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Col. John N. Partridge, _ PRICE “ONE CENT. a a es _ NOVEMBER 30, 1901, “ARM # NEW YORK’S NEXT POLICE COMMISSIONER, Interviewed and:Sketched for To-Morrow’s Sunday World by PRICE ONE Cc NT. ———==s3 2 DEFEATED THE NAVY. Y DALYS BRILLIAN! WORK LEAPED INTO ICY RIVER TO SAVE MAD YOUNG WIFE. ! Beautiful Mrs, Terry, Despondent Over Husband's Affairs, Tried Sui- cide in the Hudson, But Was Rescued. Mad it not been for herofam Dudley W, Trinifidi the five-year-old boy of George H. Terry, of No, 29 West Forty-ninth street, woult have been motheriess to-day. rs. Yerry leaped into the North Miver at the foot of One Hundred and ‘Tenth street and was rescued by the hero Just In time to save her life, She is now in J. Hood Wright Hospital, a prisoner, Mr, Terry ia an advertising agent who came here from the West some time agu, Since arriving in New York he has been unsuccessful in business. Abd ‘i week ago he 1 with his wife, his baby and his mother-in-law from apart- ments at No. 108 West One Hundred and ‘Third street to a sult in the Navarre, in West Ninety-ninth street. rooms ure splendidly furnished. but the furni- ture and clothing of the family show the touch of poverty, Mrs. Terry has heen despondent for qv some time band tom Mrs. i, James, fo Ing down It was ssh suddenly r The be informed four youns over the fa nake the pined to. © foot of One Hundred and street is 4 voathouse Mary a Norwegi tha uurteen, saw ae steps. um to th and leap Into the water, ran his sDonald money Mrs ao to the mother of whi called ‘Trinindt, yy ran up the track. Mure of her had nd pavilion ald, a boa unches and McDongid one ¢ ¥ Mrs. Terry He watched and saw he Dived Into ley Water. When they reached One Hundred Tenth street 3 . Terry was some hus- been widow, om- to the youngster that) her her edge of the stream and had | husbatd has met wit le and was being carried the te, ‘Trinifid! thre: tance from further out off his and divea in, swimmin towanl the oxhausted hilled Mrs. Terr: I reacted her. 1 roamd brought her swim to the shore the ley Water wus a hard zie, Wit the plucky Norwegian made it and struggled up the bank With the unc woman In his arms, Mrs. 3 sof her boys arr “pate walling for the why whe had Tota f she said. ee business Pe verse after another nntil now we havd He Is rae ele ndomy baby, With it would be T him to provide for hi him dearly and it was Joad lighter that I “it, ame, very: unhappy. nothing. ponald it was learned sian boatman rescued bathers from drowning last sume five mer. POSED AS DETECTIVES TO “HUNT” THEMSELVES. Hundreds of Victims of Alleged Brokerage Swindlers Complain t the Police and Two Arrests Are Made. Two members of what the police say is one of the cleverest swindling “syndicates that ever operated in Wall street, were arrested to-day by De- tectives McConville and Savage of the Central Office. The gang has been operating in the financial district for two years, in which time, it is alleged, it has swin- dled persons throughout the country out of a sum estimated by Capt. Titus between $300,000 and $400,000. The two men captured are Frank Dillon, who says he is a bookkeeper living at No. 205 Greenwich street, and J. F. Barrett, claiming to be a stenographer, of No. 593 Bainbridge street, Brooklyn. Two other men eluded the detec- tives, but they are known and will probably be captured in a few days. Emboldencd by their success at this Kame, the police swindlers branched out « e of fraud, Finally after robbing thousands of un- suspecting customers under a dozen firm names, pee niga, opening an alleged detective agency, the methods of which, Titus says, were Capt. the boldest and most unique that ever came under his notice. A Unique Sehe E. L. Under th he name of ne. Bennett & Co., Detective Collecting Agency, offices were open defrauded circulars were at No, customers, sent inviting 181 Broadway, the police them ‘To Bay, to send all claims and proofs against the resumed tx in the dollar could be collected. # unl the fraudulent brokerus were agency was In possess advised frauds, a Frequent Changes Made, oncerns through which they had been that on that alfor ns from busi tirtns, The police say the moves of the gang are as follows: They first appeared at No. St New street, There they operated as Bram- well & C other hast operation ¥ exit. stock brokers. slipped out, oflice fixing: Next they tirned up Row asx August Zimmerman & few wecks’ at No, there caused In six weeks leaving furniture and Park 0. A an As Lloyd J. Smith & Co. offices ware at No, 35 Brondway, The