VRIKXDS WON RI'SSIA. THE LI'S Walsh's Union Theory Jumps ...of Germany althoaph \u25a0 very trivial...

1
. The polypus had no stem, as usually is the case but spre.id itself on the edge of the left \u25a0Oeal ccr*. HOT this HIKWI the operation was more complicated than arltb an ordinary vocal cord pulipua. ir.jismuoh as it required cutting BjOUlid ii. ..<-r to make \u25a0 stem. Obcatne took e!Tect on the patient excellently. \u25a00 that Dr. Schmidt could use \u25a0 laryngaJ knife Bita rrecision and separate the polypus from the ndiaicTit tissue, with the exrertfon of a slight ligament. He then Inserted a laryppeal forceps sad eztractad the whole pel} pus at the first ef- Boct Th« Emperor m.nde no diFturbinsi motion. The bteedtag was somewhat profuse, hut it 'lid DOl r.' mire sjiei i.il treatment to check. As the en- . efl VOCal Cord v.as Inflamed and reddish bofor<* the operation, it will take considerable tfaM to restore the normal condition. Such an affection of the cord is nothing unusual. It is no sipn of a more serious disease. The result of the microscopic examination was in the hands of the En.peror and his physi- cians f-ix homa after the operation. This record v.ir.e for Bid indurn'mp, coloring and prepar- t&g of mirrosropical segments \u25a0 due to a new ir.v. utloß cf Professor < 'rth, which was used for the first time and Is unKnown outside of the immediate circle of his medical frier.. ls. The in- vention is a very \u25a0 pM process of indurating tissues for raacopfcal Investigation, where s of jurisprudence require the speediest possible determination of facts. Such examina- tions hitherto have required twenty-four hours. Description of Operation— Professor Orth's Invention. Berlin, \u25a0\u25a0-.v. 13—The "Frankfurter Zeitung*' prints th? following details of the Emperor's operation, obtained apparently from Dr. Schmidt, whose heme is at Frankfort: THE KAISER MENDING. Of the SI 000 authorized for the construction of the municipal buildin* W.«O was «i .aside for are now^ widely aeyarated are to bo prov ded for in the new building. The Police P.«jtment_ S3ST .^ra^'^SL^^ofl^ floor will be devoted to the various tax bureaus and the Bureau of Water Rates. t v^ tv^Tfnot r ot' S be' KgS^ Court House and the new sss^sres which would make necessary cutting seieral reel oft the new building as planned. Technology, who was chosen by Horough President Rwan«trom to pa?" on the ten pirns submitted, was opened yesterday in the Borough President's office in the presence of all the competitors. It was not until then that any one knew the name of the successful architect. Professor Despradelle also recommends that the plans submitted by Woodruff l^eeminp and Daniel E. Ward b> purchased by the city, as they incorporated several ideas that could be used to advantage in the new building. According to Mr. Hull's plans, the municipal buildm will occupy the site of the present build- ing, in Municipal Park, in Joralemon-st.. and will The report that the Villa Cirio, at San Remo. rly OCCUpiea by the late Emperor Fred- ced for Emperor William is ;i Office here. Tlie henlinE: of his majesty's wound is pro- ntlrely Battefactory a manner illetin will be Issued the day . row. r remain* at the Now Talace to \u25a0 .i.nly examination of the wound. la forbidden to ride, speak or take h tooda or drfnka, t th-- palace is, nevertheless, rfuL The following bulletin was r.nd Often longer, when the tissues to be ex- . awra extensive and In many segments. The Emperors polypus was taken at many apples for examination. The DaUpMa rrhnbilitation of Count I^rr.s- 4orff may tsc&n tnat their party will not ad- vocate the t< 'inquishr.if i.X of IfanrtlUtla, 1. \u25a0- rauae of Its beinp a vested Interest of Rtttsia. and as the present attitude of China renders its relinquishnicnt Impossible they niay favor a moderate, peaceful course, inrltiding th recog- nition of China's treaty obUgratioami If the pr r- lncr eventually is absorbed politically, the real •tracgle of Manchuriati policy promises to come at the ineetir.p of the Committee of the Extreme Orient. early in December, when Admiral Alexieff will personally present his views. Understanding With France and Germany in Far East. Ft. P<«Ter«!bttrp Xov. IS.— There is much satis- faction here at the rerurt of the Czar* visit abroad. It is hcl'.cvcd that \u25a0 com; undor- *tan<Sine; was reached with Oermany and France rcrardir.jr the Near and Far F.r.st, making for peare and rendering H«?!«ia'!' rear secure in case of future hostilities with Japan. .While the dar.p. r of hostiKtie* i* oonsiJcrcd over for the present. In spite of the warlike tone of the Eastern dispatches. It 1? realized that the FCttle- ment is rrsere'.y patchwork. A hiph official pr.;d: ICusrlr. w.irts psjafle, bOl *^ r tt ren.iy Btf war. Japan, fi .clirz v? prepared, fear* the t'-Ft. The Foreign Minister. Count Lamailßrlt. has profited by t)e happy consoquenoes of the Czar's trip. The mir.iste'--s position was considered to be insecure whrn hr went abroad, and ail ros:R- natio.i v.ould rot have beCD unexpected. The fart iha; Admiral Ale\i.rT. the Viceroy of Ibe Far Hast, as eaatOatug an independent course In Manchuria, without repard Bar the Foreign OfDoe, «m emharraaelnsr to Count a*jar#i who. l«rsid<--5. was opposed ly M. F.csubraieff. xi-ha is a n B*er of the OOBBBtfttaa of the Orient and recrr.'. iv «raa in Mph favor with the Czar. What dM Czar heard abroad coincided with Coast 2^amsdorff> counsels. It is positively known thnt his majesty te',eprr\pr.od 10 Admiral Alexieff thnt there must be no war. It is. how- ever, problematical as to whnt n.".y happen \u25a0when the Czar returns and M. Berabraieff pets nis majesty's enr Count LsXßadortt, Oeufisj Kuropatkin, the War Miniver, and M. d-> Wi-.te. PrcFifient of the C«t:ncil of MiniMts, are <io?e- ly allied. A UUSSO-CHIXESE FIGHT. Imperial Force Reported Purposely Taken for Robbers. Ticn-Tein. Nov. 13. It is reported here that Russian troops marchlrpr toward Shan-Hai- Kwan encountered \u25a0 force of in.porial Chinese troops and that fle-htin;? ensued, the Russian?, it js -:-ort<--1. prete*vlins thru the imperial force \raf a band of Chinese robbers. Altopether over 10.00 lmr^rial troops have rrossed the frontier into Manchuria. A NEW RAILWAY IN CHINA. Line from Kai-Feng-Fu to Ho-Nan-Fu—Tc Open Wheat Couutry. Shanghai. Xov 13. The Internet: in.-i East- ern Company lias signed a contract for the con- fclruction cf a railroad from Kr.i-Fenp-Fu to Ho- Kan-Fu. vith a probal !c pubsequent extension to Slan-Fu. The cxtiriation of what is officially called a potypaa from the left vocal cord of the Emperor of Germany althoaph \u25a0 very trivial operation in Itself cnrri.s with it a preat deal of significance regarding the possibility of a speedy and abaolute of "he diaeaw. In fact, the whole question turn? Uk a the rrognosis of the case, to Car the reports are favor uhle. ar.d the microscope baa de- cla-ed t'.v Rrowtto t-> be myxomatoua in character KBd free from any cvldcnoes of malienar.cy. lion toportant than this is the consideration the SSSS of heredity, in determining the ulti- mi'. outlook f«T the d'.Ftinijuished patient. in "arly Sw r cent of the reported cases of lanmgeal cancer otM or other of the parents of the victims died of the disease. In the case of the Kaiser, both Ma father and mother were affii.-t.-d with malignant dioease, as also waa hla uncle. His father 'iv.i. but little over a year after throat symptoms V,,-. .. x . lop d and his mother died in the Hum rou? affertion of the breast, r rom tbe .-i.i< of heredity his prospects are certainly not . .. strongly guaranteed aeainst the possible ma- Urnant development of what now appears to be OOl) aa Innocent intralarynceal trouble. ... \'ll it;i^ BbowK that co long as any portion of any BUperfluoun «:.ithelial prowth remains in a person of susceptible age and especially if such an excres- : cence be subject to mor^ ci less conUnuona irrita- n no one can »>e absolutely .- if. against maiip- dexeaeratlon. Thus, it is always a very ltn- portant question whether or not the disease is thoroughly eradicated at the first operation, and al«o whether or not the wound neals In the short- est possible me. It i? pr^erally admitted that In proportion to the early and complete fulfilment of these conditions is the tendency to recurrence reduced. [a any event, months of time must elapse, even under most favorable conditions, before all anxiety r 3n he allayed repardinq a possible recurrence of th<« excrescence. In the mean while, it will be necrs«.iry to keep a strict ana constant watch for «ny unfavorable symptoms. PRELIMINARY WORK ON THE CANAL. Assemblyman Graeff Suggests That No Bonds Be Issued Before Spring. ;rr isuasaara TO THE THir.rNE.l Albany, Nov. 11 ls"1 Illif JHHII Graeff, of Essex County, the Granger, who afce during the recent Bvasi for a I'- 1 " "-ton barge canal, talked with Mr. fymeu. the Secretarj' of State, to-tlay about the pr«Xh9ittmry work on the new canal. Secretary O*Brtea is one at the State commissioners of the canal fund, who are authorized by the barge canal act to mpenrtse the Isaac of canal bonds. Assetn- •; :a. ff sat'l: I tßCSestod to Mr. OTrien that it would be bet- ter business for the ooaunlasJoa to wait until ••• dlrecti&g aa is.-u< of bonds, awing to ;he present stringency of the money market I -.1- wHI tiring a letter price In the spring. The . . : work by tbe State Engineer could ; ime, iis he docs not need much money to start with. SOUTH AFRICAN TRAIN ROBBED. Fifty Thousand Dollars Consigned to a Pre- toria Bank Stolen. PHtllTif. Nov. 13.—Two men tr»-<lay boarded a nflvas 1 train .-is it ma B«<"endinjj a steep grade l^etwern Pietersburjr nnd NylttrSOCß. overpowered the guard, looted ths treaeare ear and mad* their crenr 0 - UM robber?, it la reported, obtained PMM wolea was coastsned in tilt Biandard HanK, at IT.'' ;. ;.. \u25a0-].- of waka Pr. George F. irints an editorial in th's weefc*a Affeettoß of the German Em- . Fays: Kai-Feng-Fu is the capital of the Province of 80-Nan, and If situated V* miles north of Ilan- Kow an<s 130 mile« east of Ho- Nan. Ho-Nan-fu 1? wXaaftef la the northern part of the province of that namp. Elan-Fu. also referred to as Si-Xsan-Fu. is th^ capital o' the Province of Shen-Se. *Wt is situated In the midst at vast wheat BaMi ani at the con- vergence of trade routes in si! flltUwa. The Km- pr»FS Dowager fled to Si.m-Fu o:i A::euft 13. ls<«t. about fKlf Hjiil hoan previous to tbe rapture of PekinK by"tht troops *f the allied powers. AX OPEN PORT IX CORE A. Minister Allen Going to Wiju on a TVarsliip—Xo Threat Involved. Washington, Nov. 13.— it is teamed here the l"nitcd Slates g-overnmcr.t i? ?eek*r..r to have the port of Wiju, Corea, opened, vh'le Great Britain and Ja; an have Wfflf t lfTl '1 in favor of opening the port cf Ycnyamrha T}iis govern- tnent ha> made ccr.sidenibJe [if ngUll in tin mattfr. arid it ti BB* ?::i'\ that I*^'t< J Bt i'iutetfr Allen, «we has br-«-:i it Yokohama, b p.boj-t la prajßßßi from that port to Chemnlpo, Corea. on an American warship, in pursuit or this mission. The purpose i«= to bOAOT the Co- rpans by the i'f«M» of aa Ameriran vesad of modern type, anrf it m*A that there i? aV>so- lutcly ro .... use pressure cf any k::. ( 3. Tbc orfttoal request >f Corci raa madi by ibe Tnited States Charge d'Affamr. and DOW Mr. \u25a0 Doroe it. VTUa i> SlracUy opposite the port of Anttmc. v/hich is I ' opened to trnde by China Bsder the n< v trCSQf, md is "n Important point <:\ real road rumiinp frcm P»-kin« to the < o- yc-an capital. Cnftcd .ctat<--s. c tat<--s naval ofllccn have Inspected the pine- -*\u25a0<\u25a0<\u25a0 ;ly. and decided in it* favor as np.v>:M V< :• = npho, ar.J it is al i o 1 out that thf popsesfion of a considcra- hle ooaceMtaa il Tor;c.