NEW- DAILY EPISCOPALIANS MEET. IUSK.EPISCOPALIANS MEET. 7 MSHOP IXGRAM SPEAKS. HOLT TRINITY CHURCH,...

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Page 1: NEW- DAILY EPISCOPALIANS MEET. IUSK.EPISCOPALIANS MEET. 7 MSHOP IXGRAM SPEAKS. HOLT TRINITY CHURCH, RICHMOND, VA. In whlrh the Episcopal General Convention Is meeting. Died. Death

NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3. 1907

EPISCOPALIANS MEET.7

MSHOP IXGRAM SPEAKS.

HOLT TRINITY CHURCH, RICHMOND, VA.In whlrh the Episcopal General Convention Is meeting.

Died.Death notices appearing in TirE TBIBINE willberepubllshed In The Tri-Weekly Tribune without extracharge.

Brown. George B. Renwlck. Margaret.I*-Uplalne. Matilda. Robinson. Beatrice. *i.\3sjV.ra:\u25a0'\u25a0 MaryI: Sisuse. James R.Mead. Harriett N.

BROWN— On Thursday, October 1. at Ms late residenceNo. 240 Lenox aye.. George R. beloved husband ofFannie White Brown, aged 60 years. Funeral ssrvteeeat St. Andrew's church. 127th St. and Fifth aye.Thursday. October 3. at 2 p.. m

DELAPLAINE—On Mon<toy evening. September aft, I9OT.at her residence. No. 64 West 30th st.. Matilda, wttfow<>f Isaac C Delaplatne. late of this city. Funeral pi+-vat«.

GRAY- Ttlca, N. T.. October 1. 1007, Mary B. Cray.widow of Or. John P. Gray and* daughter of tha late

Edmund A. Wetmore. of Utlca. \u25a0

MEAD—On Tuesday. October 1. st Oeeinlng. N. T-. SBsT-rl*-ttN. wife of the late Robert G. Mead. Funeralprivate. Bermuda papers please copy.

RENWICK—

At her residence, Newport. R. 1., on BUBSSjr.September 29. In the 82d year of her age. MargaretRenwlck. widow of Henry Brevoort Renwtck and daugh-ter of Jonathan and Elizabeth Janney. of Alexandria.Vs. Funeral services at the <~*hurrh of the Bptpbany.35th st. and Lexington aye.. Friday. October 4. at 10a. m. It Is kindly requested that no flowers ba sent-Washington and Baltimore papers please copy.

ROBINSON'—

On Monday. September 30, I*o7, B**triea.loved wife of •

toorge L. Robinson. Funeral Berries*at her lat» resilience-. No. 8 Glenada Place, Brooklyn.on Thursday. October 3. at 2 p. m.

6KCSE—

At Hi residence. No. 308 President St.. Brack-lyn. James Richard Skuse. beloved father of TIWIISS J.Skuse and Marietta C. Keough. on Monday TintagSeptember Bl>. Funeral services at St. Agnes's Church,Fa.-kett and Hoyt sts.. Thursday morning. October 3.9:30 o'clock.

CEMETERIES.THE WOODLAWS CEMETERY

Is j*ad!lTaecesstblA by Harlem trains from Grand CssSSSSStation. Webster and Jemme Avenue trolley*and by ear-rlage. Lots. $123 up. Telephone 4353 Oramercy for Boosof Vlew» or representative.

Office. 20 East 334 St. New Tor*City.

VNDERTAKERS.

FRANK F. rAMTBEM,CO.. 2«-S Tv"e«« 23d St.Chapels. Private and public ambulance*. TeLUS*Chelsea,

tlon of officers and \u25a0 the adoption of a resolutionprotesting against the indiscriminate Immigrationof paupers and criminals. Next year's conventionwill be held at Chattanooga, T>nn. The officersInclude: National councillor, Joseph M. Thompson.New Jersey; associate national councillor. Mrs.Elva Dean. New York, and associate national vice-councillor. Mrs. Mary Emerich. Pennsylvania.

cA Summer Appetiser— A teaspoonful of Horaford*S

Acid Phosphate in a glass of water stimulates appetiteand quenches thirst.

Married.Marriage? notices appearing: in THE TRIBUNE will

be repablished In The Trt-Weealr Tribune withoutextra chars*.

BOWMAN— At SaZ?ra. Ohl<\ October 2. StacyAugusta, daughter of Mrs. I. Twins Brooks, to Oeats*H. Bowman, esq.. of Cleveland.

OGDEX JONES——

At New London. Conn., onTuesday. October 1. by the Rev. Alfred Pool* Grlnt.Vera de Troflmoff. daughter of the lats Mahlon OgdaaJanes, to Dr. Of WiUUm Jean.

ROONET—MOORE—

At the Church of the HolyName,onOctober 2. IWIT, by the Rev. Joseph Cherry. AgnesJosephine Rooney to Dr. Samuel Barlow Moore.

TORRANTE—BVSHNELI-— Wednesday. October 2.at the Church of the Redeemer. Morrtstown. N. J.,by the Rev. Dr. William M. Hughes. Anna Groves.daughter of Mary Groves Bushnell and the lataThomas Campbell Bushnell. Esq., to Alexander Tor-rance, of Tenafly. N. J.

Notices of marriage* and deaths must be indorsedwith full name and address.

Special Notices.To the Employer.

Do you want desirable help QUICK?SAVE TIMEA\D EXPENSE by eonsulttus;

the file of applications of selected aspirants forpositions oi various kinds which haa just beenInstalled at the Uptown Office of

THE NEW-YORK TRIBUNE.No. 1364 Broadway.

Between S6th and 37th Streets.Office Hours: 9 a. m. to 6 p. ra.

