The evening world. Newspaper, September 4, 1911, Page 6

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BOMB EXPLOSIO WRECKING VIADUCT CAUSED BY 2 MEN Only Loose Bolting Prevented Much Greater Damage to | New Railroad. NO WOMAN CONCERN American Bridge Co., Open Shop, Think Outrage Was | nphasize Labor Day. to Officials of the American Rrides Com- pany and the New York, W hester | and Poston Rallroad and Mayor Fiske of Mt the attempt at destruction of the new viaduct at Co- Jumbus avenue, Mt. Vernon, last night to Iabor troubles, he dynamiting of | the viadust was a job amiliar in execu- tion to many others of which the Amerl- can Bridge Company, an open shop in+ stitution, has b the victim. Two tall, broad shouldered and active men who were seen in the vicinity of the scene of the explosion previous to and during the destructive dynamite blast are belleved to have placed the rnon ascribe bomb and set it off. ‘The report that a woman was {mplicated tn the affair GREE . was disproved today. The Mt. Vernon police 4 the woman who was seen | contract was followed by @ general running away from the viaduct immedi. | strike against the an Bridge ately after the explosion. She lives in| Company ali over the try, and this | the vicinity, and was on her way to| strike has never been declared off. the New York, New Haven and Hart-| “It Is a coincidence that the lat ford Railroad station to meet her hus-| Outrage was directed against work of band, who was to arrive ona train. The| the same company which was the object or the original strike order. THERE HAD BEEN RUMORS OF ANOTHER OUTRAGE TO COME. “In view of the charges made repeat- edly by your association In connection with the previous explosions, how could this particular dynamiting have been ac- complished with the McNamaras and MeGonigal in jail at Los Angeles?” was asked Mr. Drew. “It is to be determined by a proper legal action whether the dynamitings that have occurred can be lald at the door of the MeNamaras or any one else, and It would be !mproper for me even by inference to make charges against men facing trial," replied Mr, Drew. “It ie proper to atate, however, that in the six Weeks preceding the arrests of these men there were eight dynamitings of | open shop iron work, most of them of exceeding disastrous character, while since that time until yesterday there had been none, Owing tu the significance of this fact persistent rumors have reached | me to the effect that another dynamiting outrage was to be expected.” bomb went off just as she passed under the viaduct. Naturally she ran Had the explosion resulted as planned she would probably have been killed. WWTENDED TO CAUSE COLLAPSE OF 200 FEET SECTION. The design of the dynamiters was un- Aoubtediy to cause the collapse of a nece tlon of the viaduct about 2 feet long. ‘The point selected for the explosion is one where the iron work ham recently been placed and has not yet been rivet- @4, The explosive was placed In a hol- low steel pillar, one of four on a bed of concrete, ‘These sets of four pillars are placed et 200 feet intervals. The explosive charge was powerful and the concussion was terrifle, But bi of the loosely bolted character of the work the resistance was not sufficient to shake down the viaduct. The damage was confined to the pillars. Work will be delayed probably a month. It Is believed that the explosion w: timed for a double purpose—to empha- size Labor Day on the minds of the | use { Pretiy Slenographer Whose Story Of Abduction Hides Secret Meeting, GIRL'S ABDUCTION A MYTH TO HIDE HERLOVE AFFAIR pone” ae Police Seek Writer of Notes for Whom Sixteen-Year- Old Edith Ran Away ‘The writer of several notes, all un- signed, which were found in the room of Faith Georgiana Hughes, In the base- ment of No, 7 Haat taker tective Capt ‘Twistern, Gloster and Sergt. THE EVENING Frty-third street, where her parents are employed as care- 1s being sought to-day by De- Von He will be asked to explain |the whereabouts of the pretty aixteen- UNUSED BRAKE - CAUSED DEATH OT WOMEN AT CONEY es Only One Man on Duty to Control Speed of Cars on Giant Racer CITY STARTS PROBE. Building Inspectors Make Rigid