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i SMeVl and rn lij' the home signal, which lool at Manner,' l,,Vj feet hcynnd the first atRnnl. Train .Vo. 9 was ataridlni: W feet beyond the dancer slRn.il, hldi disregarded. In addition Knslneer Salirorder ran kr the flsg-.-ns.ii of trnln So. i, 'hn was staaftdlnar nildivnv between the rn utliiri- euy and dancer elunnl ami hn hid, as j an extra precaution owing In the roc, lighted a fusee, wiilr'i wan hnrnlnj? In full view as the enclneer iJfM, '"X thorough Inspection of the Work signals develop t :i e ' wcru In perfect condition." RIDE OF THHCE MONTHS 18 KILLED ON HONEYMOON. 'Sheriff Julius llnrliururr nun imtl fled to. dnj' that i deputy sheriffs shield had been found In the Trek, From the number on the shield It wan discovered It liolonurd tu William It, Wall, a passenger on t)ic train, who was removed after the accident to the Klmlra Hospital, not serlnusly Injured. One of the miul Mllirtle inrlriVnla In the disaster It the drath of Mrs. Lillian Reynolds of No. Sit Hiencr street, Ilrooklyn, who wns on her honeymoon. Bhe was married secretly three months ago. Cleorgo Iteynolds, the husband, aad hit bride were glove workers In the Kaiser Knitting Mills U No. 2o llroa.l war, Brooklyn. They fell In love with on another as soon ns they met. Thrlr courtship, although lntd In the sombre, uaromantlc setting of n factory, wan full of happiness for them. The young couple, both about twenty-six years old, decided to marry without letting nny one In on the secret. Early In April, they slipped over lo the City Clerk's Ofllco and procured a lleenie. JThey wero married the same dy, bylhe Hev. Father Thomas Du bin, psstor of the Church of Ht. John the Baptist. Their msrrlago was not ' known until a few weeks ngo, when f'Jarry Doyle, the bride's brother, learned u acciaentany. .Mr. anu .urs, iteyiiuuis ' decided to go on their honeymoon, Tu.es- ! 'day. They wero Klvcn a rousing send- . oC by many ''lends at the station. In .View hours word was received In c . Brooklyn that the bride wan dead. She died In her husband's arms. Dr. Mary a. McKee, a Newark physi cian, was Injured and removed to the Elmlra Hospital, Bhe lived at No. 4M 'Ugh street, Newark. .Theodore Case of No. 923 Iledford avenue, Williamsburg, received a tele ram last evening from his son, Arthur D. Case, who was with his wife on the wrecked train. It stated that both were safe and practically uninjured. ,; Morris Eysmann, ills brother Henry aad Julius 8. Anton, a cousin, are among ! injured. They all live at No. 317 Beacon avenue, Jersey City, and loft borne Wednesday night for a few days' trip to Niagara Kails. As soon as no recovered from the shock Morris Kys I DEAD AND DYING ROBBED AS THEY LA Y IN FIELDS. i ffilice Admit Bodies Were Despoiled Amid General Horror of Scenes Following Wreck Stories - of How Many K . CORNING, N. T July 5.-Wlth twen- ' ... . Kk.!.. ..m.lnlHI, .,,,l,lanlfl.l UVUIL. l.llllltllllll, W,,.V. .-. f Sn4 with many of the Injured In an Mtrsmely dangerous condition, the lior- ref of yesterday'a rear end collision on the Lackawanna ttallrosd continues to grow. Many of the bodies whose Iden tity has not been learned will probably never be recognized, so terribly mutl f Uted are they. Thu death list to-day ,wu forty-one. In addition Nellie Hchan da! of Newark, N. J and Jumes (Irlf . '(Ha wsra declared by doctors to be .' .dying and six others were not expected 't recover. Tha wreck was tho worst In the his tory of the road whose boast previous ly was that only two passengers had ' hssn Killed on U alnce 19Co. The road , oMelals blame Engineer Hchroeder. He "" C"1.0i,,ra,r ,-!'Nrfore.m;'o'(M: lt 3 crashed through tho standing Hurrah) 1 ,0 bn tlmt of Mr, iicmar Catt.i. No 0) llBltsd. The company otriclaW say riprlng street, Morrlslown, N. J. snai me aemapnore a mne rusinni was C,aa eianger. mat ine oiuch 111 wniuu '.tk limited waa stalled was also set . sagainai 10. 11 ann mat a iisgman jrom ( the limited tried to stop Schroeder half , s 'sglle from the scene of tho disaster, chroeder says tlist the distant sis i Ml was at clear and that he raw 113 "' Mgrnaei. He Insists that the fog which nasi welled In from the Chemung Illver ' was so dense that It waa alnost Impoi- I' abe to see the track a train's length ' tli'sad. The police admitted to-day that bodies i'Jsaf lbs dead anl dying were robbed as 'iHltlr lay In the open fields beside the V.WUk. Coroner Smith hss detailed nr. tosn special ofllcers to aid Deputy IMrifl Sullivan In protecting the prop, 'tarty of tbs Victims which was ploktd up Ctraai th wreckage and stored near the K tarWeporary morgue. ,.1 EN CRUSHED. r Tha story of the wreck, like others , .wlai have recently preceded It. was ,. atM of steel cafs as havens of refuge aad wooden cars as death ttaps. None ' t the dead were In the steel cars. Tho treat solid train cut through the wood ;,am stay coach and Tullman like a knira through cheese, but the steel Pullman , ears and