The evening world. Newspaper, September 1, 1900, Page 2

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Oa en a aS WEHATHER-~PFain, PRICE ONK CENT. ———————— RESUL SoS NIGHT EDITION mn The | ; ft uy Circulation Books Open to All. ”| N Yn O os “IT 1S TO WEEP,”-NEW PARIS SLANG| ANNA GOULD’S TEARS WORTH $22,357.14 EACH All Paris Laughing Over the Two-Minute Cry Which Wrung $1,600,000 from the Reluctant Goulds and Washed Out Castellane’s Debts. Amount, by the Wohrymil gland, wad Glffused between eyelids to feeilitate Oniinarily the secretion the but when tnerased by emotion or Other caumR, it overfiowe the lide Webster's Dictionary Bb teblelelebelelelolololobtololointetolelo {Oeprrtqht, 1900, by The Prem Publishing Company, New York World.) (Bpecial Coble to The Mvening World) PARIS, Sept. 1.—The boulevards | ore hing, "It 1» to woop” ts) the slang of the day—all this over the Cestellane debts and the tears of Anna Gould which washed them out, Your boulevardier ts nothing if not ames trowel Vachrymal duct |oio the Fs ‘Hence these tears, | THNENCH, 18 BO, tc Se original. He has been caleuiating the value of an Anna Gould tear, If a good cry brings $1,600,000, what will a solitary pearly drop from the beau tiful Gould eye cost? And the boulevardior has answered this to satisfy himself, Dr, Du Ma- | Ponaive Deauty amiling tn her tears | TOM CAMPBELL rals, one of the peculiar characters brought to the surface by the rur ‘@o the great Exposition, .1s made a calculation. He said to The Evening) ‘World correspondent to-day: “Tho interview which Anna Gould Mach notes ast * * Drew iron teare down Pluto's cheeks, MILTON, wee = | had with George and Bdwin Gould is #aid to have lasted exactly two min- utes. A healthy woman can weep — tea tn one minute; that SHS LWT ON YAN WYCK Gov. Roosevelt Gives Ice Mayor 15 Days to File Answer. (osetal to ‘The Brening Worl!) ALMANY, N. Y., Sept, Mayor Van Wyck has been granted fifteen days ad- ditional time in which to answer Charges of malfeasance in office in © nection with the ‘Trust preferred ‘The World. \ The persona! counsel of the Mayor, Charles B. Patterson, appeared at the Executive Mansion at 10% o'clock this Morning and reqierted an interview with Gov, Roorevelt ¢ was al once ushered into the Executive Chamber, Gov. Roosevelt wae in his accustomed wave UB fo Prepare our re Heat and feel thar we are the extension requested Y¥: Ml readily undersiand the we rumoient 6 mel in Rout’ not like my ithout aut with the At will mee him at once. vs en hawlened to weak ist a conference wpeting twent, Va trl feturrad to oe ti a mney-Gonernl a! i you are entitled Appreciate that was womowhat | re enthin Ts matte terson | “4 Heas, for she COUNTESS DE CASTELLANE. ee Shakespeare a In Cantelinne, It you now them RANE. have (ears prepare BUAK i or is, Anna Gould wept seventy tears in) two minutes. The rest ts simple. "It seventy tears brought $1,600,-| , 000, what did one tear Uring? That is the question, The result of this} simple calculation shows that the value of a single tear by Anna Gould is $22,876.14, “But,” continued the doctor thought- fully, “it is doubtful if any other woman in the world could get such & price, Anna Gould weeps more than diamonds, and Count bont has) diseovered the riehrat source of wealth ever exposed, even in Paris.” A despateh from Paris toeday sald that George Gould and hia wife Antany DEUTSC Grosse’s Best and 58 DACAKG REGO /She Lowers Kaiser Wilhelm der tor lite or ye income t her bills make fhe must be dearly let FRANCIS QUARLES, 1600 ot let alone Ae od the business of wiping out the debts Jof Count Mont de Castellane, husband} of Anna Gould It took just 61,600,000 of Jay Gould's fortune to save the good name of the Amertoan family by. pre venting a sale of the Counts effects to aatlaty creditors George