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The Brooklyn Daily Eagle from Brooklyn, New York • Page 16

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THE BTJOOTCLYN DATLY EAOTR NEW MONDAY. JANUARY 10. 1911. 16 SPECIAL ADVEBTISEMENTS. BOBBED AND TIED TO A THEE.

TO REBUILD MESSINA. 18- IS MARRIAGES and DEATHS flL BELFBRI BITTERLY DENOUNCES THE MAYOR New City Will Have Stone and Concrete Houses. Messina, Sicily, January 16 The rebuilding of Messina in durable masonry was inaugurated to-day when the cornerstone of the group of public buildings to be erected by the municipality was laid. The cabinet ministers visited the temporary wooden structures that were put up for the housing of the homeless thousands following the calamity and were especially pleased to note how well the buildings erected, by subscriptions from America had been preserved. The new city will be built of stone and concrete.

The ministers go from here to Reggio, where there will be a similar ceremony formally opening the work of reconstruction. ATTEMPTED ROBBERY; IS HELD Captain Gallagher Was "Johnny-on-the-Spot." Reports That He Witnessed. Early Morning Assault Takes Two Prisoners, John Lockwood of 374 Hicks street and John Mannix of 358 Hicks street were each held by Magistrate Voorhees, sitting in the Butler street court this morning, for examination to-morrow on a charge of assault and attempted highway robbery. The magistrate fixed the bail at $5,000, and as the prisoners did not have friends to make bonds for them they went to jail. They were arrested early on Sunday morning by Captain Bernard Gallagher of the Amity street police station, who says he caught Mannix in the act of knocking down a tipsy seafaring man not 100 feet from the Amity street police station.

The captain says he first saw the two men lurking in the shadow of a storehouse on Amity street, just below Columbia street. A tipsy man walked along Columbia street. Mannix, the captain says, knocked the stranger unconscious and stooped over him after he had fallen, apparently rifling his pockets. Lockwood walked away. Gallagher collared Mannix and took him and the stranger to the station near by.

The stranger, who was so much dazed for a time that he could not speak, proved to be William King, the chief steward of the steamship Crown of Navarre. King had a roll of bills. Lockwood was afterward arrested. King identified both as persons who had been in a Columbia street' liquor store on Saturday night, where ho was displaying his DR. JOSEPH E.

HAYNE DIES Colored Leader, Preacher, Physician and Writer. Born a Slave in South. Carolina, He Qualified in Several Professions. The Rev. Joseph Elias Hayne, D.D., M.D., colored physician, preacher, scholar, author and close student of ethnology, who came to reside in this borough about seven years ago, died at his residence, Grand and Lexington avenues, on Saturday night, January 14, at 10 o'clock, after a very brief illness.

Dr. Hayne was born a slave in Charleston, South Carolina, on April 16, 1848. He enlisted when but a youth in the One Hundred and Fourth Regiment United States Colored Volunteers, erv'ng through the war as commissary sergeant. At the close of the Civil War he entered Atlanta University and graduated an A. B.

Leaving Atlanta he studied at Wilberforce University, after which he took a course in theology at Howard University, graduating in 1872. He worked in the United States Printing Office in Washington, D. and invented a printing press. The Rev. Dr.

Hayne was one of the pioneer workers of the African M. E. Church in South Carolina. In Charleston he served as county school commissioner for four years. For four years he served as presiding elder of Newberne District in North Carolina.

Ha studied medicine and became a physician in 1894. He served a term of four years as dean of theology at Allen University in South Carolina, and wa3 once nominated for Congress. Dr. Hayne was the author of "The Negro in Sacred History," "The Black Man or Natural History," "The Controversy Between the Brother in White and the Brother In Black," and an unpublished book, entitled "One Blood." The funeral services will be held at Bridge Street African M. E.

Church, the Rev. A. R. Cooper, pastor, to-morrow at 11 A.M. TEXAN MAKES RECORD VOYAGE Oil-Burning Steamer First American Ship to Enter Plate River Estuary.

The American-Hawaiian line's steamship Texan has returned from tba River Plate ports. She had been chartered by Barber Co. and was the first steamship of the merchant service that ever carried the American flag up the great estuary. She took out a great cargo, but unfortunately she had "to return In ballast, there being no cargo available for her days and returned from Buenos Ay res in nineteen days, record time from this port tor a freighter Being an l-burex. she UU Biopo lui mm iuu 26.000 barrels of fuel oil on board for the double voyage.

Special permission had to be sought to allow her to dock at Buenos Ayres and this was readily granted. No vessels carrying cargoes of oil or kerosene products are allowed to berth at the docks there, but must discharge at La Plata, the oil port for the capital of Argentina. As an experiment me vujurb of the lexan was a ou so ack on the old route between this p.1(,rto Me co. HENDRICKS0N OPERATED ON. Doctors at Ithaca Say Former Manual G.

0. President Is Doing Nicely. Ithaca, N. January 16 Bert Hen-drlckson, a freshman In the Mechanical Enirlneering College at Cornell Univer- sity, and a graduate of Manual Training, High School, has been operated on for appendicitis. tu- that he will pull through.

Hendrickson was president of the gen- nt, 9.t vonr rt tnp isov- it; uifioiiiwi Aver. ie School, and Is a fine atn- lete, having participated in football and baseball. At Cornell he was a member of the freshman rush team that defeated the sophomores, and was recently appointed- on the freshman banquet committee. TWO BODIES IN FIRE RUINS. January 16 Two bodies were recovered from the ruins of the Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce, which was destroyed by fire last Tuesday.

