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nl 'AMERICAN THEATRE PATRONS GIVE ROUSING WELCOME TO NEW COMPANY. Maurice Freeman, New Leading Man, Drew Applause Until the Audience Went Home with Aching Hands, TRIED 10 LEAP FROM BRIDGE. Albert H. Johnson Was Caught by Police- man Duryea Just in ) Time. JUMPED FROM A TROLLEY Women’s Screams Attracted Attention to the Young Bos: tonian Who Sought to Plunge Into the River. A stylishly dressed man, describing himself as Albert H. Jobnson, twenty- @x years old, of Boston, tried to leap from the centre of the Brooklyn Bridge to-day. He was caught as his hold on the steel girder was about to release and let bim drop. Policeman Luke B. Duryee, of the Bridge squad, caught him. The police- man was patrolling the north roadway. Johnson was a passenger on a trolley car bound for New York and occupied a seat on the rail near the rear. Just as the car reached the summit of | the centre span Johnson leaped from | the car, which was not going at a high rate of speed, and ran to the high rail Women Saw Him Run. ‘The shrieks of several women passen- gers who saw the young man run to the edge attracted the attention ot Policeman Duryee. He was enabled to reach the place through the Inability of Johnson to easily climb through the network of girders. Just as Duryce reached the place Johneon fell and there was another scream from the women, who thought he had gone on down to the water. But he had his arm bent and It caught on a small steel cable running diagon- ally across the bottom of the bridge to make the structure stable. His arm was slowly straightening out so that a few more seconds the angle would have been such that his welght would have pulled his body over. ‘The policeman grabbed the arm which was sustaining him and pressed the forearm back so that it formed a sharp angle, making it impossible for the body to be released. ‘Assisted by several men from the street cars, which were accumulating n the bridge, Duryee was able to draw Johnson Leto the hoor of the Dridge. Didn’t Want to Live. jet me gu!” demanded the young ‘don'tewant to live. This is a food way to get out of it ‘If vou stop tie now you'll make me try again. he "was stopped and was taxon g the bridge police station, Washing a ath rooklyn. There he at first Said that he had lost a lot of money Futurity race of Saturday. Later he dented that 2nd gald he wae 8 cigar © rete fend and that in crossing the rive: (ue water below fascinated him and he had (ried to jump in. He eaid he wes a a Boston ators. where his hom but wou 11 anything “01 man. But jerk jn Ls, t w was fond in the pocl his clothes, and he must have spent his last f certs for street-car fare on to. t! bridge so that he could kill himself. a e- = MAGISTRATE CRANE. MAKES CONFESSION “Wher | Was a Boy,” Says He, ‘My Mother Thought | Was an Angel, but | Was Up to Ail Sorts of Deviltry.’”’ “when I was e boy my mother thought I was an angel, witle as @ matter of fact I was in all sorts of deviltry,” was the confession Magis: trate Crane made In the Morrisania Police Court to-day. The statement was made in reply to the protests of Mrs. White, of No, 568 East One Hun- dred and Thirty-fifth street, whose son John, thirteen ywars old, had been Mined $% for annoying a Chinese laundry- man. “My boy is a good boy. He doesn't as- noetate with bad boys, and wouldn't do euch a thing,’ sald Mrs. White. “That's the trouble with you mothers; you think your boys and girls could not do wrong, while they are up to all sorts of tricks when out of your sight,” sald the Magistrate, ‘The fine was inflicted, as were similar fines on Frederick Hirsch, ten, ress, and Thomas and James Brown, nine-year-old twins, of No, 556 East One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street. The complainant was Henry Lee, whose Yaundry is at No, 163 Alexander avenue. “Chinamen, as a rule, are unoffending @nd¢ law abiding,” added Magistrate Crane. “They are butts for littie ras- cals of boys and I'm going atop to It if I can. a DR. CRANE COMING EAST. Ohicago Preacher Leaves People's Church ¢- Congregationaliats, CHICAwJ, Sept. 1—Hev. Frank Crane, D. D., who came to Chicago a few years ago to fill the pulpit of ‘Trin- ty M. E. Church, and who a year a @ucoeede’ Rev. H. W. Thomas, D. D,, \ @t the People's Church, an independent Ubera! organization, has preached his farewell sermon, Dr, Crane ha opted the pastorate of the i y Congregational Church at Wor Ma which position he will assume next week, Addresses in reply were made by John P Brushingham, Judge Hanecy, Seno Wiliam 2. Wallace Heckman, Chairman of Political Action Committee of the Ur League Club, and Secretary MeCor- mack, of the People’s Church. ee ‘ORUSHED COUPLING CARs. Frank MoHugh, twenty-nine years, of No, 304 West One Hundred and Forty- Dr or | Nothing | same ad- | to put a} \ | | LILLIAN | BAYER & personal interest in the members of | ch the stock company which presents for | them In the course of a season a reper: | toire extending from Shakespeare to the | ism to bank on, and Maurice Freeman, the new leading man, whom Mr. Green- wall transplanted from his New Orleans stock house, Mr. Freeman scored in @ manner that would furnish a newspaper sensation had {t occurred on Broadway. He took no less than a dozen curtain calls after each act and sent his audi- ence home with aching, blistered hands. Mr. Freeman !s a good actor, graceful and magnetic, with a quality of volce that carries his audience to unbounded enthusiasm after his emotional pas- sages. Though Miss Rogers suffered by comparteor with tfiss Allen in her in: | torpretation of Glory Quayle, Mr, Free- man will not take second rank among the American patrons, at least, to Mr. Moran, the originator of John Storm. Lillian Bayer, another new member of ov oni Br ‘new soubrette, Is an experienced stock | actrne®? a dainty little woman with a fund of sprightiiness and good method. Helen Beaumont ts another good-looking addition, who will be heard from late ip ingenue roles, A notable new comer among the male THE WORLD: MONDAY EVE aracter ation Ve of own,” bright’ particul Patrons of the American Theatre take {members of the cast Is John Ravold, a actor Though quite a y several years’ experience in peck companies. ntage o! recei Labor Day matinees wit! be given thie | afterfoon at the Savoy, the American the Broadway, the Academy _of Musto, the Casino, the Fourteenth Street, the Star, the Metropolis, the Third Avenue and the Murray Hill Theatre, where the new stock company will inaugurate ite fitth season. It Robert Edeson had any lingering doubts of his popularity, swept away by the wild enthusiasm of his reception at evening. His weloume amounted to an A note porting company Is the substitution of Helen Burg for Gretchen Lyons. Buig came to America as an ingenue In Chevalier | companies, but soon migtated from Irv- | Ing Place 'to Broadway apse of “The in wi ‘The announcement Herald Square Theatre Luescher has resigned as business man- ager for the Shubert Brothers. the openin, Mr, Luescher will take a short rest of thi YESSALINE 9ODGERS nounced. Both Dbilit: : Luescher are has had | the be: the of splendid ng man he Ingistent that only th jana that Mr. Luescher's withdrawal hai |no connection with the opposition move: against the Shuberts throughow He enjoyed ving his ey dy, i ‘om fe 4 ment ota of face comedy. That whi eeahenira mean and shows many of che northern part of the State. In ad-|a¢ from $25 to $100, promising Fecrecy he theatre was crowded from orchestra | "hat sterling actor's methods. (tans [dition to the business management of |of proceedings and the like, has giowi amen It to root Saturday evening when the new| with the elaborate setting heretofore | the Casino and Herald Square Theatres | or igte