-.n pho by Buart.im mi^ht :-.\-'vr tUtctliadoßai DampDcatloea \u25a0i presenting t>« '.aim lor an open port there. NEW CHINESE TREATY DISCUSSED. Hay. Lodge and Rockhill Dine with the President, Washington. NY. IS.— Oucnftaif Hay. Senator 3U>dge and Director Pockbill of the Bureau of Arr.f -\rvnRerublir? <sine<i trlth th« Prrrider.t at the Wh Baaa \u25a0 I Rhv (aCanaaSy discussed the r.cw Cblnese treaty, awJ Is «si>ccted to reach v. Sngtcn ir. a few r.r.y \u25a0 . Why Ru»»ta r«not Evacuate M.ia'hurla. la ;•- taorro«r'» Tribun«". VENEZUELAN CASES CLOSED. Court Considering Decision Final Speeches Before Arbitration Tribunal. ffea Hum-. Nov. 13.— The fflßMßßatea Arhltmtion Tribuna' ad'ourn-'.^ to-day sln^ •: -r-.ments havir.; been concerted. Tiie court will now con- rJrter 'ts derision, r.rd will jnfo-ra thc^c hill lHafl of taa date of it* faVvcry. The rlcrlns proceedings van lr/f. Ri*jlimfcr tfce T'r.lted State?. Juc£<? I'^naeld ir.nintainei that the -ckadinfc- ik>»t«.. IB the protocol of February :3. atT.doned n'.l claims for prirtlc^ed treatment. The DWtai atatakj he declared, t ould rom.-Jn {bJ.:Y.?vI to the cause of arbitration, f\rn " the decision a4are4 were ur.favn:al!e to Arr.' rica. Counsel was confident the trilranal'a verdict would f2 , \u25a0 :r, i he c-:nrr:en?e of the civilized world The tribunal anrcuncej that cor.i; Ma «tntement« «".Vrli 1 crtll a-.d Indudiaii December li. C Th« LS Attorney Oeneral. Sir HnN rt '"\u25a0 ay. Z \\ a ' \u25a0.''»-> ' \u25a0 .-••:.-• \u25a0X S&t*! aeeard \u25a0 ' •\u25a0''\u25a0:\u25a0" M-nl^ar»aC«r.' - Jifovec-.ber IS- OJXIE ABANDONS TOUR. Wilmlnrton. N C. Nov. !3.-On account of a tbjraatun-* attack of acute mill llflllfMl. H«r.ry I- Dixey ttarring in Frohmar.'* "Facing the Must,- jlaclflrcto abanooc hi» Southern tour here to-r.:sM. md the company will return to-morrow to .New- Xoxjl. SHIRTS ARE THE BEST AT THE PRICE . £TT, PtABOOY A CO. r^&fsareJL Filing of Lease to Public Service Corpora- tion Shows That Its Term Ie 900 Years. It was diP'-losed in Newark yesterday that the Public Service Corporation, which the public thought bought outright all the trolley companies it absorbed, has control of the companies under l<>as*-3 for a term of nine hundred years. The lease of lie Orange and Passaic Valley Railway Com- pany was filed in the County Register's office at Newark late on Thursday afternoon. It Is agreed in the l*"»se that the company will be paid in r«ntau $3,00u on May I, 1901 and evrry six months thereafter up -o November 1 1005. After that the mount will be increased until Majr 1, 1512. after which $9.(< jo will be paid eimi-aiiiiually until the I termination of this k a: i in. BAKU uiko CAltanti thi: worm. Xl« to nltb the advertiser who Kfniln In In. copy : early (or The Miaduy Tillinnr. lit- M-rurn i>io[>?r <:..-\u25a0 ;(,;.. a autl fc >". I po»ltiua. DID NOT BUY, BUT LEASED. Leo Stevens Discusses the Trip of the Lebaudy Brothers' Balloon. RaaaHttOf tne fast time made by the Lebaudy brotr.crs' dirigibic balloon over a forty-six mil.: coursw Letwetn Moisson and the Champ dc Mars, Paris, en Thursday. Leo Stevens, the aeronaut. MM n Tribur.* 1 porter las: evening that it was rot the long Uip- that rnunted but the going to I |t«aa int r-^dr -^ d iia;:ii again. "I don't tee," rcr.jarkr-d Mr. Stevens, "where the L*bauUy brothers ace . labed anything. When tho> fjot up a thousand fc-ct they mlgnt have en- cc-nttrcd a strong wind which took them right along. I have no do.uM. how.-.or, that the Lebaudy Croth«rs ar.d Santos-Dumor.t are working on the risiu jirinciplc. and it is only a matter of apply- ing the power to the envelope. The envelope sup- ports a certain mount of weight, the gas cup- ports It in the air. a;id It's only a matter of ap- plying the power to j uih and pull you through th* air. "The speed attained by the Lebau<ly brothers, ac- cor<lirx to tne dispatches, is certainly remarkable. While ihey pnbaMV encountered a high wind, the ..• . . . rr.r \u25a0. have been on. la the ;.,;•.. r they h,i piled. If so, they have made a distinct advance In 6;x*e<l In uerortauti«». It would have bCCB i Letter :•: owf-vir. ii they had iOW rive miles and re- turned in whrro thry started. If th-y w<-r« not i-Lcvci tl. rough Un air ly th»- wind I think they i.avc Aoaa runarkabljf w-'-ii. From what I have r«uid. l.ov.ivtr, 1 am r<.>t afraid the l^obauJry broth- *ra will i-:liO»' the crtaicht spared at the St. Louis Lxiif.b.'iv-:.. •The L<;baid>s use ellera on the sides of UN '.tllooii; Sactcs-Dumont uirtd bis on the rear. whi!» 1 u-^e my propellers fore and aft At Man- hattan ll v .p::ch la.-t fall with my airship ! went to a certain rtolrt and back ap.iln. lam surprised .. •]\u0084•\u25a0 % does "ot ronsidir that th»-re i.i prot>- ... a*bich la lighter tfaaa hjrdro- . t _ |>hy»iral T rainier ia the Public SrbooU. la to-mor- row'» TrUiaac THINKS WIND FAVORED THEM. Says Irish Parties, Not the Tariff. Foster It in United States. London. Nov. 13.— 1n a letter to Miss Milner, eister of Lord Alfred Milner, Lord High Com- missioner to South Africa, Joseph Chamberlain contends that the argument that political cor- lUjitlon results from a protective policy is ab- surd. Mr. Chamberlain says: ' Germany is free from corruption, while in the United States, where there la a good deal of corruption, it is caused by the presence of the Iri?h political organizations. So far as the gov- ernment of the United States is concerned, noth- ing of the kind has ever been suggested to me, and the general purity of the administration hag Ice-en Increased of late years under the protec- tive system. The creation of trusts is also en- tirely independent of protection. We have al- ready seen such institutions, as. for instance, the Coats combination and the alkali trust. The system is likely to increase with the prow- im? tendency to cheaper production by combina- tions with larger outputs. CHAMBERLAIN ON CORRUPTION. BORIS SARAFOFF IN BULGARIA. Pr.f.i. X^v. T,-Buris Sarafoff. th Macedonian leader, with Fixty fo'.lowrrs. baa returned to Bul- \u25a0aHa. Ail the other insurgents and their chiefs tai previously returned to tola coui:tiy. On f->ur OOOaafaOi Sarafoa has been reported from Turkish sources to have been killed. Th« last oc- casion was in a dis; atch from Saljnica on October £2 last. This patch w.is repenad confirmed on the following cay. Eristol. Nov. 13.— Premier Balfour was the principal speaker at a dinner here to-night to celebrate the anniversary of the birth of Ed- ward Colston, the philanthropist. He devoted himself principally to the fiscal question, but did not advance any new arguments. Mr. Balfovr rpoke appreciatively of Joseph Chamberlain, who, he said, had given up every- thing for what he considered the good of the British Empire. He admitted that the tariff, like the navy, might be abuscl, but said he could not see why that consideration should bar the government from using either wisely. A new situation, saul the Premier, had arisen since the present fiscal policy of the British Empire had beer established, and further de- velopments of world conditions were sure to fol- low. It 'seemed to him little short of lunacy If they not only did not race th~ present situation. but if they did not prepare themselves for the dangers which were foreshadowed. Kir Michael Hicks-Beach followed the Premier. The appearance of the former Chancellor of the Exchequer on the same platform with Mr. Bal- four. although he had declared himself a free trader, aroused considerable interest and curi- osity. S.r Michyel explained his attitude by ac- cepting as the true diagnosis Mr. Bnlfour's be- lief that the present Government had still two or three years of life in which much useful work was possible, and by admitting that great injury had I'een done to British trade by the protec- tionist policies of foreign countries. Sir Michael said he was prepared to accept the policy of Mr. Baltour laid down in the Premier's speech at Sheffield. He was opposed to both illegitimate cheapness and illegitimate dearness through the operations of tariffs and trusts, but he favored the securing and the maintaining of natural cheapness. Sir Michael thought the government ought to be armed with the weap- ons of retaliation. If the choice had to be be- tween standing on old l'nes or a genuine change of fiscal policy, he preferred the latter. In conclusion, Sir Michael Hickß- Beach con- tended that the question before the Unionist party was not the authorized programme which he had steadfastly opposed, but the policy of the Premier, and he thought that th-.-y should now patiently await the government's proposals and strive for unity. On his arrival at Bri?tol to-day an address of welcome waa presented to Mr. Bulfour, In reply !•> which he declared it was the intention of the government. In the face of all the dlffl- < ultios raised by the opponent? of th^ proposed new fiscal policy, which made necessary n^w conditions under which the Industrie* of the country would be carried on. to pursue the path he had marked out. "not bound by wornout formulas which had a meaning and reality sixty years ago, but whose meaning and reality had b-. j en changed by the changing circumstances of the time." Edward Colston was a distinguished philan- thropist who was born on November 13, 170$. He founded a hospital, a free school and other chari- ties at Bristol, and his birthday anniversary has been celebrated by the Dolphin Por-iety (Conserva- tive) cjnrf* 1743; the Anchor Society (Liberal) since 17*. and the Grateful Society (neutral) since UK. Sir Michael and the Premier Speak at Bristol. AID FROM IIICKS-BEACH. BALFOUR GAINS SUPPORT. The InrgrlT Ue/.n.cd c.retttallo" or Thf •• is.tar Tnt»u»<. ns-cr»»»tate» ••r coins f* i»r»«« riirlr M»tur«l»r \u25a0 Itht. \ihrrlli«r« will eoniee '•• I tot hr •radii* I«•I «• t !,r«r ropy •' «»• I I *«\u25a0 lit-at poMlfet* itiimnil. 0 STUDEBAKERS' "EQUIPAGE." Studebaker Hros. Co.. the well known carriage mauuXaalurera, located -it Broadway, Se/enth-av*. su,(l roi^y-.i^hth-si.. have of lute been piiiilL-hiug a lomphlcl entitled "I^ulpaje." its purpose la id forth on Its title ptfft whkh rmdx "A month- ly magazine for UdlM .\nd Kfiuiemrn intire«it«d in fina horFes. appropriat< vehicles anil ronv.-r ap- poinUnents. M Among the tntcnttlnji features of the November iswue aie "The, Carriai{f"> of King Edward VII." "A Curious Cuban Conveyance" and •Appropriateness In Carriages." .*. Appellate Division Decides Dickinson Tried to Bribe Woodbury. The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court yes- terday handed d'<wn a decision rifllTiflUtfea deter- mination of Justice Wyatt, sluing as a committing maghtrat'?, to hold Alderman William Dtckiaadß for trial on a chnrge of bribery, growing out of a letter of his to Commissioner Woodbury, in which ho promised to vote for an appropriation desireJ by the Commissioner if he would instate a street cleaning drivtr named fVjvir.o. It was ci>i»tt:iil<<l by the defence that, as no money or property was asked for. the crime coulil not be proved. Justice LaughUc sa>s Hint, under the circumsiauo-!". it would ..