They wore those of Brent Marshall and Charles Sibbald. It is expected the bodies of four other victims soon will be recovered. American the Victim of a Holdup in Paris. Paris, January 16 A man describing himtelf as Harry an American, years of ar.p, was discovered, last night, bound to a tree in the woods near Join-ville-lc-Pont. six miles cast of Paris.

A squad of soldlem came upon Miller, who declared that he had been set upon by two men, who, after robbing him of his clothing and $1,000, tied him to the tree. In exchange for the clothes taken the robbers dressed him in an old coat and trousers. The police set to work on the case, and near the scene of the robbery they found a vial containing a liquid which they thought to bo poison. USED ROLLING PIN ON HIM Stepdaughter, in Defense of Her Mother, Cut Buckley's Head. He Eeturned Later and, It leged, Nearly Killed His Wife.

Is Al- With face lacerated and bruised and with several ribs fractured, besides internal injuries, Mrs. Mary Buckley, 40 years old, of 129 North Seventh street, is confined in the Eastern District Hospital. The woman was the victim of an enraged husband, for whom the police of the Bedford avenue station are searching. The trouble took place in the Buckley home last night and was the outcome of a quarrel that started in Hie morning. John, the husband, was feeling the effects of a Saturday night's debauch when he got up yesterday morning, and answered sharply every question that was put to him.

Soon he threatened his wife, and Annie Madigan, a stepdaughter, took her mother's part. Buckley, it is alleged, struck bis wife, and the girl then picked up a rolling pin and used it to good effect on the man's head. It was necessary to summon Dr. Levine from the Eastern District Hospital to dress two scalp wounds. Buckley reused, however, to make a complaint against Annie.

After supper another dispute arose, and Buckley, It is said, grabbed his wife by the throat, struck her in the face, knocked her to the floor, and then brutally kicked her into insensibility. Neighbors heard the scuffle and screams of the two women and arrived In time to see the man run from the building. They found his wife unconscious on the floor. Dr. Levine was again called and removed the woman to the hospital.

LED DETECTIVES TO LOOT. John Boyd, Alleged Package Thief, Turns Over $800 Worth of Goods. Good work on the part of the detectives of the central olflce, under Deputy Commissioner Flynn, resulted in the arrest this morning of a young man who, according to the police and his own alleged statement to the detectives, has been operating along the Riverside Drive section for the past ten weeks, stealing packages from delivery boys. After a "third degree' process which was applied in a taxi cab during a two hours drive alter the arrest, was made, the prisoner admitted, the detectives allege, that he was the man they were looking for, and then took them to his apartments and turned over to them about $800 worth of loot. The prisoner gave his name as John Boyd.

20 years old, and his address as 253 West One Hundred and Eleventh street, Manhattan. He has an alias, "Roth-steln," and admitted that he was out on parole from the House of Refuge, according to the statements made to-day by the Detective Bureau. The specific charge against Boyd is that he stole from a delivery boy, on January 11, a dress valued at $50. The complainant in the case Is Mrs. Paul L.

Bryant, who lives at 316 West Ninety-fifth street. NEW SUSPECT IN LONGO CASE Giuseppe Bellavia Arrested in a Saloon Line-Up. Detectives Picked Cigarmaker Out of Bunch of Fifteen Italians, but Refuse to Talk. That Second Deputy Police Commissioner Flynn is still on the trail of the kidnappers of Joseph Longo was" made apparent last night when a man was arrested in Manhattan on a charge of carrying concealed weapons, and It was entered on the blotter et Police Headquarters that he was also under arrest on susnicion that he had acted in concert with others in the kidnapping of 5-year-old Joseph Longo from in front of his home. 186 Twenty-first s-treet, Brooklyn, on November 13.

The man. who said lie wa3 Giuseppe Bellavia, 24 years of age, a cigarmaker of 33 Macdougal street, and claimed that he had a wife and two children in Palermo, Italy, was only arrested after fifteen or more Italians had been lineu up In the rear room of a saloon kept by Marino Fiblasi, at 236 East Seventy-fifth street. The Italians were looked over by Deputy Flynn. Lieutenant VachrlB and a dozen detectives from the Italian branch, and Bellavia was picked out by Detectives Mundo nnd (luarmlero, who say they found a revolver in bis pocket. It is not known what evidence leads to the "suspicious person" entry on Ihe blotter, as the police will not discuss that feature.

CAMORRA TRIAL DELAY. Yitirbo, Italy January 16 It is probable that the trial of Chief Enrico Alfano and his thirty-two comrades in the Camorra, charged with the murder of James Cuu-colo and his wife, will be nostponed to a date in the first week of March. The prisoners have recovered from the ill effects of their long confinement. BRIDE AND BRIDEGROOM HELD. Magistrate Says He Recognizes Kreiter as a Burglar, and His Wife Collapses.

