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i i I fjI I ii i I i I I 4 on- U Ita I nly j 0 n ed r n el- ar tog Cs- Ii S a to org 1 THE SUN SUNDAY JANUARY S19 4 J p L S AXXOVSCKXIKNT IS EPECTfa FROM nous SOON KnVern Part of Connecticut tattle Made Into a New See With Norwich an the Illshops Home Some of the l Prints Talked Of for the New Illih6p STAMFORD Coon Jan 2 There Is reason to believe that tho reports which were sent out from Rome three months ngo to the effect that the diocese of divided had much more basis than was admitted at the time by Church authorities In this diocese 3 A to this effect has como from Home slnco summor The first one was won after Pppe Plua waa consecrated and Ut trial time bishop Tierney va In Europe When he returned he said that ho had not been to Rome and knew nothing about a division The report again reached jspmtry from Rome three n asked what traW therewas in it He authorized a denial of the report- Of late there has been a rumor among those in touch with Church the Bishops attitude toward the has undergone a change When questioned recently on the subject he noncom- mittal Bishop conservative in giving out news of ChuCch affair and could not be expected to cdnflrm such re- ports uitil divisiorft was actually made It in nald qn high authority that tho is to lie divided The about it which is not known definitely by persons in is the time that the division tvjjj1 be announced officially About weeks a o Bishop Tiorney summoned a rpeptjng thodiocp80 con hUltora Itfta that they were called together the division- It has heen learned well Informed tources tiiat an Intlni fjon has been received from Rqme that tb division would be announced in January The seat of the new See will be Norwich and the entire rastern part of th State will be included New he largest city In the State and of lath years one of the most important Catholic centres will remain in Hartford diocese The now diocese will consist of the counties of New London Windharrt Tolland and possibly Middlesex In counties a French Canadiafl population They are practically nil Catholics In many ways they are quite different In their habits of living and of worship to the socalled Irish Catholics who make up almost the entire church membership in other parts of the State For this reonon extreme care will be taken- in choosing the Bishop of the new diocese The Rev Hugh Tralnor the pastor of the Catholic church in Norwich Is spoken- of as a ost jikely candidate He is the best known priests in the diocese Another name frequently spoken of isthat of the Rev Walter Shanley of Cathedral Hartford He is the president of the National Catholic and for several years was president of the Connecticut Union in which Bishop Tiernoy has always taken an active interest The French Canadian element IB the Rev Arthur OKeefe of Waiiregan This village is in town of Plalnfleld in Windham Jts principal Industries are cotton mills employ a large number of French Canadian hand OKeefe understands them people thor- oughly OllvjJtlfl HVSttAXO JAILED Mrs Hraley a Neighbor Says Hart Feared Her husband Would Kill liar Mrs 20 years old was found a furnished room early yes terday at 313 East 107th street and her husband Maurice Healey was remanded- to the custody of the Coroner from the Harlem court on suspicion of knowing something about her death walked up to Policeman Harron at 107th Third avenue yesterday morning and told him that had come found his wife lying dead across the bed An ambulance surgeon found a number of bruises on the womans taco and neck and Healey after telling several conflicting store was looked in tho house that Healey had frequently beaten his wife and they got that she was afraid her husband would Mil her SHOT HIMSEIF IX HKll PRESENCE Hart Refused to Ilanoe With Him Because She Felt Like It EMIT ORANGE N J Jan Wolff 23 years old of 34 Lincoln street ewark shot and killed himself last night- in front of the residence of Aaron Prince at 631 Park avenue Fast Orange on his return from a lull Ho accompanied Miss Dora Valeskla to the where she i employed He had fallen asleep in the trolley oar had waked up as nho was toast off He seemed hurt that she had not danced with him a night or two before and when he asked for the after they off the car he replied she because she felt Hk3 it Do mean that he asked Why sure pistol and sent a bullet head He the and the girl ran into the screaming Lnnare May Lend PItUburjf Orchestra IlrnjBURa Jan 2 Edwin H Lemare director of music at the Carnegie Pittelwrg may succeed Victor as director of the Pittsburg Orchestra At a concert of the night- Ie appeared as a the urged him to the chestra while own musk but he declined to do so Lemare of the organ andji composer- of international repute He cttme from London KlllMl In ft Mutiny of ErlibnTrf last night in the at BatonElouge resulted in the murCer of herbs Hiriart captain of t ratxh The mutiny was Tom Stanley a murderer from resulted in the escape hut for the efforts prisoher from New Orleans whom the at and attempted to kill was will armed n 200 cartridge with him v i H National Convention or ocl llrt Pt rty- CnicAOO Jan national lion of the Socialist will be held in i hicago on May 1 1804 at which time can- didates for national offlcej will be nomination Bernard Berlyn Rational uommttteeman for to make preparations forthe ac- commodation of 800 THe eeleo Ion of Chicago was by referendum ballot An American Kubfllk Pant Sftetal Dupatcli to Tn Sm- BBBUN Jan 3 Jan Kubelik the violin- ist has selected a young American Alma Stencel aa the pianist who will accompany him during his performances European tour 1 TO DIVIDE I I Rom s tic t Ill abut llr lat Is the however I two nd In in I oneof St pries 0 would the th runty l May streetand The learned from another tenant a witness said woman told her ale kla 2Charles 1o he a hOWe l orchestra rst dir render t- l I Jan A utly1 Stat and hot 2The conv m arty B I r I 1 HARTFORD D1OCES ztholio Ih Tierney hOre touch with t totisIder tli these Josephs be most acceptalle Fat ho a 3he Miss just replied the drew into his Herbert New OaumN8 con- victs Shreveport n Cab e I < ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > KILLED IX ItASKETRAUoGAiUE- loung HfothM a mow In iheAUdo man Which Peered FalaJ BOSTON Jan 2 Daniel OttliaRher died yesterday at Revere as the result of injuries received in a basketh gatne Be was a member of the Revere Athjetlo Association team which wont to Chelsea on the evening of Doe 28 whore a game was played with a team representing that city Gallagher received a blow in the abdomen and developed Yesterday morn trig an operation was upon and he was taken ia Frost Hos pltil In Cholaea but after reaching there Ho was and known as- a lover of athletics He formerly played on the football team representing Revere High School METROrOLITAX U7V5 Stockholder iiojle Hasnt Made Out a- Itfaion to Sec the nook Supreme Court Justice hisde cided that John F Doyle Is not entitled to inspect the books and records of the Metro politan Street Company of whIch i no Is a stockholder to attack the of tho company and particularly the lease to Company that a stockholder to entitled to In spect the buck of a corporation yet It cannot be contended boon a captious or whimsical denial of rights by company Justice McCall What but if not worse can to the policy of a nt Its officials that unreasonably re est motives on the of stockholders Justice McCall points out that the Metro- politan company has been made the examination of accounts has been the company Itself the results of have company the Court challenges and In opinion there tudo assumed him I die jut I c I HaHwa se nt trUe and that a mae en faY a att Man l CalI klng McCall It i T be ascribed ion sistabona severe attack4 close its has justification for ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Cornelitw C Cutfrk Ma nru Falls M Y Ho- ivas n son of James Xlchoroa and Mary CmWk and a crandaon of Meut Xlcholis tulc who was one of stuff ofllcfrs He was born tho town of I xvliton In August iHR1 und therefore ng when i In 1882 In York Volunteers and was nmcl Second Lieutenant He served throughout war In North Carolina tswfl ho was com Captain watt rftired from isn owIng to Incurred the Indian In tt In the 70n He In alt the Indian wars In the North- west from 1868 to 1884 From inoo to 100 was military Instructor Georcla Agricultural detailed for that purpose by War Department lllH h altli At own r qtie t In UWK and since then he had made In Hlaeurn Falls J superintendent of tIme press room of the that r died on Friday of pneumonia In home at ill lehth year lie oam old He went to work on Eagle In charge of the s- on which the entire edition was then brought- out He remained at the head of continuously wltnesslns had been a resident of tim Ninth for nearly fifty years and for the seven years the Democratic ticket In the same election ws a fchar- t member of St Josephs Council No B of Redford Council No 271 of Ce lumbufl He was also connected with 8t Association t h Society of Old Aeyrum It tomorrow mornlnifnt St AuRurtlna Sixth avenue and St r place Inlllerrno Iebrun who a the reprfsenu warship In the at Philadelphia of nt the In this city on Thursxlay Jebrun was a native born in Caracas 47 ago and a descendant of a w l known French was educated this find through his talent si naval en- gineer and rote In the Iron and works He leaves a widow and one son Thomas 1 OConnor a chemist died last Friday at his home 12 Korty street nf was the ou Thom s H Connor a merchant Sun