the steel day coaches held fast. Ttoey wars bent out of aha do with tha ;L , terriflo force of the blow, but they hold isuei ana iiistr occupants were injuted, 3r BaH killed. Representatives of the Htute Public errtce commission and of the Inter- f " Uts Commerce rominlsslon are on the fipawid personally Invosttgatlng the f( .wrack. All of the survivors igreo that . were was little warning. The great r', ; swilted was standing quietly on the rails ' irii the crew of the freight that had VI' stalled It were trying to get It onto the side track so that the road to lliiflnln might be cleared, Train No, 11, running mors than CO miles an hour, crashed nto It ao suddenly that some of the uaangrrs who had hern standing on rear platform did nut hive time tu NBM) and were crushed to dearii even t tny tried iTfcs wreck took place on a curve that .4ds a stretch of ten miles of straight lo msk, whl.ih Is a favorite point for en L'mTt to make up lost time, and No. It iaanSai tin alrenllnn to this rule. 'iM,TM fact that news of the disaster 1iad 4,'naH- been generally circulated yesterday Ma aetouni or tno nonaay itnuouotuaiy ,;ikassisBtsuior tne large number or mi .jaUsslLmajtf!. drsd. Comparatively fen fHsiafswtind relatives of supposed vie NsM have arrived In town, The scenes 1st" tho various Improvised morgues. kateraver. are heartrending with anxious HMands and fathers seeking word of 3mtmtoM loved ones and pasting from IX,, sssrswner 10 sirrucner. . vTTtsj'.ttWis most pathetic case perhaps was Mkjt U Wllilaat R. Laird of Buffalo, minn telegraphed his parents: "I am ssfe and think Henry and Jullns are also." I'ysmnnn added that he had been slightly Injured and was going tu the CnrnlnfT ltojpltal. The .Mrs. Nellie flchandel, reported among the Injured, Is believed to be Mrs. Nellie Douglass of Ferguson street, Newark, hi started Wodneday for rnn.iiln In look for her husband, who I left her several weeks ago. Mrs. I.ticy Hetloduentn of No. ill . Hsxlcr street was well known for her ' work among the pour of her nelghlxir- I hood. A requiem mass was sung for Imr this morning In tho Church of the .Most Trcr'niis Mood. Charles llniiKllcn of No. I! rnloni j place, Ilrooklyn, was n director In the Arl'ton Klr'etrlciil fuiiipiiny and tho i J. Wltckes Co., both jf No, IM William 1 street. I tieorgo lilrd was a tinsmith at No. W Tenth street. Ilrooklyn. Ilo was on a vacation with his daughter-in-law and her two children. OIRL TELLS OF HER ESCAPE FROM DEATH. John Slimmer Jr., whose father nnd mother were killed, formerly was a re porter on a New York morning news paper. Ills father was a wealthy fur nltuie dealer In Kcranton. The son now has a dig shoe store there. Kdlth A. Hess, who was killed, Is a member of a wralthv Urnnan famllr of Hcranton. Henri Knlen Is an nrllst of No. MS, Carlton avenue, Ilrooklyn, He and his sister, Marie, wero tin tho wrecked pas senger trnln. Henri was slightly hurt, but Mies Fa I co escaped. .She said to day. "I Imagine many were killed In their sleep. I had been nwnkn for some time before tho crash nnd when It came our car was crumpled up Into a mass of wreckage befnie 1 realised what had happened, Tho car seemed to tremble after Ihe shock. I occupied a lower berth, my brother the upper, I saw that his berth hud fallen partly from the wall and he was pinned In It, and that It was gradinilly settling on him. lie was unconscious and I could not reach htm. My knee was pinned In, hut I managed lo get It lonsii and look out a window, "I saw two men nnd called to them. The window was broken and there was Jagged gluts, but I did not think about that, The mon helped me out nnd I reached the ground by stopping on one i man's shoulders and balancing myself with his hand. Women who had got outside by this time were screaming and were aswered by screams from the wreckage, tho cries extending almost tho entire length of tho train i Hho was trylm: to llnd her brother when reacuera camo bringing him out, only slightly Injured. t'p to yesterday the Delaware, Lacka wanna and Witern had had only ono accident In which pnsienscrs were killed since WI. About six months ago two members of Vogel's Minstrel troupe were killed In a collision near lllnghamton. In the HW accident only one man was killed. Met. Death, whoso entire family, consisting of his father, his wife, five-year-old daughter andtwo-year-old son, wero blotted out by the catastrophe. .Mr. Laird, who Is employed In a Iluffalo printing estab. Ilshmcnt, left that city last night know. Ing only that his father, George Lnlrd, had been killed. He had received no Information of the fate of the other members of his family and visited the local mormlPH U'ltll , rrn ... h V.I. that hn had not bern left entirely alone. I At tho first nlaCB visited l,n fnim.1 hi. little boy and girl laid out side by side ?hwtt.'ffier II' ffVwJa "X' the winding sheet. At tho second , morgue he found tho body of his wife 1 beside that of his aged father. The ' family had taken advanlaen