po- Imost caught up to them at but they were gone when the detectives called. For one month on at No. Wall street, name of J. W. Pollard It was this time reached that there too much dence outstanding against them, and the celved of organizing 4 to collect the outstand> ing proofs of criminal wrong. Accomplishing this purpose, business In the brokerage line was starved again where thi Co. did service, at No. 3 Park Itow, Potter, Fairchild & Co. being the tithe used. Mundreds of C ute. In many of their transactions the men Rave us references the “firms of Solo mon & Rothchild, Applegate, Lot Carlisle Titus all of myths, purpose, Savage place with, tons were ice off the track. located at No. 3 & ¢ were ed. hundreds of com- and women who have put of sums varying and expects to hear _MRS. BONINE IN DEFENSE | DENIES MURDER MOTIVE. tel rns Woman Accused of Killing Ayres Begins Her Fight for Freedom and Asks No Mercy—Slain Man's Father Testifies Against Her. (petal to The Evening World.) WASHINGTON, Nov, 9.—Mrs. Bo- Mine's defense wax begun to-day in her trial on the charge of killing Censux Clerk Ayres In the Kenmore Hotel Lawyer C. B. Keene made the ope argumon, prefacing hin ri the xtatement that Mrs, Bonine mai No appeal for mercy or sympathy, ex- cept so far as the conditions that make possible theso things may diminish the probability of guilt, Reading the Government's theory of the manner in which the tragedy oc- curred Mr. Keene outlined “the testl- many to be offered in behalf of the defendant. It would be shown, he suid, that Mrs. Bonine was a atudent of medicine; she turned her knowledge to good ac- count, and that she walted upon and ing NEW SLEEPING CAR New York, Summerville Charleston, S.C. Via enusyivania Matiroad a i and way. Leave Ni fog Chatieston ‘Tne popstar route to the Expose \ ) f EN rks with j ul ints, kindness. “We physicians show body © will he sick al he said, Introd A surg t the her statement torney, to prove ed that one.” "The lack be fully p: nine's etatement to the police, the wan J, 8. Ayres. “We this pistol hat the deceased loaned « pistol to end, and that It will be testified to tdentleal that tn pistol is of motive, roved, Ayres, the “Did you mest Mra. arrival in Washington?” eee RAE TL out the h would. testify 1, wounds on Ayren'« have been inflected im the manner deseribed by the to testimony he contin defendan his own with the 4 not desire to modify | st her her Iberty, nd she will stand by: It » last witness for the prosecution father of U Bonine Sabeadins even her rom ued, tin Who owned the pistol7 asked the at- will Introduce James Seymour Ayres room, witnesses he declared, would Speaking of Mrs, Bo- law- tor It lerk on your the District- Attorney asked. “LT met her on © Saturday following | the tragedy The wituess detailed his with the a jccused on that jog: 'l made my remarks to her in as tender a way 4s possible, ay [suse pected she the destroyer of my son's life.”* Mrs, Bonine looked squarely at the old man, who has snowy white hair and beurd, as he told of his talk with her, When the opening argument sel for the defense was made, © Journed until Monday, was t WEATHER FORECAST. + for the thirty- Sunday, and vicinity: Pa to-night and Sanday; Meht to fresh north winds, eivleletivicisivitiele br iivinininief x & the conclusion wast J terutaats IX BOYS BADLY BURNED BY EXPLOSION OF TAR KETTLE, Six boys were badly burned this afternoon by the explo- won of a tar kettie in the works of the Edison Electric Com- ny at No. 1486 Third avenue. The youngsters were playing It is expected all will recover. eee out the kettle at the time. CAPT. TITUS ARRANGES NEW DETECTIVE SYSTEM. A new detective system in this sity. arranged by Capt. itus. is to be started on Monday night. Forty detectives and tective-sergeants of the Central Office Bureau will be as- jgned to various precincts and will be known as a “night pa- ol.” = They will work at at night under the sergeant’s orders. —2¢e—— LATE RESULTS AT NEW ORLEANS. Third Race—Bristol 1, Sauber 2, Dousterswivel 3. Fourth Race—B. G. Fox 1. Andes 2, Petit Maitre 3. —<+ LIFE IMPRISONMENT FOR MAN ANDO WIFE. ITHACA, Mich.. Nov. 30.—Mrs. Elmer Quimby was to-day found guilty of murdering her two children by administering poi- in and sentenced to life imprisonment. The woman and her sband planned to rid themselves of the children and poisoned them both. The husband was last week convicted and sen- nced to life imprisonment. ete ISTHMIAN REPORT READY FOR THE PRESIDENT. WASHINGTON, Nov. 30.