^|mar Uiui th« Bldi i- rnitn desire i to o^'t»Jn a political or other (>er*onal anvantage by obtaining Corlno'| reinstatement uai! that he took advantage of the known desire of the Commissioner l*» k«-i i>ir appropriailon to Influence his action Improperly. AFFIUMS HOLDING OF ALDERMAN. PLENTY OF MOTORMEN'S JOBS. Oren Root, jr., manager of the Metropolitan Street Railway, has written to Commi»(.ion«r Will- lams, at Ellis Island, asking him to inform Eng- lish speaking young Irishmen, Englishmen or Swedes that thero is an opportunity for thtm to bo- come motormen by applying at the offices of the company. It will not be necessary for them to be- come citizens to get a ace. If they can satisfy the appointment clerk as to their ability $2 20 v day for the first year and a small increase there- after are promlsad to them. Commissioner of Deeds Pleads That His Ar- rest Be Kept from Dying Wife. With tears streaming dov.-n his furrowed cheeks, and bepging plteousjy to be permitted to go homo to a dying wife. Emll Ftlder. of No. 230 West One- hunared-and-twenty-s=ixth-!<t.. ;'n employe of the Department of Highways and a commissioner of deeds, was arraigned before United States Commis- sioner Shields. In the Federal Building yesterday, charged with taking acknowledgments to P'.ni'.on vouchers contrary to law. According to the Pet 5-ion Department. Felder had taken vouchers mailed to him by Jamts J. Reilly and Rose HcLaoghUn, and. signing their names •with a crocs, witnessed the piscnatur^s, and next added the names of two witnesses. The vouchers were then returned to the claimant*. Felder re- ceived a fee of 25 cents for each voucher. He ad- mitted that he had filled out f.venty ethers, signa- tures, witnesses or.d all. lie was held in $1,000 bail for the federal gr;inl jury. VIOLATED OATH FOR A QTIASTE2. Plan to Destroy Lung Block That of Idealists, He Says. A vicious attack on those who would destroy the consumption pest rpot known M "the Lung Block," situated la the section bounded by Hamil- ton Catharine. Cherry and Market sts., was made at the Board of Estimate meeting yesterday by Father J. B. Curry, of St. James's Church, which is pear the block, when the proposal to tear down the disease infected houses and build a park there TldlfnSt Marks, In district the block Is mated, saW all the remarks made about the necessity for a park in the neighborhood were falsehoods. Xnopf told the board that the existence of Fii.-h block- was responsible for consumption Ho added thut he had Inspected the tenement houses in this block, and. besides dark an.l un- healthy living room?, hnd »wn houses with filth in them and "Vo many pale faced children. candidates t0 {™™ K'^oko. jr.. of the University Settle- ment also a^oke in favor of the proposed pnrK. He declare,! .hat the block in question could not be put in a sanitary condition and made healthy by fumigation or dfalnfectlon. It must be destroyed. The board reserved decision. ATTACKED BY A PRIEST. Friends of "J. Ogden Goelct, jr.," Say He Is Far from Here. James Abeel, who is charged with deceiving Eleanor Anderson under the assumed name of J. Ogdcr. Goelet, Jr.," is now many hundreds of mile* from here, so friends of the Abeel family said yes- terday. It Is certain that the detectives are not any nearer his trail than at first. There are several friends of the Abeel family working in behalf of the young man here. One of them said yesterday afternoon: I am convinced that young Abeel is in Mexico or somewhere in the Far West. I have several reasons tor believing this. tho;.gn I have not heard from him. I don't wish to discuss the reasons. The very fact mat I haven't Heard ; irum him Id one. however, If he were here in hiding and read- Ins the daily papers be would know that I. n.a father* oid " friend, would protect him. and h.i would write me at once. He has not done so. Ido not believe the boy is crazy. He is simply young and foolish and has been flirting with Miss Anderson. who I believe. Is an Innocent girl. They have no strong charge against him. They cannot even prove that he wrote the alleged Van Every dispatch. I do not think the cape will be pressed. Now thai the real Ooelet is exonerated he ran have no great int.-e«t in pressing the rr.aitf r. Besidea, he did noi claim to be Robert Goelet. The runi'.v "A \u25a0 Goelet " is flctitioua— there is no sum person. I:!.; ,;.,.i.ts cannot maintain that he use.l the name of any of them." Benjamin 11. Stern, coun=ol for •William C. An- derson, father of Miss Anderson, called upon As- sistant District Attorney Lord yesterday. It is un- likely that the grand jury will take up the Abeel case" to-day, as its time is too much taken up with election cases. ABEEL MAY BE IN MEXICO Soy Strikers Delighted with the Attitude of President Eliot—Strike Ends. CambrMze. Mass.. Nov. i: The mesaenger boys e-f th* Barvard Square on:« of the Western Union Telegraph Company quit and girls were employed to di-liv.r t.'legmms. I*realrtent Eliot of Harvard Unlverrlty informed the- n:ina-,fr if th« ofTli.-c to-day th%t tiie rules at the. eoliefia .'.>rl-t.i.i:r.K women without escort from rtvlttns t' 1: .1 >rmit'!rl<*-< r •.-\u25a0' l,e ohscrvet?. Th« ftrlker.s txpreysed ;;reat "T,t!sfactlon, as most of th" tvi.-ilm n don- by th*> Harvard C-^iar* f>ffl.-,. was with students of the unlversltv. The strike waa ended to-ninht. FIFTY-NINTH-ST. WIDENING HEARING. The Board of Estimate, after a MM* rceaaa \u25a0•< yesterday. Mayor Low presMmsr. Controller Grout and President Fornes of the Board af A'.torata were absent. On th* widening of Firty-nmtS-tt the Mayor read a report cr Barbart C. P.assc. «an- matbii t"^ 13 ccst °-* tr - ? trr.r>rove:r^-.*s. nl&S&s the strert twenty UM en dM r.crth s!.!e froa Bceocd to Firth art., at IUSMR tty I^* ar.rcuneed that the .*rd w.vii.; resurre .iisrussioa «; the subiect. r>ut aided that he Ofr-ur.a".y t^oa?3 It should be Kfl fat the ImtimfWl a.lm:r: tr.i"xs. EX-OFFICIAL'S DAUGHTER DEMENTED. Miss Jessie Reynolds. eisht»>T. years oUI, '" S I IS West Eißhty-sec^n-I-st.. t*e zr?.-.<\ '.-::'• t ' Oliver Charllck, who for ObMMB fWH »» * police commissioner, was asraisned in Tuscm Market Police Court yesterday ar-.d tM for far- ther examination on a charge of tatnina S o6^ worth jr.tiT from ?-v<»ral rt-r>r-~ -tores frauti-ilent means. Her lowuel said tS»I Ml *^* BQff*rtns from k'.ep' on-.aiua. aad UtSt -- \u25a0- ••\u25a0 be placed in the tarr of a *p«" \u25a0 A MODERN JACK SHEPPARD CAUGHT. James Colgan. who was» caush: here en ITedm*- day night, yesterday was taken to the Cas- ern 9t ite Reformatory to ftri.'n h;s scr.ter.-e I IS3S Cclgan overpowered fnur guards and e;«caje<l from the Elmira Reformatory. II- was ci»u«bt soon afterward. In li*»i he f a.a?-: 1 fiBM tia Al- cany Penitentiary, sawb.y TTirilft^ Ol w:r.do» v ars of four rcom'', and lowering to w* ground b7 a rope mat!* of blankets. If* crjored freedom only for a few ,Uys. T-. rhe Easr- em State Reformatory he was placed n «H! eighty feet above the ground. Ottair.ir^ 3ta»C saw.*, he cut out the bars of a smitll window ir. t!S? rear of hi 3 cell, ma.i.? a rop» .sixty f«el I^S_?t bedding, ar.d after slidir< d-.wn th» 'f^ dro ?ea twenty feet tj iaa ground without injuring -i*" self. NO GIEL MESSENGERS AT HAHVAED. Some of the Paintings To Be Seen at Exhibition. Among the mar.y painting? which will be on view at the portrait show for the benefit of the Orthopedic Hospital, in the American Art Gallerie*. Madison Square South, on Wednesday next, may be men- tioned "Colonel Coussnaaker," by Sir Joshua Rey- nolds, lent by Mrs. W. K. Vanfierbilt; "Lady Miranda." by Sir Thoma? Lawrence, lent by George J. Gould: "'Portrait of a Lady." by Hoppner, lent by Senator W. A. Clark; "The Standard Bearer." by Itembmndf, lent by George J. Cliwßt; "Mr. Mus- ters." by Sir Joshua Reynolds, lent by Charles T. Barney; "Mrs. Ker," by Romncy. lent by George J. Gould; "William Winter." by Frank D. Millet; "Mrs. George B. Satterlef." by J. Carroll Keckwlth, lent by H. L. Satterlee: "R. Fulton Cutting-." by Leon Bonr.at: "Miss Alice Roosevelt.'" by Chartran. lent by Mrs. Theodore Haaaev«lt; -Mrs. Elliott." by Gainsborough, lent by Mr?. W. K. Var.derhilt; "Mrs. John Jacob Astor." by Carolus Duran; "Charles Lanler," by Frank Ball; "Lady with Fan." by Sir Thomas Lawrence; "Portrait of a Man," by Yon Lenbach: "Miss Marjcrie Gould." by Ft. C. Porter. lent by George J. Gouii: "ilr. Carlisle." ly Sir Henry R.vhurn . "A Burgomei3- ter" and "A Burgomeister's Wif». " by Rembrandt; Mr?. Hi.js," ty Sir Joshua Reynolds', lent by David H. King, "Anne, Countess of Clare." by Homney, lent by Senator W. A. Clark; 'Portrait of a Woman," by Roiriney. lent by St;i.u'ord White; "Robert Louis Stevenson." "Mrs. Charles B. Alex- ander" and "P. A. B. Widerer." by John S. Sar- gent; Mrs. W. J. Shannon." by J. J. Shannon; "Chief Justice John Jay." by Gilbert Stuart; "Mr*. John laard Mlddleton." by Thomas Sully, "Mrs. J. Clifton Edgar." by William Thorne; "Geur;e Wash- ington." i>y John TrunibulU lent by Colonel William Jay; "Portrait of a Gentleman." by van Dyck: "Mother and Child." by l»uu«Laji VoU. lent by Mrs. Paul D. Cravath; •portrait of a Laiir." by J. McNeil Whtitler. lent by A. J. Cassatt; "Miss J. Ir.ii'.-^'-." by Irving K. Wiles lent bj Mrs. Georsr- run.-.*: "Grover Cleveland." by Z< m. lfnt by Daniel 8. 1-amont; "Miss Content Johnson," by William M. Chase: "Mrs. Stanford Whit*." by G. Boldini; "Mrs. Richard Waisoti Gikler." hy Wyatl Eatun; "Mr*.Samuel S'.o*Q. jr.." by Frank Fowicr. and "Mrs. Potter Palir.vr," by Zf>rn. lent by Daniel S. Larront. Among the patronesses <»f the Portrait Show are Mrs. Astor. Mrs. John Ja<op Ast^r. Mrs. Gcortre J. Gould, Miss Helen M. GtottS 1. Mr». Vandtrbilt Mm--. William K. Vanf'.erbilt. Mrs. J Pierpont Morataa, M:<\ Levi P. Morton. Mr«> Charles B. Alexander. Mr? Chcr'ea T Barn 5 Mr?. John H >oart Warren. Miss Whti- \u25a0m Mrs. Hairy Payne V.'hitnev. Mrs. P-jiyne Whitney. Mrs. O. 11. I' B'imnnt. Mr.-. Henry fit >*'s Mr?. M. L>wi<ht Collier, Mr*, Seth Barton French. Warn iv.v •• . : -i:: !'U\;f ti. Mrs. Robert V.". D»> Forest, Mr.-. Douglas Kctinscn, jr.. Mrs. Henry Ifarauand, Mrs. Charles De Hbnm. jr.. Mr St'.iy- vesant FHh, Mrs. Theodore Vr.-.inghu>-?en. Miss C. Pnrnlsa. Mm Hewitt. Mi«s S. C. Hewitt. Mr?. >'. Oliver Isetia Air*. <'oi'jmv >u8 OP. ImHb, Mr*. Thomas Has ms». lira. E. 11. HaiTtnsn. Mrs. 7 rayton iv. s >tr.-^. rrts K. ion Mrs. J. Fr^.l- #rl." Ke.rnoi'h!' 1 .. -Mrs. Wrnidliury LanrAv. M' 9 errt LorlUart, Mrs. Setti : ->v.-. Mr« 3tanle> Mor- timer. Mr*. John W. A!inf.:rn. Mrs. Kobert C. Minturn. Mr.<. X F Sh«prir«! Mrs. Samuel Slo m Mr- W L Sirous Mrs 11. Mi !C. Tworr.bly. Mr*. !\u25a0 Walter Webb. Mr;'. Fr:i"k 3, Wirh-vt. -, Mr«. John M Woo'i^ury Mr«. Wi'.T'am Whitney, Mrs. Ooorpe Henry W»ri I, Mr?. Paul TBcltMttMti Mrii. Trcn«r '. !".rk. Mrs. Henry C. Potter. Mrs. George O. Hr.v. i, Jin. Oliver Je'inn.a;?! and Mr. Burt.>n Harri»o»i. Filipino Girl Folio-wed Marine on Army Transport Wedded in Philadelphia. [»T Tir.E»**AFH TO TH ntrccxr. J Philadelphia. Nov. ,13.