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| Body Was Fou /QUIOK WORK OF { Mn No Great Crime of : Never was a murder mystery clear- ed up more rapidly and thoroughly than was that surrounding the kill- fMng of Mrs. Pulitzer, or Kingston. Within thirty-six hours after the mude body was discovered in the Oanal at Kearny, N. J., the place where the murder was committed had yeen located and the identity of the wurderer was known. The woman was seen in a lunch- toom at Forty-eighth street and Sev- tnth avenue, two short blocks trom her home, at 11.30 o'clock on Tues- day night. She purchased there a roll and some vanilla wafers, and on leaving the place started down Broadway. Somewhere In those two blocks she met William Hooper Young. Evi- Gently she feared Young. She had been supplying him with money. It would appear that he insisted that she go to his flat at No. 103 West ‘Fifty-elghth street with him, and to @void a row on the street she con- sented to go, although she knew Pulitzer was waiting for her in the house in West Forty-sixth street. Murder After Midnight. From the testimony of others In the Clarence flat-house it Is gathered that Yéung did not kill the woman } until some time after midnight. He hid the body in a cupboard in the room in Which the murder was com- mitted and spent the night and most of the next day in the flat with the corpse. Many projects for getting rid of the ody passed through his mind, no doubt, during this time. Probably tie idea of Capt. Schmittberger that he Btarted to cut up tho corpse and carry Mt-away piece by plece, to be. disposed BE at widely separated spois, is the torrect one. But he could not go further than tne frat incision. The knife he: had » dull. The prospect of dismembering the 01d body appalled him. In desperation hhe remembered that when he worked in Hoboken he had notived the livery sta- ble of Charles Evans in Was! gton Btreet. He remembered that back of Jersey City there was a lonesome canal, long since deserted, From these recol- lections he formed his project for the isposition of the corpse. Late In the afternoon of Wednesday, after packing the body of his vict In a trunk, he went to the livery stable of Mr. Evans, In Hoboken, and hired a Norse and buggy, saying he wanted to meet his sister at the Grand Central Btation and wanted a vehicle on which a trunk could be strapped Helped by Hall-Boy, Coming across the ferry, he drove Mirect to the fiat, where, with the as- sistance of the hall-boy, he tled the trunk containing the body of the buggy. Instead of going down the less fre- Quented thoroughfares on the far West Side on his way to the ferry, Young to the rear MURDER CLUES CAME RAPIDLY. “Guilt Was Fastened on Young Thirty-six Hours After Woman’s Mystery Been Cleared Away So Quickly as in the Case of Mrs. Pulitzer. nd. . THE DETECTIVES Recent Years Has Al. r MOVEMENTS OF YOUNG DURING THE DAY AND NIGHT OF THE MURDER, Widnight, Tuesday—Got key of his apartment from restaurant at No. 1041 Sixth ay ue. 1A. M. Wednesday—Lured Mrs. Anna Polltrer to his room and murdered her. 6.30 P.M. Wednesday—Hired bugey from Evane’s livery sta- ble in Hoboken, Oo P.M. Wedne y—Carried trank containing woman's body |) from apartment, assisted by |) Hallboy Alfred Dalbey. | 10 P.M. Wednenday—Crossed ‘Twenty-third street ferry of the Erle Railroad, | 11 PP. M. Wednesday—Cronsed J) Hackensack bridge and went to spot where body was found. 7 A. M. Thursday—Appeared at the home of Richard C. Anger, at 105 Seventh street, Hoboken, and took brenkfaat there, SoA. M. Thursday—Returnea rig, minns hitching weight ana || strap, to Evans's livery atable, |) 6.30 P.M. Thursday—Took trunk to Wells Farge Exp: oMce, on Sixth ave Fifty-ninth street. M. Thursday—Lete the Clarence, at No, 103 Went Fitty- elgbth street, carrying two bi dics, and has net been seen since. } | mamtemecnne sareranensioes \ saneanel drove down Broadway. It was a ghaat- ly load that he guided through the crowded thoroughfare. But Young, driving recklessly, avold- ed accidents with the luck that ‘accrues to men who are reckless sometimes, and BURGLAR FLEE OVER THE RODS Frantic to Escape Po- lice Benjamin Cohen Uses Buildings as if They Were Hurdles. EYE IS GOHGED OUT. Falls Through a Skylight and Leaps Through a Window and Is Traced by the Trail of Blood He Leaves. In an effort to escape capture, Ben- Jamin Cohen leaped from the roof of a four-story butlding this morning to the roof of a two-story utruoture, thirty- feet below, fell through a skylight and from