the sun. (new york, n.y.) 1904-09-27 [p...

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I fi THE SON TUESDAY 27 1904 j i q f J- f I SEPTEMBER t I I I- l JI It appoint deputy loaders for all tho district ruohed through by a riro we votE Oovornortflialnnan Odsll had a liter with Mr Hatpin and It was made known that only Batellltos of GovernorChairman are to bo made deputy leaders In tho dlstricta Indeed It wa that tho OovernorClialrman Already selected tho thirtyfive deputy leaden Ono of the GovernorChairman friend In explaining his attitude on thl matter ald that It WOK tho first stop taken by tho GovernorChairman to rid himself of Senator Platts old frlend on thA com mitten like Ferdinand Kldmnnn Cornellu Van Cott John J Hannon and William Honkel It was further ascertained that all tho Tnnunany Hall liepubllcan leader in GovernorChairman train have ken furnished with money with which conduct canvasecs while the leaders who are still known to Im friendly to Senator Platt like EUlmann Van Cott Hannon Ilenkpl hnpnt received a dollar M Linn Drucn the Republican candidate for LieiitenantOovernor accompanied bj Job E Hedges In to leave thi morning for i two weks stumping tour throughout the tate The first speeches ore to bo at Albany CAR RKCKKn J4SS WII- ollee ne mc Check Mflllan Wrath a- thf Rear rf It Ilelurefcjiie Iarnile Hundred of prrn nH mobbed the motor toon of a nouthboiiid avenue ca which ran Into the roar of an Italian proces don at Houston and Chryctle streets about a oclock tat night Spectators telephoned to Pollen Headquarter that many had been injured Tho reserves of the Firth ctreet and Vldridfio street stAtions were Kent to tlio rcnr in wogoni and hvrry nil brought ambulances from Bellovue and Oouvorneur honpital ll yond a few hrtNpa no ono VTI hurt Tin police however hod their hunttn Ml for half an hot r The parade wus lhe concluding feature of a three celebration in honor of St Joseph and the Holy Family by Sicilian who live In hrystic Stanton Elizabeth nd adjacent treotn It was mado up principally of hcnevolnnt societies and in it were many n dressed In white and wrtvithsand veils o tho carried lighted candle and those who did not bore the national emblem of Italy and America or helped carry shrine There was A nt the head and another at the rear of the line and one In the Ctntro The was wavers blocks und accompanied by n crowd composed for most part friends of Tho roar which was brought up by Kngllmas Washington wni street Into Chrystle- Moleod it I lie on tho brakes but rails caused the car to slide co that it ran into the trailing crowd The unoititial nracleiH tide but he niveictnim who happened lo be playing didn t hear the shouts ana nothing of the Impending danger until the car was upon rearmost car fender Jumped aside with yells fjcveial were down but limo Iho car had lost it momentum and were not hurt In the however till b n drum nan burst a flute was smashed nomn music hooks were trampled in the mud and several were Finding they were not hurt the hand a for tho motorman In a mo nrrnt the car was surrounded bv n mob and looked serious Policeman Norton and several others who were near by managed to rwieh tho motorman and were their hands full beating wan heard The next moment McDermott and half a dozen of hill men armed with nighatiuku to work and the crowd scattered Then Capt Flood and his arrived from ntn et and in the midst of the hubbub came the ambulances The band it anger in a hurry and hustled off to overtake tho for the most was In Ignorance of what had happened at the rear Tho car was ert on iM with a guard of several policemen DRUXKEX RRAKEMAXS UOOIXU heats Girl niio nefincri Him and Shoots Ian Who Interfere N J Sept 28 Kdward Thompson a brakerran on tho New York Central Railroad filled himself full of whiskey this afternoon end then went to the house of Miss Kato Ward Day street Glen Ridge He naked the girl to irarry him and she refused Thompson slapped her face then threw her to tho floor and kicked her Mrs Ward too terrified to call for help but ran Into the nttlo of and hid herself After had beaten the almost into unconscious- ness ho left that ho return buck to at 30 oclock Mm Ward liwird him at th door and non burst through the house firing his re volvnr in the Ho went Into tho back- yard and Edward Wade o young man- n lives with hU brother In of the house Wade told Thompson to out of this Uo and he meant off his gun in the Ward home Thonpson took aim and shot Th a down- ward COUrsO Thompson walked out to the front of paid no ott n tion to the crowd that Bell and John Haller of then Rido picked tin Wade ArId started to carry him to Mountain Hide Hospital near house ThoMpson no attention to them into tho street fifty from him Then he revolver and fired two shots apparently at the Wads went wild He down the revolver and ran away It that he took a train on Greenwood Lake branch of the Erie An alarm has sent out for him Montolalr was called Wades wound He said he could determine until tomorrow morning whether it was fatal Ho will on operation tomorrow morning to locate the FOn TIIK Of IT Corner Crowd Thumps Namirltaiu and Dtttln With Follce Caiey of 01 Amsterdam avenue ioboard a westbound Fifty ninth tr etcroMt6wn cr at Third avenue last tell ofT landed on his head and out gash in his soalp Two newspaper delivery agents hap pened along sad went to Ida asaigtanoe The Good Samaritans were Charles Odell and John Crane They carried Casey to the sidewalk and Policeman to a telephone to call an Odell and Crane to care for the injured man Three drunken men staggered out of a nearby saloon and cause sailed Odell and Crane The latter were handled arid ran into a cigar store where barricaded the When returned he found a mob banting at the door of the cigar tore the nature of the trouble The crowd at- tacked him Ho for and was reinforced by Policeman Keller The two policemen were having a hard fight when came The three of rioters and street station said were Patrick Walsh Smith and Joseph Shortly afterward Keller was near the by a big that attacked Odell and Crane Keller managed to get his amailant to the station prisoner said be wa Patrick talk then hall to and Ion clay Win 111110 11 SAAri- H was I when the ear In or Fenton Soberer and Conductor overt ok I 1 h thl otT the crold when the rattle of pAtrol Capt I fore I rt BLOOMFIELD was shoutIng n Slit and ntl the house Tlith fled to Ihe cellar I b I I arda I I trw bon 1 t- oe lno I I RIOTING Jl Job nat Dup eut the P h the orowd to O plo alt Pack Polo e of crowd Mull was then the f paid p l l l dell L I I Ii I t- i i atrol R r I I I t I t trolley Motor- man Leroy hat I at saw I I t In- sensible 1 I I t ij a iid into learn the i I Mfl ha ae om 4 4tYr S ¬ > ¬ > ¬ MONTCLAIR FREE OF TOWN pnoPKnixa AUAIX WIT UNION txcunvs nuaiovEn- Mutrr Hnllilen have No Intention r Again SatimllUni to Exactions C- pcnten Cheered by the Promise the National Organization MoNTClAin N J Sept 2r About years ago the labor unions fastened grip on all branches of the building Industry In Montclalr and tho may bo conservatively summed as follows First The decrease In assessed vnllla lions in the town an former years is estimated of assessor at 500000 Second The town is build- Ings total cost of which It estimated at from J3000000 to W000000 which were planned and would have been put up for the uncertainty and the intolerable conditions caused by the labor union domi- nation a town In which thin unions had recognition and an established stand- Ing in all branches of the building Industry- It has become because of vicious and tyran- nous management the unions themselves- a town In which Unions era not recognized in any branch of that Industry and which shop is nn open giving employment almost exclusively to non- union men Fourth Eight hundred artisans were out of all employment for the hatter part o two months In the height of the building season something like 150or 00 got employ- ment In adjacent towns going to nnd from their Montclalr homes at much expense and inconvenience between 300 and S5 good mechanics painters masons car pcnters and plumbers arc still out of em- ployment altogether walking the streets or thin town with winter close at hand and in many cases their families near absolute want and suffering That plus a few murderous assaults many collisions with tho law is a fair of what labor unionism pushed to its ultimate extreme of attempted trust mo- nopoly and arrogance haw lone for this town of 10000 inhabitants A town that Is one ol the niot Leautitiil of any in all Now Yorki beautiful suburbs and Unit until the labor trust blight foil upon it was going ahead at a rate which was leaving many of Its flourishing rivals behind Tho carpenters who are out in the cold were today basking in a gleam of sunshine that came to thorn from Milwaukee It was reporter that the international board of their union In session In the Wisconsin metropolis had voted them a sum of money with which to carry on the fight against the open shop In Montclalr JUt tithe amount of is it was today to ascertain One report put it at 11000 Another hind It that carpenters had asked for 12000 and got J1XO another report was that amount iwiced was 11000 the amount obtained was 501 But whether the carpenters get 400 or 5000 the so far au ID concerned remains tho Mme The Is here and If outward Indications coupled with assertions In the various trades amount to anything it has como to The build season is drawing to a close Boss bows anti boss carpenters- all agree in the statement that the men want thnt their business- Is going more satisfactorily than it has for w ill not die a single man to make room for the unionists by their intolerable exac- tions at last drove them to