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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 5

The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 5

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THE BROOKLYN DAILY EAGLE. NEW YORK, FRIDAY. JULY 10. 1003. WAH DEP1BTUEHT HOTS clca In Washington that 8enator Hanna will decline to serve as chairman of the National Committee In the next campaign.

In fact. It ia rumored here that the senior Senator from Ohio dtatlnctly told the President a few dava aeo at Ovater Bir that IN ARMY SOCKS SCi fLfunder no circumstances would he act as I chairman. It ia believed that thla decision OS TRIAL FOB COUNTERFEITING. Mary Nayula It on trial In the United States Circuit Court to-day on the charge of coua-tcrfeiung. LIPTON TO SEE "THE SULTAN." Sir Thomaa Llpton.

members of his party and six hundred members of the Atlantic Tacht Club will attend the performance of The Sultan of Sulu" at Manhattan Beach to-night. The theater will bo elaboratly decorated for the occaelon, the flag! o( Sir Thomaa Ltpton's yacht Shamrock and of ibe of Senator Hanna had something to do with the summoning of ex-Governor Murray Crane to Oyatcr Bay for a conference with the President. As stated in the Eagle's Washington dia-patchea some time since. President Roosevelt has made up hts mind not to interfere in any way with the selection of his run Specifications Were Changed by Some One in Quartermaster's Office at Philadelphia. ning mate.

He proposes to leave this to Atlantic Yacht Club will be prominenuj "The Sultan of Sulu" la the only play air the convention, and believes that in adoct Thomaa Llpton will have a chance to aee Ing this course he is playing good politics COL PATTEN TO BE DETACHED, prior to the yacht races, ne says. PERSONALS. ana at tne same time aeepiug himself out of entangling alliances. The War Doptrtment has begun the work of issuing brand new Krag-Jorgenscn riliea Mrs. J.

Bennett and her little daughter Mav of Union atreet Brooklyn, have arrived at the Waring. Saratoga, where they have When Henry Savage Landor, the English pstnter. explorer and writer, first visited this country he made the mistake of bringing some letti rs of introduction from membera ot the Iiritish liotiility to certain silly pea-I'li who. because of tin ir wealth, were to te lenders of American society. The result was that tho handsome and talented yomist man was bnrod almost to distraction by attention: lavished upon fatal in three or fo-ir Knstrrn cities.

One he cc.nie wearily Into a morn-iitk' ip.ip' otlic" wher-i I waa at work nd me lr. a pitiful way to take him to some cheap v. here he could get a Iaper beer Hun It a ryo bread sandwich and a pi. ss of siid he; "I havsnt had anything lit to or drink since breakfast." Th-y bad le cti Riving him fancy dUh.s, which did not lilt and champagne. io tne militia organizations that have Issuing conformed to the re- KTPf? Rifles qtliremoms of the re- cently adopted militia act.

Several thousand High Protection and Campaign Funds. Militia Receiving Krag Kifles Big Diamond Imports. summered for several seasons. Mtsa Florer-ce M. Nolen and nephew, Will iam Mahony.

of Union atreet, are atopplng at Monticello, N. until October. Mr. and Mrs. George W.

Chauncey, A stands of rifles have already been sent out. The distribution of the arms is based on the reports submitted to the department by the Army Inspectors who arw going all over the country to see if the state troops have Wallace L'hauiicey of Brooklyn are now at Eagle Bureau, 608 Fourteenth Street. Washington, July 10 The War Department officials are still hunting for the man their -ntrei ni the Ruisaeaumont lAairon- ducks), Lake'l'lacid. N. where they will organized their companies, battalions and who was resoonaible for rhanuine- th snort- I reuinti nis as proscribed by the militia act.

apend the next three months. Craee H. Irwin soprano of St. Jamea' E. Church, is spending her vacation in Maine.

Mrs Pouch and con Albert of 1.08$ Dean ticatloDs for bids on furnishing the Army I department has a great reserve stock of icnnni i VZ Krags at the varioui arsenals and Army with 160.000 pairs of woolen soeka so that poalB Thcv have llcver bef ust1 n(1 are only one firm could submit a proposal. The 1 1 first class condition. These are the guns Individual has not yet been found, but tho thnt the militia will get. search has develoncd the fact that the aoeci- While the department Is busy distributing street are spending the summer at the Lake Mouse, Highland Kails, Orange uoumy, i. i.