I.OOUI Ofllrlal Krrord.-The following official recordfrom the Weather Barean Shows the changes In thetemperature for the last twenty-four hours. In com-parison with the corresponding date last year-

3a mlU%>\ 6 n

• «W«: 1007.

j££:::::::;;g 8711 p. rfl::I*. ?2

4p. m «7 631*" —

lliKhfst temperature yesterday. C.I degrees- |n».«t53; average. .',6; avera K0 for corVeipondTng <i4i4°

la.t

.iL<"'?i' ,r°re«-J^--Falr and wanner to-dkv Fridayfair; llgHt to fresh south winds-** uaay

Ofllrlal Rm-urd and Forecast.—

"vVashlnßton. Oct. 2—

Tho area of low pressure In the upper Mississippi Val-ley Tuesday evening has apparently passed northeast-ward beyond th" Held of observation. A second lowIs central over the extreme Southwest. While It Klvoslittle promise of Immediate movement, It has causolscattered rains in Arizona, Utah. Idaho. Wyoming -andKansas. In other parix of the country tho weatherhas been fair, uith a general Increase of temperaturef-ast of the Rocky Mountain*. The weather In Easterndistrict* willbe fair Thursday, with higher tempera-ture In th« middle Atlantic states nnd New England.In the southern Rocky Mountain region and over theplains states of Nebraska. Kansas, Oklahoma andWest Texas rain in probable, and the rain willpnnb-ably. extend eastward into the Mississippi ami lowerOhio valleys or. Friday, attends! by a considerable fallin temperature from lowa southward to Texas.

In the Atlantic coast districts Friday will be partlycloudy to clouds', with Dot much change In tempera-turf. Tb« winds along the New England an.l middleAtlantic coast will be lißht and variable; South At-lantic coast, southeast to south; East Gulf coast lightsouth: Gulf coast, fresh southeast; on the lower lakeslight to fresh south: upper lakes, fr«»sh southwest

Steamers departing Thursday for European ports willhave llrht variable winds and fair weather to theGrand liunks.

loreinst for Pprolul LoeaUtlas.— For New EnglanJ,fair and slightly warmer to-day nnd Friday; lightvariable winds, mostly southeasterlyN-.r:.'r ;I;

I;H,s '.:- r:i,,^<,"i (>, v"rk :t-"-. '^'-"i Pmmsrtvaals.

Irl.lay. fair; light to fr<-sh south windsFor the District of, Columbia and Maryland fair

an^warm.r to-day; Friday, partly clouJy;Tflght'-outhFor Western Pennsylvania sod Western

hNew v ,ri-

winds. mußtly south. "«• (I"u^ "t>ni \ariablo

THE WEATHER REPORT.

WHAT IS GOING ON TO-DAY.Metropolitan Museum of Art. free, 10 a. m. to 0 p. in.American Museum of Natural History, free. » a. m.

to 5 p. m.Moetlng Chamber of Commerce. No. 85 I,it>erty street,

12:30 p. m.Graduation exerclSM of schoolship St. Mary's, recrea-

tion pUr East 24th str<-t. 8 SO p. m.Free lecture* of th« Board of Education, 8 p. m.

—De Wilt Clinton High School. 69th Btreet andTenth avenue. Prof«-BBor James T. Shotwpll.

"Europe on the Eve of the. French Revolution";Public School •>-. Heater, Essex and Suffolkstreets, Arthur Stanley lunge.. "Northern Italy

—V.:Ice to Paris": Public School 170. 111th street,

between Fifth and L^nox avenues. General JamesGrant Wilson, "Columbus and Henry Hudson":Five Points Mission. Sn. (13 Park street. Prof««sorHenry K. Northrop, "Imperial H»rlin": New YorkPublic Library. No. 112 East HCth street. WilliamUurnet Tuthlll, "AStudy In Domes"; Morris HighSchool. 100th street and Boston Road. ProfessorFrederick H. Bjrka*. "Th* Nineteenth Century InLiterature: General Aspects"! Public School l",li.istreet. Went Cheater. MasuJlro Honda, "JapaneseLlf« and Customs': Public School 27. St. Anna'savenue, 147th and 148th streets, Mrs. Mary Orat-ory Murray, "Old arid New In Music Education";Public School :;t. Amethyst avenue, near MorrisPark a-, rim*. Van Nest, Cbsrle* H. Govon, "riurnaami Scotland."

PROMINENT AEPJVALS AT THEHOTELSHOTEL ASTOR--Captn'.i J. T. Herron, 2d United

F:.-.i»- Cavalry. BELMONT—H. W. Chapin. Wa*h-BUCKINGHAM—D. Randall Mclvor, Eng-

land. EMPIRE—I*S. Navarre, Havana. GOTHAM—Carroll Boyce, New York. MANHATTAN—JohnHamlin, Chicago. Waldorf- ASTORIA-ArthurH. Cowing, I'ma(]en%, <'al.

Mr. Root and !.is family spent this morning visit-

ing plare.s of historic or artistic Interest In the < Ity,accompanied by a special escort.

ra Diaz entertained Mrs. and Mies Root -it

:rnal tea garden party at her hnm« In Calle-rdaj afternoon.

Thr- I t the programme to-day was thegarden party lr. tho grounds of the ChapultepecCastle. Over five hundred Invitations had t-

The party began shortly aft>r 5 o'clock midlasted until late In the. evening.

A Garden Party at Chapultepec—

SenoraDiaz Entertains.

Mexico City, Oct. 2.—Be'-retir> Hoot an<l his partyspent a busy day. They express pleasure with th--;r

reception and the taste shown at every entertain-ment In t!.< lr honor

At.-,one other important problems r"n-ling arothe proposition to divide the United States Intoprovinces, and make the office of presiding bishopelective, but the term of office to bo for life oruntil the Incumbent is seventy years old. Thero isalso a movement to appoint a committee to revisethe leetlonary and to n!low more liberty In thoway the Bible should be read In t!;. ihun nes.

