Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
er ~ FLAMES CAUGHT GEAR OLD COOK AT HER BONFIRE Owes Her Life to Bravery of Fourteen-Year-Old Brother. ‘WHITE HOUSE {5 ~ NOW REPUBLICAN Roosevelt Moves Them to | Washington and Takes Cam- paign From Hitchcock. IN CRITICAL CONDITION. | ONLY A SIGN LEFT HERE. Begs Doctor to Bring Some | President Calls in the Leaders " of Her Roasted Sweet From Every Section and Potatoes. Directs All Work. While playing cook over a bonfire around which were twelve of her little companions, five-year-old Annie Dolphi, of No. 721 East Two Hundred and Thir- teenth street, was so severely burned to-day that her life is despaired of in Fordham Hospital. ‘With her little friends, Anvir secured | peveral big sweet potatoes. Her brother ] Tony built the fire and she forked the @elicacies and was holding several on a long wire. Some of the youngsters piled some light brush on the blaze and at once it shot upWard. The sparks quick- ly ignited the little girl's light dress and he was in flames in an instant. Dropping the wire, she ran screaming trom the crowd. Tony and the other | children set up Headquarters of the Republican na- tional campaign have been moved to the White House, Washington, The sign is | stil kept on the abandoned offices in |New York, but all business ts ordered Jand directed from the Executive Man- sion, Mr. Roos |any moving or transfer of authority. yellow jackets simply started velt did not trouble to order | He did not strip off any Jor peacock feathers, He lin to run things himself, leaving Chair- }man Hitchcock and the schoolboy or- | ganization in the Metropolitan tower to Jeep on playing they are doing some- | thing. | But all politicians take notice! The place where business will be |done by practical men for the re- maining three Weeks of the cam | paign is in the office annex to the | White House, Washington, D. ©. | During the past week the President sent for a number of men to come and jsee him. There were no “rainbow chasers” in the list, but every one was of the type to whom Mr. Roosevelt could | say In the language of his Jetter to Har- a wild shouting for Yelp. Tne brother darted after the ter- | ror-stricken child, throwing off his coat ; Sas he ran. Almost at the gate of his home he overtook her and threw her to the sidewalk. He bravely wrapped | his coat about her, extinguishing the ‘fre, but not in time to save little Annie from fainting. Policeman Gerdenbach picked up the chili and then called Dr. Vail, of Ford- ham Hospital. As the physician exam- the a ined the little patient she opened her | man, “You and I’are practical men. S eyes and said: | The “Practical” Men. ‘Doctor, bring me some of those sweet) Among them were politicians from potatoes to-morro’ |New York, State chairmen from the Her condition {s precarious. Her body iiagle and far West, leaders of organ- | 4s frightfully burned, most of her cloth- 264 labor from various sections of the ing being destroyed. country, colored preachers, and SE a sentatives of trade and industry. TWO MOTHERS [ics eeathereal irsireinstociel taal BURNED SAVING ___|management into his own Lands and THEIR CHILDREN | texan issuing orders. He Is running the campaign to- day with as much autocratic au- thority as though he were chair- man, national committee and ad- lw ory committee all combined. National committeemen, State chatr- |men and party advisers are filling the trails from East to West headed for the White House. They write formal let- ters%0 Hitchcock in New York, but they go in person to Washington. Politiciane Amazed. The politicians who have been up be- fore the “Big Stick” boss have come away amazed at the extent of his in- formation about the campaign. They say he must have a network of private | wires from every State and underground | Two children who played with fire “while their mothers were absent are dy- ing in Harlem Hospital to-day. One of them is Vincent Ryan, a two- year-old, who, attracted by