nf hnll.l.v . f.To7 GeoVge lalrs rail! , xoursion rates ror n reunion In lluf roan trip in sixty years, wiiuntn U hroMer, ruglnter of Ihe txptoss trnln that crnahed Into the paasenger train, Is nt his home at Kl inlrn tindK- the care of physic-Inn THE IDENTIFIED DEAD. AJUTSTUOlrO, WILLIAM X Wo. 10:0 rark avenue, Xoboksn, if. J. AUMSTEOKO, Mrs. WILLIAM M. HBANSBB, CHABtrS, no. 13S William street, Mew York- Olty. OATTO, Mrs SBMAB, Morrlstowm. V. J. DYAjT, HSSMAir, Newark, ft. 3. CKWZlff, Mrs. O, B Chicago. rSISOMAW, BAKAX, Wsw York. XXgS, Mrs. BOITX A Boraatoa, Va. IVDY, Br, BLLIB YAXDBXBLIOX. of lisllsvus XosplUl, Hew York) boms, ntfolk, Va. JOXEg, Mrs. AVVA KILL, oraatoa. a. LAIXS, QSOXOII, Vo. IBS Teatb street, Brooklyn, X. Y. LAUD, MABEL, aged flva years. Xo. ISO Tenth street, Brooklyn, X. Y. laird, VKILIF, aged two years. Xo. IBS Tenth street, Brooklyn, X, Y, LAIRD, Mrs. WILLIAM B,, Xo. 180 Tenth street, Brooklyn, X. Y. MWASi, svmyh. colored, Xo. KM Oak strest, Xewark, if, j. UOVAX, ABTONIO, Bcrantoa, Pa. 2TBL30N, AMTOW, OroTa street, Jsr. sey City, rnATT, r. C, lio. 10 Xnnt avenue, Buffalo 1 travelling salesman. PATOU3KI, M iminlgraut, ticketed to Battalo. rUAVELOWBXI, OEQ1NA T BUS- sta. KBYMOLSB, Mrs. LILLIAX, Xo. ail 3peucsr street, Brooklyn, X, Y, BDTTEDUOATl, Mrs. Luoy, Xo, 133 Baxter streot, Kivt York Olty, RrciTH, JAMS, colored, Pullman porter, Ilewark, X, J. OOKULTK, D BREST, Buffalo. TAIT, JO KIT B Xo. 818 TUty-fourth strset, Brooklyn, X. Y, ZIMMOR, JOMX, Beranton, Ba. I B7MXBX, Mrs. JOXX, Boraatoa. Ba. THE INJURED. At the Klmlra Hospital: )lli. Mar) rtrennaa, No. IDS lllsb atreat, New. aik. N, J., irab.tilj mortallr Injurs J, William II. Wall, raroli-aeieoln elrctt, New York Clt), allghU) uurad. Mre, Mar; MiKee, No. 439 lllrb attest, New. atk, S. , alta-htlr liurt. I.lueoln Drone, No. V St, Jamea tlace, Dul. lalo, allslitlj Injuied. Iloeeo .owl, No, 212 WlUos street, Scrantoo, l'j Injurl.a rot aerloui. Harry I., Faho, .No. Cl.l Carlton atcnue, llrook 1)0. N, Y . siluii Injuiira. Mlas Marie, 1'alco, No, 013 Carlton tiaaue, llruoaDii, N, 11'., Injull.a ilUnt, Mr. and lavs, yetaldrrroa anl ehUlTliwa, atl alllhlll burl. V Mra. E. awntaL Jlofcwer. .a 101s till, wjunas set First Picture Taken Together Of the Democratic Candidates i it ' BBBBBM BBsBBBBBsV MJM "IssbbbBBBBbI JBaf BBX..t Wi BBfeaBBBB' fcrfW , 4 1 8888888 '83'jBBBf BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBbBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBPBBBBBBI Bfl''HBVaBBBBBBBBBBVfBBBBBBBBBBBBBB bflsjatfPlHN ' 'ITw&Br'lH, bbbbbbY , MVP LllJr bbbbW 1w ft This photograph of Woodrow Wilson In IndlannpollH April, 1D11, when Mr. ... . ..,,.. ..,,, But i .umiv.uwi. a.,i.u?uuion. lln. E. T, Ptnlof, Yoskfn, paloful tut out oirt.l Injurln. At tho Corning Hospital! Robert J, An.trrmn, No. 210 I'uns trrtt. Ktwitk, M, J nut wtlaiialr Injured. IVult Ailsms, Stm Votk City, Injuil.. illibt. Mr. and Mrs. Jk, 1). Csm. No, Ml ltc.Ifjr.1 , Urookljn. N, V., ant sirlouilr lnurtd. Dr. Oturif IxJtl.rhtiu. IntriM it ll.lliru Hat ttll, dltctiiried fioia liuipltil and st Cutelnf U-Xtl. Usild Cotltn, Bamton, I't., sot nlou.lj Is. Juni, Motrii Ejtmtnn, No, 3IT Huron ittouf, Jrrwj Cl(r, N, J not Mrtoiulr Iniurri. Jtm.i Oriffln, No. 1V7 Ut)(ltl strrst, .N trk, N, J,, cannot aurrhe, MtnlluMWr, finnaa of eirt mla, Elatra, llljlilty InJurM, Htrnan Hart. Klmlta, (trloudr tmrt. Emma n. Ilawkln., llruoklm. allghtly hurt. A, H. Inerlialf, Nj. 10. Normal airnue, llu filo, rlliht tnJurlM. Una Krlilrr, Umlra, illjlillr Injurnl. Chailra ltrnio. No, S2J Kltlitti atcnut. New York CI If, Injuries alliU. nillUn NaiMjolr. No. 148 Hllilh axnui. llrookDn, N, Y InJarlra not frt3ui. Mr. and lln. E. 1). Ntalrr. No. 1303 HnJltjr arrniif, Ntw Vork t'ltx. allihtl injured, (Icttrud I'rtttwn, New Vurk Olr. Injuria alkrht. ttlitl E, Ittrnolds, Ilrooklyn, dlsraaried from hon.llil anl u liotal. Krank 11hdI.1i, Elmlra, allilit lojuriei. Oiorita Il.x'nallt, Elmlra, minor IriJurlea. Nellie Sctiaiulcl, No, 1C7 l'ruiua atrrct, Newark, N, J rann.it aurrT, WUltam H.li'UIa, Uuffalo, dlicUrrad from boa. , Mlrhwl pital anI At lie or friend. jluratl, No. 123 Ilaitar street. Ne Vmk City, oolr alUMIr burl. .J- "."I""?' No- m r"",ulh t'rtn,.n, mere mo In. Juries, wtu rurorir. M. II. Tajlor, ramUa. allrhtlr hurt. Thomu It. WlnJlake, LlnJebrook, L. I slight. V curt. Frank WaHen. No. :W N.vth Park slrret. uX!" ,J"ri" Cathrrine Ja'iuo of Itroskljrn, badlr hurt. Taken to Iluffalo; .Mr. ami Mri. Marlln T. rierolns, Hutfaln. Panlcl lhau. No, 4M K-.t Klality-atxtH street. New York, ba.Ur t.mlael aUut htiia and Jess. Jnn,)i Kutr. No, ;( US Kwt Hlitrenth .met. New York, ballr biuianl alout ld,a and lata ami probabl will low ils'.it uf una eje. Frank Wlilalon, Ni'.i York, Mr. and Mil. lUiJamln llabat, ,nrj City ll.VUU, N. J. 1 V, Waterman. New York C'itj, ton U, Jone., Talla'tisa. Ala. William a). Klalierl), Iluffalo. llr, ami Mia. J, .MeKee, New York C'ltr. Fred Miner. Crc llllli. Urooklys, N. Y. THE