The evening world. Newspaper, September 9, 1902, Page 3

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—+ SICK NOT DRUNK: DIES IN STATION. Second Recent Case in Which a Man Uncon. . scious from Illness Is Declared Intoxicated. CONSIGNED TO A CELL. Error Is Discovered Too Late, * and the Victim Dies Within a Few Hours of Being Found in the Street. A second case in which an ambu- Janes surgeon consigned a dying man to a police cell as a “drunk” has de- veloped in Brooklyn. After having been pronounced un- consciously drunk from liquor by a | Brooklyn ambulance surgeon, James U. Waldron, jr., a painter and jdec- « tor, of No. 871 Gates avenue, died in a cell at the Gates avenue police station from heart disease. Waldron, who was forty-four years old and a son of Policeman Waldron, of the Adams street police station, fell at gthe corner of Tompkins and Gates ave- N. nues, and was taken to the police sta- @ «tion, near the corner, by a policeman, no Sergt. Downey called an’ ambulance from ththe Williamsburg Hospital, after plac- meing the man on a couch. up. Dr. Hatfleld arrived with the am- farbulance, and after a hasty investigation firstaid that Waldron was simply drunk untind would get sober in a few hours. TbVhen he heard that his patient was comrunk the sergeant had him locked up no } a cell. atte:Sergt. Downey sent for Waldron's and jother, and when she arrived she in- any Sted that he was not drunk but sick; twat he had frequently fallen from raineart failure. Ambulance Surgeon Flan- ownery, of Bt. Mary's Hospital, was called, horand he said Waldron was not drunk put dayitically ill, He ordered him sent to rairthe hospital, but in taking him to the maambulance the surgeon eald he was too dowsick to be moved and ordered him back Tto the station, where he died in a few in minutes and only three hours after Dr. pa Hatfield had said he was suffering from ™ intoxication. Policeman Waldron, who yesterday ap- th piled for retirement froin the force be- be cause be had served forty-two years, aid that his son had never been drunk h. and that he could not nave been drunk when he was taken to the station. As this is the second case of a sim! nature in two daysan official investi; Frederick Fk. ') White, Famous Litigant, Dis- appeared, and a Searching Party Will Be Sent Out to Scour Forests. PHILLIPS, Me., Sept. 9.—Frederick Hall White, eighteen years old, heir to a fortune of $3,000,000, has been lost in the Maine woods since Aug. 2, His father, Josiah J. White, of No. 196 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, docs not know whether the young man has met with a mishap, 1s wandering help- lessly about or fs only hiding to escape returning to college. With young White when he disap. peared was Maurice Henry, son of Henry, of Clark street, Brooklyn. The boys went into camp in July. Later White, who was to enter Harvard this fall, spent a week at Naragansett with his father. He returned to the camp with the understanding that he was to keep his father informed of his movements. This he failed to do, and, packing up a week's provisions, he and young Henry started for the woods. ‘Three times the elder White has come to Deer Pond for tidings of his son, | Searching parties headed by J. J. Henry, of Boston, who knows the trails thor- oughly, have scoured the woods without finding a trace of the young men. After a week of fruitless waiting, Mr. White has gone to Poland Springs to await news of his son. Some of the guides tell of having seen the young men, and with this meagre encourage- ment he is waiting for the return of the latest searching parties. If no tidings are brought in by the end of the week Mr. White will organ- ize a great searching party to scour the) from dr. Wi THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 9, 1908. YOUNG HEIR TO MILLIONS _IS LOST IN MAINE WOODS. sg Tew PRL Ht aeteee ver | FREDERICK HALL WHITE. prison father afterward, when he was to make an boy to go to accounting of the trust funds, he re- fused to obey the order of the court and war sent to Raymond Street Jail probably for contempt. He managed to escape! comes. DANCING GIVES “Dance, but don't drink nor smoke.” This is the advice Henry Clay Bar-| nabee offers actors and singers and this is the motto he's been following dur- ing the sixty-nlne years he had man- aged to keep his balance on this shifty svhere. With the revival of ‘Robin Hood" at the Academy of Musle last night, the veteran comedian of the Bostonians tripped into his forty-elghth season as tion will be made by the Health partment. John Schimpf, Jr. was struc y 2 gireet car and an ambulance sur- ».. £ geon declared him to be suffering from alcoholism, permitting him to lie in « cell all night. Me died in the morning. = ee TOSSED BY ERIE TRAIN. 