A TE11K1BLE SIGHTVanderbilt and Train StrikeMackay See. Woman.Ces-ui'tSUtheothtea[ahibicoiwi:itst#•0-Greensboro, N. C. Dec. 8.—This afternoon at Jamestown, seven uiiles from here, while Wdliam H. Vanderbilt and Clarence Mackay werj standing near their private car Ith* on a siding at Vanderbilts game|Pii preserve, they had visual experience ofau accident on Mr Vaneibilt’s Southern Rti’ way they will not soon forget. A last through freight was approaching, uad in front of it walked a worn in, Mrs. Susan Cuvenisa and three children.The chidieu burned off the track-just as ihe uoiher was pick e up by the pilot and huned twenty feet into atdiich. She fell in ten feet of the wesltuy New Yorkers; who rushed to her aid..The woman., who proved -to be a deaf mute, was carefully lifted and fouud to be conscious. She was id | badly bruised, one arm broken and a hand crusned. Physicians were uni in ended and -the unfortunate woman p aoed on a wattless in a spring wagon and sent to th hospital ftp High*Point for treat-ididoo«ixtinmte’sin;be■edthejenjiuvasorlvasosi-ladithnrebt*stitment, with directions-that the billlirbe sent to Vanderbilt aud Mackay, ’ii +and not lo-spare expense. . * -The scene of ibis accident was within a lew miles of wuere George Gonld last year, while hunting, shot his vaTeiTiHtcai ot a bird. Tue injured m in w«b seat on a special train to Now Y rlt;iv . wkli both eyes apparently shot out. but oie eye was saved, A *h indsome annuity was settled on the victim, who married his hospital uurse.krrC!aTSbc