Mr. and Mrs. Jamea H. Downey of Decatur Krug rilles to the state troops, the govern atreet and their son, Wilbur Jenkins Downey, who is on his vacation from Hamilton Col- Mege, returned on Tuesday from a Southern which he di tested. In the cottr.se of a jolly meal, during which h'i ute several rye brenM sandwiches with apparent, relish, lie tolil me of what he saisl van nn nrlual xperi, nt- of that day.

A hostess had invited him to look ut what she callfd a painting by one of the old masters. "My dear ma, lam," I.mdor. thinking the woman had been imposed on by some dealer, "tint was r.ot painted by an old ntaater. It is one of Mllhiis'." "I know It," iiaiii the, "but isn't he quite an elderly gentleman?" trip, which Included Richmond, me James River, Old Point Comrort and Virginia ueacn. 11..

.11. l.UBBtt Ul klllimu Boer sister. Miss Mary Murray, are now at 3ea Cliff for the summer. Emile M. Cossa will also be at Sea Cliff for the rest of the gseason.

Visiting them is George H. Varrel- man. Mrs. Marthon of Brooklyn, widow ol Commander Joseph Marthon, U. S.

is at the Tucker cottage. Caldwell, Lake George, for few weeks. She will go to Saratoga for Orations were drawn by somo one In the depot quartermaster's office at Philadelphia, Va. The publication in the Eagle of the correspondence covering the queer doings in connection with the contract for Army socks had the effect of stirring the officials here into activity, aud also of considerably nettling Colonel W. S.

Patten, the officer who has had charge of the purchase of clothing supplies for the Army ever since One of the results of the publicity recently given to the methods of the department in buying supplies will be found In the Issuance of orders in the next week or so, detaching Colonel W. S. Patten from duty at the War Department and sending him elsewhere, probably to the Philippines. General C. F.

Humphrey, the new quartermaster general, is operating under a big handicap from the fact that he has spent the last six years In field duty, and he finds it difficult to pick up the numerous threads of business relating to the office ol quarter-tnaater general. He stated to the Eagle correspondent to-day that the methods of doing business in his office were being changed, and "changed with a jerk." General Humphrey has not had time to I nm tint much of a but there are times when I can nnniso myself by the hour aillitii; at a keyboard, Improvising crudities which my friendly imagination aids me, lor the time being, to believe are musical. A few years ago, when I was recovering from a long illness, a good friend In the city proposed that 1 go to his mother's house In the later part of the season, DIED. ILBERTSON Suddenly, at Port Washington, July 8. FRANCIS L.

ALBERTSON. Funeral at convenience of family, at Port Wash the country and recruit my strength. He could not go with me, but caused his mother ington Cemetery. July 10, 1903. nieut arsenals have begun work on the new Army rifle.

This difTrrs materially from the Krng, being only 24 Inches in length, and, most important of all, uses a cartridge that cannot be accommodated In the rifle that is going to the militia. The well known ridge on the Krag cartridge, by means of which several of them are strung on a "clip," is missing from the cartridge employed In the new Army rifle. It is believed by some that this dissimilarity in ammunition will cause trouble later on. It is recalled that a vast amount of confusion resulted in the. Spanish war from the fact that tho regulars at Santiago were equipped with smokeless powder ammunition, while the state troopers were using old Springfield guns with, black powder.

It la apprehended that something of the same trouble may follow from the use of non-interchangeable ammunition by the regulars and the militia. Old ordnance officers, however, say that nothing of the sort will occur. They point to the fact that the ammunition used by field artillery is different from that employed by mountain artillery, and that no embarrassment results therefrom. There la a point in the law requiring the government to equip the militia with modern rifles which has given rise to a suspicion that a sharp trick was played on the state organizations. The law stipulated that the militia should be supplied with the standard service rifle of the Army.

At that time the standard arm was the Krag-Jorgen-sen, of which the government owned a large stock. Dut a new rifle had been determined upon, the adoption of which was delayed until after the passage of the militia act. So when the government began to furnish the state troops with rifles the Krag was the "standard service weapon." The department started to get rid of its reserve Btock of arms and then adopted the new gun, which is known as the United States Army magazine rifle, model 1903. However, no one disputes the statement that the Krag- ASHTON-At Wading River, on July ALICE to write a pressing invitation to me, with the result that I was soon enjoying the comforts of a great farm house, the ozone of a healthful climate and the society of my HOW IT SEEMS TO THE MAN IN THE STREET. daughter of James Anhton, aged 34 years.

Funeral serivces to be held at her late home at Yaphank, Sunday, at 2 P. M. 114 1ARRETT On Thursday, July Mra. MART D. BARRETT, widow of Captain Barrett.