8. P. Dolan Jumped from Coach tn Front of Locomotive. A man who says he is Samuel P. Doian, twenty-seven years old, of New Hampshire, jumped from a train of the Weehawken Branch of the Erle Rail- road, Jersey City, in front of another. He was struck and tossed into a ditch by the coweatcher, His head was cut » badly and his ht shoulder was dis- located. He Is Frane's's Hospital. MORO EXPEDITION. READY TO START, AM we Men of All Arms and Little Opposition Is Anticipated | | —Banquet to Taft. | MANILA, Sept. 9%—The column of trecps which Brig.-Gen. Samuel 8. Sum- mer, commanding the Department of Mindanao, Is to lead against the Macin Moros will probably leave Camp Vicars at the end of this week. Tt will consist of portions of the Blev- | enth and Twenty-seventh Infantry, two | tgoops of the Fifteenth Cavalry and a ‘mountain battery, about 1,100 men in | all. Serious opposition 1s not expected } by the military authorities. It {s te- ! Meved the plan is to segregate the hos- tfles and friendlies, and keep the latter neutral, It is expected that the Macin move- ment will be followed by an expedition inet the Sultan of Bacolod. Negros ile 4, if he continues hostile. ‘Tho’ Federal party gave banquet Gov. Taft yesterday, during which je native speakers complizaeated the faith in and at- nor, oxpresend ion for him and promised to sup- rt his administration. In responding Spgs Taft denied that the Federal i Ard a creation of the Phillp- pine Commission and complimeated the party its ization and common eanse on ite service in shaping public opinion, SERVANT HELD FOR THEFT. Louise Tinsom Dentes Charge Made by Mise Blacksto: Louisa Tinson, twenty years old, of Mo. 74 Seventh avenue, who has been employed as a servant by Miss Black- stone, of No. 112 West Forty-ninth street, was arraigned before Magistrate Meade in the West Side Court to-day, changed with haying stolen a diamond erescent piu, valued at $400, from her ‘mistress, She was held in $1,000 bail for further examination. Miss Blackstone told the Court thnt the servant had been glyen notice of ir discharge Pomtorsay morning and to leave Miss Blackstone's house (Miss Blackstone alleged that he left the missing pin on the pin was miasing. notified the po! Ny Column Will Consist of 1,100) Sees tee a public entertainer with a step as Ugbt and graceful as it twenty years 150. | According to Mr. Barnabee he and Terpsichore get along as well now as they did the day they met. As Light on His Feet as Ever. as easy for me to dance as * he said. “I can't expinin why, but I suppose I'm like that strong man of the arena who, when asked how he managed to oarry a bull on his back, answered he'd been doing it ever since the bull was a calf.” Purltanical though he {s, Mr, Barna- bee takes an opposite attitude to that of| ministers and the prudes who decry dancing as an invention of the kind of devil Mary MacLane got tired of walt- | TO ACTOR, SAYS BARNABEE. Longevity Assured to Those with Nimble Feet Who Abstain from Tobacco and Drink. LONG LIFE ing for in Butte and came down \o New York to meet. | “Dancing certainiy ever hurt me morally, and I'm sure it has done me lots of good physically,” was his clusion. “And I’m not the only person who can point to dancing as a preserver of youth. Look at the hundre ballet girls sunning themselves pital. York Centra lcliffe, while an old ladies’ home were jt not for the) beneficial effect of the kind of physical | culture which, Ike gout, be#ins In the |tus's staff, feet.”” prisoner, W Abhors Cigarettes and Boor. | The Still, Mr. Barnabee raises a restrain- ing hand and turns his back on clgar- ettes and “bose.” “They are the two things that keep many a promising career off a three- sheet," asserted the "Sheriff." “They'll fuln ‘the best voloe that ever peeped and kill the best man that ever lived. Whenever anybody wpproaches, me With one or the other I shake my head and say: ‘Not for your Uncle Henry. Yur. Barnabee Is proud of his vol but prouder still of his legs. He boast of being the oldest dancer on the stage e single exception of “Waltz-Me jefferson he reflects, “we all know Rip Van Winkle was a lucky man." pale. es, covered, BRIDE IS IN (Specia} to The Evening World.) WHITE PLAINS, Sept. §.