The evening world. Newspaper, March 23, 1901, Page 3

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Zink .2sS.. iW sft 1; Ta lord Bou Bez ord QULTON SENT TOA ROSPITAL Man Who Shot Two Theatrical Men Is a Patient in Bellevue. Robert H, Moulton, who wounded A. F, Dingwall and J. G. Leftingwell while trying to shoot Miss May Buck-/ ley in the Pabst Rathskeller yesterday | morning. is watched by a policeman in| the prison ward at Bellevue Hospital! to-day. He ts suffering from alcoholism | and morphine polsoning. i Hoe will be held in the hospital until Monday, when, #f he is in condition, he | will be aaraigned tn the West Site} Court. | There ts ttle Mkelihood that he will! furnish the $5.00) bond required before | the arrival of his mother, who Is now on ‘her way from Tennerree. Moulton'claims to know nothing abou: the shooting, and at the Bellevue Hos- pital frequently asked where he was un why he-wgs detained. Though appar- ently semi-delirious he wan Mad to read the lips of=those who were ‘speaking to him and to fully understand their words, though he ts stone deaf. Miss Buckley playéd her part In “The Price of Peace” at the Broadway The- ! atro last night with aa much spirit as could be expected and was seemingly less nervous than on the first production the night before. During the play Thursday night Moul- ton occupled a lower box next the stage. He sat alone, having bought all of the seats, and he Was constantly under the watchful eyes of a detective. The theatre management feared! that he would make a scene, an his Infatua- Yon for Misa Buckley waa well know and it was also known that he had made threats concerning her. Miss Buckley and Mouton nad been great friends. He first sw her when she was appearing In “Hearts Are Trumps” at the Garden Theatre last spring. Through Frank Mohler, the assistant treasurer, he was introduced, and the three spent the following Sun- day at Lakewood. Later Moulton and Mohler quarrelled, but bis friendship for Mins Buckley continued, and during the engagement at the Garden Theatre he met her nightly at the stage door and escorted her to supper. There was a report in stage circles that they were married, but Miss Buckley's friends knew that this could Rot be so, as phe has a husband in the West. Misa Huckley has promised to make a ‘full statement of ber acquaint- ance with Moulton. Three months ago Moulton was ar- raignesl in the Harlem Pollce Court for assaulting Emmanuel Levy in the West End Cafe, In One Hundred and Twenty- fifth street, Levy was dining with Miss Gertrude Deming, an actress appearing at the time in the Harlem Opera-House. Moulton knocked Levy down and broke a creat den! of tableware before he was ejected. ‘The night following Moulton tackled Levy at the stage door he opera-house, but thie time was ell trounced, ‘Three weeks ago, it is sald. Moulton made a scene in the Adama House, Bos- ton, by slapping the face of an, actress with whom he was dining. He was thrown out, but the actreas would not akree to prosecute. BOTH WIVES TESTIFY. Ase Resalt Smith's First Lift Part- ner Will Get a Divorce. The sult for divorce brought by Sfrs. Marion Brown Smith against her hus- band, Charles T. Smith, of New Ro- chelle, who ts now in the Tombs awalt- ing trial on an Indictment for bigamy, came up to-day before Judge Martin J. Keogh, in Special Term of the Supreme Court, Mra. Smith No. 1 and Mrs. Emma Seaman Smith, No. 2, testified. Judge Keogh’ sald he would grant the divorce asked #8 soon as the testimony fn the case had been written out. ——— MABEL CONNOR COMES BACK. New York Girl Found in Washing- ton Now Im Sister's Care, WASHINGTON, March 2. — Mins ‘Mabel Connor, the New oYrk girl who was found wandering in the streets of ‘Washington Thuraday, and mibsequent- ly identified by her sister, Misa Elea@or | nor, left to-day with her sister for | New York. | the bass THE WORLD: ETNIES RETIN SATURDAY EVENING, MAR CH 23, 1901 PATERSON MILL-GIRL STRIKERS STAND ‘SIT ACAINST FIRM IN THEIR DAILY COUNCIL OF WAR. Zona