years, and the new law is In- oie Inte ; | emp a ¢| Mr. Luesel ad the burde: years; » days notice company for this season made Its ap-| smployed Roe kctead of [Auperintending the completion of the |tended to stop It. This law makes it « creditors pearance in Hall Caine's “The Chris- S¢hattive oo (Only a week the play wi {new Princess Theatre, and he was|misdemeanor for the lawyer to udver- daibliity . The glory of the night was|run as fong as. {t continues popular, |fever too busy to be courteous {0 | tige, and includes in ite strictures all mikes the divided by Jessaline Rogers, the lending | Meanwhile rie Fatal Card” will be in | strangers or frtende who ald him, eltha the sign painter, + of another woman, who had last season's’ fayorit- | "Dcarsal- ‘phe Emerald Tele, which Jefferwon |the printer, she publisher or the De Angelia will produce to-night st th Herald Square Theatre, ts the last Mghi opera from the gifted pen of the lat Sir Arthur Suillvan, At the Kaltenborn Concert at th Cirele to-night, John Cheshire, harpist, Jeenette Douglas, soprano, an Franz Kaltenborn, vivsinist, wily be th solcists. they were the Savoy Saturday | prosented with an elaborate decoratlo ble change tn his aup- Miss | Tho of “Btabat aroused asm. were particularly effective in their numb: and ‘Isabelle Bouton Shanna Cummings gave great faction. rendition the gud. Heinrich | Conretc After the ool- Miss one Adventures she was ture, she made a of the the company, has Mitle opportunity dn | success in vaudeville and then sickness “The Christian,” but she has beauty of | *imoet ended her stage carcer, Her re- Aeneas ake perth al| face and ngure. Laura Almosino, the | hnigh' Je, a8 she bas the aplendid | new Princens, Theat Gitamnith at . finish of the foreign trained actress. | pearance of Mr. Weedon Grossmith. at P. JEROME DOHERTY IS NOW A BENEDICT. Prominent Advertising Man} Leads Miss Kathryn Mc-| Quade’ from St. Mary's Altar His Wife. Hundreds of friends of P. Jerome Do- herty, a prominent advertising man con- nected with the Haulenbeck Agency, were present last night in St, Mary's] Church, Grand and Ridge streets, to wit-| ness his marriage to Miss Kathryn Me- Quade, Miss May Keating played the wedding march from “Lohengrin.” The bride, In an exquisite gown of whitel satin trimmed with veal Irish point lace,| carried a bouquet of white roses, Miss, May Hooley was the maid of honor and Mr. Eugene F, Schuyler the best man, Immediately after the ceremony the wedding party proceeded to the resi Jdence of the bride, where a supper was \served, Mr. and Mrs, Doherty left early this morning and will spond tholr hon moon on a trip through the State, re- turning in two weeks to occupy their |new home in Brooklyn, The Rev, Fagher Harrington performed the ceremon; — “POISON TO KILL MYSELF!” Demand of Young Htallan Lends Druggist to Cause Hin Arrest. Guiseppe. Culabress, eighteen years old, of No, 35 Stanton street, entered |Solomon Rosenthal's drug store, Chry tle and Stanton streets, and requested a dos of polson as that he could kill | himelf “I'm tired of living," said the Italtan, “and I'm better off out of the world. The druggist called Patrolman Ben- nett, of the Hldridge street station, and the youth was arrested In Essex Market Court Magistrate Cornell discharged Culabress tn the cus tody of his mother, who said she woul take care of him, The prisoner said he had changed his mind about killing him- | ot | SICULL. It was reported at Harlam Hospital to- | day that George Whitosill, forty-two | yours old, of Ww AMERICAN MAN'S WHISKE fifth street, while coupling cars at Rec- rape ARK ! tor and, Tridity places to-day, nae , ABSOLUTELY PuRE, WOME BETTER MADE sore ine No. 628 and! ahe |; ULW WATN ARE ‘SEND FOR PRICE LIST, of the cars. i and Yy Shea! Wore iajured + (958 and the lett | LJ CALLANAN. 