Relatives and friends are Invited to attend funeral services to-morrow afternoon. Saturday, friend's mother and sister. In the broad hall which ran through the Life's Sunny Side. can in a year or two be absolutely free from mosquitoes In Flatbush and In Flatlands, middle of the house there was a melodeon. considerably the worse for wear.

Its bellows at 2 o'clock, at the Bedford Heights Baptist Church, corner Rogers and Bergen at. were so leaky that one had tn pump for dear life to get any music whatever from the Instrument. Tho daughter of the house, who fOST Brooklynltes are more or less expert dodgers of trolley cars. There is a ilRD-On Thursday. July 9, 1908.

HARVEY 8. BIRD, aged 0 years. Relatives and friends, also Washington Irving outside the regions supplied by Prospect Park. As for this park region, I hove here suggested what I think to be the best remedy In the end; although the virulence of this pest even here may be greatly mitigated by less radical measures. KENNETH F.

JUNOIt, M. D. Brooklyn, July 10, 1903. glint of humor and a sunshine suggestion, also. In tho contrast between two ways of doing the trick.

Some men and many children run all sorts of risks. was really less of a musician than did give personal attention to the Army socks matter, having been busy for the past week familiarizing himself with the details of the Lyon-Llttauer glove contract. Colonel Patten, however, is fully informed of the Inside history of the changed specifications for Army stockings, but for some reason or other he prefers to keep them to himself. Ho was asked to-day if he had altered the specifications so that It would be possible most of the playing on this melodeon, while I aided in tho pumping, but I made an occasional effort to amuse myself when alone by Improvising on it. In this I had Just success enough to make me long for a piano.

At They assume that the control of the motorraan over his car Is absolute which It Isn't and take their lives in their hands, acting as though ground for a damage suit were the highest gift of a beneficent Providence to finite man. On the other hand, some men and nearly all women dodgo the trolley cars as If every motorman were a juggernaut Jehu, with a reward In sight for killing or maiming as many humnn beings as possible. Council No. til. It.

are Invited to attend funeral services Saturday evening. o'clock, at his late residence. 132 Ashland place. ROOKS On July 9. 1903, at 398 Sackett St.

Brooklyn. N. ANNA, wife of J. T. Brooks, and daughter of the late August Zltxmann, aged 48.

Funeral private. LARK On Thursday. July 190S. at 418 East times it seemed as if I could bardly. wait to get back to the fly and tho opportunities It offered for cheating myself Into thinking I TROUGHS SPREAD DISEASE.

A delegation of citizens called on Superintendent Clarke of tho Street Cleaning Department this morning with a request to have the public watering troughs abolished. As a for the department to get bids from more than one manufacturer. He replied that the Jorgensen is a first class gun in every Seventeenth Bt, Brooklyn. N. EDQAR K.

CLARK, aged 67 years. matter was still under consideration and that nothing had been determined. The Controller of the Treasury nas maae Funeral private. (Buffalo papers please copy.) a ruling which will shut off a lot of claims reason for this demand they stated Ibat the They are ones who need the Bunshlne suggestion. They should remember that the motorman probably has a wife at home who would be thrown Into convulsions if he should run over any one and get arrested; that he is a sober, careful man; that he is to be credited with ordinary human susceptibilities, and that he Is as anxious not to run over you as you are not to be run over.

Distrust the motormnn's power over his car If you will; allow a fair margin or factor of safety there, but don't tremble In face of the man who Is running the car. Assume that he's human. That will take away a lot of tho mental strain of trolley-dodging, and will add materially to the comfort of a life that Is reasonably full of crossings. Colonel Patten said that no Information troughs were tho means of spreading con OR WIN ANN MARIA CORWIN. widow of Jo that were in preparation to secure additional pay to state troops while in camp for tho maneuvers with the regular Army, based would be given out until the department had come to a conclusion as to the best course to follow.

Then In some heat he exclaimed: taglous diseases among the horses. Superintendent Clarke has for a long time known that the watering places dirt much to spread on prior service in the regular Army. The We do not propose that the Eaglo, nor the disease and ho tuld the delegation that ho Controller has decided that memDers oi tne militia will not be entitled to extra pay while in camp under control of regular officers on account of previous service in the regular military establishment. would give their request the careful nttention seph W. Corwln, In the soth year of her age.