UNIDENTIFIED DEAD. Woman, with gold pin marked f. J. A. iwn; bond ring marked L. 11. Woman, wlin gold pendant on chain, amethyst setting and three pearl pen dants. Large negress, about IS years of age, wearing elouse dress, earrings and ring on one hand. Girl, about thres years, white dress, Msn of U or Jv years, black hair, striped suit and diamond atlok pin. Woman, blue dress and band ring. Ilaby, with pink dress, blue ribbon on right wrist, heart-shaped locket. Woman, about twenty, wearing gold locket on neck; gold pin, bearing "B. J. A., lS0i" gold signet ring; wore ring with two green stones; heavy block hulr. Man, twenty years, with brown hair; bluo and white tie; gold ringer ring, with threo red atones. Man, thirty years, with rod mustnoho-, brown hair; bank psss book bearing painw Marlon Urybrcwekl; black and white atrlped suit; evidently Polish. Mun, thirty-five, with light brown hair; finger ring with red stones, Woman, twenty to twenty-live, brown hair; gold neck chain with penrl pendant; heavy gold bracelet; diamond ring on left hand with cluster of many diamonds with iu'o ted stones on right hand. Man, thirty to thirty-five years, dark hair, stocklly built, gold signet ring with initials "l. J." Woman, twenty to twenty-five years, neavy dark red hair, five front teeth In upper Jaw heavily gold filled, diamond earrings, five nnger rings on left hand and one on right hand. Mun, thirty years, brown hair, small dark brown mustache, heavy gold ring with Inscription badly worn "M, a. to V. P., 'U:' HEAVY FOG HID THE STALLED TRAIN. Tho excursion crowd on Ihe limited, bvund for Niagara Vails, was to large, two engines hail been put on. Jack Dennlsori wss at the throttle of the first. A heavy fug had begun orcepllig up from tl 1 Chemung Illver, and cov ered a large part of the vallsy about THE EVENING WORLD, t J $. and Thomas H. Marshall was taken Wilson was In tho Indiana capital . . ujuipici, 6 o'olock when Dennlson saw "by the semaphore that something waa wrong ahead. Conductor Horace Staple ran up the track and saw a freight train had pulled a drawhead and was stalled, Dennlson went forward with his engine detached to noso the freight up a siding and leave the HufTalo track clear. Sud denly between the puffs of the straining locomotives could bo heard the hum of an approaching train. A few of the passengers of the lim ited who had dressed and gone out to the Iracai to see what was wrong were strolling, smoking, but most of the scores aboard the limited were usleep. The next that those on the ground knew, tho glare of a headlight cut through tho fog. Almost before they could scramble, tumble or roll down the embankment out of the way, there was a crash as the big locomotive of the express, with tho momentum of ten heavily loaded cars behind It, cut through the limited. The curvo on which the collision occurred ends a stretch of ten mllei of straight track, and the express, as all trains do, was going at topmost speed, estimated at sixty-five miles an hour. Tnatantly tho day coaches parted In the middle, and the 100 tons of steel locomotive crumpled up the steel Pull man and threw it off tho track and came to a stop In the midst of the wreckage, with the green carpet of the Pullman draped about Its pilot. It was then 6.3;, and less than halt an hour after the limited had been stopped by the freight. Forty-ono had been killed or so Injured they soon died, nnd more than that number lay Injured In the wreckage, many of them pinned beneath the tlmbes and twitted steel, ENGINEER 3AY6 HE SAW NO SIGNAL. Engineer William Hchroeder of lluf falo, at the throi.tla of the express train. Jumped beforo the crash came. With a badly wrenched shoulder and many cuts and bruises, he sat on a fence near the wreck In 11 dnxe. He claims he saw no riasm.m and the fo prevented his rending the signals set agalnta; his train. The first he saw of the limited, he said, was the tall lights only a short distance away as ho roundrd the curve. Trainmen, on thu o twr hand, say a flagman had been sent half a mile back, a semaphore was set at danger nnd that the limited was given every protection. An official statement lasued last night declares that Patrick Lane, the flag man of the limited, had been sent back along the track for a distance of half a mile Immediately after the limited was stopped. The semaphore, 1(0 yards In the rear and just st tho head of the curve, had both arms set at "Danger, while the signal standard a mile further away had one arm aet at "Caution," the statement continues. SJrvlvors have been found who substantiate at least part of this declaration. The express train was scheduled to run thirty minutes behind the limited snd the latter had been standing for that length of time when the other's eleotrio headlight suddenly bored Its way tnrough tks fog. HOW VOUNQ BELLEVUE DOC TOR MET DEATH. Dr. Kills Vanderallce Ivey died at Corning Hospital under dramatlo cir cumstances. He ! a native of Huffolk, Va,, and