Edward Kreiter, 21 years old. 66 Dobbins street, who was arrested on Saturday with his 18-year-old bride of a few months, as she was trying to pawn a $250 white fox fur set, was held by Magistrate O'Reilly in the Mannattan avenue court yesterday. The magistrate said he was a burglar who first came before him several years ago and who was afterward sent to the i Elmira Reformatory, where he served fifteen months. When admitted i this in court, the youthful bride almost collapsed. Magistrate O'Reilly informed Kreiter that lie was satisfied he was a thief who had tried to make his wife a tool.

didn't know that my husband was a burglar when 1 marricil lilm; he led to believe that ho was an honest man, although I learned that he never worked, but sometimes had valuable things in his possession." Said Mrs. Kreiter. She was detained as a witness and sent to the House of the Good Shepherd. I WHAT AILED THREE MEN Two of Them Charged Policemen With Having Assaulted Them. BUT THEY WEREN'TEVEN HURT Another Man Had His Skull Fractured, and He Left Hospital in a Hurry.

Police Inspector Patrick completed an investigation J. Harkins into three cases which were reported to him in the early hours of yesterday morning, and which astonished him. To-day the inspector is wondering how such reports originated. The first case was that of a Patrick Doran, who claimed ho had been assaulted by a policeman in the Bushwick Hospital. Another case w.

that of a man who said fie was James Kay, and who claimed he had been assaulted by a policeman in front of the Atlantic avenue station house. The third case was that of Owen Gallagher, who said he had been attacked while entering his home at 1.794 Dean street. Doran, who says he lives at 470 YVest Thirty-sixth street, Manhattan, strolled Into the Ralph avenue station just after midnight, and stated he wanted to be treated at a hospital. Patrolman Kor-man was routed out of bed and with Doran to the Bushwick Hospital, three blocks away. Dr.

W. C. Jayne dresssl an old wound on the man's hand and he departed. Officer Kormau returned to the station house and to his bed. Half an houi later Doran again appeared at tne station house.

He said he had bteu assaulted, Inspector Harkins appeared in the ita-lion house on his official tour about LUj time Doran made his second visit there. The Inspector, with his loyal aide, Lieutenant McCarthy, took Doran in hand immediately. The inspector was informed by the citizen that at the hospital the officer had assaulted him by striking hiin in the face, after the attending physician had sent the nurse from the room. Dr. Jayne produced several witnesses to disprove this statement, and Doran disappeared after he had admitted he nad "steamed up" a bit before coming to Brooklyn.

James Kay, who said he was 21 years old, a driver, and lived at 4i2 tfeits avenue, told Lieutenant Du Bois he had been clubbed in front of the Atlantic, avenue station house at 1:15 yesterday morning. Patrolman Walter F. Raleigh charged Kay with being Intoxicated. Kay said Raleigh and another officer had attacked him while in company of two friend3. When questioned, Kay said lie could not remember the naiuc.3 of his friends or their home addresses.

Dr. Ncx-sen, who responded to a call for an ambulance, said he failed to find of any assault on the prisoner, but he vas suffering from alcoholism. The third case, the most mystertous of all, was that of Owen Gallagher, 40 vears of age. When he reported to the Atlantic avenue station he said he lived at 1704 Dean Btreet and that he nad been assaulted when entering his homo at 2 o'clock yesterday morning. Hj cin'med he had been attacked by some urkr.own person, and in some unknown mani't-i.

Dr. Gibbons was called from St. Marv'i Hospital, and found that Gallagher nad A laceration of the scalp and a possiDie fracture of the skull. He took iOi injured man to the hospital. Inspector Harkins learned to-day tlut Gallagher did not live at the addroii given, and that he had left the hospital against the advice of the physicians who were attending him.

Where he wont is not known. S1XTEEN-H0UR BATTLE 70 Mexican Troops Fight 100 Rebels. Losses Believed to Be Considerable. Insurrectos Strong in Eastern Part of Oroszco. Chihuahua, Mexico, January 16 A six-teen-hour battle between 70 Government volunteers, so called, and 100 revolutionists occurred at the village of Coyome on Saturday.

This report reached General Hernandez, commanding the military zone, to-day. No details were given, but from the duration of the engagement It is presumed the losses were considerable. Coyome is about midway between this city and Ojinja. With Oroszaco holding the attention of General Navarro in the western part of the state, foreigners look for interesting developments in the eastern part. The fight at Coyome is taken as confirmation of the insurrccto report that the revolu tion is being carefully fostered east auu nnnheast of here.

It is doubtful If there are more than five hundred Federal troops in that section of the state. Oroszco. Ln talking recently with a prominent railroad man. who met him in the mountains, stated that all told since the revolution started the Insurrectos had lost 150 men in killed and those who died from their wounds. MRS.

HALE GETS A DIVORCE Testimony Heard by Referee, Who Found for Wife. Court Confirms the Findings Stock Broker as Charged With Infidelity. Supremo Court Justice Marean this morning confirmed the report of James W. Hyde, as referee in the suit for an absolute divorce brought by Mrs. Frances Hale against Melville E.

Hale, a stockbroker, conected, It is said, with the firm of J. R. Williston Co. in Manhattan. The referee finds for the wife, and there appeared to be no contest against the finding being confirmed by the court.

The Hales, according to the testimony, were married on July 18, 1905, and have no children. Lawyer Charles H. Lus-comb of 1-0 Broadway, Manhattan, appeared for Mrs. Hale, and the aw firm of and S. M.

