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Home > Documents > New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1901-11-30 [p 16] · 2017-12-20 · FACTORY: IR^ANO 116...

New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1901-11-30 [p 16] · 2017-12-20 · FACTORY: IR^ANO 116...

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FACTORY: IR^ANO 116 WEST.IB?STRCn: BLAIR iCCCSED OF AIWT'CTIOX. Rogers, Peet & Company. 25S Broadway, cor. Warren, and 7 ami 9 TVarren St. 509 Broadway, cor. Prince. "We fill order* 12C0 Broadway, cor. BM. by mail. and M West 33d St. Boys are careless about grow- ing—they grow uneven ; and to have to throw away a whole suit because your boy has out- grown part of it is discouraging. * Don't be discouraged. Tuxedo coats, waistcoats and trousers sold separately ; long or short trousers ; ordinar} r sizes or extraordinary sizes. Little dress shirts ; dress ties, pumps everything that is worn with dress clothes, and a dress suit case to put them all in. Everything that boys wear. Men too. Our Stfitcnmen in » :i«liln([ton. Two |in ß of i>ii-tnre» in To-inorriitT'a Tribune. ARGUMENTS IN THE HEISTAND IXQUIRY. "Washington. Xnv The arguments in the Heistand hemp Inquiry were begrun to-day before the special Investigating committee of the Senate. Judge Markov argued for Major Hawkes, and Mr. Needham for Colonel Heistand. Each sldo was limited to an hour and a half. v- WABASH WRECK. GV.mn«emeni3. 161 BROAD WAV CBB BROADWAY. 723 SIXTH AVENUE DDnPTfID'Q RIr '. VAII)f vii.i f « rntiiiDT 23d$t;" HH M|CHIOff-"M|CHIOff -" .j^ LUU Ul. (John W Bansone, 4 Probyns. Others. sth Ay s"^- BUTTERFLY" g-j^' will Hl«(tlcn. Cent. Vaud. Florsnz Troupe OtJ-«ri COTHs VAUDEVILLE. sLST^, Ulf Ol.( Etanton & M.v Jena, Bros, Damns. nZI 125 tt s h t.s "BLUE JEANS" HSi SUNDAY nSrl^r. CONCERTS BIGGEST AND BEJT vaitrv:-.;.-: IN luWS. y WALLACK'S. n A T fl Tl 1 TV» Eves.. i»:20. Mats. ]l I 11 91 1 II H To-<say & Wed.. 2:15. COL 0 R II II 11, AuCTistus Thomas' 11 M Ji M II H 11 II illP^iiuofioiii Comedy. <tL'ALITV STREET. I.YCEIM THEATRE. 4th Are! and Si £ Last Matinee at 2:15. Last Nlsht, S:3»>. ANNIE RLSSELL-/V ROYAL FA.IILI Dec. 4 Annie Russell- ia "The Girl and the Judas. 1 * C S R "?S^.T SOTHEEN Last NUht. »:15. IK I HKRE KIXG. < Dae. 2 Vlreinla Harn««i In "Alice c-J O!3 Viaceaara." NEW SAVOY THEATRE. 3«tß St. am g-^ •"A Gosht'lmJghty .- . ess." -.-: . { World. srt. B! T^^°2-». EBEN HOLDEN. arm theatre. Broadway , r .d 40th a Even'.ncs. S:2O. Matinees To-day and Wednesday. IU. JOH?I DREW I SECOND IN CO^^ID CHARLES f'RITFI?IO"V THEATRE " FROHMANS LiiHr,lilU^ B'way A «-ik List Matinee at 2:10. Last Ntirhr. S3O Y/y\. FAVERSHA^I | A Royal RiYsl. Dec. 2 '"The H#lrr.*t of Navarre." with Chas. Daltsa. f.AKKICK THEATRE. 35th St.. near Broadim" CIIARI.KS I Ev;s.. S:3O. Matinee To-d J:4 HAWTREY I A .Message from .'Mars MADISO.V S«t- THEATRE. 24th St. near 3-»»t Evenlnss. Sj3». Mating To-day and Wednesday, 2:4 TBT ' 'igy E \?gi?. l>AV - i The Liberty Belles SYMPHONY CONCERTS FOII VOI.VO PEOPLE. i Condnpted hy Mr. Frank 'inmrnwli. jl First I nm-r.-t. lni< (Sat.» Aft. at 2:30, 1 AT CARNEGIE HALL. Programme: Overt . \u25a0>. •Eemont." Beethoven; "-r;-»rt» stack for Piano ar'. Orchestra. Weber; Gavotte. E major. Bach; Ballet Music from Hear] VIII.. Salßt-Sslsa i Soloist .^Jr. Hii-hnr.lKnrmelater. .-:•--\u25a0;• a and sfalgle tickets on sale at Sc» at Musical Art Society, 20 W. 33d St.. and at Box OOcs. \u25a0 . i METROPOT ITA.\ OPERA HOC9E. To-morrow inudilioi Erjr., Dec. 1. at 9:15. GRAND POPULAR CONCERT Under the dire--?.r>n of C LGRAFF. Orand Orohestra. Relabeld Herman. ConJnctor. Soloists: 1.1111 I.ebm m, Klllann Van Hooie an! Josef MnfiiKinn. IBr arranßement with Mr. H^nrr WolfMha.> POPULAR PiiICES sUTs' »i."on sale at Box OfflM. HERALD S LAST N6T. d d^l MONDAY MR RICHARD MANSFIELD in •in: CAIRE." i . HDanbattan Cbcatre, * -Si" Evenings at 8 » \f VTTNKK TO-DA* ::13. •V I.HK VI M I l r.s-i.-UMRIU. MRS FISKLE. In MRS. BLRTOX HAKK:»i»\'S drams THE UNWELCOME MBS. HATCH. AMERICAN "" v -'^P- Mat. Daly except Mon.. r>c- I """^i^irWHT TEI> MARKS 1 HIG COXCEET EVERY SUNDAYSSSST. I/CITUO B " \u25a0•\u25a0•\u25a0 ' " l " SIIOU IS TOWN KEITH 5 n:L. ,-UMK-* THEATRE REPinLU;. y£&3tt££ GRACE «KOK«iE In nPEKM>IHIEK.\3BB BROADWAY, =£is*r** KLAW & ERUASGEirS FROL't CTIO.N. _ SS"«iBiBBL BIJOU IMAQCICin BIJOU liJAOCiCin Broadway A 30th St. WjH nnrlrl U r ViVMkfk\ »" i mk vi = i \u25a0«*. r^V.v'WAY DOWN EAST MORAL PLAY. W H I U»VyV>^ t T& ..i& Prices. •"•\u25a0 •'"*. "• l.<->. Mats I J>^a>LZj-! - * ftOHODfliw CASINO AJKM&HEiJ Evegs s:ls. Matlnes f^g^3«^l 9§I»"i |f Saturda^on^. 2:13. J tfjM*"- MATINEE rO-PAw. \u25a0fn«:--I.M'K TIIEVTHK » " «•\u25a0 ««*S M - >t>ne -..FTArii>Mx\% m> . i«-.nii>'"_- ED E M world in wax: n a ' jT IHI^.I MAJILTON M^rj^ Worses and Ciuriagcs^^^^ Sjsns-rM BOARD for »m«" «\u25a0* " :"" A »Vof ear* civon; horses ca.iea - \u25a0*• PAULY. Oradell. N- J- Jamss McCreery & Co., MEN'S CRAVATS. 3lade of Silk, woven to order for this depart- ment. Productions of the leading- Enropcan and American mitu. These very One cravat sllkn lnolu«le n>nn> novelty n»avn, heavy, KnKliah Matelasnea and cords.— la solid color*. Cravats made in any desired shape, the latest fold being the " Coronation Ascot " In stock,— a large variety of fine cravats,— correct for business or calling dress, sOc. to $3.00 each. Twenty-third Street. CARNEGIE HALL N>xt Monday at 8:15 Saturday afternoon n»xt at 2:15 X3LTJI3Tfi3X-XIS. THE DISTINGUISHED BOIIKMIA\ VIOLINIST. 3fnh*B'way, V\K I V'C NIGHTI>T AT S:tO M Month., UA L I O If* ltmn T<v-.ia>- at 2. THE MESSENGER BOY wl'h JAMES T. POWERS. Harlem Op^ra BOOS*. Ryes.. 8:15. Matin»» To-day. CAPT JINKS with ETHEL BAHRVMORE. Next Weak- DAN DALY In "Th* N>w Yorkfra." 4M St.. H way & 7th Ay-I IUI Unlfl. »»»\u25a0 T> ! a £ 2:XK ELSIE DE WOLFE MET THE WAY ?%: WORLD MURRAY mVtNn^k £v^v»a;:^c. IflUnnHl oir hoarding HOtSE. i>i«Tnit'S -*> ct». >nd 3O ct«. I M'"^,- SHOW. 12. W TO 11 P. »:.„_„„ NAT M. WILLS. MANSFIELD & %MLB,R. INCOMING STEAMERS. MINIATT-RE almanac. Punrlsp 7:CM|9un»et 4:34|M00n rises p mB:sftl Moon's *** 11* HIGH WATER. . y Fandy Hook 10:48 Got. Island 11:18 H»II Gate ;• Band] Hook |Oov. Island -|HaU Gate 1:01 MA RINE INTELLIGENCE. A New Collar. K. * W. "LrBECK." "LrBECK." E. &W. SUPERINTENDENT OF TOOK DENIES THAT HE IS HIDING WOMAN* WHO COOKED FOR PROMINENT MEN. Justice Clarke, in the Supreme Court, yesterday, on the application of George C. MacLougrhlin. is- MMd a writ of habeas corpus directing George Blair, who is described in the petUion filed by Mr Mac- LouKhlin as -pretending to be" superintendent of the Public Poor, to produce in court Kller Duff, whom he is alleged to restrain from, her liberty. Mr. Maclvouphlin charpes Superintendent Blair with defrauding the woman of ?'.•\u25a0\u25a0'. placing: her in a convent at Blauvelt. and. when he found that she -map takinp proceeding* •" regain her liberty, with abducting her an-.i concealing her to that her law- yer .\u25a0•\u25a0..; not lir.d her. ' .MiicLouphlin says he first met Ellen Duff in last May wander'ng about be streets. She told him she had been taken to the Convent of St. Dominic t v Superintendent Blair. She declared, he says, t:nt Blair induced her to hand over all her prop- ~i-v to him. and that then he had Imprisoned her in V.:ti convent. The lawyer said that at first he did not believe her story and thoupht she was crazy, but after watching her carefully and con- v.rsinp with her he became convinced that she was perfectly sane. She told him that she had be<n induced to riga a paper conveying about K.