Francisco wits imsoclaled In bimlnms during the last years of his life He was 1881 the school of mines of Columbia University HP served ten In the rment- us ft j his Veterans League MId then the Association regiment ft Un- iversity Psl U clubs and the Ethnological Charles II Rockwell on Friday at hs home In Tarrytown year He was a r flTil war Once he was sent to Bt Louts with unlimited orders to for the Department of the ulf and he delivered at t2ooooou worth of ammunition and atorea He was afterward to the staff of len Sheridan Hi was nf the early members of the Union League Club of an observatory He devoted much of Ma thus to astronomy Dr Frank S Jackson died In Dunkirk on Jan I at the age of Ho grade te of the New York University and He practised than twenty was a member dequoc Lodge of Masons and of the by wife his parents Mr and Jackson of u brother Robert H Jackson of Buffalo and a sister Mrs K B Csborne of Mount HeOlnnls one of the of the Confederate Navy in the Mississippi Klver In 55 native of liverpool thin the Confederate Navy HI a boy of on th of Commodore K Montgomery of the Mlj The Rebel and the other Confederate vessels were sunk at of Memphis on June 61602 Col J Stackpole for many years died yesterday at home on nt the i 110 vns from 1 tlvil war wo commissioned Ciutnln of a company of Massachusetts breveted Hn leaves- A widow ono son and two daughters Mrs Mary J Beach wife of William II Beach on Friday In her homo at 40 Hide her organized West Side Avenui- Metnodlst School in I n with two They In founding Side Avenue Methodist Church years Funeral wrfteeg bo held church this afternoon at 2 oclock K Burroughs n veteran of tho civil war and well known n of the line oftaekets running betwo and New York at the close until 1880 died lo born In IMl irTPehfleld N V lie for tl it nt e daughters Harry W died at Jfi made a record as a City Councils in fighting corporation schemes was received In Ajiftlu TM Inv of the of lIeu the during He Is Aid to hav- 1nlted States nt of hw Dr T a Birchett died at Vlrtsbttrjt Jflss years superintendent in Ippl State nt ri l tf of t Coast Artillery yrfMay- noriK at n if tins henrt trouhln ml1lIRr Cat diM d and Yss tl to Infantry In IS mde oC Infantry IM a In role p homO rookl nd his l with his parents 12 yeas t tie wad Legion and a memoer h n Ilrivlt by I two and The be Cure or ient the a he V hI chief and super- visor the the I Jut 01 0 0 and thi member of was O die From Bth he resided II where ho the or HOI in ace Society He hIs Morris die Ilt to this as Enter 1 the the the wyer JIlIcol streo 0 fl In the oulhrellie of the OInIll15 lon tSl3 West In n ulUlo the cur r was ten tars e lo leaves Idow end two Futon pneumonia Illness J e was Oa1S lie seers tllry an treasurer or the C ii Shoe Company of Easton snd director of the Shoo Jobbers AAIIO t8 lon II I re 8t old had been at that place for postmaster In the yesterday 68 lit wits a It lie was served several Council and the was of lle First Mower Potnt of yesterday was ears New Lieutenant Ills transferred the ad timen was First Twenty con1 end In I55 lie WIt Ie1 frolti Ireland press- room Catholic Benevolent Fnieht V the te eons seven funeral will held tire the enezuelan was repairs on epe aimelan to sngtneor general construction was also at head of a steel Company resignation Its one iasS to the had 52 was as rears is survIved a a s J one lila age 157 Iii after having was a water a yes- terday typhoid after Wit Ib pntnnaetnr thlrtmt years leants ad- ministration thfl aged twiee Mayor of terms It end tbit > > > > ¬ ¬ > > GUNS DISCUSS BIG LOANS SEXATOHS UISAUREE OX Tfll0S- O HAIHIXG 31000000 Coininlttrc Reports la Favor nf AH the Demands Mails by New York flankers From Whom the Money In Expected to Come Vote Tomorrow ifptctal CuUt bcipotclt to Tan sue HAVANA Jan 2 There was a special ses- sion of the Senate to disaues the leOn of 33000000 for the payment of lha claims of soldier who served In Cuban revolu tion Seuor Parraga supported time report of the committee hlch accepts everything the bankers according to Palmus message on tho subject except that fixes 90 tin the minimum price at which the honda Issued Senor Parraga declared that he In favor of waiving this detail in crder to bo In accord with what time bunkers asked An amendment presented at the font session was rend This authorizes the Executive to raise a Icuti of JSSrtflotoO No limit is flied as to the price nt llli the bonds shall be sold or1 tho rate of tntniext to be paid save that the cost per annum shall not exceed 2200000 Cube run pledge is per cent the customs receipts for Interest and a sinking fund could bo created by taxes pnld under tho original law The net proceeds of time loan will go toward paying the army A certificate for any balance due to tho soldiers could be given and this document would bear Interest at the rate 6f 2 per annum These certificates would be redeemable annually from the proceeds of the national lottery nnd the urphis taxes could bo applied to some ether debts The wire of 1000000 can taken from the national treasury to pay time overdue interest on the revolutionary bond s well a the debts of the army corps commanders Senor Sanguilly spoke In oposltlnn to time original report which obviously showed that I lt oral Clnr- I I Coda the It shall lIe Will f be a I I ask per- cent ¬ the committee did not wish to pay more than half of the 80K OOJ dun the nrmy Safipr Sanguilly thought this amount should be paid in full He believed that if the 35000000 loan were floated now Cuba could not raise any money Ho ob- jected to pivtna the Executive a free hand in regard to tho price of tho bonds and pledg ing tho customs receipts He said time bonds of J806 should have been paid long ago as thoy represented a debt of honor The Senate finally voted to suspend con- sideration of the matter until Monday The vote on this motion was 11 to 7 vo pnoFir v visicM COMEDY George Ertwrnrrtes Says Ho Loses Money During a London linn Sptclal Cable Dtipalch to Tea Sex LONDON Jan 2 George Edwardes who is generally regarded most successful theatrical manager in London declared emphatically today that form of entertainment which ho invented does not pay a manager so furns the London production is concerned Ho says Country Girl which has been running for nearly two years at Dalys Theatre baa shown a loss of a 1000 to 1800 week London la not a source of profit because the saUries and rents are so enormous but the production hero Is essential for the advertisement of the piece in the provinces America Africa and Australia A Country Girl made money for months but the early profits had to go to pay cost of production- Mr Edwardes went on to say speaking- of tbeH3 comedies that after a year or fifteen months business falls off and the margin of profit U lost As an instance he referred to The Jill from Kuyg which drew capital audiences last your yet wflen lie paid the royalties tc it showed a loss of 10000 on the year The Duchess of Danlzio cost 50000 to produce and with full houses and every seat sold the profits cannot exceed 1250 a week which mean that ten months rmpt elapse before the initial outlay can bo recovered Every year the public demands something more expensive and more elaborate Mr Edwardes says he pays 00000 a week in Mlurivv and ho maintains that ho is the only one concerned from the compiler to the stage carpenter whoso reward U doubtful rnncw Y 33000000 London Firm Didnt Know Rubbish Con hunch lladlum- SjHtlal Collie Dtivalcli Tmt StrN LONDON Jan 2 Johnson Matthey the firm of analytical chemists who have operated the same works in London for 175 years give a curious confirmation to the announcement recently made by Prof Sir William Ramsey that they have been throwing radlumaway unawares Indeed they hare paid SI a ton to have carted off as rubbish residuary matter containing from one to six grains of radium which costs 1000 a grain It is probablo that 5000001 has thus been thrown away chiefly to make street layers ballast The firm are platinum manufacturers refiners and assayers to the Itoyal Mint and the Bank of England For seventy years they have been engaged in extract ing oxide of uranium front pitchblende The oxide was used mainly to color ex- pensive glassware to which It gave a yellow ish green fluorescent appearance At time dining tables of many old families In Eng land wineglasses and ornaments are used in which radium Ii a constituent part The use of uranium for this purpose has been discontinued for the cheaper processes Tho pitchblende used by Johnson A Matthey is obtained from the Joachlmatnhl mines in Austria which now produce the finest radium Although their uranium extracted front pitchblende was known to possess radioactivity tho cause was never suspected until radium was discovered dur- Ing the past year 4IS 1JKFS HOUSE MKAT The of It for Food It Said to He Wprdil Cablf linpalcli Ins Sux- PABIB Jon 2 Eating horseflesh by the poor in Paris is increasing to such an extent that abattoirs will have to bo enlarged The present consumption Is 30000 horses a year The horse meat is somewhat darker and stronger than beef but It is not unpalatable It hat grown- in popularity since tho of the horse and the ass Is about half the price of but tho former is becoming dearer wp hones that have worked for eight or ten years In the city are purchased for 50 to graze for a few weeks anti Ire then led to the slaughter house In some departments such lit the Nord there Is a scarcity of horses for farm work DUTCH PANSIFAL Statement That Van der Linden Will firma One