the bright glow of the kitchen stove, toddled up to it while his mother was in the dining- room of the Ryans’ home, at No. 173 East One Hundred and Seventh street. ‘A coal hopped out into the little boy’ dress, and in a second he was in a blaze. Mrs. Ryan rushed into the room tn time | to save his life for the time being by ripping off his clothes. She was herself badly burned about the hands In her rescue, The other little victim of the fire is Ethel Lewis, four years old, of No. pipe lines from all doubtful sections. | $15 East One Hundred and Twenty-first. ‘The urgent subject now being de- | street. Ethel found some matches on bated in White House headquarters the floor of the parlor. She was ex- (ft) tenor vote, | erimenting with them when the who! le the labor i: ox ignited, setting her Mr President Roosevelt is giving his per- | Lewis Was’ burned trying to Save | go . | Ethel from the tlames which enwrapped sonaliationtion: to aniattemp: torsming, it back into the Republican ranks. He has had labor leaders in private sessions and is sending emissaries to industrial | centres with orders, going into details | of who to see and what to say. } From now until Blection Day the Pres- ident will direct the Republican cam- | paign, Chairman Hitchcock will con- tinue spending most of his time travel- ling between New York and Chicago on | fast trains, while his card index bureau gathers dust, | The White House View. | ‘As viewed in the White House, poll- tical conditions are as follows: New York and all the Eastern States | jcertain for Taft. | the most doubtful State, as things |tnere are in a bad way. her from head to foot. ~ SUFFRAGETTES AND THE UNEMPLOYED MOB PARLIAMENT ye LOSDON, Oct. 13-1 spite of many Precautions taken by the police a mill: | Tngiana no loner doubtful, but growing tant suffragette succeeded in invading toward Taft every day. the House of Commons this afternoon, Illinois Republican beyond question, The woman suddenly’ appeared at the | Kansas tyansterred into sure Republi- can column, , bar of the House, waving her arms and | Neprasko fairly sure, but needs atten- shouting to the members that it was | tion time to “talk about woman.” Colorado, Wyoming, Nevada and Mon- She was Immediately seized and car-|tana inclined toward Bryan, but their res away combined yote ts not equal ‘to that of | The unemployed of .ondon, acting to- [Indiana or Ohio etre ee ear Br x The election of Judge Taft, ac- 4 sel PPA cording to P. Heally compelled Parliament to hold its | COreine PRO SRO TALL) no longer I mee ma it . E The closing weeks of the campaign a eral = bundredg st be to winning Ohio, In- dressed 1 es of ana Nebraska and to desperate gathered Ingter, and ghting to pr 3ryan from recur with them a large crowd of the curious, ‘turing New York se Squads of 7 mounted and on ae foot, endeavored to perse the den t elghborhe were bowrded up Onstrants, but they v driven RG business was interfered with.’ down one street to reapp D an- y ( Pankhurst were taken other, & f the le ve tody this evening and locked up speeches on ther u w Street Police Court on war When a member of Pariuament wa t 4 wo leadere' a wrrounded and ha 1 Bat We the y to help them 8 sh’ the Commons to-day. ——— The Race in Wii.ch Maiy Teddy Bears Went Astray rtunity a race; ces, every skipper ng place start, one Teddy sh to guide; veclary could hide, World t Ad him chance to ¢ e all the r f 4 Separate World Ads, Printed Last Sunday, other HEADQUARTERS THE EV HASKELL ORES "AT ROUSEVELT ON STANDARD Charges President With Favor- | ing Trusts—Demands Can- cellation of Osage Lease. KANSAS CITY, Mo. Oct. 18—Gov. | Haskell, of Oklahoma, who arrived here | to-day from Guthrie, gave to the Asso- clated Press a copy of a letter addressed | to President Roosevelt on the subject of the leasing to E. B. Foster in 1896 of ENING WORLD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1908. ~ FOUND DEAD IN HER LONELY FLAT ALL —p—— NGHT SPREE Autopsy to Determine if