Gould, however, refused to let [LOO t tt tet etn ttt teat ebeteentntee # blotted It oat forever THISTRAM SHANDY, Oe ee the Count handle any of the money, It war pald Airectly to the creditors, Anna, though falling to away vthera, and espectatly her slater, nd obtain money for Count Bont, amt trip to New York for that purpowe home monthe apy, fected to make a last appeal, and her distress was Pee ee oe oe emit the allen corn a JOUN KRATS. rc ce fo pitiful that Edwin wae touched, and he finally prevailed upon George, The H gent for Count Bont, and ne upon him some rather {ona put up enough money » pay the main creditors and stop the vale | Some well-informed friends allege that Count Bont, when he saw how de- owed perhape by & emia, COWPER Pe ee ea sirous the Gould family was to prevent Jone scandal of a sale under the ham- mer, took advantage of tho situation and refused to accept any help untess all his dette were wiped out Kedwin wailed yeater¢ ‘i on the st, Loule from Cherhour jeorme are hin wife are atiit in Parte HLAND Time 4 Hours Minutes. The Hamburg-American line steamer o .| Deutschland t# the queen of the work arrived at this port this morning afier having broken her own| and all other records, She made tho ” minutes. Hhe lowers the record of the Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse made in 189 by) 1 command the fastest! liner « *|4 hours and 58 minutes, ook on the evening of Aug, % are ng at the Sandy Hook lightahip at tA. M. to-day PROUD CAPT. ALBERS. | Capt. Adolph Albers was the proudest "| trip from Cherbourg to the ifme point tar that ploughs the seas aw he aat in| Watching the horses race ¢ off Bandy Hook in 5 days, 12 hours and his cabin after his big ship had been|of the way and they confit ently @ | docked. ! he aald, “for » The “Naturally {am proud,” Deutschland has accom 4 that At noon on Aug, 31 she passed the) which no other ship has done, and now hl record for the fastest day's run, mak- ing 58 knots, Her average peed was 2.2 Knots per| hourly speed. There | "| hour, "| The Deutsehiand aatied from Hamburg | Aug, %, Southampton and Cherbourg | Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse walle for the (|) See ‘The Line vent baits the Mant |similer, but I have no fear of the reault.| rorg, Tei a tm aries entrance of the latter port at 965/hour tater, Our courses are the same holds the eastward and westward reoorda and the highest average of jothing can touch my whip; of that I am certain. "Next Tueada: he resumed, “the mall an and the weather conditons should be} Montuwed on Seventh Page) and Works off the Cold, OMoeiiveas Trale ae “Hie mentioned «his person by mamma Flatbush hed only four starters And the strangest clement in this prea a, enditod tm @ aingracotul Auto. [LESS "heSote Ne rite Prise Ss asia’ 08 etartaary' scosnmctetiens. st!" * Lenyyrerious cane te that Mise La Vay (Continued on Second Page) senders serait Pie gl . SERA i RACING PRICE ONK CENT, = rong ! Circulation Books Open to All,” ue EW YORK, SATU RDAY, BEPTEMBER , 100, STATEMENT BY JUDGE M’MAHON. 000+ ELLS WHY HE RELEASED $90,000 THIEF ! PHILADELPHIA. | (ROKER oe Says Morton Was Freed Be- Anand cause Friends Interceded and BROOKLYN. $20,000 | It Was His First Offense, 9 | as P12 1018 —5 io $50,000 bezzler of $50,000, Robert B. Morton, through the ‘pleadings of a young, beautiful and talented girl, Biggest Wager of Cam-\Judge McMahon says that his disposition of the paign Laid with Banker (case was strictly within the law, L. W. Wormser The statutes, he says, give him the power to isuspend sentence in a case like Morton's, and he in did so at the earnest solicitation of friends, includ 1) ing clergymen, A Miss Minnie Lee La Vay is the girl who broug rw about the freedom of Morton in General Sessio ™ week ago, Morton confessed to Miss La Vay that he had