Gale Attends a Session of the Bat- tling Workers Who Won't Go Back to Their Looms Under Present Conditions. ODBIOAS iS .O] g 9 MERTING OF 4p. " mayne ee ve" for A COUPLE. OF PRevty AND WELL DRIED PICKET (conoonoG A meeting of the striking mill girls at elected, and t the Paterson, N. J.. is like a elubwom yunent secretary te a mere inceting without the silver cay A pair of lost black cotton ghoy pink ten. It Is a clubwomen's m tying from the chandelier ever bis head minus the swish and the rnatie. [t js a like mistletoe bed-rock affair. with no poilte moss oh The first thing was roll call The rul- ng tn death. fe atr y name, the rock. on te The girls meet every me ' o'clock In Ba Mat Hall, whic looms at while K hind a saloon on Straight street teikin nis. During thy are table the sides and a plang A stove, and the gas-jets are <w fn dusty bunting. The 100 girls early and get in The Atty 1 hang lke a cloud back and form | dressed Many of the gtr! Many and silent. confused : ¢ with the averag » enst-aide hall wher girl, They tau; al and {life at his thelr attitude to sof |doin'? Why « eak when youre violently requite spoken te rk. Go on, say Tt was 9.3) 0% F when!” w exhort 1 to ons, This wa zen times before the meeting wa ‘The half-hour was converantion, muc etrike at all and mi gifts of Paterson groceries and candy to the girl Half the grocers of Paterson fered credit to the girly, and the of Trade has made them 4 tion, There was all that t fore the meeting, ‘The preliminary half-hour might have preceded a Sorosis breakfast, it wea 30 subdued. the 1 loom been n pert Ruave tex at irman now. 0 wit mou call air utile ane raid A Bald Lo Fitting from group to group Hke a moustached butterfly was the Lothario wrha or came Mary Jane of the strikers, He is large and a bit bald, with honem eyes. Lie was the beau of the moment, He’ was - where suught for and jested with, and hin own sallles were welcomed with rious appreciation. Who is he? I asked one of the girls. "Oh," she repiled in an awel voice, ¢ has been In more strikes than any other man In the mills!” He It was who called the meeting to order and asked for nominations for a temporary chairman, A blond, ‘dé- termined-looking iman was unanimously and a tht “ho shea ny minutes. |" eYe\ sVeLersveveie revere): Su y Jane, Mrs. Elvin, back to chairman firmly, and flown stlil takin have rt yall th riking week thix time th hed been in no Hanna never a Mark Ww ran button, it was he who stood up presently Ne matter Mudn- dis the they are rik he sobl, his hat “ut there's any worth less ma: did y al ki of want ty know it We a1 looms ean turn Stand Firm, We Sata, “Which were new dein’ ten hours 1 y ve days and a half a week vkesman, “for from s9 to of $1.18, or some less SAYS BRO KILLED (Spectal to The Evening World.) FREBHOLD, 'N. J., March 23.—Thomas| Levins was this morning held without ‘ali on the charge of murder to gwalt the action of the Grand Jury. He Is accused of the murder of his mother, Mrs, Margaret’ Levins, on the night of} March 1 Iast. The complainant Js his brother, Peter Levins, Levina {s forty-five years old, and ha frequently been convicted of drunken- ners. His mother, who was over sev-/ enty years old, Hved alone in a small house in the hamiet of Sweetman’s, few miles from Freehold. On the night of March 1 her son Peter, who Hives @ few hundred yards away trom her, noticed smoke coming from the house, He ran there, but at frat could find no evidence of fire, A further investigation convinced him the flames were in his mother’s bed chamber, He called to her, but receiving no response, burst open the door, which was locked ‘on the Inside. Oh the floor,of her room he saw his mother, dead. Her body was burned and the bedding and furnl- ture on fife, An overturned lamp, which had been Ighted, was on the foor. The Coroner was notified and con- cluded the woman had met with an nc- tal death. She wi burled three Gays later, and no suapiclon of foul pinay was entertained until, on March 5, Peter Lavins went