*M. which she had in several banks, to Blair because she feared he would send her to the island. MaoLouchlin pay? that he made an investigation at the banks and found that part of her story was brae. He* then went and saw Blair and demanded Ellen Duff" s money Blair, he alleges, made sev- eral appointments with him which he did not keep, and at last an action was bepun by the \u25a0woman for the recovery of her money and the cancellation of the deed executed by her. Since Ellen Duff was anxious to return to New-York. Mr. MacLou^hlin says- that he advanced her money, and on August I last She went to board with Sarah McManas. at No. 547 East Fifteenth-st. About this time Blair, it is said, Instituted a pro- ceeding in Blauvelt to have XV. r D"J« adjudged" Insane, and she on her lawyer's advice went to board in Far Rockaway with Margaret J. Kessler. an old friend. Mr. MacLoughlin declares that last Tuesday he went to Mrs Kessler's house and found that she and Ellen Duff had disappeared. };, says be does not know where she is. but be- lieves that Blair or some person acting for him has abducted the woman. Ke further says that Blair has Bed an answer in the action admitting that he received $1,655 belonging to Ellen Duff and has spent tZjSN or it for her benefit. In an affidavit sworn to by Ellen Duff she say? that she came to this country from Ireland when s^he wa? fifteen years old and learned the art of ientlnc cooking" She had been employed by both James Gordon Bennett, ur.. and James Gordon Bennett, jr.. B. V. R. Cruger. Solomon P. Chase. Governor William Sprague and Vanderbilt Allen. Sne said that she went to the Municipal Lodging House on the night of Juno 7. 1300. because, having been detained until a late boor in preparing dinner for a large party, she bad been locked out at her home and she did not wish to Incur the expense of going to* hotel. The new day. she declares. she was brought before Superintendent Blair, who demanded she should sign some papers he had pre- pared. She did this, sho averred, because she was afraid she would be sent to the Island. Mr. Blair made a statement yesterday, hi the cuirsr- of which he said thai the woman had wandered into the lodging house about two years .ago. and had said that she had no money or friends. Wh'-n her clothes w. re disinfected it whs found that several bankbooks wen in her po?SfS<ion. She was accordingly sent to his office the next day for examination ad Inspection. At that time !-h<* had told him thai she st< livingin a lodging house in East Tw^nty-second-st.. and that she wantt-d the city to take care of her. as everybody was trying to got her money. Sin.- had given him the power of attorney, which he still h«'ld. He said that on September 6 last the woman had b«-«^n placed in the insane- pavilion In Bellevue Hospital for inspection. She had boen found by the police of the Ka?! Tw-nty-sf cond-st. station in E;i=t Flfteenth-st. <>n September 9 she whs dis- charsed from Bellevae as sane. He further said that Mrs. Kerslor ha<« c<>m<> to him a few days jign and requested blxa to take charge of Ellen Duff, as sh«- bad had her for \u25a0 long tim»- and had not received the pay HacL<oaghll] had agreed to jr.-.\u25a0- her. He had then taken the woman and pi.iced her in a private hospital, when '-:•:•• was b«-ing carefully cared for. He would not tell where th<- hospital was for fear =h» wou!2 \u25a0«\u25a0 abducted. He declared that every step be bad taken bad br-«'n \u25a0•\u25a0• he had insulted Mr. Keller and the lawyers of the department. He believed be had acted throughout in accordance with the law. WAXT KECOI'S'T OF VOTE. BAH FRANCISCO STOCKS. San Francisco. Nov. 29.—The official closing quo- tations for mining stocks to-day were as follows: AU . 04 Kentucky C0n...... K. A nhi"con." 02 Ividy Washlnston C«n... .01 *'>£* 01 'Mexican M Reloher °* Occidental Con 03 Beit & "v:::::::: 13 aSS^".v.u::::::::::: :S „',,.„ 02 Overmw 02 "aWnta-::: ::.:.. « p«toSi -- 03 ;«r Con :::::: :Sfc*?ii*.::::::::::::: «5 Cholla? ..." ' Belcher 01 J'onflrtence •»' Sierra Nevada M Son C«r&Va 1.651 Standard ....^. 3.25 Con imperial 01 Syndicate Crown Point .02 Si. Louis "* Sou"" A Am-'.... « rates Con J? Hal*- & . N^rr°":::::::: 18 ; Ye riSw c ;«Vk«-.;:::::::::: « f \u0084 . Oil Yellow Jacket H Jinia . , Justice \u25a0\u25a0I B»»om«r«. Oeorne W Clyde, for rrovtdence; Pocasset (n Tm" Delaware (Br>. South Shields; St Dun- s-an <Hr) Adelaide, etc: Kxcelslor. JCew rl *»J >9 > ft l ~ l \ n l i J'^ldn! (Itah New-Orlean»: Jamestown. Norfolk and l-e^port News"- Colorado. Hrunswlck: Comanche. Charles- ton and Jacksonville: Tallahassee. Savannah. THE MOVEMENTS OF STEAMSHIPS. KOREION I'OUTS. Liverpool. Not 2tv— Sailed, steamer Georftlc <Br). Nlcol. Brow Hend° ri Km 2»— Passed, steamer Hovlc (Ur>. *"\u25a0\u25a0* Is,. N of -\v 1 i k h r No l ;r a»" ' I'awii, steamer Maajdam (Batch), Hakker. R"ttert«m f->r X^w-York Movllfc- N'-v 21' Sailed, sK-onirr AnohTta |M wa-I»- worth, from Qtssaow for New--Vork. \u0084.-_-r 9outb-tmrtnn Sot 2», 12:40 P m— s-alleJ. steamer Deutschland (O«D. Alters. ARMS Hamburg for »SW- Swansea. '".Nor '^"'s^l-!. steamer Boston City M Rotterdam Xt»v W 2S-Sal!ed. steamer Mawrtam (Lutch). BaUcer New-York via Houlnene-sur-Mer. Stettin. Nm 24— Arrived, steamer Naur.Ua (O«r>, Krafte. XeW-York via Cppenhngen. Hamburg Bo* 21>. 3 a Arrived, steamer Phcer.lcia t.;«-r'' Froehllch. New-York. Chertouri Nov -."!>. 8:10 p m— Sailed, steamer I>eut*chland Ger). 'Albers (from Hamburg and Southampton). New- York MarselUes. So* 2*— Arrived, steamer reru^ia <Br). John- ston New-Y ork via Naples. Havre. Nov 29. Arrived, steamer I.i Hr^ta «Br). St Wcbaels'^Nov'sJV— Arrived 'previously), steamer Lnch Tay (lirl.Stephens. »"olombo and Calcutta. for New- rihrl'tar' Nov 29. 2p m— Sailed, steamer Columbia (Ger). Krech ffrom O«nn* and Kaples), New-York. Naples Nov 2J». 7 a m— Ajrlved. steamer Hohenzollem «Sert Obpp«s New-York for c;enoa (and proceeded), nio Janeiro Nov 2.l— Arrived, neamrr Baron AntroaSßSß (Br) Mitchell. (fcr Now-York). T«tH!l (from Ponce Nov ST noon— Sailed, steamer Zulla. Terrlll (from iJx. (svia\ra and Curacao). New-York. . •-_ Bermuda. -Nov. 20. .10 a m— Sailed, steamer Pretoria (Br). McKenzle.'New-York.- MWMOIMV 21. with fruit to J B Krrr & Co. Arrived at "stSinJ? C^StASebs* Lswls, »— -* November » W^:^^'K =3. with H^«STwS* "-"^-to A H Bull * C °Stc am,r Buenaventura, from Wport **£***?** re " portod outside la«t nl«sht>. 1 ' "P'-^Ve^orl New. an! »irfsSk%tthTsdS. a"l bfSSSS*» to the OU P Him Chesareake. Delano. Baltimore, with mdse to "stram'T.V.lf Stream. Swain. Philadelphia, with mdse "^^Vr'Th^'.sTir,. Hvlstendahl. Tilt Cove X F N<>- 'J r ii> with ,-onrfr ere to the Am'rlcan M»tal Co. T •f, V U Hn\\ *Co Arrlv.iat the Far at TJM am. "m.ly Ho" N J Nov ~>. D:.TO p m—Wind southwest: mwlerate bre«s»; cloudy and hazy. SAILED. LATEST ESTIMATE PLACES IT AT SEVENTY. FTVE-ITAMANS THOUGHT TO HAVE BEEN CONTRACT LABORERS. Detroit. Mich.. Nov. ».-An Interview this evening wt a, Thomas E. Moran, deputy customs collector It th«« port, practically verifies the estimate that at lea.t seventv-flve lives were lost in Wednesday Seneca. collision on the Wabash in wtdch the Seneca. The two immigrant cars in rreate=t loss of life occurred, and in which so many of the wreck victims were roasted to death. were part of train No. 13. which crossed the Detroit River from Canada on the ferryboat Great .Western on Wednesday afternoon, and Deputy Moran In- spected the baggage of its passengers. He says there were at the least calculation one hundred Italians In the two cars. In addition to the,, there were ten more In the smokln* car. which was ahead of the two immigrant cars. Official advices to Superintendent Burn* of this division of the Wahash say that of the. Italians in the wreck twenty escaped unhurt, and were taken to St Louis, fifteen are in the company's hospital at Peru. Ind.. there are six others in Peru, and two are near Adrian uninjured. Subtracting these forty-three from the on» hundred and ten imml- rrants Deputy Moran says were aboard the train leave* a loss among the Italians alone of sixty- seven In addition, eight other bodies were re- covered and identified, which makes a total cf seventy-five dead. A dispatch from Adrian. Mich., says that accord- ing to Romano E. Schlavone. of No. 190 West Tay- lor-st.. Chicago, through whom was arranged the transportation to California of the Italians killed !n Wednesday night's wreck on the Wabash. there were only about fifty Immigrants on the west- bound train. If this Is true, it reduces the death list by almost half, and the number of dead vic- tims will be between forty and fifty. Pietro Cardlello, Italian consular agent In De- troit, returned to the city to-day from scene of the Wabash wreck. Sear SeSeca. to which he had burred to look after the interests of his country- men, so many of whom were burned to death . He said he was not yet able to form anything like a correct estimate of the number of Italians Wile* but is Inclined to think the estimates thus far are ernments « ;<msul < i;l ' n ' c^ernment," ernments Consul «-arni< iio t« j Government." rl^'r l^' P--P --T C >fat would f come c within the Jurisdiction \u0084r , rant "f^l^iSok after the Injured vie- n^ha^a^adTanSa'our K ovlrnment of the \u0084c-- "'-Have you communicated with Count Rosewa- *^- haye W do^e*S duty." was the diplomatic an T- Wn-rW n-r Francta Becchertal pastor of the Italian ln , n , Be^berini found W r : in . 