MH. EOOTS VISIT TO MEXICO.

Tho r.opening of tho discussion on the remarry-ing of divorced persona Is an important feature ofthe business programme. Many of the delegates

will urge the passage of a more drastic rnnon, andpossibly the prohibition entirely of remarriage ofn divorced person by ar.y clergyman of ihe ]

urch.Already the question of creating a court of ap-

peals in the Church has provoked much discussionof nn Informal character. The opponents areshowing that such a court would be for trial ofheresy charges. It is declared by some tlcreation of euch a court would ush^r politics Intothe Church conventions, unless the membership

of th.^ court la confined to the members of theHouse of Bishops.

NEGRO QUESTION UP.

Of all the questions rr ''-'lin^ in tho convention

that of creating negro bishops in causing the most

heated advance discussion. There is a larzo factionin the convention which will advocate the closing

of nepro missions nnd schools, allowing tho negrocommunicants to die out or scatter among otherreligious bodies. Another faction openly advocatesthe crention of negro bishops to serve over negrochurch's. Still others would consecrate negrosuffragan bishop* t" serve under the direction of

the whlto bishop of the diocese. Ftlll another planIs to give the negroes throo bishops anil let themerect an autonomous church.

I^ny delegates to the convention number mnnywell known business men from every se< ti.>n of thecountry, and several of them have taken housesfor the three weeks* sessions. Notable amongtheso is .1. Plerpont Morgan, who oooupiot; tin?

Rutherford mansion, which he refitted throughout

with furnishings and provisions cent from NewYork. At this mansion there will be a number ofentertainments

liriTSK OF BISHOPS ORGANIZKS.The sr-ssions of (he House of Bishops to-day were

executive, and will continue to bo *>o during theconvention. At tho close r statement of tho pro-ceedings was made by Dr. Samuel Hart, of Con-necticut, secretary of the house. After the housewas called to order by Bishop Tuttlo, elevenbishops, appearing in the house for the first time,were presented. They were Bishops Ptranse, EastCarolina; Roots, Hankow; Bpaldlng. Bait I-.ako; W.P. Johnson, Pouth Dakota; c. D. Williams. Michi-gan; Parker, »w Hampshire; McCormlck, West-ern Michigan; Webb, Milwaukee; Bcadding, Ore-ffon; Tucker, Southern Virginia, and tiucrry. SouthCarolina. Bishop William Ijiwrcncr, of Massa-chusetts, was re-elected chairman, and Dr. SamuelHart, of *'->nnecticut, secretary of th.» house.

The presiding bishop of the Episcopal churchhas commissioned the Rev. Henry Bell Bryan,archdeacon of Queens and Nassau counties andennon of Garden <ity Cathedral, Long [stand, to

be archdeacon of Panama and tho canal zone andparts adjacent The appointment has lust bo«-n ac-cepted ,-iftor a conference with Bishop Satterlee ofWashington and the archbishop of the West In-dies.

Tho first American clergyman from t!ie Epls-copal Church t" go t.> the zone will sail from »wYork, accompanied by a presbyter from the dio-cese of Newark as travelling companion and or-panizlnc; secretary, about November l, stopping en

route to accept the hospitality of Archbishop Nut-tan at his palace in Jamaica,

ing to be members of the Hock of Christ nil whonave been duly baptized in the name of the Father,anci of the Hon. and of the Holy Ghost, has or-oatned and established for tho furtherance of thework to which it lias U-.-n called of God, the fol-lowing constitution:

J. Pierponl Morgan, of New York, presented aresolution providing for tho appointment of a Jointcommittee to consider the place of holding theconvention in 1910. The question of changing theprocedure in relation to the election of a presidingbishop to serve for life, or until he has reached theage Of seventy years, and a number of other mat-ters that will later provoke considerable dlscus-elon, were the subjects of resolutions, all of whichwere referred to committees.

OFFEKS NEW PREAMBLE.Just before adjournment In th« House of Depu-

tlt«. the Rev. Dr. Hunttngton, of New York,m>jv*-n this significant preamble to the constitutionof the Church:

Bjn mth«

iCan ehurcl >. "ret planted In Virginiathta Jr 11. «7"»t'*pnth century by representa-

«ila« the Hr w 5l5lChurch of England, acknowl-

•SwS c^rn3erby^rrisTfnnSrVa^ S|

AGAINST "NEW THEOLOGY."Ihave BO means of knowing the trend of re-

ligious thought in the United Stales, but from myexperience of East, North and West London thefuture lies with no Church which sinks to whatis called the "New Theology." God forbid weehculd say a word apainst any Individual manwho believes as much as he can of the Christiancreed, but what we must beware of on both sidesof the Atlantic is losing the power of our messageby trying to make it easier to be believed.

The Church of the future must undoubtedly pos-«ess the unbroken ministry and the historic sacra-ments which you possess In the Church of Amer-ica to-day. "Hold fast that thou hast, that no mantake thy crown."But it may be said. "Every orthodox Christiancommunity In the world preaches the gospel of the

love of God and of a free salvation"— ir. what senseare \u25a0»•\u25a0 justified to-day i;; the Anglican CommunionIn keeping our own organization separate from thegreat non-episcopal bodies on the one hand, andthe man Church on the other? And here let meacknowledge the help that I.with many others, re-ceived en our side of the Atlantic from two booksthat rare written on thi* side more than twentyyetrs apo by Bishop Cleveland Coxe on "Apollos,or the Way of God." and Bishop Incraham Kipon "The Double Witness of the Church."