unite in a final declaration of independence What if we did said Benjamin U Sims chairman of the executive of the Mauler Builders Association today In loss than two years wn right hank where wo were We were to a Sam Parks state of affairs here We lint our Sam was one of the delegates He had begun sounding tho bosses Treat us right we will all the your way and the other fellow down out He ought to have been kicked Into tho street for It was money pure and that he wanted was for n time on mark for the unions They worked us beau- tifully for awhile masons would That would block carpenters and painters and plumbers we nil man was holding out against the masons unions and bring pressure to on him tell him to his that ho was holding us all up and HO work on him and boss masons that ho would give in and grunt the union demands Just as w thought we were going ahead again along would come demand for more resulting In a plumbers strike the story would over all of us bringing pressure on the boss plumbers we to give in Then the carpenters would strike then they would start around the circle again another strike of the masons so it went And all this time there won a never ending string of demands six houses went up street and the wau put some New York firm had violated some ono of the thousand and rules of the union man jack the union men refused to on work on those houses until all that tiling was ripped out and union put The were nearly completed in But that was only one Instance of dozens of others Well at last we it through our heads that we were systematically one union re got and drew our declora Independence For three weeks not a work was dono in ilontclalr everything was shut against or not We simply dont earn We will not the or deal wit h representatives in any manner shape form is where the mutter with the unions begins and ends Them have no assaults on men of There wore dozen of told at the beginning if the union lockout They are I believe That in union pays a for around in the streets and walking delegates I mipT- OBO is where the gees Probably they sent glowing accounts of treat hero to board Milwaukee Thatd all thorn get the money if they can It does not concern us any All ma UTB the building trades in pay union wages lours from R morning until oclock in the one lit rval at meal That they have willing to do all along U was not on the of or pay that they issued tholr declaration of the unions were In full swing the of work were A scant seven ten got to their Jobs at 818 80 or 830 about as chos it took a quarter of an hour their to over the union situation At intervals during the day there were other union from 430 to 445 in the afternoon ley getting their tools together i away S oclock demanded a Saturday half having previously their so was the boss and the thebes Dock a man for tardiness was RomeUilnR bad committees and and the whole TYRANNY or Fund b I four traM I up I compare poorer by th but- ThirdFrom In and hit tbl K Ten ting of this the big by r Then wo men In we along our work It a we have not know for year We We union man or non- union lat a tan long mon mot I I the I I enl non de We- n Ton the qui bold not po of He would dole moa I their data tile I every sum- mary V am stay hear the one case we out nonunion Now are doing all and peace dont rakaman lea their still uesticin anywhere lug boss dreamed have walking ptee of union ¬ ¬ ¬ turned loose on him if he with probably a down the unions fo could only have apprentice to four men plumbers systematically to o their craft If a boss worked on a lob him- self ho was not permitted to have more than one reason was that If he had two or more the job was done quickly Delay above was plumber employee wa permitted to go to a on a Hi got too soon It might be an flooded with water no difference Tho plumber must walk If his employer gave him oar fare he might take a car not car that came but the second i Then leach shop must have a union steward The stewards business wail to see to It that no man worked in I unless ho had a union card He must to it too that the union rules in all were lived to theunlon men In the It took anywhere from a quarter of the time after this union business Union are sometimes complicated But tin boss must the a full day time every there was an ironclad union union from the National Guard i Probably there was none of time union ease tions roused popular indigna- tion outside of the long master builder circles than this one Jersey men are proud of tho katlonal and tills on it created general disgust Furthermore it directed to the union 01 which heretofore only those who Immediately suffered from it had complained- It was then discovered money was driven from the town the Intolerable labor conditions One block of seventeen houses was planned and abandoned because of House costing thousands of dollars were up finished and de- teriorating months standing monu- ments to the uncertainties any- body Who contemplated building in must notions were running tho cost of buildings- to such figures as were in many eases pro- hibitory from being on the erect of a wave of progress prosperity began to drift a retrogression These things created the senti- ment at fully and still supports the master re In their stand for Independence- The crash came with the carriers for 280 per day hod carriers in every other city New Jersey getting 2 0 day Even at not at first turn TIm proposed arbitration The hod carriers the proposition in this unique letter JaBonFns ProTECTIVE Uvios No MONTCIMII X J June n IDOl J To the Matlrr Mainnt A orialion Mont Masons under date of June 4 wherein the offer of 1280 u day and the choice of a referee said referee to instructed to decision of day In favor of the laborer- we the laborers 1 laborers Union do hereby accept said offer PETEU KKIUIIER Financial Secretary This being interpreted that the hod carriers to sole condition bring that the arbitrator case But oven at that the efforts to arbitrate did not end A committee for the unions asked President of the Montclair Trust Company for them and ho At the time and Mr Carter and the master builders from 2 oclock In the afternoon until for the union committee to appear- It did not appear but at the named a to submit anything to arbitration That the patient donkeys back There had been twenty three years Things not be much worse The long suffering builders at last die had a backbone The that now at last are tree and that Montelallr Is going ahead once more PEACE DELEGATES AT CITY CLVD An Interesting International Gathering Welcome by the Mayer More than 100 members of the Inter mliameutnry Union for International were entertained at a reception night at the City Club Flags of the eleven countries represented by the visitors were displayed about the room each flag wing Intended as the rallying point for delegates of the country represented At each group of flags stood the foreign Consul of that country stationed In New York- A committee of sixty received the and McCIellan welcomed them shook the of each A colored quartet At 030 oclock after all had been Intro- duced the assembly was called to order by II Peckham tho Club The gavel he used in calling the assembly to order had previous gatherings of of Washington as President of the United States the 000th anniversary- of the Swiss Confederation come Mayor McCIellan who welcomed the dole gateson behalf of the citizens of New York The Mayor said I believe there has never been war arisen out of differences but could have avoided had the two nations understood better the nature of those dir ferences at the beginning Jt has been the men of affairs In the legislatures of this and other countries that that we understand each other better do we 1 doubt If there Is an toulent who now the name the President of the or the man at the of kingdom of Bavaria oI say that any movement a ten bring statesmen together tends oodwlll and International peace Congressman Richard Bartholdt and for the delegates Bartholdt said anticipated On this I feel thAt I should express my appreciation of fact that York things differently Chicago and them better Mr BandalCremer glowing tribute the hospitality of BLUE AND CHAOS fern the Policeman Mixed It Vp With the Dog to Oblige a Lady- A pretty girl attached to a snappy little terrier went up to Cassidy 106th street and the Central early last evening said she theres a nasty dog following my little Dudley- afraid of the ugly brute He looks like he eat my precious Ill in a minute the courteous Cassidy He until the dog hove hairy and of nondescript breed and it didnt seem to for Hn mote it with nightstick and it leaped him was a dusty yelling Drive for a minute or two Then the dog emerged from the chaos away was a His right was rent and ripped and tilt pirates te tn ware visible in hi- at calf did not desert her tarn a chatelaine at her belt she pins with which she made policeman went to Mount Sinai The trousers wore beyond had their one p I too the job be In danger I j frt It hop to pay rule which prohibit or more may Mont support won I dolr JTh front the 20 a meat be to find for their ot the Carr p wait OVEr had in- cluding IPn a knows abut what goes on of his lay here tel of b Cong man the been the t fro pda to JELL fox Polo at Pak bold want mad wale plato In his bunch of blue yellow at and trUer of knight two ho o- ut climax employers became more and more Further- more re- fused emer- gency house see par- ticulars rules member a V offer contained In corn received Master 904 instructed side Arbi- tration last visitors statesman outside the direction international weeks had entertained ew doss does said care barking East fallen Cassidy trotted leg re- pairs whme had his bite Hi ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > Doesnt