'Vv r> V mmlprai t-"-ame from the nortb- T ,rn pa^Vof Ia v. T.lorno comes from Berdno ta ih" g^vmie ofSondrir, The Prtr «»»^ Bteamer Ls Campa«nle. **£*?* _J" Kanfcw^as tho band went to Horn. ' M-.ilb.-rr> -st. banKer as crintT wer" hound for San Francisco, as in f'Yot^o-s Poci* wai, his ticket for that point. Adrian. Mich.. Nov. »-« Is believed row that the last of th* bodies recovered from the. Wabash wreck near Seneca. on Wednesday nl ht, nnd broupht here, has been identified. Mayor Reyn- olds to-day received a telegram dated Sherman. Tex.. Baying: "Can you advise if Ann Upton, an old lady." with ticket sold here to Chatham. Ont., was Injured?—William Upton." Mayor Reynolds wired back a description to Mr. Upton and" it is believed that the body will be ordered . shipped to Texas. At noon to-day only the bodies of the porter. James Brown, and the body of the old woman, remained in the morgue here. The porter's body will be shipped to Bngie- wood. where his wife and children live. A!! the burned and blackened fragments of what were once human bodies have been placed in coffins and were burled this afternoon in Oak Grove Com- UOBB OF LIFE T THE GOVEHNOR-ELECT INITIATED AT CONVOCATION IN NEWARK. Mecca Temple. Ancient Arabic <«*«*,**£ of the Mystic Shrine, the mother of shrine temp.es in the I'nited States, held a convocation in .he Au^torium at NewarK last night and Bhrta« » New-York. Philadelphia. Baltimore and othw dJ were rre Sent <n :ar CcCc numbers. There was > a street pa^Ton. L Central Railroad Matlon to tte »e«rk early tn the afiernoon a delegation of Noble, an.: escorted to the .. .^entai Hote'.. where dir.n. r «- of \u0084••. -X the officer- wore driven to tne r tto » for the rarane They were .^^ > '; Oriental eo.tume peculiar to the order, aad tbe* rrlages were attended by the Arab P**™* 0 * Mecca and Lulu temple,, preceded by th »* band of sixty pieces, each musician a member o. 1 Th°e rd inUlat,on of 135 Masons into *£™££ of the .hrine was the most important <™™' O [£* demonstration. Amonp the ernor-elect Franklin Murphy. Judce Gottfried Krue /er of ho Court of F.rror, and Appeals Congress- man r. ™rtt*%j™*:i?g& o E f i? r n :- sTa^. included men from ««2Sm£2£n Fowler were Governor Voorhees and ' ' rl v rjunl hall seats arr.orp XuS^e^plac^^'a dinner. for two thousand wen> jiia.ei MURPHY A MYSTIC SHRINER Mayor-elect Low will b<« the guest of the Authors' Club on the evening of December 1 19. "Public Art" -will be discussed before the Nine- teenth Century Club on Tuesday evening. Decem- ber 10, at Sherry's, by Charles De Kay, John La Farge and Charles K. Lamb. "The Department Badges of the Grand Army of th.- Republic" is the subject of '£• lecture to be de- livered on Thursday evening by Bauman L. Belden before the. American Numismatic and Archaeologi- cal Society at No. IT West Forty-thlrd-st. Dr. Carson will preach the annual strmon to the Pennsylvania Society of New-York to-morrow af- ternoon In the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church. Malls from Australia of the following dates: Melbourne. November 5; Brisbane, November 7. and Sydney, November f>, are due. in New-York on Tuesday morning. Malls for Australia will close at the General Post office as advertised. Two iu«kom of Imlf-lone pictures). it<-«l State* Senator* and ConKreiisinien. s«-e To- luorruir'ii Tribune. new-tork cmr. The monthly meeting <>f tho 'West Knd Associa- tion w!J! be held at Its rooms, in the Hotel Endi- •••\u25a0!•. on Monday evening at s o'clock Officers f'»r r.*'2 will be voted for at this meeting. George S. Lesplnasse will speak on "Paris and New-Tork." A dinner will be given for Edwin EL Terrell, a w»ll known lawyer of s«n Antonio, Tex., at the Knickerbocker Athletic Club on- Monday evening by the New-York alumni of the Beta Theta Pi. Mr. Terrell was Mlnist.-r to Turkey, an'! htis been for many years an active mpml«>r of th.> fraternity. Covers will be !al<l for about fifty nit-mbfrs of th<- association. WHAT IS GOING ON* TO-DAY. ' Horse rale. Madlsr.n Piuaro Garten. The ];\u25ba,- Dr. H. M. Saundem. on "Oamhllr.ir." !>'Jn» for Political K.:i »Uon. No. 23 West Forty -fourth- »t.. 11 a. m. \u25a0 Plnrer of ft. Andrews Society an<*. address by B ' \u25a0•'\u25a0 0. Cousins, cf lowa, on "Tlis Genius at Hobert Burns." Delminlc-i'o. evening. Dinner of the Manhattan Democracy, No. 414 Grand-st.. 7 .".- d. m. Brotherhood of St. Andrew. public meetlnr. v.lth addresses by ni.shot> Potter .- I others, Grace Church. Broadway and Tenth-*?.. 8 p. m. Daughters of the American Revolution, entertainment. Sherry's, evening St. Mark's Hospital benefit concert. Carnegie Hall, 8 p. m. Met tint- of the Shakespeare Club, Btudto No. 91&, Camesle liuildlnc. >> p. m. People's [netlt it< lecture by Professor Mace on "The American Revolution," C per I'nlon, S p. m. [ntercolledate Cr<"*s Country Asuoclatl ~>n meet, Morris Park, aft< rm 1 PROMINENT AKP.IVALR AT THE HOTELS. CAMBRIDGE Marquise- de Tallpyr^ni-Pericorrl. of Paris, and Prinoesa Pogsio Rospoli. of Rr>m<\ FIFTH AVENUE -Senator Georn- !'. Hoar, of Massachusetts, Professor H. B. F Tucker, of Virginia. GRAND Assistant Burgeon L. 1,. Yon Wedeklnd, I" B. N : O. M. Haist.-,i. of Bcranton; Captain R H. Turnrr and Major H. H Benhem. U. B. A., nnd John Ft. R<..-»ch, of Chester Pel 1 HOFFMAN U !- " ! 'r<ien. of Fail River Judco Andrew Hamilton, of Albany. IMPERIAL —Colonel F. D MacMaster. of Havana. MAN- HATTAN- George Harris, president of Amherst College. PARK AVENUE-rMajor S C Smith. n. A., of Ehigland. VICTORIA— Judge r> C. Mar ris of Daluth, and Captain W. A. Btratton, of Hartford. WALDORF Benator J. W. Bailey, of T' x.-i.x. and Colonel Washington A. Etoebling, i>f Trenton. HOME HEWS. The Albany Post Road, or Broadway, as it is more familiarly called, originally was used by the stage coaches that ran between New-York and Albany. It is n<>w a favorite route for au- tomobiles, coaching parties, and horsemen trav- elling along the Hudson River. It is th<^ regu- lar route for the coach Good Times. Bordering on it are the country places of A. 1.,. Barber, General Samuel Thomas, Philip Schuyler, Lucien C. Warner, Misa Helen M. Gould. Edwin Gould. Isaac Stern, John D. Ar<hbo!d. Mrs. L,. C. East- man and ninny other well known people. A few years ago ex-Senator Burns, thf-n a member of the I^eeislature. secured th^ passage of a law to protect the Albany Post X.'ad from tr< Hey roads from Hastings to Mount Pleasant The plan of the trolley people is to have this act rescinded at the next session of the legis- lature, and already friends of the "Huckleberry" line are circulating petitions asklntr th^ people to give up their highway. The petitions have been signed by about three hundred people. "HUCKLEBERRY" LIXB HAS THRER HUN- DRED SIGNATURES TO A TETITION— HOUSE OWNERS AGAINST PLAN. There is apprehension among: those who own country homos in Hasting-s, Dobbs Ferry, Irv- inKton. Ardslfy and other places along: the Hud- son River that the Albany Poet Road will be spoiled for driving by a trolley line. The Union Railway Company, whose lines now end on the outskirts of Tonkers, is said to desire a right of way over this famous road, in order to reach Tarrytown. where it wants to connect with a bran.h in operation across Westchester County to M.imnronr-ck. etery. Thrre are four coffins filled -with these pieces. Peru. Ind.. Nov. 29.