before Justice Hulee ahd ald he betleved his mother hac been murdered by Thomas, Tho Justice gave no credenca to this sory, and Peter thon went to County Prosecutor Boater, who, on his complaint, detailed ty $2-—_______ Thomas Levins Charged with Pouring Oil tale Aged Mrs. Levins and Setting Her Afire. {fire Imtances lel 1 j arrest. jthe Freehotd Jail, and declares his in- | * nocence, | THER MOTHER. the county detective, Charles Strong, to Investigate the case. The detective | learned that Thomas had been seen at hie mother's house an hour before ¢ was discovered, Other clrcum- prosecutor to order his ‘The accused man ts now locked up In The populur bellef here ts that he la In no way concerned In his mother's death. —s- ACCUSED BY LITTLE GIRL. Master Mechanic Mi a Vera Btrun, ten years old, of 3 Fast One Hundred and Twentieth str appeared as a complainant in the # Jem Police Court to-da yagatnat C: Charles Mill. Hs {# fort wld, Uvex at No. 105 East Elght: etreet, in a master mechanic TANS WP MAVES: Held on a ve rae. (Special to The Svening World.) SAN FRANCISCO, March 2.—ILTd pot (he transport Indian yped for two hours tn the bi jevoted Cuban wife of Bugler W. of Tenty Infantry, have accompa- id of having to Alnth and wis employed on the Gould yacht sold re- ould nied him to Manila ins’ make the trip alone, With the assistance of Hayes's com- He t* cently to Venezue ployed by a now toah, of No, % Broadwa: radea"ghe hail! been stowed-away with In court MUN was {dentifled as the! a’ her b iongings on the tvacaport. She man who was arraigned laet Saturday | -vaited until sho suppored the ship waa on a almilar charge, the xirt being six| well at sea, noshe left her hiding yeur-oll Kathe Stovihelmer, of No, Vi] piace West One Huadred and Tweifth sirect. | A subscription of twice the customary paasage money was taken up among the men, and it way offered for a berth for her, but the captain could not accept tt, and after a pathetic parting from her husband and while the “tears streamed At that time he was dischigrged for in- suMciency of evidence. | Magistrate Mayo he'd him tu $2,000 ball for ex- aminatton and sent, the Strun girl to “the Chiltren’s ‘Society. niefeleinintetetelelntte jdown her cheeks, Ina tug. otwithstand in shew. will reach Manila no band. An appeal Gen. Saafter, nder of California, who at mission ty sail on the transport enn- jaylvanta, ‘That vessel ia much faster than the Indiana and is expected to Manila tirst marries Hn the © tu) ed the reg: r home she wa away on the [transport and ita him in New {York seamstress, nd Company D jboys, her * machine and other household effects were brouxal to San Francisco. while she made ‘her way by different trains, }with oh striking: girls | OUTING MARY JANE. vty aheut ‘rank | Us unlest he HM wee a mnit ieee that we ko in his or let him: talk ty carried Met, the men Kirke by a side ae ng the strtk eady held thin we “Tticht= is rights, you know," was saying to them as th WIFE'S LOVE. WORTH $50,000 Horace S. Stevens Sues|2ever noted for my fondness for hard work. I iked hinguage spoke French as fluently German and Latin I learned quite read- Bernard Zah dle oN Horas 8. Stevens om Bernard Zan, sald to have and various @ tw RINNELL, Ia, March 2t--Mrs, Her- str f Dr, George D. Herran, the; maken (te report for the week ending) ion 1, Hurtix, of Hurtig & Seamon aker and) writer, formerly [Maren 16 showing that the contagious | oe onty gave him 38 for delivering & Appited Chriattanity, Lowa jiuneuen during ane week message from Chicago giving good Wired a divorce an the /Sig)fM the NEO Y ws, but also wrote him out a pase ound ¢ rion lmaking the largest: weekly touil mitting him free of charge to all the Dr. Herron was a minister in Burling. | eral months. Of thes th cates theatres owned by the firm, ten years agu, when Ae came Aore genase ine asarlet ‘durux & Seamon have been engaged to Hl the chalr of Applied Christianity UG voartet feve [in Utigation over their Chicago theatre endowed by ae B.D, Litt be ¥ ie with