it stand to reason that an apart ment house with every apartment rented must be better in some way than one only half rent ed At the Aylesmere there is one housekeep- ing apartment and that to sublease TIlE AYLESMERE 58 West 76th St MORE OFFICERS CASHIERED Continued from Page were recently removed from Tiellng across the Mongolian border undo escort One version of the Is that the money U to bo used for the pur- pose of bribing Mongolian Princes FIGHT GOES ON AT PORT ARTHUR Chefoo Senile of the Report That Is Out Apfrtol Cable Detente to TUB SDK LONDON Sept 27 New comes from Chefoo that severe fighting U Ing that the blockade IB that tho Russian squadron has not nutdi another sortie The Japanese Consulate Chefoo denies the report that the side of Port Arthur has been attacked A despatch to the Daily Mail from Chefo says that photographs taken at Port Arthur on Sept 14 and sent to Chefoo to be de- veloped show that the stacks of coal which were at Tigers Tall at the beginning the war are still there MIl that many o the houses in the town have not been dam aged by the Japanese bombardment ATTACHES ARE SAFE one German and One French Remain Port Arthur SprrtaJ CM ntipelch ta THI ails BKRUN 21 The Togtbloitt cor- respondent learns Lieut de French attache who was believed to have left Port Arthur about July 15 since which he has not been heard from was Arthur on Sept 10 It i probable that ha Is still with the Russian garrison The Chinese junk in which the French and German attaches were thought to have left Port Arthur was it appaara turned back by the Japanese two days before authority was received by the Jap- anese commanders for their passage of tho Japanese lines One German took advantage of the permission and loft the Another German naval still in Port Arthur GERMAN ATTACHE HONORED Mikado Gives maser for the UaUeri Representative Special Dtipalc to Tux Srx Toxio Sept M The Emperor and Empress gave a dinner tonight in honor- of Prince Carl Anton of Hohenzollem the Kaisers representative with the Japanese army The guests included the Elder Statesmen members of the Cabinet military and naval officers and court dignitaries- The press extends a hearty welcome to the Prince It considers that the Kaisers sending him to view the operations at the front IH evidence of friendly relations the two countries A despatch from the Japanese Ccnsul at Sydney N 8 W announces that the German Lloyd Steamship Company to start a service to Japan Tills bi apparently another German attempt an inroad on Great Britains carry It is rumored that Russia is to buy foreign journals published in The Jiji Bhimpo notes that Japans foreign trade during the first eight 1904 was 19000000 yen in period last year The excess exportS was 44000000 yen Usually the imports are larger than tho exports exceeding them by onehalf It is probable that the normal ratio will be cetlUhed the end of the year The paper explains tho increase by the facts that domestic have not been affected by the war and that Japans control of the sea- s nearly complete Furthermore the rice Top is 28 percent larger than usual which s partly due tq the fact that this season in Increased area was under cultivation- The Aiaki remarks upon the phenomenon that the currency has not been despite the fact that the of all de- icriptions since the the war amount to 380000000 yen There been advance in prices except for rice and barley have been bought largely The A aM attributes the financial condition to the cautious policy of the Government and the care of the in guarding every The exchequer notes Government local bonks of their surfeit of farmers deposits MANY RUSSIANS DESERTERS lejervUts Neek to Avoid Bring Sent to the Far East Sptttot CaM DMpaWt to TOT Son LONDON Sept 7 According to the Russian correspondence the num of deserters from the lower ranks of are enormous The police are overwhelmed with the work of trying to track them Desertion is becoming ra general that it hardly possible to cope with it Men inscribed in one military district will be ound living from hand to mouth and passports hundreds of miles hoping that their existence will be forgotten- The reservists are doing their utmost avoid being sent to Manchuria Even some of the army not Inclined a go to the Far BO openly The correspondent says it seems that important part of Russias plan of cam was to kite Corca to between the northern array and the besieger of as got Confederates He article from the that was a complete failure owing the Japanese command would have bent to attack Gen rear Ian had to be abandoned The Times remarks that this 1s almost first allusion in the to the of UalUe Fleet COM DtlfaMt SDV PAste 26 Tbn St Petersburg cor of the KeAo d Port says that Russian Baltic fleet win sail for the East on Oct 10 I and ten Deal pro at west of at- I Sept Peer tie at for Sort t- ome ting month In by lon no who b- yte Time her tho ann Is wit out to ore an aCe the quota Mol to tey alf Rue cAd Pa- r c First story that naval considered Cable be- tween cor- responding in- dustries expanded baa cent Vladi- vostok sea the Japanese Sp respondent the ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ COL LONG LOST HA FOVND IN MANHATTAN AND BE RESTORED AFTER 4O YEARS A Good Bt r OM CHH War It to the Mttlury Museum at ten the lists Next tlon Roosevelt Will See It First ORANGE N 3 Sept 28 After lain for fifty years In a northern borne the campaign lint worn by Col John I Mosby the Confederate cavalryman lost by him when he was shot on Doc JM4 is about to be returned to its original owner For many years It has been in possession of Mrs David C lives ot275 Central West Recently Mra got Into com munlcntlon with John Murwwn one o- Moabye old troopers who now lives Pars street Orange she told him that bad a hat which she belonged the noted guerrilla Mr Munsoi wrote to his old chief and has just received a reply to the effect that the hat in quei- tlon is undoubtedly the one he lost when he was shot Mrs Halsted had said she would return it to Mosby and latter authorized Mr Munson to get I for has sent word to Mrs Hal te that he will present the hat to the museum whore it will b placed with his old coat as a relic There U a good story of the war con- nected with this hat When Col Mosb was shot he and a companion Thomas Love were eating supper at the house o a farmer named Lake in Farquier county Va A party of the Thirteenth New York Cavalry on a raiding expedition rode the farmhouse and seeing the horses ot the two outside stopped to investigate- In the scrimmage which followed Col was shot through the abdomen was Mosby despite the pain of his had presence to tear off the coat on were the insignia of his rank and to throw The Federal in and capt- ured Love to and women of the officer in com- mand Inquired who the wounded soldier was Lieutenant Johnson sir replied one of the family In asked the Union officer One of the troopers looking forward said the mann wasnt in same breath and reaching for his he remarked that would be a dead Lieutenant soon The officer hi of the and the wounded Confederates boots spurs cloak cape and leaving him on the floor rode away They left the two horses behind and as soon as tho was out of Lake and members of his family hitched an ox cart and took to a hiding where he helpless for two was looked a the bunkie of Mr Muncon who had been captured elsewhere For a long limo they their leader an The after the scrimmage at the farmhouse the Union soldiers While in camp made a search of the clothing captured and their no when discovered from the of the pockets that the clothing had been worn no less a Mosby tho guerrilla on a was set it a great incentive to man to capture him and were and the soldiers stormed on the Lake homestead to their had escaped- In the course time the articles of Moebys fell into hands to Coles who command of the This in whose It to his niece possession it has been since to Mr Munson Cot expresses great happiness in getting his says it to President Roosevelt before he it to the museum It U a slouch hat type nowadays called the rough rider a piece of MILITIAMEN SCORED For Not Preventing a Lynching Company Muttered Out MONTOOMKKT Ala Sept 29 Oov Cun- ningham this afternoon issued an order to the Adjutant to muster out the yule military company which protect the life of Horace Maples a negro who was lynched by a mob In that city on Sept 7 Tho order was given upon the recommendation of the military court of inquiry ordered by the Governor to inves- tigate the company failed- to its on that This court found That the combined forces evidence introduced a life to be taken unlawfully by a mob under cir- cumstances us in concluding thereby reflecting serious discredit upon the military into service upon court found that R K L and Hay were entirely ignorant of then that on the there was an entire lack of concerted effort or looking to the protection of the or prisoners that was no order fire and that when the attack occurred the soldiers were sitting- on the steps and curbing eating supper ALLOTTED TO ORVBERS MAN Republican Nomination for Congress In the Seventeenth The three Assembly districts in the Seventeenth Congress district have each forward a candidate for the Republican nomination for Congress The probability i the nomination will go to William of the The other candidates are William H Smith of the Ventythlrd and Harvey T Andrew of Thirtyfirst conference last at Avenue between Odell district the understanding wa Judge The district went 1500 Democratic two years In the Thirteenth Congress district the Republican candidate either William I or Her bort Parson Ronan Cruller Off Lisbon Yptctel CoNs nitpatt t Tn flux LISBON Sept 28 The Russian cruiaor- erok which