—There will be legal complications over the will of Bradford McGregor, the young million- aire who died from the effects of an ‘operation, after belng married to Mise Schlemmer at his country seat at Ori- enta Point. | ‘Phe testament will be filed in the Sur- | rogate's office here next week, The dead man's first wife was Mi Grace Quintard, niece of Bishop Qui ard, Bbe secured a divorce from Mr. McGregor in Dakota, {s now living in Burope, and there may be a question as to the legality of the Dakota decree. If the divorce should not be valid, she would share in the property. Joshua M, Fierro, who drew the will of the senior MoGregor, as well as that FORTUNE M’GREGOR LEFT May Be a Question as to the Validity of First Wife's Divorce. LEGAL TANGLE. of Bradford, says that there can be no) S10”. question as to the validity of the Mc- Gregor divorce, as both parties signed papers, and that the decre will be revogniged in any State. By the death of the young millionaire, who leaves about $4,000.00 to his bride who was made a widow in thirty-six hours, the entire residuary estate of the late Ambrose M. McGregor. one of the founders of the Standard Ol! Company, reverts to his mother. According to the papers filed here, the senior MoGregor left an estate of more than $8,000,000. Considerable property waa not taxable and no one knows how much this is worth, Under the will of Ambrose Mc- Gregor 37% shares of Standard O!! stock left to hig aon js held In trust, and hip widow can only use the income of welcome. presided at fs favor of to frame convention hours for hours for NEUMAN DIES, ESCAPING TRIAL Man, Who Leaped from Train from Captors, Expires in the Vassar Hos- to Escape Dotective-Sergt. ingmen estimated the Suite Convention wi the Legislature to ré and fied to school 1 exp on his way Doran, who wife, whom he is on labor Martin Murph; the sessions. Schnectady. “constitutional’’ State, is@ public we ublic wor) Connecticut captured and beause Mr. White wanted all summer and the ed against It. hiding out unt!l school time) Herman Neuman, the prisoner who leaped through the window of a New s train, near Rhine- a to this city to \ stand trial for bigamy and larceny, ia Broadway these days who would be 4) 3'00" "th. Vassar Hospital, at Pough- of Capt, was in charge of bring the body to wis it over to Neuman's rela- Ww says that she will see that it is buried. Neuman’s second wife, wt sped after his defalcation here was jas her way back from Kansas City In care of her father. LABOR CONVENTION ~ MEETS AT AUBURN, Delegates Representing Near- ly 300,000 Organized Work- in Session—Some Legislative Reforms Desired th whom he AUBURN, N. ¥., Sept. 9.—The Federation of Labor convened here to- day for a four-days’ session. Two hun- dred and twenty delegates, representing constituency .000, Were enrolled at the opening sen- Mayor Burgess delivered an address , of Buffalo, President of the Federation, replied, and The only business done at to-day’s meeting was to appoint a committee on credentials, Half a dozen cities have apolled for next year’s convention, with the chances Special efforts will be made this week legislation calculated to curtail the child-labor evil mer in New York with relatives, and in the factories of the Another metter to come Aa ate Seat for the|home to tell her parents of her mar- State directly or for any of tts cownty ‘ Breath . nat or municipal aub-divisions. riage. @he remained there a week when HOT-CORN MAN SAILOR'S VICTIM Scalded by Kearsarge Seaman Who Used His Stock as Mis-) siles. BIGCAN WAS TURNED OVER | Contents Fell Over Peddler | Who Had Been Knocked) Down and Doctors Say the Man May Die from Injuries. Jacob Cohen, who cries “Hot corn smoking hot," beside nis big cauldron M43 \of steaming ears in front of No Bowery, and lives at No, 11-2 street, lies in Gouverneur Hospital in & precarious condition. scalded from | head to foot. Mack McCarthy, able seaman, U. 8, 8. | Kearsarge, on shore leave tampage In the