Young | Fall During Celebration of Sis- Mrs. Martin Was Slain | ter’s Coming Wedding Fatal in Attack. | to T. C. Nevins. ‘Until an autopsy has been held, it will not be known whether Mrs. Agnes Mar- tin, of Williamsburg, died from natural causes or was the victim of an attack. Her body was found to-day in the bed- room of the apartment where she lived |with two children, died of a fractured (skull to-day in the office of a lumber |following an all-night carouse which was undertaken in celebration of the on the upper floor of the two-story 000 acres of Osage Indian oil lands, which the Governor calls the “richest oll | country In existence.” “I shall insist," says the Governor in his letter, “upon canceliation of this lease in the interest of these citizens of our State, or that Congress take action to declare this improvident and unjust lease votd and secure for the Osage na- | tion the just and reasonable compensa- tion that other owners are receiving. “I agree,” he continued, “that In 1896 the Democratic Administration made a lease to E. B, Foster on the entir Osage Nation for ten years at 10 per cent. royalty. At that time the nearest known oil production was about seven hundred miles from the Osage Nation, but during the ten years the field was developed and found to be unusually | rich, and ten years at this low royalty was an ample reward to those who de- veloped it.'” Goy. Haskell asserts that “by 1905 Fos- ter had transferred his lease to the In- dian Territory Mluminating Gil Com- pany, a well known subsidiary of the Standard Of] Company “You neglected to give the Osages any opportunity whatever to be heard,’ says the Governor in his letter. ‘The fact | that 680,00 acres of rich ofl land was | the stake the Standard Oil Company | was playing for, and the land owners de- nied the right to be heard, is something | that will require a more lucid explana- tion than Frank Plerce, acting secretary | of the Interior Department, has seen fit to give.” In conclusion Gov, Haskell says: “Mr. Pierce suggests in a letter to me that a8 a matter of fact it was not known at the time that the Standard Oi! Com- pany was the real party in interest, I, submit to you that the very fact that Messrs. Guffey, Barnsdale and Senator | Depew, well known Standard Oi) repre- | sentatives, with others of the same odor, making a personal appeal to you for this low royalty to the land owners, should have been ample evidence that! the Standard Ol] Company was the real beneficiary. “It was the same Senator Depew who. induced you to grant the Prairie and Gas Company franchise over protest of Secretary Hitchcock, less than one year before that time: and in | this the property more than enough to pay for the famous twenty-nine milion dollar fin YONKERS TAKES TRANSFER FIGHT | TO STATE BOARD eget City Also to Begin Suit to Have Trolley Company’s $50,000 Bond Forfeited. ALBANY, Oct. 13—Complaint against the action of the Yonkers Railroad and Union Railway Companies in discontin- ulng certain of their nes of cars be- tween New York and Yonkers was made to-day to the Public Service Commi. n in the Second Distric The complaint also alleges ‘‘that the exaction of a charge of 10 cents for transportation | between New York and Yonkers works an irremediable hardship and imposi- tlon on residents of Yonkers,”” Receivers of the companies have been orfered to answer the complaint with- in five days. By @ unanimous vote of the Board or Aldermen of Yonkers last evening it was decided to at once begin legal pro- | ceedings to forfeit the $50,444 bond which was deposited by the Yonkers | Railroad Company last year as @ guar- antee that it would carry out its eight cent fare contract When the Yonkers Railroad Company sought the South Broadway franchise in order to enabi it to establish a di rect route to the subway at Kings br it made a contract to give a continuous ride from Yonkers to the Battery over the Third avenue elevated on the subway at Kingsbridge for eight | ent sited @ $50,000 bond as a | ion of the 15 cent t itizens e demanded that the bond be f and collected and the fra ses revoked, Last night the Board of men had a wo hours’ fight and finally the Repub- 4n inembers gaye in and yoted with ‘ nocrats k franchises HOTEL GOTHAM SOLD. Was sold at auction ' n the estate salesroom No ‘ el \uctioneer Joseph 9. fou ia Benjamin PB. t for an a akerewating eney represents parties finar teremte erty and the dis © present man _-- HALES CUMED AN 6 10 16 Daye. « Hieeling or Protruding Piles db @ 16 dave or money refunded. Boe Oye | been | West Thirty-flfth street. 0 | approaching marriage of Nevins's sister teeh anaa AIS She had. trving Smith, of Monessing, Pa. De- Mrs. Martin. was) thirty-three years | tective Murphy, of the East Thirty-ftth old, Since last March she had been street station, arrested Smith and A. J. separated from her husband, Joseph, | Keenan, also of Monessing, and 1s look- who has a shoe store at No. 10 Grand |ing for Edgar Burgess, manager, and William Mohroe, bookkeeper of the lum- [yard at No, 424 East ‘Thirty-frst street, | ESTRANGED WIFE DIES OF BROKEN INSANE. DANCED BULGARIA SURE. HEAD AFTER AN BEFORE EXPRESS OF WINNING QUT AND WAS ILLED. AGAINST TURKEY Of Five Hundred Spectators Great Britain Will Advise Sul- Not One Tried to Save Thomas C. Nevine, a married man} Seized with a returning attack of tn- street. Every week he sent her $10. At night she was alone in the building Per firm. after workers’ in, the grocery. store | The men under arrest and Oscar Mor- ris, foreman of the lumber yard, an- | Sou ieee ther witness, assert that Nevins re- | ee y othe . ass Nevins re- beetaagd che os sor ae bhai ceived the injury which caused his Payment, the husband sent Joseph | geath by falling on the e'dewalk. Sneckens, an employee, to the house with it. Sneckens found the door un- All Went on a Spree. locked, The parlor, dining room and) It appears that Burgess, the manager, is an old friend of Keenan and Smith. The two Monessing men came to town yesterday and, after a call upon Smith's | bride-to-be, got Nevins and went to call on Burgess. Monroe and Morris were |introduced to the Monessing men, and Nevins and the six men went together to dinner. After dinner they drank a great deal, wandering deviously in the direction of | the east side, and at 3 o'clock this morn- ing were in a saloon and hotel at Twen- |ty-sixth street and Fourth avenue. There, it 1s said, Nevins essayed to leave the party and go home, ‘but fell from the doorstep of the saloon, landing on his head. No sign of injury showed except a cut over the right ear, which bled slightly. Nevins's muddled companions put him in @ cab and took him to tne office of the lumber yard, where they stretched him out on the floor and coyered him kitchen were deserted, but in the bed- room he came upon the occupant. She was lying, face upward, on the floor. A glance told she was dead. Sneckens ran back to the shoe store and told his boss that his wife was dead. Martin hurried toward the place. He met Police Captain Dooley, who went with hin The dead woman was fully dressed except for her hat. There were no signs of a struggle and nothing tn the flat ap- parently had been destroyed, but marks on the face, forehead and the back of the neck led Capt. Dooley to believe that there might have been violence. He notified the Coroner. Mrs, Martin was last seen alive last Friday night, when with Mrs. Annie Pershinisky, of No. 62 Driggs avenue, she visited a cafe on Metropolitan ave- nue and had, so Mrs, Pershinisky says, a glass or two of beer. coer DR. BULL HAS NO CANCER, BUT IS SERIQUSLY ILL —_—>—_ with blankets. Keenan volunteered to remain and watch him; Morris went to his home at No. 201 East ,Thirtieth street, and Burgess, Monroe ahd Smith [returned to the Fourth Avenue Hotel. | Awoke to Find Him Dying. Keenan went to sleep. When he woke up even his muddled intelligence could | discern that there was something wrong | with