there to the ground floor, an- other thirty feet. He climbed the stairs to the second floor of that building, jumped through a sash of a window to the yard, twenty feet below, and then sought his way to the top of a tene- | ment house and concealed himself under & scuttle, Where he was found, diesd- ing and almost lifeless. His right eye had been torn out of {ts socket by glass. Marcus Yuden was awakened tn his rooms on the fourth and top floor of the bullding at No. 117 Clinton street early this morning by two burglars who were searching bis trunks. He foreamed, as did his wife and their four children, who were in adjoining rooms. The burglars ran out, but the Yuden familly continued to scream. One burglar disappeared aad has not been found. The other, who gave his name as Cohen, ran up the ladder leading to the reof, This bullding stands two stories above its neighbors, but this did not | daunt Cohen, He leaped from the root down to the top of the two-story bullding at No. 115 Clinton street, occupied by S. Lowen- jthal & Son as a dyeing establishment. Running towards the back of the butld- ing, Cohen took no heed of a skylight and fell through, crashing the glass with him. From the top of the four-story building to the skylight is thirty feet. From the Skylight to the ground floor of the dyeing house is another thirty- foot distance. Cohen went the whole Gistance to the ground floor. Sergt. Hildebrand, in the Delancy street police station, a half block from the acene of the burglary, heard the screams of the Yuden family and called out the reserves, They found the trace of blood on the stone flagging back of the dye- house and Policeman McGrath followed it until he came upon Cohen. Cohen, was dragged around to the reached New Jersey. He went out on the jonely road back of Jersey City, jook the body out of the trunk, tled @ itching welgbt and strap around it and threw it into the water. Motorman David Howell saw ihe the canal on Thursday at 1| Vele in the afternoon, Chief of Po-| ice Murphy, of Jersey City, was noth fied, and in a few hours the newspapers | ott Ity and New Jersey were .full of ry of the nude body of a blond | young woman found In the canal Quick Work of Detectiven, Politzer, who had been imploring the Hee to And his wife, read In the last | ton of The Evening World the story the finding of the corpse in New Jer- sey. He went to Jersey City with friends and identified the body. ‘This was at 10 o'clock on Thursday night. At 10 o'clock on Friday morning Mr. Evans, the livery stable keeper of Ho- | Doken Identified’ the strap afid weight that had been tled around the body. He remembered that the man who hired the rig had mentioned the Crusader Chief of Police Donovan, of Hoboken, learned the name of a man who had been connectéd with the paper and from this mai secured a photograph of witi- lam Houner Young. who was identified by Liveryman vans as tha man who had hired the rt Coming to New York at 9 o'clock last night Chief Donovan and two. Hohoken reporters located Young's flat. Then they went to the West Morty-seventh street station, got two detectives, broke open the flat’ and found the evidences of the ctime, less than seventy-two hours after the crime was committed. | NEARLY BITES OFF ~—POLICEMAN'S FINGER John Hall Puts Up a Tremen- . dous Fight When Arrested-- Sergeant Loses His Valu- ables in the Fracas. thirty-one, of No. Brooklyn, last evening, a finger of Ser- Geant James McCarthy, of the Adams Street station, Brooklyn, was badly bitten and a thumb dislocated. He lost & valuable diamond watch charm and a 2 umbretia. Sergeant McCarthy was coming down Johnson strect, when he noticed Hall, in @n intoxicated condition, When the reeant took Hall into custody, he walked peaceably enough to the corner ot Adams and Johnson streets. he suddenly thrust out a foot and tried to trip the officer. MeCarthy managed to keep his foet ‘and instantly grabbed Hall, In struggle which ensued Hall fastened ble teeth in the middle finger of the ser- geant’s left hand. wan let go, McCarthy threw away the umbrella he had been holding in his hand, and reaching into his drew his club and proceeded to whack Hall over the head. Even then Hall continued to hang on to the Anger, but the oMcer finally succeeded in beating him off. i By this timo a crowd had gathered. Some of the bystanders took a hand in the affair, with the result that Mc- Carthy was hit in the back of the head a A stone. Though half-stunged, he tained his hold on each ainda aha erent irene