—Horace Heslcr McCai:. •' : the marine corps, station at League Island. Ear- : ried to-night Juanlta Castro, a Fniplno girl. «M i travelled as stowaway on board an army transport Ito join him In this country. The w»d I took p'.art ' at the home of th-? family of the bridegroom, la ' Germantown. The courtship b«ran on the is!aa«i of i"sabe!!a rf» 1 Basilan. When McCal! was ordered horae the r.rl i disguised herself a«" i fruit ve:id \u25a0.• and boar««J tt« 1 army transport. When San Francisco was reached i McCall got a boat on a dark nigh' in.l rowed it , alongside th« transport HamHa clhaPsd to. v.,.;> ! the guards on the deck pretended rose-o se-' nothins. He was cent East. She got work. ar.,l he ttOM her money, and she came to town last OtSBL « . MADE INSANE BY NOISE OF TRAINS. Mrs. Nessle Vnsiman. forty years aW who cair* ' to this country from the interior of Russia 0M i months ago. and .as been Mag wit": brt i daughter. Mrs. Rachel Eoser.feldr. at Ste \u25a0 a:—- St.. was taken to the insane pavilion af B yesterday. She was made crazy, tier relatives sa :by the constant roar of the SeconJ-ave. c trains, which passed clo»« to n«r window. At t»»<» hospital she coutiaualiy triad ID imitate the sou* of the elevated trains. Forty-second-st. To Be Old Self Then, Says McDonald. "Forty-sceond-st. and Its neighborhood should be completely restored by December 1." •aid Jon? B M-Donald yesterday. "With the exception of four hundred feet on either side of Flfth-ave. the work is to all intents already finished. You mus. realize that not only has the roadway to be propped up by many feet of solid masonry for the Metro- politan Street Railroad, but the almost incessant Interruptions caused by passing cars, not to men- tion the gas. water and telephone complications involved in the underground work, render th« labor most difficult. "We have a large force of men at work on the urinni«h*d r«rtion. however, and I expect that within the r»xt two weeks the entire roadway. etc will be restored. Tho holes in Sixth-are., of. course, are mainly the telephone companies own C 7t C waV understood yesterday that several store- kefners and property owners along the affecteJ thoroughfare ire threaten^* damage sulta *f*ajMj the cit?- According to a statement made by Cbiaf Knaineer William Barclay Parson.-, the jr^ nersl ex- cavating outlook is m>w more roseate. Mr. P announced that .ill the eTravatinKfor t^e wbvray from the City Hall to One-hundred-and-nlnetieth- stTwas complete At th^ i>r"«ont rate of progress. he said the company would be running expelr- mental trains through th* entire tunnel aaaae urn in December. Some time in March or April, he expected actual traffic would begin over the entire system. AT THE PORTRAIT SHOW. Union Men to Snap Smokers of Non-Union Cigars. At a meeting cf the union laid committee of the agarmakers' Union, held in response to i hurry call. Spartan measures «m decided on yesterday to put a stop to the smoking of non-union cigars by union men. A kodak corps was appointed to go. equipped with cameras, to the neighborhoods where there are non-union cigar stores, and take snapshots of union men who leave them smoking non-union weeds. It is proposed to serd photographs of these men to their respective unions, with the request that they he dealt with In accordance with union meth- Oda. It la also proposed to keep th- pictures <rf all such mm in frames in conspicuous places at all U "t°la charged that the men most given »,£•«£ prave.l practice of non-union smokes «re high up in labor circles, and denounce non-union products in public. RESTORED BY DECEMBER A CAMERA CRUSADE. Union Official, Charged With Lor- arffJJF, Jumps Forty Feet. Despondent her*ii*e of suspicion as to his aa> counts as an officer of a lartor union, James a. Schmidt, fifty-one years old. a <"arp*n>r. of >;«, 2.0S Ma<lt#on-av» . who was h»!<l for th» jrrand fir? on a charge of grand larger. v !»y ihi:^:iv Bak«r. in Morr:s.<nU court, en November 5. commutes tail ci<l« In the Tombs prison yesterday a:t»rnooa. Hi» faavaai ovr the railing of the raOnj on tS% tMM flrr of cells. w.. re t* was COBBB*4 tad M forty fact to the stao* floor b*|ow. i:<» ntnirk bea.l f::-T't ar.^J ™.ishfd the top of hia skuiL, dyiri in* Vtaßtly. Keeper ll;tnsfe::ry T.-as s^rr.dlr.tf <fn .-c»l» a varcj away from the iipot wiwr« S:r:m;it lar.rt^/ Srhnii.lt ror.fl'ici to hla kei t*vn ta.it ir.e •»•*» wor- ried nwr criairt charta Bisai by Btsaban ifMa unlcn crnc^rninir an ail<*»e » «^.nrt;:^» in h:< »". counts as an oflJc^r of tn» orsan zatlsn. and v i (fßieil to pr»»y oi h!« rriTl. Th»* co-nn!alna»t axairtHt htm *».« Fr»<lenck «'arr»n*ton. -i 'ir^nter of No. :u Il.r'i '): \u25a0\u25a0:. ... 1: 'i-anrt-twer.ty-th;pl-it. ME. EUBBARD STILL HIS3UIG. Expedition to Explore Labrador's Intsrior Given Up for Lost. Bt, John ». N. K. Nov. l.r— The mall sutjaer which has Just returned here from Labruio- Mnga n'> news o; rh»> aaaaiMaa to -xalora the intor:or cf Labrador. > .'»i!' < 'l by LmbMm I£uV >"" I, Jr . of New-York, assistant editor of ~f>ut- '.-\u25a0\u25a0.' which started from RJ?olet. Labrador, n August 1. All th« (^r'l*-^ believe the party per. laaed. A tribe of Monta«rna.3 Indian wr.icn fcai been trapir.g In tne Interior, recently rtsited t!m '-oast and said they ww nothing of 0M | .bbca] fxpfflirion. tho'i* the rnfliar.s went LSO miles Is- land. Caspar Whitney. tfc» Editor oj Outing.' »!>• financed ar.-I organized the expedition of Mi assist. mf, LmoMU HuoSard. Jr., ID MlHUs*. the tsSntsi of Labrador, dismissed last ntsht's report.-? froci St. John's. N. F.. to the effect that the »x,v.!!r;n wa3 lost or destroyed. %m entirely unwarranted >y» the circumstances of the- case. The rumor tnat % relief expedition was being organized by "Outlay to search for the exniorer he also characterised as altogether premature. "We could not. A.-.i M not expect to. hear '- - HUMsjrd as yet." he saM. '•as it Is impo- have communication from the \u25a0tMsnaai w>.ere doubtless Is at the present time. The Indians w.*> brought the present reports aatj go a kaasl anl fifty miles Island, while Hubbard la going a r , than twice that distance. The other resorts, r notice, come from the seaboard. wi>re Hoibaxd and his party did net even intend to touch. I hay* not the slightest xr.lsgivlr.gs H to the party's »e!i being, nor has Mrs. Rubbard. who Is stayiag m\'J^ relatives In Quebec. The party Is travf>:i!r.g Bgit. caribou abound in the Labrador Interior, zr.i tot feature* there are ptarmigan and willow grous*. Hubbard. who la no tenderfoot, but a man of ex- perience and resource, had carte blar. :he as to hU route and itinerary, and I should not be srreatly disturbed if I did not hear from iinj until tiie b»- ginning of next year. "I have not even seriously considered such % thing as a relief expedition. Were I to orgar.lza such an expedition It SNll probably not start un- til next year. Even then It would be undertaken largely. I ana afraid, from sentimental motives. Se- cause se*kir.g for Hubbaxd's party would nv-ica re- semble the sear. for the proverbial needle lr. tlu haystack. ••Hubbard. Dillon Wallace, a New-York lawyer. and two Cr« Indians, with a sasoe. shootln? and fishing tackle, left Ri*o!ette. not or. August 1. .n reported, but about tat* beginning af Ju'.y. laM object was to penetrate to the settlement of Naj- rauppes In.!iani«. where. so far as know-.. m> white man has *'--er been. sDadful that ma vious expeditions, overloaded with impedimenta, had had to turn back discomfited from tr.» (;•:««. Hubbard and his party ttavcUsd wry Ugh* - -\u25a0 Ing to their prowess with tr.e r-nl :ir.d r:..<? to ob- tain food on the trip. As previously arrange* Mr*. Hubbard left the part. «on *::*?It Hubbard's plan was to work Itttood up tee HamU- ton River, using th« canoe un lake* and CtMBI until they were frozen over, when ;.-.* party was to take to snowshoes and proceed. He may {tare rone to Ur.sava Bay. or ajlf \u25a0!»\u25a0\u25a0, for all T k-.ow While there is ever uneasiness as to expe<:;; this character. I nave tie greatest cunflden.-e in Hubbard and bis aMlity to worry through. CAME AS A STOWAWAY TO XABBY. Accepted Theory of Mrs. Walsh's Death Funeral To-day. [by Tir.Er.nA-n 1 tot: Titrflf I Montclair. N 1.. Nov. 13. -The sensational «nicMe of Mr.«. E. Dt Witt Walsh In her home *\u25a0 upper Montclair on Wednesday evening daring a dinner party is bans] much dlscu*«ed among the large cir- cle of fricDda of the family. -Mr. Walsh saM to-day that there was nothing more to say concerning Ms wife's tragl~ death. He simply Kltefated Mi orig- inal statement thai Mrs. Walsh ended hat Bt* when seized with .1 sudden attack of acute Illness. None of the guest* who were present at the dinner party which had such \u25a0 tragic endlr.j willdiscuss jusi what took place before Mr?. Walsh shot her- self, and except for the statement made if Mr. Walsh there seems to be a disposition to k<-ep Chi details of the sad affair from being made public. Though Mr*. Walsh killed herself early In the evening the police .wrro not informed until mid- night, and the physician who was called to attend Mr. Walsh told newspaper reporters that Mrs. Walsh had shot herself accidentally. There will he no inquest in the case. Dr. McKenzi«\ the county physician, says he is \u25a0.bSOMJtij MtfwM that «he committed s ii- clde, and Prosecutor Utter and his detectives hold the- name net The Investigation made by the county physician closed the affair. Chief of Polic; Gallagher said to-night that there were no new developments in the case and be M not believe there would be. He was strongly of the opinion that the unfortunate woman had commitf-ii dM rash act at a time wh»n BOS wri 3 suffering Intense agony, and sought relief in death while temporarily Vhe'funerai will be held to-morrow a.'trrnoon. and will be private The Rev. Dr. Awry H. Bradford, pastor of the First Congregation p. Church. Mont- clair. is expected to officiate. The burial will '\u0084> at Montelalr Heights. SUICIDE IX THE TOMBS SHOT SELF WHILE IN PAIN NKW-lOtt* DAIi.V TKIBT7XE. BATUB&AY, NOVEMBER 14. 1903. 11l LI'S PLANS ACCEPTED. VRIKXDS WON TO RI'SSIA. RESULT OF CZAR'S VISIT. run through to Court-st. occupying lha around there now covered with a brick row. The design calls for a bulidlng tn the French Renaissance style of architecture, eight stories in height, to be fin- ished In blue Indiana limestone. Tlie principal en- trance will be in Joralemon-«t.. but there will also be an entrance !n Court-st. Mr. Hull :s a native BrooKlynlte and w.is grad- uated from Columbia University In 18*2. He is t..- archttect of the house being built for Senator WlllHm A. Clark at Fifth-nve. and Rewity-ser- ond-«t.. Manhattan. In *" >nternMior.al compj.ti- tinn of IT7 architects for the design or tne nui.u ings of the Univers'ty of California he won thi fifth prize. Brooklyn's New One Million Dol- lar Municipal Building. Washington Hull, of No. 16 East Twenty-third- st. Manhattan, is the successful architect in the competition for the best design for the new mu- nicipal building that Is to be erected In Brooklyn, at a cost of $1,000,000. The report of Professor Pespradelle. of the Massachusetts Institute of NEW ADMINISTRATIVE MUNICIPAL BUILDING, TO COST 51,750.000. Designed by Washington Hull. . 4

