabbed a rope from a tru at No. 445 Columbus avenue, and fastening an around his w Bresnahan Club, with headquarters Roger Bresnahan John J. MeGraw.. Christy Mathewson : Mike Donlin + 2,108 Joe McGinnity ... 1,838 cy Seymour 1,830 Larry Doyle . «1,627 Fred Ter . 1,519 George 11,812 ewhich | mude the machine Will be rejected, Gow ORVILLE WRIGHT SUFFERED WITH READY FOR A NEW AN ITCHING HASH Largeas Hazelnuts—Face Became Badly Swollen and Could Not Work : ae | | Aviator to. Test Motor « for! — Grew Worse But Was Speed in Preparation for | SOON CURED BY THE the Government Test. CUTICURA REMEDIES ee “Last summer [ was troubled with an itching rash on my hands; so people called it poison ivy. I sueee must have scratched it durin, | nights for it got worse. The hands is forearms got all full of little blisters as | large as hazelnuts, so I went to a dow | tor, He gave me a salve and talcum powder and told me to take a needle and open the blisters, but instead of petting better it still got worse. Then e gave me some medicine and my hands and face got all swollen, I could not work any more, After lingerin { around for three weeks I thought would try the Cuticura Remedies, M4. — Orville his) WASHINGTON, Wright plannal another flight in Sept. aeroplane at Port Myer this afternoon. He was early at the aeronatical tes| ing grounds superintending the corre tion of a few minor details on his ma-} chine. In Saturday's flight the motor, so far hag acted perfectly, missed on a cylinder very frequently. Mr. Wright sald this was due to the fact that the magneto had worked e loose, but that this would be remedied| bought a set of Cuticura Soap, Oint 3 ment and Resolvent Pills, and in one tostay | week T saw that I was no longer as bad. Mr. Wright maintained an average | [ kept on using Cuticura and the trouble speed of nearly thirty-nine miles an) continued to grow better. In five hour during his short flight Saturday | weeks it was entirely cured. I had afternoon, and he claims the machine is suffered four weeks before I tried the vie of raking forty-four miles Cuticura Remedies and I can recome Nae ain mend them as the best for all skin dis- Mr, Wright says that he will not at-| gases fT use the Cuticura Resolvent tempt to make this speed until he/ Pills now and tif®n as the best blood Matthew Ganter, 21 Fayette” ‘and 13,’08,"" makes the official speed trial before the (yeyide army board, in which he must tly over | 8t., Brooklyn, N. Y., Apr. 8 @ course five miles with and against the wind, If he makes the forty-four miles he will get a bonus of $1y,W0 on his contract price of $2,0W, which is based on a speed of forty miles an hour, Lf less than thirty-six oules is Women Prefer Cuticura Soap and Ointment for Toilet, Bath and Nursery. For Diane purifying and beautt+ fying the skin, scalp, hair and hands, for eczemas, = rash inflammations, rritations, itchings an ~ chaflngs, as well as for sanative, antiseptia ~ cleansing ond many pure 4\ poses which readily eng i gest themselves to women, especially mothers, Cuticura Soa: it will provably be two Weeas before the ollcial Ulis Uf is avloplane aie compieted au of als motor afver makiig 4 Wornis ab of Im tr OUGHT FRE AT AON LNER ra MANEHEHA ———— (Trade Maré.) Special For To-day, the 14th. CHOCOLATE CREAM ~ 100 ADS ES +*-POUND SUE ASSORTED CHOCO: 1 bs (20 kinds)... POUND SSO ED WARD CANDY sees eee POUND 200 special For tee the oe ; one ives, p 10 190 SPECIAL ASSORT CRN Lee St porxn 296 feVenings until 4 Passengers Badly Scared, But Officers Prevented Panic. AL CANTON ANGER, opt The 18 passengere on the Atianiic | ie! nck, ven Saturday ‘Transport ner Minnehaha, which ar- | ° ’ lay, had a scare last Monda SABARC CLAY wey learned that the erew had rs SATE fichtIng a fire In the forward ‘9 CORTL, (NOT wrooard ounker for twenty-four ho i (oin A st taat it was still smouldering. azo Sunday / It was deep down tn the coal then and seemed to have an ugly The bunker was flooded, but aj — = e of smoke continued to pour oul.) ke was kept out of the saloon. | The