We- do not keep aloof from either In any spirit of\u25a0 terllnesa or Pharisaical pride. We long to be

one: we pray to be one; we honor and admire allthat they have done for the cause of Christ. Thereis no difficulty in London, and there ought to heno difficulty anywhere, in workingside by side withthem \u25a01 .very cause which mikes for the well-tx?ii;^ of our common city or nation. The PublicMorality Council for London, of which Iam chair-man, contains representatives of every religiouscommunity in London.

But, in spite of this, we are bound to maintain,!n opposition to the great non-episcopal bodies,that the historical ministry cannot lightly be setaside in the Christian Church; that, just as everyp'.art has lines of Its own on which it develops, sothe divine grain of mustard seed carries within It-sett the organization by which it was m»ant tospread throughout the world. Again and again

ha* tins. as well as the gospel of free salvation.been shown effective in the history of the Church.It was the ordered ministry and strong organiza-

tion of the Church which saved the Christian re-ligion for Europe when the Goths burst upon Romeand swept it away, and It was the Church which£6 a matter of fact converted the conquerors.And aeairi. leaping over the aces, to come to yourown Virginia, \u25a0when other political causes into\u25a0which Ineed not enter had almost swept away theChurch from this part of America altogether, yet,once given the chance, just an a plant trampledunder foot but not dead will lift its head, and thebent stalk will straighten Itself again when theweight is lifted off. co in the marvellous revival ofthe Church of Virginia we see once again theJustification in history of Church order. Churchministry and Church worship.

AX ANGLICAN COMMUNION.But when Iturn to the far more delicate ques-

tion as to why we do not seek reunion underpresent conditions with that great historic Churchwhich numbers, Iknow, so many adherents inAmerica, and which undoubtedly shares with usthe pifu< of an unbroken tradition and sacramentsconsecrated by duly ordained ministers. Igladlyavail myself of boom words written at ray re-quest for my use to-day by one of the most hon-ored bishops of the Anglican Communion, honored,Ihope, on both Fide 3of the Atlantic

—Imean

Bishop King, of Lincoln. Iasked him to writedown for me what he considered the special char-acteristic and special function of the AnglicanCommunion, and those who remember what wascalled the Lincoln trial In England will know howlittle he can be considered prejudiced toward whatis sometimes called a Protestant view of the Chris-tian faith. And this Is what he writes:

"The special function of the Anglican Com-munion is to preserve the exact truth. She muchprotests against 1 ny additions to or subtractionsfrom the tea'cMnc of Holy Scripture and the earlyand undivided Church.

"The Church of Rome appears to us to err in theMof authority in relation to the truth. The. uni-versa] supremacy of .1 single see and the infalli-bilityof an Individual bishop are extreme Instancesof this. The ecclesiastical use of authority in re-lation to individual conduct, such as compulsoryconfession and attendance at mass, seem to til-<Jang*r th« freedom of Individual action and there-fore to wtaken the moral life—obedience must POtbe put in the place of truth We give authoritychiefly an educational place with regard to tru:h.Authority Introduces us to the truth, and thentrußts to the faculties of the Individual (the mird.heart, conscience, will),undtr the guidance jf theHoly Spirit, to apprehend that truth. We wishPeople to say: 'Now we believe, not bees . ofthy Baying. for we have beard Him ourselves andknow that this Is Indeed the Christ, the Saviour<t the World." "!believe it would be difficult to state in clearer

words the difference between the "fatherly" au-thority pjs given to the Church by the Anglicancommunion an 'J th" authority as taught and prac-ticed In the Church of Rome. We believe, more-over, in a Catholic Church which Is not afraid inBay land of the Idea of a national Church. Andalready in far Japan, England and America areworking together in the common work of fostering"the Holy Catholic Church of Japan" to be thefoul of that great and growing nation.In one s<r«e Itis Impossible for the Church to

mix too freely with the world. Into the slums of>-.-iSt London, Into the business of Wall Street, Intothe mining camps of the Klondike. th« Churchraust go. and no human Interest in th<^ world is< Mithe interest of the Church.

MESSAGK FROM THE HEART.Ina happily worded closing paragraph the Bishop

apologized for the simplicity of the message he hadbrought to the men of the American Church fromacrosp i:«o sea, bat he averred that It came fromthe heart.

After the sermon the vast congregation waswarned that only members Of the convention wererspftctcd to receive communion. This restrictionshortened Ota service to an appreciable extent.

There were about one hundred bishops In the pro-ccstion. This was viewed by thousands of personsIn the streets surrounding the church and in Mon-

'"\u25a0 Park. About seven hundred deputies, clericalfi'id lay, are In attendance. These were providedwith seats in th.. church. Many hundreds of pcr-fous tiiiGtlc to Kr-in admittance to the opening ser-vice went to tho centre of the' park and sanghymns. At limes tho music floated into the churchduring the aeryIce like anthems from anotherworld. . _

The House of Deputies met at 2:30 this afTernoon.Tl;e .:••%•. Dr. McKlm was unanimously electedpresldenl and the Rev. Dr. Henry Anstlce, of MewV'rk. secretary. Through the courtesy of the Gov-crr.or of Virginia the Ilwiw of Btshopa uses thechainbcr cf the House of Hur.- -. .- GovernorFwauson came Into the house, and on bin.; pre-Bchted ii\u25a0: •!\u25a0 an address, as did also 1!" Bishop ofLondon,' the Bishop of St. Albans. Bishop Mont-gomery and the bishops of Mackenzie River, Que-1- • and Ontario.