Carr of 1411 Broadway, Manhattan, for tne nusoanu th hesrinirs before Referee Hyde testimony was given by Mrs. Hale, who lives 113 Fainoriuge street: uea i r. iirli pr nt lid Daiuunuui- nurri, Charles K. hrnk.r The The latter is also a stock broker The net ruiwyitnucu Manhattan hotel in Wcs. currea at Forty-ninth street, on December 9 last.

WILLIE IS A BAD BOY. Mrs. James Oramm of 262 Schenectady avenue arraigned her youngest son William, 13 years old. In the Children's Court thu' morning. She told Judge Wilkin thai the boy was uncontrollable, that he did not attend school, he often ran away from home and stayed uays at a tune, mat shot craps and smoked cigarettes.

The boy admitted that he did these things. Judge Wilkin nostponed the hearing until January 1. COGLLY PLEADS GUILTY Young De Temple Admits Slashing Mrs. Irvin and Daugh-. ter When Cornered.

STABBED FORMER 20 TIMES. Caught as He Was Leaving Sister's Home Shows No Regret for His Act. Detectives of the local headquarters bureau captured Martin DeTemple, the young thief who stabbed Mrs. Mary A. Irwin and her daughter, Dorothy, tit their residence on Saturday night, and this morning Magistrate Voorhees, sitting in the Butler street court, heard his plc-A of guilty and held him without bail for the action of the Grand Jury.

DeTemple Is 18 years old and has been in the Catholic Protectory. He admittel to the police that he had Just started in business as a furnished room thief and that anger over his failure to get away with his booty from Mrs. Irwin's house led him to commit the assault on her. DeTemple was covered with blood when he got away, for in his blind fury he had stabbed Mrs. Irwin twenty times.

His overeoat was soaked with blood and he abandoned that in a barber shop at 104 Hoyt street. The barber took the coat, to the detective headquarters in State street, and in the pockets were found cards which fixed the man's Identity and gave the detectives a clew on which to work. The police found that the man had a sister living at 302 Cooper street, and that he also had relatives at 349 Seventeenth street and somewhere on East Eighty-third street, in Manhattan. All of these places were "covered," and De tectives Reynolds, Sullivan and O'Neill were sent to watch the sister's home. The police learned that he was apt to go there on Sunday mornings.

De Temple Caught Leaving Sister's Home at 10:30 Yesterday. The officers remained out all night in the rain, keeping the house under the strictest surveillance. At 8:30 clock yesterday morning the lad came along and entered the house. Two hours later he emerged and the detectives followed him. Reynolds accosted him as he wis passing the corner of Irving avenue and Moffat street.

"Hey, there," said the detective; "what's your name?" "Holland." was the lad's reply. "it Is DeTemple," said the detective. "If It is, what is it your business?" asked DeTemple. "I only wanted to Know wny you stabbed that woman last night, con tinued Reynolds, who was sure of nis man. "She stopped me when I was gettln? out of the house," said the young man.

and I was so mad that I did it. DeTemple was then placed under ar rest and was taken to headquarters in State street, and thence to the home Mrs. Irwin, at 1U2 uergen street. ia woman and her daugnter were uom bed, suffering from the effects of their Injuries. They unhesitatingly identified DeTemple as their assailant.

Piisoner Tells Story to Detectives. The prisoner talked freely about him self to the detectives. He had been em ployed until recently as messenger la a drug store at Jefferson and Irving avenues, and lie frankly confessed that he had broken into the place one night and had stolen a lot of postage stamps. The stabbing was done with a new penknife, which the druggist had given nun. in a neat box, as a ChrlBtmas present, me lad admitted that he had been trying his hand at robbing furnished rooms.

one day last week, he said, he had been caught leaving a room in St. Mark avenue, near Third avenue, with a lot of clothing, and had been forced to give It up. He said that he could not give the number of the house, but believed tnat it was tnree doors from Third avenue. The police believe that ho had been looting otner furnished room houses, and they expect to get a number of complaints against him when his case goes before the Grand Jury. The boy told the police that he went to Mrs.

Irwin's house with the intention of getting away with whatever he could lay his hands on. He had learned, in the few hours that he was in the house for he rented the room only on Saturday morning that one of the lodgers who had an apartment on the same floor was out of town, and so he went Into this lodger's room and stole his portable property. That included two watches and a diamond ring, which Mrs. Irwin forced him lo give up. But he kept a seal leather pocketbook, containing $6.

which he look from the room. He spent $4 of that on Saturday night, and he had the purse and the remaining $2 in his possession wnen he was arrested. Pleads Guilty When Arraigned. The complaints against him were made by Detective Reynolds in the Butler street court this morning. Mrs.

Irwin and her daughter, the doctors say, will be luclty If they can pet out of their'bed in a week, and so the detective was forced to make the complaint "on Information and belief." "How do you plead to the charge that you assaulted Mrs. Irwin and her daughter?" asked Magistrate Voorhees. "Oh, guilty," was the wholly unconcerned reply. Young De Temple seemed to be worried over the fact that he would not be able to see a young woman to whom he has been paving attention. He had a copy of a "pome" which he confessed he sent her at New Years.

This is It: Rlrl. how you. nnfi nlse Iho same as ymi. 1 yrm a Happy Now Year, Ami dywii from my eye runs a tear. SUBWAY MASS MEETING.