bjtli a bachelor of arts and master of arts from the University of Virginia, taking his doctor's degree at the University of Pennsylvania two years ago In the tame class with Dr, George Lotterhos of Crystal Bprlngs, .miss, ror me past year both men have been Internes at Hellevue Hospital Ivey having made all arrangements to leave there July 17 to go Into partner ship at Newport News wltb his unole, Dr. ueorge vanaersnce. ivey and Lot' terhos were on their way for a fare well outing together at Niagara Falls. Just before they started I-otterhos suggested that they be sure to carry with them some mark of Identification, and Ivey's last action at the Hellevue dormitory was to put a packet of let ters bearing his name into his pocket When Ivey reached Corning Hospital a piece of his skull the else of one's hand hud been torn away, Dr. Bwaln told him that his condition was grave, "Oh, I'll get by," he replied wltb smile on his twitching Hps. Dr. Bwaln again told him that hi ebanoai wsra) si lam, and wksa Ivsy re- FRIDAY, JULY pealed that ha would "get by" Swain changed his tactics, "The only chance you have," he said, "Is to go onto the operating tab! at once." Ivey was silent a moment, then the -gtnH-swre back. Wu. s Ute," he said. "I was WMkfl-I'm not going to make- It" ".gfTWVrie WOMEN AND NEVER V; ' Ml NO ME." ' William :. Wall of No. 1420 fitebblns avenue, the Bronx, waa In tho upper berth. No. , In tha Ksthonla, when the collision awakened him. He la a heavy man and the plunge from tha berth broke his left shoulder. "I had gone to sleep In my union emit," he said, "and when I got to my feet and found that something was wrong with my arm I buttoned It up In Ida my suit and sot out to see what I could do. And I found plenty. "The tangle of wreckage that had be'- tbe rear of on ear was a won- derfnl thing to see, Ziegi aad arms aad bodies were stloklasr out from It luts the pieces M timbers that wsra all "I don't think sny one of us was par ticularly excited, ann -rhile there waa no one giving orders we worked to gether as If we had rehearaed. It was a couple of houra before I found time to look up my clothes." Wall said when he and others reoched Dr. Ivey the latter said: "Don't mind flattening above his head each perilous me. hut get the women out." second. Wall. '"11 , !vl,, who says he I. a preacher when l"iit $ n 'ir,rr,WM rr,c,,,d by to have his shoulder set. Then he Jm,g0 Mulqucen In General Sessions to caught the Lackawanna Limited andlevn months In the penitentiary for went on to Niagara Falls, whither ha Presenting fake accident claims to the naa Been oouna. In Fletcher's undertaking rooms side by side He the bodies of Mr. nnd Mrs. Charles Drandlos of New York. They were married yesterday and were on their honeymoon. The bride of a day 1 was killed outright. Her young h..m band died from Injuries after he hadl,,one "' wh'r they "make little told hl story nnd cried frantically for onc out of 11,0 bB ones." Tho march his bride. Mrs. Lillian Iloynolds of lead under tho lofty shadow of the Drooklyn, who was hilled, wai also a i Qucemrbcro ntldgo's central span, which bride. REPORT VICTIM'S WIFE AS DEAD, BUT SUE IS IN HER BROOKLYN HOME. Heports from the Corning train wreck that Charles Ilrandes, a wealthy manu facturer of electrical appliances, with offices at No. 1U William street, and his "bride" had been killed, brought both shock and amazement to the Ilrandes home at No. 12 Koltom place, Drooklyn. Ilrandes lived at that address with his wife and four children, nnd Mrs. Ilrandes declared, after reading tho reports from Corning, that thero must be some mistake. Mr. Ilrandes was a director of the Arltton Klectrlcal Company and one of Ihe J. Wilkes niectrlcal Company. H eft his home. Wednesday, to go to Buffalo on business, My husband, eald Mrs, Ilrandes In her Ilrooklyn home, "made frequent trips on business, nnd there waa noth- ng unusual about his going on Wed nesday, I feel this report about his being accompanied by a bride must be dreadful mistake. His name must have been confused with the name of aome other man. He has always; been what sv husband and a father ohould be. I have never bad the least causo to suspect him," A friend of tho family went to Cor ning to-day to Identify the body nnd unravel the mystery concerning the dentlty of the woman reported as Mr. Brandes' "bride" ONLY FOUR ARE SAVED FROM ONE CAR, SAYS ONE OF THE SURVIVORS. George V. Walters of No. fA North, Park street. East Ornngo and Miss Rosalie Qussncr of Willow street. Hloomrtcld, who were riding In the sec ond to the last coach of the wrecked Delaware, Lackawanna & Western flyer, which was wrecked at Qlbs.on's Narrows, yesterday morning returned to their homes to-day, somewhat shaken up by their experience, but unhurt be yond a few bruises. They were both awake at the time of the collision, to which fact, In great part, they probably owe their escape. Only four persons In tho tar got nut with their lives according to Walters. "There did not seem to bo any fort, so far as 1 could an," declared Walton. 