Tests to Discover Cause of Fatal Accident. Giant racer at Coney Island, yester- day's accident, which resulted in the | death of, two women, would not have Superintendent Thatcher after he and @ half dozen inspectors from the Brook- lyn Department of Buildings had sub- fected the mammoth structure to series of rigid teats today. Superintend- ent Thatcher found that only one man, John Fennel, was in charge of the four brake levers, all concentrated at one point. The emergency brake, which would have brought the coaster train to a standetill within its own length, had not been operated even once during the whole summer. According to the figures of Arthur Jarvis, the president of th» coaster company and its engineer, it has carri4 a half mil- Hon passenger: said Superintendent Thatcher to an Eventng World reporter, “in Vicates that ft has not been used at all during ths entire summer. Had !t been applied yesterday; the women's lives would have been saved. But Fennel was alone in charge and had his hands fuil, The coaster itself.” continued Mr, Thatsher, “4s the’ most perfectly constructed of it# kind In the world, and if proper precautions are taken in handling the cars there is no possibility of an accl- dent.” President Jarvis of the coaster com- pany announced that hereafter there would be two men in charge of the brakes, and in addition, angle line: would be put up at the curves to pre- vent the trains from leaving the tracks, no matter what speed they attain, The terrific speed which caused yesterday's accident tore away twelve of the two- inch girders on which the coaster tracks rest A permit to begin operating the coaster again was issued by Supt. Thatcher this afternoon after it had been put to a drastic test, 100 cars being rushed over executives of the American Bridge Com. | The Westchester County dynamite ex-| year-old student of stenography from|the tracks at full speed, “Archie” Zim: Dany and to poll the projected trigi | Ploson Is the thirteenth occurring upon | Friday morning until yesterday after-|mor, Arthur Middleton and Engineer tip of an cleetrie car over a portion of | tie, Work of the American Bridge Com-| noon, when she slipped into the house | Jarvis rode in the first train, together tisslihe to-day, Both purfoses wereltrde ber cent. of the) suet after the detectives had left it] With a score of employees, to satisty e, . » | trade, with her father. Supt. Thatcher that the coaster was en- successful | Phe explosion of last night is the! in Mer Tttti tne. girl ne | titled to a clean hill of health, jor the rk, Westchester and ; ; othe! +] Kallighan, thrty-five, of Scrantot SAW FROM HER PORCH. Boston Ratiroad, Th July of last year | caused Mrs, Hughes to xo into hysterics. | and Mrs "Alle Sroveuts forty, Ge NO, a5T Mre. John Hertzel, who lives near the |« temporary wooden bridge over Its | It was @ tale of forcible detention in 4| Harrison avenue, Jersey City, Others tn scene of the explosion, gave valuable| tracks In Pelham Parkway, the Bronx, | room in Harlem to which she had been | the car were Mrs. Mary Harding, forty- taformation to-day. She said she was | Was BiBwa up. ‘dire New York, lured by three men. But the detectives | two, of No. 141 Mott Terrace, Schenec- sitting on the porch of her home a little aes d ‘ ere ee it up as about as true las the|tady; Mrs Ruby Harding, forty, of No. after 8 o'clock yesterday ning when | age ne hy Basehentartataticn: © tale she told Thursday night about }59 James street, Scotia, N. Y¥.; James she saw two big men carrying wha ee ee eaten a brian | Koing to work for a man named Rosen- | Kallighan, thirty-eight, a brother of looked to be vallses or tool bags dyna\ ust, 1909, a bridge Miss Gallighan, and William J. Smith, looked to be valises or tool bags cross | under cons:ruction wax blown up at| berg, at Broadway and Spring street, | (yenty-eight, of No. 29 Monitor street. ing @ vacant lot and going In the direc-| Whittock and Garrison avenue the | who lind been unusually nice to her.