There ill be a meeting of the South Brooklyn Board of Trado to-morrow evening at Acme and Ninth street Hall, Seventh avenue at which Controller at wnich controller P.cnitoFDaal onH Trttin Pur- ro Mitchel, president of the Board of Aldermen, will address the residents of South Brooklyn on the subway situation. As this meeting has been arranged purely for the sake of receiving information on this subject, friends of both subway projects are earnestly requested to attend. EXPLOSION IN LISBON. Gas Main Cut by Strikers or Their Sympathizers. Lisbon.

Portugal, January 16 An underground explosion of gas near the rail, road terminal last night caused much alarm. Three workmen were seriously i burned and considerable aamage io properly in the vicinity was done. fhe explosion was due to the gas main having been cut by the gasnouse work men. who are on strike, or tneir sympathizers. The railroad, service continued to-day.

ns usual. Tn-riav a bomb was exploded In the '('lieilas tunnel of the Belt Line Railway. No one was injured, but several holes were lorn In ihe underground passage, neeeFKitating the suspension of traffic on the Belt Line. It is believed that the bomb was thrown by a discharged workman. I 1 I DIED.

Flume, Louise Bond, Ann Browne, William II, Carroll, Susie M. Cuzner, Frederick Kirkland, Tlora McC.raynr, Eliza Mooncy, Mary Nettleton, Fred'k Nov. Edmund Franz Daly, Michael Nicholson. James Dixon, Mrs. Angela COsborn.

Willard Knelish. Robert C. Fell. Mary Goodman. Mary A Hamel.

Edward C. 11:11, John Lindsay llnnt, Joseph H. Ibrrt, Frank Resscgule, Lewis D. Seluilz, Helen Marie Slaght, Colonel J. C.

Smith. Sarah E. Teese, Helen M. Kaiser, John G. BLUME Suddenly, on January li, 1911.

LOUISE BLUME, widow of the late Ernest Blume. Services at her late residence, 2053 Bedford av, Flatbush, Monday, January 10, at 8 P.M. Interment private. BOND Suddenly, on January 14, 1911 XN BOM), widow of the late Edward Bond, in the 74th year of her age. Funeral services at her daughter's residence, 347 Keap st, Monday 8 P.M.

BROWNE At his home, 86 South Tenth it, Brooklyn, on January 13, It'll. WILLIAM H. BROWNE, age HI years. Private funeral. 8:13 o'clock, Tuesday morning, from Church of Epiphany.

Interment at Valatie. New York. CARROLL After a long illness, SI'SIE M. CARROLL, beloved wife of L. F.

Carroll, in her 46th year. Relatives and friends, also Selma Hive, Indies of the Mflicabecs. are Invited to attend the funeral from her lte residence, -6! Bedford av, on Tuesday, January 17, 1911, at 9 A.M. A solemn requiem mass will be celebrated for the repose of her soul. Interment at Calvary Cemetery.

Cl'ZNER On January 14, 1911, Captain FREDERICK CL'ZNER. husband of Su-tan M. Cabbie, In his 69th year. Funeral services at his late residence, 427 Lincoln av, Richmond Hill, Monday, January 16, at 8 P.M. DALY On January 13.

1911. MICHAEL DALY. Funeral from the residence of his aunt, Mrs. John Ennis, 216 Wyekoff st, Wednesday, January 18, at 2 P.M. T1IXOX On January 16, 1911.

Mrs. ANGELA C. DIXON, widow of the late Rev. William T. Dixon.

Funeral services on Vcdnesdav, 1 n.M., at Concord Baptist Church of Christ, Duffleld st, near Myrtle av. ENGLISH On January 16. 1911. ROBERT CHARLES ENGLISH, beloved husband of Harriett Louise English (nee Lawler), and brother of Harfiett M. English and John U.

English, in his 32d year Funeral services at his late residence, 33 Shiplev st, Union Terrace. Woodhavn, L. Tuesday. January 17, 8 P.M. Interment at Evergreens Cemetery Wednesday morning.

Take Lexington av elevated to 'Cypress Hills, thence trolley to Lott av. I COODMAX On Sunday. January 15. 1911, MARY AGNES, daughter of Bridget and the late James Verney. Funeral from her late residence, IS Butler st, on Wednesday, at 9 A.M., thence to St.

Paul's H. C. Church, where a solemn re-ouiem mass will be celebrated. Relatives and friends invited to attend, also members of Morning Star Council No. 1, Daughters of Columbia.

HAMEL On Sunday. January 13, 1911. EDWARD C. HAMEL, beloved husband of Lillian M. Madden, son of Henry and Kate Hamel.

Relatives and friends are Invited to attend the funeral from his late residence. 16 East Thirty-first st. Flatbush, on Wednesday, January 18, at 1:30 P.M. interment in Lutheran Cemetery. HILL On January 16.

1911. JOHN LINDSAY HILL, in the 71st year of his age. Funeral from his late residence, 158 South Portland av, on Wednesday. January 18, at 3 o'clock in the afternoon. Interment at Oakwood Cemetery, Troy, N.

on arrival of 8:15 train from New Y.ork. HUNT Newton, N. on Sunday. January 15. lull.

JOSEPH H. HUNT. M.D., formerly of Brooklyn, N. Y. Funeral tervltes at 22 Liberty fit.

Newton. Wednesday, January 18. 3 P.M., on arrival of the 12 o'clock train from New York, foot of Barclay et, L. W. R.