— The Injured passengers of the Wabosh -wreck who are In the hospital here show marked improvement to-day, particularly In the case of tht» five women suffering- from ner- vous shock. The doctors say all will recover. The body of D. W. Doud, fireman of the double header, was brought here to-day for burial. Chicago. Nov. 29— Hermann Poesrhe, of No. 48 Dearborn-st., Chicago, -whose name was in the list of dead In the Wahash wreck, wa? not injured. He was a passenger on the wt-stbound train. OBJECT TO CARS INALBAXYROAD. Steamer Hardanjw (lir) from Mediterranean port?, was reported off Fire Island last night in error for steamer Thrift. Steamer Teller (Nor). Lirsen. Demerara November IS. with miff to L \V & V Armstrons. Arrived at the Bar at » a m. Steamer Monterey, Johnvtone, Vera <'ruz November 21, Projtreso 'Si nno* Havana 25, with mdse and M passengers to James E Ward & Co. Arrived nt the nar nt 2:30 n m. Steamer F'rlns Wlllem II (Dutch). Vlnch»r«, Paramaribo November 5, Demerera 7, Trinidad 11. Cumana and Giianta 13. La Guayra 14. Porto Cabello 1.1. Curacao 18, Jacmel 20, Aux Cnyes 21 and Port -au- Prince 22. with n \u25a0'•\u25a0•» and 8 passengers to KunharH & Co. Arrive.! »t the Bar at 1:3" p m. Steamer Cumbal (Br). Barry. Coqulmbo Aujrust 23. Arica 29. Callao September •>. Guayaquil IT. Payta 20, Tocopllln October 7. Tnlcahuano 12. C.ironel 13. Punta Arena 21. Montevideo 2fs and St Lucia November 19, with t!,.ise an.'. - cabin passengers to W It <iraco & Co. Ar- rived at the Har at <">:.'« p m. Steamer Leon i.Nor), Jensen. Port Antor.lo November "1 nnd Port Maria 22, with niuJ-e and ft cabin passengers to the I'nited Fruit Co. Arrived at the liar at 11:30 a m. Steamer Grand I>ake iMri. Peterson. Port Maria. Jamaica. portT OF NEW YORK. FRIDAY, NOV. 2ft. ML ARRIVETX SHIPPING NEWB. TO-PAY. Vessel. From. Una. Pnlarstlernen Manchester. November BroSSyiTcity." Savannah. November 14. .Bristol City •\u0084,. . Hamburg. November 17 Hamb-Am Manias '*. Port Spain. November 20... Trinidad Uf,, T.\ '....'.• Gibraltar. November 14 Array Trans Phi'iieirhta Southampton. November 30. American t-mVrla / - Liverpool. November 23 Canard Chateau I.aflte Bordeaux. November 16 .. .. French Snrat,.iip BandaßO. November 23. N V * Cuba Xr.ache. \u25a0" Jacksonville. November 27 Clyde Barcelona Hamburit. November 19 Union British Antwerp. November IS rhornlx Bodl«well SI Luola. November 21 SUNDAY. DECEMBER I. Potsdam Rotterdam. November 21. ...H01-Am Minneapolis- London. November 21 At Trans Ijl \u25a0"•.«•- gne •\u25a0 Havre. November 33 French Ovmric Liverpool. November 22. White Star vi ,- ld '" ...N<-w Orleans, November 2f1.. .Morgan ,'!,,',, " " lacksonville, Novwnbt* 2S Clyoa "nn Juan.'.'.'. ' Sao Juan. November 26 N I « P R ;.,„ rj'iin<'e Itrunswlck. November Z* Mallory fiarat.'ica. '..'."... Nassau. November XT NY A Cuba. Sacoochee . Savannah. November 2s. .. .Savannah Pretoria. . .'.'." Bermuda, November 28 Quebec MONDAY. DECEMBER 2. ;e. Inn Liven November 21 I.eylan.l Etona 91 Lucia, November "I Norton Xrat'istan.. .'. . 51 Lucia, November 24 Norton Proteus New-Orleans, November 27.. Cromwell OUTGOING STEAMERS. TO-PAY. Vessel yr - Line, Mall* close. Vessel nails. «i..i Jamaica Atlas o:3oam 12:00 m Andes Haiti. Atlas 8:30 a m I^'rOOni Astorial Glasgow. Anchor 9:30 am 12.-00 m c ,1H«! Argentina, Norton *<:<«> a m lO:oi>am Campania. Uverpool Cunard .'><>• a m >.;t>»a m Concho Oalveston. Uallory 3:oopm Omsuelo Hull, Wilson Oral Waldersee. Hamburg. Hamb-Am. B 08 .• Louisiana New-Orleans, Cromwell ... \u25a0 3:<X>pm Menomlnee. London. At Tram - 1 :l«l p m Mexico Havana N V v Cuba M-ot>am 1 :00 p m Ol '.. Mai i/ is. Munson '.12:30 p m 3:00 pm Phoenix Nuevltai , 12:3'»p m 3:<>t»pm I'hlladelohla i - rto Rico, Keel V 0:uO a m 12:<»»m Byridam. Rotterdam, Hol-Am . 7:30 a m10:o0am St Cuthl it Antwerp. Phoeols =oartan Prince Azores, rrlnce 7:30 am 10:00 a m Trave Naplea N •! I-lovd 7:(«»am 10:«» a m Matanzas. Tamplco N" V * I'uhn. . . .10:00 a m l:0Opm i'rlnrt-M \u25a0,••-\u25a0 Norfolk. Old Dominion 3:00 p m Excelsior, New Orleans, Morgan 3oOpm MONDAY. DECEMBER 2. Jeffen-on. Norfolk. Old Dominion.... 3:oopm TUESDAY. DECEMBER 3. Kronprlnr Wllbelm, Bremen, NC, IJoy.i n:.T«) a m I0:OOa m Buenos Ayres, <";i'liz. Spanish Cevlc, Liverpool, White Star GerßOVla, Naples, F«l>re Mllanea Colon Panama l>:.To»im 1:00 pm Prina v/'m 11. Port atl Prince. Dutch. l«i:'K) a m 1:«X> p m Apache. Charleston. Clyde 3:00 pm WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4. Philadelphia, Southampton, American. 6:30 am 10:00 am Majestic, Liverpool, White star B:3Oam 12 <»> m Zeeland, Antwerp, Red war H>."oOara 12 \u25a0\u25a0<> m Hekla Copenhagen Scand-Am ll:<)0am 2:00 pm Pretoria Bermuda, Quebec 8:00 a m 10:00 a m Monterey Havana. N V & Cuba 12:00 m 3:00 pm Denver, Galveston. Mallory 3:oOpm [roquols. Charleston. Clyde 3:00 pm DITTER FIGHT OVER ELECTION OF COLLECTOR AVT> ASSESSOR ix ORAXGETOWX. T*T*-K *>- V. Nov. 9 (Special).— fa a lively ami hitter contest ben over the recent elections of collector and assessor for OrangetuNm. and appli- cation has been made to Justice Maddox. of th*> Su- preme Court, for a mandamus directing a recount of the vote In the Sixth District, which is in the village of Sparkill. On election night, after the votes were counted, the flsrures sent into Xyack from the nine districts in Oransetown showed that John Happie. 1!,. Democratic candidate for Town Collector, was elected over l-in<->>ln J. Stewart, his Republican opponent, by a majority of three, and that T. I. X. Tallman. Republican candidate for assessor had a majority of thirty over his Demo- cratic opponent. A. A. Ulackledge. When the re- turns were sent into the town clerk's office the next day it *fac ' "T. ' time was an error on them of seven votes. Stewart, tn.- Republican candidate for elector, claimed that this error was the cause of his apparent defeat, and that if the vote was recounted he would be found to have \u25a0 majority. The board of canvassers canvassed the vote of the town, and declared '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Democratic candidate *\u25a0].»<• te.i collector by \u25a0 majority of three. In making the c?nvass the board was surprised to find that the returns elected Mr BlaektcdKe. Democratic candidate for assessor. by a majority of ten over Tallman. The returns from the .Sixth"District were found to be badly muddled, and had to be corrected several time? before the official count could be made. Stewart and Tallraan both claim that the errors at that poll beat thorn. Congressional Edition- TO-MORROW'S TRIBUNE, £ Congressional Edition, TO-MORROW'S TRIBUNE This Edition will con- tain handsome half-tone portraits of all U. 5. Sena- tors and members of the next Congress, with in= teresting information re- garding them. Also cMany Other Good Things. Long Overcoats 'The woods are full of them;" So many "best" makes, we really don't know where we come in. We do know, though, that our coats are right. Dash and grace— the touch of the custom bench— stand out in every line. Every style of Overcoat worth seeing— sls to $45' Youth*' Long Overcoats, $10 to $25. Boys' Long Overcoats, ages 3 to 15, $5 to $15. Everything else Man or Boy wears. Stores Open This Evening. ) 841 / 420 ) 265 BROADWAY 6 Stores . \ Cor. 13th St.? Cor. Canal St. [ Near Chambers St. DAILY TBIBUNE. SATUBDAY. NOVEMBEB 30. 1901. ]|p* puNrtpiNEfbiwrnißß "CHAIRS TO SIT OV* ARE IDEAL. HOLIDAY GIFTS. A Scottish tenant, shown over his laird's newly apEolnted house, carried the special report to his Inquisitive wife that he "could sit on ever} C Our quaint old styles please everyone who likes to "pick up" odd bits occasionally, Mahog- any Colonials. *i:: <*•. though quaint in shape and wonderfully artistic in line. are as stout ana Ktronpr as the sati-s of your grandmothers I>utch chairs. >7.->» (with rush seat). UK thoE« seen in old Dutch i.aintinps. English, French and Italian-many correct copies or antiques preserve*! in European museums Colo- nial "roundabouts" and triangles. Chairs for every purpose, from library chairs, which are veritable "old shoes" for comfort, to the dainti- est little ones, at $2.75. for desk? and boudoirs, but all at factory prices, as you "BUYOFTHf MAKER** Geo. C. FLint Co. 43 44 «U»'47 n«T 21?ST.. •4IAR WtdAOXAY. B^^s^s^s^ \^^^a\^s^s^^^^^^^^^sW TO Announcement*.
Transcript
Page 1: New York Tribune (New York, NY) 1901-11-30 [p 16] · 2017-12-20 · FACTORY: IR^ANO 116 WEST.IB?STRCn: BLAIR iCCCSED OF AIWT'CTIOX. Rogers, Peet & Company. 25S Broadway, cor. Warren,