41-43 Vesey st presented MEDAL FOR A BANDMASTER. tan Beach last night. came as a surprise to both the audience and the leader, orchestral numbers, and before the sing- Ing of the “Stabat Mater," Harry Wes- ton, the French horn player of the band, ¥ re is made at the| Oct. 6 are complete, Mr. Grosemith| The police say that both Fas ets IP | Street Jail, being held to secure his ap that Mark A. his English oompapy will reaoh|the room were turned on, and that ti each-of-promise sui esi) is Be) oo npany will reach | Goors, and. windo' aan: caretully, fares a at cis ot Sf Bromine suit mane | play to be presented during hie engage. |clowed. They call It suicide {brought by Gusste Orgol, of Nv au my ite | hiene here fe “the Night of the Pasty,” Mins Anna Crane denies that both Jeta | Willis avenue, who demands $00 dam- o new Princess Theatre | which haa been running at the Avenue | Were on and says that only one Was! ace, and who sets up as the reason she I ei don, for a year past. open, and that it was one which worked i Eas Theatr gO Ou Ree Kee ee lonely and which had evidently been | became undesirable in the « opened accidentally. Hyman the allegation that she begged fora few moments and on behalf of the|was wrong,” said Miss Crane to thé! he gemande band made a speech, He then intro- police to-day, “I had Intended to stay | Gn ug. 17, Miss Orgol asserts, the « emberd of Shannows wana at| iuced J. W. McKinney, manager of the/away over Labor Day, but last night I) fendant called upon her ‘and promise) theatre, who made the presentation. felt that something was wrong at homel|marrlage. The wedding was set. lor Manhattan Honor Their Leader. | After this the band, led by Mr. Ta-|and aa could not sanke of the feel-| Aug. 21, and the guess assembled it A gold medal eet with dlamanis wan| calle: gecund director, played “He's a|ing I came on here and found Hannah |her father's home on that day. but the) §| Jolly Good Mellow,” and. then the audi-|dead, with the gas turned on. bridegroom. tarried, whereupon, th to Handmaster Shannon, of|enee and members of the band joined| "She did not commit sulcide. She was plaintiffs brother, Max Orgol, set out the Twenty-third Regiment, at Manhat-| in three cheers for the bandmaster. happy, and we had lived contentedly|to search for Freund and met him. | ‘The presentation —<—<—<—<——__—_ together." Freund, the brother reported, was ob- Tne two Misses Crane have a hand-|durate, saying that as the girl had IRE DESTROYS VILLAGE Immediately after the celved here to-day report the thon of the villag loss is estimated improving et, crisp flakes of wheat and malt—eaten Does Wenders fer the Boy. “1 feel gratefnl to you for making ‘Force.’ My son, who {s employed in an office, had been running ‘Force’ pleased his taste and he cats it twice a I feel that tt has done wonders for down for months. strength and vitality daily. plans for the future have not been an- the Shuberts and Mr. Kindilest of feeling exists between them | the Bandmaster Thomas Shannon was by the members of hia band during lest night's concert at Manhattan Beach. Mater" nce to wild enthust- Bvan Williams and Gwillyn stles 010 and patis- that house, on the night of Monday, the indulgence of the audience MONTREAL, Sept. 1.—Despatches re- destruc- ¢ of La Belle Que. The at $40,000, sharpens intellects by NING, SEPTEMBER 1, 1902, _ NEW LAW STRIKES DIVORCE SHARKS. a -$o——__—___ Prohibits Advertising for Cases by the Lawyers Who Give Bargain Counter Rates. ‘The Session Lawe for 1@, passed by, tribitor, ‘The aew aw also covers the Legislature at ita last session, were | divorce detectives, titures of the pubished at Albany to-day, and in-| social fabrte, eldentally several of the new laws went he punishment for a msde into t fs not more than a year in prison Two changes In the law of divorce! $1,00 fine, oy both fine and impri are looked upon as of highest im-| ment, as follows portance, the long declared public poltey