Bowery, was arraigned | in Essex Market Court to-day chargrd with dashing the bolling contents of | the n stand and bore down on ‘ined his attack to caustic the outfit at first. | ‘Then a Third avenue electr: along and the blueja against the color of the car, declaring | that British red should be tabooed tn | wtrevt cars, and accentuated his remarks by xrabbiig steaming hot ears from Cohen's cauldron and hurling them at |thg offending car Cohen protested at this seizure of am- [munition Ina time of profound peace. | whereupon McCarthy turned upon him jand knocked him down. ‘Then lie a grabbed the cauldron and fell with it ipon the prostrate Cohen, the boiling | water going all over the peddler. Cohen's cries attracted the attention of a policeman, who arrested the wallor and summoned’ an ambulance . MacDonald, who took Cohen + Gouverneur Hospital, found that he wa badly scalded and might die. McCarthy was held to awalt the result of the man’s injuries. nit bh criticism | He ia car came protested . Structural Bridge and Workers ‘Threaten Strik: | NEW HAVEN, Conn., Sept §.—Tne members of the Bridge and Iron Struc. tural Workers’ Union in Connecticut have deolded to go on atrike unless the cempanier employing them accede at once to demands which were presented three months ago | ‘These demands oalled for a wage scale | of # cents an hour and a working day | of nine hours ‘At present the scale is from 30 to 3 cents an hour, LACK OF LUXURIES “INDUCES. SUICIDE. Poor Youth Who Married Wealthy Girl Makes Four Attempts to Die, the Last of Which May Prove Successful ——- Tie the Un! deserted. ate Because he could not furnish his bride of a month with horses and carriages and she had gone to the home of her parents, Harold Hemendinger, of No. 320 Hast Elghtisth street, made four at- tempis to kill himself and is now dying in a Wilkesbarre (Pa.) hospital as a re- sult of Iris last. ° Hemendiny who is not yet twenty) years old, worked for the American Ex- press Company as a driver at $60 a month. He was a handsome youth and dressed well, Four months ago he met at a dance pretty Miss Leah Soloman, eighteen years old, of Wilkesbarre, where her parents are among the wealthiest residents. Miss Soloman was spending the sum- of the Jabout @ moath ago Hemendinger anid it t | Mies Boloman went to the City Hall and Mt were married. For @ week they lived in a hotel and then Miss Solomon went her father sent for Hemendinger and VIOLENT CULPRIT IN CHILDREN'S COURT Six-Foot Boy of Fifteen Swears and Carries on Like Mad, Wildly Attacking Wit- ness Against Him, In the Children's Court to-day Marks Luper, fifteen years old, No. 114 Ridge street, was found guilty of attempting to pick a woman's pocket, Luper fs the wildest boy tried before Justice Olmated since the court opened. He ewore like a “trooper,” The Court could hardly believe he was as young as he sald. He swung ‘his arme like @ and ‘injustice’ of being a resented the rested. The boy glared at Ils Honor, shook bis fat at witness and en English distributed adjectives a startlingly pi manner. Court eyed him in amazement. His Honor Informed ‘aim the witness, Louls Waldman, a painter of No. 31 Avenue B, had seen hii seme to plok a srented #9 Row’ whether he was or nade @ flying leap and narrowly missed pounding the latter's head. ‘He will be sentenced Thursday TOOK HER GEMS AS SHE ATE. Wealthy Woman Accuses Saratone Walter of Theft of Diamond Pin, Oscar Allen, No. 39 West Thirty-sov-| enth street, was arraigned jn Harlem Court to-day charged with the theft of a diamond pin valued at #00 from wealthy Mrs, Hugo Hoefler, of No. 568 ‘West One Hundred and Porty-second street, He was held in 31,000 bail for examination to-morrow. Mrs. Hoefier was a guest at the Hotel Kanelogtes, Saratoga, and Allen wax employed as @ waiter there and waited rs, on. r. When she left the table the ‘pin had dis red. She re- the matter to the managem: who found that Allen had left without waiting to get his wages. The pin wan found in & pawnshop and the detec. tives say Allen had the ticket ——— KNIGHTS TEMPLARS MEET. State Grand Commandery Geeston at Saratog BARATOGA, N. Y., Sept. 9—New York State Grand Commandery Knights Tem- plars, Grand Commander Erastus @.] A derb; Delavan, of Binghamton, began Its elghs | scene, os A WAGON MYSTERY STIRS THE POLICE. Occupants of Blood-Stained Vehicle Abandoned it After Having Been Night Journey. Upset (Special to The Bveuing World.) RYW-ON-SOUND, N. ¥., Sept. 9.