was last heard of at Las where the Spanish authorities to allow her to coal or to remain repairs her captain said she t reported port JOTTINGS BOUT TOWX Krlmd of Dr A Woodruff and ifnoers of the Presbyterian Foreign Mis art to before it sum on a tour of tbe Wut African nnlah and unusual geta YOUMANS 7 DERBYT- he Correct Browns and Black Ml Fitk Xrenue near 441 1107 Jfad o S Wttt IM Broarlvav sCar Ubtrtv MOS YS haying I 21 Hat who Pak I In she bleed to the hal at Mob capture of It under a Ten he toe Trig t toper wit plo mol bond tD Boot dow duet alf Now York He M five Hut the I ho Let Jai put tat Dt te Hot lee tat for tat nee lbs Boa 1101 yOUMANS tHE man who su r WILL Gees With Washing Lost Destine and the already military past unconscious inter- posed was saved The per- sonage Cavalry in turn tht same could have been that i the ago Palmas refused Rev Hats clans elegance 81 14 s 1 < ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Telephone OKD 8TANIBY PostMaster General of after stating that under a message rate plan tile london telephone system had rapidly grown to about 70000 exchange said 11 The proper method of charge for an exchange service is under which the payment of the fixed in proportion to their user In the United Statee where during the last few years the telephone exchange system has largely improved and developed charge of this kind widely adopted and have means of increas- ing tile A plan under which subscribers pay In proportion to their user was introduced in Manhattan anti The Bronx old New York City in 1894 There were then less than 10000 tele- phones in the city In the same area there axe now more than 133000- NBW YORK TBM5PHON8 COMPANY CONTRACT OFFTCSBt- g Dey Street 3 W t 3th Street 83 5 U Stttet- so Wet XMtfc Street t Salt 140 Street j 1 T Great in recent i tele- phones 1 1 tat ub j bee haT t poe l i j Rates Britain a omcial communi- cation East ¬ ¬ ¬ XO IRISH HOME RULE Hr Wywlham Opposes Plan for a Legit UUve Assembly aptcitt CUM ctfprtcA to TUB BUN LONDON Sept 27 The Right Hon Wyndham Chief Secretary for writes to the Times criticising the report of Lord Dunravens Irish Reform especially the recommends statutory legislative assembly for Ireland be instituted Mr Wyndham says Without reserve or qualification Unionist Government is opposed to the multiplication of legislative bodies within the United Kingdom whether in pursuance- of the policy generally known aa home rule for Ireland or in pursuance of the policy known as home rule for all round Discussing the proposals Irish finance Mr Wyndham conclusion that the destruction of tho existing departments charged the administration of Irish finance way for the construction of some other body vaguely outlined IB a matter for speculation proper enough for private individuals but outside the sphere of politics does not question the sin cerity of the aaHOcIatlon Ho recognizes the honesty of its Ideals and aspirations but bo says that the chances of their realization are prejudiced not enhanced when are confused with any plan however tative for the multiplication of legislative aaoemblies within tha lltnlto of the United Kingdom To any such plan nr In and vague in feature the opposed HAMBURGAMERICAN DIVIDEND Larger Than Lan Year Despite the Eats War Hpiclat Deifatclt lo Tna Sux- LIVEBPOOL 38 Surprise was by the news that the Hamburg Steamship Company had a dividend of 7H per cent last year It had been calculated that the company had lost 150000 ia the rate war but evidently the 3 steerage rate for the Continent more than recouped- it for the losses incurred through the 3 rate from England The Cunard company not having such a resource la to show a reduced dividend- An Easy Win for Young Peter Jackson 3pttlal CuM Dtipatch to Tat Bute LONDON Sept 26 Young Peter Jack son and Charles Knock met tonight in a round match for 550 Jackson in the third round JAMES CALLANAN DEAD wa a Fortune of SSOOO Much to DEB MOIRES Ia Sept Cal a pioneer resident of Des millionaire died this ago of 82 He leaves an estate worth 3000000 consisting of extensive farms plantations in this State and old Mexico has been one of the foremost pbilanthro lets of the State for yearsand as he loaves tone but collateral heirs itis expected that will may contain many bequests to charities He founded Callanan College and moot of the for the Methodist here He was chief fund for erect a homo for tho to the Home or Friendless He was a liberal subscriber to the support of the State was was a native of Now York of that State Ore Alto the din wit wit pail thy tat lope Cal ort d- oor ext fife 10 Pone Cart lan Mole the He of hOlt age He or his now I the River bewares and his pro- vided also leg Human president and many relatives live Hudson counties ¬ ¬ ¬ Are you ready for a sudden FallFall suits Fall overcoats and Fall underwear gloves Fall Derbies and soft hats Fall AH up by man or boy ROGERS PEET COMPANY JM Broadway coT Warren IttU W Sit crdtn raincoat shoeswaterproofed all 4 11 U cr- ul S J 53 Broadway sad 255 Sresdvsr p4 s TO KEEP DISEASE OUT OF Dr Dartlnston Tells the County Medleat Society About Present Health CommissIoner ton told the County Medical Society at the New York Academy of Medicine last night about the precautions used by the Health Department to prevent the spread- of contagious disease to the schools H traced the work from the beginning in 18J8 when 160 inspectors wore to work to the present day of more elaborate pre- cautions Dr Darlingtons paper showed that there was a great increase In the number- of children excluded from the lest year over those excluded in 189T being 41826 aa against 7084 Dr John J Cronin assistant cal inspector read a paper work of summer Dr Robert J Wilson Resistant bacteriolo- gist told of disinfection aa to the department and Dr T of a on The specific treatment of pneumonia These for the oem were nominated PresIdent Dr Henry 8 Stearns Dr Crandall and Dr w L Carr sec- retary Dr J V D Young treasurer Dr Richardson BtMINBM NBTIOBS There U CBljr ae- UVHBAT A LAKMAKS FtouoA WITBX The drat choice among toilet perfumes mn aocttter ffyrnp Mn tk reoM MMHuSo- aEir patarant wla ferfhC ITT DIED CORCORAN Haanah Corooran BM rears bdovad wife of John Oanona died Sept M 1M4 after lout lUnen Funeral from her late raldeaee m Cteny New Tort cUr oa Tknnday Sept at i P U Oonaeettrat papeta plUM con cnOCKEnOa Sept M at naroHabK Ussf Henry Horses Crocker aged M reao Funeral services will be held at Bamtabi Wednesday Sept 38 on arrival of a apec train leaving the Button Bottoa oa track it at 140 PU ReturnIng loire Bees able at t P II DONAIJT Lanneelot R Mr and A J Donallr al their homo Teaatf N t Sunday 10 P U anddenly u 19 months XICKSOa after Uo c B 0t neat patiently sad courageously borne hla nth year mend anti relatives are Kspeotfullr iavttx to funeral unite on Thursday Sept aa at- St Paula Evangelical Lutheran Owen West 22d au ath av at t P U Kcnsloo Cemetery FtANNEBY At residence ill Peas tt Brooklyn la th Mtb year of hl ace Dealt FUnnatr lather of the Rev ft o runnerrv Requiem Thursday morning at 10 oclock 4- St Patricks Chuica Kent and WIQoutby- FLEiacnUAKNAt his late TeaMence 4 Wed nth tt early Smooj morning Sept X Louis P Flrbehmann the Mth YOU of aU Funeral prtv- OILMORE In New Tnk dtr on Stcrdar Hcph- J4 Rear Adatnl Fernando P CUmore n S N retired Funeral wrvleM and Interment en Wednesday at r PU at Aonapotla Md- UARTtNAt Mount dtiaeaa Won on aqA 34- 1W4 Wary J beloved wUe of Bcaacd tv- UarUa Funeral from ber residence Ut West lEts at Tuesday lA theneo to OtoroB BU Joseph SIb av and Washington place Inter meat III Calvary Friends sad rtlat e anr- etpecttuUy Inrlte- dUcCAimnfAt Lone BraBcnM J cm Moo4 Sept M U04 Joha O UoOarthr of ill W t New York In his nth Year Funeral services at St Jo epa Church end TTaahtniton Wedqudar nentejr Sept M at ta- BOAOD or MANxam or THX notuir CATWO uo OarnAK ASTLCM At a special neettnr of the Board of Uanafen of Uw Aomam- Cathotlo Orphan Asylum la the City of New York held on Uondar Sept M 1104 th tot lowing resolution waa adopted AfiolMtf Tbe Uanaccn ot Stamen Oathollo- OrphaaA Flumln tn of New York hare learned with the deepest rest of the death of their aaaoctate Mr John a UoCarthr wo- haa beeo alnoa l 8e a menbr of tile Board at- Uanar f for over aeveatMa rean Ha tRIM urn and at the time ot hla death was second vice prest dent The memboca of the Board desire to add their tnumonr to that ot all other who have bern the eoUboiH of Mr UoOarthr In Ui charitable works to hi witting and o- vatlon In every cause III which he baa eacaced and to ezpiTU their n ot the treat IOM which the CatboOo and the orphaan have iruflemj In hla death Jon M FAautr ArehbUhop President niUNELANDe At Stookbrldft Maw Sepr IS auddentr Fredoln William Rhlnelaader Now York aced n rear Funeral aervlaea at Calvan Church 4th av and Hit at on Tuesday flept IT at u oclock UITHOn Monday Sept M 1KM John It Smith Funeral from lUslat residence No 12 St JohnA place Wednesday Sept It at M A U thenoi to St Auruntoea R C Church Sixth av sit Milling place Brooklyn Urea and tOi ads membera of the Catholic Club and Mtnhaitaa College Alumni rap rally Invited Interment In Calvary 7EMBTKBIE8 MnaUrm S 14 acrfi Parti n sun St N Y- WANTKD information M to the whettarxwl nettofkln o Alice or Mrs Mall TTLDEN Altr 1t9ttos II SCHOOL POI y 1 i aol ole roe l vi 1 1 t fV Slaw I UIeo 11- I r ill IIna t ft f South i of Ill t Age years 1 f a J t 1 j I near 1IIenD t- at t late if are i ff ate U of Tad M- ay the CSt if mill r i comm i Jji Brie also 1 e Gnat em L mre 1omu8JWALS or W ti t005nU N yon OVNCJr I unl1n flJ1f 5 p s gsasls I u5 I son Sept ms 1101 his age 0 c zeal Droo lye West 00 West 11th at iw ii ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > > < > <

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I fi

THE SON TUESDAY 27 1904j i q f J-

fI SEPTEMBER

t

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appoint deputy loaders for all tho districtruohed through by a riro we votE

Oovornortflialnnan Odsll had aliter with Mr Hatpin and It wasmade known that only Batellltos ofGovernorChairman are to bo made deputyleaders In tho dlstricta Indeed It wa

that tho OovernorClialrmanAlready selected tho thirtyfive deputyleaden Ono of the GovernorChairmanfriend In explaining his attitude on thlmatter ald that It WOK tho first stop takenby tho GovernorChairman to rid himselfof Senator Platts old frlend on thA committen like Ferdinand Kldmnnn CornelluVan Cott John J Hannon and WilliamHonkel It was further ascertained thatall tho Tnnunany Hall liepubllcan leaderin GovernorChairman train haveken furnished with money with whichconduct canvasecs while the leaders whoare still known to Im friendly to SenatorPlatt like EUlmann Van Cott HannonIlenkpl hnpnt received a dollar

M Linn Drucn the Republican candidatefor LieiitenantOovernor accompanied bjJob E Hedges In to leave thi morning for i

two weks stumping tour throughout thetate The first speeches ore to bo at Albany

CAR RKCKKn J4SS WII-

ollee ne mc Check Mflllan Wrath a-

thf Rear rf It Ilelurefcjiie IarnileHundred of prrn nH mobbed the motor

toon of a nouthboiiid avenue cawhich ran Into the roar of an Italian procesdon at Houston and Chryctle streets abouta oclock tat night Spectators telephonedto Pollen Headquarter that many hadbeen injured Tho reserves of the Firthctreet and Vldridfio street stAtions wereKent to tlio rcnr in wogoniand hvrry nil brought ambulances fromBellovue and Oouvorneur honpital llyond a few hrtNpa no ono VTI hurt Tinpolice however hod their hunttn Ml forhalf an hot r

The parade wus lhe concluding featureof a three celebration in honor of StJoseph and the Holy Family by Sicilianwho live In hrystic Stanton Elizabeth

nd adjacent treotn It was mado upprincipally of hcnevolnnt societies and in itwere many n dressed In white and

wrtvithsand veilso tho carried lighted

candle and those who did not bore thenational emblem of Italy and America orhelped carry shrine Therewas A nt the head and another at therear of the line and one In the Ctntro The

was wavers blocks undaccompanied by n crowd composed for

most part friends ofTho roar which was brought up by

Kngllmas Washington wnistreet Into Chrystle-

Moleod it I lieon tho brakes but rails causedthe car to slide co that it ran into the trailingcrowd The unoititial nracleiHtide but he niveictnim who happened

lo be playing didn t hear theshouts ana nothing of the Impendingdanger until the car was uponrearmost car fenderJumped aside with yells fjcveial were

down but limo Iho car hadlost it momentum and were not hurtIn the however till b n drumnan burst a flute was smashed nomn musichooks were trampled in the mud and several

wereFinding they were not hurt the hand

a for tho motorman In a monrrnt the car was surrounded bv n moband looked serious PolicemanNorton and several others who were nearby managed to rwieh tho motorman and

were their hands full beating

wan heard The next momentMcDermott and half a dozen of hill

men armed with nighatiuku to workand the crowd scattered Then Capt Floodand his arrived from ntn etand in the midst of the hubbub came theambulances

The band it anger in a hurry andhustled off to overtake thofor the most was In Ignorance of whathad happened at the rear Tho car wasert on iM with a guard of several

policemen

DRUXKEX RRAKEMAXS UOOIXU

heats Girl niio nefincri Him and ShootsIan Who Interfere

N J Sept 28 KdwardThompson a brakerran on tho New YorkCentral Railroad filled himself full ofwhiskey this afternoon end then went tothe house of Miss Kato Ward Day streetGlen Ridge He naked the girl to irarryhim and she refused

Thompson slapped her face then threwher to tho floor and kicked her Mrs Ward

too terrified to call for help butran Into the nttlo ofand hid herself After hadbeaten the almost into unconscious-ness ho left that ho return

buck to at 30 oclockMm Ward liwird him at th door and

non burst through the house firing his revolvnr in the Ho went Into tho back-yard and Edward Wade o young man-n lives with hU brother In of thehouse Wade told Thompson to outof this Uo and he meant

off his gun in the Ward homeThonpson took aim and shot

Th a down-ward COUrsO Thompson walked out tothe front of paid no ott ntion to the crowd thatBell and John Haller of then Rido pickedtin Wade ArId started to carry him toMountain Hide Hospital near house

ThoMpson no attention to theminto tho street fifty

from him Then he revolverand fired two shots apparently at the

Wads went wildHe down the revolver and ran awayIt that he took a train onGreenwood Lake branch of the Erie Analarm has sent out for him

Montolalr was calledWades wound He said he could

determine until tomorrow morningwhether it was fatal Ho will onoperation tomorrow morning to locate the

FOn TIIK Of ITCorner Crowd Thumps Namirltaiu and

Dtttln With FollceCaiey of 01 Amsterdam avenue

ioboard a westbound Fiftyninth tr etcroMt6wn cr at Third avenuelast tell ofT landed on his head andout gash in his soalp

Two newspaper delivery agents happened along sad went to Ida asaigtanoeThe Good Samaritans were Charles Odelland John Crane They carried Casey tothe sidewalk and Policemanto a telephone to call anOdell and Crane to care for the injuredman

Three drunken men staggered out of anearby saloon and cause sailed

Odell and Crane The latter werehandled arid ran into a cigar store

where barricaded the Whenreturned he found a

mob banting at the door of the cigar torethe nature of the trouble The crowd at-

tacked him Ho for and wasreinforced by Policeman Keller The twopolicemen were having a hard fight when

cameThe three of rioters

and streetstation said werePatrick Walsh Smith and Joseph

Shortly afterward Keller wasnear the by a big

that attacked Odell and Crane Kellermanaged to get his amailant to the station

prisoner said be waPatrick

talkthen

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MONTCLAIR FREE OF

TOWN pnoPKnixa AUAIX WITUNION txcunvs nuaiovEn-

Mutrr Hnllilen have No Intention rAgain SatimllUni to Exactions C-

pcnten Cheered by the Promisethe National Organization

MoNTClAin N J Sept 2r Aboutyears ago the labor unions fastenedgrip on all branches of the buildingIndustry In Montclalr and tho

may bo conservatively summedas follows

First The decrease In assessed vnlllalions in the town an formeryears is estimated of assessorat 500000

Second The town is build-Ings total cost of which It estimatedat from J3000000 to W000000 which wereplanned and would have been put upfor the uncertainty and the intolerableconditions caused by the labor union domi-nation

a town In which thin unionshad recognition and an established stand-Ing in all branches of the building Industry-It has become because of vicious and tyran-nous management the unions themselves-a town In which Unions era not recognizedin any branch of that Industry andwhich shop is nn open givingemployment almost exclusively to non-

union menFourth Eight hundred artisans were

out of all employment for the hatter part otwo months In the height of the buildingseason something like 150or 00 got employ-ment In adjacent towns going to nnd fromtheir Montclalr homes at much expenseand inconvenience between 300 and S5

good mechanics painters masons carpcnters and plumbers arc still out of em-ployment altogether walking the streetsor thin town with winter close at hand andin many cases their families near absolutewant and suffering

That plus a few murderous assaultsmany collisions with tho law is a fair

of what labor unionism pushed to itsultimate extreme of attempted trust mo-

nopoly and arrogance haw lone for this townof 10000 inhabitants A town that Is one ol

the niot Leautitiil of any in all Now Yorkibeautiful suburbs and Unit until the labortrust blight foil upon it was going aheadat a rate which was leaving many of Itsflourishing rivals behind

Tho carpenters who are out in the coldwere today basking in a gleam of sunshinethat came to thorn from Milwaukee Itwas reporter that the international boardof their union In session In the Wisconsinmetropolis had voted them a sum of moneywith which to carry on the fight againstthe open shop In Montclalr