Only Company of Its Kind In the W however, and the passengers got no Your Old Trunk or Baas; inkling, of the fire Until Monday. noon Made Good a ry when @ seaman inadvertent) TUNA, "BAGS, “Ete that he had been up all night fighting Bourht aigie: ieaghenmed the fire. rgenc: The officers were questioned, but an- ; 4 awered evasively. They gotfled the Pin ts pair Coy Umid ones that there was no possible) Near ada t eit STREETS vag, danger and no cause for alarm. Ney- New’ Goods, Drummers’ Samples, ertheless many of ihe passengers were! badly scared. On Monday the smoke from the fire! got Into the hold where there were % several score Belgian and French horses. By Tuesday morning however, tne coal was all gotten 01 of th» bunker and a flood of water put the fire out, TI rei Patek Good SNS. CASES Bags, 5) Ab), BoA, 33. ae ke. Cominerciit ‘and Dress rakes alt Kags and Fitved Cases, Al Bridwell . . 1,500 || called for assistance. Several men low +4 OFF REEVE Pre ee ®@ Luther Taylor . © 1,406 || ered him quickly and again drew him oe Backage Hi Repalrs Called For aad Delivered, Arthur Deviin . || to the surface with Shiels in his aras,| DROWNED IN MORR.- C NAL. 100 FOR THE *T Jack Barry : Dr. MeMahou, of St. Catherine's Hos-| The ody of a drowned man was Emergency Co.’s Signs oO pital, after pulnp Xyg on inte Solel's! fou d to-day in the Morris Canal at the fi jon Sq. West om 14th a. palate ha | a, gave simliar treatment to Fa- foot of Van Vorst streat, Jersey City, ON POF OR tien Bt ttee ‘ | gan. The latter was able to resume his ‘There was nothing found by which it Thomas Needham vse 412 || patrol. could be Identified. Otls Crandall 306 u Harry MoCormiok 306 '‘Diamond-Studded Medal For Most P The Giants are playing the best baseball that New | York has witnessed in years. nant, and from now until the promises to be the most ex-iting in the history of the league. As an encouragement to the individual members of the ervention of team The Evening World will present to the most popular were player a diamond-studded gold medal. All New York fans sie oresent Re can express their preterence through The Evening World coupon below, which will be Baseball and Final ecitions: EVENING WORLD For the most popular National League Team. l vote for..sssscceeeeeees Name. Aaareas boss. s0030s Address Letters to Baseball Editor, opular Giant | They are out for the pen- lose of the season the struggle If you want to get Uprights—prices $250 to to $10 monthly. 50 Used printed daily in the Noon, BASEBALL PRIZE. member of the I!-w York $5 Per without interest. Stool, t soeeereee | (134 Fifth A | THREE STORES | eee eee eee ee Evening World, P.0. Box 1,354 WATERS |e PIANOS reasonable, don’t fai! to examive the new Waters | - A.so a Special offering of all uprigits, differen: makers, in pertect condition, on payments of only $5 down and SEND POSTAL FOR CATALOGUE | Horace Waters @Co. | j127 W. 42d St., near Broadway. | Hariem tranch (Open Evenings): 254 W., 125th St., near 8th Ave, At Cash Prices Largest and finest stock of Digirvatts, Watches and Jewelry In York. No employers! references require: Call or write for Mustrated Catalogue No. 4 37 Maiden Lane, N, ¥. 289 Fulton St klyn, LW.SWEET&.CO az a good piano and get it Made to fit and fee! absolutely ertect for Your False Teeth an at Ty write Dic WERNET, PHILADELPHIA, PAs Pianos, Ws : 34.0, on payments of $7 ENGAGED. SCHWALDE—KALISH.—Mr, and Mra, 3. Kalish, of 57 West 12ith at, announee the engagement of their daughter ANNA Mr, MURRAY SCHWALBE, Sunday, 1908, from 5 ill 10 P.M. No cant DIED. Month ANDERSON—On Sunday, Sept, 13, 1908, " RACHEL, beloved wife of Georke AB i derson, 2371 Sth ave. ng and delivery free, | Funeral services at Fred Hulbers's |] tuneral parlors, No. 205 West 196th Tuesday at 2 P. M. —_—_—_—!__== HELP WANTED—MALE, MEN TO SELL OFFICIAL PROGRAMMES AT THE MARDI GRAS. APPLY 4,80 SOUVENIR COUNTER, LUNA PARK, BRING DB- | POSIT FOR STICKS. ve., near 18th Street, . ests See ——— nd | y

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