Transcript of VRIKXDS WON RI'SSIA. THE LI'S Walsh's Union Theory Jumps ...of Germany althoaph \u25a0 very trivial...

Page 1: VRIKXDS WON RI'SSIA. THE LI'S Walsh's Union Theory Jumps ...of Germany althoaph \u25a0 very trivial operation in Itself cnrri.s with ita preat deal of significance regarding the possibility

. The polypus had no stem, as usually is the

case but spre.id itself on the edge of the left\u25a0Oeal ccr*. HOT this HIKWI the operation wasmore complicated than arltb an ordinary vocalcord pulipua. ir.jismuoh as it required cutting

BjOUlid ii. ..<-r to make \u25a0 stem.Obcatne took e!Tect on the patient excellently.

\u25a00 that Dr. Schmidt could use \u25a0 laryngaJ knifeBita rrecision and separate the polypus from thendiaicTit tissue, with the exrertfon of a slightligament. He then Inserted a laryppeal forceps

sad eztractad the whole pel}pus at the first ef-Boct Th« Emperor m.nde no diFturbinsi motion.The bteedtag was somewhat profuse, hut it 'lidDOl r.'mire sjiei i.il treatment to check. As the en-• . efl VOCal Cord v.as Inflamed and reddishbofor<* the operation, it will take considerabletfaM to restore the normal condition. Such anaffection of the cord is nothing unusual. It isno sipn of a more serious disease.

The result of the microscopic examinationwas in the hands of the En.peror and his physi-

cians f-ix homa after the operation. This recordv.ir.e for Bid indurn'mp, coloring and prepar-

t&g of mirrosropical segments \u25a0 due to a new

ir.v.utloß cf Professor < 'rth, which was used for

the first time and Is unKnown outside of the

immediate circle of his medical frier..ls. The in-

vention is a very \u25a0 pM process of indurating

tissues for raacopfcal Investigation, wheres of jurisprudence require the speediest

possible determination of facts. Such examina-

tions hitherto have required twenty-four hours.

Description of Operation— ProfessorOrth's Invention.

Berlin, \u25a0\u25a0-.v. 13—The "Frankfurter Zeitung*'

prints th? following details of the Emperor's

operation, obtained apparently from Dr. Schmidt,

whose heme is at Frankfort:

THE KAISER MENDING.

Of the SI 000 authorized for the constructionof the municipal buildin* W.«O was «i.aside for

are now^ widely aeyarated are to bo prov ded for

in the new building. The Police P.«jtment_ i«

1° S3ST .^ra^'^SL^^ofl^floor will be devoted to the various tax bureausand the Bureau of Water Rates.

t v^

tv^Tfnot rot' Sbe'KgS^Court House and the new sss^sreswhich would make necessary cutting seieral reel

oft the new building as planned.

Technology, who was chosen by Horough President

Rwan«trom to pa?" on the ten pirns submitted, wasopened yesterday in the Borough President's office

in the presence of all the competitors. It was not

until then that any one knew the name of the

successful architect. Professor Despradelle alsorecommends that the plans submitted by Woodruffl^eeminp and Daniel E. Ward b> purchased by the

city, as they incorporated several ideas that couldbe used to advantage in the new building.

According to Mr. Hull's plans, the municipal

buildm will occupy the site of the present build-ing, in Municipal Park, in Joralemon-st.. and will

The report that the Villa Cirio,at San Remo.rly OCCUpiea by the late Emperor Fred-

ced for Emperor William is;iOffice here.

Tlie henlinE: of his majesty's wound is pro-ntlrely Battefactory a mannerilletin will be Issued the day

.row.

l»r remain* at the Now Talace to\u25a0 .i.nly examination of the wound.

la forbidden to ride, speak or

take h tooda or drfnka,

t th-- palace is, nevertheless,

rfuL The following bulletin was

r.nd Often longer, when the tissues to be ex-. awra extensive and Inmany segments.

The Emperors polypus was taken at many

apples for examination.

The DaUpMa rrhnbilitation of Count I^rr.s-

4orff may tsc&n tnat their party will not ad-vocate the t< 'inquishr.ifi.X of IfanrtlUtla, 1. \u25a0-

rauae of Its beinp a vested Interest of Rtttsia.and as the present attitude of China renders itsrelinquishnicnt Impossible they niay favor amoderate, peaceful course, inrltiding th recog-

nition of China's treaty obUgratioami Ifthe pr r-

lncr eventually is absorbed politically, the real

•tracgle of Manchuriati policy promises to comeat the ineetir.p of the Committee of the Extreme

Orient. early in December, when AdmiralAlexieff will personally present his views.

Understanding With France and

Germany in Far East.Ft. P<«Ter«!bttrp Xov. IS.—There is much satis-

faction here at the rerurt of the Czar* visit

abroad. It is hcl'.cvcd that \u25a0 com; undor-*tan<Sine; was reached with Oermany and Francercrardir.jr the Near and Far F.r.st, making forpeare and rendering H«?!«ia'!' rear secure in

case of future hostilities with Japan. .Whilethe dar.p. r of hostiKtie* i* oonsiJcrcd over for

the present. In spite of the warlike tone of the

Eastern dispatches. It1? realized that the FCttle-ment is rrsere'.y patchwork. A hiph official pr.;d:

ICusrlr. w.irts psjafle, bOl * r̂ tt ren.iy Btf war.Japan, fi .clirz v? prepared, fear* the t'-Ft.

The Foreign Minister. Count Lamailßrlt. has

profited by t)e happy consoquenoes of the Czar's

trip. The mir.iste'--s position was considered to

be insecure whrn hr went abroad, and ail ros:R-

natio.i v.ould rot have beCD unexpected. The

fart iha; Admiral Ale\i.rT. the Viceroy of IbeFar Hast, as eaatOatug an independent course

In Manchuria, without repard Bar the Foreign

OfDoe, «m emharraaelnsr to Count a*jar#i

who. l«rsid<--5. was opposed ly M. F.csubraieff.xi-ha is a nB*er of the OOBBBtfttaa of the Orientand recrr.'. iv «raa in Mph favor with the Czar.

What dM Czar heard abroad coincided with

Coast 2^amsdorff> counsels. It is positively

known thnt his majesty te',eprr\pr.od 10 AdmiralAlexieff thnt there must be no war. It is. how-ever, problematical as to whnt n.".y happen

\u25a0when the Czar returns and M. Berabraieff pets

nis majesty's enr Count LsXßadortt, Oeufisj

Kuropatkin, the War Miniver, and M. d-> Wi-.te.

PrcFifient of the C«t:ncil of MiniMts, are <io?e-ly allied.

A UUSSO-CHIXESE FIGHT.

Imperial Force Reported Purposely

Taken for Robbers.Ticn-Tein. Nov. 13.

—It is reported here that

Russian troops marchlrpr toward Shan-Hai-Kwan encountered \u25a0 force of in.porial Chinesetroops and that fle-htin;? ensued, the Russian?,

it js -:-ort<--1. prete*vlins thru the imperial force\raf a band of Chinese robbers.

Altopether over 10.00 lmr^rial troops haverrossed the frontier into Manchuria.

A NEW RAILWAY IN CHINA.

Line from Kai-Feng-Fu to Ho-Nan-Fu—TcOpen Wheat Couutry.

Shanghai. Xov 13.—

The Internet: in.-i East-

ern Company lias signed a contract for the con-fclruction cf a railroad from Kr.i-Fenp-Fu to Ho-Kan-Fu. vith a probal !c pubsequent extensionto Slan-Fu.

The cxtiriation of what is officially called apotypaa from the left vocal cord of the Emperorof Germany althoaph \u25a0 very trivial operation inItself cnrri.s with it a preat deal of significanceregarding the possibility of a speedy and abaolute

of "he diaeaw. In fact, the whole question

turn? Uka the rrognosis of the case, to Car thereports are favoruhle. ar.d the microscope baa de-cla-ed t'.v Rrowtto t-> be myxomatoua in characterKBd free from any cvldcnoes of malienar.cy.

lion toportant than this is the considerationthe SSSS of heredity, in determining the ulti-mi'. outlook f«T the d'.Ftinijuished patient. in"arly Sw r cent of the reported cases of lanmgeal

cancer otM or other of the parents of the victimsdied of the disease. In the case of the Kaiser,

both Ma father and mother were affii.-t.-d with

malignant dioease, as also waa hla uncle. His father'iv.i. but little over a year after throat symptomsV,,-. .. x. lop d and his mother died in the Hum

rou? affertion of the breast, r romtbe .-i.i< of heredity his prospects are certainly not• . •.. strongly guaranteed aeainst the possible ma-Urnant development of what now appears to beOOl) aa Innocent intralarynceal trouble. ...

\'ll it;i B̂bowK that co long as any portion of any

BUperfluoun «:.ithelial prowth remains in a personof susceptible age and especially if such an excres-

:cence be subject to mor^ ci less conUnuona irrita-n no one can »>e absolutely .- if. against maiip-

dexeaeratlon. Thus, it is always a very ltn-portant question whether or not the disease is

thoroughly eradicated at the first operation, andal«o whether or not the wound neals In the short-est possible me.It i? pr^erally admitted that In proportion to the

early and complete fulfilment of these conditionsis the tendency to recurrence reduced.

[a any event, months of time must elapse, evenunder most favorable conditions, before all anxietyr3n he allayed repardinq a possible recurrence ofth<« excrescence. In the mean while, it will benecrs«.iry to keep a strict ana constant watch for«ny unfavorable symptoms.

PRELIMINARY WORK ON THE CANAL.

Assemblyman Graeff Suggests That No BondsBe Issued Before Spring.

;rr isuasaara TO THE THir.rNE.lAlbany, Nov. 11 ls"1IllifJHHII Graeff, of Essex

County, the Granger, who afce during the recent

Bvasi for a I'-1""-ton barge canal, talked with Mr.fymeu. the Secretarj' of State, to-tlay about thepr«Xh9ittmry work on the new canal. Secretary

O*Brtea is one at the State commissioners of thecanal fund, who are authorized by the barge canalact to mpenrtse the Isaac of canal bonds. Assetn-

•;:a. ff sat'l:

ItßCSestod to Mr. OTrien that it would be bet-ter business for the ooaunlasJoa to wait until••• dlrecti&g aa is.-u< of bonds, awingto ;he present stringency of the money marketI-.1- wHI tiring a letter price In the spring. The. . : work by tbe State Engineer could

; ime, iis he docs not need muchmoney to start with.

SOUTH AFRICAN TRAIN ROBBED.

Fifty Thousand Dollars Consigned to a Pre-toria Bank Stolen.

PHtllTif. Nov. 13.— Two men tr»-<lay boarded anflvas1 train .-is it ma B«<"endinjj a steep grade

l^etwern Pietersburjr nnd NylttrSOCß. overpowered

the guard, looted ths treaeare ear and mad* their

crenr 0-

UM robber?, it la reported, obtained PMMwolea was coastsned in tilt Biandard HanK, at

IT.''

• ;. ;.. \u25a0-].- of waka Pr. George F.

irints an editorial in th's weefc*aAffeettoß of the German Em-

. Fays:

Kai-Feng-Fu is the capital of the Province of80-Nan, and If situated V* miles north of Ilan-Kow an<s 130 mile« east of Ho-Nan.

Ho-Nan-fu 1? wXaaftef la the northern part ofthe province of that namp.

Elan-Fu. also referred to as Si-Xsan-Fu. is th^capital o' the Province of Shen-Se. *Wt is situatedIn the midst at vast wheat BaMi ani at the con-vergence of trade routes in si! flltUwa. The Km-pr»FS Dowager fled to Si.m-Fu o:i A::euft 13. ls<«t.about fKlfHjiilhoan previous to tbe rapture ofPekinK by"tht troops *f the allied powers.

AX OPEN PORT IX COREA.

Minister Allen Going to Wiju on a

TVarsliip—Xo Threat Involved.Washington, Nov. 13.—it is teamed here •

the l"nitcd Slates g-overnmcr.t i? ?eek*r..r to havethe port of Wiju, Corea, opened, vh'le GreatBritain and Ja; an have WfflftlfTl'1 in favor ofopening the port cf Ycnyamrha T}iis govern-

tnent ha> made ccr.sidenibJe [ifngUll in tinmattfr. arid it ti BB* ?::i'\ that I*^'t<J Bti'iutetfr Allen, «we has br-«-:i it Yokohama, bp.boj-t la prajßßßi from that port to Chemnlpo,Corea. on an American warship, in pursuit orthis mission. The purpose i«= to bOAOT the Co-rpans by the i'f«M» of aa Ameriran vesad ofmodern type, anrf it i« m*A that there i? aV>so-lutcly ro .... use pressure cf any k::.(3.Tbc orfttoal request >f Corci raa madi by ibeTnited States Charge d'Affamr. and DOW Mr.

\u25a0 Doroe it.VTUa i> SlracUy opposite the port of Anttmc.

v/hich is 1« I' opened to trnde by China Bsderthe n< v trCSQf, md is "n Important point <:\

real road rumiinp frcm P»-kin« to the < o-yc-an capital. Cnftcd .ctat<--s.

ctat<--s naval ofllccn haveInspected the pine- -*\u25a0<\u25a0<\u25a0 ;ly.and decided in it*favor as np.v>:M V<:• = npho, ar.J it is alio

• 1 out that thf popsesfion of a considcra-hle ooaceMtaa ilTor;c.-.n pho by Buart.im mi^ht:-.\-'vr tUtctliadoßai DampDcatloea \u25a0i presentingt>« '.aim lor an open port there.

NEW CHINESE TREATY DISCUSSED.