—Admiral Walker. Chairman of business wax carriedhe Isthmian Canal Commission. called at the State Depart- ent this afternoon and delivered to Secretary Hay in person e report of the Commission. Secretary Hay announced his tention of forwarding it at once:to the White House. LATE, HE SWAM TO REAR-END CRASH CATCH BIG LINER.) ON STATEN ISLAND: STOSKA’S EFFORT MAY COST/TRAINS ON RAPID-TRANSIT HIM HIS LIFE. ROAD IN COLLISION. Cashier George Wood hers Slightly Injared— Jumped Into ley Water from boat as He Saw Rhyndam Sail- rrye ing Down River. Trainmen Unburt. wrge Wool, cartter of the Bank o Michael Stoska wanted to sali this Staten Inland, was alightly injufed a several others were brufsed In a rear- morning on the Holland Ine steam- Nip Ryndam, for hia home in Rorter- [ond collision on the Btaten Island Rapid Cet AeA TV Prannit road thie afternoon. dam, He atarted for the company’s bal gra elon ovo Just Tompkineville, A) freight train switching at the station and a train from South Beach for St. ¢ wax held up to allow the switch be completed. pler in Hoboken on the ferry-boat Ham- burg. In midstream hin heart jumped up tn hin mouth when he beheld the big ship sailing swiftly down the river. No flagmai was sent out (o warn Stoaka wan bewildered for a moment. firaine coming behind. ‘The Tote ‘Then with a cry he acrambled over the| passenger train, drawn by Engine > guard rail and dived into the [cy water. [eame along and crashed into the rear ‘The startled puasengera rushed out ou] car of the South Beach trata deck, belleving the man intended to] Mortunately there were few 1p rar, whieh Wan a commit sulclde. Stoska quickly struck | Ke out In the direction of the {nat disap- pearing steamship, and atruggied might- My to overtake her In the mean time the ferry-boat had been stopped and deckhands and pas- Sengers threw ropes and Ife-preservers And all of them munuged ty Ket ont of the before and fren hefore ux danger The_engineer 4 the way of crash came, a hotae road r three hour ar living een r ou for | businere met on to the wiminer, He Kept bravely 3 or ee cath five minutes, and then, convinced that{gt George, and. ur-omfo his Job was |mporsible, cepted the ald of a life-preserve He wan hauled back on deck shivering and exhausted. In Hoboken they took im to St, Mary’x Hospital, where the phystclans sald the plunge might com the man his Ife. “I'd have made that boat,” {t hadn't been so darn cold, dy ase iow on The at care rest ——— LITTLE GIRL BADLY BURNED. Cauntt Vire White w Clothing She he auld, “it 310 Went STE fi ound « bo. The Tireless Wheels of F Weet N Van exp clothing caught fire ANd Whe WAR 9 Chicago, vi purned. She wan taken to the New ¥ be obtained every day Hosplial Adyertse houses, homes and apart- ments for wale in the Sunday World. od io No Cure, *1 Lasative jene-dey, ++ Future Admirals Fought Bravely and Were Not Dis- graced—President, Cabinet, Dewey, Miles and 25,000 Partisans Saw Fierce Struggle. : FINAL SCORE WEST POINT - ANNAPOLIS - (special to The Uvening World.) FRANKLIN FIELD, PHILADEL- VHIA, Nov. 30.—The Army defeated the Navy in a sensational football game this afternoon before the most brilliant these grounds. 11, Navy Twenty-five thousand surrounded the gridiron; refused admission. The stands were masses of color, the majority of the men being in uni- form. President Roasevelt grew so in- terested in the game that he left his box and came down on the side lines to be nearer the strenuous strife. Little Daly, the old Harvard cap- tain, saved the day for West Point. He made all the Army's score. crowd ever assembled on The score was Army spectators 10,000 were} 7 fetntelet THE Li NAVY. POSIT Whig ea weacie ne cGninteaes Read is Carpenter Fretz . Belknap Adams Soule . MeNair Freyer . Land . Nichols . Refel of Harvard, —Mr. Wrenn, £ PATS rn MTA Kicked a beautiful goal from field in the first-half. In the second half he olelninininininlnininininlnlminiel inland: f Chicago. inlelmieteleininininlet: - - = icinini-teininicinivicinioinlnjely NE-UP: % IONS. ARMY. Farnsworth | +. Graves Umpire—Mr. Wrightington, | touchdown and kicked the ay within one minute after the begin- He ran the entire length of the field for! ning of play. BRILLIANT CROWD SAW SUPERB GAME. Eveniog World.) D, 2.