|fooklyn ‘The Hardings and. MP tion of the viadu i The men disap- | Bronx The detectives found that Rosenberg, | provost were one party; Mr, Smith, Mr, Pee cen tian inser ava: irertasl'seW hare: epic. ciememigened lovely mustehe, branch office at No. | icallighan and Miss Kailighan were an- I: ik ads two ines. Ther © walkie /GIRL FALLS OVERBOARD ts West 1 street, and all, pia mye me wen anes ue rete 5 ! Joar of a r " é 3 rapidly away from the viaduct. She FROM LINER AND DROWNS revious to her return the detectives! tering the second deck of the big Iron f Watched them until they reached the found a number of letters from a man | Structure when the car swung wild corner of Columbus and Hubbard ave- | Wirel From the Minneapolis nues. They stopped there and appeared Ss | #0 he ‘waiting, | Gives No Explanation of Tra. | Then came the explosic which | . rocked the whole neighborhood. gedy at Sea. two men walked rapidly west ip Hu Atlantic Transport line officials are bard avenue. Mrs, Hertze! seeking further information to-day by them witn the explosto: wireless from the liner Minneapolis to! id heard what had happe explain a message received at the wire Policeman Wrenn and Thi A* Mes) jess station at Wood's Ho! Massa- Namara, a wat pan empl i by the clusetts, yes! day This aerogram an- j New York, W & Boston Rall- nounced the probable loss ov f if road, were |s jer the viaduct Miss Caroline Mercer of Omaha, Neb., at the time of the explosion, ‘They saw a first-clase passenger. Here la the the two men standing at Columbus and message Hubbard avenues and their deseription If Miss Caroline Me 8 body of the pair Iie with that ¢ Mrs. washes Hore-light brown vair, Hertzel. brown eyes; 5 feet & inches, 118 | unds, clothing marked O. M. DAMAGE DONE WITHIN A RA- Nae cee sore af a ee H DIUS OF 200 FEET. Cub) nay Neb. ne : " : ‘ he’ message Was transmitted to the i eed tect Saree ae nttu® Internationa! Meyeantile Marine Com iH La fae le eet, Serious damage pany offices last night. ‘The Minneapolis | was done to the plant of the Mauser from th Saturday afterna t Manufacturing Company, nearby, The and when the sage was sent f i noise of the explosion wa 1 in New have been about 160 miles out. No direct t Rochelle, W! Plains, Yonkers and message to the steamship company has i all through the Bronx and the upper been received from the ship, vest side of Manhattan, a ; 4 Operatives from the William J. Burne OMAHA, Ne 4—Miss Caroline | of a well known ] Detective Agency were out on the ft here two weeks 4 this morning. They are men exper Dr. Nelson Mer | enced in investigating dynan and Miss Mary rages on bridge work and are following Me ail planning to take ' up the clues furntahed by Mrs, Hert ) o permanent residence in England. and the policeman and watchman. Mina Mercer was A sufferer from hys Burns ts in Chicago to-day. He had teria and had been treated by special planned to remain there until Wednos- [8 Without avadl. Iter father, | be @ay and reach New York Thureday, but Qioy cig ve ago, leaving his estate H the Mount Vernon explosion may jo hi/s three ehildren change his plans. —_ SOME EIGHTY CASES OF DYNA- FIRE ENGINE SMASHES STORE MITING AGAINST OPEN SHOPS, a “There are some significant facts in sone the. REIN ; connection with the dynamiting of the aially a i railroad viaduct at Mount Vernon,” said ayy ahhh & ae ain 6 | Waiter Drew, general counsel for the engin » Bayonne fire department, ' National rectors relation, No. oS turn of t Highth « Wert Thirty-second mreet, when amed Bayonne, with his en Dy an Bvening World reporter for bis gine #o s iy, tuday that hile opinion of the explosion saeine ant ute gluse “The open shop Movement on the part yy isu Arug 8 John of the erectore of structural tron’ an} son wae burt so badi Mt the s stecl which to date has been rcour- goone mt the ane Hospital panied by elghty o44 dynamitin cs there ts no hope sro Hts | work 1n course of construct! s- Spinal cord wae severed by the broken {ginated in a strike against the Amor. * he way too fire can Bridge Company over a contrac Barney, a for @ bridge on the railroad aifected in hia cae, the New York, New Hoven & Hartford, That strike was called to Y ympel the American Bridge Com nthe wae waked by the to cance! a subcontract it had barking of the dog, Noarly overcome with the Boston Bridge Works, becaien