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CRUSHED IN PER FAMILY WHEN RICK BREAKS nand Children Narrowly Death as L Beams “Burst Into Home. is Arm of Liging Ma- ¢ in Brooklyn Snaps QYt While in Use. ef & derrick lifting three i beams from the street level | structur ; AND RD SOPAMOES. TROD “FRESHES” TOLLE MISERE Ceremony Takes Takes Place on Col- lege Campus To-Night— Read Mystery Book. et Utica avenue, Brook ed over the roofs of buildings theast corner of the iwe neavy beams and part of the] derrick dropped through) Of three houses, missing by st of margine Mra. Mary and her children who live floor of the three-story at No. 1766 Ful:on street, three bulldings were Ad und the nelghborhuod filled pod only one person was & Jecob Johnson of LEN DERRICK AT FULTON STANDOTICA SVE BRYKIN BISHOP WANTS ALIMONY REDUCED TO $3,500 Banker Declares He Cannot Af- ford to Pay $15,000 Life, he said, js but Pe tpeaing. and shutting of doors and r to go on after the door, hes shut, or opened, than | to oyen or shut In re ant to the "icresenn war, Butletr thinks that we are ton near and too vitally concerned to criticize justly, but we should view the entire situation with sympathy, patience, broadminded: straight thinking. Neutrality does not mean indifference. Pes nas eal Oa SENTENCE CZAR’S JOCKEY, J. d. Bennett Gets, Biante Months for Barnard College to-' eta holds its b ooo third-|S0Phmores into the eultvi, Street line irom college lite. Lermid N James Cunningham Bishop, the be ergy whose wife, Abagail Han- , macured a divorce less than ayear ago, to-day made appll- cation before Supreme Cougt Justice Gavegan for a reduction In alimony. Mr. Bishop represented that a4 a re- sult of bred times he is unable to earn the incomo that was his when he was ordered to pay Mrs. Bishop $ » He asked that $3,i00 ear be allowed her in future. His application was opposed by attorneys for his former wife, who declare the on the campus at ni 4 the usual afternoon “rusb.” The lantern proceession by the ‘The int-| Bophmore ciasn is first: after which No, 1°64] all the classes, in cap nd gown, with the exception of the Freshmen, collect around the mystery book, while they sing college songs. Then followa the ia | Mysteries Dance by fourteen veiled tole} mafdeny. The SBophmore president pregents the key to the Mystery Book fo the Freshmen Chairman, who takes nga struck by the beams vm are at NS. Ion, James J, Bennett, once @ well known steeplechase rider, who wor the Cser of Russia, was sent to the penitentiary for eight months to-day by County Judge Gibbs in the Bronx. B nett was convicted of passing a wot less check for $100 on Police Captain John J. Tappen, whose wife owns the r Bape tes Jan at City Tapa, which upitor’ sente! two week; 2 aioe ‘gave hin until today the cl Ben: the a bie amily had refused to Bishop's attorneys submitted am- davits to show that he resigned from the firm of Redmond & Co. last June and declared that he hag not since been earning much money beyond the Income derived from the $00,000 trust fund bequeathed him by hin father. entation, A vot inte ore at ‘Butler in addressing the 2. Sent & On. ; HAVE PREPARED THE FOLLOWING FOR TO-MORROW (SATURDAY): Fine Imported Tailor Serge 54 inches wide, in black and the fashionable midnight blue, will be placed on sale at the special price of $1.10 per yard Janteras to see An Interesting Sale of lien’é Medium-weight Overcoats 1_-.and Imported Raincoats t ‘prices that are much lower than usual. Overcoats of unfinished worsteds and in dork gray mixtures. or black; with silk facings, A Special Selection of Giris’ Autumn Coats (Sizes 6 to 16 years) will be placed on sale at the exceptional prices of fae Baglish Gabardine Raincoats, in gray ed coveral shades of. tan; with plain or tleeves; yoke and sleeves silk-lined. An Unusual Sale of Boys’ Autumn Clothing at especially