Funeral services at her late residence, South Ninth at, on Sunday afternoon, at 4 o'clock. Interment at Rlverhead on arrival of the Monday momlng train. (Rlverhead papers' please copy.) RASER On Wednesday, July 8, at Bayonne, N. ANITA CHASE FRASER, wife of Al- lun Fraser, In her 10th year. Funeral private.

AVILAND-At her residence, 18 Wllloughby av. it deserved. Scudders, shall decide for us tho best method of buying these stockings. We are going to get the best that can be bought, and we will adopt such procedure as Is calculated to afford the widest competition." PARIS FASHIONS TJP TO DATE. JUNOR'S WAR ON MOSQUITOES.

The government clerks at Washington are WILL GO WITH REGIMENT. much exercised over the prospect of losing Colonel Patten was asked why the old From the Eagle Paris Bureau, 53 Rue Cambon, through the courtesy of i Abraham Straua. specifications were changed, and he replied that they were altered so as to secure a was musical. 1 had suffered over this wheezy melodeon for about two weeks when the time came for mo to leave the farm house. My satchel was packed and I stood with the mother and daughter at the front door, waiting for the hired man to bring tho buggy which was to tako me to tho station.

The conversation turned to music and the mother asked the daughter If Bhe had shown me the "patent melodeon in tho spare room." "No," the daughter answered, all blushes. "The place looks so bad I didn't want to take him In thore." of cotiiso, was interested, and protested that I cared nothing what the room might look like; I should bo very glad to see the patent, melodeon. "Why, certainly," said the good, wholesome mother. "We ain't had the spare room furnished yet, but George says we've got to, and he's begun on it by sending a patent melodeon to his sister. You von't mind the looks of things in there, will you?" They took me Into a fine, large, square room at the front of the house, designed to be the parlor, and there, among barrels and boxes, such nH accumulate In a lumber room, Colonel Austen's appeal to tho Secretary of War requesting that D.

H. Kabey, a Navy Yard employe, be allowed leave to go with He Claims That With Adequate Means the Pest Can Be Entirely Wiped Out. the early closing priv-Full Working ilege on Saturdays Davs for during the summer. For Borne years past it Government Clerks. ha8 been tnB custom to close the executive Brooklyn, on Fifth day, Seventh month, ninth.

ELIZABETH widow of Aaron Q. Havl-land. Funeral at Purchase Meeting1 House, on First better sock. He said that tne socits canea for under the changed specifications were far better than those furnished under the old ones, but he was forced to admit that tho Thirteenth Regiment on Its camp tour to Plum Island has met with success. A telegram was received at tho Navy Yard this morning directing that Rabey be given the departments at 3 o'clock on Saturdays dur he had no means of proving thla because To the Editor of the Brooklyn the Army had bought none.

I trust that you will allow me space to leave whlcn bad llrst been reiuseu mm ny the head of his department, and he will be It la understood that colonel patten naa ing the months of July, August and This year the early closing Bcbcnie was started as usual, but some one In the Navy or the War Department found that there written to a number of manufacturers of day, Seventh month, twelfth, at o'clock. Carriages will meet 9:1 train from Grand Central Depot, at While i 10-t OPE-On Thursday, July 9, 1903, ELIZABETH Hope, aged 82 years. Funeral from her late residence, 87 Wyckoff st, Saturday, July 11, I M. Interment at Flatbush. OflAN At Sullivan st, South Brooklyn, on with the regiment, when It leaves tno inir- stockings asking if they will submit bids teenth's armory to-nlKHt.

refer to some sanitary questions In Brooklyn. I referred in a late Issue to some sanitary Improvements In connection with Prospect Park. I wish further to draw tho at waa a statute prohibiting cabinet officers under the specifications as they were last from curtailing the regular working hours of clerks. This was promptly brought to the changed. Bo far as can be learned ne nas found no one who will bid outBldo of those flnnB that use the "Nelson footer," which TO INSPECT THE NEW BRIDGE tention of the public to this matter.

July 10, Mrs. ELLEN HOHAN. A delegation from the Brooklyn League will Is said to be controlled by four factories. In that communication I Buggested the Notice of funeral later. General Humphrey explained to-day that substitution of salt water in the park lakes the Army waa having a lot of trouble in Inspect the new Wllllamsburgh Brldgo on the afternoon of July 10.

The bridge is now sufficiently completed to allow crossing on purchasing Its clothlr.g supplies at present. SLYN Entered into rest, on July 10, 1902, Mrs. E. B. JOSLYN.

widow of Charles J. Joslyn, youngest daughter of the late John M. and Susan Hleyier of Philadelphia, Pa. for fresh. This substitution would In my opinion bo one of the most beneficial improvements In Brooklyn's future.

was a handsome piano. WILLIS BROOKS. There la a big fight on between a number of foot. Tho party will meet at tne omce oi the chief engineer. 84 Broadway, Brooklyn, at 1:30 o'clock.