First, undoubtedly, the future can only belongto a Church which believes and preaches the forth-reaohir.p. energizing and active love of God. GodforWd that Ishould deny the difficulties whichFi-rround a belief In the love, of God or ignore thoftern Fide of the New Testament, but no Churchwill save the world, and especially these thousandlaflliona who have not yet had a chance of makinguj>their minds as to the truth of Christianity, except

a Charch that believes and proclaims and livesout t m lave of God to every child that He hasmade.

And antk the gospel of the love of God must cowhat we call in England the message of a freesalvation. It may be that in the past we may haveallowed a legalizinc spirit to creep over th«Church, bvt to-day High Church and Low Churchvie in England to preach a gospel of a free salva-tion—Oat the Eternal Son of God came Into thisworld and pave Himself for his brothers; that theChrist.an religion does not consist In a belief Ina eood man named Jesus Christ dying on thecross, but consists in a belief in the sacrifice ofGod h!mself.

General Convention of the ChurchOpens in Richmond, Va.

[By Telegraph to The Tribune.

Richmond, Va.Oct. 2.—The general convention ofthe Episcopal Church opened here to-day, withBishop ruttle, of Missouri, as presiding officer.At 11 o'clock a long procession of choristers nndclergy entered HolyTrinity Church for the opening

service. Bishop Tuttle began the communionoffice being assisted by Bishop Doane, of Albany.

While the hymn "In the Cross 'if Christ IGlory"was being sung, the Bishop of London went to thepulpit. His text was "The kingdom of heaven Islike unto a grain of mustard seed." He Fp<ikeof the growth of the American Church as beingnvjch like that peed, and rehearsed the story of

the early trials and vicissitudes of the Jamestowncolcr.lsta. He laid particular stress on the eviden-tial value of the large amount of church building

la 1. : lon In the last forty years, and the story ofthe Church in America, he declared, was a Stronggstden •"• for the divine origin of Christianity. Con-tinuing:, he said, in part:

The riddle of tho Sphinx Ik easier than a com-plete answer to the query. "What Is a Child?" 1>r.G. Stanley Hall, president of Clark University. Isone of the fonemoal experts r.n child study. H<.says: •"For one tM'ig, a child is the key to theentire history of lif>- on this globe." Read hisarticle in next Sundays Magazine Section ofTribune.

Much spa a li \u25a0:\u25a0 \u25a0. ted In "Tla nulletln" of 'Uismonth t.. t;.. work of ths Egyptian BxploiI'uiid la excavating the pyramid temple "f Amen-smhat I, at LlshL Nearly 01 Itombshavsbeen opened, but, as the undertaken frequently

robbed the toobs of the wealthy, few Interestingtilings were found, until th«> grave of a womaanamed Benbtes was opened, l'his hud suffered only

the contemporary disturbance, and it took two

months to unearth all its treasures). The body wasincaeod In three coffins. J» i*Ulng <'i contents>.f the Innermost coffin Professor Lythgoc t.ij.-<:

The vncfi mask was of thicker plaster, carefully]. with Inlaid eyes ol alabaster and ob-

sidian, set in silver frames. At the neck th< re w.ioa panel "f actual beads carnellan and glaz<Into thi plaster, with conventional \\:»; curia oneither side, done i:i blue paste with a carnellandi.si: at tii« cxtrcmitloa <.f eaoh curL The lid hu ibt-uii fastened to tho body of the i-"fnn by a sys-tem of bronae pins and catches, so Ingenious inconstruction that nothing short .>r main force wouldhave sufficed to open it. Unfortunately, it wa*marie of -s"ft WOOd, Which had rotted away, no thatonly measurements and notes on Ita constructionand scheme of ornamentation could be secured, if

waa laia on it:' tide, with the faco toward the eyepanel* of th« outer coffins.

Immediately Inside this third ccffln there was athick layer of pitch, which must have been pouredon after the t>o,iv had been laid In ignition, just.prioi to the burial, for the pitch had for th.- mostpart run down to the l»ft Mle of the body, amimust therefore have been Introduced only Just be-fore the coffin waa closed and laid «n its side. Inthis pitch layer were, found the most valuable orthe personal ornnm«-ntc. which must have 1 n

placed on the body outside the final wrappings,and been dragged oui >.f position by the pitch asIt r;m

They consisted of a circlet, from the head—formed or three colla <>f twisted g.iid wire endlnirin an ornament over the forehead and a series ofiilnet.Nt-elpiit gold rosettes which had been dottedover the wijr and fastened to Ita separate strands;n necklace <->f tiny carnelian and beryl bead*with gold nheii r"'nrl;:nt«; v second necklace of tiny

brown beads with cirflle-tie pendants of gold, t^il-v.-r. carnellan, beryl and Ivory, and bracelets (?) oftiny brown beads, with, at Intervals, double, heartamulets of k^m. carnellan. beryl and Ivory. JustInside this pitch layer and outside the wrappingsof tho body th«-r<' wan a wry elaborate bead girdle,fastened on tho right side with a plaque of plantercovered with gold foil, on which was Inscribed the

nnme Ben!>t<-s, ami. close to the hands 011 the Liftaide M small <laß«fr in a wooden sheath decoratedwith gold.

The body was wrapped In several thicknesses ofcloth. The innermost wrapping of all waa a shnwlof extraordinarily lin<> texture, averaging EOxSOthreads to the centimetre. The outer wrappingsconsisted nf alternate shawls and bandages, thecloth i>t the !nt!>T being of much coarser quality,only averaging 4oxi<; threads to the centimetre. Th«legs and arms were wrapped separately. Insideth«-se wrappings, and separated from each other bythe various layers of cloth, there wore a numberof other personal ornnm^nts: two elaborate beadcollars of carnelian, glased pottery and wii? planter;a bronse pectoral covered with gold foil;a necklaceof I'ottlo shaped beads made of Ivory, carnelian.green stone and c!nze<i pottery covered withfoil, with a carnelian and gold cloisonne pendant;n carnellan hawk amulet; a small cam' coveredwith bead work and tipped with gold, and behindthe head a large disk of hard paste or some ma-terial which may perhaps !.e the prototype of th«>later Inscribed hypocephalus.• .—..