NY emote Ke rolied out of hed to the the union Ald not e@naitier the lave ¢q D aimetlenk ahtna c UL Will secover, @ompany ae fals, Kelusal to cancel babe 4 whose acquaintance the the family lived in Harlem las and with whom she had several clan destine meetings. Her room wa searched and a letter and a postal card wintet in the Same handwriting, written within | ward rush of the flames that threatened the past two months, were found, o destroy the Island at the time that| "0t caught her. Confronted with these letters, the| Dreamland was burned out When Miss Williams was revived she rirl broke down and confesed that a0] Age py ave WITH | MATCHES | Rene cwaae (ee mamaes He atnar pare | rive Taken to Hospital After had invented Rosenberg and his Job in ri a 2 a : order to have less dlffoulty in getting : country home at Rye Hench, N. Ho! — Plunge to Stone-Paved |this visit has been postponed now be- iM out of the house to meet her friend, | Fire Does 8200 Damage and Nearly, ’ ' Whose name she refused to tell. Her | cause Of Mise Williams's condition, ise Guin a having | Kills Little Boy, Mrs, Williams said to-day thht her Yard. PASH LD (WHO SPS: tOINTAR 108" DAYAR tage daughter and Garrison were to have the grt sent to an in itution, have 8| The playfulness of Tom a ig aaltone been marned this fall and thet she and vd {dea ax to his identity and gave | cat, caused the destruction of about her daughter had cut short their visit » detectives the clue op which they worth of clothing to-day in Dominick|in Europe at Garrison's request that John Kenny of No, 118 Jewell street, 9 working to-day | Lewis's apartinent at No. #9 East One| they might hurry home to prepare fur | Brook'yn, went his and their she adn lat she had fre-| Hundred and Seventeenth street. Lewis, |the wedding. Milas Willlaing had bought |... months ughter ‘> visit Mra, quently taken automodtie rides with|a barber, and his wife, a dressmaker, | MUCH cf her trousseau in Europe. Sadie Sheeh-n of No. Sedgwick ———__——_ |him, and that when he did not appear left thelr home after breakfast to go to| ave the Bronx, yesterday a: to ke his appo! F she | work, Thetr son, Jo: six years old, | EX-POLICEMAN FOUND e Giffor) Beavins > 1 his wife w also had gone to the home of a reiative in| was playing with the eat | visitors, and at 6 o'clock t’> party Yonkers in the hope that he wows find | Asoprding: t0 is tte boy, toe oat A SILVER MINE IN DESERT. gathered on the rear porch to have a her there ven she saw by reading | went into the closet and overturned a| ray ken, The the papers how frightened her parents|hox of matches. In a minute or two| RENO, Bent, G—James Mae Pode gpleni to the oe Pilea | were ab {ded to return home. there was a blaze and the tenants in| honey, the form ‘ew York policeman | 8eds' aver m River Another youns girl, Agnes Tracy, fours | the building were running from the Whose disappearance Wednesday night jie:ne steep at Chie point that elthough teens years old, of No. 28 Has! One| amoke-filled halls, Fred Danton, four-| fom the Government surveying camp | the front door of the Sheehan house is liumdred and Lighteenth street, is ree. teen years old, of No. 417 Bast One Hun- caused a wide search to be instituted |on the street levil the rear poroh is ported to the police as missing #ince dyed and Seventeenth street, ran into! for him, as It was feared he had falien twelve feet above the ground, Saturday about four feet six the burning apartment and saved the Victim to the desert heat, arrived in| The eight members of the party were inches tal welghs ninety pounds. lithe bay, Wha mae § oes oyersame by bell onnnieernnly Hota red after DIS / just taking their places before the She has brown eyes, dark complexion te smoke. Dantoni dropped him from | narrow escape from death. NRA ERE ‘a cna dance When sue ‘me ghe|@ rear window Inte the areaway. ten! Samples of ore taken from a ledge|°emere When the poroh gave way, Be feet helow s : fore the porch is a stone-paved court- |wore a light summer suit, no hat and sa | discovered by Mahoney gave evidence |‘ | black shoes and stockings of containing a large amount of silver, |¥8Fd, and to this the whole