Hay. Lodge and Rockhill Dine with thePresident,

Washington. NY. IS.—Oucnftaif Hay. Senator3U>dge and Director Pockbill of the Bureau ofArr.f -\rvnRerublir? <sine<i trlth th« Prrrider.t at theWh Baaa \u25a0

•I Rhv (aCanaaSy discussed

the r.cw Cblnese treaty, awJ Is «si>ccted to reachv. • Sngtcn ir. a few r.r.y \u25a0 .

Why Ru»»ta r«not Evacuate M.ia'hurla. la ;•-

taorro«r'» Tribun«".

VENEZUELAN CASES CLOSED.

Court Considering Decision Final SpeechesBefore Arbitration Tribunal.

ffea Hum-. Nov. 13.— The fflßMßßatea ArhltmtionTribuna' ad'ourn-'.^ to-day sln^ •: • -r-.mentshavir.; been concerted. Tiie court will now con-rJrter 'ts derision, r.rd will jnfo-ra thc^c hilllHaflof taa date of it* faVvcry.

The rlcrlns proceedings van lr/f. Ri*jlimfcrtfce T'r.lted State?. Juc£<? I'^naeld ir.nintainei that

the -ckadinfc- ik>»t«.. IB the protocol of February

:3. atT.doned n'.l claims for prirtlc^ed treatment.

The DWtai atatakj he declared, t ould rom.-Jn{bJ.:Y.?vI to the cause of arbitration, f\rn

"the

decision a4are4 were ur.favn:al!e to Arr.'rica.

Counsel was confident the trilranal'a verdict would

f2, \u25a0

• :r, ihe c-:nrr:en?e of the civilized

worldThe tribunal anrcuncej that cor.i;Ma «tntement«

«".Vrli1 crtll a-.d Indudiaii December li.C

Th« LS Attorney Oeneral. Sir HnN rt '"\u25a0 ay.

Z \\ a'

\u25a0.''»-> • • '\u25a0 .-••:.-•

\u25a0X S&t*! aeeard \u25a0

' • •\u25a0''\u25a0:\u25a0"M-nl^ar»aC«r.'-

Jifovec-.ber IS-

OJXIE ABANDONS TOUR.

Wilmlnrton. N C. Nov. !3.-On account of a

tbjraatun-* attack of acute mill llflllfMl.H«r.ry I-

Dixey ttarring in Frohmar.'* "Facing the Must,-

jlaclflrcto abanooc hi» Southern tour here to-r.:sM.md the company will return to-morrow to .New-

Xoxjl.

SHIRTSARE THE BESTAT THE PRICE

.£TT, PtABOOY A CO.

r^&fsareJLFiling of Lease to Public Service Corpora-

tion Shows That Its Term Ie 900 Years.It was diP'-losed in Newark yesterday that the

Public Service Corporation, which the publicthought bought outright all the trolley companies

it absorbed, has control of the companies underl<>as*-3 for a term of nine hundred years. The leaseof lie Orange and Passaic Valley Railway Com-pany was filed in the County Register's office atNewark late on Thursday afternoon. It Is agreed

in the l*"»se that the company will be paid inr«ntau $3,00u on May I, 1901 and evrry six monthsthereafter up -o November 1 1005. After that the•mount will be increased until Majr 1, 1512. afterwhich $9.(< jo will be paid eimi-aiiiiually until the

I termination of this ka: •

iin. BAKU uiko CAltanti thi: worm.Xl« to nltb the advertiser who Kfniln In In. copy

:early (or The Miaduy Tillinnr. lit- M-rurn i>io[>?r

<:..-\u25a0 ;(,;..a autl fc>". I po»ltiua.

DID NOT BUY, BUT LEASED.

Leo Stevens Discusses the Trip of theLebaudy Brothers' Balloon.

RaaaHttOf tne fast time made by the Lebaudy

brotr.crs' dirigibic balloon over a forty-six mil.:coursw Letwetn Moisson and the Champ dc Mars,

Paris, en Thursday. Leo Stevens, the aeronaut.

MM n Tribur.*1 • porter las: evening that it wasrot the long Uip- that rnunted but the going to

I|t«aa p°int r-^dr- d̂ iia;:ii again.

"Idon't tee," rcr.jarkr-d Mr. Stevens, "where theL*bauUy brothers ace . labed anything. When

tho> fjot up a thousand fc-ct they mlgnt have en-cc-nttrcd a strong wind which took them right

along. Ihave no do.uM. how.-.or, that the LebaudyCroth«rs ar.d Santos-Dumor.t are working on the

risiu jirinciplc. and it is only a matter of apply-ing the power to the envelope. The envelope sup-ports a certain mount of weight, the gas cup-

ports Itin the air. a;id It's only a matter of ap-plying the power to juih and pull you through

th* air."The speed attained by the Lebau<ly brothers, ac-

cor<lirx to tne dispatches, is certainly remarkable.While ihey pnbaMV encountered a high wind, the..•.. . rr.r \u25a0. have been on. la the ;.,;•.. r they h,i

piled. If so, they have made a distinct advance In6;x*e<l In uerortauti«». It would have bCCB iLetter:•:• • owf-vir. ii they had iOW rive miles and re-turned in whrro thry started. If th-y w<-r« noti-Lcvci tl.rough Un air ly th»- wind Ithink they

i.avc Aoaa runarkabljf w-'-ii. From what Ihaver«uid. l.ov.ivtr, 1 am r<.>t afraid the l^obauJry broth-*ra will i-:liO»' the crtaicht spared at the St. LouisLxiif.b.'iv-:..

•The L<;baid>s use ellera on the sides ofUN '.tllooii; Sactcs-Dumont uirtd bis on the rear.whi!» 1 u-^e my propellers fore and aft At Man-hattan llv.p::ch la.-t fall with my airship !wentto a certain rtolrt and back ap.iln. lam surprised.. •]\u0084•\u25a0 % does "ot ronsidir that th»-re i.i prot>-... a*bich la lighter tfaaa hjrdro-. t

_|>hy»iral Trainier ia the Public SrbooU. la to-mor-

row'» TrUiaac

THINKS WIND FAVORED THEM.

Says Irish Parties, Not the Tariff. Foster It

inUnited States.

London. Nov. 13.— 1n a letter to Miss Milner,

eister of Lord Alfred Milner, Lord High Com-

missioner to South Africa, Joseph Chamberlaincontends that the argument that political cor-

lUjitlon results from a protective policy is ab-surd. Mr. Chamberlain says: '

Germany is free from corruption, while in theUnited States, where there la a good deal ofcorruption, it is caused by the presence of theIri?h political organizations. So far as the gov-ernment of the United States is concerned, noth-ing of the kind has ever been suggested to me,and the general purity of the administration hagIce-en Increased of late years under the protec-tive system. The creation of trusts is also en-tirely independent of protection. We have al-ready seen such institutions, as. for instance,

the Coats combination and the alkali trust.The system is likely to increase with the prow-im? tendency to cheaper production by combina-tions with larger outputs.

CHAMBERLAIN ON CORRUPTION.

BORIS SARAFOFF IN BULGARIA.Pr.f.i. X^v. T,-Buris Sarafoff. th Macedonian

leader, with Fixty fo'.lowrrs. baa returned to Bul-\u25a0aHa. Ail the other insurgents and their chiefstai previously returned to tola coui:tiy.

On f->ur OOOaafaOi Sarafoa has been reported fromTurkish sources to have been killed. Th« last oc-casion was in a dis; atch from Saljnica on October£2 last. This patch w.is repenad confirmed onthe following cay.

Eristol. Nov. 13.—Premier Balfour was theprincipal speaker at a dinner here to-night to

celebrate the anniversary of the birth of Ed-

ward Colston, the philanthropist. He devotedhimself principally to the fiscal question, but did

not advance any new arguments.

Mr. Balfovr rpoke appreciatively of Joseph

Chamberlain, who, he said, had given up every-

thing for what he considered the good of theBritish Empire. He admitted that the tariff,

like the navy, might be abuscl, but said he

could not see why that consideration should bar

the government from using either wisely.

A new situation, saul the Premier, had arisen

since the present fiscal policy of the BritishEmpire had beer established, and further de-velopments of world conditions were sure to fol-

low. It 'seemed to him little short of lunacy Ifthey not only did not race th~ present situation.but if they did not prepare themselves for the

dangers which were foreshadowed.Kir Michael Hicks-Beach followed the Premier.

The appearance of the former Chancellor of the

Exchequer on the same platform with Mr. Bal-four. although he had declared himself a freetrader, aroused considerable interest and curi-osity. S.r Michyel explained his attitude by ac-cepting as the true diagnosis Mr. Bnlfour's be-

lief that the present Government had still two

or three years of lifein which much useful workwas possible, and by admitting that great injury

had I'een done to British trade by the protec-

tionist policies of foreign countries.Sir Michael said he was prepared to accept the

policy of Mr. Baltour laid down in the Premier'sspeech at Sheffield. He was opposed to both

illegitimate cheapness and illegitimate dearnessthrough the operations of tariffs and trusts, but

he favored the securing and the maintaining of

natural cheapness. Sir Michael thought thegovernment ought to be armed with the weap-

ons of retaliation. If the choice had to be be-

tween standing on old l'nes or a genuine change

of fiscal policy, he preferred the latter.

In conclusion, Sir Michael Hickß- Beach con-

tended that the question before the Unionistparty was not the authorized programme whichhe had steadfastly opposed, but the policy of

the Premier, and he thought that th-.-y shouldnow patiently await the government's proposalsand strive for unity.

On his arrival at Bri?tol to-day an address

of welcome waa presented to Mr. Bulfour, Inreply !•> which he declared it was the intentionof the government. In the face of all the dlffl-< ultios raised by the opponent? of th^ proposed

new fiscal policy, which made necessary n^w

conditions under which the Industrie* of thecountry would be carried on. to pursue the path

he had marked out. "not bound by wornoutformulas which had a meaning and reality sixtyyears ago, but whose meaning and reality had

b-.jen changed by the changing circumstances ofthe time."

Edward Colston was a distinguished philan-

thropist who was born on November 13, 170$. He

founded a hospital, a free school and other chari-

ties at Bristol, and his birthday anniversary has

been celebrated by the Dolphin Por-iety (Conserva-tive) cjnrf* 1743; the Anchor Society (Liberal) since

17*. and the Grateful Society (neutral) since UK.

Sir Michael and the Premier Speakat Bristol.

AID FROM IIICKS-BEACH.

BALFOUR GAINS SUPPORT.

The InrgrlT Ue/.n.cd c.retttallo"or Thf ••

is.tar Tnt»u»<. ns-cr»»»tate»••r coins f* i»r»«« riirlr M»tur«l»r\u25a0Itht. \ihrrlli«r« willeoniee

• '••

I tot hr •radii* I«•I «• t!,r«r ropy •'«»•II *«\u25a0 lit-at poMlfet* itiimnil. 0

STUDEBAKERS' "EQUIPAGE."Studebaker Hros. Co.. the well known carriage

mauuXaalurera, located -it Broadway, Se/enth-av*.su,(l roi^y-.i^hth-si.. have of lute been piiiilL-hiuga lomphlcl entitled "I^ulpaje." its purpose laid forth on Its title ptfft whkh rmdx "A month-ly magazine for UdlM .\nd Kfiuiemrn intire«it«d infina horFes. appropriat< vehicles anil ronv.-r ap-poinUnents. M Among the tntcnttlnji features ofthe November iswue aie "The, Carriai{f"> of KingEdward VII." "A Curious Cuban Conveyance" and••Appropriateness In Carriages." .*.

Appellate Division Decides Dickinson Triedto Bribe Woodbury.

The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court yes-terday handed d'<wn a decision rifllTiflUtfea deter-mination of Justice Wyatt, sluing as a committingmaghtrat'?, to hold Alderman William Dtckiaadßfor trial on a chnrge of bribery, growing out of aletter of his to Commissioner Woodbury, in whichho promised to vote for an appropriation desireJby the Commissioner if he would r» instate a streetcleaning drivtr named fVjvir.o.

It was ci>i»tt:iil<<l by the defence that, as nomoney or property was asked for. the crime coulilnot be proved. Justice LaughUc sa>s Hint, underthe circumsiauo-!". it would ..^|mar Uiui th« Bldi i-rnitn desire i to o^'t»Jn a political or other (>er*onalanvantage by obtaining Corlno'| reinstatement uai!that he took advantage of the known desire of theCommissioner l*» k«-i i>ir appropriailon to Influencehis action Improperly.

AFFIUMS HOLDING OF ALDERMAN.

PLENTY OF MOTORMEN'S JOBS.Oren Root, jr., manager of the Metropolitan

Street Railway, has written to Commi»(.ion«r Will-lams, at Ellis Island, asking him to inform Eng-

lish speaking young Irishmen, Englishmen orSwedes that thero is an opportunity for thtm to bo-come motormen by applying at the offices of thecompany. It willnot be necessary for them to be-come citizens to get a ace. If they can satisfythe appointment clerk as to their ability $2 20 vday for the first year and a small increase there-after are promlsad to them.