—.LUDWIG BAUMANN & CO. ALL RIGHT.T,urU\lir Baumann A Co. lny Htre.s.s on an as-

sortment of furniture, carpets and upholsteries at

reduced prices. Officials of the company saidyesterday that the fire in their Eighth avenue an-nex had rot in the ."lightest degree crippled th<.|r

resources and facilities. Their ton story buildingfit No. tU West 3(Jth ptreet, which adjoins theEighth avenue branch, had not been touched bythe fire, nnd everything Is Intact. Deliveries \vi!lbe made an usual.

Great Value of Baker Gift to

Museum Just Discovered.Almost indistinguishable In Its method and fine-

ness of weaving from the Gobelin tapestries of thelust two centuries is a piece of Coptic tapestrynow on exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum ofArt. This tapestry is part of a gift made by George

K. Baker in IS9O, but its Importance has Just beendiscovered. ItIs about 10 by 9>i Inches, and repre-sents a woman holding a chiton In her upraisfd

hands. Sir Purdon Clarke said yesterday that itwas hard to determine whether the piece waspagan or Christian in character. A nimbus aboutthe head, he said, would inf.r tho latter, although

there Is a similar panel In Kensington Museum rep-resenting Hermes and distinctly pagan.

The panel iii(T«-rs from the technique of the Gobe-

lin tapes! only in that the warp Is of linon in-

stead of the modern cotton or wool thread. Thewhole of the weft Is In wool, whereas the mediaevaland inodt-rn custom is to use ellks for the highlights. The panel Is woven with the warp ar.d sub-

ject running the same way, to say* us much workas posslblo on the horizontal lines. Where changesof colors occur on vertical lines in unimportantplaces ihe colors are zigzagged, but where thereIs iisharp deviation required a silt was woven openand aft. rward sewed up. This piece, of the secondor third centuries, la the only example of Esyp-tlnn "Gobelin" work possessed by the museum.

Two recent purchase! are a small Last Suppor"by Tintoretto and an a'tnr piece by Cima. repre-senting In stately attitudes St. Anthony, St. Rochand St. Lucy. The altar rieco is from tho collec-tion of the Duke of Leuchtenberg. of St Peters-burg, while the "Lift Supper" was formerly Inthe possession of Lord Methusn. A status of St.Catharine, fifteenth century French, ii anotherpurchase of tlie last month.

Th<» most Important loan made to tho muß'Mim forseveral months Is that of the Barbertnl tapestriesl*>nt by th« edral of St. John the Dtsins, prob-ably through the Influenc* till Morgan. Twelvepieces constitute the set, which bears the generaltitlo ••'!" \u25a0 Mysteries of •'\u25a0•• life end Death ofChrist." The net was woven litI \u25a0'• pontifical tap-estry works at Boms, under the pices of Car-dinal Barberlni, for llm> chapel of Urban VIIIabout

:\u25a0 |] The cartoons for this series ai •till pro-

served in the palaco of the Barberlal In Rome. Thestyle of the etrles Is of th< lato Renaissance undsomewhat UoriJ.

HARE TAPESTRY SHOWN

Rumors in Vienna That She WillBe Marriedto Count Laszlo Szechenyi.

Vienna, Oct. 2.—The report made public li thoUnited States that Mls.i Gladys Vanderhllt, daugh-ter of Cornelius Vaadsrhtlt, was to bemarried to a Hungarian nobleman, has been tele-grashed bars. It hi now recalled that when Mrs.Cornelius Vanderbilt and her daughter wore kjstsabout :imonth hk" they spoilt much tfasM in thecompany of Count Lawiß Bsschanyl, and evenvisited his estate at Horpaea, in Hungary.

Count Baeohenyl belongs to an ancUnt Hungarianfamily. He Is twenty, lsht years of ag*. a courtehambsrlata and a Hsutaaaat in the reserves, niseldest brother. Count I>yonis Szechenyi, marriedCounteM Csraman Chlmay. It is believed herethat ths count's \u25a0ngegSWlSsit to Miss Vanderbiltpossibly was settled during the visit to Horpacs.

BEQUEATHS HOUSE FOR MUSEUM.{By Telegraph to Th«Tribune. ]

Hartford. Com... Oct. 2.— The will of JudgeThomas Hyde Ix)rd Talcott. tho Glastonbury re-clubo, who never had a Judicial decision reversed,was filed to-day In the Probate Court. Itprovidesthat the testator's house. Including his wife's roomwhich was kept unchanged for the thirty-five Fearssince her death, t-lmll be deeded to an associationto be used as a museum, together with its contents

MISS VANDERBILT ENGAGED?

Charges Made Against American Aero ClubRegarding Race at St. Louis.

Parts, Oct. 'liie "Eclair" publishes a dispatch

from it.-* Madrid correspondent Haying that theAero Club of Spain Is much annoyed at being ex-cluded from participation In the balloon races tobe held at St. Loots the latter part of this month.This action was taken on account of the latenessIn glvlnif notification of the names of the com-petitorn. The Spanish club has decided to breakoff all relations with tho Aero Club of America, notto enter any contests with this club In the future,and to lodgo ii formal complaint with th» Inter-national Aeronautic Federation that the subscrip-tion to race at St. Louis was paid, but when thenames of the competitors were sent In the Ameri-can club Intimated that they had come too late, butkept the subscription money.

SPANISH AERONAUTS ANGRY.