station, our po and It reduired the mm Hicemen i cain+ a vel hy i Jacerated. In an encounter with John Hall, aged | % Myrtle avenue. | Then | the | Unable to make the} rea | ‘NEGRO BEGGAR CREATED FUROR, Arrested at Delmonico’s, He Escapes from a Policeman and a Hot Chase Follows Before Recapture. A negro will be arraigned to-day for approaching men who left Del- monico's, at Forty;fourth street and Fifth avenue, following them to their cabs unt Pateolman Mehrer arrested | him, ‘he prisoner grabbed the men by | thelr coat-sleeves and begged persint- jently, He Is George Willams, uv 20 West ‘Thirty-second street. Menrer took Williams to Forty-second street to get the patrol wagon, but at the Grand Central Depot he ‘escaped, | He 1an into the car-shed, toppling over | one of the cab-drivers and running Into | several men and women who were com- ing off a train. He bounded over trunks, skipping across big baggage trucks, dodging through an open baggage car, | through the tralh lobby In trunt of the | gates and raltiing, into the depot and out on Vanderbilt avenue, The crowd of tralnmen, guards, gatemen, porters, messengers, cabbies, policemen and others followed, | ‘The hesto got to Madison avenue, hen ran’ to Forty-fourth street and past Delmontco's. Midway — between Fitth and Sixth avenues he was cap- tured again See on RIVER VICTIM IDENTIFIED. Mra, Anua Sprotte, Goroder De« clarem, Killed Herself, H4prrial to The Reoning World.» HACKPNBACK, N. J. Sept. %—The holy Of the womun found in the Hudaon River at Edgewater a week ago was te-day identified as that of Mra. Auna Sprotte, a widow, forty-claht yeara old, of Fifth street an@ Hefman avenue, Guttenburg, The body was wxrumed by Undertaker MoNalls, of Furt'Lee. to permit of the | Police station, where Dr. Fletcher, of Gouverneur Hospital, inserted the eye in Its socket, sewed up the cuts and bandaged Cohen until he looked like a new Egyptian mummy. Cohen, with his head covered with bandages that concealed his injured eye, Was arraigned this morning in the Es- aex Market Court. The prisoner walved lexamination and was held in $1,000 bail. WOMAN LEAPS FROM TENEMENT WINDOW Mrs. Jacobwitz Wanted to Die Because Her Husband Had Wasted $7,000 of Winnings in a Lottery. Tired of life because her husband, Frank Jacobwits, a tailor, of No, 144 Eldridge stret, spent all the money he Won on a lottery ticket some time ago, Mrs. Yetta Jacobwitz jumped from a wWintow on the fourth floor of her brother's house, at No. 47 Second ave- shortly after 5 o'clock this morn- Some months ago Frank, the husband, invested half a dollar in a quarter shate of a two-dollar lottery ticket. His ticket won a prize, and the tatlor drew about $7,000 as his share of the spoil. Frank Jacobwitz promptly ceased to be only the ninth part of a man, and entered nto the business world a full- fledged business chicken {n his own es- teem, He was soon plucked. ture was a candy store, but he lost money on that deal. Belleving that public taste ran more to the pernicious Weed than to sweetmeats, the ex-tallor put some more money into a cigar store, His judgment was wrong, how- ever, for he soon lost more of his easy- won cash. He went back to candy, and again he failed. At this his wife lost patience. In fact she thought #0 much about the money Frank was throwing away that whe sald she would have to go some+ Where to plek up her Health and spirits. She went away to the house of her brother, whose name Is given as Javod Kampf. He greeted her with open arms, but there was something strained about \her behavior, Frank Jacobwits called lo see her Sesterday and urged her to ome home, but she would After Frank went away Mr |wite acted even more strange! her brother nut his lttie girl, Rachel, to watch her movements carefully’ “arly this morning the woman arose and drew a chair to the window and he fire-escap?. The scream of the child and th |Ing Woman roused the tenement. j{leeman BirmiAgham, of the Union et, sent In an ambiilance call, and His first ven- Boge, of Bellevup Hospital, reapomicd ‘The woman's skull wae fractured, and | Sere 'she. Noe’ Heat arta eon: . a dying "cont: tion. Her lsband and her at her bedside. Passengers on the Strar! LONDON, BSépt. %.