—Praotically’ everybody (Hpecial to The FRANKLI PHIA, Nov. who amounts to anything of, United States was at Franklin this afternoon for the third straggic on PHILADEL-| come of to-day's game. Hy in the |navy was resumed in 1899 each Field] has a victory Fortunes were wagered on the out- Since the an- and nual struggle between the army to Its credit. wax the odd game. Partisans on both the gridiron between the army and navy | sides were confident of victory and Un- cadets, 1 was Wert Point against Annapolls. ‘The sturdy Jade of the military academy against the hardy middies, and the Na- icnal Government, from th ‘ommand- er-in-Chief of the Army and Navy, ih the person of President Roosevelt, down to “Plebe! and middy of the ere on the «round to witness the atroge! War heroes one ‘ waied the populace were held cheap in Philadelphia day, because they were here tn much by bumbent. Every morning train brought the nation’s great ones inte the City of Brotherly Love. ‘The hotels were filed to overflowing with distingutshed ques! Cola Slowtown Abinge wi The town was draped in the blue and gold of the navy and the gold and «ray of the army. Business was at 4 stand- stil, No one talked of anything but football. The streets were Milled with gayly uniformed officers and red-cheek- ed cadets. cle Sam's warrtorn from both branches of the service backed thelr favorites in au way that betokened bankruptey to one or the other branch of the service for a twelve-month to come orders, xwept aside the blue-coated line Of police along the edge of the gridiron Ines wav- sabres and headgear, cheering on. favorites aud Wagering more xal- than they could sind rushed up and dewn th ing earn in j Frankl many historle had such this afternoon. Long before noon crowds be- gan to gather tn the rectangular in- closure that lew on the east bank of the Schuylkill, to the north of Fairmount Park. Old Officers Got Excited. digniiy of the service was thrown | to the winds, Stafd generals, colonels, commanders and navy tains, strict as martinets in enforcing thelr own SeaTing ‘accommodations had deen pro- vided for 2.0% spectators, and thera was not_an Inch of room to spare when play waa called. Twenty thousand more persons had sought admission, and x mob stormed the gates that a guard of men was hardly able to with- stand. There was no charge for ad- mission, and the crowds thought. the gates would be thrown open after play was called, but the police kept them ac a safe distance from the gates. All that was left for the crowd with- to cheer the distine it Roosevelt, Admiral icut.-Gen. Miles was sig- nulled to the waiting spectators within. the inclosure by the enthusiastte crowd outside the os dent's Arcival. President Roosevelt, 3 ry of the Navy Long, Secretary of War Root and Gen. Leonard Wood, of Havana, reachet the city at 1 2. M, from Washington. An immense crowd 1 wun Broad street station to see the President, but they were disap- pointed, as the Presidential party was switched into the South strect station and lunched on the train, remaining un- le it was Ume to drive to Franklin (Continued on Fourth Page.) FIND DEAD BABY’ ©) HOLD GIRL MOTHER. lenis BODY FOUND ON A ROOF NEAR HOME. Mille 1K Hospital Seventeon-Vear-Old Pree a Prison Sent to fe Kast Sixiy-weventh nd a aml! dead baby’ Ng Kast Stxty-third Policemen 4 Mireet Station for roof of No. * this afternoon then arrested the «irl mocher of child, She ta Millie Koth, seventeen yeurs of Noo 1 Bast: Sixty-third Regiment, Regi V f t Hotel st Denis on Deo. 1 la commemoration of the company’s seventy -ffth vlethday an- iiversary, Capt. WA Hoe will preside, —— SOL SMITH RUSSELL HOPELESS INVALID. VETERAN ACTOR HAS LOCO- MOTOR ATAXIA. {Wheeled About ina Char, We Has Ever the Stage. WASHINGTON, Nov. 3) —Sol Russell, famous actor, whose the home was recently stricken with locos and the malady has pro- cresant unchecked, ow the kindly ot his lege motor astax! Thespian ts denied the u Ho is pushed about in a go-cart by a colored man. There is no chance that he will ever be able to resume his old part on the stage, which ts indebted to him for some of its quaintest and drol- —— ' Smith SHOT HIMSELF 10 DEATH IN SALOON. SENT A BULLET INTO HIS RIGHT TEMPLE. {Sateide In Avenne A Liquor Place jen tiled—Body Taken ot Pollec Station, An unidenti this afternoon in the Cynen, at No, 138 Avenue A, ing himself in he right tem, The man was about years old, 5 feet $ Inches 1) pounds and had fair hair. The body was dressed In a dapie. Jothes, dark serge Gap t i shoes. The body was taken to the Bast 8 ty-roventh Street Police Station: A recelpt for $3.50, made out to Al vricka, for dues from a Boh jodge, wax found in the side poekel the man’s coat. A pocketbook with: same name in ft was also founds tergon, No J. Delo the potter think, Is) they i aa eediyse t New name and addres#, and’ the. Paterson have been notified: Two dollars and. some, mal ere aleo found In the. vest Their arrival. The’ by special train >