company | > FLED FROM BLAZE, rl made when | LEFT BABIES BEHIND. | twas whipped around an abrupt carve, + {It turned half over, throwing the women |; Who were Killeed xalnst the fron | stanchions, causing their instant death, $/ The Giant Racer is built of steel and . rele and {t helped to stem the on- | MILLS-RUTHERFURD BANNS If there had been two trakemen ecn-| |trolling the speed of the cars on the, occurred, was the declaration made by | “The rust on the emergency brake," | PUBLISHED IN PARIS. WORLD, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1911. CORNERSTONE | CEST. AMBROSE’S _ LAID BEFORE 0,000 Archbishop Farley Officiates —Church, School, Audito- rium and Rectory in One. In the presence of 5,000 people the cor- Nerstone of the new church, school and rectory of St, Ambrose's Roman Catho- lic Church, in West Fifty-fourth street between Tenth and Eleventh avenues, was laid to-day by Archbishop Farley. The new structure is to be a combina. tion butlding four stories high with @ frontage of about 12 feet on West Fifty- fourth street. There ix to be an audi- torium in the basement, which will ac- commodate about 1,000, The main floor will be @ church; the two floors above will be the new parish school and the about $160,000. Prior to the exercises there was & | Parade of Company H, Twelfth Regi+ ment, commanded by Capt. Wentworth Tucker. Severat councils of the Holy Name Society, a delegation of Fourth | Degree Knights of Columbus and « | delegation of Ancient Order of Hiber- Mans. These escorted Archblehop Far- | ley from the Episcopal home on Madi- | fon avenue to the new building. About | 1,000 children sang the hymn “Lady of | Good Counsel."" Archbishop Farley was assisted by the Rev. Dr. Joseph Delaney, deacon, the Rev. Thomas O'Keefe, sub-deacon, and the Very Rev. Mgr. John V. Lewis, the Rev, Francis P. Burke and the Rev. Joseph P. McEvoy as masters of cere- monies. After the cornerstone had veen Dut in place on the east side, the corner- tone taken from the old church was put west corner. Then the children sang ‘Come Holy Ghost, Creator Bi and the Rev. Peter F. Guinevan, rector | of the parish, introduced the Very Rev. John P. Chidwick, D. D., president of St. Joseph's Seminary, Dunwoodie, who proached the sermon. Doctor Chidwick for a number of years was rector of the parish. ASSP DOES, GR TOLD OF FIANCE'S SUICE Miss Williams Prostrated by Tragic End of Garrison at the Waldorf. Miss Mary Williams, flancee of Dan- fel E. Garrison jr. of St. Louts, who committed suicide at the Waldorf-As- |torla Hotel, 1s prostrated to-day in her apartments at One Hundred and Four- |teenth street, near Columbia Universit: stepped from the steamship Lapland, returning from Europe. les Williams to the effect that Garrison had dead w down the gt panied by her mother, Mrs. BE. C, Will- fama. to her fainted and would have fallen had they as quietly as possible. ahoney able to return to the scene of his find, but will not do so unless accompanie by others more used to the Ways of the ‘top floor will be a rectory. It will cost) |as the result of his death, The news | was broken to her yesterday as she Immediately after the shooting a wire- telegram had been sent to Miss deen injured, but the fact that he was kept from her until she came ng plank yesterday, accom- Two men were sent to break the news She RAH! RAH! BOYS, STRIKEBREAKERS, MAKE SHIP MERRY Stranded College Youths Come Home Aboard the Adriatic As Stewards. How do you like your ovaters? Raw! Raw! Raw! It developed to-day that the stage burlesque on various college yells was no joke on board the Adriatic, which got in last night. Twenty of the stewards were genuine Ra, Rah boys, | Working thelr way over from Liyerpool. The officials found that the score of young men from the high-brow factories made the most efficient sort of strike- breakers, and they were not glad to see them go ashore never to return. It was this way: | After the commencement period began | @ number of under-graduates from vari- ous institutions of learning concluded | to add a little travel to the regular course. They shipped on a cattle boat) from New York, worked their way over Playing