Nevins, He went out to look for a | doctor and found Dr. Gambrino. of No. 331 East Thirty-first street. When Dr. Gambrino got to Work on Nevins he was past human aid. Policeman Blythe, of the East Thirty- fifth Street Station, was notified, and reported the matter to the station house. | Detective Murphy was assigned to make an investigation, and found Morris, who told the story outlined above. Keenan Jand Smith were found together in a saloon a short distance from the lumber |yard. They sald that Nevins lived tn | Eighty-second street, ween Second jand Third avenues. ed | me sanattion of Dr. Willam 7. Bull, MISS HOPPER GOT to be very erica! this afternoon Poy-| AUTOMOBILE ON PROMISE TO WED. siclans and nurses are in constant at- (Continued from First Page.) Has Muscular and Inflamma- tory Rheumatism That Is Approaching the Heart. be tendance upon him at his home, No. 35 It is dented Bull is suffering B, Potter, of No, positively that Dr. from cancer. Dr. N 48 West Fifty-first street, sald to-day there was no cancerous trouble. “Dr. Bull,” he said, “is suffering from rheumatism—muscular cnd inflamr tory rheumatism. The two operations that were performed upon him were to asked Miss Hopper if Brown ever gave her money “Oh, yes,” she testified, ‘but not in connection with the auto. ‘He gaye it to me merely as a gift, to do anything I liked with.’ 2 iKes the actress concluded she looked at Mr. Hays and petulantly correct defective glands in the neck. “Oh-h-h, you!” One operation was performed in New- During her examination she frequently port and another recently in this city. made “g00-goo" eyes at Brown, who sat The defective glands are a complication within six feet of her at the witness of the rheumatle trouble and nothing table, separated only by Mr. Lauter- more. I have been in attendance upon | ba Dr, Bull with Dr. Joseph A. Bake and| “Now. that your engagement ts an- nounced why, not announce the date of the marriage?” was asked of Brown by an Evening World reporter, other physicians, His condition to-day is very critical as the rheumatism has approached the region of the heart.” | “It is up to Miss Hopper to name the \date, and she has not done so yet," re- |plied Mr, Brown tn a whisper as he \arose and escorted his future wife to lthe street, where he tucked her into the HIS OWN LAWYER eaetsgse ca IN A SANITY CASE Miss Hopper only held up her, finger land exclaimed ‘Soon, very soon!” when |asked about the marriage. Hopper ‘A laugh was produced by Mii when Wir, “Haye asked her if she had told the whole of te conversation she |had with Brown on March 2, when she Jaccepted the auto as a gift and received also ‘a proposal of marriage and an en- : * at | kagement ring. sats i Ellis L. Rossen Discharges | set ‘29%, Re giotrteSPNGtantine HOP "A gallant comment of Mr. Edward Lauterbach’s on the exchange by Miss Hopper of @ promise of marriage for a 7 AP eutomobile and a $25,000 life insur- ince policy was as follows: "Miss Hop- per, | think you gave more than you Counsel and Conducts Suit for Himself. . Buchanan, who followed Ellis 1. Rossen, a school teacher. jopper to the tifled that ‘Jan account in the name of mother, whose mental condition was under in-| Martha E. Tedder, had been fan account . ‘ of the firm's up to Apri when it be. vestigation before Justice Brady and | f th etual cash account of hi a jury In the Supreme Court to-day, | mother's and no member of the firm ' was thereafter interested in it. discarded his lawyers and tod on |" The witness told of another account tn conduct! om ‘ which the name Constantine was used onducting his own deferise to the | ge a convenience, the account being one charge of insanity, while ex-Alderman | of the firm's. Buchanan explained that aaa aitanain ann aitarcet (sr the Cornelius O'Connor account which d ‘are a iraham | according to the books owes the concern Hockins looked on $91,000, was a dumping ground for items Assistant Corporation Counsel Cowie | which they did not