—The Cunard ine steamer Etruria, which ails from er are entittation: Coroner Robertson, of ‘Eitan Sarva. i selatly ‘a offered no it Sete penuleneral ainsey ES THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER WOMEN GO TO THE PLAY TO SEE ADVANCE FASHIONS. An advance cry of the season's fash- fons is again heard from the stage. In “Hearts Aflame," now playing at the Bijou Theatre, some stunning f: are worn by the women of the cast, outnumber the men ten to one. The most beautiful gown in the pro- duction fs worn by Miss Jane Holly in the character of Mrs, Dunbar. This exquisite frock is of white antique and | ho Irish point lace, combined with pearl panne velvet. The shading of the diftec- ent whites used ts most artistic. The costume 1s entirely hand-made and Is almost indescribab! Frenvh “creations to be appreciated, It 1s made princess fashion, very long, and Js particulariy graceful In outline. ‘The lace on the skirt is embossed In a} floral design, the raised flowers being made of white taffeta, A special feature of the gown Is the new sleeve, which is very full from the elbow to the wrist, with long hanging pleces of the lace at the elbow. Tabs of the lace hang from the bodice, which folds across the front in a modified surplice fashion. Ploture Hat of Irivh Point. The pleture hat worn with . being one of those which must be s the cos- + tume fs of Irish point and antique lace over white panne. ‘The rolling brim 1s made of folds of chiffon decorated wit! © square medallion of the lace set rectly In the centre in front. Long. drooping white ostrich plumes on each side of the hat and a beautiful pear! ornament complete the decoration. Another beautiful costume of white lace ts worn by Miss Dorothy Dorr, tho | leading woman. This gown !s of Ivory | Yak lace, over white chiffon and taf- feta silk. It Is also pening in the back, plain, depending for {ts effect on the beauty of tho material and grace of its lines, ‘The sleeves are long, full below the elvow, with @ cuff extending over the hand. The neck ts round and a little low. A magnificent buckle of dia- monds and rubies ts worn at the walst- Mne jn the back. A distinct feature of styles ix the prevalence gowns of all descriptions. This was no- ticed in the summer, and promises to remain fashionable through the winter is well, A very smart gown of white broadcloth ts worn by Migs Lucille Wat- son as Mrs. Ashton. The skirt Is per- fectly plain, with habit back and strap- made princess, and is absolutely the season's of white in pe 29, 1902. [VOLY ol Lace ove and 7a KK i In “Hearts Aflame"’ Many Beautiful Gowns Are Charmingly Displayed| on Actresses Who Know How to Wear Clothes. Waite Chip Bi Ta siKa wort’ Dorothy seam! made with son” back. Sleeves FI what Dorr ts The bodice ts trimmed with alloon of burnt orange and gold, and known © Tremendously. | { | } as the The folds extend over the shoulders and end in front in pointe, giving the effect of a rolling collar. the bodice ts gathered at the waist in The front of a blouse effect, this being a feature of many of the new gowns. The sleeves flare tremendously below the elbow in a w of double bel sort ith I. chou of burnt orange velvet. Miss Bijou Fernandez as Alteon Deyo, the young woman of “horney” predilec- tions, wears succession of outing eo! The hat worn this costume is of white tucked chiffon, trimmed with roses and a hui tumes Which show the very latest ideas \n regard to golf sults, pedestrian gowne and riding habits, the latter presenting the most successful divided skirt that has It 1s so cleverly made that even the yet been seen. sharp-eyed women of the audience, who come to the play to get points on fasl « well as entertainment, fail to de- fon a ct that it fs @ divided skirt until Miss Deyo Kindly Silustrates the nature of the garment with the remark that she 1s “getting nearer to trousers every day Mrs. Van Snel- lor, frocks, Miss Florida Pier, wears somo smart which {3 an old rose broadcloth. one of The skirt is made very long and has five broad tucks at the foot. the side in front with two over-lapping| tabs, There is a Russtan blouse trimmed w Bu ith lace applique. Hat a G The large draped si eri bit ite Ly cutts with la reoun Aff eve of white ed with old rose and rose pangs | Double revers | Ace. It fastens at have double broadclot v on the bodice of panne and white broad nt of rose chiffon cl joth open over a f ornamented with medallions of long crush sash of ro Be mpletes the rgcous aftalr of roses, Another good gown 1s worn by Mr Fellx Morris, pl eee, costum: the Mrs. drop skirt of blue taffeta bodlee hion, the folds beln, proldered bands of w! to the bodice of hand-made artne. A h rhine- | f ig a yoke Von Ids across jan point lace it te ver blue sash of black crepe de Chine w anne . The hat ermine, la ra vet a co and Lelgh of It ts of