R. IBERT On Sunday. January 15, 1911. at 8:30 A.M., FRANK IBERT, beloved husband of Mary L. Ibert (nee Gram-mlch).

Funeral will be held from Ills late residence, 1041 Bushwick av. on Wednesday morning at 9:30 o'clock: thence to St. Barbara's Church. Central av and Bleecker st, where a solemn requiem mass for the repose of his soul will be read. Interment St.

John's Cemetery. KAISER On January IS. 1911, at i Youngsville. Sullivan County, New York, JOHN GEORGE KAISER, in his 71st year. Funeral services will be held Tuesday evening, January 17.

at. 8 o'clock, at residence of his son, Frederick W. Kaiser, Division av, between Church and Lefferis avf. Richmond Hill, L. I.

KIRKLAND On Sunday. January 15, 111, after a brief illness, FLORA KIRKLAND. Funeral services will be held nt her late residence. 560 st, on Tuesday, January 17, at 8 P.M. Interment at Evergreens Cemetery.

(Cincinnati, Ohio, papers please copy.) McGRAYXE On Monday, January 10. 1911, ELIZA, widow of the late Dawson McGrayne, in the lifuh year of her Funeral services on Tuesday evening, January 17, at 8 o'clock, at 721 Elmore place, Flatbush. Interment private. MOONEY On Sunday. January 15.

MARY' MOONEY. Funeral from her late irsionce, 27 Schermerhorn sr. on Tuesday morning at thence to Si. Charles Borromeo's Church, on Sidney place, whore a solemn requiem mass will be celebrated. NETTLETON Entered Into rest on Saturday, January 14, FREDERICK NETTLETON, in his Stith year.

Funeral nervlces at the residence. KIT'i Washington pv. on Tuesday. January 17, at 3:31 P.M. Interment in Greenwood.

Funeral private. NEY On Sunday. January 15, 1011. EDMUND FRANZ NEY. Funeral services nt his late residence.

Third av and First st. College Point, on Tuesday, Jan-vary at 11 A.M. NICHOLSON On Sunday, January 15. 1P11. JAMES, beloved husband of Janet Nicholson, in hisTMh year.

Funeral from i i late residence, 6014 Fourth av, Brooklyn, on Wednesday, January 18, at 2 P.M. Interment Greenwood. OsnORN On January 15. WILLARD PARKER OSBORN. Funeral from late residence.

100 Monroe st, Tuesday, January 17, 2:30 P.M. PELL At Glens, Falls. N. January 14. It'll.

MARY widow of William J. Pell, in her 71ih year. Services at. the residence of her son. Albert W.

Pell. bHl Monroe st. Drook'yn. 'Pics. lay evening, "anuarv 17.

at 8 o'clock. Interment at Greenwood. RESSEGl'IE On January 10, 1911, l.LWIS D. RESSEGl'IE. at his residence, 410 Kosciusko fit.

Funeral services on Wednesday evening, January 18, at 8 o'clock. SCHl'LZ On January 15. liUI. HELEN MARIE SCHL'LZ, wife of Carl II. Sehulz.

Funeral service Monday evening, 8 o'clock, at her late home, 215 Lexington av, Brooklyn. Interment Tuesday. U. S. GRANT POST NO.

327. BLAGHT Comrades are informed of the death of Comrade JAMES C. SLAGHT. late captain and quartermaster U. S.

Volunteers, and that the funeral services will be hell at Z'Ja naiouMi evening, oauuaij ai. o'clock. Comrades are requested to at tend in uniform C. K. BUCKLEY.

Commander. TV. H. H. Tyson, Adjutant.

SMITH On January 15, It'll, SARAH VI. SMITH, aged 41 years, of 1121 Her- r.f li Qmith (irata Chanter. (. will kindly at tend services Wednesday, P.M. Interment at Mount Olivet Cemetery, Thursday, 3 P.M.

TEESE On Monday. January 10. 1311. HELEN widow of the late David Spencer Teese. Funeral services at her late residence, 655 Prospect place, on Tuesday evening, January 17, at 8 o'clock.

Iuler-fttat private. i 1 Priest's Characterization of Cay-nor in Answer to Question of Catholics and Politics. HE RAPS UNION LABOR ALSO. Eoclesiast Is "Heckled" at Stormiest Session the People's Forum Ever Saw, In defending the Catholic Church, of which he Is one of the most prominent members in the Brooklyn diocese, against a number of men who fired questions from all parts of the hall, the Rev. John L.

Bclford, rector of the Church of the Nativity, yesterday afternoon, at a ses sion of the People's Forum, held In Hart's Hall, Gates avenue and Broadway, was the center of one of the stormiest ses sions ever held by the forum. In answering one of his questioners. Father Belford took occasion to refer to Mayor Gaynor as a "contemptible hypocrite," and he emphasized his declaration In a way that left no doubt in the inds of his hearers as to his opinion of the Mayor. The mention of Mayor Gaynor's name came about in this way. A man in the audience asked, "Isn't it true that the Catholic Church controls the politics in the City and State of New York?" Father Belford asked his questioner what were his reasons for the belief that prompted the query.