attractive prices. Boys’ Overcoats, in shower-proof mixtures; yoke and sleeves satin-lined; of styles, suitable for boys from 4 to 18 Ateo a Sale of Men's Shirts, Pajamas and Underwear _, offering unusual price advantages. ea Plain or Plaited Shirts, in fancy stripe tsi with stiff cuffs . Sitk Negligee Shirts, in a variety of in a variety Norfolk Suits, knickerLockers Boys’ Blanket Robes, in a variety of attractive extra pair of per sult $7.75 Pajames, of cotton fabrics of fancy patterns ‘ Medlumpweight Balbriggan Shirts, t ong or short sleeves; and Ankleclength per garment 48c, Boys’ Shirts, with soft cuffs and detached + per sult $115 Boys’ Blouses . Boys’ Outing Flannel Pajamas, per suit 65c, Boys’ Silk Scarfs : ye HVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OOTOBER 9, 1014. (Derrick That Imperilled Woman and Children and Three Houses It Crushed in Brooklyn Accident. Photograph by an Evening World Staff Photographer, HEMPSTEAD FLYER PLUNGES T0 DEATH AS SCORES WATCH William Picellar Unable to Keep Biplane from Falling 200 Feet to Destruction. ‘Though @ stiff wind, blowing puffy, kept other aviators on the ground, William Ptoellar, an aviator con- nected with the Poter Angelo school at the Hempstead Plains Aviation Field, squinted at the weather thie morning and decided that he would go Up anyway. His biplane was hauled from the hangar while other fiye itood «by looking on and Pic arted the engine. It skipped and missed, but he tinkered with tt until, apperently, he was satisted and then took hie seat in the craft, Picellar rose well, but the onlookers realized that tl ngine was aetill balky and it wa jar to the greenest amateur that the wind was giving Picellar difficulty. Nevertheless, he pointed his craft upward and shot away from the sheds at high speed. When he had climbed about 200 feet and was many times that distance away from his starting point, the watchers saw the machine wobble. ‘They saw Picellar working madly at his controls, saw the craft pitch and ro and then saw Picellar, now de- termined apparently to get back to for his descent, Almost instantly {t capsized. Men started running from the hangars, stumbling over the stubble of the field as they kept their eyes , on Picellar, and so they saw the big biplane come toppling downward, had to cling with both bands to ihe framework. It struck the field many yards away and when the first of the spectators got there they found Picel- lar senseless among the wreckage. They hauled him out and telephoned for the Nassau Hospital's moter am- bulance. It came at full speed and hurt Internally and terribiy crushed, but It was two hours before he died. ———— WOULO ABANDON “ISLAND.” Grand Jery Wants Fenttentiary The September Grand Jury reported to Judge Wadhams in General Ses- sions to-day that the institutions on bi stitutions from Blackwell's to Rike: Inland is recommended. Lack of money, according to the Grand Jury report, ia given aa the reason for the deplorable conditions found. Because of this the ‘Srene ury recommends the immediate 9 propel riation of 4120.00 000 ie reme ie conditions. Ju ams told the rand Jurora their ‘I rt would forwar led to Mayor Mitchel and the sare of Metimate tna Apportion- ment. The jurors also recommend that the twelve-story building at Leonard and at a site for jater aban- doned, be used as an annex to the Tombs to overcome the overcrowded condition of the prison. ————— MRS. VICTOR LAWSON DEAD. CHICAGO, Oct. 2.