jan nce af 6 : for some weeks, apd yesterday an 1 citer, Misa arne Rand, Maine jand of ipl rte vere . ‘ 7 ie her daughter, Me Carne td ctetthn [inereaa Of 6 smallcpox, tina decreaand |/munction waa Kranied on te Om money ‘ mill every girl ts to ree wo from the strikers’ up by the wea . Whose propr ek te thelr dem ach weaver thia fund ary,’ announced the chair has got a communica that Amount. am. He Pail fmol IM for n't see Irv the coming to whe kd not wish Hened, burn vor was a labartous | @ yee on the dn- ssuring the strikers |) mut to be ami t there were those were reporting thfully to Mr. Frank N subdued and angry murmur r 4 the punctuated with ni At told this had been suspected, cele for to-morrow now," crted | he peace-keeping anan of many’ strikes, shouting breich. ‘The pickets for ait day named by) the chalrman pointing a jon Jead pencil aa he selected began somebody from fie room, and the teal was shove and serape of chalrs the ads ent before | Misw through the fri hi ae rs in Judge Lothario ey reparated. | ¢ A GALE. °. ha for te ts wut any n for sometimes for not working burder at my English, and when I told them tt was 2 Broad-| because I was too Inzy I'm sure they be wting Mra. Stevens‘a lovel leved me. mands $80,000] Mer on Uon. OADM Court Says Robert Put- / nam Must Share Trust Left by Grandfather. Patmam wilted the Defends um rease property wr deuth he «ued for na ee in hts fu war Mrs. Putnam wen ppines te follow the forty Mier son a Dotes on Civil Law. “Tam not a criminal Inwyer, and my name ts not Mary Ann."* Mary Mary Coleman ts (he young lawyer who ts at prevent engage in the defense of Jonn Davie, a negro bn trial for his He Coleman was pnen' Ne rRer’s court, 1am engnged on a munter ease, 12 ts she satd, “and my second one at Hur all the rame I'm not a Inal lawyer, and never expect ta be, “Civil law in my forte. make a brillant success of it some day, the one ambition of iny And I was christened plain Mary with- trimmings, some of the r ers to the contrary notwithstanding “How did I happen to take up law? Wary, 1 Juat drifted into tt. She Likes Langua, “L was educated at St. vent—grew up there, In fact. prie! But though, ters used to upbraid me «i However, @ iucng her to leave him. Zaha] yor had only words of pratso for was arrested to-day Deputy Sheriff] cated me one of hia star pupils Vo boring, and gave $2,500 . Ing so dry ae lay ever entered my head, rh his attorneys, Weeks & Bat-| im sure of that. tle, Mr Stevens alleges that) Zahn] eater [left school 1 found time h ourted hla wife, Ada E. Stevens, a-ling heavy on my bands. I hecamo iduens ring the years and 19.) less and uncasy, and finally 1 decid anit Induced ber to elope wital wrudy law. 1 entered ¢ ew Mim on ! Univerwity, took the vurae In two years Stevens began suis dn the Supreme] and was admitted to the barf Justice Mv Adam athe tiger a year and a balf now 7 on dant care £01 nal cise inder for Zvhn's arrest me aeey nu deniiivare fprceeimlndli mu murder cane might It is me 14 mur Diphieria Reported y Health Dey department of Me Ith Europe with Mrs, and Miss Rend last]in the last three weeks, the record reo Ss AUN RS 1 being 37. Spokes mail aba vis a Naas ee ara ceil, which tives and Criminal Case, but She Just and | hope to as Engitrh. the French profes. riment, 1 to-day | DEAD WOMAN 1S BRIDE WEEPS OTHER. FROM CHICACD. Mystery of Death Boarding-House Is Cleared Up. i Rotert Mo S&F mo has won first} The woman who was found dead at Mood tn his lawsuit. tnstituted against) the boarding-h use at No. 321 West One his mother before her death, for his) Hundred and Twenty-fourth street has share of a trust estate of $100, on identified as Lillie BR, Robertson, of ny his grandfather, Ro HL hicago. The identification wan made yomiliionaire, who died in Cinceinnath in| by: Minnie Paults, a colored) woman IANS jitving at No. 101 Went Ninety-third Justice Russel! handed ¢ street. cision to-day, holdin She knew the unfortunate woman In tied to share equatly In the! Chicago, where she lived