—The police have something of mystery in the finding of a horse and wagon close to Bt, Benedict's Home, on the Pont road near Portchoster. certained that a man and woman bad been overturned near tie place late las: night, amd after the wagon had been righted left horse and vehicle standing in the road and started to walk to Port- chester, It fas been as- ‘The wagon was in a dilapidated condi- tion and the boytom covered with blood, hat was also found pear the ich had fresh blood stalng on ae Chief of Police Donovan, of Portches- ter, and his feree are working had a religious ceremony performed in Wilkesbarre, The young bride and her husband returned to New York and he instaiied her in a furnished room. Mrs. Hemendinger wanted to know where the horses and carriages were her husband had promised her before her marriage. He then admitted to her that he made only $ a month, and Mrs. Hemendinger went to the home at her husband's mother, TMring of this | went back to her own people in Wilkesbarre. Hemendinger wes heart-broken at his wife leaving Dim and made four trips to Wilkesbarre to induce her to return, She refused. On Labor Day Hemen- dinger secured a leave of absence from his employers and told hie mothr he was going to make & Jast appeal to! his wife to return tu him, He was well received at the Soloman home and spent | alieof his time trying to wet his wife | t return to New York with htm. On| her repeated refues! Hemendinger de-| cided to Kitt trimsel!. First he turned on the gas in his room and bis young wife turned {t off; he then tried to jump from a third-story window, and was again prevented by his wisi the next bought a bottle of carbolic aed, which wan found and destroyed eer | zs on by Mrs, Hemending tor Pevtorduy, inger went to the cellar of futher-in-law's home | abot himeeli. tained ‘con. | old TWO COUPLES Sister and Brother andl '—DEMAND” MORE WAGES. ~ | | who has disappear |the boy's forehead meendlogsr, re: | been ELOPE IN CABS. Their Sweethearts Run Away and Get Married. MEET AT THE a Week in Jersey They Re-| turn to Brooklyn and Keep) House Together, | Bert Donnelly, of the Consofidated | James Shanley Association, and his died, at Brooklyn, chose the same day which to clope and by a mere chane met at the altar. on had been a constant that young woman. But net- Donnelly nor his sister suspected ovher was planning to marry nelly afraid to confess «i severing of the househe they quietly perfected a as ose the same day away and wed, and antieipa lations Fy arrangements to would have tt, the and hour te ton wiht ie the same » altar of St Church, in Clas- tr or Malone, gave then other hired E ate Jersey. ‘They remained | driving (rom place to Mutual Anne's Roman Cathe forgiveness, and dup for ‘the ual t to week they returned and started | Keeping together at No. 831 Clifton | a pretty little house, whieh young nelly his new brother-in-law bought togethe — Two Drowned When Barge Sank, TROIT, Mich., Soot. ¥-"The steam- H. Peughton, owned in this city, sank al bev di L tye foot of Dubois t Two of the crew pwned thelr berths, ‘Their are William Daniel, aged sixteen, me; Edward Clow ed olghteen, rh, Mich: GOVERMENT DD NO SEND THE FLAG Official Statement from Hun- gary as to the Emblem Brought to This Country by Gen. Zseni. VIPNNA, Sept, §.—An official note Is- sued to-day announces that the Hun- gartan Government disclaims any con- nection with the recent presentation of a Hungarlan flag to the United Hun- garian Booteties of New York. It Is pointed out that the flag was pro- vided by the National Union, a private society, and that its cost was raised by public subscription. ‘The Hungarian flag referred te arrived here Aug. 30 on the steamer Statendam, from Rotterdam, in charge of Gen, Jo- seph Zseni and a delegation of Hun- York, when the coming 0: ask first announced, met and denounbal the action of those who sent ft, chalming that the sending of the emblem was a | direct invitation to the Hungarians to forget the benefits they have received In | this country and to keep up allegiance to the country they had lett. also asserted that it was of its purposes way ngarians 0 have made fortunes: here to return to Hungary and