FACTORY: IR^ANO 116 WEST.IB?STRCn:

BLAIR iCCCSED OF AIWT'CTIOX.

Rogers, Peet & Company.25S Broadway, cor. Warren,

and 7 ami 9 TVarren St.509 Broadway, cor. Prince. "We fillorder*

12C0 Broadway, cor. BM. by mail.and M West 33d St.

Boys are careless about grow-ing—they grow uneven ;and tohave to throw away a wholesuit because your boy has out-grown part of it is discouraging.*

Don't be discouraged.Tuxedo coats, waistcoats and

trousers sold separately ; long orshort trousers ; ordinar}r sizes orextraordinary sizes.

Little dress shirts ; dress ties,pumps

—everything that is worn

with dress clothes, and a dresssuit case to put them all in.

Everything that boys wear.

Men too.

Our Stfitcnmen in » :i«liln([ton. Two |inß r»of i>ii-tnre» in To-inorriitT'a Tribune.

ARGUMENTS IN THE HEISTAND IXQUIRY."Washington. Xnv

—The arguments in the

Heistand hemp Inquiry were begrun to-day beforethe special Investigating committee of the Senate.Judge Markov argued for Major Hawkes, and Mr.Needham for Colonel Heistand. Each sldo waslimited to an hour and a half.

v- WABASH WRECK.

GV.mn«emeni3.

161 BROADWAVCBB BROADWAY.

723 SIXTH AVENUE

DDnPTfID'Q RIr'.VAII)fvii.if « rntiiiDT

23d$t;" HH M|CHIOff-"M|CHIOff-" .j^LUU Ul.(John W Bansone, 4 Probyns. Others.

sth Ay s"^- BUTTERFLY" g-j^'will Hl«(tlcn.Cent. Vaud. Florsnz Troupe OtJ-«riCOTHs VAUDEVILLE. sLST^,Ulf Ol.( Etanton & M.vJena, Bros, Damns. nZI

125 ttsht.s "BLUE JEANS" HSi

SUNDAY nSrl^r. CONCERTSBIGGEST AND BEJT vaitrv:-.;.-:IN luWS.y

WALLACK'S. n A T flTl 1 TV»Eves.. i»:20. Mats. ]lI 11 91 1 IIHTo-<say & Wed.. 2:15. COL 0 R II II11,AuCTistus Thomas' 11 M Ji M IIH 11 II

illP^iiuofioiiiComedy. <tL'ALITV STREET.

I.YCEIM THEATRE. 4th Are! and Si£Last Matinee at 2:15. Last Nlsht, S:3»>.

ANNIE RLSSELL-/V ROYAL FA.IILIDec. 4

—Annie Russell- ia "The Girl and the Judas. 1*

CSR"?S^.T SOTHEENLast NUht. »:15. IK IHKRE KIXG. <

Dae. 2—

Vlreinla Harn««i In "Alice c-J O!3 Viaceaara."NEW SAVOY THEATRE. 3«tß St. am g-^

•"A Gosht'lmJghty .- . ess." -.-:. { World.

srt.B!T^^°2-». EBEN HOLDEN.arm theatre. Broadway ,r.d 40th aEven'.ncs. S:2O. Matinees To-day and Wednesday. IU.

JOH?I DREW I SECOND IN CO^^IDCHARLES f'RITFI?IO"V THEATRE

"

FROHMANS LiiHr,lilU^ B'way A «-ikList Matinee at 2:10. Last Ntirhr. S3O

Y/y\. FAVERSHA^I | A Royal RiYsl.Dec. 2

—'"The H#lrr.*tof Navarre." withChas. Daltsa.

f.AKKICK THEATRE. 35th St.. near Broadim"CIIARI.KS I Ev;s.. S:3O. Matinee To-d J:4

HAWTREY I A .Message from .'MarsMADISO.V S«t- THEATRE. 24th St. near 3-»»tEvenlnss. Sj3». Mating To-day and Wednesday, 2:4TBT''igyE\?gi?.l>AV-

iThe Liberty Belles

SYMPHONY CONCERTSFOII VOI.VO PEOPLE. i

Condnpted hy Mr.Frank 'inmrnwli. jlFirst Inm-r.-t. lni< (Sat.» Aft.at 2:30, 1

AT CARNEGIE HALL.Programme: Overt . \u25a0>. •Eemont." Beethoven; "-r;-»rt»stack for Piano ar'. Orchestra. Weber; Gavotte. E major.Bach; Ballet Music from Hear] VIII.. Salßt-Sslsa iSoloist .^Jr. Hii-hnr.lKnrmelater.

.-:•--\u25a0;• a and sfalgle tickets on sale at Sc» atMusical Art Society, 20 W. 33d St.. and at Box OOcs. \u25a0. i

METROPOT ITA.\ OPERA HOC9E.To-morrow inudilioi Erjr.,Dec. 1. at 9:15.

GRAND POPULAR CONCERTUnder the dire--?.r>n of C LGRAFF.

Orand Orohestra. Relabeld Herman. ConJnctor.Soloists: 1.1111 I.ebm m, Klllann Van Hooie an!

Josef MnfiiKinn.IBr arranßement with Mr. H^nrr WolfMha.>

POPULAR PiiICES sUTs' »i."on sale at Box OfflM.

HERALD S LAST N6T. dd^lMONDAY

—MR RICHARD

MANSFIELDin •in: CAIRE."

i . •

HDanbattan Cbcatre, * -Si"Evenings at 8 » \f VTTNKK TO-DA* ::13.

•V I.HK VI MIlr.s-i.-UMRIU.

MRS FISKLE.In MRS. BLRTOX HAKK:»i»\'S drams

THE UNWELCOME MBS. HATCH.AMERICAN

""

v -'^P-Mat. Daly except Mon.. r>c- I """^i^irWHTTEI> MARKS1 HIG COXCEET EVERY SUNDAYSSSST.

I/CITUO B"

\u25a0•\u25a0•\u25a0' "l"SIIOU IS TOWN

KEITH5 n:L. ,-UMK-*

THEATRE REPinLU;. y£&3tt££GRACE «KOK«iE InnPEKM>IHIEK.\3BB

BROADWAY, =£is*r**KLAW & ERUASGEirS FROL't CTIO.N.

_ SS"«iBiBBLBIJOU IMAQCICinBIJOU liJAOCiCinBroadway A 30th St. WjH nnrlrlU

rViVMkfk\ »" imk vi = i\u25a0«*.

r^V.v'WAYDOWN EASTMORAL PLAY.W HIU»VyV>^ tT&..i&Prices. •"•\u25a0 •'"*. "• l.<->. Mats

IJ>^a>LZj-!— - *

ftOHODfliwCASINO AJKM&HEiJEvegs s:ls. Matlnes f^g^3«^l 9§I»"i|f

Saturda^on^. 2:13. J tfjM*"-MATINEE rO-PAw.

\u25a0fn«:--I.M'K TIIEVTHK » "• «•\u25a0 ««*SM

->t>ne -..FTArii>Mx\% m> . i«-.nii>'"_-

ED EM world in wax:o«n a

'jTIHI^.I MAJILTONM^rj^

Worses and Ciuriagcs^^^^Sjsns-rM BOARD for »m«" «\u25a0*

":"" A

»Vof ear* civon; horses ca.iea-

\u25a0*•

PAULY. Oradell. N- J-—

Jamss McCreery & Co.,MEN'S CRAVATS.

3lade of Silk, woven to order for this depart-ment.

Productions of the leading- Enropcan and American mitu. Thesevery One cravat sllkn lnolu«le n>nn> novelty n»avn,

—heavy,

KnKliah Matelasnea and cords.— la solid color*.

Cravats made in any desired shape, the latestfold being the"

Coronation Ascot"

In stock,— a large variety of fine cravats,—correct for business or calling dress,

sOc. to $3.00 each.

Twenty-third Street.

CARNEGIE HALL N>xt Monday at 8:15Saturday afternoon n»xt at 2:15

X3LTJI3Tfi3X-XIS.THE DISTINGUISHED BOIIKMIA\ VIOLINIST.

3fnh*B'way, V\K IV'C NIGHTI>TAT S:tOM Month., UA LI O If*ltmn T<v-.ia>- at 2.—

THE MESSENGER BOY—

wl'hJAMES T. POWERS.

Harlem Op^ra BOOS*. Ryes.. 8:15. Matin»» To-day.

CAPT JINKS with ETHEL BAHRVMORE.Next Weak- DAN DALY In "Th* N>w Yorkfra."

4M St.. H way & 7th Ay-IIUIUnlfl. »»»\u25a0 T> !a£ 2:XK

ELSIE DE WOLFE MET THE WAY ?%: WORLD

MURRAY mVtNn^k £v^v»a;:^c.IflUnnHl oir hoarding HOtSE.

i>i«Tnit'S -*> ct». >nd 3O ct«.IM'"^,- SHOW. 12.W TO 11 P. »:.„_„„NAT M. WILLS. MANSFIELD & %MLB,R.

INCOMING STEAMERS.

MINIATT-RE almanac.Punrlsp 7:CM|9un»et 4:34|M00n rises pmB:sftl Moon's ***11*

HIGH WATER.. y—

Fandy Hook 10:48 Got. Island 11:18 H»II Gate;• Band] Hook |Oov. Island

—-|HaU Gate 1:01

MARINE INTELLIGENCE.

A New Collar.K. * W. "LrBECK." "LrBECK." E. &W.

SUPERINTENDENT OF TOOK DENIES

THAT HE IS HIDING WOMAN* WHO

COOKED FOR PROMINENT MEN.

Justice Clarke, in the Supreme Court, yesterday,

on the application of George C. MacLougrhlin. is-

MMda writ of habeas corpus directing George Blair,

who is described in the petUion filed by Mr Mac-

LouKhlin as -pretending to be" superintendent of

the Public Poor, to produce in court Kller Duff,

whom he is alleged to restrain from, her liberty.

Mr. Maclvouphlin charpes Superintendent Blair

with defrauding the woman of ?'.•\u25a0\u25a0'. placing: her in

a convent at Blauvelt. and. when he found that she-map takinp proceeding* •" regain her liberty, withabducting her an-.i concealing her to that her law-yer .\u25a0•\u25a0..; not lir.d her.'