stewards to first cabin steers and hogs and then tramped about on) the other aide. When the vacation days ended they found themselves in Liver- pool, and unable to negotiate the swim- ming Aistance between Liverpool and lew York. About that time the strike had crippled f the ocean ships. The idea stru. the college boys that they might work their way over as stewards on one of the liners. The college boys became expert wait- ers in a surprisingly short time. Will- 1am Taylor and Frank Parks, from dear old Harvard, managed to disguise thelr astonishment over the reluctance of the Chicago millionaires to eat beans for breakfast. George Rice, from the Uni- versity of Illinois; Vincent Cylkowskt, from the same institution; A. N. Thomas, a tall, serious future statea- man who wore glasses and called the [Western Reserve University alma mater; ©. R. Watterson, also of the Western Reserve; Claude A. Kneupfer of Armour Institute; Frank Kelly of the Moss Man- Hugh Findley of the Nebr: course of all neophyte: ship's roll and glad of it. Then there were others who were equally glad to be there, but not will- ing to advertise the fact. They traveled Uke princes, incognito, and made hasty departures from the ship as soon as possible. “They saved the day for w Purser H. P. Palmer. In the evening when the day's tofl over the college boys went to the to Tower of Babel seance at times when the regular season, the gentleman from Cornell was sayin something about yelling at the same time that a Yale product was giving @ frog imitation that seemed to include something about breaking up the dishes, The boys also had a side line of songs. EIGHT POSING FOR PICTURE HURT AS PORCH FALLS BURGLARS LOOT. TWO SHOPS SANE STREE Force Open Safe in One Plate and Rob Cash Register in | the Other. GETS $250,000 IF HE SECURES A COLLEGE DEGREE. ‘LEAVE FINGER PRINTS | ’ | Brooklyn Police Believe They, (| Will Lead to Arrest of the Robbers. ‘The sate in the butcher shop <| Joseph Lehmer at No. 213 Bridge atreet, Brooklyn, was found at @ o’slock tiie | morning in @ room in the rear of the | shop broken open and more then 9000 in cash, @ soki watch and trinkets | worth about $200 were missing { Almost coincident with the discovers’ | of the theft in Lehmer’s shop, Filippe Domenico, who has a barber shop at No, 199 Bridge street, in the next blook, @iscovered that his place had been broken into and the cseh register robbed of $0. In both places the thieves left traces of their visit in finger prints, The prints are so clear and so numereus that the Brookiyn police are confident they will have little trouble tracing thieves, As soon as the burglaries were reported to headquarters Morris Eckler, the Bertillion photographer hur- Tied to the scene to get copies of the prints before they could be disturbed. The robbery at Lehmer’s shop wae dis- covered by John Popp, of No. @ Joha- son street, an employee, who came to open the shop early this morning. He missed the from its usual place against a side wall and hunted for It. In @ room tn the rear he discovered the safe, a cheap affair of concrete with @ sheet iron covering, lying on the floor, CHISELED THROUGH IRON GOV- ERING The thieves had chiseled through the sheet tron, chipped away the concrete with a hammer and chisel until they could life out the combination, and then had stolen everything of value that the safe contained. They left a paver's | hammer, @ chisel and a saw. A barred window in the rear wall of the room showed the means of en- trance. One bar had been sawed out entirely and another was sawed at one end and bent so that the hole mado Was large enough for a man to crawl through. The thieves loft by the front door. Lehmer when he night, he Henry Baker was the favorite nephew of the late John W. Gates. He lives at St. Charles, Il, His uncle willed him a quarter of a mill- fon dollars, stipulating that young Baker, who is twenty years old, must graduate from college before he can have the money. To help the boy along the finan. cler left him an additional $10,000 to defray educational expenses. Baker will enter some school at the open- ing of the fall term. BROADWAY CROWD ANGRY AS CYCLIST