Votice of funeral hereafter. In Prospect Park Is a beautiful hill. In attention of Secretaries Moody and Root and the clerks in those departments will have to keep at their desks until 4 o'clock every day In the week. There Is great lamentation among the employes nt this declaration, but, however desirous Messrs. Moody and Root may be to let the clerks out at 2 o'clock, there seems to be no provision of law to authorize It.

It Is thought that the heads of other executive departments will follow the lead of Secretaries Moody and Root. Some one counted up the other day the time It Is possible for a government clerk to miss during a year, and still receive full Haven and Fair and Phila shoe manufacturers, who quarreled over a contract for furnishing 20,000 pairs of shoes. So bitter was the dispute that, to settle It, General Humphrey threW out all bids. Practically the same thing occurred in conection this hill could be constructed a splendid reservoir for the distribution of salt water delphia papeis please AY On Thursday, the 9th. at his residence, which could be pumped from the aea.

Over SOME CHURCH STATISTICS. with a large contract for the purchase of Fifty-seventh st and Fourteenth av, Borough Park South. PETER SCOTT KAY, In the 76th this reservoir could be erected a suitable building tn bo utilized as an aquarium, ob To tho Editor of the Brooklyn Eagle: khaki cloth. year of his ago. NEW BROOKLYN COMPANY.

(Special to the Eagle.) Albany, July 10 Articles Incorporating the Pettie Tire. Company of Brooklyn have been filed with the Secretary of State. The capital Btock 1h placed at and the directors for the first year are as follows: Edwin II. Er.sell, William W. Connell and Emma C.

Petite of Brooklyn. servatory, weather bureau and for adminis The news that Colonel Patten Is to be de 'Funeral cervices Saturday, the 11th at 8 Tho number of members of the principal Protestant churches In the City of Brooklyn and their Increase In the past five years, trative purposes. Salt water In the park would supply Brooklyn with what, has been tached from the department will creato some surprise. He has been on duty here P. M.

Interment private. io-2 RBY-On July 9. JAMES B. K1RBY, aged 87, the constant pursuit of the Merchants Asso since before the Spanish war, and has be are Bhown In the following table. The fig late of Ulen Crve.

ciation of New York to secure for that come one of the fixtures of the department. ures as to membership are Irom tne bagie Almanacs of 1898 and 1IWI3: I'lelatlves and friends are requested to attend city salt wster for fire extinguishing pur It Is said that when General Humphrey ar the funeral from his late residence, 412 Van poses and street and sewer flushing. Its sanitary superiority for these purposes rived here Colonel Patten asked for duty In the Philippines. General Humphrey has decided to grant this request, and will replace Buren st. Borough of Brooklyn, Saturday, 11th Inst, at 3 P.

M. Interment at Babylon, L. I. unquestioned. What wonderful varieties of fish could be propagated for the aquarium Colonel Patten with an officer who served and for the Instruction and entertainment of pay.

He figured as follows: Thirty days for vacation, thirty days sick leave, fifty-two Sundays, eight legal holidays and three or four more days because of inaugurations and deaths of government officials. This made about 123 or 124 days In the year In which no work was done, thus giving to the government clerk one day off in three. More than $30,000,000 worth of diamonds and other precious atones were brought Into the United States In the fiscal year Just Big ended. The depart- Diamond mont of Commerce and Labor, through Its Bu- Import, renu of Statistics, ANNINO On July 8. 1903, ELLEN, nee HAN.

Kaptlst OonaresAtlonallet Lutheran Methoillst PreshytTlnn Episcopalian liuten Itef.irmed Unitarian Universalis! pen. v.m. inc. 1H, IK7 1K.3T3 l6 14.735 IM 7.311 23,27 7, INI IMM 2.H42 14.t:l 17.2M 24,0 31. WK 7.3 A.7IH l.tnir, I'M 1,147, 2ltl SM S2 1.

G. A. P. VETERANS' RIFLE PRACTICE. The Twenty-third Regiment Volcran Association will have a day of special rifle practice at Crordmoor, L.

on Saturday, July 11. Trains leave the Flatbush avenue station at 12:17 and 12:30 P. M. with the general In the East. Colonel Pat ten la regarded as an exceedingly hard work the people.

