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I c cTt TT- r JWi- r r jfr y r < 0 w I THg SUSATIiZ AUGiJsi t o 8 I 5 t 1 K Zh HUNTIKGTON I WEDS ftIS JtttinE IltE KIKCK OF COTLZS- V I I UVSXIXUiOKi Isaac K flt Her rntber I Sir Ifat tonn Conndenlli l 3fuinlter Flrnt IInt- ionil Trcim Whom Hhe Obtained n UK kntn lhru tn AUo In ilr Hunting T d tons Kmplnf A M Hiinttnaton- tolll I II II V IlunltnKlnnai Adopted Won SI When It became I known yesterday that Archer I 1 Wilton ot New York hlll been mar- I I I rle l on luntlllUI Ht Ooorgos Church Han- over ¬ Il square London to the former wlfo of S Thiitmu 1 D trl s of Hast Orange there was a F grcvl siirprlKO In tho Oranges I Tlio brldfRloom 1 Is tha stepson of Collls P llimtlngtoii who has adopted him and Is t5 uf age Tho bride I ts the daughter of- IIM eor I K Jates who lives In Eat Park street Orange and Is I acting VIcoPrrslclcnt and Assistant Secretory of the Southern 1aclllc lie Is al0 thn confidential manofC 1 P Hunting- ton Mn dates and Mr huntington are I brother anti sister union Oatcs Huntlngton Is r 28 years of age Sha Is a tall oriinette She was considered one of the handsomest women I in Orange society circles young Uuntlngtoni- s I i I alto well knovvi In the Oranges divorce from her Mrs huntington got a I former husband a few months ago after 1 brief residence In bouth Dakota where she went for that purpose The divorce proceedings woro kept iUlut on account of tho relatives of both ii parties and the grounds on which Mrs Crlss I obtained a divorce arc known t no one In this city ouulde of thA Immediate families of the- ersonlntorested I I I The CrlsUatc wedding was solemnized In the Orange Ituptlst Church eight ear Itgii Mr Crlss was at that time In the employ of I P Huntlugton a he still Is Doth the bridegroom and the brides father aro teachers In the North Orange Sunday school and activo In chursh work Mr Criss alo has two sisters who aro active church workers After their marriage Mr and Mrs Crlss went to live In Jarlc avenue Eat Orange Mr Crltswasloalt appearances a must devoted and exemplary I liunband and constituent friends of the pair 1 Were burprUed to hear a tear after their mar lloge that all was not pleasant between the r11 couple About that lime little girl was born I nnd the couple spent several months abroad- On their return Unto Europe the rotations be- tween ¬ I Mr Cries und hlswHo became more pe- culiar ¬ 1T The wife frequently amazed her friends w by shutting herself up In a darkened room for days at a time und to those to whom she con- fided ¬ her trouble shu declared that she believed marriage to bu a failure and could not believe I It fiositble fur matrimony to result happily About a year RIO Mrs Cries refused to live any longer with her husband allbough what her reason was for desiring a separation has leer been exactly known Mr Crlss retained pos- session ¬ ut the little girl and ho and the child I lived for a short time A the Park avenue resi- dence ¬ later closing up tho house and tlklnl up I their residence with Mr Cribs the Mansion House A few months ago It was rumored about the Oianges that Mrs Cries wan In Dakota w here the had gone lo obtain a divorce Previous to that time It had been announced that she was in a sanitarium suterlnl Irom some nervous disorder A family said yesterday that Mr Gates had bided with his daughter and I uphold her throughout the couples domestic I rouble whatever they were Mr Gates mid I Mr Cries were formerly employed In the ramo office In the Mills building but when the repa- ration ¬ took place Mr Cries asked to be allowed to resign Irom Mr Uunllngtona employ Ills request was but hu ivas transferred another reuse t Mr Huntington was oppned to the marriage of bin stepson and nelce It Is said while Mr Gates approved of his daughters action Mrs has not bren In Orange since t the reparation between her and her husband a year ago Mr Uutus said yesterday 1 dont know the slightest thing about the Wedding of my daughter I did not know of the j wedding unti I bear tile report th s morning Hugh a member of the stuck Exchange said The reported wedding of Mrs Helen Crlss I f and MrHuntington Is a most complete surprise p J had not heard the hllghteat Intimation that there was to b a wedding and I never suspected that urn would ever Mrs t Cries went abroad about maryalaln with I compaion and I dont believe that any her family that the Intended to marry suspct atepconsln Mr Huntington Archer HUntDlton as fine a gentleman as I ever were Abroad together al one summer and although lie had long acquainted with Sirs Cries be never appeared to be very devoted The bole affair Is mysterious and complicated Thai the divorced wile of one of O p Hunting tons ronndentlal clerks and the favorite niece I ef Mr Huntington should marry Mr Hunting I tons stepson unknown to any member of the I family seems almost Incomprehensible I do vI cot believe my brother knows oCho wedding The members of the law frm Vanderpoel CumIn Goodwin who n thn counsel for Mr Crts during divorce proceedings had not a notification of the wedding Teeter ¬ day A member of time firm said that If Mr CrieS who Is now out of town knew of tho wedding he would have promptly communi- cated ¬ IJ 1 with his lawyers 1t1 SEALED UP DIJI lid PAPERS I P No Ujiltrr holt Mureurct JR Runielli I I Decree Against Samuel P The sealing up of the evidence and the ref- erees ¬ report on which Margaret E Hussell got L an absolute divorce from Samuel 1 Russell on Uk Thursday caused as usual Inquiry t bo mode w for the facts of the case There I U no provision I court rule or statute for scaling The court ha the right to keep evidence In a case tram I the nubile In divorce actions but nothing Is Mid In the statute about sealing The precedent arises from certain rases In the old chancery I practice On the envelope sealing the papers I 1 this caso Judge Old rleoc wrote E SuQlcletit cause appearing therefor It Is or- dered ¬ that tho within testimony and referees report be sealed and can only bo opened for the inspection of the parties to this action Ills understood that thin suniclent came referred to was the character of the evidence which was unpubllHbable The ulalntlir Is a voting woman of Baltimore who married the detendiuit In February INIIII In that city 8ho Is about v3 > ear mild which I it also about the age of the defendant Ho came to title clly with her still opened 1 clcnUMs of tire at lotia Third avenue Ills parenislived In tho litmus wltn I them ItUKsell briamo Infatuated with Margaret Greene who taught Spanish and Imiili and f in June 18U4 jolt his wlro ttntjruvlmlemi for bhn employed a iiradtinte In dentistry who his since conducted the business tar her Their friends were for a long unto under the hnpreloI that Itusarll was travelling In the Km 7 sell has since lost track of Russell and of Mar- garet ¬ tireene She brought action against him through Law Ter loel M Mar and ItUJxell put In I answer denying tin through Liivvj cr llaymnnd V Humphrey The cakB wit sent to Uiivld Nay aa referee who rpurtl1 In favor of tho wife Kubscll did not put any evidence MRS ItEIDECKER IV COXTE3IPT Alter FitlBtlne I In Court Hevtrnl Time Hhe Winy Away mud Heed i > n Dicuie When the adjourned motion to punish lrs Henrietta lleldecker otherwise known as Dr- Henrietta Helnhard for contempt of court In falling to obey an order to turn over certain U furniture to the SherI vvai rulled yesterday 3 before Judge llleKerlch In Lime Court uf Com won Pleas the woman failed to appear Judge Ulrgerlrh told counsel that a letter had been handed to him In the Court House by a boy who said It wa given to hint a time Uriind Central Htatol This letter was written nn a small paper und With in German and when translated read us folOf I t Mri Henrietta Ileldeeker l k all pro trivted i and li nirrrrliu lieu nerToiii promrullnu and In- rder to rvcuvcr U I It ueceium lur her togulottii 1 country J Ewsi K Kruiz M P 3JH Kail Thirtyfourth street I Judge flleeerlch adjourned the hearing for an I counsel time lo Invesiluate Then I be adjulfae1 the wuinnti lu contempt and tilted her tins procurcd several postpone- ments ¬ of thu caubygniuttrig In court Popular Hurprlnen I In Iyrotrcbulci The second of the popular Ureworki pro irftmrncs arranged for every riatuiday night la August will bu olHred to the public tithe sTiflIng In Tains Upen Air Theatre at Manhat Unlleacb Whllo the Japanese tenth Ihlnese war spectacle will lie the plain attraction the lrwork exhibit vvhlchfnllnwtltvvlll replete devices anti roinlo pyroudintc bur 0 Dried compliance with many requests tho fireworks and war spectacle v 111 ho given every rsnlng during the week bundats excepted from DOW anti the enc of the season Iff AND lou Xlttt MXTJIOVOLIS Mrs Kate Chase who Is now In Now York en- gaged In an attempt to secure a home far her- self mend her children during hr letlels eee- nfreueltln the business town lhe Is trying to recover her fathers place Kilfto wo by means uf a fund which shall pay oft thl mortungc und return the property to her for her life After her death site proposes that the persons who advance the money shall take the property 1 ho place which lies only a utile In- n straight line from the Capitol Is on the side of Washington In which the city Is Irovlll anti It Is believed that the property llomo lay be very valuable Mr Chase 111 dropped the name Hpraeu so com- pletely ¬ that sho I Is not known under It at the Ilal hotel nt which she stop here does the business In relation to the raitlnit of thn money In person nnd she Is on her way from tifllce tonrTlce down town mount the time slut spends In New York H ho has lust ObOe nf tier old charm of manner Her hair i Is white but her figure Is slim and clrllrh anti her style nf dressing Is youthful but not Inappropriately MI It was at one time ugirestei1 that the Ohio Hocletv phntild advance the money to redeem MrsChares rnlllrl1llnll one or two wealthy mem hers mal I promlel limit tho majority of thn socIety was of time project soil It fel through Mrs I base I Is c n rnuracted by success nf her efforts rn far Hhe upeaks with 1 sadness In her voice nnd In her looks which seems t have become habitual to he In tho delivery department of 1 flxth avenue dry goods store Is a man with a remarkable memory He hal charge of all the goods which- are returned by the drivers becniKO of mistake In addresses because the buyers had changed their minim Ho never forgets a name or ad- dress amtI often corrects mistakes In the records of the department lie knows thn character and appearance every block In the cIty and mil describe any holire upon hearing ltd num- ber ¬ HP ascribes his remarkable knowledge of the cIty to thin fact that ho passed many years- In driving a delivery wagon An unused church I Is tho last building to be used as a bicycle academy There are few va- cant ¬ halls In New York tlmt have not been put to this use The outlay of capital required Is very emaIl and tho risk Involved In becoming tho manager of an academy Is not very great The halls are usually rented for a time when they would not otherwise bo engaged and the prices asked are low while there Is sufficient rivalry among tho bicycle companies to make It possible for a man to got hold of enough wheels to common operations without great outlay Thcso academics seem to flourish too In parts of the town where one would suppose tutu thero was little money to bo spentonsuch diver- sion ¬ Tho asphalt pavements of Essex and Norfolk streets exhibit always a number of riders who form 1 remarkable contrast to the squalor of tho neighborhood In fart ttiero Is no feature of the bicycle craze that Is more difficult to understand than tho possession of wheels by pome 01 the people who own them Men who look as though they could never attoid the CIt of a tiicu cIa are time proud po sesors of their own machines Ierhapi the bicycle habit tends promote a frugality which tins never developed before Even when selling on tho Installment plan the largest supply company re quires that purchasers shall bu guaranteed by their employers or by a real estate owner It I H not to t lie supi osed that any largo proportion of the riders can turnMi such guarantees end the tallment plan does uotaeeuj able1 explain- the quihtlon The limitation of the Interest that society takes In bicycling Is marked very sharply nt tho line of the professional Itfcycle racers and by dde records are matters In which society takes no Intercut whatever mend It Is safe to say that nine out of ten people one tees riding on tho do not know the name of the man 10uloarc the best record or w 1ml It I Is It was this Indifference of riders In general tonaril professional bicycling that prevented time great meet lat winter from Ielol ho great a success- as the projectors The mon who are financIally Interested In providing btcyee amusement fur the un hllo evidently expect the crazn tl continue profitably next year The largest rink thai Sew York hIs yet seen will bo opened this winter I Is to be tar up town on the west sldn near northern end ot Central Iark und will cover an pUre oIly block Thin building which wi shortly be commenced Is to be arranged thl purpose only nnd this bicyclIng la to proceed In it to thin accompani- ment ¬ of music and every oUr attraction that cim bo made Incidental to the sport Tho thousands of dollars which are dally poured Into tho dry goods stores are collected at certain Intervals from the various assistant cashiers and turned over to the chief Before the banks close be deposits what he tins on band Several tmesecelt thieves have tried- to Intercept messengers and at least two attempts were successful The drv goods men are very slow about giving Information about such thefts however Believing that they only encourageother thieves The Dellhbrho of Fourteenth street and avenue likely to become the Spanish quarter of the town Already there are three Spanish hotels In that region and they are always crowded with darkskinned blACk montRebe men who move quickly about olices or sit on chairs In front of the buildings generally talking with a great deal of vivacity and smokIng cigarettes Several doctors signs In this region show plainly that their owners are Spaniards or Cubans and the tobacco stores In the neighborhood are entirely In the bands of Cubans The three or lour hotels In the city that depend almost en- tirely ¬ for their support on the passengers that tho southern steamers bring from Cuba do not generally object to dark but there is u degree of color at vvuicn they draw the line when they tan the arrIval of u load of jetblack i seugers nt one of these hOb is likely to throw the uioprlrlur Into great excitement and the diplomacy euployed In gulling them un to a house vv illmi to receive them might servo to settle more Important problem The biigcagemen and drivers at tIme tiers huvo leurned now how to direct the ar- rivals ¬ mind time people who e Bkms are too dark- to recommend them ut certain of time hotels are sent to ono where It I U known they will bu re- ceived ¬ Nothing U more characteristic of tbe o tpanlibAmerlcuu hotels than tho mvstery which surrounds thom For u New Yorker to vvulK un to the otllce and ak If u certain person- Is stopping there I U un I luimedlulii Indication to thom proprietor that tlethlll is wrong oinno- vvheru and thu cortvrruatmtt- will be carried on by him with this l Idea In view Whether tie mal you walt to MO Id III thu hotel or not it I uuarter of an hour before jou nnd it out and thu manner In which the In ¬ formation Is cUlmullcltOlllwlS leaves a sus- picion ¬ that t about lan A cu- rious ¬ mature of way in which these hotels- are conducted Is the fact that few of the people tl charge speak an > thing but ripamch French time language moot tiitd next to Spanish and Kngllsh plays only 1 small role One of the curious cOlllUonsln New York Just now said a real Mlto agent VIe the lumber of vacant houses In the lower part of town Houses mire In the market now ut 1 rental of 1000 or 3100 thut would have brought half as much again live years ago That Is be caueu there limes been u general movement up tllanllltu lists For u small family otto of that rents lor lvUO I really wore desirable than a house Youd think women would havo learned by this how to get off a car but they havent said tho conductor of a Ilatbunh trolley car In lirooklyn In a tone of Injury and disgust as he started to get names of passengers as witnesses to the circumstances of an embarrassing mis- hap ¬ to a young woman who stepped off the car the wrong way und before It had stopped Thats time third woman that has fallen ott my car today allliho saws way None of them was much I have to make 1 report of each case and got the names of passengers as- vvitnerHiK Its so easy to avoid such tumbles loC Units wha make me timed Thin iilrl wn a wheelwomun too who ought to know Fotucthlng of thin laws of 1lullbrlul I If a woman l Is ever to learn I going tn time academy evidently to nol her wheel 1 for is the park Hhusignalled tha 11111 conductor to but vvhllu the car was yet rU1111 at fair speed jauntily swung hcrielf to the rearimi thurar and wan promptly loulrl i yer on her hack Thi vhork tumbled her hulr downand covered her with dust but except for her feelings whim was unhurt 1 heres tine simple rule which every woman ought tn learn and remember which would make Mifli acuidcntb liiiKisihlu all I tln con- ductor A vvomiinalivajs grasps t tho hcli with her right bund In netting tilT I swings her mound with her face tl this reur of the cur Mm will Miltt her pockrthnok front right 1mm litt hand In order tci do this InUsit- hn cur I la stationary any one getting niT this way U hound to he tipped backward thiHiuh not al ways t1 led over Of course if they would wait till rar top It would I be alt right Hut they cant t All ears are now guarded on the ItIt side ko that pakxenicers must get olf on t the right Now I If f 1 woman would only I re- member ¬ simply to Ira < I i I the handrail nlwajs with t her left soil vvnitld fur toward thin front and ulvvavi he safe ten If HIP car I tm still moving sun huii everv chance nf keeping her equilibrium and would usually do It lIme rule I I ts simple and I think sure Tho company an addition to the usual warning arid make It read I I car Take stops hold with your l Ir bind and wall till the 4 FAULTS IN TiE DU1VBWA- YcninrKtt cninrKtt HATH OKJO- at RVIJrAr VST lit 11Wf1LT Pmk Hoard Attired thin t4pettfleatiofle U- heiitember lNU4 Arch In reeked end HlnUlnKBOO Feet oT Crlhworlt Hhnnlil- He JletaiilUCo of llepnlri V0OO The report of Consulting Engineer Foster Crow on tho Harlem Driveway brings to light some defects In construction time responsi- bility ¬ of which may rest on the city or on tho contractor that 11111 a questol timid the Cor poratton Counsel now Mr CrowI1 wai requested by the Park Hoard on un I make an export examination I of time driveway an examinatIon which was tn lie comprehonslvo of the plans tpccinrntlons structure and ma- terials ¬ and the stability and workmanship of the work In progress The report now In Ibm tintids of tho Commissioners Is tho result of his work Mr Crowoll describes the Driveway very fully nnd tins first thing ho notlcci with dlsnu- provat Is tho masonry retaining wall In tho tint section ll 5tli street to High Itrldgc which Is practically completed Mr Crowcll IRS that it glees evIdence of having been carefully built- In nccordnnce with time specifications but that Its outer faco I vertical Instead of leaning In- ward While this feature cannot fairly be styled a defect In desllllll says Mr Crowcll It Is In my jl an undesirable one and where ever practicable In tho future elsewhere on thin work retaining walls should bo given a bailee The dimensions of tho wall ho continues aro somewhat lighter than I should hiave been Inclined to adopt for work of this character but nevertheless there Is no reasonable doubt of Its permanent stability and as It Is practically On Ished and time Illllnir behind nearly completed It may be accepted as satisfactory In general Tho next thing that attracted Mr Crowollk attention I Is the first of the three subways that go underneath thin driveway the arch of which although lot nearly bearing tho load that It will bear when the Driveway I Imbued Is badly cracked and 1 la sinking account of the changes In tho plans and specifications of tho original contracts Mr rowell I U unwilling to say whu Is responsible for this work He bays Under some circumstances the correct as elenmcnt of tho cause of tho palpable failure of this subway would have an Important bearing upon tho question of tho responsibility of the contractor and his obligation to rebuild tho work at his own expense but In thin case I can ¬ not llnd that It ISI matter of much consequence so far as tIn fixing of responsibility for tho rlaoo that lht > alteration In the pcciilcatbon tho timber grlllno wits omitted WHS directed by thin hark Commissioners fept 19 18IH and certain liutlce Plies called for III the original plans lo ho driven In front of the subway were dlspelec wllh by thin engineer whim n respects so far as I can learn and so far as time evidence of thin work Itself goes the plan and slid ideation were not defl- ated ¬ from by the contractor Engineer Irow ell recommends that the entire maonry superntructuro of this subway be taken down the foundation retufurced and that len changes bo male In thn plans and pcclllcutlons of the two other subways the piling for which Las but ben begun as will avoid like mistakes The crib bulkheads In tho Ural section are also criticised Ilcsnys This part of the work ran scarcely bo consid- ered ¬ satisfactory iinil a portion of It about 600 fctln length Is BO Ladly distorted anti ills iilnred that 1 recommend Its being rebuilt on tlrely Time present crib encroaches beyond tho estab- lished ¬ bulkhead line and the part nnder water Is dangerous to navigation und the drlewuy Is rndniigcred by I the insecure work thin trouble hern l is lhn result of careless work and faulty designs He same I find It eitremely difficult to reach final ton iMlnn as tn the controlling ramo of the allure of the crib because both Its de lgn and uIIII were linptrfect It wns originally de- signed ¬ for it depth of elllto1 reel below mein low water to hard I I was sit ieittefli y found that tile depth to hard bottom at thin part of the river was about thlrtvelghl feet wit the nrlgliml tot width of I twenty test was Slot Increased as Mioilld have been Although thin engineer hart authority to chance I tho dimensions according to depth I item did not do It a nil I It I I Is t this complication that render It dlflicult I I to place I the ropmdbiltty fur according to Mr I ron ell I thin contractor complied with the engineers plans and In- structions ¬ except In some minor details Mr Crowoll has few criticisms to make on the tccond section HP makes some recommenda- tions ¬ for the reorganization of the engineer force wade necessary by the retirement of the who had charge of time work Alstanlnllleer says that the original speci- fications ¬ were Intelligently drawn and had It not boon for the subsequent weakening mortif- ications ¬ they would hae ben entirely sufclont In another report he estimates tIme pairs and changes on the Driveway at 570000 Contractor J D Lcory who did the work that has been criticised has flied a statement with the Boar In which It Is claimed thKt If there are they are due to faulty plans and not tnthp contractor As the matter ws put Into the hands of the Corporation Counsel but a few dlsllo It will probably be some time bo fore 1 Is reached HAST SlliCttli IIMVT IUE TREE The Grove ninnppriirlnB from the Eter coOt Htreet Cemetery Property owners antI residents In the vicinity- of First avenue and Eleventh street are very much worked up over thin cutting down and if moval of the trees from the old cemetery that occupies the middle of tho block between 1 Elev- enth ¬ and Twelfth streets and First avenue and Avenue A Tho cemetery Is owned by St Patricks Church- on Mott street but Is taken cure of bjthe Cal- vary ¬ Cemetery people 1 he cemetery contained qulto a grove ailanthus trees Near tho west- ern ¬ end of tho cemetery was a clump which lad been used us a playground by the children of the neighborhood It hind also become n very convenient Place fr people tn deposit rubbish The trees It I bald required such lontal rimming that was dec Icfed tn remove Time property holders say that the trees have made an attractive spit In a very thickly ilated neighborhood anti that they will POI really missed Their greatest fear the nay- s that thin removal of time trees I Is only a Hep- nwurd tho sale of the cemetery A petition hl been Marled to stop tin work but unless irflented very onl It will bo UNcle for tho- Inot trees wi probably bo cut down Insldo of three or days CAUOIIT jir ins oirv BLlJTOH An Elevator Conduelnr In the War Depart- ment ¬ cflilentully Killed WASHINGTON Ala Olnrtn Murphy col orcd nn elevator conductor War Depart- ment met a strange accidental death tide uf- ornrion Ho was slandlng outside his cur In the subbascmenl of tlio building und In roo sponen to I cal from one of tIns upper llonrs jumped for hi car and pulled the liner before lie was fairly In The car went upward with great rapidity thin lower part of Murphr jody nnd tile legs belim outside When the car reached thin basement lloor tho unfnrtunnto conductor hack caniHKharply I In contact with an Itch llange and hU teal y wui wrdged In H- Olghtly between the ear und tho mill that the cite wax brought In a KtundHtill Murphys back was ITOktn and he was haIIIlue Dr I icorke I I Heriidon u surgeon of navy uIII reach this aeuuti from bin ollicc I in time Nnvy I 1lrWwlL Murpliy waiapiiilntcd from I ilreen I t I In I mill on the rcrcmiiiendatlon of tniiertKsinuu Henry 1 Jbculham JIuwas 44 years old risiiitviv IICICIW Ul IIJGln Two Frrnrlimrn Aplrrft Iuildrd on ThliC- OUHI by Three HUutnvrH Four French llshcrmen who lost their bear limes lit a fog ort the banks of Newfoundland arrltcd hero yesterday TWO of them were ilrked 111 by the 01 I tank In I Ciunplne nnl two by thu Vhlto liner llrltuiinlu len bite llrltannii brauvht are Adrian l Itmvv ami- Illppolyte I I I Frlrel toni I tiny belonged tn thn tiniicL 1Aillve I They hud ben only tour hour HWiy trol their vessel Draifun mid Alois Jrnn Marie of the mack tnrutivhi had II en IBbe1 hours without water uhen Ia 1111 them nlmurd tlixir hunger cm Aug 4 They uto