.MiicLouphlin says he first met Ellen Duff in last

May wander'ng about be streets. She told him

she had been taken to the Convent of St. Dominic

t v Superintendent Blair. She declared, he says,

t:nt Blair induced her to hand over all her prop-

~i-v to him. and that then he had Imprisoned her

in V.:ti convent. The lawyer said that at first he

did not believe her story and thoupht she wascrazy, but after watching her carefully and con-v.rsinp with her he became convinced that she

was perfectly sane. She told him that she had

be<n induced to riga a paper conveying about K.*M.which she had in several banks, to Blair becauseshe feared he would send her to the island.

MaoLouchlin pay? that he made an investigation

at the banks and found that part of her story wasbrae. He* then went and saw Blair and demanded

Ellen Duff"s money Blair, he alleges, made sev-eral appointments with him which he did notkeep, and at last an action was bepun by the\u25a0woman for the recovery of her money and the

cancellation of the deed executed by her. Since

Ellen Duff was anxious to return to New-York.Mr. MacLou^hlin says- that he advanced hermoney, and on August Ilast She went to board

with Sarah McManas. at No. 547 East Fifteenth-st.About this time Blair, it is said, Instituted a pro-

ceeding in Blauvelt to have XV. r D"J« adjudged"Insane, and she on her lawyer's advice went to

board in Far Rockaway with Margaret J. Kessler.an old friend. Mr. MacLoughlin declares that lastTuesday he went to Mrs Kessler's house andfound that she and Ellen Duff had disappeared.};, says be does not know where she is. but be-lieves that Blair or some person acting for himhas abducted the woman. Ke further says that

Blair has Bed an answer in the action admitting

that he received $1,655 belonging to Ellen Duff andhas spent tZjSN or it for her benefit.

In an affidavit sworn to by Ellen Duff she say?

that she came to this country from Ireland whens^he wa? fifteen years old and learned the art of

ientlnc cooking" She had been employed by bothJames Gordon Bennett, ur.. and James GordonBennett, jr.. B. V. R. Cruger. Solomon P. Chase.Governor William Sprague and Vanderbilt Allen.Sne said that she went to the Municipal Lodging

House on the night of Juno 7. 1300. because, having

been detained until a late boor in preparing dinnerfor a large party, she bad been locked out at her

home and she did not wish to Incur the expenseof going to* hotel. The new day. she declares.she was brought before Superintendent Blair, whodemanded she should sign some papers he had pre-pared. She did this, sho averred, because she wasafraid she would be sent to the Island.

Mr. Blair made a statement yesterday, hi thecuirsr- of which he said thai the woman hadwandered into the lodging house about two years

.ago. and had said that she had no money orfriends. Wh'-n her clothes w.re disinfected itwhs found that several bankbooks wen in herpo?SfS<ion. She was accordingly sent to his officethe next day for examination ad Inspection. Atthat time !-h<* had told him thai she st< livingina lodging house in East Tw^nty-second-st.. andthat she wantt-d the city to take care of her. aseverybody was trying to got her money. Sin.- hadgiven him the power of attorney, which he stillh«'ld. He said that on September 6 last the womanhad b«-«^n placed in the insane- pavilion In BellevueHospital for inspection. She had boen found bythe police of the Ka?! Tw-nty-sfcond-st. stationin E;i=t Flfteenth-st. <>n September 9 she whs dis-charsed from Bellevae as sane. He further saidthat Mrs. Kerslor ha<« c<>m<> to him a few daysjign and requested blxa to take charge of EllenDuff, as sh«- bad had her for \u25a0 long tim»- and hadnot received the pay HacL<oaghll] had agreed tojr.-.\u25a0- her. He had then taken the woman andpi.iced her in a private hospital, when '-:•:•• wasb«-ing carefully cared for. He would not tell whereth<- hospital was for fear =h» wou!2 \u25a0«\u25a0 abducted.He declared that every step be bad taken badbr-«'n \u25a0•\u25a0• he had insulted Mr. Keller and thelawyers of the department. He believed be hadacted throughout in accordance with the law.

WAXT KECOI'S'T OF VOTE.

BAH FRANCISCO STOCKS.San Francisco. Nov. 29.—The official closing quo-

tations for mining stocks to-day were as follows:AU. 04 Kentucky C0n...... K.

A nhi"con." 02 Ividy Washlnston C«n... .01*'>£* 01 'Mexican MReloher

°* Occidental Con 03

Beit & "v:::::::: 13 aSS^".v.u::::::::::: :S„',,.„ 02 Overmw 02

"aWnta-::: ::.:.. « p«toSi-- 03

;«r Con :::::: :Sfc*?ii*.::::::::::::: «5

Cholla? ..."'

Belcher 01

J'onflrtence •»' Sierra Nevada MSon C«r&Va 1.651 Standard ....^. 3.25Con imperial 01 Syndicate j»Crown Point .02 Si. Louis "*Sou"" A Am-'.... « rates Con J?Hal*- &.N^rr°":::::::: 18 ;

YeriSw c;«Vk«-.;:::::::::: «f \u0084 . Oil Yellow Jacket HJinia . ,Justice .»

• \u25a0\u25a0I

B»»om«r«. Oeorne W Clyde, for rrovtdence; Pocasset

(n Tm" Delaware (Br>. South Shields; St Dun-

s-an <Hr) Adelaide, etc: Kxcelslor. JCew -°rl*»J>9>ftl~l\nliJ'^ldn! (Itah New-Orlean»: Jamestown. Norfolk and

l-e^port News"- Colorado. Hrunswlck: Comanche. Charles-ton and Jacksonville: Tallahassee. Savannah.

THE MOVEMENTS OF STEAMSHIPS.KOREION I'OUTS.

Liverpool. Not 2tv— Sailed, steamer Georftlc <Br). Nlcol.

Brow Hend° riKm 2»— Passed, steamer Hovlc (Ur>. *"\u25a0\u25a0*

Is,.N

of -\v1ikhr

Nol;r a»"

'I'awii, steamer Maajdam

(Batch), Hakker. R"ttert«m f->r X^w-York

Movllfc- N'-v 21' Sailed, sK-onirr AnohTta |M wa-I»-worth, from Qtssaow for New--Vork.

\u0084.-_-r9outb-tmrtnn Sot 2», 12:40 P m—s-alleJ. steamer

Deutschland (O«D. Alters. ARMS Hamburg for »SW-

Swansea. '".Nor '^"'s^l-!. steamer Boston City M

Rotterdam Xt»vW

2S-Sal!ed. steamer Mawrtam (Lutch).

BaUcer New-York via Houlnene-sur-Mer.Stettin. Nm 24— Arrived, steamer Naur.Ua (O«r>, Krafte.

XeW-York via Cppenhngen.Hamburg Bo* 21>. 3 a

—Arrived, steamer Phcer.lcia

t.;«-r'' Froehllch. New-York.Chertouri Nov -."!>. 8:10 p m—Sailed, steamer I>eut*chland•Ger). 'Albers (from Hamburg and Southampton). New-

YorkMarselUes. So* 2*—Arrived, steamer reru^ia <Br). John-

ston New-York via Naples.

Havre. Nov 29. Arrived, steamer I.i Hr^ta «Br).

St Wcbaels'^Nov'sJV— Arrived 'previously), steamer Lnch

Tay (lirl.Stephens. »"olombo and Calcutta. for New-

rihrl'tar' Nov 29. 2 p m—Sailed, steamer Columbia (Ger).

Krech ffrom O«nn* and Kaples), New-York.Naples Nov 2J». 7 a m—Ajrlved. steamer Hohenzollem

«Sert Obpp«s New-York for c;enoa (and proceeded),

nio Janeiro Nov 2.l— Arrived, neamrr Baron AntroaSßSß(Br) Mitchell. (fcr Now-York).

T«tH!l (fromPonce Nov ST noon—Sailed, steamer Zulla. Terrlll (from

iJx. (svia\ra and Curacao). New-York. • . •-_Bermuda. -Nov. 20. .10 a m—Sailed, steamer Pretoria (Br).

McKenzle.'New-York.-

MWMOIMV 21. with fruit to J B Krrr & Co. Arrived at

"stSinJ? C^StASebs* Lswls, »——

-* November »W^:^^'K =3. with

H^«STwS* "-"^-toA H Bull *C°Stc am,r Buenaventura, from Wport **£***?**re

"

portod outside la«t nl«sht>. 1'

"P'-^Ve^orl New. an!»irfsSk%tthTsdS. a"l bfSSSS*» to the OU P Him

Chesareake. Delano. Baltimore, with mdse to

"stram'T.V.lf Stream. Swain. Philadelphia, with mdse

"^^Vr'Th^'.sTir,. Hvlstendahl. TiltCove X F N<>-

'J r ii> with ,-onrfr ere to the Am'rlcan M»tal Co.

T •f, V U Hn\\ *Co Arrlv.iat the Far at TJM am."m.ly Ho" N J Nov ~>. D:.TO p m—Wind southwest:

mwlerate bre«s»; cloudy and hazy.

SAILED.

LATEST ESTIMATE PLACES ITAT SEVENTY.

FTVE-ITAMANS THOUGHT TO HAVE

BEEN CONTRACT LABORERS.

Detroit. Mich.. Nov. ».-An Interview this evening

wta, Thomas E. Moran, deputy customs collector

It th«« port, practically verifies the estimate that

at lea.t seventv-flve lives were lost in Wednesday

Seneca.

collision on the Wabashin wtdch the

Seneca. The two immigrant cars in

rreate=t loss of life occurred, and in which so

many of the wreck victims were roasted to death.

were part of train No. 13. which crossed the Detroit

River from Canada on the ferryboat Great .Western

on Wednesday afternoon, and Deputy Moran In-

spected the baggage of its passengers. He says

there were at the least calculation one hundred

Italians In the two cars. Inaddition to the,, there

were ten more In the smokln* car. which was

ahead of the two immigrant cars.Official advices to Superintendent Burn* of this

division of the Wahash say that of the. Italians in

the wreck twenty escaped unhurt, and were taken

to St Louis, fifteen are in the company's hospital

at Peru. Ind.. there are six others in Peru, and

two are near Adrian uninjured. Subtracting these

forty-three from the on» hundred and ten imml-

rrants Deputy Moran says were aboard the train

leave* a loss among the Italians alone of sixty-

seven In addition, eight other bodies were re-

covered and identified, which makes a total cf

seventy-five dead.A dispatch from Adrian. Mich., says that accord-

ing to Romano E. Schlavone. of No. 190 West Tay-

lor-st.. Chicago, through whom was arranged the

transportation to California of the Italians killed

!n Wednesday night's wreck on the Wabash. there

were only about fifty Immigrants on the west-

bound train. If this Is true, it reduces the death

list by almost half, and the number of dead vic-

tims willbe between forty and fifty.