Mil AN. widow of Thomas Manning, mother ing and efficient officer, and his Integrity has Last, but by no means least, the city would be free forever from that awful nest. of Mrs. Whlttaker and Ellsa Manning, telatives and friends are Invited to attend fu ever been questioned. He was a member so absolutely destructive to health and com of the eourt that sentenced Captain Carter neral from 315 Seventh st, Brooklyn, Saturday Brooklyn, July 1, 1903 fort the ever present mosquito.

for his numerous swindling operations at 9:30 A. M. thence to fit. Thomaa Aqulnaa' church, where a solemn requiem mass will be against tne government Let me conclude by again referring to the question of the mosquito extermination with offered for the repose of her soul. The announcement from Iowa to the effect CUE On Thursday, July 1908, ANN, be that President Roosevelt has informed Gov loved wife of the late James McCue.

FULTON STREET BOARD OF TRADE. The next regular meeting of the Fultoa Street Board of Trade will be held at Columbia Hall, 1.810 Fulton street, on Monday, July 13, nt 8 o'clock. MC KINLEY LODGE'S PICNIC. The afternoon and evening picnic of Mc-Klnley lOdge, Knights of Pythias, will be held at West End Park. Fulton and Van Wyck avenues, Jamaica, L.

1., on Saturday, July n. 'uneral from her late residence, 880 Pearl at. on Saturday, July 11, at 9:30 A. H.j thence which I have been associated In Brooklyn, and especially In Flatbush. First I am sorry to have to disclaim my further responsibility during the last two weekt for the prevalence of the mosquito peat, since the men granted to the Board of Health by the Department of Public Works have been withdrawn, leaving me without any meana of further pursuing their exter ernor Cumnins of High Protection that State, the ad- and vance agent of tariff x-j reform, that he (Koosc-Campaign Funds.

VB)) wolll(J fRVor a rc. Vlelnn nf lha tariff shows that the total Importations of diamonds and other precious stones In the eleven months ending with May, amounted to over I2S.000.000 In value and as the flgurr for the month of May alone were about $3,000,000, it Is evident that the June figures will bring the grand total of diamonds and other preeiotia stones up to a full $30,000,000 for the fiscal year ending June 30, lf03. to Bt. James' Pro-Cathedral, where a solemn requiem mass will be offered for the re-pose of her suul. EN TEE On July 9.

at her late residence, providing said revision was not begun until after the next Presidential election, has 144 Union av, JANE, widow of James 1. Mc Kntee. White dimity, trimmed with tucking at considerable anxiety among thoso Republican statesmen who lelatlves and friends are Invited to attend itself and lac. fuiwrul ut Urace church, Conselyea st, near signed to the duty of collecting campaign mination. I was also without oil during the last week of June.

This withdrawal occurred at the time when the heavy ralna of Ihe Inst few weekt required evon a larger force than I had to overtake the rapid germination of mosquito larvae In order to prevent their breeding. I will tay, however, that I have during the last two months' work used twenty-lhreo barrels of oil In l-orimer, on tfnturday morning, July 11, at o'clock. GEORGE JUNIOR REPUBLIC TL'i mn d0 001 hesitate to say that this announcement will work havoo with their collection i July 190J, THOMAS J. Mc Ivh.NNA, tieloveil husband of Mary Hen Bishop Potter to Dedicate New nessey. their opinion It will cause the big protected Interests of New England and tho East to close their check-books and decline to chin In for the election of a Republican President uneral on Sunday, July 12, st 1 p.

from 1 killing four different crops of larvae which Chapel. The Right Rev. Henry C. Potter, Bishop Thii is the largest Importation of diamonds and other precious stones ever shown In a single year of our commerce. Prior to 1SS7 the tolnl had seldom If ever resehed per annum.

From 1SS7 to 189S tho total gradually moved upward until It reached OHO then as rapidly fell to In in $6,750,000 In 1SU6 and Hl.fifio.ono In tho fiscal year 1W7. In lSrifl the total Increased to nearly In KM to over $14,000,000. In 1M1 to $20,000,000, In to and In will be fully $30,000,000, making the total for the year Just ended not only more than In any preceding year, but SO per cent. In excess of lftOl. double the figures of 1899 and more than six times tho averago during the period nis taio residence, uj Hudson av.

Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. Relativea and friends Invited. They have already been Informed ih.i of New York, Is to dedicate the now chapel at the George Junior Republic on the twelfth PAUL-July 9. 1905. CORNELIUS MoPAIIL.