ollve velvet made over The blouse} ‘satin if the front surplice | edged with em- ‘There stone buokle finishes the costume, Still another handsome w orn by Miss Kate vely t gown, Lester as Mrs. Lioyd, is of emerald green, made with) ornamented | a w three-quarter long ith ereen. con SAY WOMAN DIED FROM MAN'S KICK Detectives Make Arrest Charg- ing an Expressman and His Wife with the Death of a Neighbor. James Cullen, an express wagon driver, and his wife, Kate, were a ralgned In the Centre Street Court on the charge of homicide this morning Cullen and his wife are accused of be- | ing responsible for the death of Mrs Annie Hogan, who died tn her rooms, | at No. i217 Washington street, last night from inturies recelved in a street fight Bept. 10. ‘The detectives say Cullens | formerly Myed in th wh Mra, Hogan died and had quart with her frequent Cullen and wife were standing in front of poure the night of Sept. 19 when Mr Hoenn accosted them. The two women | became ihyolved ina fight, During scume it fs alleged Cullen kicked Mra. Hogan, knocking her down. Then Mra. Cullen; It is alleged, struck her: No complaint was made to the poites jand it was not until last evening that Capt. Halpin heard of it, He imme- jdiately went. Detective Colby to the house, but Mrs. Hogan had died in the Mean time. a GREENBERG SET FREE. Re- {Discharged When Arraig: fore Magistrate Mayo. Isidor Greenberg. of No, 51 East Ninth street, who was arrested yesterday as & “suspect” In the Mrs. Pulliser mur- der case pnd afierward detained on the charge of stealing 4 hors and wagon feom a livery stable in Newark, was dis- charged to-day when arraigned befor Maj strate Mayo in the Centre Btroet van pmucorestut acter iJ 1d ry og t was mnde by ve Greenberg ringing stolen » DONE 10 DEATH BY MALICIOUS TONGUES John Dinkelmeyer, Whose Mind was Unbalanced by Stories Told His Mother, Cuts His Throat. John Dinkelmeyer, forty-five years old, killed himself this morning at his | 610 Kast One Hundred and | home, N Fiftieth street, by cutting his throat with a carving knife, He dled almost instantly. According to Dinkelmeyer's widow, the man had worrled considerably since the death of his mother, a short time ago. According to Mrs. Dinkelmeyer, a Julla Dinkelmeyer, who lives re In Sixty-ninth street, told nother shortly before her death atesling her mone sister, he was ised the old woman to chang her will. The statement preyed on the | gon so much that his mind became weakened and he showed signs of in-| sanity Last night Dinkelmeyer believed tha the poitce were after him, and at o'clock he went to the Morrisania po- | lise station, where he told the Ser- | geant that he had come to give himself up The Sergeant told Dinkelmeyer that he wasn't wanted. At bc & this morning Mrs. Dinkel ent for a physician, While her moyer : back Was turned Dinkelmeyer picked up n jarge carving knife and cut his throat, When the phyaiclan arrived the min Was dead. 1K, has LOI FUL been received an ucci- pedi Wide sae hau mee wi tuft he. went and woud not de aole t ngagement at Hyde & Behmano Thea- fe next week: Bhe wit appear later on, \\ John Griftith will present scenes froni af “Faust” a8 @ substitute for tho dancer. FATHER DIED ON HIS WAY 10 SON, Aged Alfred Newnham Was) Coming or the St. Paul to} Spend the Remainder of His om Bt Days in Amer ica. Wher St. Paul came Tel well-drensed j bowed b way leagerly scanned val th ates customs officer. embroidered bands of white and tho steerage passengers on the | ashore to-day young man through the crowd and at 2 | the faces of the new | | followed by a civic procession, escorted | fireworks all al: Cincinnati Takes Holi- day for the Purpose of Entertaining the Nation’s Head. GETS JOYOUS WELCOME. Thousands Throng Line of March and Guns Boom from the Hilltops — Will Speak To-Night. CINCINNATT, 0., Sept. %.—The Pres- idential party arrived at the Pennsyl nia Depot at 10 o'clock, schedule time, and was escorted to the St. Nicholas Hotel by a long line of carriages, with Senator Foraker, Mayor Fielschmann, President Frank W. Foulds and direc- tors of the Cincinnat! Fall Festival, whose guest the President fs, and prom- inent citizens As the train entered the depot a de- tachment of policemen lined up, and officers were stationed all along the Ine of march, Galutes of twenty-one guns were fired from several points on the hilltops as the train entered the city, The decorations of the clty were elab- orate, The line of march from the station to St. Nicholas as through a contin- uous throng of people for over a mile The crowd was so dense that all could not seo the President, but they partic!