to Thl Country 5jvf l Cable DiipaM to Tns StN TilE HAGUE Jan Voderand stated that the Dutch Impresario Van der Linden will take an operatic company to tho United States to sing ParAiful in the Wrstcrn citi J pore 1 the musleD I iy A the t I JncrCulll lIalIIII Th tiesh beef Used out 011 rUT I 2The I I as time Use tim ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > < LondOn Abandon That F tnre of the New Svraat CttHi Dtipateh to ties i Jan 3 A year ago bibulous London want Ut a condition of panic the Licensing act which had provided a for liabltual topars Anybody convicted twice of drunkenness could not bo aarvod with a drink In any saloon In his district for three years Under the pro- visions of the act bartenders received photographs of such persons and were warned that they would loss their if they them Tho anxious time for the public house peoplo baa now pulsed for tho blacklist was abandoned on New Year Day as impracticable One of the provisions of the Licensing act was that a delinquent might be ordered into an Inebriates home but Lord Chief Justice declared that nobody could bo detained In such a home against his will and this made the whole affair dead letter Tho police also found It Un possible to cope with the Inebriates whose photographs In number far beyond the memory of any barkeeper One saloon- keeper on tho Strand said that during the year 1003 time police furnished him with photographs of S7S persons who were to be placed on the blacklist Moreover as showing the poor working of the law art Inebriate who was blacklisted n one dis- trict has Only to step Into theiwt borough where he becomes a free min Tho who are too tansy to do this can put on a fslio mustache or beard The magistrates have failed to the value of the act and since August last only seventeen people have been in London Of the years total of those placed on the blacklist ill per cent women OYTWV II7T AD HEALTHY Rainfall for the Year the Greatclt hi Uslf Century Sprdal Catli Dttnalrtt to TVX Sm lU Ki1Sf1FA4 UCfnII Aol LoNDON over served Aher8 ono a were see Were I II Rt4ffig rca licenses blacklisted ¬ ¬ LOXDON Jan official record o tho rainfall in Great Britain for the 1903 shows that it was by tar the wettest twelve months for more than half a century Nearly two of every three days were rainy Rain fell for 205 days in London an average of 1W days the previous year Nevertheless the conditions haye been un precedentedly favorable in regard to the jiublic health and there has never been so death rate both In the urban and rural districts It seems evident that the heavy rainfall has washed the country clean The flooding of streams and water courses and destroyed injurious matter which would otherwise accumulated- and the drains and sewers have been flushed with unprecedented frequency Tho close of the year las not been marked with any special form of illness There has been no epidemic during the twelve- months of Influenza or other pulmonary affections which are usually associated with the prevalence of wet cold weather KfVO EKDT HAVE A UfESE Ills Automobile the Only One In England Not Numbered Sptctal Cable Detpatch TimE SLOW LONDON Jan 2 The new act of Parlia- ment for the registration of automobiles- and the regulation of their speed In the United Kingdom went into force yesterday- and this evening the streets of London present the spectacle of motor flitting to and fro with illuminated glass plates on the front and rear giving an alphabetical letter and number besides the initials of the owner AH drixers must carry licenses which they are compelled show to the police on demand The speed Is limited- to twenty miles an hour on an open country road and ten miles an hour in town that there js a superstitious objection to the number 13 Local authori- ties have been unable to get owners to ac- cept It Over a thousand cars were regis- tered In London yesterday The act allows the Kings automobile to- go without being numbered His Majesty not required personally to have a driving license though it U assumed his driver possesses one SQUlEttyS BODY SET NORTH Man Who AccIdentally Sliot Ministers Sun Not Arrested Special Cable 0 jacA to TM Sex HAVANA Jan 2 The body of Fargo Rquiers the eldest eon of the United States Minister to Cuba who accidentally shot and killed on Now Years eve by a French chauffeur employed by hU father was embalmed on Thursday night It was laid in state In the Church of the Angel last night At the requiem mass today- all the meml er4 of tho Diplomatic Corps the secretaries and a number of official were present They walked to the wharf whence the body wa transferred to the steamer Morro Castle for Now York George L Lorillard the Second Secretary of tie American Legation is accompany- ing the body to Now York The French servant who wa responsible for young fckjuierss death Inw not been arrested The accident occurred In the Ministers housu not in tho tablo as previously reported IX AXTWERP THEATRE Somali Tire Starts the Audience In a Rush for the Doors Special Cabl to TUB ties ANTWfBf Jan 3 During a performance- at the Hippodrome last night some we carelessly throw cigarette into a heap of paper and a fire started The audience became wildly excited probably because of their recollection of the recent Chicago disaster and rushed for the main entrance although thero were many other exits The employeeu had groat difficulty in preventing a panic and consequent tones of life In time crush JECE OF XAPOLEOX DEAD Prlncpfi Slathllrto Had lieen HI for a long Tide Special Cable Dispatch to TRill SUN PABIS Jan 2 The Princess Mathilde daughter of Jerome Bonaparte former King of and niece of Napoleon is dead She had been seriously ill for seine time and exEmpress and Princess Clotilde had been in constant attendance upon her Sen Vork Donnl IJke to Walk Special Cablt Dnpatch lo THE SUN LONDON Jan 2 Tho tendency of the people to Increase the use of public con veynnoes Is tho same in London and New Yak ibcugh the street other of U oil transportation have to carry the tnlro population of New Yolk more times every year than Is the case in Lon- don For New York thee traate is US times and for L mlon 130 times The tramways of Glasgow carry the population 174 times a year Ihijsb of Liverpool 187 times and of IJerlin 2V3 rtmes- SaiitiiMlnmont Coming llrrr Special CaW Depolcl to Tm Sew HAVBK Ian SantosDumcnt the Brazilian aeronaut sailed for New YOlk today on the French line steamship La iiavole 2The year Iowa have S i Is was small I I Eug nle I TlIllwafI and marries I I I M I I re- moved PA SIC e ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > ¬ ¬ ii8M- AOI8TMTK RRAY UPllIXKL WITH E PALMAS ULOOP Mrs Itarlutos Rant Jealous sml lUd MrjirlSFd Her hut De Palma Teiether In t Streftthe- SM De Palms Hid Thrvaifnwl Pier OrtAXOB N J Jan 3lu the police court this morning Mrs Barbato of 90 Hurlbnt street drew a nor torn the folds of her shawl and out g ih In the throat of Pasqualo De Palms This two well standing In font of the of Justice Joseph B Bray and some ot the blood sprinkled the Magistrate Do Paima will hurried to the hospital where h is In a criticereohdltion and Mrs Barbato waa placed under arrest on a charge of asMiilt with intent to kill and Do Palma it Is said wero 6tretr- hwrt fifteen years ago in Praia Italy Carmela ran away to this country with Barbato Do Palma wrote to the Irt- a correspondence was kept urt for years ago he came to his H came out to pretty frequently to see her and c On Clirlstmas ovo ho surprised her And woman ran a She said that kiss met D Palms wholly by accident and that he threatened to cut A razor If did ot go with him Six de- nim her came up and the After this neighbors uy r r time household times Mrs Barbato Imploring some one not to kill her The seems totally unconcerned She baa two children one a in arms other a little lad who at his mothers skirt and fell to the floor scream- ing when she cut D Palms throat She says she tried to kill De Palma becsuse he annoyed her but the her things so uncomfortable for her that In cut c Jlaa and t Camel Ii She Do Palms together on art ihe had the I when ran lively Ia h I r 1GUTLOYERS THROAT IN fl Come t deep age The Just razor frnt ¬ ¬ < < lover It been discovered that Palms hat a big bundle of letters he from the woman nd her neighbors think she was fearful lest of these letters De Palma boon living- In South Brooklyn and had Leon staying with a at Essex avenue since the before Christmas On Christ- mas eve at which time time woman alleges Do Palma threatened to cut razor she went to the station and made a complAint against D4 Palma was the result of lids complaint KILLED IX THE DAVITT MIXK- Amslnsmtim People Charge llrlnze Men With Causing sn Explosion HEUXA Mon Jan 2 One man was killed another Injured mortally and an- other nearly asphyxiated as the result explosion and gas arising therefrom in the Michael at Butt last night The explosion Is charged by the Amalga- nisted Copper Company officials to have been a deliberate attempt on the part of Heinze miners to kill the employees of the rival concern The dead man is Samuel The are John Krivel a miner Foreman John Pomaluma who upon the report rushed to time scene explosion The title to Davltt mine which lies between the and Rarus mines owned by the Amalgamated and United Copper don between The Pennsylvania miners were in the order of tho United States Court to determine to what extent If any Heinze hid looted ore from the Davitt as alleged by the Amalgamated were in stopping passages through the door workings to