INURES WOMEN Becomes So Threatening That Police Reserves Are Called Out to Rescue Him. Brondway crowds this afternoon watched @ near-riot when a motor cycle, ridden by Lewis Stilson of No. 148 We-i Sixty-fourth street, ran down and sertously injured Misses Leonora and Rose Lesser of No. 556 West One Hun- rea and Fortieth street, just as they were crossing Broadway at Thirty- eighth street. Stilson was one of a large squad of Dieycle and motorcycle riders who under convoy of bicycle policemen, were on thelr way to the City Hall to Join in @ protest against the closing of the cinder path leading to Coney Island, from which cyclists have been barred. Large crowds were coming from the Labor Day parade, and the usual holi- day throngs were headed for the neigh- boring theatres. The street was thronged when the Stilson machine caught in the car tracks and skidded toward the young women. Both went screaming to the pavement. An immense crowd gath- ered Some of the bystanders thought the cyclist to blame and started for him, ‘The convoying policemen, aided by traffic | men, rescued the hunted man from the says that three weeks ago, was going home Saturday was followed to the car by two men, He thought no more about it until the following Saturday, when Be was followed again. In the next block, at Domentco's bar= ber shop, the thief gained entrance Sat- urday night, but the theft did not be- come known until this morning. En- trance was gained through a rear wis. dow NEW WOMAN” IS ASSAILED BY. crowd and a hurry call was sent to the West Thirtieth street station for the | reserves, ‘The reserves cleared the packed street. Chtizens took the girls to @ nearby —_— drug store. Dr. Roth, who was called, found that Miss Leonora. had a frac- tured hip, internal injuries and was badly cut about the ae Her sister had cute about the face dnd internal ine juries, Both will recover, WHIRLING TOOLS Swagger and Stare Have Taken Place of Sweetness and Modesty, He Says. temporary fashions in women's Gress and in general the attitude of the “New Woman" toward the world were the subject of a sermon preached yesterdey by Bishop John J. Nilan in Bt Jo ph's Roman Catholic Cathedral befere @ large and fashionable audience “Man and woman,” said the “are equal in the sight of God, but om earth woman occupies @.different sta tion. She was created to be man's help mate and‘to supplement what be lacked. She was to be kind and geatie KL SI MEN MIKE SHAFT CAE BUTTE, Mont., Sept. 4—Caught in « vortex of whirling steel drills when be- HARTFORD, Comn., Sept. (~The est says he is confident of being and patient under long suffering. tace | ing hoisted to the surface in a mine| ™,, Mi ke lays we hear « great deal was flung, screaming and struggling. It was some time before the neighbors could go to the rescue, and {t was somo | time longer before Sergt. Hau: and 1 PARIS, Sept. 4—The banns have been desert. He admitted his. trip across | Patrolman Brace of the Highbridge ata- Panic Glricken | Parents Desort \Rvgunies ere f2r Yuden Livingston, desert had been made in an undress tea Sod supinon esslatance tram the ‘ SUNICKE arents Desert} vous and Margaret Stuyvesant Ruther. | uniform consisting solely of undergar- | Fordiam Hospital, Youngsters, But Police \f ind. tienen aod Boos; Two ambulances and al! the available Realia THA | ‘The wedding ts to take place at Deau.| Mahoney was working five mites |#UF8eons came from the hospital. When | scue em ellie on to from camp. He complained of heat and | ‘ey returned, of the victims went Halt a dozen infants were left to their | >. asked permission to return to camp, | With them, Maurice Sheehan, five years t i Sans gavin Farmer 160 by ‘Trat His request was refused, the trip alone | old, was the most dangerously hurt, 1 heir lodgings to ayy (hibectal to The Erening World.) being regarded as too dangerous, but|the shock haying affected his heart so sina uadgings to) Wy BANK, N. J, Sept. 4—John| he inelated and left that he may not recover. Mrs, Shee- : xicowered’ 1) Naughton years old, a Port Mone | Sr arrreyr Jhan's spine had been sprained; William 2 _ ath FAIRY Was cairuck by an ox |GARROS SOARS 13,945 FEET; Ghoshan, threa