The man replied, Why a Catholic young man told me that the Catholics elected Dix in New York and Wilson in New Jersey, and he added, We don't care who knows The priest's comment was, "If there was a reason for the Catnolie Church to oppose a candidate, it was in the case of William J. Gaynor, who is a contemptible hypocrite, and no effort was made to defeat him by Catholics. While we represent 60 per cent, of the voters of Greater New York, as they say we do, it should have been an easy matter to have beaten him if we had tried." The speaker then referred to the Mayor's former affiliation with the Catholic Church and the Christian Brothers, and repeated that If ever'' good reason existed for the use of the'alleged power of the Catholic Church it was In this case, and that the fact that nothing of the kind was done was ample proof of the falsity of the accusation. Father Belford Discusses Labor Organizations. The "heckling" of Father Belford occurred nt the conclusion of an address he had delivered before the forum on "LaborSome of Its Rights and Some of Its V- rong3." As is usual, an open discussion followed, which was supposed to be confined to the subject of the talk.

Most of the men who asked questions went very wide of the subject, but the man who brought up the matter that evoked the speaker's opinion of the Mayor went further from the target than any of his companions. Of course, many of the queries were pertinent to the lecture, which Father Belford, without mincing words gave his views on the conduct of some strikes that aroused the ire of most, of the loaders. Father Belford, In his address, referred to an article that had appeared In the May. 19u, number of the Mentor, a monthly publication issued to his parish-iouci-B, and in which he gives his views on matters of importance. In that article, which was on "organization," he said in part: "This is the age of organization, we find it in business.

In politics, in religion. It is the evidence of intelligence and the sign of progress. The degree of organization characterizes the qualify of an epoch, an institution, a movement. With it you have the army. Without it you have the mob.

With it there is order anl calm, without, it there is chaos and strife. Its results are magninceut. or lerrible. "The onward and upward march of la-! bor is due to this silent and tremendous power. It has put down the mighty from their seats and it has lifted up the low-! ly.

It. has won two great conquests. lias compelled the world to admit mat labor is honorable, and it has won recognition for labor's rights. To-day we see reasonable hours and fair wages. The child and the woman have protection, renditions of safety and of health ore secure in mine and mill.

If we may judge of the future by the past few years, our generation will see strides of real prog- After asserting the right of the laborer to freedom; to the r.ght io sell his labor at a fair price when and where he wills, Father Belford continued: Denounces Violence as a Weapon in Labor Warfare. "We hope to see the day when reason and justice will regulate the demands of the laborer and the employer alike. Then it will be posn'blc to adjust differences, honestly and without loss of time, the I waste of material and the bitter feeling i that rules to-day. We cannot believe i ihat men will forever remain blind to! the absurdity and injustice of refusing' lo work or to allow other men to work material that does ont bear a certain or the vandalism that deliberately i stamp, undoes and removes work done by other i hands. Surely the day cannot be far off when we shall see the end of the sav- agery that mainw men and beasts, that; blows up mills, breaks machinery, burns buildings ami destroys material.

Union-I ism, of course, denies responsibility for these crimes. "So long labor unions endeavor to i protect tile workman and improve his condition, just so long will it have the respect of the community, but when ihc unions continue as they have, not in the interests of the men, but for the inter-; ests of a lot of trouble makers, who I make it their business to curtail produc- tion, to hamper industry and to hara employers, we condemn it tone too I strongly. no umik as memners union use violence to attain their ends, as we. have seen in the murder of Warner in New York and the destruction of the Los Angeles Times building in California, ami the many crimes perpetrated in the recent express strike in New York, Just so long will the community despise and Ji ail it can to suppress unionism and al! it stantU, for." In speaking of the meeting this morning, Father Belford said that for nearly tao years the Forum people had been asking him to make an address, but. as the meetings are always held on Sunday, he had found it impossible to accept the invitation.

A combination of circumstances yesterday, he said, enabled him to be present, and he had given his views plainly. The reference to the alleged interference of Catholics in politics, he said, was brought about through a question bearing on a letter he had written, warmly indorsing Edward M. Shepard tor United "'states Senator, and with this as a srarter. th other queries followed in quid; suc cession. It had not been his intention.

Father Belford said, to bring politics the Resion vesterdav. but when lhe fame mi he had eiven his answer tn a question that seemed to interest the audience as much as the matter that was before the meeting IN MEM0RIAM. McCARTNEY Solemn ni.i.ss (month's mtnrtl for the laic Rev. FRANCIS A. McCARTNEY, D.D., on Tuesd.iy, January 17, at 10 A.M., in Church of the Assumption, Cranberry at.

Relatives, friends and reverend clergy iuviitj. The New No. 5 As a dress shirt, all details improved; four stud holes in bosom three to show. Combed yarn in body; EARL WILSON. At leading Haberdashers.

LOST AND FOUND. LOST Liberal lewurd: CLL'B BUTTON' No. ICS, I'rofcBsional Chauffeurs Club of America. litlH Hruadway, Now York. LOST.

Japanese SPANIEL, white cheat anrt legi black coat; liberal reward, no questions AfiKecl. if returned. Mrs. S5INN, 363 Jefferson avenue. IX)S'P, ia1ys silver WATCH and FOB, In, vicinity of Jipilford av and Park place, Sunday afternoon; LUitabie it: ward if returned ti 41ft Grand av.

LOST Mink NECK PIECE, on Montague at, liPlu'APn mill ii'flork fintnrrlav 14; suitable reward. Inquire at Standiaii Arin Hotel, Columbia Heights. silver mesh. HAH, containing $20, card case ami bunch of keys. Reward if retuhned to BALLEXTINE, -174 Washington av.