falsified the books of his employers, Edward Hill's siiion Sons & Co,, but that he did it to protect a friend, » om | Who is even now employed by the firm and who f ho plaelne of t wn Was many times more guilty than he, ecused of inalne Miss La Vay told Judge MeMahon the story and pleaded for Morton's release, The spectacie of a self-confessed and cone victed criminal walking out of court a free man was Sloan Won on Flatbush and His Unclean Tactics Were Whitewashed. d 'How Pretty Minnie Lee La Vay Pleaded to the Judge for Morton’s Release, As to the extraordinary action of the Court in setting free a self-confessed and convicted eme I | WARDS NS TO WITHDRAW FROM TRAC Richard Croker'’a confidence probability of Witham J ee Try Hon ta represented by $20,000 In « The of Demoeratt Fiven the most invete ie'wn)at the time amazing and mysterious, | The District-Attorney’s representative recom mended that sentence be suspended, and this, with wtla tearful letter from the man’s mother and the is cen" (petitions of friends, brought about the strange re» ‘sult. Morton confessed also to having been false as ‘then a trustee of a little $6,000 estate, (Special iy The Bening World ) Msininy!AiKinu) wari baalen('w’ baad’ Wy |Phe eSebde ing tn" ttemacrn th faery: | The firm which had been mulcted of so much SHEBPSHEAD BAY RACE TRACK, | Hallyhoo Hey after an outrageou «| t lean el : a id ie teal, de. he runing of tne aban) 910 iin tt of Ta |v fae “Money were astonished at the Court's decision and stakes, which one more brouxt ML iu titka Tad Thon Yentarday, Ka tapeeell eeit wan. fobt W ne! Bartow S, Weeks, private counsel for the firm, was a duel between the powerful sta alongnide of the Meld on the 1M " ol | drew the head of the had been made a e other Man, many villty than he, would esempe Messrs, Keene and Whitney t ; H F a Arige: | um) Het w as surprised, larae addition to the usual Saturay | PH" tks of ads MUCH SUF Ret fers tow influ fw beautiful ar t in love Pr tacos Alsappointment awaited | Ne! he Nes} i b the crowd, however, for on the prov | ruey Jumped away : Mt ized to a very entimable amme was the annuncement that |Alatd Reheck, mile and Tommy A | n M f ‘ Hrourh bie tll, The tle rece was to be ran over the| sine tncel along in front, on eve t : , es al a eee auae Ms terms, Hallyhoo Hey was in. be 1 hie *|. a , ns haan a new seven-furlong cour straight MURA daicch se who. Wa ‘ ; i on A holiday crowd takes plomire in ‘on, Tommy Atki "i K wagers were i n| Mt T MeMahor wonk We ‘i t ve did not MA very inoh © nnd Smile had the rail, Th in Mine Min ‘ av he 5 herself to the dem leaders were golng easily until near the x ‘ mt ‘ld Minnie ba Vi pected that they would ne the great |! idowed i La) Vay who would tn time bee wtruggle of the two-year-old oe ovor the| At this point Tommy Atking was about |” at Kip t m: t a prominent young old course around the clips haifa length behind Alard Scheck and |» u t Bupt. Clark said later that he believed | Smile. Sloan, seeing his opportun sy | ap A » an that the announcement was a mistake |aickiy sent Rallyhoo Rey up on the { ‘ ‘ Hat and 14 course would be used, but | outside alongalie of Alard Scheck Ther i M the OM4 not know that and com: |he forced Alard Beheck over on Tommy m * a, mented bitterly on the shorteightedness | Atkins, who waa compelled to pull uy i] . ; of the management in running @ race|or knock Smile over the fence A of this sort over the straight track, {Then Hallyiwe Hey went on dag A Don " asic an where nothing except the} Spencer quickly rallied Tommy At : ae 1 =i i . on ‘ 41 r, wh volun Inst quarter of (Continued on Sixth Page.) Itative, however, and, — = detng official, te to nettle mat- ope the Cough “== | Why Extra Fares | . NOT HIS SWEETHEART. . dnntetits ca deanna —

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