rl Ish to allay Iwo morn fMiermen hal Pierre anti Jules Ilolnlron fruI thn brig Duzene were ticked mi t Ito Irllsh t fteamslihi llaku- Mandant < and landrcl I In IhlhideU- plilii They 1rl1 taint Input luck of food that tilt had tu ou board HoiitliuiirL to rir JOb Tlili Iort Thin twmnscrew passenger and freight steam- shIp Southmwtirk of tho International Nuvlga ton Company let arrived hero ye terday Philadelphia take the plwe of f the lied Mar steamship Ithynland which will here aftnrpl een Ihiludelphla arid hIvetjsol TIe bouthwark anti her lntvr ship the Ken ilnizton will both be on the route between tbli poet and Antwerp before September V Nzr BOOKS Brief R Tlewn of Important find Jaterui tag New PnbllenltoBi- Wo have received the second volumcof 1foo l published by the Jensen Press Philadelphia This Is onaof those ageend productions of time same family as the Yellow llofilt but much bet- ter look Ing to our mind than that very bilious eccentricity It comes In a snowwhite cover which Is relieved by one of Mr John Hloann free anti faclnatnl pictorial decorations In this a rising from a lightgreen area regards with Interest a while butterfly wending Its way amid 1 forest of darkurccn cookies of fanciful design while a buffcolored titer rising In tho extreme northwestern parlof tho picture wilds gently dt wn watering on Its way time largo righthand division of the Udys deep red wig Ono Is bound to bo pleated by this picture on tho coverby Its Ono eulorsle boldness and Its m > stery Tho book are varied and Intereltnl Tho musical flmvof Mr Harrison I poem Acron the Years will recommend Itself to any sensi- tive ¬ ear though It Is just a llltlo peculiar when- we come to analyze I with regard to Its mere meaning to read of a shepherd browned anti overripe with sunny fluting In tho nibbled meads Tho phrnso noonlong too Invites a speculation tlmt Is not likely to come to anything It Is probably Impossible to determine how 1111 noonlong ls In Mr Owen poem Tho Ape and tho Thinker tho remarkable quality Is afforded In the Idea that tho npo should bo a melancholy creature given to philosophic sar- casm ¬ Mr Vleter causes his ape to rebuke Its human Interlocutor for an undue love of gold and an obliviousness to the general uilscy For one human being that heeded tho cry of dis- tress ¬ Mr Wisters ape had found ten that Ig- nored ¬ It utterly Cold selfishness comes not In heaven Is one of tho remarks attributed to this surprising creature and the Thinker Is further Informed by Mr Winters ape that to heal some heart to ease some moan I Is a business that nmoni apes at least Is supposedto to have decided recommendations Wo do not know where Mr WIBterobtalned this idea of time simian philosophy It could hardly have been thu re- sult of 1 study of tho late Mr Crowloy tho lentralllrJ menagerIe who It will be remem ¬ u to scratch and bite his tonsort Miss Kitty OBrien most K I U Burtons picture of tho Doatl of Mlnnchatm I undoubtedly but the quality of vagueness we think Is a little too much Insisted upon for nobody could tel here without the assistance of time title Mlnnchnha was not a feather bed and Mr Sloan picture of tho girl sitting with her bunds In her lap In Illustration ot Kao Chopins story awakens the sympathetic ca- ncer ¬ of tho beholder because being one of those pictures In tho Chinese style which dispenses wIth the Idea of foreground and background It looks as though a large tree and the Atlantic Ocean were suspended Immediately over tho girl anti wero liable at any mo ¬ lent to fall and annoy her In Mr VllllamJ Olackene picture fly the ulcer the size of thin lady In the foreground Is excus¬ able because she Is transparent and by virtue of that quality permits us to obtain a view of thin landscape It Is I fact however that If site were nu opaque lady we could hardly l mien the river at all One of the ablest and roost Inter- esting ¬ contributions to thus number of Mood Is Tho Reply of Olgadlbs a dramatic mono- logue ¬ by Mr Harvey Maltland Watts Mr Watts calls this the reverse to tho obverse of Ilrowulngs Bishop Illougrams Apology H- Is 1 ver > Ingenious piece of fancy wel put striking In its philosophy and Its Alto- gether ¬ the reader should get a good deal of en- tertainment ¬ out of this curious and distinctly handsome publication Suppressed Chapters and Other Uooklsh ness by Koburt Undges Charles Scribners tons I Is another series of those able and agree ¬ able sketches and essays which have recom- mended ¬ this writer so widely Al of these things were suggested to Mr Bridges his capacity of book reviewer anti are concerned with tho books he has read and with the authors who made them Thus we have a dialogue In the Anthony Hop style and an account of Trilbys Christmas and a skit on Little Eyolf which recognizes the preternatural gloom of that celebrate production and sometblnl sug¬ by Mr John Bangss witty sketches of Tho Idiot and something suggested by Kipling and so on There are too a number of the brief reviews- of books that Mr Bridges publishes In Life un- der ¬ the pseudonyme of Droch and there are essays besides all concerned we think with persons who are concerned with books and all compact agreeable Instructive discerning- and entertaining It I a volume to recommend Itself to those who are Interested In the lighter literature of the day Not every reader of course will agree with alt that Mr Bridges says When ho speaks of the brightness and tho reasonable dignity of tho dialogue In Mr Crawfords Katharine Laiiderdale for In- stance ¬ not everybody will agree with him But nobody wi bu offended with him for It Is no otTence a critic to betray now and then tho pOMtesxIon of 1 kind heart In Tha Countess Bettlna tho History of an Innocent fecandal by 11 I P Putnams tons we have a highly romantic story of tho present time curiously told In 1 style which has generally been restricted to the narration of the romance of a bygone age It makes u > feel as though the Dumas guardsmen had come buck tn run things In their own peculiar fashion and perhaps wo should feel grateful for tho Impres- sion ¬ for thumle of those lively gentlemen was distInctly Interestlll At any rate we have here u story exciting quality Including an elopement In very high life with Inci- dental ¬ castles nunneries moonlight galloping torses und doughty menatarms and It Is a pleasure to us to bear witness that the Countess Dettlnn who was a young por > on of much phjslcnl loveliness as well as uf many sterling traits of mental and moral character escaped train the PrInce whom she hall no mind t marry and married the young ofllccr In tho Herman army for whom she bad a mind erlmpn It I Is well that our dull modern life should be touched up tor us In this lively old style way Certainly thn story I Is In great con- tract to anything that we havo lied train MIca Wllklns It Is undoubtedly well written under Its plan and wo can heartily congratulate the author Uon sonic of his qualification however ve may bo dIsposed to regard others Mr W J Hendersons story Afloat with Ihe Flag Harper ie t Brothers Is olethlll that vlll bu sure to captivate the oys l tho story of two naval cadets who go to Rio Janeiro CI the United States cruiser Dettolt The events of thu war In Ulo harbor during the reo lelllnnof the Brazilian fleet uro vividly picture by Mr Henderson and the btory u very spirited description of tho part played by our ships aunt especially the letrol In thu sup irefslon of that Henderson In- horciughly versed In tImIngs nautical and Is I wel equipped to tell a story of tho sea He has patriotic spirit und makes no bones of be Ilg Jingo Every American boy will like his story tho hotter by reason of thut circumstance Uf tidbit now I Iy published wu have received Mm Musgruve und lice Husband by Itlch arcl Marsh anti In Old New Knglund tho Ito imiico of a Colonial Fireside by IlczuUnli- lutterworth It Appletnn Co In Honor of thu 1111 und other short storIes by W lark und Thu heart of Life by W U- Mullock I V Iutnuina Nms The Worm Itmt fused tl Turn by britain MhaiJ rl- KllvIo Company A Mormon Wlfo I by- iraco Wilbur Trout Charles II Korr Co 0 Jhkagci nnd Mumselle a Modern I Heathen the Ullh Novel of the Celebrated Boutlicrn Au liorem K Burke Collliu Wllllaiu J Ikiiners Jr Philadelphia HuuJneiiuu Social Contract translated with an historical and critical Introduction anti tolls by Henry J Tozer nnd n Illi n preface by leruard lloutnquet menu Cooperative Labor Upon time Lund and I other papers the report of 1 conference held In England In October IHUIedlUd by J A HuUoii are Imported by hetcrlbners Perpetual Youth an essay by Eleanor ivlrk conies from The Idea Publishing Company lirooklyn Time Saloon Keepers ledger a series of > > tempcnxne revival lectures by the tier Dr Louis Albert flanks I Is published by the Funk Wsgnslls Company We have received the bound volume of the Crllr for tho first half of the present year Health Pleasure an Illustrated book ne descriptive summer resorts and excursion l road routes I Is Isue by tho New York Central Hall Tho True Hclonco of Living by DrEdward Hooker Dewey comes to us from tIme Henry Bill Publishing Company Norwich Conn- A second edition of ° Hlmpllficd Elocution- by Edwin lordon Lawrence Is published by the author in this city- FJcmcntsof Pedagogics by J N Patrick I A Worklne Manual of American History by William U Mace Elementary Ureek Educa- tion ¬ by rrrderlck II Lane and now editions- of other school text books come to us from C I W Bardccn Byrucuie JAMISE fOtLOW MASSACRE Aid Needed to Krrp theArmfnlnniof IronS Btarvutlon As a sequel to the Turkish atrocities In the Saotoun of which much was printed In the newspapers of New York several months ago word comes now that the Armenians of that district are on tIme verge of a famine and that starvation threatens thousands of them The entire Armenian population of tho district of Moush I Is threatened Word comes to tho Eng- lish ¬ Itelief Commllleo trot Mr Shipley tho lit Itlsh delegate attached to tho Commission at Moush that not only are tho Armenians poverty stricken hut thing havo no seeds to plant and no Implements with which to till the soil When thin Sassoun massacre occurred entire villages were destroyed provisions and flocks of sheep wero carried away and all tho farm Im- plements ¬ either burned or pillaged In tbo spring no fields could be ploughed and no seed was sown Thousands of women and children halnl no one t provide for them are crowded villages begging from people who are little better of than tliomselven Iteccnt advices frol tha tomity show that famine prevails thu lush district but In tho ad ¬ joining districts of Armenia Tho attention of England France and Rus- sia tine been called to time condition of these sur- vivors ¬ of tho massacre and recently a relief committee was formed In this city to cooperate with the English committee In the work of pro- viding ¬ assistance for thorn Thin committee I Is composed of Mrs Hobert Abbo Prof N huller Murray Morris K lesup Jacob II Schlff- Hpencer Track thin Ilev Dr Henry Van Dyke Mrs Henry Vlllard Everett I P heeler and Dr A Ayvalan Mr Spencer Traik Is the- reurorII11 contributions will bo received at offlce 111ne street STATION JAIL 11KELT TO FALL Mulberry Street Police Have to Take Prim once to Elizabeth street The jail of the Mulberry street police station Is apparently ready t fall at any moment It has beet condemned by an Inspector of the De- partment ¬ of Buildings and no prisoners or lodgers have been admitted to it since last au- tumn ¬ and the prisoners of the precinct are taken to Elizabeth street station The Police Commissioners have not been not fe that the jail bus noon condemned so not think they are authorized afl yet to tear It down They cannot proceed with needed re- pairs ¬ on other station houses unlll they have provided for those on the Mulberry street Jai To build anew jail will coSt 1000or rnou a hal of tho appropriation for station house re ¬ and Improvements I Amonl thin Improve- ments ¬ plamieiHs the another story to tha West 1 hlrtleth strti t station Something mu t be done soon with time Mnl berry street Jail for It Is not only ready to fall Itself but to brlnir down a tenement on this north anti render the city liable for duumamies even If no loss nf life Is caused The walls put- tied ¬ so much last fall that tlio water pfpesbrokc The jail was abandoned when this happened Time rear of the flvestorv tenement ill hits north seems to bhow the weakness of the tail and If one fulls apparently the oIlier will In the mean tine the Pnllee Commissioners are wait- Ing for the lUiilcling Department to empower them officially to tear the Jail down 10 FJIEIEXT TKOLIEY ACCiDENTS lie Ilrookljn Heights Company Exhibits Its New Fender Tho Crawford trolley fender with which all time cars of the Brooklyn Heights Company are to be equipped was exhibited yesterday to Mayor Scbiercn time members of the Board of Aldermen and Brooklyn citizens In general The Mayor rode down town on A car pro¬ vided with the tender and expressed himself much pleased with its appearance and Its work- ing ¬ The fender Is a movable contrivance only one being attached to a car but It can easily be shifted by the motortnau and conductor at the end of each