FOUND, January 14. P.M.. In New York City, SUM OK MONEY. Owner, may obtain same upon protwr description and cost of this advertisement, 10. M.

Eagle orflce. IOST, Friday evening. January 13. cither going to or from, or iiv the Brooklyn Academy of Music, a gentleman's old-style solitaire diamond PIN. Finder will receive suitable reward by leaving it at 184 Lincoln place.

Brooklyn. 16-8 DROWNED INL0NG BEACH INLET Eockville Centre Han Lost JAto While Anchoring Oyster Boat. Body Wot Hecovered. (Special to The Eagle.) Rockvllle Centre, L. January Wtilter B.

Tuppcr, aged 35 years, of this place, was drowned In Long Beach Inlet late Saturday night, and his body has not yet been recovered, although searching parties were out all day yesterday. Tupper, in company with Charles Mott, left East Rockaway Saturday evening in an oyster boat. When they reached the inlet Mott went down in the cabin to attend to the engine, and Tupper started to drop anchor. When Mott came out of the cabin Tupper had disappeared, and it Is believed that he lost his balance and fell overboard. His heavy boots, it Is thought, filed with water and carried him to the bottom.

MAY FIGHT ASSESSMENTS. Brooklyn League Committee to Consider Matter Thursday Night. The attention of officers of the Brooklyn League was attracted to the letter which appeared in Friday's Eagle slgnei "Gverassessed Taxpayer." This letter stated that individuals who felt that they had been overassessed might not have the time nor the money to contest the matter, and the writer suggested that some representative organization, like the Brooklyln League, receive complaints and go before the Board of assessors with them. Dr. Brush, president of the league, said to en Eagle reporter to-day that the committee on taxation would meet Thuri-evening next, and pending their discu-sion of the matter outlined above, preferred not to discuss it.

LITTLE CHILD SEVERED ARTERY A little black kitten was the cause oc a serious accident to 3-year-old Tessie Catania, who lives on the first floor, at 138 Marcy avenue. The child was in the window yesterday afternoon and the cat was sitting outside. The little girl held a piece of string near the glass and the animal clawed at the window. Tessie hit the pane of glass and smashed It. The child's screams attracted her motnw, Dr Rosenberg, from the Eastern District Hospital found Tessie in a seml-con-scious condition, with an artery severed.

She was removed to the hospital In ft serious condition. CORPORATION NOTICES. FOR BIDS AND iSS'l'l EW YORK. I SOTICB TO CONTRACTORS. GBHBRAI.

INSTRUCTIONS TO BIDDETti. or iwrjon inakinff a bid or etl-Tlie work, material or up-mate for ty i New York, or for any piles iirtinVnts bureaus or office, shall ot aml in a seated cnvalope. Indorsed furnish the a Buppiies. materials, work with the bid or esttmat. i or servli-e i' or t)ielr name or names and wlilj prestation to the president, the date ol head ot 18 depaitmont or board or i before the date and hour his or Us 'atn-crtlsement for the samo, named In place the estimates raclyd whlctt Suened by the President ot will be said department and rad.

Board or the contlaet made according and the ttWr''n thereafter as to law as soon i c)ntain Each bid ot the person miking and plate 0f all persons Interested the rame. rt other person IO with him distinctly state that- fact, interested. 'I de whout any connection also that rBun lnaking an estimate for with any ami Is in all respects fair the or fraud, and t.at i withoJt head or. neir.ber of burpau, deputy thereof or New VorK contracting party, directly or -Burety or otherwise in or partner, ancc ot the contract, or in th in the business to which It relates. unites.

thereof. Ts ill must be by oath, bid or partv or parties making ths In writing. OI Bever'al matters staled thers-mtimate tnf true freehold'" Jurely company 1 auaranty ns surety. and law to J'-'jortn in the matte form mentioned below will be considered unless No dii precedent to tne reception or nrnnnanl it be SrcOlll- confiilerAtlon chck upon one of ths u'Vional banks of The City of New nr nf Vurk tht- amount of five per centum nwn nr tun irw. iir.

inune hnnd reoulred as Dro- the a1, Jivi of the Greater New York vided b1-" 1 check or money should not bs in the envelope containing the bid or either inrlosed In ft estimate. to the head ot separate president or aid. or ub-ihe depart" upQn thB presentation of tha mined bid or i3T, as to the quantity and h. supnlies or the nature snd extent ity or tne must be made to the the plans, on file In Epecilu-nii' tle presiaent, board or d-the said parti. umt hau he accepted from or contract No hi'i pergon who is in arrears awarded upon debt or coh- The I 'no ,9 a defaulter as surety or upon obligation to the city.

0 Contracts must he hid for separately. rVuht Is reserved In each case to reect estimates If it be deemed to be lor interest of the city so to do. i wrlto oat the amount of their hiti or estimates addition to Inserting ths "n'idders'ate required to make their bids hr etiiMti upon the Wank forms prepared ao'l Ifurmshed city a copy of which. wCh the ifoir tn' mi ii i "-bid together with a vupy of tho enntraet, in-eludliiK sp" rat Ions in the form appro va bv the corpora1 ion ouneti, car. be obtained b'y aiiplicath'ii thetvfnr at the office of the -J partment (or which the vork Is Io be fioiie.

Plate or 'drawings construction work BUZ alse be seen thtie..

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About The Brooklyn Daily Eagle Archive

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