JUt tithe amount of is itwas today to ascertain Onereport put it at 11000 Another hind It that

carpenters had asked for12000 and got J1XO another reportwas that amount iwiced was 11000the amount obtained was 501

But whether the carpenters get 400or 5000 the so far auID concerned remains tho Mme The

Is here and If outward Indicationscoupled with assertions

In the various trades amountto anything it has como to The build

season is drawing to a close Bossbows anti boss carpenters-

all agree in the statement thatthe men want thnt their business-

Is going more satisfactorily than it hasfor w ill not die

a single man to make room for theunionists by their intolerable exac-tions at last drove them to unite in a finaldeclaration of independence

What if we didsaid Benjamin U Sims chairman of theexecutive of the Mauler BuildersAssociation today In loss than twoyears wn right hank where wowere We were to a Sam Parksstate of affairs here We lint our Sam

was one of the delegates Hehad begun sounding tho bosses Treat usright we will all the

your way and the other fellowdown out He ought to have beenkicked Into tho street for It wasmoney pure and that he wanted

was for n time onmark for the unions They worked us beau-tifully for awhile masons would

That would block carpenters andpainters and plumbers we nil

man was holding outagainst the masons unions andbring pressure to on him tell him to

his that ho was holding us allup and HO work on him and bossmasons that ho would give in and grunt theunion demands

Just as w thought we were going aheadagain along would come

demand for more resultingIn a plumbers strike the storywould over all of usbringing pressure on the boss plumbers

we to give in Then thecarpenters would strike then

they would start around thecircle again another strike of themasons so it went

And all this time there won a neverending string of demands six houseswent up street and the wauput some New York firm hadviolated some ono of the thousand and

rules of the union man jackthe union men refused to on

work on those houses until all that tilingwas ripped out and union putThe were nearly completed in

But that was only one Instanceof dozens of others

Well at last we it through our headsthat we were systematically

one unionre got and drew our declora

Independence For three weeksnot a work was dono inilontclalr everything was shut

against

or not We simply dont earn We willnot the or deal wit h

representatives in any manner shapeform is where the mutter

with the unions begins and endsThem have no assaults on

men of There woredozen of told at the beginning

if the union lockout They areI believe That in union pays afor around in the streetsand walking delegates I mipT-

OBO is where the geesProbably they sent glowing accounts oftreat hero to board

Milwaukee Thatd allthorn get the money if they can It doesnot concern us any

All ma UTB the building trades inpay union wages

lours from R morning untiloclock in the one litrval at meal That

they have willing to do all along Uwas not on the of or paythat they issued tholr declaration of

the unions were In full swing theof work were A scant seven

ten got to their Jobs at 818 80 or 830about as chos

it took a quarter of an hourtheir to over the union

situation At intervals during the daythere were other union

from 430 to 445 in the afternoonley getting their tools togetheri away S oclock

demanded a Saturday halfhaving previously their

so was the boss andthe thebes Docka man for tardiness was RomeUilnR

bad committees andand the whole

TYRANNY

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Then wo menIn we along ourwork It a we havenot know for yearWeWe unionman

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and peace

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have walkingptee of union

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turned loose on him if hewith probably a

down the unions fo

could only haveapprentice to four men

plumbers systematicallyto o

their craftIf a boss worked on a lob him-

self ho was not permitted to have morethan one reason was thatIf he had two or more the job was donequickly Delay above was

plumber employee wapermitted to go to a on a Higot too soon It might be an

flooded with waterno difference Tho plumber must walkIf his employer gave him oar fare he mighttake a car not car that camebut the second i

Then leach shop must have a unionsteward The stewards businesswail to see to It that no man worked in

I unless ho had a union card He mustto it too that the union rules in all

were lived to theunlon menIn the It took anywhere from aquarter of the time

after this union business Unionare sometimes complicated But tin

boss must the a full daytime every

there was an ironclad union

union from the National Guardi Probably there was none of time union ease

tions roused popular indigna-tion outside of the long masterbuilder circles than this one Jerseymen are proud of tho katlonaland tills on it created generaldisgust Furthermore it directed

to the union 01 whichheretofore only those who Immediatelysuffered from it had complained-

It was then discovered money wasdriven from the town the

Intolerable labor conditions One blockof seventeen houses was planned andabandoned because ofHouse costing thousands of dollarswere up finished and de-teriorating months standing monu-ments to the uncertainties any-body Who contemplated building in

mustnotions were running tho cost of buildings-to such figures as were in many eases pro-hibitory

from being on the erect of awave of progress prosperity beganto drift aretrogression

These things created the senti-ment at fully and stillsupports the master re

In their stand for Independence-The crash came with the

carriers for 280 per day hod carriers inevery other city New Jersey getting2 0 day Even at

not at first turn TImproposed arbitration The hod carriers

the proposition in this uniqueletter

JaBonFns ProTECTIVE Uvios NoMONTCIMII X J June n IDOl J

To the Matlrr Mainnt A orialion Mont

Masons under date of June 4 whereinthe offer of 1280 u day and the choice of areferee said referee to instructed todecision of day In favor of the laborer-we the laborers 1 laborers Uniondo hereby accept said offer

PETEU KKIUIIER Financial SecretaryThis being interpreted that the

hod carriers tosole condition bring that the arbitrator

caseBut oven at that the efforts to arbitrate

did not end A committee for the unionsasked President of the MontclairTrust Company for them and ho

At the time andMr Carter and the master builders

from 2 oclock In the afternoon untilfor the union committee to appear-

It did not appear but at thenamed a to submitanything to arbitration

That the patient donkeys backThere had been twenty threeyears Things not be much worseThe long suffering builders at last die

had a backbone Thethat now at last are tree and

that Montelallr Is going ahead once more

PEACE DELEGATES AT CITY CLVD

An Interesting International GatheringWelcome by the Mayer

More than 100 members of the Intermliameutnry Union for International

were entertained at a receptionnight at the City Club Flags of the

eleven countries represented by the visitorswere displayed about the room each flagwing Intended as the rallying point fordelegates of the country representedAt each group of flags stood the foreignConsul of that country stationed In NewYork-

A committee of sixty received theand McCIellan welcomed themshook the of each A colored quartet

At 030 oclock after all had been Intro-duced the assembly was called to orderby II Peckham

tho Club The gavel he used incalling the assembly to order had

previous gatheringsof

of Washington as President of theUnited States the 000th anniversary-of the Swiss Confederation comeMayor McCIellan who welcomed the dolegateson behalf of the citizens of New YorkThe Mayor said

I believe there has never been wararisen out of differences but

could have avoided had the two nationsunderstood better the nature of those dirferences at the beginning Jt has been

the men of affairs In thelegislatures of this and other countries that

that we understand each other betterdo we 1 doubt If there Is an

toulent who now the namethe President of the or the

man at the of kingdom of Bavariao I say that any movement a ten

bring statesmen together tends

oodwlll and International peaceCongressman Richard Bartholdt and

for thedelegates

Bartholdt said

anticipatedOn this I feel

thAt I should express my appreciation offact that York

things differently Chicago andthem better

Mr BandalCremer glowing tributethe hospitality of

BLUE AND CHAOS

fern the Policeman Mixed It Vp Withthe Dog to Oblige a Lady-

A pretty girl attached to a snappy littleterrier went up to Cassidy

106th street and the Centralearly last evening

said she theres a nastydog following my little Dudley-

afraid of the ugly brute He lookslike he eat my precious

Ill in a minutethe courteous Cassidy

He until the dog hovehairy and of

nondescript breed and it didnt seem tofor Hn mote it with

nightstick and it leaped himwas a dusty yelling

Drive for a minute or two Then thedog emerged from the chaos

awaywas a His right

was rent and ripped andtilt pirates te tn ware visible in hi-

at calf did not desert hertarn a chatelaine at her belt she

pins with which she madepoliceman went to Mount Sinai

The trousers wore beyond

had

theirone

p

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toothe

job be In danger

I

jfrt

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hop to

pay

rule which prohibit or

more

may

Mont

support

won

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employers became more and more

Further-more re-fused

emer-gency house

seepar-

ticulars

rules

member a

V offer contained In cornreceived Master

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instructed side

Arbi-trationlast

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Doesnt it stand toreason that an apartment house with everyapartment rented mustbe better in some waythan one only half rented

At the Aylesmerethere is one housekeep-ing apartment and thatto subleaseTIlE AYLESMERE

58 West 76th St

MORE OFFICERS CASHIERED

Continued from Page

were recently removed from Tiellngacross the Mongolian border undo

escort One version of theIs that the money U to bo used for the pur-pose of bribing Mongolian Princes