blasting smoke tie miner creeping en them and driving them from their work Without there was a deafening crash It alleged on tho ilelnzo door the door from and crushed the timbers Time noise sttaeted Foreman Poma liirna who rushed to the scene but the of from tho Hani mine him and but for several miners who had followed him he would have perished Sheriff J Quinn and n are at the if he can fix the blame J lie will masks arrests The excitement In intense over the matter sad the miners are 0 t was once massages to the mine John him to coma C V Goociale who has of tho Boston and Montana propertied openly de- clares that it was a on the of the Heinze employees to the Pennsylvania ARISE IiTiUGEX- CEHo rIses 1511 Swn nt us Moon mists ion WAT1B TRU nriay HooUTtriQoV 7d9lHoll Ole has rri I Ith th an th or- an Davitt mine and I en t Iii it I I liP tatl Mice Inspector John J I1Y bent Byrne In to as as mur- der mlt cl5 LIJIACACTunt nal doe nix tacit toni Sweep Deputy requesting iiC ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > Si Benedict Uanaon Dee 13 DM J- H Ola N r Orleans lice 23 JU tVMt n l- Sn Cl Mat Orlcaii lice 27 SJ Injqunu JacK urtllr flee 80 l JZ- MsHaniUtua Norfolk Jan I Si ia Br tatne from Kew YorU at iVrmeolaa New York a Uverportl- Si St Paul New Vorl at SouthimptonI- AILED non rosxioN roars S La Savolc train Havre fur New Yort- Sa Sew york Chorbourr tot New York S Umbrla irene Liverpool ton New York i 0 vlf from Now York Sa Rlietn front Urf mcA for New York sea romsrroir- Hatlt Hamilton KorfolU- SaU TtiHilav r Alllanca Colon Charl lon Byron Brazil Hayt- lltriaprln vuacn Cadiz Prlnj Qjkar Genoa Munroe Nacoocbw Savannah Majestic LiverpoOl Hull British 1rlncfs Antiwiii Oalv ton J 5 V M S 00 A M- i Jan e Iro ju ton rlnc M Anne Norfolk IICOH1VO STUUSBim- Sou thainptun 12 CO it II 00 7 00 AM 10 00 A it SDOJM- UOOM 1M l M 3 00 H M U Champa n- Montxrrat Vlciorlin- Arkaniai Otortla city of MempM- Simurce lnck nn IU SliM Jn a Liverpool t urton- HamhW New Orleans alvi on San Juan Due Tvtxlw in Naple- Ulbr ltar Ant loluli- nottcnlam Due ir dn iu Jan n New Orlrans Savannah Dm TlHtTtdau Jan 7 Chrtitlanaand Shield lan 2 Sa Jan sW ssins OtT lArn from rtrausmsIpm 3tl- II fI 100111 Jar M lOOP 1- 1Mapal f 5 it HolIno ler amos AM Ur11 30 AM Ij TM 300 P 1t- jall 8311 M role us Now Orleans Lie TodO- IlIrlaru I Lutine 1lsrnbrg C 20- Nordllvn OIbraltllr Je 10- T1rqua Gibraltar Dc 17 t 11- l acooCiMt bet larll ODvllle to- Ol1uba ilDlla o re is Havre Pee an O IIverpco Pet it Otr 17 llUIoa 11 I Dec 2a flu TaM rrou- Ierlll Ut- tAbll 20 lon U 28 rot u Dec 31 U Ute I Can cas II I arpahla let lee Ct I Itt 21- 1IIISn It rc Tl Nrekar rcmen 70- IlInlloo Hull lItt3C- hteclfo SJlaDIe 7- AlabAnl Slelll DCC 2J- Im PIIO S W QIsne Dec31r- m Cld lien 31 City len tickle B C 24 Jesserle tc3li- enee Dee Cu Leon XIU t4ferIQn Ute e ATrfT4SaTranAy AlgonquIn AUISITED covoslea gaot jp 3 0 Beep 21 A tan Pie PmInzcntfl1ctOt1 flea 5- I1C fl ls- JCc Copenhagen lice Rilts OtC am ian 76- Meiabs 24- flct rl Vale lienS 20 1 73- sardegni 1 23- Slottrdyk City lee Itansli 4 > < r o Broadway and 20th Street and Fifth Avenue Enirance on 19th Street Annual Sale HOUSEHOLD LINENS This Sale Offers Advantages Over that of Any Previous Year trustworthy lines embracing manufacturers surplus stocks discontinued broken lots are here at far below the cost of manufacture alone These prices in the face of an advancing market and highr r tes denunded by make this sale the most Import- ant we have ever announced Among the Are Table Cloths 2 yards 255 350 reduced from 250 W50 and 1550 2x2 12 yards f teduced from 285 325 425 and tf00- 2x3 yards ft reduced from 350 237S 500 and JW50 Larger 5 zw and Widths Proportionate Reductions Table Damask w Fine Satin Bleached Damask regularly 110 Fine Damask regularly 135 50e yd frn j toC Jt 275 dozen A miscellaneous lot of pine Huckaback Towels Hemstitched regular 425 and 1450 quality at 00 QK doz TrrrI l Lord it I ill OUR stock is more ces are lower than before Man i Most Prominent 1 1 175 195 l 275 22O 245 I 450 265 295 385 550 j i tf at 1 JI H Cream Damask r 7Oc I II Dew Bleach Hemstltcbed H lICk fl3r 11 4 A 1 aw Taylor I and ever J I l I I 25 ft j j tyc1c y U 7zvesVcbbs regularly < > Crash Toweling Heavy all linen soft finish regu larly J5f quality J4Cyd i ¬ Bath Towels Extra large size made of selected 37 l2c nr i cotton I r gular at CeLL pair also 100 Hand EmbroidereJ IrIsh Linen PlllOlV Cases regularly at 165 plir LwClt Pillow Cases Hemstitched I 95e riI toIterly t7 and 225 i 275 I t 125 145 125 ri > Linen SheetsE- xtra quality Irish Linen large size regular value n 4 75O rp pr V MERCHANT 1904 January Sale of UpToDate Styles Muf Neck Pieces Vfctorfnes Mantles Jackets Coats Fur Lined Garments Sleigh Robes AT THE FOLLOWING REDUCTIONSF- ox Moleskin Squirrel Bear 20 discount Chinchilla Marten Alaska Sable simmo 15 Ennine Lynx Mink Sealskin Persian Lamb to Sables from Southern Russia British Columbia and Hudson Bay 15 l Imperial Crown Sables from Northern Russia and Siberia io Furlined Overcoats and Sleigh Robes 10 Auto Coats and Fur lined Circulars 15 NOTx 1 do rot cell blended or darkened fliwUn or Hudson Bay Sable or Mink Ladles who haw purchased them ciicwhcrc complain that they have a mottled shabby appearance after worn a short time I sell London Dyed Alulia Seal Skin only and Wpflj Dyed Persian Lamb silken Persian Droadtall e 4 stork all sizes in Coats and Jackets and a complete assortment of Neck Pieces Muffs c in al fashionable furs All sales strictly for cash No goods sent on approval 41st and 42d Streets Between Broadway Sixth Avenue 1ti c Shayne i I II II It II beIng I i I I U p 4 j 1 1 I I i In iJ t 1e 4 nut 4 5i ° = vritpir IGNORED Tile Sinn He SUde SUyor of Troy nrfimnl the One Apimtntnirnt He Asked For Tnor Jan 2 For years former United Stated Senator Murphy has been the Demo- cratic leader In this city acknowledged as uch and nctuolly to Four years ago Daniel E Conway one of Mr Murphys lieutenant by alliance with Republicans became Mayor and continued In power till the November tloction when Mr Con- way joined hands with Mr Murphy and elected Jo eph F Hogan Mayor Mr Hogan however was nominated by Mr Murphy It was expected that Mayor Hogan would re Dect In some degree the wishes of Mr Murphy in appointments In the estima- tion of Mr Muiphy and his followers time has rot done HO With two ex- ceptions those who supported Mr Conway- in office Mr Murphy personally one ap- pointment refused line wen Mr Murphy hut once since It looks veteran leader naif an attempt was beingmndato drive him out of the party resents It and so do his friends lUG niMOSTiiATio rOll FOLK lllMoiirl UemnerMts In Name huh fur Governor ST Looia Jan 2 Tlie Democratic mass meeting at Music Hall tonight to further Gubernatorial candidacy of Joseph WlrgaU Folk Circuit Attorney of St Louis was one of time greatest ovations ever given for a nomination In this State It was not simply atm outpouring of citizens of St Louis but thousands of business men and from the Stats at largo were In attendance Vandiver was chairman of time were made by the Hon W others Mr Folk was Introduced chairman the nudlonre wont wild and could not he for seine ten or fifteen mln ware cheered to the echo oolutions were adopted declaring that Mr Folks name will tw with the next Democratic State convention aa a candidate for and tlint we believe he lo the choice of a vast majority of the Democrats of the State Deputy Tenement Hngws CommIssioner John F Skelly been appointed Deputy Tenement House Commtsaionnr He be- long in tie district and woe by Senator JJ Fratley unR from party held election Meeting i the to an aspIrant aildr the Hon Olvph Campbell W D been iaIs the quieted lACe Governor has ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > ¬ Damask Tray Cloths Hemstitched regular 37 l2c quality at uv RAJIV WITH A FINE LONG NAME A Dauclitrr Horn lo the Huron and OareneM Yen Steeit of Ulllltmitiura Dwellers In an apartment house at 294 South Second street Willinrasburg h o only recently learned that their neighbor in that dwelling Mr and Sirs Von Steeg are a French Baron and Baroness and that a daughter born to them a few weeks agp is heir to the title The child was Christ ened Father Porcile of the of Our Lady of Lourdes The mother of the von Steeg who ia a niece of Cardinal was among the guests The baby received the name of Marie Olaelo ce la Tour dAuvergne von Her godfather was the Duo de la who was repreeejitod by time French Consul and hpr godmother was her great aunt the de la Tour who was repre- sented by Mrs Mary Mutchmore of delphia A feast followed the christening Knocked flown anti Robbed HAOKEXSACK X J Jan 3 Isaac Orden of Dundee Lake got off a Hudson River line trolley CM last night and started to walk of W H Ackennan He was lew a blow on the head and robbed of 40 and a gold watch FOR GRIPShud- der Shiver Sneeze Some one walked over my grave Is a common exclamation that follows a shud- der A shudder a shiver or a sneeze tha- fiiM sign of taking Cold is caused by chocked circulation of the blood The use of Dr Humphreys Seventyseven starts the blood coursing through the veins and breaks up the Cold or Grip 77 prevents Pneumonia Seventyseven cures Coughs Colds Grip Influenza Catarrh Pains and Sore millie la the head anti cheat Hoarseness and Sore Throat At Druggists 2 cents t Medical Quid mailed free Humphrtjri UcdCoCorWUllam kolui MIKU i i 1 i 5i i 4 a im 1J f a D t lp I 1 II i I 3 1 i I j it- M I- Van V1 f 1 P f i t- iii7IIlI7P3 L I f ft4 14 34 n a p rI i 1ic I 4 I ¬ ¬ ¬