trip It I Is made of rope net with a framework of gas pipe 1M Inches In diameter It extends U feet 0 Inches In front anti I Is 6 feet I ii Incites In width The slope Is gradual the lower end being within an melt of time car track liubber buffers are placed on each silo beneath It to prevent It from striking tIns switches The network covers the bumper and draw bars By a spring attachment this force of the blow on striking an object Is broken The company will have lfiOO of this tenders In operation within a month Experts regard the fender as tho most satisfactory yet In ¬ vented KAK1XE- P INTEL tIGENCIC UTrmt AIMAX4C Tm PAY Sun rises 005 Situ sets 7 051 Moon rises 0 13 sitcom WATXR Till DAY Bandy nook10 US I Uov bland 10 001I Uehl Quit 12 30 Arrived FpIiur Aug 9 fa IucAntn from Queenstnwn- hs Nnrmnnnin HareniU Cherboarc- b lu ramulni MarLiciilauer Antwerp M Iirltiiiinlc lladilnckcjueenstown- B Iota IuilwlK llamlmric- Bo Ihlumi hk out Chrl llan and bus Mitoulo unbrauD Krotfti San Domingo he Eti sin Johnnon Ulbraltar- YeinaMre Be ItuiiliKon Ilmrleiton- hs lallnliasrtee Aikius 8avaiuiab- fUduyatlMllo VVidk r Norfolk Hi Ilkhmonl DavlH Want I olut- B Ely lioHuvau Iiaraeoa Dark Aulello uulatulu beotto SerlUo hoc mater arrivals see Flnt rag inniviD OCT 81 Fpaarndam from New York at Rotterdam 144 I tilam troll Sea York nt Amsterdam Us tarts from Now York K Tilbury- B < llaiitlarr City from New iurk at KrlltoL- bi liuvte IromXtm York at Liverpool SIOIITKn- KM LarKO Par from Meislua for New York paed Ombr liter ms Tocivhtet from Now York for Gibraltar passed hiti5rtt PAil tn rno KOREiav moaTs BiKurat Illmiurik from Southampton for Mew York he hiptrlui frnrii Copenhagen for New York him Kiltur tiiueiit II rroms cnoa for Neuc York 5 seiuliitituiu moo iireuicmm fur ew Ytm- rSI Clrcassla front Moe tile for ioev York ocinomsu sTzemestmii- aml Tmutiu Malt lois IliMllftldl- fl IjvTouralne Havre U uu A M- IlllblU ID A M Liverpool 4 Jil A M hoo AM Trine llrfimn n MO A M- lIllOlllUtllUKKOW situ A M llUOAlt- Anuu MOll A M t idiuii Uollcrdam 11 UU A M- 1iilatliv 1 UO I1 Jl- II Ihimliurit- MlmlMlcipl I UUA U Lunilul- iIuimml UUUM- 1HOUM Hinunu in do AM Finance Colon I III no AM I C Oil M- II Colombia Colon I lonilAltS- rxursnra 2 00 M llaviina Ill III V M 100 I1 M hi lets Nsa foimuuiiauiehI 11I no A M- AHenu lllUf I M llujll lutes A it- Allriihany lanuM1- VUOM Jainntea 10 00 AM- KIKiirte Nrw orleuut- nnoho a nu h M Clalvenlnn 3 Oil I1 L- SUU Louisiana New UrkalKI- KCOMlU 1 M BTUiXSIIt- rttuf 7 fay Kontabelle NtTliomai- Munliuniet Jnb ia Iotiinlainr- liiluna July vr- tJul rtlncKU- Zhif > id- JUrkulu Atoi ui Avv 11 M Normamlle llavri Anit n luruuresia AUK I lluvr- nirnic Jlly 2i I oinlon- llotlrnUni July vn- JulyUD Kutiriilum el St I lulu AUK Alii temluolft JuckMiu villa Aui Cti3 of Mueou SutuiiiUi B Pee Itnibiii tu 13 Peril Koiithawpluu- nliU AUK a S lirenien- Tuunc Aug AUi livirpiml- Unlmtvk 4 IjtnilonI- HuKui July II on ion July 1 Hi hemita hlataiuum Mug Aug Em hui New orleniu 7 plus Zisrc4iy IuU hi- setmritiatitl AmttW5rl 11mg a- A img Sisti if ebrusskii 0- ianntamn htti irruhelmu J luly I siihurtitui tiitrmllutr J tihi t I 11th JO- thIuolm Aug tie IidIesSt1V 1t1 14 AUS 7- bprre luremuien AUtO S Jersey Ity 5blmseS July81 City of to- Leons 7 Andes Fort auhrino Au 10 I ubtIcaftu- Ltr W NEW AND POPULAR NOVELS THE VEILED DOCTOR MISS A Novel By VAUINA ANNE JEFFEMON DAvx WINNIE Post 8vo Cloth Ornamental 125 DAVIS A strong story of Southern hifeN r Prut j A distinctly unusual book unusually original and unusually stronglciinniil jirnr The readers attention Is well sustained to the end Button Journal MY LADY NOBODY MAARTEN A Novol By MAAUTKN MAARTENB Author of An Old Mm Is Lovo otc Illustratod Post MAARTENS I 8vo Cloth Ornauiontal 175 This Holland genius Ims clone ft large number of meritorious things but nothing superior to the present tnryPAIVfi > lnhl t Ilttx This hook Is one to ho rend It Is interesting as a story admirable as a study of Dutch character Imctou Daily News THE MARTYRED FOOL DAVID I A Novol By DAVID CnuiflTiE MunnAV Author of Times ROVOIIROH In Direst Peril etc I CHRISTIE Post 8vo Cloth Ornamental 125 MURRAY I A tooth story full of stirring scenes and rapid movement and f vivid pictures of Australian and European ltfoX 1 Afail and Krnrna A very drnmatlr tale This story Is told with clean strokes and a nervous energy that are very Impressive Umton Traveller WITH THE PROCESSIONHE- NRY J A Novel Bv HVXHY B FuuEn Author of Tho I Cliff Dwollors etc Post 8vo Cloth Orna B mental 12o FULLER F Very well told and toll of life and color without any wearing brllllsncy In the study of ofTeotn rhiirrtimnii A 1 Time book Is great there In question nf It It Is large anti deep It contains every element of grandeur CMcdjo Ttinc IIer M A PAIR OF BLUE EYES THOMAS A Novel By THOVAS HAnDY Now Edition With Etched Frontispiece Crown 8vo Cloth HARDY I 150 All of time stories by tide gifted English novelist are notable be- cause ¬ of their freshness and pnwor Mwfon Joiinidl Among the classics of English Mellon Iravtiltnee Journal ii THE MASTER I A Novel By T ZASGWILL Author of Chidron of the Ghetto Ctc Illustrated Post 8vo ZANGWILL I Cloth Ornamental 175 A remarkable hook by ono of the meet famous of recent wrlt m For wealth antI power of description this writer has ho superior Episcopal Itemnlrr Ililladelphla In the execution anti finish of The Master the young Jewish author shows an admirable conception of time mysteries of stj lo anti teciinlqueThatoit Herald DIPLOMAflcDISENCHALiTMENTSED- ITH A Novel By EDITH BIOELOW Post 8vo Cloth Ornamental S125 B16ELOW Thin story l Is a capital one antI li capitally told Tfcintmi AiirtrH Shows a deep Intellleencn of c v rvdav humanity and a pretty wit together with a line and uuhurlful sarcasm point time nar- rative ¬ Chicago Tlincfllcrall BILLY BELLEW W E- NORRIS I A Novel By W E Nonnis Author of Marcia Thirlby Hall A Man of Ills Word etc I Illustrated Post 8vo Cloth Ornamental 1 50 Decidedly Interesting and as a study of peculiar characters It Is a marked succes nntnn Jnurnal A store In W E Nnrrlss heat vein and few reiders need be told how entertain ¬ log and full of sparulo that vein can be Uosloii Ttavcllcr I Published by HARPER BROTHERS New York i prrIiil 1ottrtuJ Its > it licit OF Ill ml iicrTits or- theNiw Yur i unite ilhrir etir Mini un I Til- dnuFuullcUllulla hit IKM CIX lllll Ic VH i 111t tm sue SIt cv slit lUiiid will I lniioid li n Mmulut July Vi I niHitiinlay Vim I 17 l iVblh i llicluiln I IKK- Itlb I mAle K tCoetl hiiiuTlnleiiiU- ntOltlliit hIS OK rilE TlllhTKKH nf- Ihu New nri Iuullo lllirjiv tumor ICIIIK and Til i dIm ounditlloni the Aslcilt tllllMl IIIIIIUM- UfiDrlin Hair will I tme rlcwnl rroin Jinnda Ann I in IC 14ii trims hviJl t M I Mi j both lluluhu HUHUlih lIT flKhuin nil fiidciil- lMITIl cltptotir l0ttfCt I iVRM K Ill Eslt fHtUN Cllt 1 Itlll riir I lurOMIin Itiv Jolin Mali I I l iutur II- li v l Pr Jvnuiovi nf I IIHHIOII I is IkiMCltil tittiill i Ulu- bllhiU llthlml I IkTVl raltl I It tA M and 4J M CT UAUTIIOlliMKVV H IAlilMl llul M Vciv S act o 42mt sI Rvrnlntc praver und ennon at h uVlmk Rev Hr McUtew wilt omclile ho inoriiliyc service HE anuxoERS KAIIIIATH HOME liii IMH u T bIb avJohn A D l VlUoa prucucs IUJ1730 SGGRI6GS COMPANY PUBLISH TODAY- TWENTYFIVE LETTERS ON English Authors For Teachers Literary Chubs and tha General Reader By MART FISHER 12mo cloth 400 page Irlceuh50 This work treats of thote eminent wrlttn- uho for more than Jive hundred years have inosL Influenced tho thought of the world The author makes the reader acquainted not only ullh the character of their works limit what la of greater Interest clth them as men what theyfilt and believed their wall of looking at life and their ex- periences ¬ The work Is a departure from Us class In Its omttsloii of the hackncuedjuagmentt ulttclt pass front book to book Its fresh telling waiter front original sources and Its special notice of the effects of tctafc and vicious literature ujmi yonny nnlndeits mission lielna to tncnleate a taste for flea 0 bist that has been thought and sold in the uorlci 1 The ChIcago InterQccan says This Is a book mirked for IU simplicity of st j IB and directness In clear statements of the literary charucteriallrs of eminent English authors front Chaucer In 1400 to Mrs Humphry Ward In 1HU1 Such a broad field can Rive only epitome sketches butt her Intruders are wonderfully clear In their delineation 8he does thli hit 50 much In vordsof herown hm allows tacit to speak and tItus clothes each III living character what each thought and believed 1 how thuy lived and acted and labored The reader will seldom tint more of positive value In Mich nall space told more vigorously and tilDwIngty titan In the neat compact volume Teachers anti literary clubn will rind the book bonndlesrly suggeitlvelnvltlng to wider new while thn Intelligent thoughtful reader will find richness upon every peer U Is not of Una book of thin kind I Is more deserving of full corn mendatlou WIT AND HUMOR OF FAMILIAR SAYINGS 4 HvMAiwiiAiM uowx Polished Buckram ft flit Top Price 3100 The inlwlnn nf hit volume to not to mar Vw- MiKini of iimlllar tautnyt but t i meaturt < n a tilffiauil htuninous tccij lij varying light and ittiuic heir meaning and aviillcation For ule liy the lUkor A Taylor Co B and TEail 16th- it New York atM other ho ksellere or will MstM- I lsiet1abl on receipt uf price Ly limo putiUben S C GRIQGS CO KII3 Hint 204 SVghsehu lTrhlc ao- IIVXIrY AT HIM IIEHT Battle of tho Giants Christianity and Agnosticism A contnive riy between Irof lluiley Mr llumpotjr Viruh liuiiop Usre W u Stalled and Usnrr- VaviD I I JAlEll HO CENTS CLOTH 7S CENTS I TilE IIUMBOLOT LIBRARY OF SCIENCE 514 3TH AV KKW YORK RESIOVED A SCARLET FEVER SIGN The Hoboken Boned of Health IIo an- Vndertukf r Arrested Undertaker Herman Grin of 05 Clinton street Hoboken was arrested yesterday for re- moving ¬ a scarlet fever sign put up by the Hoard of Health on the house at lot Grand street which has been quarantined for several days There are three cases of scarlet fever In the house Lena Gntjahr three years old died on Thursday night She was burled yesterday by Undertaker Grim After the funeral Grim removed the crape from the door and took down the sign Its ab- sence ¬ was noticed by an employee of the Board of Health who was making a tour of time quar antlned houses The undertaker was arraigned before Acting Kecordor Seymour mind gave ball for trial The Board of Health Is worried over the alarmlne Increase of contagious dIseases In Ho- txiken Last month lla cases of contagious diseases were reported as against 13 for July 1HIM Commliiloneri for the Annexation of Supe- rior ¬ to Uulutli ST PAul Aug 0Cov Cloush has appointed G G hartley and Alex McDougal of Dululh and J H Sutherland members of the Commis- sion ¬ from Minnesota to confer with a similar Commission from Wisconsin with a view to an- nexing ¬ Superior to Duluth The Governor him self Is a member of the CommUslon under the Joint Legislative resolution 3DI32IDD- OHANOn ThurtiUy Ainj8 at his late residence 270 21M it Drooklyn N V Vui Y Uolau brother of time Ilev Joseph K Uolan Funeral from the Church of M Join the Kvangellit on Saturday Aug 10 at U30 A M where a eel emo mauof requiem will be celebrated for the repose of his no- ulD1TJtNDAt thee Weitmlnster Hotel on AUK 9 1505 Janice ii DarinJ In tln SOul 5 ear of tile B- BBelatlvel and frIends are hit lied to attend tie funeral services at Trinity EpIscopal Cliureh Newark N J on Monday Aug 1J at 815 1 M- AIIA < < llIEItOn Friday AUK tfLoulinH D- Vtaeniluek wiru of Daniel clallanluT Funeral from her late reildeneo Ovtl Ixirlmer at- Orcenpolnl on Sunday Mug U at si 1 r M Itela lives and frIends are retpectfully Invltcj 1INOAt Frankforton the Main Germany on thin Nth Iiut Mary wife of David II King Jr of New York XA1VIIiCKIn IarU on July SO Alice dstifh ter of thi l Isle Vltllain Thomas anil bophle Tllley Law rence Funeral servIces at St Mark CUurohZd ar and lOlli it on Monday tug IV at tM 1 M- aieKHMHON At Cornwall on Hiidaun N Y on tnu Silt hut Ilerkeley ou of John ouj Leila 8- Mi Keuou Services will bo held at the rotldenca of hit parents VI7 6th avuu baturday time bIb loll at 131I- 1 M- OHUUUUOn Thursday Aug S at her mlJenee Sit hester sl djimtherliue OUoukc ore McAullffe beloved wife of Ialrlck Ullauke Funeral on Bunday AUR 1 11I al if M Holallrei and f rkU J are Invited to alien HMIT1I At Lebanon Spring X Y Aug 8 1883- Kllialwth Smith of nioomtleld N J Interment at Norwalk Conn- riMB KFNSiro CKMETFIIV Imnted on the Harlem I Itallroad forty elKht iuilnute ride from lime Urau- dtvntrulliiot mice Ulrail 1M t Nru ElectrIc llulliojl In Wcstcbeitcr- Alnvsj Aui ll The Tort Chester HT- llurrUon and White Ilalni Electric lUllond- umpany was lini r iriitud today to construct n sIr mt uriicc rival In the village of Port Ihc I ttr V tutu IMiiiii I I und iii the towns of- Ilji and lliirrlktin und tu unmeet th- at Inn capital a I 110mil it limb directors I John W- lmuiilinry I William I Itjiin i Iliuifoid i I M l Mender KCII Wiiliatu I Winl John W McCarty and JohnC Mfrntt l Iort hester John fluff JohnOltoiirke and Krunk tJhlrinerof NVhlu- iIlalns Kbeneer Bullet UarrUoo Charles Ualues of Klndcrhoolu