FIGHT GOES ON AT PORT ARTHUR

Chefoo Senile of the Report ThatIs Out

Apfrtol Cable Detente to TUB SDK

LONDON Sept 27 New comes fromChefoo that severe fighting UIng that the blockade IB

that tho Russian squadron has not nutdianother sortie The Japanese ConsulateChefoo denies the report that theside of Port Arthur has been attacked

A despatch to the Daily Mail from Chefosays that photographs taken at Port Arthuron Sept 14 and sent to Chefoo to be de-

veloped show that the stacks of coal whichwere at Tigers Tall at the beginningthe war are still there MIl that many othe houses in the town have not been damaged by the Japanese bombardment

ATTACHES ARE SAFE

one German and One French RemainPort Arthur

SprrtaJ CM ntipelch ta THI ailsBKRUN 21 The Togtbloitt cor-

respondent learnsLieut de Frenchattache who was believed to have leftPort Arthur about July 15 since which

he has not been heard from wasArthur on Sept 10 It i

probable that ha Is still with the Russiangarrison

The Chinese junk in which the Frenchand German attaches were thought tohave left Port Arthur was it appaaraturned back by the Japanese two daysbefore authority was received by the Jap-

anese commanders for their passage oftho Japanese lines One Germantook advantage of the permission and loftthe Another German naval

still in Port Arthur

GERMAN ATTACHE HONORED

Mikado Gives maser for the UaUeriRepresentative

Special Dtipalc to Tux SrxToxio Sept M The Emperor and

Empress gave a dinner tonight in honor-of Prince Carl Anton of Hohenzollem theKaisers representative with the Japanesearmy The guests included the ElderStatesmen members of the Cabinet militaryand naval officers and court dignitaries-The press extends a hearty welcome to thePrince It considers that the Kaiserssending him to view the operations at thefront IH evidence of friendly relations

the two countriesA despatch from the Japanese Ccnsul

at Sydney N 8 W announces that theGerman Lloyd Steamship Company

to start a service to Japan Tillsbi apparently another German attempt

an inroad on Great Britains carry

It is rumored that Russia is to buyforeign journals published in

The JijiBhimpo notes thatJapans foreigntrade during the first eight 1904

was 19000000 yen inperiod last year The excess

exportS was 44000000 yen Usuallythe imports are larger than tho exportsexceeding them by onehalf It is probablethat the normal ratio will be cetlUhed

the end of the year The paper explainstho increase by the facts that domestic

have not been affected by thewar and that Japans control of the sea-

s nearly complete Furthermore the riceTop is 28 percent larger than usual whichs partly due tq the fact that this seasonin Increased area was under cultivation-

The Aiaki remarks upon the phenomenonthat the currency has not beendespite the fact that the of all de-

icriptions since the the waramount to 380000000 yen There been

advance in prices except for rice andbarley have been bought largely

The A aM attributes thefinancial condition to the cautious

policy of the Government and the careof the in guarding every

The exchequer notesGovernment local bonks of theirsurfeit of farmers deposits

MANY RUSSIANS DESERTERS

lejervUts Neek to Avoid Bring Sent tothe Far East

Sptttot CaM DMpaWt to TOT SonLONDON Sept 7 According to the

Russian correspondence the numof deserters from the lower ranks of

are enormous The police areoverwhelmed with the work of trying to

track themDesertion is becoming ra general that ithardly possible to cope with it Men

inscribed in one military district will beound living from hand to mouth and

passports hundreds of mileshoping that their existence will be forgotten-

The reservists are doing their utmostavoid being sent to Manchuria Even

some of the army not Inclineda go to the Far BO openlyThe correspondent says it seems thatimportant part of Russias plan of cam

was tokite Corca to between the

northern array and the besieger ofas got

ConfederatesHe article from the

thatwas a complete failure owing

the Japanese commandwould have bent to

attack Gen rearIan had to be abandonedThe Times remarks that this 1s almost

first allusion in the to theof

UalUe FleetCOM DtlfaMt SDV

PAste 26 Tbn St Petersburg corof the KeAo d Port says that

Russian Baltic fleet win sail for theEast on Oct 10

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COL LONG LOST HA

FOVND IN MANHATTAN ANDBE RESTORED AFTER 4O YEARS

A Good Bt r OM CHH WarIt to the Mttlury Museum atten the lists Nexttlon Roosevelt Will See It First

ORANGE N 3 Sept 28 Afterlain for fifty years In a northern bornethe campaign lint worn by Col John I

Mosby the Confederate cavalrymanlost by him when he was shot on DocJM4 is about to be returned to its originalowner For many years It has been inpossession of Mrs David Clives ot275 Central West

Recently Mra got Into communlcntlon with John Murwwn one o-

Moabye old troopers who now livesPars street Orange she told him thatbad a hat which she belongedthe noted guerrilla Mr Munsoiwrote to his old chief and has just receiveda reply to the effect that the hat in quei-tlon is undoubtedly the one he lost whenhe was shot Mrs Halsted hadsaid she would return it to Mosby andlatter authorized Mr Munson to get I

for has sent word to Mrs Hal tethat he will present the hat to themuseum whore it will bplaced with his old coat as a relic

There U a good story of the war con-

nected with this hat When Col Mosbwas shot he and a companion ThomasLove were eating supper at the house oa farmer named Lake in Farquier countyVa A party of the Thirteenth New YorkCavalry on a raiding expedition rodethe farmhouse and seeing the horses otthe two outside stopped to investigate-

In the scrimmage which followed Colwas shot through the abdomen

was Mosby despitethe pain of his had presence

to tear off the coat onwere the insignia of his rank and to throw

The Federal in and capt-ured Love to and womenof the officer in com-mand Inquired who the wounded soldierwas

Lieutenant Johnson sir replied oneof the family

In asked the Union officerOne of the troopers looking forward said

the mann wasnt in same breathand reaching for his he remarkedthat would be a dead Lieutenant soon

The officer hi of theand the wounded Confederates

boots spurs cloak cape andleaving him on the floor rode away

They left the two horses behind and assoon as tho was out of Lakeand members of his family hitched anox cart and took to a hidingwhere he helpless for twowas looked athe bunkie of Mr Muncon who had beencaptured elsewhere For a long limo they

their leader anThe after the scrimmage at the

farmhouse the Union soldiersWhile in camp made a search of theclothing captured and their

no when discoveredfrom the of the pockets that theclothing had been worn no less a

Mosby tho guerrilla ona was set it a great

incentive to man to capture himand were and

the soldiers stormed on theLake homestead to their

had escaped-In the course time the articles of

Moebys fell into handsto

Coles who command of the This

in whoseIt to his niecepossession it has been since

to Mr Munson Cotexpresses great happiness in getting his

saysit to President Roosevelt before heit to the museum It U a slouch hattype nowadays called the rough rider

a piece of

MILITIAMEN SCORED

For Not Preventing a Lynching CompanyMuttered Out

MONTOOMKKT Ala Sept 29 Oov Cun-

ningham this afternoon issued an orderto the Adjutant to muster out theyule military company whichprotect the life of Horace Maples a negrowho was lynched by a mob In that city onSept 7 Tho order was given upon therecommendation of the military court ofinquiry ordered by the Governor to inves-tigate the company failed-to its on that Thiscourt found That the combined forcesevidence introduced a life to

be taken unlawfully by a mob under cir-cumstances us in concluding

thereby reflecting serious discredit uponthe military into service upon

court found that R K Land Hay were entirely ignorant ofthen that on thethere was an entire lack of concerted effortor looking to the protection of the

or prisoners that was no orderfire and that when the

attack occurred the soldiers were sitting-on the steps and curbing eating supper

ALLOTTED TO ORVBERS MAN

Republican Nomination for Congress Inthe Seventeenth

The three Assembly districts in theSeventeenth Congress district have each

forward a candidate for the Republicannomination for Congress The probability

i the nomination will go to Williamof the The other

candidates are William H Smith of theVentythlrd and Harvey T Andrew of

Thirtyfirst conference lastat Avenue between

Odell districtthe understanding wa Judge

Thedistrict went 1500 Democratic two years

In the Thirteenth Congress district theRepublican candidate either William I

or Her bort Parson

Ronan Cruller Off LisbonYptctel CoNs nitpatt t Tn flux

LISBON Sept 28 The Russian cruiaor-erok which was last heard of at Las

where the Spanish authoritiesto allow her to coal or to remain

repairs her captain said shet reported port

JOTTINGS BOUT TOWX

Krlmd of Dr A Woodruff andifnoers of the Presbyterian Foreign Mis

art to beforeit sum on a tour of tbe Wut African

nnlah and unusualgeta

YOUMANS 7 DERBYT-he Correct Browns and

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Telephone

OKD 8TANIBY PostMaster General of

after stating that under a messagerate plan tile london telephone system hadrapidly grown to about 70000 exchange

said

11 The proper method of charge for an exchangeservice is under which the payment of the

fixed in proportion to their userIn the United Statee where during the last fewyears the telephone exchange system haslargely improved and developedcharge of this kind widely adoptedand have means of increas-ing tile