OBITUARY NOTES.MRS. MART B. GRAY, wife of the late Dr. Per-

duo Gray and daughter of the late Edmund A.Wet-more, died on Tuesday at her home. in Utlca. N.Y. Her husband was for many years connectedwith the state asylum for the lnsano and whilethere established a periodical called "The Opal."which was edited by the patients. In IKo Dr.Gray brought about a convention of superintendentsof the poor, which was addressed by him on thesubject of the removal of children from poor-houses In the state and placing them m public orprivate asylums provided for the purpose. Besideshis numerous addresses and lectures. Dr. Graywrote several books on Insanity. Ho died in Utlcaon November 29. ISS6.

MBA SUSAN E. WALLACE, widow of GeneralIjew Wallace, died In Crawfordsvllle. Ind.. Tuesdaynight.

SAMUEL D. HALLIDAY.[Py ssraah » n Th» Tribune.i

Ithaca, N. V.. Oct. -Samuel D. Halliday,a lead-ingmember of the Tompklns County bar. died at

noon to day, after a three week's illness following

a stroke of apoplexy. He had Just returned from aEuropean trip for his health when Stricken. Mr.Hallidsy had a wide reputation as "• practitioner.

He «h« a Democrat, and served as District At-torney of this county. He was lat"r elected to theAssembly for two terms and bad been a delegate

to tho National Democratic Convention twice, be-sides having been a member of the DemocraticState Committee. Hf was a trustee of CornellUniversity and Its legal adviser, succeeding the lateJudge Francis M. Finch. He was graduated fromCorne'.l In Its first class, In 1870, after ependlng ay«ar at Hamilton. ICe wan admitted to the bar In1872. fie was tho legal representative of a largenumber of corporations.

OBITUARY.

School in Handling Garbage Estab-lished at Court.

Peace now reigns between tho Street CleaningDepartment and the Janitors' Society of New York,

after a long and bitter fight over the garbagequestion. A conference wan held yesterday In the

Esses Market court, attended by Magistrate Cor-rigan. Commissioner Bensel and officers of theJanitors' Society, at which a school of Instructionwas established for violator* of the garbage law.Including both Janitors and tenants.

Th" conference was brought about as a resultof the arrest of thirty-two Janltresee3, who werefined tl each by Magistrate Conigan last Saturdayfor mixing garbage with other refuse. The Janitorsblamed the tenants. At the conference, those rep-resenting th* Janitors' Society were Secretary

Michael Brown, at whose suggestion the confer-ence wad called; Isaac Hlraobn, president of thesociety, and the society's attorneys. Landle &Zunsser. j

Th«> first session of the school of instructionwill be held this morning at the Essex Marketcourt and will be in charge of SuperintendentSttii-kpol<\ who has done considerable work Incleaning East Bide streets, and a representative ofth« Janitors' Society, who will Interpret the sani-tary code to all offenders.

As many arrests of Janitors are made nearlyevery day. and the «wsslon will continue until night.

All violators will be brought Immediately Into the

school after the magistrate has disposed of theircases. Mr. Brown bald yesterday that this In-novation would prove one of the greatest aids ineffectively teaching the East Side Inhabitants theF.-inltary rulfs of the city.

TO TEACH JANITORS.

ELECTED BY DAUGHTERS OF AMERICA.Cleveland, Oct. i.—The annual convention of the

Daughters of America oloaed to-day with the elec-

KAISERIN AUOUSTFJ VICTORIA. FOR HAMBURO.Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Blsaell. N. Kt<-hepor«»l.irrla.Mr and Mrs. Temple F. Miss Violet Whitney.

Oral* Mr. and Mrs. WilliamA. J. Taylor. Moser.

BALTIC. FOR LIVERPOOL.Sir Kenelm and Lady IMrs. Mary H. Eouthworth.Dlgby Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Ssaverns.Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Dl Hope lark.

Nunzlo. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mai-Mr and Mrs. Howard nob- lory.

blethwßltK. f. Noria-MUler.Mr. and Mrs. John Talbot.

FRIEDRICH DER GROSSER FOR BREMEN.Miss Florence Bright. IMrs. Samuel McCorab.Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Hell- Parl Pass.

broner. |Mm. C. F. Thomas.LA SAVOIE. FOR HAVRE.

Mrs. W. O. Ashley. IC. D. Scott.F. <•. i.ucker. IAlbert L. Wilson.

Travellers who arrived yesterday from abroadwere:

CARMANIA.FROM LIVERPOOL.Mr. and Mrs. Henry Beer. JJoaqulm Nabuco, BrazilianMr. and Mrs. H. R. Bowen. Ambassador to the UnitedMr. and Mrs. W. H. Burton. States.Mrs. Alice Cooper-CllfTe. Mr. and Mr». Tyler Mora*Alexander Finn. Mr. and Mrs. Charles HGeneral and Mrs. T. L. Starkweather.

James.

TRANSATLANTIC TRAVELLERS.Among the passengers who will salt to-day for

Europe are:

H. H. ROOER9 RECOVERING.H. H. Rogers. It was said at tho Standard Oil

Building yesterday. Is making satisfactory progresstoward recovery, although it cannot yet bo pre-dicted when he will be able to return to his office.

Englishman Points- Out AmericanGrower's Greatest Need.

Thirteen visiting members of the InternationalFederation of Master Cotton Spinners and Manu-facturers' Associations were entertained at dinnerlast night at the Waldorf-Astoria by the membersOf th« New York Cotton Exchange. Dr. J. 11.Parker, the president of the exchange and toast-master of 'ho evening, welcomed the visitini?manufacturers to this country, whose cotton fieldsthey have enrre to inspect.