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Page 1: Ir SUSATIiZ AUGiJsi I Zh lou TiE Nzr · I c cTt TT- r JWi-r jfr r y r 0 w I THg SUSATIiZ AUGiJsi to 8I5 t 1 K Zh HUNTIKGTONI WEDS ftIS JtttinE IltE KIKCK OF COTLZS- V I I UVSXIXUiOKi

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JWi-rr jfr y r <

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ITHg SUSATIiZ AUGiJsi t o 8I5 t 1

K

Zh HUNTIKGTONI WEDS

ftIS JtttinE IltE KIKCK OF COTLZS-

VI

I UVSXIXUiOKi

Isaac K flt Her rntber I Sir Ifattonn Conndenllil 3fuinlter Flrnt IInt-

ionil Trcim Whom Hhe Obtained n UK

kntn lhru tn AUo In ilr HuntingT

d tons Kmplnf A M Hiinttnaton-

tolllI

II II V IlunltnKlnnai Adopted Won

SI When It became Iknown yesterday that ArcherI 1

Wilton ot New York hlll been mar-II I

rle l onluntlllUI Ht Ooorgos Church Han-

over

¬

Il square London to the former wlfo ofS

Thiitmu 1D trl s of Hast Orange there was aF

grcvl siirprlKO In tho Oranges

I Tlio brldfRloom 1Is tha stepson of Collls Pllimtlngtoii who has adopted him and Is t5

uf age Tho bride Its the daughter of-

IIMeorI

K Jates who lives In Eat Park streetOrange and IsI acting VIcoPrrslclcnt and

Assistant Secretory of the Southern 1aclllclie Is al0 thn confidential manofC 1P Hunting-

ton Mn dates and Mr huntington areI brother anti sister union Oatcs Huntlngton Isr 28 years of age Sha Is a tall oriinette She

was considered one of the handsomest womenI in Orange society circles young Uuntlngtoni-

sI iIalto well knovvi In the Orangesdivorce from herMrs huntington got a

I former husband a few months ago after 1 briefresidence In bouth Dakota where she went forthat purpose The divorce proceedings worokept iUlut on account of tho relatives of both

ii parties and the grounds on which Mrs CrlssI obtained a divorce arc known tno one In this

city ouulde of thA Immediate families of the-ersonlntorestedI I

I The CrlsUatc wedding was solemnized Inthe Orange Ituptlst Church eight earItgii Mr Crlss was at that time In the employof I P Huntlugton ahe still Is Doth thebridegroom and the brides father aro teachersIn the North Orange Sunday school and activo Inchursh work Mr Criss alo has two sisterswho aro active church workers After theirmarriage Mr and Mrs Crlss went to live InJarlc avenue Eat Orange Mr Crltswasloaltappearances a must devoted and exemplary

I liunband and constituent friends of the pair1 Were burprUed to hear a tear after their mar

lloge that all was not pleasant between ther11 couple About that lime little girl was born

I nnd the couple spent several months abroad-On their return Unto Europe the rotations be-

tween¬

I Mr Cries und hlswHo became more pe-

culiar¬

1T The wife frequently amazed her friendsw by shutting herself up In a darkened room for

days at a time und to those to whom she con-fided

¬

her trouble shu declared that she believedmarriage to bu a failure and could not believe IItfiositble fur matrimony to result happily

About a year RIO Mrs Cries refused to liveany longer with her husband allbough what herreason was for desiring a separation has leerbeen exactly known Mr Crlss retained pos-

session¬

ut the little girl and ho and the childI lived for a short time Athe Park avenue resi-

dence¬

later closing up tho house and tlklnl upI their residence with Mr Cribs the

Mansion HouseA few months ago It was rumored about the

Oianges that Mrs Cries wan In Dakota w herethe had gone lo obtain a divorce Previous tothat time It had been announced that she wasin a sanitarium suterlnl Irom some nervousdisorder A family said yesterdaythat Mr Gates had bided with his daughter and

I uphold her throughout the couples domesticI rouble whatever they were Mr Gates midI Mr Cries were formerly employed In the ramo

office In the Mills building but when the repa-ration

¬

took place Mr Cries asked to be allowedto resign Irom Mr Uunllngtona employ Illsrequest was but hu ivas transferredanother reuse tMr Huntington was oppned to the marriageof bin stepson and nelce It Is said while MrGates approved of his daughters action Mrs

has not bren In Orange sincet the reparation between her and her husband ayear ago

Mr Uutus said yesterday1 dont know the slightest thing about the

Wedding of my daughter I did not know of thej wedding unti I bear tile report th s morningHugh a member of the stuck

Exchange saidThe reported wedding of Mrs Helen Crlss

If and MrHuntington Is a most complete surprisep J had not heard the hllghteat Intimation thatthere was toba wedding and I never suspectedthat urn would ever Mrst Cries went abroad about maryalaln withI compaion and I dont believe that any

her family thatthe Intended to marry suspctatepconslnMr Huntington Archer HUntDltonas fine a gentleman as I ever wereAbroad together al one summer and althoughlie had long acquainted with Sirs Criesbe never appeared to be very devoted The

bole affair Is mysterious and complicatedThai the divorced wile of one of O p Huntingtons ronndentlal clerks and the favorite niece

I ef Mr Huntington should marry Mr HuntingI tons stepson unknown to any member of theI family seems almost Incomprehensible I dovI cot believe my brother knows oCho wedding

The members of the law frm VanderpoelCumIn Goodwin who n thn counsel forMr Crts during divorce proceedings had not

a notification of the wedding Teeter ¬

day A member of time firm said that If MrCrieS who Is now out of town knew of thowedding he would have promptly communi-cated

¬

IJ1 with his lawyers

1t1 SEALED UP DIJI lid PAPERSIP No Ujiltrr holt Mureurct JR RunielliII Decree Against Samuel P

The sealing up of the evidence and the ref-erees

¬

report on which Margaret E Hussell gotL an absolute divorce from Samuel 1 Russell on

Uk Thursday caused as usual Inquiry t bo modew for the facts of the case There IU no provision

Icourt rule or statute for scaling The courthathe right to keep evidence In a case tram

I the nubile In divorce actions but nothing IsMid In the statute about sealing The precedentarises from certain rases In the old chancery

I practice On the envelope sealing the papersI 1this caso Judge Old rleoc wroteE SuQlcletit cause appearing therefor It Is or-

dered¬

that tho within testimony and refereesreport be sealed and can only bo opened for theinspection of the parties to this action Illsunderstood that thin suniclent came referredto was the character of the evidence which wasunpubllHbable

The ulalntlir Is a voting woman of Baltimorewho married the detendiuit In February INIIIIIn that city 8ho Is about v3 > ear mild which Iitalso about the age of the defendant Ho cameto title clly with her still opened 1 clcnUMs oftire at lotia Third avenue Ills parenislived Intho litmus wltnI them

ItUKsell briamo Infatuated with MargaretGreene who taught Spanish and Imiili andf in June 18U4 jolt his wlro ttntjruvlmlemi for bhnemployed a iiradtinte In dentistry who his sinceconducted the business tar her Their friendswere for a long unto under the hnpreloI thatItusarll was travelling In the Km

7 sell has since lost track of Russell and of Mar-garet

¬

tireeneShe brought action against him through Law

Ter loel M Mar and ItUJxell put In I answerdenying tin through Liivvj cr llaymnndV Humphrey The cakB wit sent to UiivldNay aa referee who rpurtl1 In favor of thowife Kubscll did not put any evidence

MRS ItEIDECKER IV COXTE3IPT

Alter FitlBtlne IIn Court Hevtrnl Time HheWiny Away mud Heed i> n Dicuie

When the adjourned motion to punish lrsHenrietta lleldecker otherwise known as Dr-

Henrietta Helnhard for contempt of court Infalling to obey an order to turn over certain

Ufurniture to the SherI vvai rulled yesterday

3 before Judge llleKerlch In Lime Court uf Comwon Pleas the woman failed to appear

Judge Ulrgerlrh told counsel that a letter hadbeen handed to him In the Court House by aboy who said It wa given to hint atime UriindCentral Htatol This letter was written nn asmall paper und With in German andwhen translated read us folOf I

t Mri Henrietta Ileldeeker l k all pro trivtedi and li nirrrrliu lieu nerToiii promrullnu and In-

rder to rvcuvcr U IIt ueceium lur her togulottii1 country

J EwsiK Kruiz M P 3JH Kail Thirtyfourth streetI Judge flleeerlch adjourned the hearing for anI counsel time lo Invesiluate ThenI

be adjulfae1 the wuinnti lu contempt and tiltedher tins procurcd several postpone-ments

¬

of thu caubygniuttrig In court

Popular Hurprlnen IIn IyrotrcbulciThe second of the popular Ureworki pro

irftmrncs arranged for every riatuiday nightla August will bu olHred to the public tithesTiflIng In Tains Upen Air Theatre at ManhatUnlleacb Whllo the Japanese tenth Ihlnesewar spectacle will lie the plain attraction thelrworkexhibit vvhlchfnllnwtltvvlll replete

devices anti roinlo pyroudintc bur0 Dried compliance with many requests tho

fireworks and war spectacle v 111 ho given everyrsnlng during the week bundats excepted

from DOW anti the enc of the season

Iff AND louXlttt MXTJIOVOLIS

Mrs Kate Chase who Is now In Now York en-

gaged In an attempt to secure a home far her-

self mend her children during hr letlels eee-nfreueltln the business town

lhe Is trying to recover her fathers place Kilfto

wo by means uf a fund which shall pay oft

thl mortungc und return the property to her forher life After her death site proposes that thepersons who advance the money shall take theproperty 1 ho place which lies only a utile In-

n straight line from the Capitol Is on the sideof Washington In which the city Is Irovlllanti It Is believed that the property llomolay be very valuable Mr Chase 111

dropped the name Hpraeu so com-pletely

¬

that sho IIs not known underIt at the Ilal hotel nt which she stop heredoes the business In relation to theraitlnit of thn money In person nnd she Is on herway from tifllce tonrTlce down town mount thetime slut spends In New York H ho has lust ObOenf tier old charm of manner Her hair iIs whitebut her figure Is slim and clrllrh anti her stylenf dressing Is youthful but not InappropriatelyMI It was at one time ugirestei1 that the OhioHocletv phntild advance the money to redeemMrsChares rnlllrl1llnll one or two wealthymem hers mal I promlel limit thomajority of thn socIety was of timeproject soil It fel through Mrs I base IIs c nrnuracted by success nf her efforts rn farHhe upeaks with 1 sadness In her voice nnd Inher looks which seemsthave become habitualto he

In tho delivery department of 1 flxth avenuedry goods store Is a man with a remarkablememory He hal charge of all the goods which-are returned by the drivers becniKO of mistakeIn addresses because the buyers had changedtheir minim Ho never forgets a name or ad-

dress amtI often corrects mistakes In the recordsof the department lie knows thn characterand appearance every block In the cIty andmil describe any holire upon hearing ltd num-ber