'There was only n henvy mist. When the crash tame 1 reached up nnd grub bed ihnld of tho luggage rack. I got hold of Miss Uuusner at the same time and helped her to crawl through n, win dow and crawled through nfter her. 1 wns bruised some, hut she was hardly hurt at nil, When w got outtldo I heard aomeone crying 111 the car, so I went back and brought out a woman and her baby. The woman was shaken up considerably, but the baoy wasn t hurt a lilt. We were the only folic saved from that car, I had to crawl over bodies to get In and out of It, 'The only thing' that prevented more damage being done, was the, attaching of an extra coach at Blnghamton. This car served to hold up the locomotive as It smashed Into us, and prevented It from ploughing fartehr Into the other enrs that contained more people." Cleric Stricken With Fa real ya Is. C. Fred fichott, who has spent fifty of hla seventy-six years as a clerk In the office of Weasel, Duval 4 Co. on Pier M at the foot of Hedgwlek street. Brooklyn, was overcome by a stroke of paralysis In front of (he Kings County Court-House this afternoon, He was carried Into the Court-House, whence an ambulanbe from the Holy family Hospital took him awjy to a cot, Physicians do not believe he will re cover. Brooklyn Hank Donates Slook, AMI ANY, July S.-Supt. Van Tuyl of the State Uanklng Department, has ap proved an application of the citizens' Trust Company of ilrooklyn for permis sion to increase Its capital stock from twi.neo to $l,OfiO,0(V). This company rn- cently absorbed the Hroadway Itank of Uiuoklyti. Nnthan H. Jonns Is president and James II, Conroy secretary. Hupt. Vun Tnyl also approved an In crease of the capital stork of tho Oys ter nay nank from IM.OOfl to IM.fKW. The Ideal Summer Beverage Is LIPTON'S TEA ROT OK XOID. 5, 1912. CON VI CI SCAMPERS UP PIER OF BRIDGE AS BULLETS WHINE Climbs 135-Foot Tower of Queensboro Span as Guards Rain Missiles About Him. Dave Lewis, a negro prisoner In the penitentiary on Illackwell's Island In tho Kast Itlver, matched strong chances of quick death against hla liberty early to-day when he climbed like a cat up the face of the steel central pier of tho Queeneborough Bridge, bullets from tho revolvers of the prison guards below him metropolitan Street Railway. Ha had only entered on tho nrat leg of his "bit" when ho mado his sensational attempt at escape to-day. At eight o'clck the guards lined up Lewis with about thirty ' t V. - ..-I . I. - . i uiuci iu,uiii-i. ,ui ma inarcn IO ma rests on the Island In the middle of the river. Directly under the bridge span and standing against the steel lattlred piers Is a tool box. As tho procession of striped prisoners passed this box Lewis managed to allp out of Jlnft. dive Into! the box nnd let tho cover down on his ,,IH,.I l.ln. ,l...n.l (l vesta niniuut uliii va vill. at STARTS TO CLAMBER UP 135 FOOT PIER. There, In tho cramped quarters, he made a quick shift of clothing. Off went the striped Jacket and trousers. Ho was wearing beneath tha garb of shame a coat and trousers of his own secret devising. The coat was made of three towels not a sartorial masier. piece, to be sure, but at least It nas not striped. The trousers wero cut out of blankets; they looked like the mack Inaws of the Canadian lumbermen. A little cap, fashioned out of two stocks, displaced the striped headpiece Lewis wore. The change was mado In a minute, the procession of convicts continuing, meanwhile, toward the quarry, with Lewis's absence still undiscovered. Tho negro peeped out of the tool box, saw the distant backs of the ar.T.M guards, then leaped out and began to make the US-foot climb on the Intricate steel ladder of the bridge tower, Tho crlei cross of steel laths, bolted from rib to rib, gave the scrambling prisoner foo: and hand holds. He bad climbed perhaps about fifty feet when there was a shou: on tho Island below him. lie looked down und saw the guards coming on the run from the quarry, their revolvers flickering In the sunlight. Furiously the negro dug his feet Into 'tho Interstices of tho lattice and clawed hla way upward. A shot sounded from below and tho ping of a bullet sunt un answering ring from the steel below his feet. Then another shot another and again another. The high whine of bul Ui;s sounded In hts ears. Still he pressed upward. EVEN A JAILBIRD MUST HAVE A FLY. The guards defended tjielr marks muiiKlilp afterward by saying that they were really not trying to hit Lewis; they only wunted to frighten lilni. They didn't do either. Ltwln reached the top of the pier nnd womicd hltn wny through the tangle of cables and girders until ho stti-id on the centml footpath. Nobody on the bridge hud seen him come up the pier, but Police men Flood nnd McAdam of the Kant Klxty-soventh streot station, who ucrv going on post on the bridge, heard the firing below, saw the scarecrow shape wrlgglo up from below and started to run in