Iirlatlvea and trim, Is are Invited to attend Hie Instant, which date will mark the eighth anniversary of the founding of the George Junior Republic, Freovllle, N. Y. funersl from his late residence, on Sunday. big financial interests of the East will have lltt'e use for them when they come around with the hat next year, and they are pathe-Ically asking where the sinews of war are to be obtained. Some of the President's friends bare of late been busily engaged In booming Governor Cummins for the Vie juiy vi, ai i v.

Bt. Marks av. ItRRY At Cape Elisabeth. July BESSIE The present Is a particularly auspicious I OH. wife of Henry L.

Merry and moment In the history of tho Interesting This rapid growth In the Importation of daughter of k. t. riuhuah of this city. presidential nomination. They are ouotlne runeiai services at Caps cCllsabeth.

Saturday, diamonds, wnne It suggests general pros perlty. also seems to Indicate the develon Cummins as saying that he would accept the I July II, P. M. 10-8-faau Domination If ine party leaders deemed It little republic. The work has grown splendidly from modest beginnings of eight years ago, but with the Increase In the cumber of the friends and benefactors of the work, Its needs have constantly kept pace, so that INKIN-On July FANNIE, beloved Wlft of expedient that he should tako the second Teter Rankin.

mont of a comparatively new Industry In the Tnlted States, the cutting of diamonds. The total Importations nf diamonds alone In the eleven months ending with Mny amounted to $24 oon.nno and of other I uneral services at 733 Hancock st, Saturday, 8 P. M. Interment at convenience of family! had they been allowen tn germinate Into the dying mosquito would have given evidence sum, -lent to prove this one of the worst mosquito years ever known. Thirty-seven thousand cubic feet of permanent drainage have been dug In the meadows.

One hundred and fifteen pools, some of them at much as fifty feet In diameter, which have never before been emptied of their abominable fresh, or brackish, stagnant water contentt, and which were dangerous alike to health and sweetness, and have always been covered with a green scum, have, by tblt drainage, been transformed Into clean aalt water poolt, connected with the daily tldea, and full of fish. They no longer ttlnk to heaven. Flatbush hat been after all comparatively free from mosquitoes. I say thlt advisedly and atsert that tho man who does not know thla It Ignorant of the turroundlng condition! or careless In hla observation. Th's hat been one of the most prolific mosquito seasons I havt ever known.

The people of Brooklyn do not know. In all probability, that down on the meadows Just beyond the belt, over which oil has been spread ahmg the margin of the residential portion) In order to protect that portion from mosquitoes, these pests on several occasions during the tummer have been to thick that they actually gave color to the atmosphere. place on the ticket Out the very suggestion of Cummins hss greatly stirred up the high protection organs, and Ihe American Protective Tariff League will, It Is predicted, nip his boom In the bud. Before leaving Washington Senator Aid- the republic Is still In need of annual contributors, or better still, of those who can lEA-On Thursday. July 9.

at her residence, 188 precious atones. $4,500,000. Of he $24,000 Mimmlt st, MARiiAKCT, widow ef Martin 000 worth of diamonds Imported, $10(KiflOOO afford to liberally endow It. From time to shea were unrut diamonds. This total ef $10,000.

I eiativea and friends are invited to attend the rich of Rhode Island, chairman nf Ihe finance 000 of uncut diamonds is a large Increase compared with the Importations 0f uncut solemn renulem services at St. Stephen' committee, and a leading authority in Wash diamonds In preceding years, the figures for I Church. Summit and Hlcke ets, Saturday morn, Ing. July 11. at lojo o'clock, Funeral private.

eleven months of the year isnz being I5.SO0,- I It Is requested that no Dowers be sent. 9. pen, while for the eorreapondlng months of time Important buildings have been contributed by those Interested. Mrs. Clinch of Oeorgla hat Just erected the chapel to be uaed for the religious work of the place.

It I to be dedicated by Bishop Potter, but with the understanding that It will be always used for union work. As yet It hat not been possible to maintain a regulur chaplain, but the aid of those Tlsttlng the place has alwavt been denended lltl'LKSB-At South Orange. N. on Friday, 1900 II waa snd for the correspond Ing months of 1898 but a little over July 10, FAN MB Cl'RTIS OLIVER, be. ington on all tariff matters.