—Jessie Bradley Lawaon, wife of Victor F. Lawson, pub- Maher of the Chicago Dally News, died to-day at thelr home on Lake shore Drive after a protracted iilnese, A tempestuous voyage from Burepe early last summer taxed her strength and a rast eterna in Northern the tite t her and in summer she became dat Mrs, Lawson had been an inv: 14 oe ever {went errs and} ad a pavelies 1 Bed ey, was born fn" euistat at) 1853, il ‘_ Se ahs Collegg, and was ma: OR IN VRATORS: cot! Lat a raiding ITEMs Copper exports sinc since Gept. 1, 19,403 tons. Year age, 34,314, President Colt of United States Rubber Company stated that divi- dends having heen amply earned, and in an easy cash on finances of compan: Avy: condition, with $8.0 hand, action of aireators in declaring dividends on beth common and ferred stocks is entitied to common- dation in these times of war and fipancit! atress, The division of $1,700,000 at this time among 15,000 stockholders will do much tii and be most thankfully receive Government eotton te 78: year ago, Exports of cotton since inte, eed Wing before, 000,000 6 per vent. at oost of 8.13 per cent, —_—_-—-- CHICAGO WHEAT. AND CORN WHEAT, ines a a ‘The at Wheat export houses are generally bearish. Market rallied some frem the low point on Puy pd of better export porta, and commis- a pitching and twisting so that Picellar Picellar was taken there. He was Moved From Biack well's te Rikers, SENDS $200 TO SWELL CITY CONSCIENCE FUND Generally the Poor Man Who Is Conscience Stricken, Says Comptroller. A conscious stricken man to-day sent two $100 bills to Mayor Mitchel, The money was onclosed between two pieces of pasteboard in an envelope on which appeared the following in- scription: “For the Conscience Fund." There was nothing to dedte where the letter came from. It was registered and sealed with red wax. Secretary Rousseau opened the Jetter and extracted the bills, He immedt- ately sent them to the elty’s con- actence fund, in care of Comptroller Prendergast. Speaking of the conscience fund the Comptroller said; “It io generally the poor man who is conscience stricken. This is eo bepause he |+ tenderer of heart than his richer brother. Most of those who sénd Money to the conscienee fund are sctupulous persons who got more profit out of some transaction than they were actually entitled to. Three years ago # clergyman sont $400. It was evidently handed by a con- solence stricken person of whom he ‘was spiritual adviser. All the money received this way goes into # general fund paid toward the reduction of taxes.” ANOTHER DECISION FOR PERSONAL BETTING Justice Kelby in Deciding Belmont Park Case Is Guided by Ruling of Higher Courts. GGranting a writ of habeas corpus sued out by John J. Graham for Frank Fox, Justice Charles Kelby at Mineola to-day remarked that if the Legislature desired to put an end to betting in New York it could do so very easily. Fox was arrested at Belmont Park on Sept. 17 by men from the office of District-Atorney Lewis J. Smith, who charged that he had violated the Ii in making bets. He waived exami: tion before a justice of the peace and Mr. Grabam was retained as counsel and the writ obtained. Mr. Smith op- posed the discharge 6f the accused, holding the law had been viclated. Mr. Graham submitted the decisions of the higher courts in similar cases and Justice Kelby held that he de- cisions all favored Fog and that as ‘he claimed to be betting with friends “eH ‘Wheat barely steady at lower prices. only he must be discharged, ——S EASY TO GATHER CROWD IN WALL STREET NOW So Many Idle, Propagandists Obtain Audiences With No Difficulty. With the Exchange coleed, Wall strest and the financial district are the happy hunting grounds for uil kinds of meetings. Speakers cen easily gather a crowd. On the op- posite corner from J. P, Morgan & Co.'s new office Minaeye the Secial- {ats hold forth, as than 4 hundred feet away, in an automobile, the “Bishop of Wall street" preaches. SimNar meetings are held in other apr while atreet fakirs also draw the idle. YEAR'S COTTON YIELD, of 16,800,000 five hundred-pound bales of cotton as the crop of 1914 was made to-day by the Department of Agriculture's crop reporting board in the eeason’s finat reporting, whieh showed the condition ef the crop on Sept. 28 was 78.6 per cent. of a nor- mal. year's ever grown In the United States, The record {s 15,608,000 bates grown In 19. grown, and in 1913 there were 13,703,- 000 bales. yield of about 200 pounds of lint per acre, which, ey te] to the estimated aren Rete of Pry per cent. of the acreage is abandoned each year, abandonment, City Collector Was appointed office yesterday, He Oct. 1, 1878, by ig when the late City Coflecter. 