spend thelr money In hat country. BOY SHOT DEAD AND MAN MISSING, Coroner Told that Child Was Accidentally Killed and Ital- ian Who Held the Gun Had Threatened Suicide. it wos PA'TER@ON, N. J., Sept, %—Coroner Hoffman js making an investigation Into the reath of Pipino Niglino, a six-year- old boy, who wus shot and Killed at th hame of Toni ‘Trotter, at Kingsland, From what the roner could Jearn | Trotter was cleaning a gun when it was discharged and the bullet entered a that atees| Bome of the neighbors s the shooting Trotter expressed great sorrow and declared that he would kill | himeelf It da t ght he may he carried out tis t looking for him Tae boy, whose parents live at Nu. Attorney street, New Yo taken to Kingsland to spend a The police are| ors | “RL ao ee ay ws WIFE JEALOUS, Life in the Transvaal Told in Woman's; Bind Cook Hand and Suit tor Alimony and| Foot and Scale Walls” Fee to Liberty with Plank. ALTAR. HE AIDED BOER WOMAN, After a Honeymoon Drive of| Barinique, Accused of Cruelty and Violent Doings, Replies that Hels a Mild Man and Guiltless of Acts Charged. Alesis Charles Barinique, a decorator, Gas) Com| ‘ {who abandoned his business in Joh: pany, and secretary of the| nesturg, South Africa, to return to this ntry, pretty sister May, who has kept|M. who l# suing him for @ separation house for him since thelr parents |.” {N° No. 415 3kiliman street, | 4 seault @ money to the wife of a Boer soldier, | woman being in destitute circumstances, Mrs, Her husband, she de late, cleared the table and threw away the birthday cake. She ran to her room with the baby holds, smashed the window, climbed in and swore child threw her on the floor and stamped on After their return to this city he con- youngest child avked him one evening if “he were going to whip mamma to- rs, jeavoring to support dren, Barininee denies all of his wife's state- ments and says he has always been an Affectionste husband, ‘but that his wife is of AN excitable and Very Hervous diet position, besides being insanely Jealous, * has strike him with household utensils and , B | himself statur HROKER sHoDTs ford, Conn., In the Tombs Pollee Court jhas ile with [returns from %0 cities and towns having defrauced him out of $1,314.36 In i Renaissance Lace Bed Sets. ROW, WED! Bed Sets at A Marked Reduction from Their Real Value.” f They come both in single and full sizes, and are made with deep lace flounces and handsome centre pieces. each Spread. Our Great ore benefit of those whe have not SEEN the offer in detail we repeat it here to-day: i time as you may wish, Portieres made from All-Silk Velours, lined with Tamitan Silk, and interlined with flannel, cord or fringed edge; actually worth 50.C0, hung complete, for the remarkab'e sum of... They are made by one of the oldest and best manufacturers in @ country, and are stric\ly reliable. ning and handsomely finished. few prices that are unmatchable : The “O'NEILL SPECIAL,” drop head, four drawers, beautifull finished, like above cut. . The PA With tive drawers and drop head, pak.. week, ‘Although conflicting stories are told, Corone: believes the shooting was “OUT OF PRS They Pry Bars Apart, HUSBAND SAYS. ALL DESPERATE Escape Followsa Deep Plot to i: Murder the Sheriff and | ~ Jailer and Release Every | CriminalUnderConfinement NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Sept 9 —Three highwaymen escaped from jail here after assaulting the cook and binding him hand and foot. The — escaped men are William Collins, of — New York; Michael Teeling, of Elizabeth, and George Donsck, of Newark. They were all awafting trial for highway robbery and were considered among the most danger- alleges that his wife, Teresa ground of cruelty, 4s of an In- y Jealous temperament, and on one n abused him and threatened to him because he had supplied the to Justice Harinique applied woods thoroughly. hite would | was subsequently | ‘ have abandoned hope long before its | purged ‘Simeelt of contempt joensen Mahebat eat aN trom the |, EAeh forgave the other, stood up steckier in the Supreme Court to-day Peet Mette co outages ie/Biding| Daring bis inoareeration .,t ce tst | ehip juat as soon am the Kearsar tie |for each other, and then, with their! for an allowance of $15 a week allmony | ous men in the jail. aK ‘yoslah J White, the father of Fred Raymond Street