know what else to ; orporation Counsel Cowie | to vith, and that O'Connor did not in made no objection, and Rossen began | fact owe the firm @ cent. by reading from various authorsa| ‘There 1s a mortgage on 65 acres down from the Bible to the modern love story | at Glen Cove, near Teddy which from f jught to be worth something,” testified © prove that he was sane Buchanan, ‘':t came to us for a debt tossen, Who is about thirty years old, | of $14,000 owed us by Anstle, one of our haniiaantiaticecahaneininanics ri customers and belongs, I believe, in the | O'Connor account. schools, and has been in various instit tions for the mentally disturbed on the motion of his family. He has now heen | for ety days under observat | 0 P pathic ward at Bell Ornatus et Ronitas’? upon the recommendation of the experts that he be committed to an asylum Mr a Cowie snade application tava juatioa. Thc oe tn, Justice, tossen's motion, sent t case to Robert BE, Morgan as refs Morgan an nvinced that Rossen as t 80 crazy as the doctors thought, and on hie so reporting Ware & Hockins | moved for Kossen's discharge, which | brought on the trial by jury. ‘REG. OFriCE | Dr. H Valentine Wildman testified ton | his opinion as expert that Rossen suf | ed delusions and hallucinations anc Celebrated Hats was insane, Rossen thinks persecutors = follow iilm in disguise, and is unsafe t The accepte Ss be at e, according to Dr. Wildman. | epted stand unt te wis tne custom for years tor || ads of hat fashions, people to disguise thema when p ! F Ing tended victim, and he read style and quality show éhiat Fevenge Was tustifiahles ur 181 Broadway eriain circumstances, but denied that | 7 ae actuated by revenge Hie read so Fitth av. 507 Fifth av. passages from the Bible on loving one | tan to Accept Declaration Drinking Men Not Reliable Employers Want Sober Men Competition t too keen and life te too strenuous for an employer to keap men on hie payroll whose nerves are unsteady and whose braina are not clear. Rvery line of business is begtoning to close {ts doors to drinking men, Ditunkenness ts a discamp and, Ike moat diwoasen, has its remedy. Orrine ts the rell- able treatment and 1s sold under a positive kuarantee to effect a cure or your mohey rn pre Will be refunded. Orrine ts in two forme: Young Man. of Independence No, 1; ‘wHION sean be Guad “WHEOUL tho patient's knowledge In tea, coffee Nad, No. 2. for those. wn wimh to oF rea! SOFIA, Oct. 12.—"There ts no cloud! sated ‘in. plain, mealed packager one: ‘ 8 on on re. sanity, which for several months had|on the Bulgarivn horizon,” sums Up jnnlied int pain, ‘hedied oayerete, POmet: Hie plain, Rete velope. confined him in the Snake Hill Asylum, | the official view In Sofla of the events |,07tINe Oo. Wrehington. D. C.. oF : Gustave Mader, twenty-three years old, | that have transpired sine the proclama- | “sh ith PAE ThA ah aL, ¥ - » WW. Bth, 7th ave: BOOT » of No, 38 Clairmont avenue, Jersey tion of Bulgarian independence DY | Salt RU way RINE TORES. City, danced in front of an express | Prince Ferdinand on Oct. 5. ‘The Gov- | 4% Peay TR wa QRRHARDT, train at the West Side station of the ernment is convinced that the Chan- Od oo A Newark and New York Railroad to- Cellerles of Burope will swing to a more Myrtle ave.” dey ahuwke Wiiea, favorable view of Bulgaria's action as SHEUSS, 262 Soon as the danger of a general c &IKE Rway. Several weeks ago the young man w flagration is entirely over, ‘a fie? Grand.” released from the asylum as cured. He| The troops now under arms, including BRK oy ARI eTHice returned to live with his slater Eleanor | the reserves recently called out, reach |" SOME AY ave: PATERSON —SMITH : a total of 12,00) men, They will be UUNUMANN'S:— 10S)/HOBOKEN— Kamiah, n the Clairmont avenue house. This act ty sy Lave, © tranches, Newark—Holzhauer, ept to the colors for another month, | eee eae ue morning she left him in apparently pending a settlement of the existing good spirits, but she had