A plan under which subscribers pay Inproportion to their user was introduced inManhattan anti The Bronx old New York Cityin 1894 There were then less than 10000 tele-phones in the city In the same area there axenow more than 133000-

NBW YORK TBM5PHON8 COMPANY

CONTRACT OFFTCSBt-g Dey Street 3 W t 3th Street 83 5 U Stttet-

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XO IRISH HOME RULE

Hr Wywlham Opposes Plan for a LegitUUve Assembly

aptcitt CUM ctfprtcA to TUB BUN

LONDON Sept 27 The Right HonWyndham Chief Secretary forwrites to the Times criticising the

report of Lord Dunravens Irish Reformespecially the recommends

statutory legislative assemblyfor Ireland be instituted Mr Wyndhamsays

Without reserve or qualificationUnionist Government is opposed to themultiplication of legislative bodies withinthe United Kingdom whether in pursuance-of the policy generally known aa home rulefor Ireland or in pursuance of the policyknown as home rule for all round

Discussing the proposalsIrish finance Mr Wyndhamconclusion that the destruction of thoexisting departments charged theadministration of Irish financeway for the construction of some otherbody vaguely outlined IB a matter forspeculation proper enough for privateindividuals but outside the sphere of

politicsdoes not question the sin

cerity of the aaHOcIatlon Ho recognizesthe honesty of its Ideals and aspirations butbo says that the chances of their realizationare prejudiced not enhanced whenare confused with any plan howevertative for the multiplication of legislativeaaoemblies within tha lltnlto of the UnitedKingdom To any such plan nr

In and vague in feature theopposed

HAMBURGAMERICAN DIVIDENDLarger Than Lan Year Despite the Eats

WarHpiclat Deifatclt lo Tna Sux-

LIVEBPOOL 38 Surprise wasby the news that the Hamburg

Steamship Company hada dividend of 7H per cent

last year It had been calculatedthat the company had lost 150000 ia therate war but evidently the 3 steeragerate for the Continent more than recouped-it for the losses incurred through the 3rate from England

The Cunard company not having sucha resource la to show a reduceddividend-

An Easy Win for Young Peter Jackson3pttlal CuM Dtipatch to Tat Bute

LONDON Sept 26 Young Peter Jackson and Charles Knock met tonight in a

round match for 550 Jacksonin the third round

JAMES CALLANAN DEAD

wa a Fortune of SSOOOMuch to

DEB MOIRES Ia Sept Cala pioneer resident of Desmillionaire died this

ago of 82 He leaves an estate worth3000000 consisting of extensive farms

plantations in this State and old Mexicohas been one of the foremost pbilanthro

lets of the State for yearsand as he loavestone but collateral heirs itis expected that

will may contain many bequests tocharities

He founded Callanan College andmoot of the for

the Methodist here He waschief fund for erecta homo for tho to the Home

or Friendless He was a liberalsubscriber to the support of the State

waswas a native of Now York

of that State

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Are you ready for a suddenFallFall

suitsFall overcoats andFall underwear

glovesFall Derbies and soft hatsFallAH up by

man or boy

ROGERS PEET COMPANYJM Broadway coT Warren

IttUW Sit crdtn

raincoat

shoeswaterproofed

all4 11 U

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53 Broadwaysad

255 Sresdvsr p4s

TO KEEP DISEASE OUT OF

Dr Dartlnston Tells the County MedleatSociety About PresentHealth CommissIoner

ton told the County Medical Society atthe New York Academy of Medicine lastnight about the precautions used by theHealth Department to prevent the spread-of contagious disease to the schools Htraced the work from the beginning in18J8 when 160 inspectors wore to workto the present day of more elaborate pre-cautions

Dr Darlingtons paper showed thatthere was a great increase In the number-of children excluded from the lestyear over those excluded in 189T

being 41826 aa against 7084Dr John J Cronin assistant

cal inspector read a paper workof summerDr Robert J Wilson Resistant bacteriolo-gist told of disinfection aa tothe department and Dr Tof a on The specifictreatment of pneumonia

These for the oemwere nominated PresIdent Dr

Henry 8 Stearns DrCrandall and Dr w L Carr sec-

retary Dr J V D Young treasurer DrRichardson

BtMINBM NBTIOBS

There U CBljr ae-UVHBAT A LAKMAKS FtouoA WITBX

The drat choice among toilet perfumes

mn aocttter ffyrnpMn tk reoM MMHuSo-

aEir patarant wla ferfhC ITT

DIEDCORCORAN Haanah Corooran BM

rears bdovad wife of John Oanona diedSept M 1M4 after lout lUnen

Funeral from her late raldeaee m CtenyNew Tort cUr oa Tknnday Sept at i

P U Oonaeettrat papeta plUM concnOCKEnOa Sept M at naroHabK Ussf

Henry Horses Crocker aged M reaoFuneral services will be held at Bamtabi

Wednesday Sept 38 on arrival of a apectrain leaving the Button Bottoa oatrack it at 140 P U ReturnIng loire Beesable at t P II

DONAIJT Lanneelot R Mr andA J Donallr al their homo Teaatf N tSunday 10 P U anddenly u 19months

XICKSOa after Uo c B 0tneat patiently sad courageously bornehla nth year

mend anti relatives are Kspeotfullr iavttxto funeral unite on Thursday Sept aa at-St Paula Evangelical Lutheran Owen West22d au ath av at t P U

Kcnsloo CemeteryFtANNEBY At residence ill Peas tt

Brooklyn la th Mtb year of hl ace DealtFUnnatr lather of the Rev ft o runnerrv

Requiem Thursday morning at 10 oclock 4-St Patricks Chuica Kent and WIQoutby-

FLEiacnUAKNAt his late TeaMence 4 Wednth tt early Smooj morning Sept X LouisP Flrbehmann the Mth YOU of aU

Funeral prtv-

OILMORE In New Tnk dtr on Stcrdar Hcph-J4 Rear Adatnl Fernando P CUmore n S Nretired

Funeral wrvleM and Interment en Wednesdayat r P U at Aonapotla Md-

UARTtNAt Mount dtiaeaa Won on aqA 34-

1W4 Wary J beloved wUe of Bcaacd tv-UarUa

Funeral from ber residence Ut West lEtsat Tuesday l A theneo to OtoroB BUJoseph SIb av and Washington place Intermeat III Calvary Friends sad rtlat e anr-etpecttuUy Inrlte-

dUcCAimnfAt Lone BraBcnM J cm Moo4Sept M U04 Joha O UoOarthr of ill W

t New York In his nth YearFuneral services at St Jo epa Church

end TTaahtniton Wedqudar nentejrSept M at ta-

BOAOD or MANxam or THX notuir CATWO

uo OarnAK ASTLCM At a special neettnrof the Board of Uanafen of Uw Aomam-Cathotlo Orphan Asylum la the City of NewYork held on Uondar Sept M 1104 th totlowing resolution waa adopted

AfiolMtf Tbe Uanaccn ot Stamen Oathollo-OrphaaA Flumln tn of New York harelearned with the deepest rest of the deathof their aaaoctate Mr John a UoCarthr wo-haa beeo alnoa l 8e a menbr of tile Board at-Uanar f for over aeveatMa rean Ha tRIMurn and at the time ot hla death was secondvice prest dent

The memboca of the Board desire to add theirtnumonr to that ot all other who have bernthe eoUboiH of Mr UoOarthr In Uicharitable works to hi witting and o-

vatlon In every cause III which he baa eacacedand to ezpiTU their n ot the treat IOM

which the CatboOo and the orphaanhave iruflemj In hla death

Jon M FAautr ArehbUhopPresident

niUNELANDe At Stookbrldft Maw SeprIS auddentr Fredoln William RhlnelaaderNow York aced n rear

Funeral aervlaea at Calvan Church 4th av andHit at on Tuesday flept IT at u oclock

UITHOn Monday Sept M 1KM John ItSmith

Funeral from lUslat residence No 12 St JohnAplace Wednesday Sept It at MA U thenoi to St Auruntoea R C ChurchSixth av sit Milling place BrooklynUrea and tOi ads membera of the CatholicClub and Mtnhaitaa College Alumni raprally Invited Interment In Calvary

7EMBTKBIE8

MnaUrm S 14 acrfiParti n sun St N Y-

WANTKD information M to the whettarxwlnettofkln o Alice or Mrs Mall

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