Jail.” While in Jali molto ine whart in the Brooklyn Navy |respective life partners, took a week's | Dentine the trial of her action and a] A few days ago John Buchenits and Hall White. Is ‘well, known In the son sent him a penknife with a three- yard, and visited the Bowery to cele- counsel fee of $59. Decision was re-] walter Rhein, two other prisoners, courts of Brooklyn, For years he has {neh plade which was confiscated Dy te ee ae esol ry to cole” | carriage drive through Jersey, return | served Manned a jail deitvery, ‘They 1aten Gai een Involved In gation concerning ' ‘ate the “glorious victory” of the Navy . | G different matters, but the case in which She C, Henry, of No, 6 Clark jover the Army. the capture of New |ing to-day and going to housekeep-| ‘The parties were married on soy) 15,| tossed that they had planned to Kitt he has the most often appeared wt! 4 |gtract, Brooklyn, whose son is reported |York and some more glories of play ing together. isu7, in this elty, and went to the Trans-| Sheriff Barciay and Jailer Mewmeg Mrs White lett a_large fortune to 0gt et) woods with young WE {war. The first thing he did was to fil Neither Suspected. eee mabe CG dee oitedl wk eae then in; FE sir 70; ot the 7 day 3 . z nique s, he ba the contention that tiepetween himself culde and they are out camping.” he |? A- M. to-day he felt equal to “licking | lime to Miss Mamle Carroll, of!) Niekedl hes plot, without the slaying feature. and his wife he claimed a part of the sala. “1 have been hearing from my | any landlubber in sight. |Baih Breach, and ‘Jack’ Comas, a4 coe sts, wan the bintiday ot wer | che Orwomeen wees taking their estate for his own use absolutely. He Son regularly. Yount las prol McCarthy, able seaman, U. 8. N.. young tn : in o wa. 5; IMR wa rohday of her] exercise the three men 5 ficated) with’ hin ing Insurance man, whi sf Was defeated, however, and somo time ably not commmunica w sibhied tie wuerete ok Cohen's greene | foul! pe Ue ME oat { ehiid and she prepared dinner| way robbery made thelr way nt cell the. thi a heyy leds pide rail of 6m bed to force apart the iron bars, hind ews! gawed im an attempt to three weeks Ago. Sliding down the roof they en kitohe! The cook ran at them Iso @ birthday cake for the boy “ares, came home door. she locked the Barinique, r From ¢ the wall, plank : SCHOOLBOYS GET PRIZES. Contest in Drawing at Brill Over and Five Awards Made. A novel and interesting contest just closed at the Harlem store of) Brothers, One Hundred and fifth street and ‘Third avenue, sands of schoolboys made drawings « almost as many subjects for prises he would Kill her and the He then struck and kicked her, vd his ill treatment of her, she saya, further alleges that because her y into a violent passion her of polsoning the chil- ® winds against him, Barinique says she was at last to leave her husband and is heir two ohil- mt yeid a he ulleves, often attemtted te ond, C Hundre all the vielence he wat ty of was a ¢ TAKA: Cher: tentang : street; third, Bugene Byrnes, No. oT em from her ino vo prote: F One Hundred ‘and Thirtieth s' Bariniqne ts described as small in| fourth. | esmala: “¢ if hy Highty-first street; ftth, FR, Ryan, ned Hig wie An! areeson, PMc Che Hundred and’ Fourveentts | street. B/ ‘FRAUD. i jaa od C. Beers, a #tock broker, of Hart-| 414 WINS IN MAINE. PORTLAND, Me. Sept. 9.—Blection tged Jerome i, Mel of abou! O'Neill’s We have just purchased and will place on sale TO-MOR- DAY, a splendid lot of fine Renaissance Lace Bolster Pieces or Shams The Regular 15.00 Sets........--20.... 9,98 i The Regular 16.50 Sets.eye-+...seeeee+ 10,98 The Regular 22.50 Sets.. 14.50 The Regular 25,00 Sets. + 15,00 The Regular 27.50 Sets. ++ 37,50 The Regular 30.00 Sets. preesescsine Bie saves 24,50 cial Offer of 50.00 Silk Velour Portieres for 23.50 Is Still Open to You. — This is positively the greatest value ever given. For the The Regular 50.00 Sets. For a limited time we will make to order, and deliver at such 23.50 The “O'Neill” Sewing Machines. They are equal to any Sewing Machine on the market to-day, They are strongly built, light ran~ We guarantee them for tive yea OPEN. CLOSED, IFIC, box head, three drawers, oak A Full Set of Attachments with each machine. SIXTH AVENUE, 20TH TO 2iST $7

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