Informed the Eagle torrespondent that he would not oppose tariff revision at the proper time, providing such revision was made by the Republicans. It is understood that Senator Aldrlch agrees with the President that the proper time to begin will be one year from the first of next December, or during the abort session of the Flftv-elathth fnneroa. 000 000. I loved wife of James surplepe, in her list year. I unerel services at her late residence, 821 Wll The diamonds Imported are divided by the Tlitreau of Ptntlstlcs Into groups, I Inughby av, Brooklyn, Monday, July II, at 8:30 "IMamonds uncut, Including miners' on for conducting religious services with such assltlsnce at the teachers and helper! Of course the extreme high protectionists glarlers' snd engravers', not set" and IHKR-On Thursday.

July 1n, FRANK like Charles A. Moor, the head of the Amor- "diamonds cul hut not set I STEVEN rSHi.R, In the 4Mb year of his age. ir.n fpnr.etiw. Tavier The vnlue nf diamonds uncut, Including I uneral services Friday evening, July to, miners', glaziers', Imported In eleven p. at Christ Episcopal Church, earner I Clinton and Harrison ete.

Interment East months ending with Mny, hts grown from two and one-third millions In 1898 to ten millions In 1903. while that of diamonds cut I HaVen. Conn. can rnuor. neretnrore these have been held In Ihe school house, and now there Is great rejoicing that a place has been provided exclusively for the highest work, which the republic ran carry on, namely, lit spiritual life.

It It Intended thnt three service! shall he held each Sunday and one on Wedneaday evenings. The latter will frequently ht conducted by tho citlsens. (Savannah papers please eopy. LSOS-At Brooklyn, Thursday evening, July but not set has grown from four million in 1898 ti. fourteen millions In these Even the Utile I was anie io no wnn nv men In two months' work It ample proof of the absolute possibility of the complete obliteration of the pett.

Portlont of water which 1 olb'd and In which the mosquitoes were killed have ant bred any larvae again Inside of tlx weeks. My observation la that the mosquito dnet not live more than a week or ten dayt. That they aro likely only under exceptional conditions to go more than 1,000 yards from their breeding ground except In pursuit of men or animals and on both they are carried long distances. The fearful rapidity with which they breed (each female laying about 4O0 rggt at a decelvet the careless observer. It 19, the Rev.

JOHN CHURCH WOOD WILSON figures bring In each rate for a period of I seed 41. i rvues of funeral st the nome of the family, eleven months. Thla Inference that the rutting of dla I JO Strong place. Sunday evening, July 13, a mnnds la becoming an Important Industry In "7 win hifi mis programme. They are bitterly opposed to tariff revision of any sort, whether under the guise of reciprocity or by a direct reduction of Ihe schedules of the Dlngley act.

They will undoubtedly serve notice on the Republican campaign managers that If Ihe programme for tariff revision la not dropped they will make no contributions for next year's campaign. The "gland Patters" have already succeeded In Inducing Governor Cummins to moderate his tariff reform plank, but the Governor has served notice that he will not recede another Inch, snd that he and hit friends consented to modify Ihe tariff plank this year only upon President Roosevelt's distinct promise to Oovernor Cummins that he would favor a revision of the tariff when Congress convenes a year from next December. The Impression Is growing In political clr- I o'clock. the I'nlted States, which Is suggested by I lladi lphls and Washington papers please eopy. the rapid Increase in tne importation of un llJinN-Joppa Lodge No.

Ml, T. and A. cut diamonds. Is strengthened by the fact Ilirethren: You are hereby summoned to attend that tho census statistics "lapidary work" show that the total value of production of A PROGRESSIVE EUCHRE. A large number of people enjoyed a progressive euchre, held In Hart's Hall, 1,0.10 Gates avenue, last night, despite the warm weather.

Tho affair waa under Ihe ausplcet of the Btuyveaant Heights Social Club, an organltailon well known In tho neighborhood. The prlzet offered were useful as well at handtomo, and Ihe contest for their pot-session was spirited. Ian emergent communication at the moms, xaturday. July II. st I P.

to pay last trio cannot he too widely known that mosqtilloet cannot breed tavo In water, In order that the Inpldnry work In 1900 was over against less than half a million In 1890 and lute of respect to memory of llro. JAMES r. I WILSON. Jr. thnt the value of tho materials used In people may be intliiceo io prevent any accumulations of water, however small, around their houtet, 1 assert with considerable JOHN C.

THOMAS, Master, Borne don't believe In mermaids now. But, hush! If you will come with me, And never tell a soul, I vow I'll show you some, betide tbe sea. work In 1900 was over $4,250,000 against lest I'llllsm H. Riley, Secretary. man tzM.n'w in ivm.

a. B. confidence that with proper meatures we i.

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

Pages Available:
1,426,564
Years Available:
1841-1963