- pated In the cheering as he passed, bow- ing and dofing his’ silk hat from side to-aide. borate arrangements have been made for the President and his party here during the day. At noon he was given a luncheon, which was attended by many prominent men At 2 ociock a grand military parade, the President and party to the fall fen- tival, where be was scheduled to speak at 4 o'clock to the business men, There will be a third parade to-night, with the line of ‘march Nicholas Hotel to the rounds. At 8 P. M. the speak at length In the from the 8t. fall festival President wl music hall. . Under a proclamation of Mayor Fleisch- mann business was suspended for the day and everything was given up to the entertainment of the President. SAFES 100 HEAVY FOR OFFICE FLOORS | | Papers and Books of the Rich-' George H. Grabe, Retired mond Department of Assess- ments Are Now Kept on the Sidewalk. On the sidewalk in front of the new Masonic Temple at Stapleton, 8. I., are four large safes, the largest wolghing fine tons, the smallest two tons. in these safes are stored all the papers and books of the Department of As- sessments and Arrears of the borough of Richmond. The reason they are out on the sidewalk fs because there is no room for them inside. The whole Department of Taxes and Assessments of the borough moved a few days ago from New Brighton, whero the old offices were, to Stapleton, where nearly all of the office space in the new Masonic Temple was engaged. The in- tellects that completed the arrange- ments forgot to figure on the safes, The moving was done three days ago. Building Commissioner Seaton refused ‘0 allow the safes In the bullding, say- ing that the weight would break down the floors. Now they are shoring up the floors and taking out partitions in order to allow of the ingress, In the mean time the safes are out in the rain. | —_—-— Took a Drink of Whi key Before Go Aboard Boat a peace ‘KNOCKOUT’ SUSPECTE! Capt. of Hai Dewey, ort Was Accompanied to the ~ Pier by a Stranger forWhem — the Police Are Looking. — hae The New York police are now vestigating the death of Capt. car W. Dewey, of Hook and Ladder Gom- pany No. 1, Springfield, Conn. =, Capt. Dewey, who attended the Fire Chiefs’ convention in this city, died in a stateroom on the half an hour after the steamer left — New York Thursday night. With W. A. Dennete Fox, both members of his company, left the convention Thursday to go to the boat, On the way to elevated train they stopped in a On the train Capt. Dewey com of being sick, and at South Ferry, | fell after leaving the station, A carriage was called and a att insisted on asalgjing them with stricken man. He accompanied # the pler of the steamer. -When ing there Dennett discovered, - hits watch had been stolen and the stranger. A policeman took all of them to the Old Slip police station. There Dennett found his wateh th’ pocket and the stranger was rele Dewey was left in the carriage ou He was driven back to the boat am placed in a stateroom, where he dist At Hartford the body was taekn A medical examiner said died from heort disease, but panions bellcve he was di he took the drink, and that ger had something to do with believe he was in the saloon drank, rode to South Ferry hand when Capt, Dewey was EY-FIREMAN SUES FOR HIS OLD seg eee rs Disability Received in Heroism, Brings Action Reinstatement. George H. Grabe, a fireman, obtained a writ of mandamus, re * been his counsel, Jacob Marks, from O'Gorman, in the Supreme Court, to restore him to a position in the Department, at his salary of 81,400. Grabe has been a fireman He was retired June 25 by Cot a the report of the medical prt ent duty. Lawyer Marks said that, ap incapacity was caused in the provisions of the Greater New Charter, the Fire Com: tion In the Department which require active service, at his brought on through inh ing ts while Peetu ing Fire Commissioner Thomas year, Sturgis on a pension of $700 the eDpartment tnat he was ance of his duty as a fireman, compelled to assign him to cempensation, His di man Corrigan, who As the last steerage passenger ved up the gangplank {nto the Barge young man sought the Unit “Where is my father?” he asked. was hurled le Who I am sure that St. Paul” elighty-o nd New 1 the stigat he » years ham, An vel I ah at se when fon N.Y, ne Th natown, said the ye your father?" took passage on «man, old. 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