years old, had & deep ties ‘fo, the atrec wn Poel found nm «tl ving, butt MAKES A NEW RECORD, | scuip wound and a wrenchet hip, and omen ee state, atarteg ena, ie wae taken by tra Alice, her baby, had been painfully of unknown origin, started the Long lospital, where il Sonny savings and hi erorand discovered it and ran through |#t the Red Bank FPatr with his aunt, | over the sea h Aviat rros to-day | after their injuries had been dressed, the building and awakened the 1 broke the world's altitude record with @ | they were to their homes pants, More than a score of women monoplane by ascending M.M0 feet rami - shed into t: cots in scanty attire, | Pfisco F. Motta of No, 61 Spring| The achievement of M. Garros to-day | strictly Profeastonal, everal leaving babies 1 When Steet, a foreman in the Fle Depart. | betters Lincoln Beachey's height record (Brom the Cleveland Main Dealer.) they reached the street they rememberea MeMt repair shops, has presented a| made at Chicago Aug. 20 last by | ectorY Lawyer Mi e little a tRUty mata @ back by Magnificent carved frame to Commis. | feet, Garros ts well known in American | » Lawyer—Yes alles Hut the GnlARen tera! eeotaee at Waldo to contain the engrossed | aviation olrcles, having appeared at | I want to know when tinea tithe ak veetiver icine maaluit ena Presented to the Cor meets 'n many American cities, Inchid- | his bill? } oe Apa SOR te: i ned poner when he left the Fire [ Ing ond, Memphis, New Orleaas, vay Never! Two dollars for i i! | men [Oklahoma City and San Antonie [me advice, please, 4 cage, five miners were Killed tn the | shaft of the Black Rock mine of the | Butte-Superior Company yesterday. A sixth miner, James Lee, died a few {hours later in the hospital from his {injuries In thelr anxiety to reach the surface the workmen jumped on a cage upon | whieh dull steel! was being taken to |the surface. It 1s presumed that in | thelr crowding the men dislodged the | steel shafts from the box in which they were held and they caught tn the wall | plates on the sides, fairly mincing the | miners’ bodies as they bounded back Jand forth and finally sweeping them Jinto the dump, 1,400 feet below. Charles Green, station tender, was hurled from the upper deck of the cage |to the lower level by the impact when lthe brakes were applied and was de- , as re all the other miners about women's rights, but eome ef them, tt seems to me, are really wom en'a wron{ The masters of fashion are preparing her to take her place alongside man by shaping her garments #0 that they more closely resemble | men's attire, with the result that she disfigures her form and beauty and de- forme her nature. “Gone is the old-time expression of womanly sweetness and modesty! Im ite place we have the swagger and the mare. In one way women might |tmitate the men, When @ Poe's | work he rolls back his shirt sleeves and bares his breast occasionally, but when he goes in the presence of @ woman or of his superior he puts on his ooat, | fastens his collar and {s fully dressed, | / “With woman It is just the opposite, She seems to feel most dressed when ith the exception of Lee, whose bead her arms and neck and shoulders are was mashed t |ncovered. Aside from the immodesty Thomas Der n tender, had of tt, tt te not proper, and, regardless pleaded with the miners not to board | of the outside world, we priests ha the cage while the steel Was being | the right to reprove her. ‘al hoisted ast is in violation of the “No woman should think of approach. r y's rules, ling the altar rail to recel signal to hoist had been given| Gemmunion ws pave | Nou tad shot up some distance gorse “th bared arma and shoul. cel began to move, It ia| —____. that it became a death| Her Lack, {na moment, for one drill | (From the Baltimore American,) a wall plate and bent Why is that woman sttting 80 lonely nstantly the men were crushed and apart from the group of buay tan ‘ ¢ ree off the, deck to She has no conversation worth listen, i the bottom of the shafi, where they ing to. Never in her life had any klad jwere sound in three feet of water, (of em operation ” A $

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