¬

HP ascribes his remarkable knowledge ofthe cIty to thin fact that ho passed many years-In driving a delivery wagon

An unused church IIs tho last building to beused as a bicycle academy There are few va-

cant¬

halls In New York tlmt have not been putto this use The outlay of capital required Isvery emaIl and tho risk Involved In becomingtho manager of an academy Is not very greatThe halls are usually rented for a time whenthey would not otherwise bo engaged and theprices asked are low while there Is sufficientrivalry among tho bicycle companies to make Itpossible for a man to got hold of enough wheelsto common operations without great outlayThcso academics seem to flourish too Inparts of the town where one would suppose tututhero was little money to bo spentonsuch diver-sion

¬

Tho asphalt pavements of Essex andNorfolk streets exhibit always a number ofriders who form 1 remarkable contrast to thesqualor of tho neighborhood In fart ttiero Isno feature of the bicycle craze that Is moredifficult to understand than tho possession ofwheels by pome 01 the people who own themMen who look as though they could never attoidthe CIt of a tiicu cIa are time proud po sesors oftheir own machines Ierhapi the bicycle habittends promote a frugality which tins neverdeveloped before Even when selling on thoInstallment plan the largest supply company requires that purchasers shall bu guaranteed bytheir employers or by a real estate owner It IHnot to tlie supi osed that any largo proportion ofthe riders can turnMi such guarantees end thetallment plan does uotaeeuj able1 explain-the quihtlon

The limitation of the Interest that societytakes In bicycling Is marked very sharply nt tholine of the professional Itfcycle racers and bydde records are matters In which society takesno Intercut whatever mend It Is safe to say thatnine out of ten people one tees riding on tho

do not know the name of the man10uloarc the best record or w 1ml It IIs It wasthis Indifference of riders In general tonarilprofessional bicycling that prevented time greatmeet lat winter from Ielol ho great a success-as the projectors The mon who arefinancIally Interested In providing btcyeeamusement fur the un hllo evidently expect thecrazn tl continue profitably next year Thelargest rink thai Sew York hIs yet seen will boopened this winter I Is to be tar up town onthe west sldn near northern end ot CentralIark und will cover an pUre oIly block Thinbuilding which wi shortly be commenced Isto be arranged thl purpose only nnd thisbicyclIng la to proceed In it to thin accompani-ment

¬

of music and every oUr attraction thatcim bo made Incidental to the sport

Tho thousands of dollars which are dallypoured Into tho dry goods stores are collectedat certain Intervals from the various assistantcashiers and turned over to the chief Beforethe banks close be deposits what he tins onband Several tmesecelt thieves have tried-to Intercept messengers and at least two

attempts were successful The drv goodsmen are very slow about giving Informationabout such thefts however Believing that theyonly encourageother thieves

The Dellhbrho of Fourteenth street andavenue likely to become the

Spanish quarter of the town Already there arethree Spanish hotels In that region and theyare always crowded with darkskinned blACk

montRebe men who move quickly aboutolices or sit on chairs In front of the

buildings generally talking with a great dealof vivacity and smokIng cigarettes Severaldoctors signs In this region show plainly thattheir owners are Spaniards or Cubans and thetobacco stores In the neighborhood are entirelyIn the bands of Cubans The three or lourhotels In the city that depend almost en-

tirely¬

for their support on the passengersthat tho southern steamers bring fromCuba do not generally object to dark

but there is u degree of color at vvuicnthey draw the line when they tan the arrIvalof u load of jetblack i seugers nt one of thesehOb is likely to throw the uioprlrlur Intogreat excitement and the diplomacy euployedIn gulling them un to a house vv illmi to receivethem might servo to settle more Importantproblem The biigcagemen and drivers at tImetiers huvo leurned now how to direct the ar-rivals

¬

mind time people who e Bkms are too dark-to recommend them ut certain of time hotels aresent to ono where It IU known they will bu re-ceived

¬

Nothing U more characteristic of tbe otpanlibAmerlcuu hotels than tho mvsterywhich surrounds thom For u New Yorker tovvulK un to the otllce and ak If u certain person-Is stopping there IU un Iluimedlulii Indication tothom proprietor that tlethlll is wrong oinno-vvheru and thu cortvrruatmtt-will be carried on by him with this lIdea In viewWhether tie malyou walt to MO Id III thu hotelor not it I uuarter of an hour beforejou nnd it out and thu manner In which the In ¬

formation Is cUlmullcltOlllwlS leaves a sus-picion

¬

that t aboutlan A cu-rious

¬

mature of way in which these hotels-are conducted Is the fact that few of the peopletl charge speak an > thing but ripamch French

time language moot tiitd next to Spanish andKngllsh plays only 1small role

One of the curious cOlllUonsln New YorkJust now said a real Mlto agent VIe thelumber of vacant houses In the lower part oftown Houses mire In the market now ut 1 rentalof 1000 or 3100 thut would have broughthalf as much again live years ago That Is becaueu there limes been u general movement uptllanllltu lists For u small family otto of

that rents lor lvUO Ireallywore desirable than a house

Youd think women would havo learned bythis how to get off a car but they haventsaid tho conductor of a Ilatbunh trolley car Inlirooklyn In a tone of Injury and disgust as hestarted to get names of passengers as witnessesto the circumstances of an embarrassing mis-hap

¬

to a young woman who stepped off the carthe wrong way und before It had stopped

Thats time third woman that has fallen ott mycar today allliho saws way None of themwas much I have to make 1 report ofeach case and got the names of passengers as-vvitnerHiK Its so easy to avoid such tumblesloC Units whamake me timed

Thin iilrl wn a wheelwomun too who oughtto know Fotucthlng of thin laws of 1lullbrlulIIf a woman lIs ever to learn Igoing tn time academy evidently to nol herwheel1 for is the park Hhusignalled tha11111conductor to but vvhllu the car was yetrU1111 at fair speed jauntily swung hcrielf

to the rearimi thurar and wan promptlyloulrl iyer on her hack Thi vhork tumbledher hulr downand covered her with dust butexcept for her feelings whim was unhurt

1 heres tine simple rule which every womanought tn learn and remember which wouldmake Mifli acuidcntb liiiKisihlu all Itln con-ductor A vvomiinalivajs grasps ttho hcliwith her right bund In netting tilT Iswings her mound with her face tl this reur ofthe cur Mm will Miltt her pockrthnok frontright 1mm litt hand In order tci do this InUsit-hn cur Ila stationary any one getting niT this wayU hound to he tipped backward thiHiuh not always t1led over Of course if they would waittill rar top It would Ibe alt rightHut they cantt All ears are now guarded onthe ItIt side ko that pakxenicers must get olf ontthe right Now IIff 1 woman would onlyI re-member

¬

simply to Ira < I i Ithe handrail nlwajswitht her left soil vvnitld fur toward thinfront and ulvvavi he safe ten If HIP car Itm stillmoving sun huii everv chance nf keeping herequilibrium and would usually do It lIme ruleIIts simple and I think sure Tho company

an addition to the usual warningarid make It read I

I

carTakestops

hold with your lIrbind and wall till the

4

FAULTS IN TiE DU1VBWA-

YcninrKtt cninrKtt HATH OKJO-

atRVIJrAr VST lit 11Wf1LTPmk Hoard Attired thin t4pettfleatiofle U-

heiitember lNU4 Arch In reeked endHlnUlnKBOO Feet oT Crlhworlt Hhnnlil-He JletaiilUCo of llepnlri V0OO

The report of Consulting Engineer FosterCrow on tho Harlem Driveway brings tolight some defects In construction time responsi-bility

¬

of which may rest on the city or on thocontractor that 11111 a questol timid the Corporatton Counsel now Mr CrowI1wai requested by the Park Hoard on unImake an export examinationI of time drivewayan examinatIon which was tn lie comprehonslvoof the plans tpccinrntlons structure and ma-

terials¬

and the stability and workmanship ofthe work In progress The report now In Ibm

tintids of tho Commissioners Is tho result of hiswork

Mr Crowoll describes the Driveway veryfully nnd tins first thing ho notlcci with dlsnu-provat Is tho masonry retaining wall In tho tintsection ll5tli street to High Itrldgc which Is

practically completed Mr Crowcll IRS thatit glees evIdence of having been carefully built-In nccordnnce with time specifications but thatIts outer faco Ivertical Instead of leaning In-

wardWhile this feature cannot fairly be styled a

defect In desllllll says Mr Crowcll It Is Inmy jl an undesirable one and whereever practicable In tho future elsewhere on thinwork retaining walls should bo given a bailee

The dimensions of tho wall ho continuesaro somewhat lighter than I should hiave been

Inclined to adopt for work of this character butnevertheless there Is no reasonable doubt of Itspermanent stability and as It Is practically On

Ished and time Illllnir behind nearly completedIt may be accepted as satisfactory In general

Tho next thing that attracted Mr Crowollkattention IIs the first of the three subways thatgo underneath thin driveway the arch of whichalthough lot nearly bearing tho load that Itwill bear when the Driveway IImbued Is badlycracked and 1la sinking account of thechanges In tho plans and specifications of thooriginal contracts Mr rowell IU unwilling tosay whu Is responsible for this work He bays

Under some circumstances the correct aselenmcnt of tho cause of tho palpable failure ofthis subway would have an Important bearingupon tho question of tho responsibility of thecontractor and his obligation to rebuild thowork at his own expense but In thin case I can ¬

not llnd that It ISI matter of much consequenceso far as tIn fixing of responsibility for tho

rlaoo that lht> alteration In the pcciilcatbontho timber grlllno wits omitted

WHS directed by thin hark Commissioners fept19 18IH and certain liutlce Plies called for III

the original plans lo ho driven In front of thesubway were dlspelec wllh by thin engineerwhim n respects so far as I can learnand so far as time evidence of thin work Itselfgoes the plan and slid ideation were not defl-ated

¬

from by the contractorEngineer Irow ell recommends that the entire

maonry superntructuro of this subway be takendown the foundation retufurced and that lenchanges bo male In thn plans and pcclllcutlonsof the two other subways the piling for whichLas but ben begun as will avoid like mistakes

The crib bulkheads In tho Ural section are alsocriticised Ilcsnys

This part of the work ran scarcely bo consid-ered

¬

satisfactory iinil a portion of It about 600fctln length Is BO Ladly distorted anti illsiilnred that 1 recommend Its being rebuilt ontlrely

Time present crib encroaches beyond tho estab-lished

¬

bulkhead line and the part nnder waterIs dangerous to navigation und the drlewuy Isrndniigcred by Ithe insecure work thin troublehern lis lhn result of careless work and faultydesigns He same

I find It eitremely difficult to reach finalton iMlnn as tn the controlling ramo of theallure of the crib because both Its de lgn and

uIIII were linptrfect It wns originally de-signed

¬

for it depth of elllto1 reel below meinlow water to hard I I was sit ieittefli yfound that tile depth to hard bottom at thinpart of the river was about thlrtvelghl feetwit the nrlgliml tot width of Itwenty test wasSlot Increased as Mioilld have been

Although thin engineer hart authority tochance Itho dimensions according to depthI item

did not do It a nil IItI IIs tthis complication thatrender It dlflicultI I to place Ithe ropmdbilttyfur according to Mr I ron ell Ithin contractorcomplied with the engineers plans and In-

structions¬

except In some minor detailsMr Crowoll has few criticisms to make on the

tccond section HP makes some recommenda-tions

¬

for the reorganization of the engineerforce wade necessary by the retirement of the

who had charge of time workAlstanlnllleer says that the original speci-fications

¬

were Intelligently drawn and had Itnot boon for the subsequent weakening mortif-ications

¬

they would hae ben entirely sufclontIn another report he estimates tImepairs and changes on the Driveway at 570000

Contractor J D Lcory who did the work thathas been criticised has flied a statement withthe Boar In which It Is claimed thKt If thereare they are due to faulty plans andnot tnthp contractor As the matter ws putInto the hands of the Corporation Counsel but afew dlsllo It will probably be some time bofore 1 Is reached

HAST SlliCttli IIMVT IUE TREEThe Grove ninnppriirlnB from the Eter

coOt Htreet CemeteryProperty owners antI residents In the vicinity-

of First avenue and Eleventh street are verymuch worked up over thin cutting down and ifmoval of the trees from the old cemetery thatoccupies the middle of tho block between 1Elev-

enth¬

and Twelfth streets and First avenue andAvenue A

Tho cemetery Is owned by St Patricks Church-on Mott street but Is taken cure of bjthe Cal-vary

¬

Cemetery people 1 he cemetery containedqulto a grove ailanthus trees Near tho west-

ern¬

end of tho cemetery was a clump whichlad been used us a playground by the childrenof the neighborhood It hind also become n veryconvenient Place fr people tn deposit rubbish