15,300,000 BALES, I NEAR THE TOP RECORD “Eddys”’ Sauce is a bottle full of Iness and satis- faction for 10c. ‘‘Eddye’’ is Crop Is Second in Point of the relish ‘that satisfies. Size Ever Grown in the United States. WASHINGTON, Oct. 2.—A forecast Grocers and Delica- tessen Lad Sell Ie. Per Bott v quantity of cotton brings this crop second in point of size Last year 14,156,000 baies were] | At moving time we specialize on tuning, refinishing and mov- ing your piano; reas sonable rates. The Sept. 25 condition indicates a 000 acres, would Tn. ath,008 be bales. An average Allow! for the condition of the indicates a total production of joa. “SERVICE” The Slogan at Lamberts, - For Good Service, as well as for the *5@= most substantial and fashionable Dia- $50 mond and Solid Gold Jewelry, wise buy- 751 ers come to Lamberts. $100 The men behind the % en $100 ae are well $125 Sa train ey can rs SS *5 full information, and, if $165 you like, advice and sug- gestions. Solitaire Dia- $2 mond Engagement Rings, for illustration, $250 sre shown you by ex- perts. There is no need to dwell ‘on the desirability of doing business with a firm who knows what they are talking about and bent on pleasing you. Lambert Solitaire Diamond Engage- ment Rings in handmade mountings. solid 14-karat or solid 18-karat gold and platinum, sell at many. prices between $10 and $1,500, and every value is bright asa diamond, for no middleman is to pay; no heavy cost of store management is to be met. et Woading Rings, stanch and true, Mee Gare les are guaranteed Seamless hy Solid Gold. 8c ld by the hundred, they grow in favor as years roll away. Engraving Free. Watches, Solid Gold, —a> + 30 piste ty sat ae ‘Gold- Filed” and Ster- ling Silver, from the best makers only. Sekar. 96.35 9p We are large man uentrers of Diamorid and Sol! Gold Jewelry, ori; in idea, soli fect in fin Fnteineedoad as to quality, low in price. LAMBERT BROTHERS Third Ave., Cor. 58th.St. Store Open Saturday Night Until 10 o’Clock. dames McCreary & Go. 34th Street 5th Avenue Special Values on Saturday ‘ Misses SUITS, COATS & DRESSES wits Fleck Sal Cheviot, Gabardi Girls’ School Coa In Young Men's, Misses’, Juniors’ and Girls’ Wearing Apparel Made of Novy Bis ue English Serge com ae | hm cine or mies! Afternoon | it gy 14 to 18 years, Made of Charmeuse, Bonn | Sf Crepe wads. 4 Chine; Basque or ants wpe pa 26.80 Juniors’ & Girls’ SUITS, COATS & DRESSES Juniors’ Suitay—Size 18 to 17 years. Made in, or Broadcloth. ¢ 1 vee 26,60 6 and d 29.50 6 to ene N G Ohi A if I Made of Neve ot Gras CF 7 i ae x lu full lena) Young Men's & Boys’ SUITS & OVERCOATS Misses’ Suits;—Size 16 to 18 years, Made Mitth. Pleor of ‘Brondclothe "Gabardine. of Wool Popa #85, Young Men's Sults-—coats in new Navy Blue, Black, Negre + Soft Roll m nap, x patel pockets; Be 4 mi) ier snd 29,80 | of atriped or checked fabr als) Osford Gray Misses’ Se vd ae 14 to 18 or Navy Blue Serge or C finch cheat "180 and 30.66 ‘ values 21.50 and 25.00 ores Men's Medium Weight or Winter Overcoats "=" and Ulsters;—both and American- Size 82 to 42 inch chest. value 16.50 to 40.00, 12.50 to 29.50 ” #10 Boys’ Noth Suits wit Se pated ker trousers, Made of and Imported Fabrics. Size 8 to e TR value 10.50, 119 Boys’ Norfolk Suits with two pares i Kniekerboe trousers, ade of Tweed or Cheviot; also Navy Blue bem value 8,50, eB 87 Years {2 One begs sobs ‘, Charles Krebs began his seventh year as a clerk in the J so» in construction, per-f