the direction of Williamsburg Plusa. The two policemen gave nhane, but Lewis was fleet of foot and he was des perate, Hevernl times tho policemen fired at the Hying figure as they con tinued to chase hlni. Finally, when si- G WEEK-END COMBINATIONS FRIDAYS AND SATURDAYS ONLY, 99C COMBINATION No. 4 Chocolate, nan was inrpanui aiianta, m Iiuund bin rueli of the follunlngi Italian lotered .Msranlilnu Cherries. Al.I. t'Olt la le Sate lime In wurrhaalng. primarily, readr for taking r ler lahins nviure IBM run.v in. a ive usve 7 einer rumouiaiions mi anie liner. Special for Friday, July 5th. Special for Saturday, July 6th. hTIUWlIKlUtV AM) VAN. rtlXlrV- AmKJSKvV,"lTliutn'r Oood old relUble I'udge. mad. tempt- ftfi .1th"u"li"?iZK Inglv delirious and slten a new and Ilea of Ire rrrain lleelf and the ligrr"- .r.g.n.1 flavor b the , addl- 1ft $trJttl)$!lBtSl 1 ft lion of Mtraieberry and an. I Mf ( nu,0fs. aOc value. AUG iinc. yah 1-Ol'M) POX l'Otl-NII DUX SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY riioroi-vrK l oVKTtr.n ckkam vkv- t'linrtii.ATK covkiikii ri,.XTA- C""llMlS rrt enlre. if vholewme nnd 1 IONS A rheaar aod annetUIng .Me- delicious cream, nlth u roallng of mire laases aenlre. atltli aa ctwtlnrr f our "hoiolate of rsie eicrllrnre. - f llire Cli.irole.te lo sild .le- rjgj Ou, regular UDVSr.t.. ppx jjJC g". .TOiSK OFFERINGS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY"" MH.K CIIOCOI.ATK COVKHKI) FHKSII Ua?ltJRIVWi9 nIiMI-liKUKlEA I'resh. rlne raapber- DOMIONS ASH Cllut OI.Al K me a&w'gt 39c ;;g&..A,A,a bile rark Kiaw and rerrU.ndt .rnTmKf o'k!' "'' MILK CH0C0UTE COVERED - 0Pr &&SliJ MARASCHINO CHERRIES- cPdJlri " -ripe, full crown French cherries. lSJ&mtyJitN3W with none of their juice lost, f-'j0Wi& 0 BMOADWAV formlnn the centre to a costing ol WMV& T. Our Premium Milk Choco- , late. POUND BOX Includes the centalner. caught tho fugitive, "Well, every bird must have his fly even a Jallblfd," was tho way Lewie greeted his captors. lie was hack on the stone D ie by IU o'clock and wearing stripes. WALL STREET The course of stock market prices to day was altogether downward. A brief display of strength at the outset was followed by a selling movement which Increased In force as tho session ad vanced. At the end the list was ranging around the lowest of the day with many I active issues showing net losses cf nearly 3 points. The weakened condition of the market wns due chiefly to the reactionary ten dency of Copper. During the morning period Copper was subjected to severe selling pressure and this form of Moulds tlon Induced selling In other quarters. Steel with a drop of 70 was another extremely weak feature. Heading, Union Pacific. Jrlt. Paul and Northern Pacific also yielded easily to liquidation. Very little rallying power wns In evi dence ftt the finish, price") closing nt bottom figures. Tlie flnelnff Trlcea. To.rlat't tils-heat, lowest ant tsat prttrt of sloeka and of rial ehaaiea, a rnnr, with Wcdntadar final firurea, aj aa fjllowe: Net lllfk, Iiw. taut, Ciraeii Amal. ("oncer MH 2S . St Am. Caa. ......... in Am. Can. 1-f 117V Am. UxromiUre. , 44H Aa. Hm.lt. it tVf. Am. Huiir ,, 1111 Am. T, ,V T, .. WSJa Aiumnda Minim. I2H At.. Ton. A Han Ke I0s Halt, A Ohio 104. IIU;n IUp. Ttanait. MS (errt. Leather 27'a Cm. il'acll'o 20 la Clin, ifa Ohio dl Am. i.ar as roiTvi. uin - ni 1?U ? as: Ito'a HV, 4IS leva 1I1S? Si - k.-. ll.H, 17U' 25 i5H SI 117', m lit! HII llttK SI 76M 41" Hi ID'S t it , ii., Mil, sc ni, i ,, ii.o Contol. (!aa IM'l. ree, Cop.... M4 S.l - It r.rie , .r; lien. Kletlile tM , Jit. .Nor., l 1WK Ml, I7?U - Jr "Olfl 5a :iH H iniir, siei, -.7 Kan. city h5i"i" i 111. C V"r" YtV'. .V"11?.- . Mil? ln I'lflfUl :ii Nee. Weal...... llj North Am Mj! N, V. Cent 117V Worth. rino IM'.: Out. A Weat M IWUlia'ila 121? I'rewl fleet '. 11 - !a M "a Keating leWH 1 2.i 31 1MIV i 2S - S 7. -I- S 1flS IV OPS 11 70 llnrk I, land Itoek laland. 1. M,,lltil. I AC Hotith. Hallway ftinth. Kallsar pf.. t'nlon 1'atlllf I'. 8. Atrel V. rt. 3!al vi Utah Coptwr Wata-Oi pf Wear. E. A M Kx. tmaecj, A.ltan-e. - .Peellne. FORT ERIE ENTRIES. rtna1 T afMt Tuia.aMafi.aa1.la FlllnC! t,0O M: flte and one-lialf inrtoaK. ;jV A NW, 111 lla.ma. 103 1 Iimali. 10S; t'hlnoo. if.ti; lllirk l"eJ SiiJan. lull; "lUesllng. 110; I'labutr. lra .iiml'le Elnar. 106; UoUmtne. W7; ' TliTntl hlcrV-Twojear-olda: SftOO sd.le.li f,T "n,1 1 etas-halfTirlnni. .IHukln. 101: Kth.l liirt. 101 1 Cock of tl Val 103 Bunch of Ke7a 10.1; Charey. 101; The Wldwe Mo..n. litf- tSandtife. 