hardly disap- situation. The guamis on the frontier peared around a corner when he ap-, ®ve been given stringent instructions > keep well wi territorial mits vement i peared on the pa HIN efore his of the new kingdom and to avoid clash- home and began to dance. ing with the Turks. | Filnging his arms about wildly, he The {1 of Prince Boris, eldest son remade Marie) danced down the street. Now and then Of King Ferdinand, ts the rea wh i 4 ; the members of the royal fausly were | Special for To-day, the 13th, he would stop and whirl ke a top, aud | not present at the festivities in Sofa | WALNUT his antios #oon attracted a large crowd. | \ecterday ia connection with che Kine CREAM KISSES. .....PouND 10¢€ The presence of spectators seemed to imphal entry into his.c 1. Prince | GENUINE: 10c increaso his terpsichorean franzy, and, ors goes under the title in Bulgaria |] gree DRIIGHT, POUND ne jz orts EOE the title ulgaria Pr: SSORTED CHOCO. GEE 1A De) BIR, SG CALE | ora) LATES (20 kinds}... -rouND 19¢ down the atreet, ed the corner and "LONDON, Oct. 13.—Foreign Secretary Sneni on toward the west aide station of the Grey and (M. Tewolsky, the Russian special tor To-morrow, the 14th, railroad. Minister 01 reign Affairs, spent to- | orerre FRUTTI Tully Ave hundred people were at ile {i (8 \legranle correenoutentce, with clits. roenp 10e heels, but no one seemed inclined to in- ng conference of the powers rn Cl ek terrupt his dancing. He was a power- {0 : the near Eastern question. In | on@corate fully built young man, and there were | {#lling ty wth the proposals tad COVERED DATES, ...PounD 25¢ many among those who watched him | the concurrence of Turkey. If Turke rate Rowastore opbn evar ngs unit ta who knew that he had been in an in-/takes Great Britain's advice she wiil Bee SET CET oT ee sane asylum. No policeman could be @ccept the Bulgaria We deliver free purchases of one dol- and the an nia and Her Jnr and over between Battery and found. zegovina as accomplished facts and ask J Zuoth street; also all Brooklyn proper, ‘Arriving at the station platform, the pensation. Z |madman danced its length, and then Be Oe aS eee GO 54 BARCLAY ST, c . matic agent of Bulga n Paris ‘or. West B danced back again, Then he danced in red to-day that the situation in 29 CORTLANDT: a circle about the little station, and had jjujgaria was grave and tense. A Cor.Chi si L danced back to the platform as an ex- | 1 solution is snecessary, b s ‘or. Church St. press train that did not atop there (for the country cannot st PARK ROW‘ NASSAD whlzzed down the rails from Newark. people are nervous and busit 3 At City Hall Park, The dancer never relaxed his maa a standstill wheat, ‘which is the O fource of our weal émains unsol: skipping and bounding for a minute, jurthermore, the reserve h the exclaimed, | but as the train drew nearer his feet colors and this constitutes a heavy: flew faster and his arms waved more x} e. They must be dismissed 01 wildly. The locomotive was not fifty Used yards away and travelling at forty miles an hour when he danced out onto the tracks, and was still dancing when the fender struck him down and “the wheels ground him to pieces, ———E—— BRASS KING BRADY SUED BY A PORTER | Daniel M. Brady, milifonaire, head of | Th in an action brought by George W. not } sent to Turke: Tha agent said, however, that he did Hieve that an ultimatum had be Ale ere is no other Ale like Evans’. several big corporations, is defendant It is an honestly brewed ale, care~ fully bottled by its makers. Griffin, a colored Pullman buffet car | itis a satisfying and health = pro- porter, for $20,000 damages. The plain- uff declares the defendant accused him | of stealing a pocketbook and having been arrested and locked up in Montreal, on Jan. %, 1906. moting beverage. It affords the means of securing the best ale in the world free of duty. Hotels, Restaurants, Cafes, Dealers. and place same on sale at ABigClothingPurchase The Cornell Clothing Co. Were compelled