Commissioner of Deeds Pleads That His Ar-rest Be Kept from Dying Wife.

With tears streaming dov.-n his furrowed cheeks,

and bepging plteousjy to be permitted to go homo

to a dying wife. Emll Ftlder. of No. 230 West One-hunared-and-twenty-s=ixth-!<t.. ;'n employe of theDepartment of Highways and a commissioner ofdeeds, was arraigned before United States Commis-sioner Shields. In the Federal Building yesterday,charged with taking acknowledgments to P'.ni'.onvouchers contrary to law.

According to the Pet 5-ion Department. Felder hadtaken vouchers mailed to him by Jamts J. Reillyand Rose HcLaoghUn, and. signing their names•with a crocs, witnessed the piscnatur^s, and nextadded the names of two witnesses. The voucherswere then returned to the claimant*. Felder re-ceived a fee of 25 cents for each voucher. He ad-mitted that he had filled out f.venty ethers, signa-tures, witnesses or.d all. lie was held in $1,000 bailfor the federal gr;inl jury.

VIOLATED OATH FOR A QTIASTE2.

Plan to Destroy Lung Block That

of Idealists, He Says.A vicious attack on those who would destroy

the consumption pest rpot known M "the Lung

Block," situated la the section bounded by Hamil-

ton Catharine. Cherry and Market sts., was made

at the Board of Estimate meeting yesterday by

Father J. B. Curry, of St. James's Church, which

is pear the block, when the proposal to tear down

the disease infected houses and build a park there

TldlfnSt Marks, In district the block Ismated, saW all the remarks made about the

necessity for a park in the neighborhood werefalsehoods.

Xnopf told the board that the existenceof Fii.-h block- was responsible for consumptionHo added thut he had Inspected the tenementhouses in this block, and. besides dark an.l un-healthy living room?, hnd »wn houses with filth in

them and "Vo many pale faced children. candidatest0{™™K'^oko. jr..of the University Settle-ment also a^oke in favor of the proposed pnrK.

He declare,! .hat the block in question could not beput in a sanitary condition and made healthy by

fumigation or dfalnfectlon. It must be destroyed.The board reserved decision.

ATTACKED BY A PRIEST.

Friends of "J. Ogden Goelct, jr.,"Say He Is Far from Here.

James Abeel, who is charged with deceiving

Eleanor Anderson under the assumed name of J.Ogdcr. Goelet, Jr.," is now many hundreds of mile*

from here, so friends of the Abeel family said yes-

terday. It Is certain that the detectives are notany nearer his trail than at first.

There are several friends of the Abeel family

working in behalf of the young man here. One

of them said yesterday afternoon:

Iam convinced that young Abeel is in Mexicoor somewhere in the Far West. Ihave severalreasons tor believing this. tho;.gn Ihave not heardfrom him. Idon't wish to discuss the reasons.The very fact mat Ihaven't Heard; irum him Id

one. however, Ifhe were here in hiding and read-Ins the daily papers be would know that I. n.afather* oid

"friend, would protect him. and h.i

would write me at once. He has not done so. Idonot believe the boy is crazy. He is simply young andfoolish and has been flirting with Miss Anderson.who Ibelieve. Is an Innocent girl. They have nostrong charge against him. They cannot even provethat he wrote the alleged Van Every dispatch. Ido not think the cape will be pressed. Now thai

the real Ooelet is exonerated he ran have no great

int.-e«t in pressing the rr.aitfr. Besidea, he did noi

claim to be Robert Goelet. The runi'.v "A \u25a0

Goelet"

is flctitioua—there is no sum person. I:!.;

,;.,.i.ts cannot maintain that he use.l the name ofany of them."

Benjamin 11. Stern, coun=ol for •William C. An-derson, father of Miss Anderson, called upon As-

sistant District Attorney Lord yesterday. Itis un-likely that the grand jury will take up the Abeel

case" to-day, as its time is too much taken up with

election cases.

ABEEL MAY BE IN MEXICO

Soy Strikers Delighted with the Attitude ofPresident Eliot—Strike Ends.

CambrMze. Mass.. Nov. i: The mesaenger boys

e-f th* Barvard Square on:« of the Western UnionTelegraph Company quit and girls were employedto di-liv.r t.'legmms.

I*realrtent Eliot of Harvard Unlverrlty informedthe- n:ina-,fr if th« ofTli.-c to-day th%t tiie rules atthe. eoliefia .'.>rl-t.i.i:r.K women without escort fromrtvlttns t' 1: .1 >rmit'!rl<*-< r •.-\u25a0' l,e ohscrvet?. Th«ftrlker.s txpreysed ;;reat "T,t!sfactlon, as most ofth" tvi.-ilmn don- by th*>Harvard C-^iar* f>ffl.-,. waswith students of the unlversltv.

The strike waa ended to-ninht.

FIFTY-NINTH-ST. WIDENING HEARING.The Board of Estimate, after a MM*rceaaa \u25a0•<

yesterday. Mayor Low presMmsr. Controller Grout

and President Fornes of the Board af A'.torata

were absent. On th* widening of Firty-nmtS-tt

the Mayor read a report cr Barbart C. P.assc. «an-

matbii t" 1̂3 ccst °-* tr-? trr.r>rove:r^-.*s. nl&S&sthe strert twenty UM en dM r.crth s!.!e froa

Bceocd to Firth art., at IUSMR tty I^*ar.rcuneed that the .*rd w.vii.; resurre .iisrussioa«; the subiect. r>ut aided that he Ofr-ur.a".y t^oa?3It should be Kfl fat the ImtimfWl a.lm:r: tr.i"xs.

EX-OFFICIAL'S DAUGHTER DEMENTED.Miss Jessie Reynolds. eisht»>T. years oUI, '" S I

IS West Eißhty-sec^n-I-st.. t*e zr?.-.<\ '.-::'• t'

Oliver Charllck, who for ObMMB fWH »» *police commissioner, was asraisned in TuscmMarket Police Court yesterday ar-.d tM for far-ther examination on a charge of o« tatnina So6^worth jr.tiT from ?-v<»ral rt-r>r-~

• -toresfrauti-ilent means. Her lowuel said tS»I Ml

*^*BQff*rtns from k'.ep' on-.aiua. aad UtSt

--\u25a0- ••\u25a0

be placed in the tarr of a *p«" \u25a0

A MODERN JACK SHEPPARD CAUGHT.James Colgan. who was» caush: here en ITedm*-

day night, yesterday was taken to the Cas-ern 9t ite Reformatory to ftri.'n h;s scr.ter.-e IIS3S Cclgan overpowered fnur guards and e;«caje<lfrom the Elmira Reformatory. II- was ci»u«btsoon afterward. In li*»i he fa.a?-: 1 fiBM tia Al-cany Penitentiary, sawb.y TTirilft^ Ol w:r.do»vars of four rcom'', and lowering to w*

ground b7 a rope mat!* of blankets. If*crjored

freedom only for a few ,Uys. T-. rhe Easr-

em State Reformatory he was placed n «H!eighty feet above the ground. Ottair.ir^ 3ta»Csaw.*, he cut out the bars of a smitll window ir.t!S?rear of hi 3cell, ma.i.? a rop» .sixty f«el I^S_?tbedding, ar.d after slidir< d-.wn th» 'f^ dro ?eatwenty feet tj iaa ground without injuring -i*"self.

NO GIEL MESSENGERS AT HAHVAED.

Some of the Paintings To Be Seen

at Exhibition.Among the mar.y painting? which willbe on view at

the portrait show for the benefit of the OrthopedicHospital, in the American Art Gallerie*. MadisonSquare South, on Wednesday next, may be men-tioned "Colonel Coussnaaker," by Sir Joshua Rey-nolds, lent by Mrs. W. K. Vanfierbilt; "Lady

Miranda." by Sir Thoma? Lawrence, lent by George

J. Gould: "'Portrait of a Lady." by Hoppner, lent by

Senator W. A. Clark; "The Standard Bearer." byItembmndf, lent by George J. Cliwßt; "Mr. Mus-

ters." by Sir Joshua Reynolds, lent by Charles T.Barney; "Mrs. Ker," by Romncy. lent by George J.Gould; "William Winter." by Frank D. Millet;

"Mrs. George B. Satterlef." by J. Carroll Keckwlth,

lent by H. L. Satterlee: "R. Fulton Cutting-." by

Leon Bonr.at: "Miss Alice Roosevelt.'" by Chartran.lent by Mrs. Theodore Haaaev«lt; -Mrs. Elliott." byGainsborough, lent by Mr?. W. K.Var.derhilt; "Mrs.John Jacob Astor." by Carolus Duran; "CharlesLanler," by Frank Ball; "Lady with Fan."by Sir Thomas Lawrence; "Portrait of aMan," by Yon Lenbach: "Miss Marjcrie Gould."by Ft. C. Porter. lent by George J. Gouii: "ilr.Carlisle." ly Sir Henry R.vhurn. "A Burgomei3-ter" and "A Burgomeister's Wif».

" by Rembrandt;

Mr?. Hi.js," ty Sir Joshua Reynolds', lent byDavid H. King, "Anne, Countess of Clare." byHomney, lent by Senator W. A. Clark; 'Portraitof a Woman," by Roiriney. lent by St;i.u'ord White;"Robert Louis Stevenson." "Mrs. Charles B. Alex-ander" and "P. A. B. Widerer." by John S. Sar-gent; Mrs. W. J. Shannon." by J. J. Shannon;

"Chief Justice John Jay." by Gilbert Stuart; "Mr*.John laard Mlddleton." by Thomas Sully, "Mrs. J.Clifton Edgar." by William Thorne; "Geur;e Wash-ington." i>y John TrunibulU lent by Colonel WilliamJay; "Portrait of a Gentleman." by van Dyck:"Mother and Child." by l»uu«Laji VoU. lent byMrs. Paul D. Cravath; •portrait of a Laiir." by J.McNeil Whtitler. lent by A. J. Cassatt; "Miss J.Ir.ii'.-^'-." by Irving K. Wiles lent bj Mrs. Georsr-run.-.*: "Grover Cleveland." by Z< m. lfnt byDaniel 8. 1-amont; "Miss Content Johnson," byWilliam M. Chase: "Mrs. Stanford Whit*." by G.Boldini; "Mrs. Richard Waisoti Gikler." hy WyatlEatun; "Mr*.Samuel S'.o*Q. jr.." by Frank Fowicr.and "Mrs. Potter Palir.vr," by Zf>rn. lent by DanielS. Larront.

Among the patronesses <»f the Portrait Showare Mrs. Astor. Mrs. John Ja<op Ast^r. Mrs.Gcortre J. Gould, Miss Helen M. GtottS 1. Mr».Vandtrbilt Mm--. William K. Vanf'.erbilt. Mrs.J Pierpont Morataa, M:<\ Levi P. Morton.Mr«> Charles B. Alexander. Mr? Chcr'eaT Barn 5 Mr?. John H >oart Warren. Miss Whti-\u25a0m Mrs. Hairy Payne V.'hitnev. Mrs. P-jiyneWhitney. Mrs. O. 11. I' B'imnnt. Mr.-. Henryfit >*'s Mr?. M. L>wi<ht Collier, Mr*, Seth BartonFrench. Warn iv.v

•• .:-i:: !'U\;fti. Mrs. Robert V.".D»> Forest, Mr.-. Douglas Kctinscn, jr..Mrs. HenryIfarauand, Mrs. Charles De Hbnm. jr.. Mr St'.iy-vesant FHh, Mrs. Theodore Vr.-.inghu>-?en. Miss C.Pnrnlsa. Mm Hewitt. Mi«s S. C. Hewitt. Mr?. >'.

Oliver Isetia Air*. <'oi'jmv>u8 OP. ImHb, Mr*.Thomas Has ms». lira. E. 11. HaiTtnsn. Mrs.7 rayton iv.s >tr.-^. • rrts K. ion Mrs. J. Fr^.l-#rl." Ke.rnoi'h!' 1.. -Mrs. Wrnidliury LanrAv. M'9

errt LorlUart, Mrs. Setti :->v.-. Mr« 3tanle> Mor-timer. Mr*. John W. A!inf.:rn. Mrs. Kobert C.Minturn. Mr.<. X F Sh«prir«! Mrs. Samuel Slo mMr- W L Sirous Mrs 11. Mi!C. Tworr.bly. Mr*.!\u25a0 Walter Webb. Mr;'. Fr:i"k 3, Wirh-vt. -, Mr«.John M Woo'i^ury Mr«. Wi'.T'am Whitney, Mrs.Ooorpe Henry W»ri

—I,Mr?. Paul TBcltMttMti Mrii.