101; (luckilia, lis. tllelmont "KtlllTn BACK Htakea: three.TeaM'Ma and THE CURABLE STAGE or i CONSUMPTION : De not go nsy from home In the hope ef a cure from residing a short time In i different climate. Consumption ss i dis ease Is Just ss curable as an other dis use, and can be cured In any climate. If you sre curea ai nom, (u main well; while If you Improve In another cltmste. you return to your home only to have the disease brisk put again In a more virulent form thin before. if vou feel that there has been failure to rorreetly dlagnos. or underatsnd your ease, . call on lr. Anderson ano Investigate his means of treatment for yourself, , He Is one of New York's leading Special lets In Throat and Lung Diseases, and sn espcrl In diagnosis by special X. Unlit ex-j imluntlon. whereby he dlacovera the very 1 earllcat signs of lung trouble while the 1 dlaeaeo l yet In Its eurabls stiae, It coats you nothing to find out fir yourself, became nfflre, consultation and examlnntlon are given without charge. Dr. Anderson, Specialist, 0 West 2!d stroll (between 5tll and Oth avenucal, New York. ir,... Tv.Mv in In 4 Mnnilqv. We,1nea. day, F'laMy evenlnga till 8 o'clock: Sun- I days. 11 lo 2. Valuabls boolc on Tubercu- 1 lotta aent lo nny addreaa. ' I Y (Trade Mark.) JXlH-AA?1. the fol tsanrted im ui ..iiuaei 1.111-it lanuj. hibo aa nan Htjle Cream Chocolates, Milk Chocolate Ulle. The iiurimse of tills runiblnstlan nlsn Hair and Ills ril(.r are all alrunklr nrspoed iiv kHDriHicm u. I truipUnsr- M :r.i'P n.CB Thne.iear-el.ts ana up; tell. er Ileum. CI. Klma. 07: Utile Pal, 101; Mallt ne 11; 11) 'iK ll: Ell'Ji t. JiWl icereS..il!na.' Kit trrllln. WI: Camel lf. stiicnn .,, .m Jd! UA: liamllion, ItOi thabel, list tl'e.-llnnrr. Via. Ililen liatete. 112; Pen loytl. 1 ' t Wl: Tl rM-war-oHa ard mil handl- ryi ftro ailil.1i 1s fiirKu-r. - -Or. Xsd.Mii "'r i. "i ..Vi'" a r rrnaer, I In, l.ave;on Ul;j.m, 112 Wlntar. , sren. 11 a. Hl.vTH ItWK Thrfr.Mir-flita and np; tiardl. it? 17MI arid!: ote antt (ine.altltenUl raUea. 1 liirlit of Ur Jiff. If. IlrtK.n'.j (riant. 10A; Cliff 1Mb, tni; fc.Ma, 107. iV'ont. iwii Mohn Kiie. l"- KiT a llnli 'it.. 110j The M loafer, 110 H'orue entry. .,,., , ,. . , t. 1 tt.it'l! TIrfe-nr-olitf . and up; (rflintl 1.V0 aVeli flae ard eri.lialt furlpesa. 1 I.0.UI1. ICS, cne:a "trow. If Si Tom Holland, loll Ka;le Hied, U'.t, Ka'a K Hi; Tojhnv. teeer. Wit rl"'lel ' II0S llior: . Pitta, it, 1. Kihii teinimc 107. ... ., Kinirnl lt' 'r. T!ir,eiear-e.t,la a! up; sell. hi Vn artaVli on anl one-elutittenlli tntles, llcj. HI. Im. lot s attlerf, Urania, 10.1, Hlllele, Inis sirt Warn, IfiTs neinournf. IMi fftl. .Wh-nelilf, IM, Hla.-'iferd. lhlT. 110! Ca'it. fnn-inn. Ill, Panse.-niu March. Ill Tvrrtlef allMratira of 5 iioundi elalmed. Trark fait. Use CARMEN NOT dangeroas cosmetics and acquire, beauty wltbowt walling or rubbing. Just a touch of CARMEN Completion Powdtr snd rour heslthr, fcluaklnf bennty ef raaata will b anhsneed, to remain until yourubrl Off, without "showing nowtler," , Carman Is different from other eowdera no dmnsar -ao powder effect-no ruialsf aar akin er Usauaa. Ira 4'U,tfMl fr9,fM la r.ree eae .wrrlNia thtrntr ...r, t.mpittitHt araraa, Itnt. riHktnt CWai.-r.ll.l lae- Wa. Caarmen Cold Cream -trood for aore. rwiehsltln. 8nowwklte Noti-atKkr, tS.trdiit. Stafford-Millar Company. 15 Olive Street S t. Loaila, Ma. ! CM irlfj.' OlHlC .IIM Half a Vtnturv In Uuttnen. Don't Let Neglect of Your Eyes Rob You of a Livelihood If you are among those whose living depends on good eyesight don't abuse it get correct glasses to safeguard it. Eyes Examined Without Cham by Registered Physicians. Perfect Fitting Glasses, ttJiO to lit With Far & Near Lenses, 14.20 to $18 217 Broadway, Aitor Houte 223 Sixth Ave.. 1 5th St. 350 Siith Ave.. 22d St. 101 Namu, Ann St. 17 Weat 42d-NW YerJ: 498 Fulton St.. Cor. Gond St.. Rrooklyn. POPULAR ONE-DAV OUTINGS Lake Hopatoong Sjjfil EVERY SUNDAY 91 AND HOLIDAY Lesve West Zlrd St. 8.50 a.m. Leave Liberty St. (.00 a.m. Atlantic City .11 S222 Leave West 23rd Street 7.50 a.m. Leave Liberty Street 9.00 a.m. l3 Off We? Clothing For Ladies and Gentlemen on Credit No Deposit Just $1 a X pay Week Lenox0 2274 3o Ave., 7 w 14th St. bet. nth nib At. I bet. i and a net h Ol'EN Tlt.L, 0 I'. M. "K W I T" iiisUnta odor 1.1 ixraplrsiiea. Aeee. Istslr taarmlsas. ataansls malts trsaj t any sddrsaa. Jan. iJSv. Drue and Urparinasat Vteireaa. C. E. Ueelsr Cu.. 1200 Callawhlll It.. FhltaT Are You Starting on Yov Vacation Next Saturday? Wliy Not Go to Bermuda A few choice rcaervatlana en the apleerlld noja.1 Mall ateumsalp "Ore. tsvs." 10,003 Ions displacement, aillln SATURDAY, JULY It's an Ideal opportunity ef vliltlag this Leaullful, plslureei)ue, tropical ajar den. fslllns. every five days In eoa nectlin with Quebec 8. B. Co. Tickets Interchineeable. Temperature Never Over 81 looter ilian New York Hoatlni. bsiblns, tenuis, drlrlas, loir and (lahlni. All-eipena. tours, 5 dirs. . , a)2T,BO mm " " S 'lara. .. nu.oo " 0 davs. .. 41. BO " " 19 die. .. 40,00 i Allrsrtlrs Toura st Itrdured Rate. Ask for Illualrattd Mleraltuv. THE ROYAL MAIL STEAM rav-nt-i tu. SAMiritSON A eO, Gen. Aets., tl State Ht., New Turk, Trios. Cook ton, SIS 238 Hroadway and 34 firth Avs, Ilsymond ti Wtiltcomb. Jit fifth Aie N. V or any staamaslp ticket ssent, LAUNDRY WANTa-FEMAWlT , VAUILV IKONKlti llrat daaa; etaulil poalt tJ!f& rouo(i- HltU, Uusdry, ilitUMr 110 V aSsaLa&i-La, r-Trrjesfii 'tsrrsTn-mf s