The Sun. (New York, N.Y.) 1904-01-03 [p 7].chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030272/1904-01-03/ed-1/seq-7.pdf · SHOT HIMSEIF IX HKll PRESENCE Hart Refused to Ilanoe With Him Because

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THE SUN SUNDAY JANUARY S19 4J

p LS

AXXOVSCKXIKNT IS EPECTfaFROM nous SOON

KnVern Part of Connecticut tattle MadeInto a New See With Norwich an theIllshops Home Some of the lPrints Talked Of for the New Illih6p

STAMFORD Coon Jan 2 There Isreason to believe that tho reports whichwere sent out from Rome three monthsngo to the effect that thediocese of dividedhad much more basis than was admitted atthe time by Church authorities In thisdiocese 3

A to this effect has como fromHome slnco summor The first onewas won after Pppe Plua waaconsecrated and Ut trial time bishopTierney va In Europe When he returnedhe said that ho had not been to Romeand knew nothing about a division Thereport again reached jspmtry fromRome three n

asked what traW therewasin it He authorized a denial of the report-

Of late there has been a rumor amongthose in touch with Church theBishops attitude toward the hasundergone a change When questionedrecently on the subject he noncom-mittal Bishop conservativein giving out news of ChuCch affair andcould not be expected to cdnflrm such re-

ports uitil divisiorft was actuallymade It in nald qn highauthority that tho is tolie divided The about itwhich is not known definitely by personsin is the timethat the division tvjjj1 be announcedofficially

About weeks a o Bishop Tiorneysummoned a rpeptjng thodiocp80 conhUltora Itfta that theywere called together the division-It has heen learned well Informedtources tiiat an Intlni fjon has been receivedfrom Rqme that tb division would beannounced in January The seat of thenew See will be Norwich and the entirerastern part of th State will be included

New he largest city In theState and of lath years one of the mostimportant Catholic centres will remainin Hartford diocese The now diocesewill consist of the counties of New LondonWindharrt Tolland and possibly Middlesex

In counties a FrenchCanadiafl population They are practicallynil Catholics In many ways they are quitedifferent In their habits of living and ofworship to the socalled Irish Catholicswho make up almost the entire churchmembership in other parts of the StateFor this reonon extreme care will be taken-in choosing the Bishop of the new diocese

The Rev Hugh Tralnor the pastor ofthe Catholic church in Norwich Is spoken-

of as a ost jikely candidate He isthe best known priests in the dioceseAnother name frequently spoken of isthatof the Rev Walter Shanley ofCathedral Hartford He is the presidentof the National Catholicand for several years was president of theConnecticut Union in which Bishop Tiernoy

has always taken an active interest The

French Canadian element IB the Rev

Arthur OKeefe of Waiiregan This village

is in town of Plalnfleld in Windham

Jts principal Industries are cottonmills employ a large

number of French Canadian hand

OKeefe understands them people thor-oughly

OllvjJtlfl HVSttAXO JAILED

Mrs Hraley a Neighbor Says Hart FearedHer husband Would Kill liar

Mrs 20 years old wasfound a furnished room early yesterday at 313 East 107th street and herhusband Maurice Healey was remanded-to the custody of the Coroner from theHarlem court on suspicion of knowing

something about her deathwalked up to Policeman Harron

at 107th Third avenue yesterdaymorning and told him that had come

found his wife lying dead acrossthe bed An ambulance surgeon found anumber of bruises on the womans tacoand neck and Healey after telling severalconflicting store was looked

in tho house that Healey had frequentlybeaten his wife and they got

that she was afraid her husband wouldMil her

SHOT HIMSEIF IX HKll PRESENCE

Hart Refused to Ilanoe WithHim Because She Felt Like It

EMIT ORANGE N J JanWolff 23 years old of 34 Lincoln streetewark shot and killed himself last night-

in front of the residence of Aaron Princeat 631 Park avenue Fast Orange on hisreturn from a lull Ho accompanied MissDora Valeskla to thewhere she i employed He had fallenasleep in the trolley oar had waked up

as nho was toast off He seemedhurt that she had not danced with him anight or two before and when he asked

for the after they off the carhe replied she because shefelt Hk3 it

Do mean that he askedWhy sure

pistol and sent a bullet head Hethe and the girl ran into thescreaming

Lnnare May Lend PItUburjf OrchestraIlrnjBURa Jan 2 Edwin H Lemare

director of music at the CarnegiePittelwrg may succeed Victoras director of the Pittsburg OrchestraAt a concert of the night-Ie appeared as a the

urged him to thechestra while own musk

but he declined to do so Lemareof the organ andji composer-

of international repute He cttmefrom London

KlllMl In ft Mutiny of ErlibnTrf

last night in theat BatonElouge resulted in the murCer of

herbs Hiriart captain of t ratxhThe mutiny was Tom Stanley amurderer fromresulted in the escapehut for the efforts prisoher from NewOrleans whom the at andattempted to kill was will armedn 200 cartridge with him v i H

National Convention or ocl llrt Pt rty-

CnicAOO Jan nationallion of the Socialist will be held in

i hicago on May 1 1804 at which time can-

didates for national offlcej will benomination Bernard Berlyn Rationaluommttteeman for

to make preparations forthe ac-

commodation of 800 THe eeleoIon of Chicago was by referendum ballot

An American Kubfllk PantSftetal Dupatcli to Tn Sm-

BBBUN Jan 3 Jan Kubelik the violin-

ist has selected a young American AlmaStencel aa the pianist who will accompanyhim during his performances Europeantour

1 TO DIVIDE

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KILLED IX ItASKETRAUoGAiUE-loung HfothM a mow In iheAUdo

man Which Peered FalaJBOSTON Jan 2 Daniel OttliaRher

died yesterday at Revere as the result ofinjuries received in a basketh gatneBe was a member of the Revere AthjetloAssociation team which wont to Chelseaon the evening of Doe 28 whore a gamewas played with a team representing thatcity

Gallagher received a blow in the abdomenand developed Yesterday morntrig an operation was upon andhe was taken ia Frost Hos pltil In Cholaeabut after reaching there Howas and known as-a lover of athletics He formerly playedon the football team representing RevereHigh School

METROrOLITAX U7V5Stockholder iiojle Hasnt Made Out a-

Itfaion to Sec the nookSupreme Court Justice hisde

cided that John F Doyle Is not entitled toinspect the books and records of the Metropolitan Street Company of whIch

i no Is a stockholder toattack the of tho companyand particularly the lease to

Company

that a stockholder to entitled to Inspect the buck of a corporation yet Itcannot be contended boon acaptious or whimsical denial ofrights by company Justice McCall

What but if not worsecan to the policy of ant Its officials that unreasonably reest motives on the of stockholders