Trcn«r '. !".rk. Mrs. Henry C. Potter. Mrs. GeorgeO. Hr.v. i, Jin. Oliver Je'inn.a;?! and Mr. Burt.>nHarri»o»i.

Filipino Girl Folio-wed Marine on Army

Transport Wedded in Philadelphia.[»T Tir.E»**AFHTO TH

•ntrccxr. J

Philadelphia. Nov. ,13.—Horace Heslcr McCai:.•'

: the marine corps, station at League Island. Ear-

: ried to-night Juanlta Castro, a Fniplno girl. «Mi travelled as stowaway on board an army transport

Itojoinhim In this country. The w»dI took p'.art'at the home of th-? family of the bridegroom, la'Germantown.

The courtship b«ran on the is!aa«i of i"sabe!!a rf»1 Basilan. When McCal! was ordered horae the r.rli disguised herself a«" ifruit ve:id \u25a0.• and boar««J tt«1 army transport. When San Francisco was reachediMcCall got a boat on a dark nigh' in.l rowed it, alongside th« transport HamHa clhaPsd to. v.,.;>! the guards on the deck pretended rose-o se-' nothins.

He was cent East. She got work. ar.,l he ttOM• her money, and she came to town last OtSBL

«. MADE INSANE BY NOISE OF TRAINS.

Mrs. Nessle Vnsiman. forty years aW who cair*'to this country from the interior of Russia 0M

imonths ago. and .as been Mag wit": brtidaughter. Mrs. Rachel Eoser.feldr. at Ste \u25a0 a:—-

St.. was taken to the insane pavilion af Byesterday. She was made crazy, tier relatives sa

:by the constant roar of the SeconJ-ave. ctrains, which passed clo»« to n«r window. At t»»<»hospital she coutiaualiy triad ID imitate the sou*

of the elevated trains.

Forty-second-st. To Be Old SelfThen, Says McDonald.

"Forty-sceond-st. and Its neighborhood shouldbe completely restored by December 1." •aid Jon?

B M-Donald yesterday. "With the exception of

four hundred feet on either side of Flfth-ave. the

work is to all intents already finished. You mus.

realize that not onlyhas the roadway to be propped

up by many feet of solid masonry for the Metro-

politan Street Railroad, but the almost incessant

Interruptions caused by passing cars, not to men-

tion the gas. water and telephone complications

involved in the underground work, render th« labor

most difficult."We have a large force of men at work on the

urinni«h*d r«rtion. however, and Iexpect that

within the r»xt two weeks the entire roadway.

etc will be restored. Tho holes in Sixth-are., of.course, are mainly the telephone companies ownC7tC waV understood yesterday that several store-kefners and property owners along the affecteJthoroughfare ire threaten^* damage sulta*f*ajMjthe cit?- According to a statement made by CbiafKnaineer William Barclay Parson.-, the jr n̂ersl ex-cavating outlook is m>w more roseate. Mr. Pannounced that .ill the eTravatinKfor t^e wbvray

from the City Hall to One-hundred-and-nlnetieth-stTwas complete At th^ i>r"«ont rate of progress.he said the company would be running expelr-

mental trains through th* entire tunnel aaaae urnin December. Some time in March or April, heexpected actual traffic would begin over the entiresystem.

AT THE PORTRAIT SHOW.

Union Men to Snap Smokers ofNon-Union Cigars.

At a meeting cf the union laid committee of the

agarmakers' Union, held in response to ihurry

call. Spartan measures «m decided on yesterday

to put a stop to the smoking of non-union cigars

by union men.A kodak corps was appointed to go. equipped

with cameras, to the neighborhoods where there

are non-union cigar stores, and take snapshots of

union men who leave them smoking non-unionweeds.Itis proposed to serd photographs of these men

to their respective unions, with the request that

they he dealt with In accordance with union meth-

Oda. Itla also proposed to keep th- pictures <rf all

such mm in frames in conspicuous places at all

U"t°la charged that the men most given »,£•«£prave.l practice of non-union smokes «re high up

in labor circles, and denounce non-union products

in public.

RESTORED BY DECEMBER

A CAMERA CRUSADE.

Union Official, Charged With Lor-arffJJF, Jumps Forty Feet.

Despondent her*ii*e of suspicion as to his aa>counts as an officer of a lartor union, James a.Schmidt, fifty-one years old. a <"arp*n>r. of >;«,2.0S Ma<lt#on-av» . who was h»!<l for th» jrrand fir?on a charge of grand larger. v !»y ihi:^:iv Bak«r.in Morr:s.<nU court, en November 5. commutes tailci<l« In the Tombs prison yesterday a:t»rnooa.

Hi» faavaai ovr the railing of the raOnj on tS%tMM flrr of cells. w.. re t* was COBBB*4 tad Mforty fact to the stao* floor b*|ow. i:<» ntnirk bea.lf::-T't ar.^J ™.ishfd the top of hia skuiL, dyiri in*Vtaßtly. Keeper ll;tnsfe::ry T.-as s^rr.dlr.tf <fn.-c»l»a varcj away from the iipot wiwr« S:r:m;it lar.rt^/Srhnii.lt ror.fl'ici to hla kei t*vn ta.it ir.e •»•*» wor-ried nwr criairt charta Bisai by Btsaban ifMaunlcn crnc^rninir an ail<*»e » «^.nrt;:^» in h:< »".counts as an oflJc^r of tn» orsan zatlsn. and v i(fßieil to pr»»y oi h!« rriTl. Th»* co-nn!alna»taxairtHt htm *».« Fr»<lenck «'arr»n*ton. -i 'ir^nterof No. :u Il.r'i '):•

\u25a0\u25a0:. ... 1: • 'i-anrt-twer.ty-th;pl-it. •

ME. EUBBARD STILL HIS3UIG.

Expedition to Explore Labrador's IntsriorGiven Up for Lost.

Bt, John ». N. K. Nov. l.r—The mall sutjaerwhich has Just returned here from Labruio-Mnga n'> news o; rh»> aaaaiMaa to -xalora theintor:or cf Labrador. h«>.'»i!'<'l by LmbMm I£uV>""I, Jr . of New-York, assistant editor of ~f>ut-

'.-\u25a0\u25a0.' which started from RJ?olet. Labrador, nAugust 1. All th« (^r'l*-^believe the party per.laaed. A tribe of Monta«rna.3 Indian wr.icn fcaibeen trapir.g In tne Interior, recently rtsited t!m'-oast and said they ww nothing of 0M | .bbca]fxpfflirion. tho'i* the rnfliar.s went LSO miles Is-land.

Caspar Whitney. tfc» Editor oj Outing.' »!>•financed ar.-I organized the expedition of Miassist.mf, LmoMU HuoSard. Jr., ID MlHUs*. the tsSntsiof Labrador, dismissed last ntsht's report.-? frociSt. John's. N. F.. to the effect that the »x,v.!!r;nwa3 lost or destroyed. %m entirely unwarranted >y»the circumstances of the- case. The rumor tnat %relief expedition was being organized by "Outlayto search for the exniorer he also characterised asaltogether premature.

"We could not. A.-.i M not expect to. hear '- -HUMsjrd as yet." he saM. '•as it Is impo-have communication from the \u25a0tMsnaai w>.ere h»doubtless Is at the present time. The Indians w.*>brought the present reports aatj go a kaasl anlfifty miles Island, while Hubbard la going ar,than twice that distance. The other resorts, rnotice, come from the seaboard. wi>re Hoibaxdand his party did net even intend to touch. Ihay*not the slightest xr.lsgivlr.gs H to the party's »e!ibeing, nor has Mrs. Rubbard. who Is stayiag m\'J^relatives In Quebec. The party Is travf>:i!r.g Bgit.caribou abound in the Labrador Interior, zr.i totfeature* there are ptarmigan and willow grous*.

Hubbard. who la no tenderfoot, but a man of ex-perience and resource, had carte blar. :he as to hUroute and itinerary, and Ishould not be srreatly

disturbed ifIdid not hear from iinjuntil tiie b»-ginning of next year.

"I have not even seriously considered such %

thing as a relief expedition. Were Ito orgar.lza

such an expedition It SNllprobably not start un-til next year. Even then It would be undertakenlargely. Iana afraid, from sentimental motives. Se-cause se*kir.g for Hubbaxd's party would nv-ica re-semble the sear. for the proverbial needle lr. tluhaystack.

••Hubbard. Dillon Wallace, a New-York lawyer.and two Cr« Indians, with a sasoe. shootln? andfishing tackle, left Ri*o!ette. not or. August 1. .nreported, but about tat* beginning af Ju'.y. laMobject was to penetrate to the settlement of Naj-

rauppes In.!iani«. where. so far as know-.. m>white man has *'--er been. sDadful that mavious expeditions, overloaded with impedimenta,had had to turn back discomfited from tr.» (;•:««.

Hubbard and his party ttavcUsd wry Ugh*-

-\u25a0

Ing to their prowess with tr.e r-nl :ir.d r:..<? to ob-tain food on the trip. As previously arrange*

Mr*. Hubbard left the part. «on *::*?ItHubbard's plan was to work Itttood up tee HamU-ton River, using th« canoe un lake* and CtMBIuntil they were frozen over, when ;.-.* party was

to take to snowshoes and proceed. He may {tare

rone to Ur.sava Bay. or ajlf \u25a0!»\u25a0\u25a0, for all T k-.owWhile there is ever uneasiness as to expe<:;;

this character. Inave tie greatest cunflden.-e inHubbard and bis aMlity to worry through.

CAME AS A STOWAWAY TO XABBY.

Accepted Theory of Mrs. Walsh's

Death—Funeral To-day.

[by Tir.Er.nA-n 1• tot: Titrflf'«I

Montclair. N 1.. Nov. 13. -The sensational «nicMeof Mr.«. E. Dt Witt Walsh In her home *\u25a0 upper

Montclair on Wednesday evening daring a dinnerparty is bans] much dlscu*«ed among the large cir-

cle of fricDda of the family. -Mr. Walsh saM to-day

that there was nothing more to say concerning Ms

wife's tragl~ death. He simply Kltefated Miorig-inal statement thai Mrs. Walsh ended hat Bt*when seized with .1 sudden attack of acute Illness.

None of the guest* who were present at the dinner

party which had such \u25a0 tragic endlr.j willdiscussjusi what took place before Mr?. Walsh shot her-self, and except for the statement made if Mr.Walsh there seems to be a disposition to k<-ep Chidetails of the sad affair from being made public.

Though Mr*. Walsh killed herself early In theevening the police .wrro not informed until mid-night, and the physician who was called to attend

Mr. Walsh told newspaper reporters that Mrs.

Walsh had shot herself accidentally.

There will he no inquest in the case. Dr.

McKenzi«\ the county physician, says he is\u25a0.bSOMJtij MtfwM that «he committed s ii-clde, and Prosecutor Utter and his detectives holdthe- name net The Investigation made by thecounty physician closed the affair. Chief of Polic;

Gallagher said to-night that there were no newdevelopments in the case and be M not believethere would be. He was strongly of the opinionthat the unfortunate woman had commitf-ii dMrash act at a time wh»n BOS wri3 suffering Intenseagony, and sought relief in death while temporarily

Vhe'funerai will be held to-morrow a.'trrnoon. andwill be private The Rev. Dr. Awry H. Bradford,pastor of the First Congregation p. Church. Mont-clair. is expected to officiate. The burial will '\u0084>

at Montelalr Heights.

SUICIDE IX THE TOMBSSHOT SELF WHILE IN PAINNKW-lOtt* DAIi.V TKIBT7XE. BATUB&AY, NOVEMBER 14. 1903.

11l LI'S PLANS ACCEPTED.VRIKXDS WON TO RI'SSIA.

RESULT OF CZAR'S VISIT.

run through to Court-st. occupying lha around

there now covered with a brick row. The design

calls for a bulidlng tn the French Renaissance style

of architecture, eight stories in height, to be fin-

ished In blue Indiana limestone. Tlie principal en-

trance willbe in Joralemon-«t.. but there will also

be an entrance !n Court-st.Mr. Hull :s a native BrooKlynlte and w.is grad-

uated from Columbia University In 18*2. He is t..-

archttect of the house being built for Senator

WlllHm A. Clark at Fifth-nve. and Rewity-ser-

ond-«t.. Manhattan. In *" >nternMior.al compj.ti-tinn of IT7 architects for the design or tne nui.u

ings of the Univers'ty of California he won thififth prize.

Brooklyn's New One Million Dol-lar Municipal Building.

Washington Hull,of No. 16 East Twenty-third-

st. Manhattan, is the successful architect in thecompetition for the best design for the new mu-nicipal building that Is to be erected In Brooklyn,

at a cost of $1,000,000. The report of ProfessorPespradelle. of the Massachusetts Institute of

NEW ADMINISTRATIVE MUNICIPAL BUILDING, TO COST 51,750.000.Designed by Washington Hull. .

4