at 22 In- uw state with his two brothers, Mra. / diana avenu | Putnam, by her wil, left’ the whole! ter parents were poor and respectable, | rust esta her favorite Israel tut it is sald ade rather an eventful | Putnam fer in the PhUippines. | career, ones having had trouble with | Od Me Bh tafe the fund tn | Sanger Pullman, and again having at | ary, the wife of ex-Jdustice Puinam, temmed: to get $12.00 from a Chi ted Her children after her death, He: business man, Abe lonskongrawher enh wl and went to Ive on Elghth avenue, Ignoring the will of her fa¢her . {near Sixtleth street. , ithe fund to tere i Ba nilonl of the boardingshouse fore she dled obert nam | wh died the woman sald her deht sult to enjoin her fram dispos- roment sult to eadotn her from disver: | vuyuand wan q tailor In Chicago, She as had been looking for rela 1 heard of them on: Nor Jersey A a sulel utopay will show whether It wa anes in in New | Mrs. Mary Forest and Two Friends Charged With Shoplifting. Most unfortunate Is the predicament of Mary Forest, a protty nineteen-yeare old gitl, who ts under arrest at York- ville Court prison, charged with shop- lifting. With Minnie Manning and Vina An> derren she was arrested Thursday in an uptown department store. The three lived in the tenement-house at No, 43g Second avenue. Mary was married on Tuesday to Emile Forest, a tugboat deckhand, He left her to go to work Wednesday, and Thuraday she arrested. She does not know her husband's whereabouts, and he is Ina lke predicament about her. The girls been aole to se- cure ball. They will have a bearing Monday. “The Vaiue of the goods they are alleged to have stolen Is $17.20. a Arconed of Stenling Diamond. Charles Gilroy, of No. 48 East Third street, was arrested last night by Pollcoe man Kenney, charged with the larcen: of a diamond stud from George Mervill of No. 62 Tenth avenue. Mervill says Gilroy stole his stud in an Eighth avee nie car, and after passing it to a cone federate attempted to leave, but; Mere vill grabbed him and called a policeman. BRIGHT LAWYERIS MARY COLEMAN. ‘eyerayeyersyer®) OCOETOOS miter. b murder c: one lawyer atone takes twe and attend to the work properly In ordi that full Juntte In this case, for Instance, we have Ver non Davis with ua, [and my fath being practically one, How does It ha} peu that lam interested In this parti ular trial? 1 will ¢ nin on the defenac. KINE| no trled | Ume since. In this Inatance. Davis, was in verdict expected hye of with one of manslaughter. His cllent was a negro. In fact this man, Jo ourt at that time. ody, but the man nes, and the man got it Into his hes that | was the one who saved him fro the chatr. Thonght Her a Mascotte. “He thought [| wis ain mascotte, an way, and this man wno ts now on trt for hia lif felt exactly the same wa about tt, and nothing would do out must xo into court and help defend hir 1 saw him one day at the Tombs, ju previous to the trial, and he sald: * sure goin’ to be in’ cote, and [told him f would) de_ there right. It seemed to relleve his mind.’ "You ought to take a good d recreation,” | remarked. “Yes, | ought to,” she replied, don't. 1 used to ‘ride a wheel, haven't ae orim- itre. rt Con- wan but Ta pera and a magi to the bar. I read the Zinn now and then, pat he Civil Code 1» my pet reading. often borrow a py belonging to yer Hugh E. Pentecont, office with ut to read Saturday night and Sund Pentecost: will laugh and say, ‘You' not going to read that stuff over Su day [ hope.’ But 1 love the law—[ lo’ att and the Ming ward, going to reach the goal, nev: Being a mixture Freni Irteh ard Yankee I ought to su 7 Vivacity, sense, wit myke a ‘gvod combina 1 could helteve that 1 embo« qualities! But Ido th. bd fi o my soul, Watice rest le Ye fear. to ie have not wantll Yankee traits as well, JANE GORDO! THIS MESSENGER LUCKY. er No. 525, Is the envy of costal Mesne a 1 his fellows, now opening fhe house. j {a always with me—or I'm with e should be tried with to kevp track of the evidenc may be done the client. iu. MT was in court with my father when case similar to thin one some It ler ro er pe MRS. HALL CIVES UP NO CLAIMS. Her Surrender of Black Rock Doesn't Change Her Status. Mra. Helen Hall has no moral ev phyatcal objection to a lemal evies tion from Mack Rock. The fact that she surrendered the keys of the mansion in Conneeticnt im no way chauges the status of the, case so far she is concerned. , he relinquished no F rendered no c! Hatch & Wickes, Attorneys. Acting for the Bridgeport Trust Come | pany, sole administrators of George Francis Giman's estate, the Shoriff of! Fairfield Coumy went to Black Rock and was met by Mra. Potts, mother of! Mra, Helen B. Hall, who has held poaseanion since Gliman‘s death. Under Instructions from her daughters who has been in this city for a week, Mrs. Potts gave up the keys, and the Sheriff turned them over to the Trust Company to-day. Mrs. Hall's attorneys are busy with) the suit she has filed uguinat the beoker=, age firm of Chapman, Selter & Alien to! recover $25,000 and accrved profits, whica. she clnims George Francis Gilman in- weated for her benefit shortly before hisi death. When the Supertor Court ot Connectl-; cut decides who shall be admisietrators the heirs of the whole blood will have! these four ciaims to fight: . Mrs, Hall's claim to the entire estate, Miss Catherine Kupfer’s claim to valuable studio at i hy Mr. Gilman originally for the use of Carl Ienner, the artist, George W. Smith's claim to an interest, tn the property under the will of tem years.ago, drawn in his favor. George Hartford's cluim to @ half ine; tereet In the 230 tea stores which he has! managed for mary years. DWARD ZELLER as {murder in the first degree wis ot Durlng, the trial [ whispered to my father many ad m. ye aul Hy 1 1 mt "ou Miss Mary. all of but I my bleyele fon #ix months L have read only one novel since I was "t care for a But I love to read who has an His ts newer than ours, and when I go after tt to take it home y Mr. re ne ve and she hugged an imaginary Civil her breast and rolled her hazel er in cs and m ty at is certainly bright and and if one may judwe by appent- gin the Scotch and N. who ts Johe Thirty-first DIES SUDDENLY. Magistrate’sSon,Prom- inent in Sulzer Case, Victim of Typhoid. Edward Zeller, the only eon of Mage {strate Zeller, died this morning after un illness of only three days, Death was unexpected. Early in the week he attended to Ais business ax usual and when he became {ll no serlous attention was paid to it, but yesterday the disease developed Into virulent typhoid fever and death came to-day. Young Zeller wan twenty-six yeaTe old and a lawyer. He had been asso= clated with his father. He came Into ¢ notice recently through his cons in with the contention over the body and property of Herman Sulzer. It was he, as attorney for the Harlem River Amusement ‘Company, who caused a summons to issue requiring Mrs. Weimann to appear in| Harlena Court to answer the charge of threate ening to keep Mrs, Sulzer and her, som out of Sule®r Park —<—=_- American Home, The World Almanac and Encyclo= pedia for 1901 is, If possible, better. than ever before. Five hundred:and forty pages of closely printed matter afford the reader a variety of In= formation on every subject cons nected with the political, economia and social conditions, past and pres- ent, of the United States, and also, on a large number of Canadian an English subjects of equal interest. ‘A general index of everything in the) book affords speedy reference, and im: addition to this {8 an index of note worthy articles or paregraphs {n | pree ceding volumes of The World Ale! manac. There {s also given a list “Occurrences During Printing,’?, “advertising” index and an in {ng resume of the many tmpot occurrences of the past year in wh The World has taken a leading: strenuous part. The World) Alman should have a place In the homeo every American citizen for the) able political and economic in nck Tock erected! |

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