Justice McCall points out that the Metro-politan company has been made the

examination of accounts has beenthe company Itself the results of

have companythe Court challengesand In opinion there

tudo assumed him

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Cornelitw C CutfrkMa nru Falls M Y Ho-

ivas n son of James Xlchoroa and Mary CmWkand a crandaon of Meut Xlcholis tulcwho was one of stuff ofllcfrsHe was born tho town of I xvliton InAugust iHR1 und therefore ngwhen i In 1882 In

York Volunteers and was nmcl SecondLieutenant He served throughoutwar In North Carolina tswfl ho was com

Captain watt rftired fromisn owIng to Incurred the

Indian In tt In the 70nHe In alt the Indian wars In the North-west from 1868 to 1884 From inoo to 100

was military InstructorGeorcla Agricultural detailedfor that purpose by War DepartmentlllH h altli At ownr qtie t In UWK and since then he had made

In Hlaeurn FallsJ superintendent of tIme

press room of thethat r died on Friday

of pneumonia In home at illlehth year lie oam

old He went to work on Eagle Incharge of the s-

on which the entire edition was then brought-out He remained at the head of

continuously wltnesslns

had been a resident of tim Ninthfor nearly fifty years and for theseven years the Democratic ticketIn the same election ws a fchar-t member of St Josephs Council No B

of Redford Council No 271 of Celumbufl He was also connected with 8t

Associationt h Society of Old

Aeyrum It

tomorrow mornlnifnt St AuRurtlnaSixth avenue and St r place

Inlllerrno Iebrun who a the reprfsenu

warship In the at Philadelphiaof nt the

In this city on Thursxlay Jebrun was anative born in Caracas47 ago and a descendant of a w l knownFrench was educated this

find through his talent si naval en-gineer and rote In the

Iron and works He leaves a widowand one son

Thomas 1 OConnor a chemist died lastFriday at his home 12 Kortystreet nf was the

ou Thom s H Connor a merchantSun Francisco witsimsoclaled In bimlnms during the last yearsof his life He was 1881the school of mines of Columbia UniversityHP served ten In the rment-us ft jhis Veterans LeagueMId then the Associationregiment ft Un-iversity Psl U clubs and the Ethnological

Charles II Rockwell on Friday at hshome In Tarrytownyear He was a r flTilwar Once he was sent to Bt Louts withunlimited orders to for theDepartment of the ulf and he delivered at

t2ooooou worth of ammunitionand atorea He was afterward to thestaff of len Sheridan Hi was nf theearly members of the Union League Club of

anobservatory He devoted much of Ma thusto astronomy

Dr Frank S Jackson died In Dunkirk onJan I at the age of Ho grade

te of the New York University and

He practised than twentywas a member

dequoc Lodge of Masons and of the

by wife his parents Mr andJackson of u brother Robert HJackson of Buffalo and a sister Mrs K BCsborne of Mount

HeOlnnls one of theof the Confederate Navy in the MississippiKlver In55 native of liverpool

thin the Confederate Navy HI a boy ofon th of

Commodore K Montgomery of the MljTheRebel and the other Confederate vessels weresunk at of Memphis on June 61602

Col J Stackpole for many years

died yesterday at home onnt the i 110 vns from 1

tlvil war wo commissioned Ciutnln of acompany of Massachusetts

breveted Hn leaves-A widow ono son and two daughters

Mrs Mary J Beach wife of William IIBeach on Friday In her homo at 40

Hide herorganized West Side Avenui-

Metnodlst School in I n with twoThey In

founding Side Avenue MethodistChurch years Funeral wrfteeg

bo held church this afternoon at2 oclock

K Burroughs n veteran of thocivil war and well known n of theline oftaekets running betwo andNew York at the close until 1880

died lo bornIn IMl irTPehfleld N V lie for tl

it nt e

daughtersHarry W died at Jfi

made a record as a CityCouncils in fighting corporation schemes

was received In Ajiftlu TMInv of the of lIeu

the duringHe Is Aid to hav-

1nlted States nt of hwDr T a Birchett died at Vlrtsbttrjt Jflss

years superintendent inIppl State nt

ri l tf of t

Coast Artillery yrfMay-noriK at nif tins henrt trouhln

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ten tars elo leaves Idow end two

Futonpneumonia

Illness J e was Oa1S lie seerstllry an treasurer or the C iiShoe Company of Easton snd director ofthe Shoo Jobbers AAIIO t8 lon

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re 8t old had beenat that place for

postmaster In the

yesterday 68 lit wits aIt lie was

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tire the enezuelan wasrepairs on

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GUNS DISCUSS BIG LOANS

SEXATOHS UISAUREE OX Tfll0S-O HAIHIXG 31000000

Coininlttrc Reports la Favor nfAH the Demands Mails by New Yorkflankers From Whom the Money InExpected to Come Vote Tomorrow

ifptctal CuUt bcipotclt to Tan sueHAVANA Jan 2 There was a special ses-

sion of the Senate to disaues the leOnof 33000000 for the payment of lha claimsof soldier who served In Cuban revolution Seuor Parraga supported time reportof the committee hlch accepts everythingthe bankers according toPalmus message on tho subject except that

fixes 90 tin the minimum price at whichthe honda Issued Senor Parragadeclared that he In favor of waivingthis detail in crder to bo In accord withwhat time bunkers asked

An amendment presented at the fontsession was rend This authorizes theExecutive to raise a Icuti of JSSrtflotoONo limit is flied as to the price nt llli thebonds shall be sold or1 tho rate of tntniextto be paid save that the cost per annumshall not exceed 2200000 Cube runpledge is per cent the customs receiptsfor Interest and a sinking fund could bocreated by taxes pnld under tho originallaw The net proceeds of time loan willgo toward paying the army

A certificate for any balance due to thosoldiers could be given and this documentwould bear Interest at the rate 6f 2

per annum These certificates wouldbe redeemable annually from the proceedsof the national lottery nnd the urphistaxes could bo applied to some ether debtsThe wire of 1000000 can taken fromthe national treasury to pay time overdueinterest on the revolutionary bond s wella the debts of the army corps commanders

Senor Sanguilly spoke In oposltlnn to timeoriginal report which obviously showed that

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the committee did not wish to pay morethan half of the 80K OOJ dun the nrmySafipr Sanguilly thought this amount shouldbe paid in full He believed that if the35000000 loan were floated now Cuba

could not raise any money Ho ob-jected to pivtna the Executive a free hand inregard to tho price of tho bonds and pledging tho customs receipts He said timebonds of J806 should have been paid longago as thoy represented a debt of honor

The Senate finally voted to suspend con-

sideration of the matter until MondayThe vote on this motion was 11 to 7

vo pnoFir v visicM COMEDY

George Ertwrnrrtes Says Ho Loses MoneyDuring a London linn

Sptclal Cable Dtipalch to Tea SexLONDON Jan 2 George Edwardes who

is generally regarded most successfultheatrical manager in London declaredemphatically today thatform of entertainment which ho inventeddoes not pay a manager so furns the Londonproduction is concerned Ho saysCountry Girl which has been runningfor nearly two years at Dalys Theatrebaa shown a loss of a 1000 to 1800 weekLondon la not a source of profit because thesaUries and rents are so enormous butthe production hero Is essential for theadvertisement of the piece in the provincesAmerica Africa and Australia A CountryGirl made money for months but theearly profits had to go to pay cost ofproduction-

Mr Edwardes went on to say speaking-of tbeH3 comedies that after a year orfifteen months business falls off and themargin of profit U lost As an instance hereferred to The Jill from Kuyg whichdrew capital audiences last your yet wflenlie paid the royalties tc it showed a lossof 10000 on the year The Duchess ofDanlzio cost 50000 to produce and withfull houses and every seat sold the profitscannot exceed 1250 a week which meanthat ten months rmpt elapse before theinitial outlay can bo recovered Everyyear the public demands something moreexpensive and more elaborate

Mr Edwardes says he pays 00000 a weekin Mlurivv and ho maintains that ho is theonly one concerned from the compilerto the stage carpenter whoso reward Udoubtful

rnncw Y 33000000

London Firm Didnt Know Rubbish Conhunch lladlum-

SjHtlal Collie Dtivalcli Tmt StrN

LONDON Jan 2 Johnson Mattheythe firm of analytical chemists who haveoperated the same works in London for175 years give a curious confirmation tothe announcement recently made by ProfSir William Ramsey that they have beenthrowing radlumaway unawares Indeedthey hare paid SI a ton to have carted off

as rubbish residuary matter containingfrom one to six grains of radium whichcosts 1000 a grain It is probablo that5000001 has thus been thrown awaychiefly to make street layers ballast

The firm are platinum manufacturersrefiners and assayers to the Itoyal Mintand the Bank of England For seventyyears they have been engaged in extracting oxide of uranium front pitchblendeThe oxide was used mainly to color ex-

pensive glassware to which It gave a yellowish green fluorescent appearance At time

dining tables of many old families In England wineglasses and ornaments are usedin which radium Ii a constituent part Theuse of uranium for this purpose has beendiscontinued for the cheaper processes