to sacrifice their en. Clothing to raise immediate cash. THE HARRIS STORE ways on the lookout FOR SPOT CASH purchases, have bought this valuable stock of clothing for Spot Cash, at 50 cts. on the dollar stock of for money. present itself. ONE 14 FROM THE CORNELL CLOTHING CO.’S PRICES ‘A gigantic purchase from one of the best manufacturers !n the United States, all up to date clothing made expressly for New York City trade and bought for Spot Cash. Only once in a life-time does this golden opportunity Now is the time to get value This valuable stock will be offered on WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14TH, 8.30 A, M. Fall and Winter Sults | Fall&WinterOvercoats 3 all 15,00 Men's Sulte—Pos Ortle iknucks of stylé, ana ere = thoroughly tailored, At serrerrre 7.80 "5 Sulte—You certain n favor of these beautiful, $15.00 and $20.00 Men’ 235 BROADWAY, the $15.00 Men's Fall Overcoate—In 8 Cravenette Raincoats, ue 7. 50 Tomakethis Sale FAMOUS we have marked ourentire stock of Men's Furnishing Goods and Hats at corresponding prices, the Fall and 10. 0 Overcoats—- Winter at ede and $25.00 Men's Fall and Winter Over- Cassimeres, hand- ¥ Zoll pnd Winter Ouse. same. brown, _ ollve, le ey Aer ; Vive and blacs, ® Meltons, | Friese a 2 (1) 2 en's Suite. ppoorde, at s.r . be Hor Bifferent models and ‘a large #80.00 Mo's All Wool Fall and W variety of nei ter Qvercoats — Imported Kernoy, Te ali vanades) of y} 0 Honvera, Prien ang Whip: ¥ ue. cunas, Blac Saad es Be 95.00 930.00 Me have been patin lined, aterees ° ‘lored to mi the approval tale most critical men; marked Men’s Trousers by | & character 15 00 Lay unusual in ga 83.00 Men's Trousers— 1 50 e1 ouble their Winter | 84,00 Men's Trousers— Fall&Winter Overcoats "*Winic: 2.00 0.00 Men's Fall Overcomts—In Tan! Welebt se scrsrnceeees and Oxford 5 00 96.90 jlen'e rousere— 3 00 i inter & *10.00 Opposite Post Ritiee: Opes Saturduy +1 10 PF, My Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry. t and mos of Hien the City. > PRICE—EITHER required, tat, rences No employers’ 1 Write for Bookiet 14 L. W. Sweet & Co., 37 Maiden Lane, N. Y, 8389 FULTON &T., BROOKLYN t) e EY WORK WHILE YOU SU DIED. CULLEN,—On Sunday, Oct. CULLEN, 11, BRIDGET native of Meelick, County Gal- way, Ireland Funeral fron: the residence of her nises, Mrs, T. H, Forrest, $31 West 44th at, | Wednesday, Oct. 14, at 10 o'clock; thenee where a solemn be offered. Inter- to Holy Cross Church, mass af requiem will | ment Caivary. HELP WANTED-FEMALE. NURSE—Consclentious woman to take en: tire charge of baby 5 monthe sonal references required. Call 450 St. Johns place, Brooklyn, Billings, HOUSEWORK—Wanted, girl_to do general housework in apartment; mo objection to ed colored girl, Call Billings, 400 Johns place, Brooklyn. LAUNDRY WANTS—MALE. HARKER, experienced, waited. Apply, with Teferenci Dakota Steam Laundry Oo., 2424 Jat ay Help Wanted To-Day! fe Advertised for in The Moning | World's Want Directory, TUBSDAY, OCT, 18, 1908. Addressers ss oe & Harness Makers . 4 Agents A ss, 18 Housework 164 Alteration Handi 4 Horseshoere At ‘Apprentices roners Pilste 4 Janitors . a2 4 Janitresees ” s.. 4 2 Jewellers...) see 2 2 Tallors.... 14 6 Laundresses .. oo 1 7 Man 1 78 Mantoures ... 8 2 Milliners. » 4 Numes ...- 84 Operators... ) 2 Photographer 7 Canvaseers 22 Painters. 8 Carpenters +++ 8 Tables tet tcisa ek i thampermaida +++ 20 oan 1 19 Glgarmakers ss 2 2 Chauffeurs «++ . aanuarel ‘) 6 Rooters .. ne) | eoeeltore > s> & Belesladien..,"'.. #1 Compaeore +* +1 2 Galesmel a a8 Seamstr rest 1 re | i see fi Sleeve Hands cc. 2 Solicitors... i De! 2 Stablemen 5 Stenographers’ ali ¢ 5 Stenographers _( rela $ eloamers i'M Vator Runners rimmei ator BURDOS se nomithe ccce ts & 2 Typewriters QM.. 1 3 Typewriters (F).. 8 4 Upholaterenw s+ se WB 15 Varnishera.. ase Walters i 8 M1 4. Waltressee ce sath sine to atin it Tore) + ne eres Fr ‘The World printed to-day 4,640 Help Ads., 920 more than all other New York papers combined”