The trees It I bald required such lontalrimming that was dec Icfed tn removeTime property holders say that the trees have

made an attractive spit In a very thicklyilated neighborhood anti that they willPOIreally missed Their greatest fear the nay-s that thin removal of time trees IIs only a Hep-nwurd tho sale of the cemetery A petition hlbeen Marled to stop tin work but unless

irflented very onl It will bo UNcle for tho-Inot trees wi probably bo cut down Insldo ofthree or days

CAUOIIT jir ins oirv BLlJTOHAn Elevator Conduelnr In the War Depart-

ment¬

cflilentully KilledWASHINGTON Ala Olnrtn Murphy col

orcd nn elevator conductor War Depart-ment met a strange accidental death tide uf-

ornrion Ho was slandlng outside his cur In

the subbascmenl of tlio building und In roosponen to I cal from one of tIns upper llonrsjumped for hi car and pulled the liner beforelie was fairly In The car went upward withgreat rapidity thin lower part of Murphrjody nnd tile legs belim outside When the carreached thin basement lloor tho unfnrtunntoconductor hack caniHKharply IIn contact withan Itch llange and hU teal y wui wrdged In H-

Olghtly between the ear und tho mill that thecite wax brought In a KtundHtill Murphysback was ITOktn and he was haIIIlue DrI icorke I IHeriidon u surgeon of navy uIIIreach this aeuuti from bin ollicc Iin time Nnvy I

1lrWwlL Murpliy waiapiiilntcd from IilreenI

t IIn Imill on the rcrcmiiiendatlonof tniiertKsinuu Henry 1 Jbculham JIuwas44 years old

risiiitviv IICICIW UlIIJGlnTwo Frrnrlimrn Aplrrft Iuildrd on ThliC-

OUHI by Three HUutnvrH

Four French llshcrmen who lost their bearlimes lit a fog ort the banks of Newfoundlandarrltcd hero yesterday TWO of them wereilrked 111by the 01 Itank In ICiunplne nnl two

by thu Vhlto liner llrltuiinlu lenbite llrltannii brauvht are Adrian lItmvv ami-IllppolyteI I I Frlrel toni Itiny belonged tn thn

tiniicL 1AillveI They hud ben only tour hourHWiy trol their vesselDraifun mid Alois Jrnn Marie of the

mack tnrutivhi had II en IBbe1 hourswithout water uhen Ia 1111 themnlmurdtlixir hunger

cm Aug 4 They uto rl Ish to allay

Iwo morn fMiermen hal Pierre anti JulesIlolnlron fruI thn brig Duzene wereticked mi t Ito Irllsht fteamslihi llaku-Mandant

<

and landrcl I In IhlhideU-plilii They 1rl1 taint Input luck of food thattilt had tu ou board

HoiitliuiirL to rir JObTlili IortThin twmnscrew passenger and freight steam-

shIp Southmwtirk of tho International Nuvlga

ton Company let arrived hero ye terdayPhiladelphia take the plwe off the lied

Mar steamship Ithynland which will hereaftnrpl een Ihiludelphla arid hIvetjsolTIe bouthwark anti her lntvr ship the Kenilnizton will both be on the route between tblipoet and Antwerp before September

V

Nzr BOOKS

Brief R Tlewn of Important find Jateruitag New PnbllenltoBi-Wo have received the second volumcof 1foo l

published by the Jensen Press PhiladelphiaThis Is onaof those ageend productions of time

same family as the Yellow llofilt but much bet-ter look Ing to our mind than that very biliouseccentricity It comes In a snowwhite coverwhich Is relieved by one of Mr John Hloannfree anti faclnatnl pictorial decorations Inthis a rising from a lightgreen

area regards with Interest a while butterflywending Its way amid 1 forest of darkurccncookies of fanciful design while a buffcoloredtiter rising In tho extreme northwestern parloftho picture wilds gently dt wn watering on Itsway time largo righthand division of the Udysdeep red wig Ono Is bound to bo pleated bythis picture on tho coverby Its Ono eulorsleboldness and Its m > stery Thobook are varied and Intereltnl Tho musicalflmvof Mr Harrison I poem Acronthe Years will recommend Itself to any sensi-tive

¬

ear though It Is just a llltlo peculiar when-we come to analyze I with regard to Its meremeaning to read of a shepherd browned antioverripe with sunny fluting In tho nibbledmeads Tho phrnso noonlong too Invitesa speculation tlmt Is not likely to cometo anything It Is probably Impossible todetermine how 1111 noonlong ls InMr Owen poem Tho Ape andtho Thinker tho remarkable quality Isafforded In the Idea that tho npo should bo amelancholy creature given to philosophic sar-casm

¬

Mr Vleter causes his ape to rebuke Itshuman Interlocutor for an undue love of goldand an obliviousness to the general uilscy Forone human being that heeded tho cry of dis-tress

¬

Mr Wisters ape had found ten that Ig-

nored¬

It utterly Cold selfishness comes not Inheaven Is one of tho remarks attributed to thissurprising creature and the Thinker Is furtherInformed by Mr Winters ape that to healsome heart to ease some moan IIs a businessthat nmoni apes at least Is supposedto to havedecided recommendations Wo do not knowwhere Mr WIBterobtalned this idea of time simianphilosophy It could hardly have been thu re-

sult of 1 study of tho late Mr Crowloy tho

lentralllrJ menagerIe who It will be remem ¬

u to scratch and bite his tonsortMiss Kitty OBrien mostK IU Burtons picture of tho Doatl ofMlnnchatm I undoubtedly butthe quality of vagueness we think Is a littletoo much Insisted upon for nobody could telhere without the assistance of time titleMlnnchnha was not a feather bed and MrSloan picture of tho girl sitting with herbunds In her lap In Illustration ot KaoChopins story awakens the sympathetic ca-ncer

¬

of tho beholder because being one of thosepictures In tho Chinese style which dispenseswIth the Idea of foreground and background Itlooks as though a large tree and the AtlanticOcean were suspended Immediately overtho girl anti wero liable at any mo ¬

lent to fall and annoy her In MrVllllamJ Olackene picture fly the ulcer

the size of thin lady In the foreground Is excus¬

able because she Is transparent and by virtueof that quality permits us to obtain a view ofthin landscape It Is I fact however that If sitewere nu opaque lady we could hardlyl mien theriver at all One of the ablest and roost Inter-esting

¬

contributions to thus number of Mood IsTho Reply of Olgadlbs a dramatic mono-

logue¬

by Mr Harvey Maltland Watts MrWatts calls this the reverse to tho obverse ofIlrowulngs Bishop Illougrams Apology H-

Is 1 ver > Ingenious piece of fancy wel putstriking In its philosophy and Its Alto-gether

¬

the reader should get a good deal of en-

tertainment¬

out of this curious and distinctlyhandsome publication

Suppressed Chapters and Other Uooklshness by Koburt Undges Charles Scribnerstons IIs another series of those able and agree¬

able sketches and essays which have recom-mended

¬

this writer so widely Alof these thingswere suggested to Mr Bridges his capacity ofbook reviewer anti are concerned with thobooks he has read and with the authors whomade them Thus we have a dialogue In theAnthony Hop style and an account of TrilbysChristmas and a skit on Little Eyolf whichrecognizes the preternatural gloom of thatcelebrate production and sometblnl sug¬

by Mr John Bangss wittysketches of Tho Idiot and somethingsuggested by Kipling and so on Thereare too a number of the brief reviews-of books that Mr Bridges publishes In Life un-

der¬

the pseudonyme of Droch and there areessays besides all concerned we think withpersons who are concerned with books and allcompact agreeable Instructive discerning-and entertaining It Ia volume to recommendItself to those who are Interested In the lighterliterature of the day Not every reader ofcourse will agree with alt that Mr Bridgessays When ho speaks of the brightness andtho reasonable dignity of tho dialogue In MrCrawfords Katharine Laiiderdale for In-

stance¬

not everybody will agree with him Butnobody wi bu offended with him for It Is nootTence a critic to betray now and then thopOMtesxIon of 1 kind heart

In Tha Countess Bettlna tho History of anInnocent fecandal by 11 I P Putnamstons we have a highly romantic story of thopresent time curiously told In 1style which hasgenerally been restricted to the narration of theromance of a bygone age It makes u > feel asthough the Dumas guardsmen had come bucktn run things In their own peculiar fashion andperhaps wo should feel grateful for tho Impres-sion

¬

for thumle of those lively gentlemen wasdistInctly Interestlll At any rate we havehere u story exciting quality Including anelopement In very high life with Inci-

dental¬

castles nunneries moonlight gallopingtorses und doughty menatarms andIt Is a pleasure to us to bear witness that theCountess Dettlnn who was a young por >on ofmuch phjslcnl loveliness as well as uf manysterling traits of mental and moral characterescaped train the PrInce whom she hall nomind tmarry and married the young ofllccrIn tho Herman army for whom she bad a minderlmpn It IIs well that our dull modern lifeshould be touched up tor us In this lively oldstyle way Certainly thn story IIs In great con-

tract to anything that we havo lied train MIca

Wllklns It Is undoubtedly well written underIts plan and wo can heartily congratulate theauthor Uon sonic of his qualification howeverve may bo dIsposed to regard others

Mr W J Hendersons story Afloat with IheFlag Harper iet Brothers Is olethlll thatvlll bu sure to captivate the oys l thostory of two naval cadets who go to Rio JaneiroCI the United States cruiser Dettolt Theevents of thu war In Ulo harbor during the reo

lelllnnof the Brazilian fleet uro vividly pictureby Mr Henderson and the btory u veryspirited description of tho part played by ourships aunt especially the letrol In thu supirefslon of that Henderson IIn-

horciughly versed In tImIngs nautical and IsI

wel equipped to tell a story of tho sea He haspatriotic spirit und makes no bones of be

Ilg Jingo Every American boy will like hisstory tho hotter by reason of thut circumstance

Uf tidbit now IIy published wu have receivedMm Musgruve und lice Husband by Itlch

arcl Marsh anti In Old New Knglund tho Itoimiico of a Colonial Fireside by IlczuUnli-lutterworth It Appletnn Co In Honor of

thu 1111 und other short storIes by W larkund Thu heart of Life by W U-

Mullock I V Iutnuina Nms The WormItmt fused tl Turn by britain MhaiJ rl-

KllvIo Company A Mormon Wlfo Iby-

iraco Wilbur Trout Charles II Korr Co0Jhkagci nnd Mumselle a Modern IHeathenthe Ullh Novel of the Celebrated Boutlicrn Auliorem K Burke Collliu Wllllaiu J IkiinersJr Philadelphia

HuuJneiiuu Social Contract translatedwith an historical and critical Introduction antitolls by Henry J Tozer nnd n Illi n preface byleruard lloutnquet menu Cooperative LaborUpon time Lund andI other papers the reportof 1 conference held In England In OctoberIHUIedlUd by J A HuUoii are Imported byhetcrlbners

Perpetual Youth an essay by Eleanorivlrk conies from The Idea Publishing Companylirooklyn

Time Saloon Keepers ledger a series of

> >

tempcnxne revival lectures by the tier DrLouis Albert flanks IIs published by the Funk

Wsgnslls CompanyWe have received the bound volume of the

Crllr for tho first half of the present yearHealth Pleasure an Illustrated bookne

descriptive summer resorts and excursionl

roadroutes IIs Isue by tho New York Central Hall

Tho True Hclonco of Living by DrEdwardHooker Dewey comes to us from tIme Henry BillPublishing Company Norwich Conn-

A second edition of ° Hlmpllficd Elocution-by Edwin lordon Lawrence Is published by theauthor in this city-

FJcmcntsof Pedagogics by J N Patrick I

A Worklne Manual of American History byWilliam U Mace Elementary Ureek Educa-tion

¬

by rrrderlck II Lane and now editions-of other school text books come to us from C

I W Bardccn Byrucuie

JAMISE fOtLOW MASSACRE

Aid Needed to Krrp theArmfnlnniofIronS Btarvutlon

As a sequel to the Turkish atrocities In theSaotoun of which much was printed In thenewspapers of New York several months agoword comes now that the Armenians of thatdistrict are on tIme verge of a famine and thatstarvation threatens thousands of them Theentire Armenian population of tho district ofMoush IIs threatened Word comes to tho Eng-

lish¬

Itelief Commllleo trot Mr Shipley tholit Itlsh delegate attached to tho Commission atMoush that not only are tho Armenians povertystricken hut thing havo no seeds to plant and noImplements with which to till the soil

When thin Sassoun massacre occurred entirevillages were destroyed provisions and flocks ofsheep wero carried away and all tho farm Im-

plements¬

either burned or pillaged In tbospring no fields could be ploughed and no seedwas sown Thousands of women and children

halnl no one tprovide for them are crowdedvillages begging from people who are little

better of than tliomselven Iteccnt advicesfrol tha tomity show that famine prevails

thu lush district but In tho ad ¬

joining districts of ArmeniaTho attention of England France and Rus-

sia tine been called to time condition of these sur-vivors

¬

of tho massacre and recently a reliefcommittee was formed In this city to cooperatewith the English committee In the work of pro-viding