Tho pitchblende used by Johnson AMatthey is obtained from the Joachlmatnhlmines in Austria which now produce thefinest radium Although their uraniumextracted front pitchblende was known topossess radioactivity tho cause was neversuspected until radium was discovered dur-

Ing the past year

4IS 1JKFS HOUSE MKAT

The of It for Food It Said to He

Wprdil Cablf linpalcli Ins Sux-

PABIB Jon 2 Eating horseflesh by

the poor in Paris is increasing to such anextent that abattoirs will have to bo

enlarged The present consumption Is

30000 horses a year The horse meat is

somewhat darker and stronger than beef

but It is not unpalatable It hat grown-

in popularity since thoof the horse and the ass Is about half theprice of but tho former is becoming

dearerwp hones that have worked for

eight or ten years In the city are purchased

for 50 to graze for a few weeksanti Ire then led to the slaughter house

In some departments such lit the Nordthere Is a scarcity of horses for farm work

DUTCH PANSIFAL

Statement That Van der Linden Will firmaOne to Thl Country

5jvf l Cable DiipaM to Tns StN

TilE HAGUE Jan Voderandstated that the Dutch Impresario Van derLinden will take an operatic company to

tho United States to sing ParAiful in theWrstcrn citi J

pore

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LondOn Abandon That F tnre of the New

Svraat CttHi Dtipateh to tiesi Jan 3 A year ago bibulous

London want Ut a condition of panicthe Licensing act which had provided a

for liabltual topars Anybodyconvicted twice of drunkenness could notbo aarvod with a drink In any saloon In hisdistrict for three years Under the pro-visions of the act bartenders receivedphotographs of such persons and werewarned that they would loss theirif they them Tho anxious timefor the public house peoplo baa now pulsedfor tho blacklist was abandoned on NewYear Day as impracticable

One of the provisions of the Licensingact was that a delinquent might be orderedinto an Inebriates home but Lord ChiefJustice declared that nobodycould bo detained In such a home againsthis will and this made the whole affairdead letter Tho police also found It Unpossible to cope with the Inebriates whosephotographs In number far beyondthe memory of any barkeeper One saloon-keeper on tho Strand said that during theyear 1003 time police furnished him withphotographs of S7S persons who were tobe placed on the blacklist Moreover asshowing the poor working of the law artInebriate who was blacklisted n one dis-trict has Only to step Into theiwt boroughwhere he becomes a free min Tho whoare too tansy to do this can put on a fsliomustache or beard

The magistrates have failed to thevalue of the act and since August last onlyseventeen people have beenin London Of the years total of thoseplaced on the blacklist ill per centwomen

OYTWV II7T AD HEALTHY

Rainfall for the Year the Greatclt hi UslfCentury

Sprdal Catli Dttnalrtt to TVX Sm

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LOXDON Jan official record otho rainfall in Great Britain for the1903 shows that it was by tar the wettesttwelve months for more than half a centuryNearly two of every three days were rainy

Rain fell for 205 days in Londonan average of 1W days the previous yearNevertheless the conditions haye been unprecedentedly favorable in regard to thejiublic health and there has never been so

death rate both In the urban and ruraldistricts It seems evident that the heavyrainfall has washed the country clean Theflooding of streams and water courses

and destroyed injurious matterwhich would otherwise accumulated-and the drains and sewers have been flushedwith unprecedented frequency

Tho close of the year las not been markedwith any special form of illness Therehas been no epidemic during the twelve-months of Influenza or other pulmonaryaffections which are usually associatedwith the prevalence of wet cold weather

KfVO EKDT HAVE A UfESEIlls Automobile the Only One In England

Not NumberedSptctal Cable Detpatch TimE SLOW

LONDON Jan 2 The new act of Parlia-ment for the registration of automobiles-and the regulation of their speed In theUnited Kingdom went into force yesterday-and this evening the streets of Londonpresent the spectacle of motor flitting toand fro with illuminated glass plates onthe front and rear giving an alphabeticalletter and number besides the initials ofthe owner AH drixers must carry licenseswhich they are compelled show to thepolice on demand The speed Is limited-to twenty miles an hour on an open countryroad and ten miles an hour in town

that there js a superstitiousobjection to the number 13 Local authori-ties have been unable to get owners to ac-

cept It Over a thousand cars were regis-tered In London yesterday

The act allows the Kings automobile to-

go without being numbered His Majestynot required personally to have a driving

license though it U assumed his driverpossesses one

SQUlEttyS BODY SET NORTH

Man Who AccIdentally Sliot Ministers SunNot Arrested

Special Cable 0 jacA to TM SexHAVANA Jan 2 The body of Fargo

Rquiers the eldest eon of the United StatesMinister to Cuba who accidentallyshot and killed on Now Years eve by aFrench chauffeur employed by hU fatherwas embalmed on Thursday night Itwas laid in state In the Church of the Angellast night At the requiem mass today-all the meml er4 of tho Diplomatic Corpsthe secretaries and a number of officialwere present They walked to the wharfwhence the body wa transferred to thesteamer Morro Castle for Now YorkGeorge L Lorillard the Second Secretaryof tie American Legation is accompany-ing the body to Now York

The French servant who wa responsiblefor young fckjuierss death Inw not beenarrested The accident occurred In theMinisters housu not in tho tablo aspreviously reported

IX AXTWERP THEATRE

Somali Tire Starts the Audience In a Rushfor the Doors

Special Cabl to TUB tiesANTWfBf Jan 3 During a performance-

at the Hippodrome last night some wecarelessly throw cigarette into aheap of paper and a fire started Theaudience became wildly excited probablybecause of their recollection of the recentChicago disaster and rushed for the mainentrance although thero were many otherexits The employeeu had groat difficultyin preventing a panic and consequent tones

of life In time crush

JECE OF XAPOLEOX DEAD

Prlncpfi Slathllrto Had lieen HI for a longTide

Special Cable Dispatch to TRill SUN

PABIS Jan 2 The Princess Mathildedaughter of Jerome Bonaparte formerKing of and niece of Napoleonis dead She had been seriously ill forseine time and exEmpress andPrincess Clotilde had been in constantattendance upon her

Sen Vork Donnl IJke to Walk

Special Cablt Dnpatch lo THE SUN

LONDON Jan 2 Tho tendency of thepeople to Increase the use of public conveynnoes Is tho same in London and NewYak ibcugh the street other

of U oil transportation have to carrythe tnlro population of New Yolk moretimes every year than Is the case in Lon-

don For New York thee traate is US timesand for L mlon 130 times The tramwaysof Glasgow carry the population 174 timesa year Ihijsb of Liverpool 187 times and ofIJerlin 2V3 rtmes-

SaiitiiMlnmont Coming llrrrSpecial CaW Depolcl to Tm Sew

HAVBK Ian SantosDumcnt theBrazilian aeronaut sailed for New YOlk

today on the French line steamship Laiiavole

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AOI8TMTK RRAY UPllIXKLWITH E PALMAS ULOOP

Mrs Itarlutos RantJealous sml lUd MrjirlSFd Her hutDe Palma Teiether In t Streftthe-SM De Palms Hid Thrvaifnwl Pier

OrtAXOB N J Jan 3lu the policecourt this morning Mrs Barbatoof 90 Hurlbnt street drew a nor tornthe folds of her shawl and out g ihIn the throat of Pasqualo De Palms Thistwo well standing In font of the ofJustice Joseph B Bray and some ot theblood sprinkled the Magistrate Do Paimawill hurried to the hospital where h is Ina criticereohdltion and Mrs Barbato waaplaced under arrest on a charge of asMiiltwith intent to kill

and Do Palma it Is said wero 6tretr-hwrt fifteen years ago in Praia ItalyCarmela ran away to this country withBarbato Do Palma wrote to the Irt-

a correspondence was kept urt for yearsago he came to his

H came out to pretty frequentlyto see her and c

On Clirlstmas ovo ho surprised her And

woman ran a She saidthat kiss met D Palms wholly by accidentand that he threatened to cut A

razor If did ot go with him Six de-

nim her came up and the

After this neighbors uy r rtime household

timesMrs Barbato Imploring some one not tokill her

The seems totally unconcernedShe baa two children one a in arms

other a little lad who at hismothers skirt and fell to the floor scream-ing when she cut D Palms throat Shesays she tried to kill De Palma becsuse he

annoyed her but the herthings so uncomfortable

for her that In cut

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lover It been discovered thatPalms hat a big bundle of letters hefrom the woman nd her neighbors thinkshe was fearful lestof these letters De Palma boon living-In South Brooklyn and had Leon stayingwith a at Essex avenuesince the before Christmas On Christ-mas eve at which time time woman allegesDo Palma threatened to cutrazor she went to the station andmade a complAint against D4 Palma

was the result oflids complaint

KILLED IX THE DAVITT MIXK-

Amslnsmtim People Charge llrlnzeMen With Causing sn Explosion

HEUXA Mon Jan 2 One man waskilled another Injured mortally and an-

other nearly asphyxiated as the resultexplosion and gas arising therefrom in

the Michael at Butt last nightThe explosion Is charged by the Amalga-

nisted Copper Company officials to havebeen a deliberate attempt on the part ofHeinze miners to kill the employees of therival concern The dead man is Samuel