Pietro Cardlello, Italian consular agent In De-

troit, returned to the city to-day from scene of

the Wabash wreck. Sear SeSeca. to which he had

burred to look after the interests of his country-

men, so many of whom were burned to death.

He

said he was not yet able to form anything like a

correct estimate of the number of Italians Wile*

but is Inclined to think the estimates thus far are

ernments «;<msul <i;l

'n'c^ernment,"ernments Consul «-arni<iio t«

j Government."rl^'rl^'P--P

--TC>fat would

fcome

cwithin the Jurisdiction

\u0084r, rant "f^l^iSok after the Injured vie-

n^ha^a^adTanSa'our Kovlrnment of the \u0084c--

"'-Have you communicated with Count Rosewa-*^-haye

Wdo^e*S duty." was the diplomatic

anT-

Wn-rWn-r Francta Becchertal pastor of the Italian

ln,n, Be^berini found

W r: in. 'Vv r>V mmlprai t-"-ame from the nortb-T,rn pa^Vof Ia v. T.lorno comes from Berdno ta

ih" g^vmie ofSondrir, The Prtr «»»^Bteamer Ls Campa«nle. **£*?*_J"Kanfcw^astho band went to Horn.

'M-.ilb.-rr>-st. banKer as

crintT wer" hound for San Francisco, as in

f'Yot^o-s Poci* wai, his ticket for that point.

Adrian. Mich.. Nov. »-« Is believed row that

the last of th* bodies recovered from the. Wabash

wreck near Seneca. on Wednesday nl ht, nndbroupht here, has been identified. Mayor Reyn-

olds to-day received a telegram dated Sherman.

Tex.. Baying: "Can you advise if Ann Upton, an

old lady." with ticket sold here to Chatham. Ont.,

was Injured?—William Upton."Mayor Reynolds wired back a description to Mr.

Upton and" it is believed that the body will be

ordered . shipped to Texas. At noon to-day only

the bodies of the porter. James Brown, and the

body of the old woman, remained in the morgue

here. The porter's body will be shipped to Bngie-

wood. where his wife and children live. A!! the

burned and blackened fragments of what wereonce human bodies have been placed in coffinsand were burled this afternoon in Oak Grove Com-

UOBB OF LIFE T

THE GOVEHNOR-ELECT INITIATED AT

CONVOCATION INNEWARK.

Mecca Temple. Ancient Arabic <«*«*,**£of the Mystic Shrine, the mother of shrine temp.es

in the I'nited States, held a convocation in .he

Au^torium at NewarK last night and Bhrta«»New-York. Philadelphia. Baltimore and othw dJ

were rreSent <n :arCcCc numbers. There was > a street

pa^Ton. LCentral Railroad Matlon to tte

»e«rk early tn the afiernoon

a delegation of Noble, an.: escorted to the ...^entai Hote'.. where dir.n. r «-

of\u0084••. -X the officer- wore driven to tne r

tto» for the rarane They were .^^> ';

Oriental eo.tume peculiar to the order, aad tbe*

rrlages were attended by the Arab P**™* 0*

Mecca and Lulu temple,, preceded by th »*

band of sixty pieces, each musician a member o.

1 Th°erdinUlat,on of 135 Masons into *£™££of the .hrine was the most important <™™' O[£*demonstration. Amonp the

ernor-elect Franklin Murphy. Judce Gottfried Krue

/er of ho Court of F.rror, and Appeals Congress-

man r.™rtt*%j™*:i?g&oEfi?rn:- sTa^.

included men from ««2Sm£2£n Fowler wereGovernor Voorhees and ' 'rlv rjunl hall seatsarr.orp XuS^e^plac^^'a dinner.for two thousand wen> jiia.ei •

MURPHY A MYSTIC SHRINER

Mayor-elect Low willb<« the guest of the Authors'Club on the evening of December 1 19.

"Public Art" -will be discussed before the Nine-teenth Century Club on Tuesday evening. Decem-ber 10, at Sherry's, by Charles De Kay, John LaFarge and Charles K. Lamb.

"The Department Badges of the Grand Army ofth.- Republic" is the subject of '£• lecture to be de-livered on Thursday evening by Bauman L. Beldenbefore the. American Numismatic and Archaeologi-cal Society at No. IT West Forty-thlrd-st.

Dr. Carson will preach the annual strmon to thePennsylvania Society of New-York to-morrow af-ternoon In the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church.

Malls from Australia of the following dates:

Melbourne. November 5; Brisbane, November 7.and Sydney, November f>, are due. in New-York onTuesday morning. Malls for Australia will closeat the General Post office as advertised.

Two iu«kom of Imlf-lone pictures). it<-«lState* Senator* and ConKreiisinien. s«-e To-luorruir'ii Tribune.

new-tork cmr.The monthly meeting <>f tho 'West Knd Associa-

tion w!J! be held at Its rooms, in the Hotel Endi-•••\u25a0!•. on Monday evening at s o'clock Officers f'»rr.*'2 will be voted for at this meeting. George S.Lesplnasse will speak on "Paris and New-Tork."

A dinner will be given for Edwin EL Terrell, aw»ll known lawyer of s«n Antonio, Tex., at theKnickerbocker Athletic Club on- Monday eveningby the New-York alumni of the Beta Theta Pi.Mr. Terrell was Mlnist.-r to Turkey, an'! htis beenfor many years an active mpml«>r of th.> fraternity.Covers will be !al<l for about fifty nit-mbfrs of th<-association.

WHAT IS GOING ON* TO-DAY.'

Horse rale. Madlsr.n Piuaro Garten.

The ];\u25ba,- Dr. H. M. Saundem. on "Oamhllr.ir." !>'Jn» forPolitical K.:i »Uon. No. 23 West Forty -fourth- »t.. 11a. m. \u25a0

Plnrer of ft. Andrews Society an<*. address by B'

\u25a0•'\u25a0 0.Cousins, cf lowa, on "Tlis Genius at Hobert Burns."Delminlc-i'o. evening.

Dinner of the Manhattan Democracy, No. 414 Grand-st..7 .".- d. m.

Brotherhood of St. Andrew. public meetlnr. v.lth addressesby ni.shot> Potter .- Iothers, Grace Church. Broadwayand Tenth-*?.. 8 p. m.

Daughters of the American Revolution, entertainment.Sherry's, evening

St. Mark's Hospital benefit concert. Carnegie Hall, 8 p. m.Mettint- of the Shakespeare Club, Btudto No. 91&, Camesle

liuildlnc. >> p. m.People's [netlt it< lecture by Professor Mace on "The

American Revolution," C per I'nlon, S p. m.[ntercolledate Cr<"*s Country Asuoclatl ~>n meet, Morris

Park, aft< rm 1

PROMINENT AKP.IVALR AT THE HOTELS.CAMBRIDGE Marquise- de Tallpyr^ni-Pericorrl.

of Paris, and Prinoesa Pogsio Rospoli. of Rr>m<\

FIFTH AVENUE -Senator Georn- !'. Hoar, ofMassachusetts, Professor H. B. F Tucker, of

Virginia. GRAND Assistant Burgeon L. 1,. YonWedeklnd, I" B. N :O. M. Haist.-,i. of Bcranton;Captain R H. Turnrr and Major H. H Benhem.U. B. A., nnd John Ft. R<..-»ch, of Chester Pel 1

HOFFMAN U !-"!'r<ien. of Fail River •

Judco Andrew Hamilton, of Albany. IMPERIAL—Colonel F. D MacMaster. of Havana. MAN-HATTAN- George Harris, president of AmherstCollege. PARK AVENUE-rMajor S C Smith.n. A., of Ehigland. VICTORIA—Judge r> C. Marris of Daluth, and Captain W. A. Btratton, of

Hartford. WALDORF Benator J. W. Bailey, ofT'x.-i.x. and Colonel Washington A. Etoebling, i>f

Trenton.

HOME HEWS.

The Albany Post Road, or Broadway, as it is

more familiarly called, originally was used by

the stage coaches that ran between New-Yorkand Albany. It is n<>w a favorite route for au-tomobiles, coaching parties, and horsemen trav-ellingalong the Hudson River. It is th<^ regu-

lar route for the coach Good Times. Bordering

on it are the country places of A. 1.,. Barber,General Samuel Thomas, Philip Schuyler, Lucien

C. Warner, Misa Helen M. Gould. Edwin Gould.Isaac Stern, John D. Ar<hbo!d. Mrs. L,. C. East-man and ninny other well known people.

A few years ago ex-Senator Burns, thf-n a

member of the I^eeislature. secured th^ passage

of a law to protect the Albany Post X.'ad fromtr< Hey roads from Hastings to Mount PleasantThe plan of the trolley people is to have thisact rescinded at the next session of the legis-lature, and already friends of the "Huckleberry"

line are circulating petitions asklntr th^ peopleto give up their highway. The petitions havebeen signed by about three hundred people.

"HUCKLEBERRY" LIXB HAS THRER HUN-DRED SIGNATURES TO A TETITION—

HOUSE OWNERS AGAINST PLAN.

There is apprehension among: those who owncountry homos in Hasting-s, Dobbs Ferry, Irv-

inKton. Ardslfy and other places along: the Hud-

son River that the Albany Poet Road will bespoiled for driving by a trolley line. The UnionRailway Company, whose lines now end on theoutskirts of Tonkers, is said to desire a right ofway over this famous road, in order to reachTarrytown. where it wants to connect with abran.h in operation across Westchester County

to M.imnronr-ck.

etery. Thrre are four coffins filled -with thesepieces.

Peru. Ind.. Nov. 29.—The Injured passengers of

the Wabosh -wreck who are In the hospital here

show marked improvement to-day, particularly Inthe case of tht» five women suffering- from ner-vous shock. The doctors say all willrecover. Thebody of D. W. Doud, fireman of the double header,was brought here to-day for burial.