¬

assistance for thorn Thin committee IIscomposed of Mrs Hobert Abbo Prof N hullerMurray Morris K lesup Jacob II Schlff-Hpencer Track thin Ilev Dr Henry Van DykeMrs Henry Vlllard Everett IP heeler andDr A Ayvalan Mr Spencer Traik Is the-

reurorII11 contributions will bo received atofflce 111ne street

STATION JAIL 11KELT TO FALL

Mulberry Street Police Have to Take Primonce to Elizabeth street

The jail of the Mulberry street police stationIs apparently ready t fall at any moment Ithas beet condemned by an Inspector of the De-

partment¬

of Buildings and no prisoners orlodgers have been admitted to it since last au-

tumn¬

and the prisoners of the precinct aretaken to Elizabeth street station

The Police Commissioners have not been notfethat the jail bus noon condemned so

not think they are authorized afl yet to tear Itdown They cannot proceed with needed re-

pairs¬

on other station houses unlll they haveprovided for those on the Mulberry street JaiTo build anew jail will coSt 1000or rnou a

halof tho appropriation for station house re ¬

and ImprovementsI Amonl thin Improve-ments

¬

plamieiHs the another storyto tha West 1 hlrtleth strti t station

Something mu t be done soon with time Mnlberry street Jail for It Is not only ready to fallItself but to brlnir down a tenement on thisnorth anti render the city liable for duumamieseven If no loss nf life Is caused The walls put-tied

¬

so much last fall that tlio water pfpesbrokcThe jail was abandoned when this happenedTime rear of the flvestorv tenement ill hits northseems to bhow the weakness of the tail and Ifone fulls apparently the oIlier will In themean tine the Pnllee Commissioners are wait-Ing for the lUiilcling Department to empowerthem officially to tear the Jail down

10 FJIEIEXT TKOLIEY ACCiDENTS

lie Ilrookljn Heights Company ExhibitsIts New Fender

Tho Crawford trolley fender with which alltime cars of the Brooklyn Heights Company areto be equipped was exhibited yesterday toMayor Scbiercn time members of the Board ofAldermen and Brooklyn citizens In generalThe Mayor rode down town on A car pro¬

vided with the tender and expressed himselfmuch pleased with its appearance and Its work-ing

¬

The fender Is a movable contrivance only onebeing attached to a car but It can easily beshifted by the motortnau and conductor at theend of each trip It IIs made of rope net witha framework of gas pipe 1M Inches In diameterIt extends U feet 0 Inches In front anti IIs 6 feetIii Incites In width The slope Is gradual thelower end being within an melt of time car trackliubber buffers are placed on each silo beneathIt to prevent It from striking tIns switches Thenetwork covers the bumper and draw bars Bya spring attachment this force of the blow onstriking an object Is broken

The company will have lfiOO of this tendersIn operation within a month Experts regardthe fender as tho most satisfactory yet In ¬

vented

KAK1XE-

P

INTEL tIGENCIC

UTrmt AIMAX4C Tm PAY

Sun rises 005 Situ sets 7 051 Moon rises 0 13sitcom WATXR Till DAY

Bandy nook10 US I Uov bland 10 001I Uehl Quit 12 30

Arrived FpIiur Aug 9

fa IucAntn from Queenstnwn-hs Nnrmnnnin HareniU Cherboarc-b lu ramulni MarLiciilauer AntwerpM Iirltiiiinlc lladilnckcjueenstown-B Iota IuilwlK llamlmric-Bo Ihlumi hk out Chrl llan andbus Mitoulo unbrauD Krotfti San Domingohe Eti sin Johnnon Ulbraltar-

YeinaMreBe ItuiiliKon Ilmrleiton-hs lallnliasrtee Aikius 8avaiuiab-fUduyatlMllo VVidk r NorfolkHi Ilkhmonl DavlH Want I olut-B Ely lioHuvau IiaraeoaDark Aulello uulatulu beotto SerlUo

hoc mater arrivals see Flnt raginniviD OCT

81 Fpaarndam from New York at Rotterdam144 Itilam troll Sea York nt AmsterdamUs tarts from Now York K Tilbury-B < llaiitlarr City from New iurk at KrlltoL-bi liuvte IromXtm York at Liverpool

SIOIITKn-

KM LarKO Par from Meislua for New York paedOmbr liter

ms Tocivhtet from Now York for Gibraltar passedhiti5rtt

PAil tn rno KOREiav moaTs

BiKurat Illmiurik from Southampton for MewYork

he hiptrlui frnrii Copenhagen for New Yorkhim Kiltur tiiueiit II rroms cnoa for Neuc York5 seiuliitituiu moo iireuicmm fur ew Ytm-rSI Clrcassla front Moe tile for ioev York

ocinomsu sTzemestmii-

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flIjvTouralne Havre U uu A M-

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Liverpool 4 Jil A M hoo AMTrine llrfimn n MO A M-

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MOll A Mtidiuii Uollcrdam 11 UU A M-

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iIuimmlUUUM-1HOUMHinunu in do AM

Finance Colon IIII no AM I C Oil M-

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llaviina Ill III V M 100 I1 Mhi lets Nsa foimuuiiauiehI 11I no A M-

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llujll lutes A it-Allriihany

lanuM1-VUOMJainntea 10 00 AM-

KIKiirte Nrw orleuut-nnoho

a nu h MClalvenlnn 3 Oil II1 L-

SUULouisiana New UrkalKI-

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BTUiXSIIt-rttuf 7 fay

Kontabelle NtTliomai-Munliuniet

Jnb iaIotiinlainr-

liilunaJuly vr-tJulrtlncKU-

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lluvr-nirnic

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el St Ilulu AUKAliitemluolft JuckMiu villaAuiCti3 of Mueou SutuiiiUi B

Pee Itnibiii tu 13Peril Koiithawpluu-nliU

AUK aS lirenien-Tuunc

AugAUilivirpiml-

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hemita hlataiuum MugAugEm hui New orleniu 7

plus Zisrc4iy IuU hi-

setmritiatitl AmttW5rl 11mg a-

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siihurtitui tiitrmllutr J tihi t I11th JO-

thIuolm Augtie IidIesSt1V 1t1 14

AUS 7-

bprre luremuien AUtO SJersey Ity 5blmseS July81City of to-Leons 7Andes Fort auhrino Au 10

I ubtIcaftu-Ltr W

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Irlceuh50This work treats of thote eminent wrlttn-

uho for more than Jive hundred years haveinosL Influenced tho thought of the worldThe author makes the reader acquaintednot only ullh the character of their workslimit what la of greater Interest clth themas men what theyfilt and believed theirwall of looking at life and their ex-

periences¬

The work Is a departure from Us classIn Its omttsloii of the hackncuedjuagmenttulttclt pass front book to book Its freshtelling waiter front original sources andIts special notice of the effects of tctafc andvicious literature ujmi yonny nnlndeitsmission lielna to tncnleate a taste for flea0 bist that has been thought and sold inthe uorlci 1

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st j IB and directness In clear statements of theliterary charucteriallrs of eminent Englishauthors front Chaucer In 1400 to Mrs HumphryWard In 1HU1 Such a broad field can Rive onlyepitome sketches butt her Intruders arewonderfully clear In their delineation 8he doesthli hit 50 much In vordsof herown hm allowstacit to speak and tItus clothes each III livingcharacter what each thought and believed 1

how thuy lived and acted and labored Thereader will seldom tint more of positive valueIn Mich nall space told more vigorously andtilDwIngty titan In the neat compact volumeTeachers anti literary clubn will rind the bookbonndlesrly suggeitlvelnvltlng to wider new

while thn Intelligent thoughtful reader willfind richness upon every peer U Is not of Unabook of thin kind IIs more deserving of full cornmendatlou

WIT AND HUMOR OF FAMILIAR SAYINGS 4

HvMAiwiiAiM uowx Polished Buckramftflit Top Price 3100

The inlwlnn nf hit volume to not to mar Vw-

MiKini of iimlllar tautnyt but t i meaturt <n atilffiauil htuninous tccij lij varying light andittiuic heir meaning and aviillcation

For ule liy the lUkor A Taylor Co B and TEail 16th-it New York atM other ho ksellere or will MstM-IIlsiet1abl on receipt uf price Ly limo putiUben

S C GRIQGS COKII3 Hint 204 SVghsehu lTrhlc ao-

IIVXIrY AT HIM IIEHT

Battle of tho GiantsChristianity and Agnosticism

A contnive riy between Irof lluiley Mr llumpotjrViruh liuiiop Usre W u Stalled and Usnrr-VaviDI I

JAlEll HO CENTS CLOTH 7S CENTSI

TilE IIUMBOLOT LIBRARY OF SCIENCE514 3TH AV KKW YORK

RESIOVED A SCARLET FEVER SIGN

The Hoboken Boned of Health IIo an-

Vndertukf r ArrestedUndertaker Herman Grin of 05 Clinton

street Hoboken was arrested yesterday for re-

moving¬

a scarlet fever sign put up by the Hoardof Health on the house at lot Grand streetwhich has been quarantined for several daysThere are three cases of scarlet fever In thehouse Lena Gntjahr three years old died onThursday night She was burled yesterday byUndertaker Grim

After the funeral Grim removed the crapefrom the door and took down the sign Its ab-sence

¬

was noticed by an employee of the Boardof Health who was making a tour of time quarantlned houses The undertaker was arraignedbefore Acting Kecordor Seymour mind gave ballfor trial

The Board of Health Is worried over thealarmlne Increase of contagious dIseases In Ho-

txiken Last month lla cases of contagiousdiseases were reported as against 13 for July1HIM

Commliiloneri for the Annexation of Supe-rior

¬

to UulutliST PAul Aug 0Cov Cloush has appointed

G G hartley and Alex McDougal of Dululhand J H Sutherland members of the Commis-sion

¬

from Minnesota to confer with a similarCommission from Wisconsin with a view to an-

nexing¬

Superior to Duluth The Governor himself Is a member of the CommUslon under theJoint Legislative resolution

3DI32IDD-OHANOn ThurtiUy Ainj8 at his late residence

270 21M it Drooklyn N V Vui Y Uolau brotherof time Ilev Joseph K Uolan

Funeral from the Church of M Join the Kvangelliton Saturday Aug 10 at U30 A M where a eelemo mauof requiem will be celebrated for therepose of his no-

ulD1TJtNDAt thee Weitmlnster Hotel on AUK 91505 Janice ii DarinJ In tln SOul 5 ear of tile B-

BBelatlvel and frIends are hit lied to attend tiefuneral services at Trinity EpIscopal CliurehNewark N J on Monday Aug 1J at 815 1 M-

AIIA< <llIEItOn Friday AUK tfLoulinH D-

Vtaeniluek wiru of Daniel clallanluTFuneral from her late reildeneo Ovtl Ixirlmer at-

Orcenpolnl on Sunday Mug U at si 1r M Itelalives and frIends are retpectfully Invltcj

1INOAt Frankforton the Main Germany on thinNth Iiut Mary wife of David II King Jr of NewYork

XA1VIIiCKIn IarU on July SO Alice dstifhter of thi lIsle Vltllain Thomas anil bophle TllleyLaw rence

Funeral servIces at St Mark CUurohZd ar andlOlli it on Monday tug IV at tM 1 M-

aieKHMHON At Cornwall on Hiidaun N Y ontnu Silt hut Ilerkeley ou of John ouj Leila 8-

Mi KeuouServices will bo held at the rotldenca of hit parents

VI7 6th avuu baturday time bIb loll at 131I-

1 M-

OHUUUUOn Thursday Aug S at her mlJeneeSit hester sl djimtherliue OUoukc ore McAullffebeloved wife of Ialrlck Ullauke

Funeral on Bunday AUR 111I al if M Holallreiand f rkU J are Invited to alien

HMIT1I At Lebanon Spring X Y Aug 8 1883-

Kllialwth Smith of nioomtleld N JInterment at Norwalk Conn-

riMB KFNSiro CKMETFIIV Imnted on the HarlemI Itallroad forty elKht iuilnute ride from lime Urau-

dtvntrulliiot mice Ulrail 1M t

Nru ElectrIc llulliojl In Wcstcbeitcr-Alnvsj Aui ll The Tort Chester HT-

llurrUon and White Ilalni Electric lUllond-umpany was lini r iriitud today to construct

n sIr mt uriicc rival In the village of PortIhcI ttr V tutu IMiiiiiI I und iii the towns of-

Ilji and lliirrlktin und tu unmeet th-at Inn capital a I110mil it limb directorsI John W-

lmuiilinryI WilliamI Itjiin iIliuifoidi I Ml MenderKCII Wiiliatu I Winl John W McCarty andJohnC Mfrntt l Iort hester John fluffJohnOltoiirke and Krunk tJhlrinerof NVhlu-iIlalns Kbeneer Bullet UarrUoo CharlesUalues of Klndcrhoolu