S. T. Hubbard. ex-president of th- exchange, fol-lowed Mr.Parker and touched upon the Importanceof th« visit of their guests to America, Mr. Bub-bard traced the history of the cotton Industry inthis country. The possibilities of a continual In-crease in the production Of our cotton fields wasreferred to. All Europeans, ho saM look uponAmerica, and especially the New York Cotton Ex-change, as the centre of the cotton Industry of theworld.

"Speculation we do have and will have as longas the world exists." said Mr. Hubbard. "But weare the only exchange In the world which is willingto guarantee the grade of cotton which is ex-changed."

C. W. Masara. president of the InternationalFederation of Master Cotton Spinners. In his ad-dress emphasized the necessity of this country In-creasing itscotton supply, so as to send more acrosstho Atlantic. He also referred to the recent dis-cussions of tho planters and spinners uniting andshutting out the middle men.

"All this talk about the planters and spinnerscoming together Is absolute nonsense. The mlddlaman Is a necessity in every sense of the word.The thou(r>i*s of this coming about should be dis-missed as Impossible. What America needs, ac-cording to my views as an Englishman, is to ade-quately extend Its cotton manufacturing Industriesand Increase the supply of cotton which it sendsannually to Europe."

One of the features of the dinner was a proces-sion of waiters through the grand ballroom of theWaldorf where the banquet was held, bearingvarious figures familiar to the cotton fields, whilethe orchestra played

"'Way Down South. In the

Land of Cotton," and other Southern songs. Amongthe other speakers who responded to toasts wereA. Waibel, a member of the International Federa-tion from Germany; Q. Duvllller-Motte. a memberfrom France; E. M. Weld, vice-president of theNew York Cotton Exchange, and H. W. Taft.

COTTOX EXPERTS DIKE.

The festival management had hoped to haveIn the audience other festival directors of the half-century who are still active. The oldest and theon© of longest service, Mr. Carl Zerrahn, whostood at the conductor's desk thirty-three years, i

held out hopes of his coming, but at the last con- jeluded that the Journey from his home in Mossa-chsotts would be too trying. Mr. Knelsel. the or-chestral conductor since 1*32, was present, ofcourse, and so was Mr. ("hadwtck. Mr. Goodrlch'sImmediate predecessor. Ilollis Dan, of Ithaca; Mr.L*ngley, of Newport; Mr. Loeffler. of Boston, andother lesser lights among conductors and com-posers gave sympathetic attention to the launch-Ing of a new work by the composer, who has madethe deepest Impression of all the younger coterieof American writers.

Description and criticism of "Job" must be with-held until there are more favorable conditions forwriting. It Is a work that was conceived by Itscomposer in a serious spirit, and obviously with apurpose to get out of the beaten path of oratorioand cantata. He has succeeded In a considerabledegree, his music proving to bo most Interestingas It approached tho ecclesiastical model, whichhe has sought to consort with a modern dramatiostyle of utterance, a style more or less influencedby the young Italian school of opera writers.

The work which is inscribed to Mr. Goodrich hadevidently received careful and devoted study andwas performed with enthusiasm on the part of allthe forces. Mr. Beddoe accomplished prodigies ofvalor in singing the trying part of Job In the newwork, as well as the equally trying part of thesolo tenor in the tirst part of "The Dream ofGerontius." with which the concert opened. It waga regular tour de force, a remarkable achievement,nil the more admirable from the fact that his sing-ing was as good as his voice. Only the flawlessart of Mr. de Gogorsea In the music of the friendIn "Job" and the. priest In 'The Dream" made hisperformances equally pleasurable. Mme. Schu-mann-lleink was in superb voice, but her forcedtones and exaggerated pathos grieved the ju-dicious.

A portion of the afternoon rehearsal was devotedto a sort of supplementary concert by the childrenof tho high schools of the city, who, under the di-rection of Charle3 I. Rice and with the help ofMrs. Ida Johnson, soprano; Miss Helen OGorman.contralto; Walter I. Brown, barytone, and the or-chestra, gave a performance of Gad>»'s tuneful can-tat i"The Brl King's Daughter." which was highlycreditable. Especially noteworthy was the freshand bright quality of t!-..- girls' voices. Perform-ances of works adapted for children's voices havebecome a regular feature of the Cincinnati festi-vals, and there are doubtless many of the festivalpatrons In "Worcester who would like to see theexample Bet by the Western festival city followedhere. h. E. K.

IUSK.

Fiftieth Festival of WorcesterCounty Musical Association.

[ByTelegraph to ThoTribune.]Worcester. Mass.. Oct. ;.—Though the first con-

cert of the fiftieth festival of the Worcester CountyMusical Association was not given until this even-ing. Mechanics' Hall had already been crowded tothe doors at two rehearsals. The attendance to-night was as large as the spacious room wouldhold, and many sought admission In vain. In onerespect, then, these being auspicious indications. Itmay already he said that the Jubilee will prove tot>e truly a golden one, and the association will startout on its second half-century fresh in hope andstrong Incourage.

The concert this evening brought a first perform-ance to the work composed for the Jubilee by Fred-erick S. Converse. It was an epical dramatical, adramatical epical composition for four sol.i manna,chorus and orchestra, entitled "Job." The sainsingers concerned in it were Mme. Schumann-Helnk. Daniel IMIM,Emllio <1" <',i>Korza andFrank Oroxton. The band, a fim\ sHf-reliant andcapable body, was composed of sixty-flvo membersof the Boston Orchestra; the chorus numbered clo^eto four hundred voices, and Mr. Wallace Goodrich,who is to close his connection with the associationat the end of this festival, owing to Increased artis-tic obligations In Koston, conducted.In the audience amontj other visiting musician"

of repute sat Mr. Arthur Mees, of New York, whois to be his successor.

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