Chicago. Nov. 29—Hermann Poesrhe, of No. 48Dearborn-st., Chicago, -whose name was in thelist of dead In the Wahash wreck, wa? not injured.He was a passenger on the wt-stbound train.

OBJECT TO CARS INALBAXYROAD.

Steamer Hardanjw (lir) from Mediterranean port?, wasreported off Fire Island last night in error for steamerThrift.

Steamer Teller (Nor). Lirsen. Demerara November IS.with miff to L \V & V Armstrons. Arrived at the Barat » a m.

Steamer Monterey, Johnvtone, Vera <'ruz November 21,Projtreso 'Si nno* Havana 25, with mdse and M passengersto James E Ward & Co. Arrived nt the nar nt 2:30 n m.

Steamer F'rlns Wlllem II (Dutch). Vlnch»r«, ParamariboNovember 5, Demerera 7, Trinidad 11. Cumana andGiianta 13. La Guayra 14. Porto Cabello 1.1. Curacao 18,Jacmel 20, Aux Cnyes 21 and Port -au- Prince 22. withn \u25a0'•\u25a0•» and 8 passengers to KunharH & Co. Arrive.!»t theBar at 1:3" p m.

Steamer Cumbal (Br). Barry. Coqulmbo Aujrust 23.Arica 29. Callao September •>. Guayaquil IT. Payta 20,Tocopllln October 7. Tnlcahuano 12. C.ironel 13. PuntaArena 21. Montevideo 2fs and St Lucia November 19, witht!,.ise an.'. - cabin passengers to W It <iraco & Co. Ar-rived at the Har at <">:.'« p m.

Steamer Leon i.Nor), Jensen. Port Antor.lo November "1nnd Port Maria 22, with niuJ-e and ft cabin passengers to

the I'nited Fruit Co. Arrived at the liarat 11:30 a m.Steamer Grand I>ake iMri. Peterson. Port Maria. Jamaica.

portT OF NEW YORK. FRIDAY, NOV. 2ft. MLARRIVETX

SHIPPING NEWB.

TO-PAY.

Vessel. From. Una.Pnlarstlernen Manchester. NovemberBroSSyiTcity." Savannah. November 14. .Bristol City

•\u0084,. . Hamburg. November 17 Hamb-Am

Manias '*. Port Spain. November 20... Trinidad

Uf,,T.\ '....'.• Gibraltar. November 14 Array TransPhi'iieirhta Southampton. November 30. American

t-mVrla /- Liverpool. November 23 CanardChateau I.aflte Bordeaux. November 16 ... .FrenchSnrat,.iip BandaßO. November 23. N V *Cuba

Xr.ache.\u25a0"

Jacksonville. November 27 Clyde

Barcelona Hamburit. November 19 Union

British Antwerp. November IS rhornlx

Bodl«well SI Luola. November 21SUNDAY. DECEMBER I.

Potsdam Rotterdam. November 21. ...H01-AmMinneapolis- London. November 21 At TransIjl\u25a0"•.«•- gne •\u25a0 Havre. November 33 FrenchOvmric Liverpool. November 22. White Starvi,-ld

—'"...N<-w Orleans, November 2f1.. .Morgan

,'!,,',, ""lacksonville, Novwnbt* 2S Clyoa

"nn Juan.'.'.'.'

Sao Juan. November 26 NI« P R;.,„rj'iin<'e Itrunswlck. November Z* Mallory

fiarat.'ica. '..'."... Nassau. November XT NY A Cuba.Sacoochee . Savannah. November 2s. .. .SavannahPretoria. ..'.'." Bermuda, November 28 Quebec

MONDAY. DECEMBER 2.•;e. Inn Liven November 21 I.eylan.l

Etona 91 Lucia, November "I NortonXrat'istan.. .'. . 51 Lucia, November 24 NortonProteus New-Orleans, November 27.. Cromwell

OUTGOING STEAMERS.

TO-PAY.

Vessel yr- Line, Mall*close. Vessel nails.«i..i Jamaica Atlas o:3oam 12:00 mAndes Haiti. Atlas 8:30 am I^'rOOni

Astorial Glasgow. Anchor 9:30 am 12.-00 mc ,1H«! Argentina, Norton *<:<«> a m lO:oi>am

Campania. Uverpool Cunard .'><>• a m >.;t>»a mConcho Oalveston. Uallory 3:oopmOmsuelo Hull, Wilson •Oral Waldersee. Hamburg. Hamb-Am. B 08 .•Louisiana New-Orleans, Cromwell ... \u25a0 3:<X>pm

Menomlnee. London. At Tram-

1:l«lpmMexico Havana N V v Cuba M-ot>am 1:00 p mOl • '.. Mai i/is. Munson '.12:30 p m 3:00 pmPhoenix Nuevltai , 12:3'»p m 3:<>t»pmI'hlladelohla i

-rto Rico, Keel V 0:uO a m 12:<»»m

Byridam. Rotterdam, Hol-Am . 7:30 a m10:o0am

St Cuthl it Antwerp. Phoeols—— ——

=oartan Prince Azores, rrlnce 7:30 am 10:00 a mTrave Naplea N •! I-lovd 7:(«»am 10:«» a mMatanzas. Tamplco N" V * I'uhn....10:00 a m l:0Opmi'rlnrt-M \u25a0,••-\u25a0 Norfolk. Old Dominion 3:00 p mExcelsior, New Orleans, Morgan 3oOpm

MONDAY. DECEMBER 2.

Jeffen-on. Norfolk. Old Dominion.... 3:oopm

TUESDAY. DECEMBER 3.

Kronprlnr Wllbelm, Bremen, NC, IJoy.i n:.T«) a m I0:OOa mBuenos Ayres, <";i'liz. SpanishCevlc, Liverpool, White Star

——GerßOVla, Naples, F«l>re

——Mllanea Colon Panama l>:.To»im 1:00 pm

Prina v/'m 11. Port atl Prince. Dutch. l«i:'K) a m 1:«X> p mApache. Charleston. Clyde •— 3:00 pm

WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 4.

Philadelphia, Southampton, American. 6:30 am 10:00 amMajestic, Liverpool, White star B:3Oam 12 <»> mZeeland, Antwerp, Red war H>."oOara 12 \u25a0\u25a0<> mHekla Copenhagen Scand-Am ll:<)0am 2:00 pm

Pretoria Bermuda, Quebec 8:00 a m 10:00 a mMonterey Havana. N V & Cuba 12:00 m 3:00 pmDenver, Galveston. Mallory 3:oOpm[roquols. Charleston. Clyde 3:00 pm

DITTER FIGHT OVER ELECTION OF COLLECTORAVT> ASSESSOR ix ORAXGETOWX.

T*T*-K*>- V.Nov. 9 (Special).— fa a livelyami hitter contest ben over the recent elections ofcollector and assessor for OrangetuNm. and appli-cation has been made to Justice Maddox. of th*> Su-preme Court, for a mandamus directing a recountof the vote In the Sixth District, which is in thevillage of Sparkill. On election night, after thevotes were counted, the flsrures sent into Xyackfrom the nine districts in Oransetown showed thatJohn Happie. 1!,. Democratic candidate for TownCollector, was elected over l-in<->>ln J. Stewart, hisRepublican opponent, by a majority of three, andthat T. I.X. Tallman. Republican candidate forassessor had a majority of thirty over his Demo-cratic opponent. A. A. Ulackledge. When the re-turns were sent into the town clerk's office thenext day it *fac

'"T.'

time was an error on themof seven votes. Stewart, tn.- Republican candidatefor elector, claimed that this error was the causeof his apparent defeat, and that if the vote wasrecounted he would be found to have \u25a0 majority.

The board of canvassers canvassed the vote of thetown, and declared '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Democratic candidate*\u25a0].»<• te.i collector by \u25a0 majority of three. In makingthe c?nvass the board was surprised to find thatthe returns elected Mr BlaektcdKe. Democraticcandidate for assessor. by a majority of ten overTallman. The returns from the .Sixth"District werefound to be badly muddled, and had to be correctedseveral time? before the official count could bemade. Stewart and Tallraan both claim that theerrors at that poll beat thorn.

Congressional Edition-

TO-MORROW'STRIBUNE, £

Congressional Edition,

TO-MORROW'S

TRIBUNE

This Edition will con-tain handsome half-toneportraits of all U.5. Sena-tors and members of thenext Congress, with in=teresting information re-garding them.Also cMany Other Good Things.

Long Overcoats'The woods are full of them;" So

many "best" makes, we really don't know

where we come in.

We do know, though, that our coats

are right. Dash and grace— the touch ofthe custom bench— stand out in every line.

Every style of Overcoat worth seeing— sls to $45'

Youth*' Long Overcoats, $10 to $25.

Boys' Long Overcoats, ages 3 to 15, $5 to $15.

Everything else Man or Boy wears.

Stores Open This Evening.

) 841 / 420 ) 265

BROADWAY6

Stores. \ Cor. 13th St.? Cor. Canal St. [ Near Chambers St.

DAILY TBIBUNE. SATUBDAY. NOVEMBEB 30. 1901.

]|p* puNrtpiNEfbiwrnißß"CHAIRS TO SIT OV*

ARE IDEAL. HOLIDAY GIFTS.

AScottish tenant, shown over his laird's newly

apEolnted house, carried the special report to

his Inquisitive wife that he "could sit on ever}

COur quaint old styles please everyone who

likes to "pick up" odd bits occasionally, Mahog-

any Colonials. *i::<*•. though quaint in shape

and wonderfully artistic in line. are as stout anaKtronpr as the sati-s of your grandmothers

I>utch chairs. >7.->» (with rush seat). UK

thoE« seen in old Dutch i.aintinps. English,

French and Italian-many correct copies or

antiques preserve*! inEuropean museums Colo-nial "roundabouts" and triangles. Chairs for

every purpose, from library chairs, which areveritable "old shoes" for comfort, to the dainti-est little ones, at $2.75. for desk? and boudoirs,

but all at factory prices, as you

"BUYOFTHf MAKER**

Geo. C.FLint Co.43 44«U»'47 n«T 21?ST..

•4IAR WtdAOXAY.

B^^s^s^s^ \^^^a\^s^s^^^^^^^^^sW

TO

Announcement*.

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