r amendment ty th of the F the pire State belng to discourage ‘ance the marriage Section 481——Ad IPces—W NOY r Bev While in some States divorces diy: ites or ent to “ giented for Intempenin cruelty, distributed or circulates support, desertion and even for y te painphiet, card, hand- Charles Dickens, the novelist, d ASML te Ra Lia as the cause of troudle between him and | offering to procure or ald In procure his wife, “Incompatibility of temper-| Ing any divorce oF the sever en aia art solution or annulment of it ment,” In this State there ts but on Haver okcanterinas tovenoutbe \ ground considered suMctently serious| or aot as attorney or vo: | for a divorce, and then only the jnno-| sult for alimony or divorce or the | cent party Is permitted to marry agata.| weverances ssolution ine ’ of an fe. elthe With these stringent Imitations, “dt-| Oy ‘eis eee ce vorce day” often finds the court In this| meanor, ‘This act shail not apply to) clty with from thirty to forty cases on! the printing oF publishing of | ‘ N) notice or advertisement required or | the calendar, and the successtul party | Athoriond by any mw of tile tite to the suit frequently hurries away with wo ate love to the pareon and is remar.| featriction on temarringe, ried: Companion to this law is ing Into effect to-day, which Stops the Advertisers. succesful party to a 1 three Chapter 28, of the Laws of 1972, which i. takes effect to-day,’ said A. H. Hum- | mel, “is an amendment to the Penal | |; Code, and is designed to put a stop to and » monthe shall the legil Ashermen who bave their |, Another law at hooka out for weak or foolish wives | 7inm of the Clty who want to be off with the old love and on with the new, and for husbands | who want to shake off the reeponsibiil- tlea they owe to their wives and fam!- \tes, “The evil of advertising lawyers who offer to procure divorces for all comers going preme ¢ Ry another Jaw, feet Dist vurt s¥atem munteipal justice sittin t t e GIRL MUST PAY T0 MARRY THIS YOUTH Freund Goes to Jail for Breach of Promise Rather Than Wed Without Promised, Dowry of $1 500. | FOUND HER SISTER DEAD ON RETURN. Gas Was Turned On, and It Is a Question Whether or Not . Wealthy Miss Crane Com- mitted Suicide, a e Miss Hanneh F, Crane, fifty years old, living In luxury and said to be wealthy, was found dead this morning in a room | in her home at No, %3 Carleton avenue, Brooklyn, by her spinster sister, Anna D. Crane, who had rtturned from a visit | out of the city. Although, according to affidavits » mitted to Justice Hall in the Supr Court, suniry damsels are bidding from $1,000 to $2,000 for the hand and heart of Hyman Freund, the young man Jangulshes disconsolate in the Laidlow “Thad a presentiment that something | not pay the young man the $1,500 w somely furnished home and every sur- money he could not marry her, and rounding of wealth. They had been other girls had offered from $1,000 to & greatly attached to each other, and the|for the honor of calling him bh | sister's neparnuce from the city on _aland he couldn't think of ma vacation alone is said to have made the. poor girl, but he would mak o| other morose and melancholy. ppy for $1,600. fa Jim Dumps’ first-born—young Jim—a clerk, Had wrecked his health by overwork. His brain grew weak, his body thin, Just as his father’s once had been. “Eat ‘Force,’”’ Jim Senior begged of him. He did. Now 4e is “Sunny Jim,” 6 19 1 health. cold, day, with the reaul€ that he Is gaining Mrs.: —," Qlame furnished om application.) bua. | Tata Week our opticians will examine your Glasses jew Yorks lassen mado and repaired while you wait, fentors’ Gul Solid Gold EYE GLASSES at $1a Pair. HIS WEEK, hires atoren giksses that ut my price Why do I offe: Simply be stores f want 4 to know that every pair of hey don't prove r maney tack FOR 106 Fast 230 192 Fulton st. 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