The are John Krivela miner Foreman John Pomalumawho upon the report rushed to time

scene explosionThe title to Davltt mine

which lies between the andRarus mines owned by the Amalgamatedand United Copperdon between The Pennsylvaniaminers were inthe order of tho United States Court todetermine to what extent If any Heinzehid looted ore from the Davittas alleged by the Amalgamated

were in stoppingpassages through the door

workings toblasting smoke tie miner creeping

en them and driving them from theirwork Without there was adeafening crash It alleged on tho ilelnzo

door the door fromand crushed the timbers

Time noise sttaeted Foreman Poma liirnawho rushed to the scene but the of

from tho Hani minehim and but for several miners who hadfollowed him he would have perished

Sheriff J Quinn and nare at the if he can fix the blame J

lie will masks arrests The excitement In

intense over the matter sad the miners are0 t

was oncemassages to the mine John

him to coma

C V Goociale who has of thoBoston and Montana propertied openly de-

clares that it was a onthe of the Heinze employees to

the Pennsylvania

ARISE IiTiUGEX-CEHo

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H Ola N r Orleans lice 23JU tVMt n l-

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SJ Injqunu JacK urtllr flee 80l JZ-

MsHaniUtua Norfolk Jan I

Si ia Br tatne from Kew YorU atiVrmeolaa New York a Uverportl-

Si St Paul New Vorl at SouthimptonI-

AILED non rosxioN roarsS La Savolc train Havre fur New Yort-Sa Sew york Chorbourr tot New YorkS Umbrla irene Liverpool ton New Yorki 0 vlf from Now YorkSa Rlietn front Urf mcA for New York

sea romsrroir-Hatlt

Hamilton KorfolU-SaU TtiHilav r

Alllanca ColonCharl lon

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Majestic LiverpoOlHull

British 1rlncfs AntiwiiiOalv ton

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roBroadway and 20th Street and Fifth Avenue

Enirance on 19th Street

Annual Sale

HOUSEHOLD LINENSThis Sale Offers Advantages Over that of Any Previous Year

trustworthy lines embracing manufacturers surplus stocksdiscontinued broken lots are here at far below thecost of manufacture alone These prices in the face of an advancing marketand highr r tes denunded by make this sale the most Import-ant we have ever announced

Among the Are

Table Cloths2 yards 255 350

reduced from 250 W50 and 15502x2 12 yards f

teduced from 285 325 425 and tf00-2x3 yards ft

reduced from 350 237S 500 and JW50

Larger 5 zw and Widths Proportionate Reductions

Table Damask wFine Satin Bleached Damask

regularly 110Fine Damask

regularly 135

50e ydfrn jtoC

Jt 275 dozen

A miscellaneous lot of pine Huckaback TowelsHemstitched regular 425 and 1450 quality at 00 QK doz

TrrrI l

Lord it

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OUR stock is more ces are lower than before Man

i

Most Prominent1

1

175 195 l275

22O 245 I 450

265 295 385 550 ji tf

at 1 JIH Cream Damask

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II Dew Bleach Hemstltcbed H lICk fl3r11 4

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Crash TowelingHeavy all linen soft finish regu

larly J5f qualityJ4Cydi

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Bath TowelsExtra large size made of selected

37 l2c nr

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cotton I r gularat CeLL

pair also 100 Hand EmbroidereJ IrIsh LinenPlllOlV Cases regularly at 165 plir

LwClt Pillow Cases Hemstitched I 95e riI

toIterly t7 and 225

i

275 I t

125 145125

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Linen SheetsE-

xtra quality Irish Linen largesize regular value n475O rp pr

V MERCHANT

1904 January Sale of UpToDate StylesMuf Neck Pieces Vfctorfnes Mantles Jackets

Coats Fur Lined Garments Sleigh Robes

AT THE FOLLOWING REDUCTIONSF-ox Moleskin Squirrel Bear 20 discountChinchilla Marten Alaska Sable simmo 15Ennine Lynx Mink Sealskin Persian Lamb toSables from Southern Russia British Columbia and Hudson

Bay 15 lImperial Crown Sables from Northern Russia and Siberia ioFurlined Overcoats and Sleigh Robes 10Auto Coats and Fur lined Circulars 15

NOTx 1 do rot cell blended or darkened fliwUn or Hudson Bay Sable or Mink Ladles whohaw purchased them ciicwhcrc complain that they have a mottled shabby appearance afterworn a short time

I sell London Dyed Alulia Seal Skin only and Wpflj Dyed Persian Lamb silken PersianDroadtall e

4

stork all sizes in Coats and Jackets and a complete assortment ofNeck Pieces Muffs c in al fashionable furs

All sales strictly for cash No goods sent on approval

41st and 42d Streets Between Broadway Sixth Avenue

1ti

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=vritpir IGNORED

Tile Sinn He SUde SUyor of Troy nrfimnlthe One Apimtntnirnt He Asked ForTnor Jan 2 For years former United

Stated Senator Murphy has been the Demo-

cratic leader In this city acknowledged asuch and nctuolly to Four years agoDaniel E Conway one of Mr Murphyslieutenant by alliance with Republicansbecame Mayor and continued In powertill the November tloction when Mr Con-

way joined hands with Mr Murphy andelected Jo eph F Hogan Mayor MrHogan however was nominated by MrMurphy

It was expected that Mayor Hogan wouldre Dect In some degree the wishes of MrMurphy in appointments In the estima-

tion of Mr Muiphy and his followers time

has rot done HO With two ex-

ceptions those who supported Mr Conway-

in officeMr Murphy personally one ap-

pointment refusedline wen Mr Murphy hut

once since It looks veteranleader naif an attempt was beingmndatodrive him out of the party resents Itand so do his friends

lUG niMOSTiiATio rOll FOLK

lllMoiirl UemnerMts In Namehuh fur Governor

ST Looia Jan 2 Tlie Democratic massmeeting at Music Hall tonight to further

Gubernatorial candidacy of JosephWlrgaU Folk Circuit Attorney of St Louiswas one of time greatest ovations ever given

for a nomination In this StateIt was not simply atm outpouring ofcitizens of St Louis but thousands ofbusiness men and from the Statsat largo were In attendance

Vandiver was chairman oftime were made by

the Hon W othersMr Folk was Introduced chairmanthe nudlonre wont wild and couldnot he for seine ten or fifteen mln

ware cheered to theecho

oolutions were adopted declaring thatMr Folks name will tw with thenext Democratic State convention aa acandidate for and tlint webelieve he lo the choice of a vast majorityof the Democrats of the State

Deputy Tenement Hngws CommIssionerJohn F Skelly been appointed Deputy

Tenement House Commtsaionnr He be-long in tie district and woe

by Senator J J Fratley

unR

from party held

election

Meetingi

the

to an aspIrant

aildrthe Hon Olvph Campbell W D

been

iaIs

the

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Governor

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Damask Tray Cloths

Hemstitched regular 37 l2cquality at uv

RAJIV WITH A FINE LONG NAME

A Dauclitrr Horn lo the Huron and OareneMYen Steeit of Ulllltmitiura

Dwellers In an apartment house at 294South Second street Willinrasburg h oonly recently learned that their neighborin that dwelling Mr and Sirs Von Steegare a French Baron and Baroness and thata daughter born to them a few weeks agpis heir to the title The child was Christ ened

Father Porcile of the of OurLady of Lourdes The mother of the

von Steeg who ia a niece ofCardinal was among the guests

The baby received the name of MarieOlaelo ce la Tour dAuvergne von

Her godfather wasthe Duo de la who wasrepreeejitod by time French Consul and hprgodmother was her great aunt thede la Tour who was repre-sented by Mrs Mary Mutchmore ofdelphia

A feast followed the christening

Knocked flown anti RobbedHAOKEXSACK X J Jan 3 Isaac

Orden of Dundee Lake got off a HudsonRiver line trolley CM last night and startedto walk ofW H Ackennan He waslew a blow on the head and robbed of40 and a gold watch

FOR

GRIPShud-der Shiver Sneeze

Some one walked over my grave Is acommon exclamation that follows a shud-der A shudder a shiver or a sneeze tha-fiiM sign of taking Cold is caused bychocked circulation of the blood The useof Dr Humphreys Seventyseven startsthe blood coursing through the veins andbreaks up the Cold or Grip

77 prevents PneumoniaSeventyseven cures Coughs Colds

Grip Influenza Catarrh Pains and Soremillie la the head anti cheat Hoarseness andSore Throat At Druggists 2 centst Medical Quid mailed free

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