The evening world. Newspaper, September 23, 1902, Page 2

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DERER YOUNG IS | SHAMMING, HE SAYS. | When Capt. Titus had finished making | publle the confession of Young to-day, Anslatant District-Attorney Garvan, who hax charge of the care for the District- | Attorney, intimated that he bad some-! When he | thing to way. ' u ‘Titus has announced, {Garvan, “thet thie is the sion that Youtg made to } Th thia the captain jx mistake ee got kno lawyer—n ‘apt. Vseat It looked as though he to make a hot retort when Lawy Int “ "T think,” said Mr. captain meant to was that Younz had made a sta rment. sintlas to thi 10 persone in. Bridgeport." Capt. Titus was Ked If yun emen: was voluntary. Te replied It waa entirely volunteer t emmont, In fact |TITUS AND GARVAN IN A LITTLE CLASH. (Continued from first Page.) B = ie of him In spots he built up an accomplice on the name. Was a clover move and will have its effect on the public. nald Mr. | A CELL IN THE TOMBS.) “Young was in the office of the District-Attorncy for half an hour white sion went on as to what diepositton should be made of him. The tives wanted to take him before a Coroner for commitment, but Die- Attorney Jerome would not hear of it, He directed thet Young be cownstairs to the Tombs Police Court, Magistrate Mayo had been informed of whot had been ¢ $ 1e court-room was Hart, “shat what anged anc ‘ YOUNG RECOGN!ZED HELD ON AN AFFIDAVIT. LD ON - FROM WORLD PICTURE. | “ Detective-Sergt. Hughes made the following affidavit, which was pre- "Edward P. Hughes, deing du!y sworn, 7 #That he is a resident of the city of 3 / tle street, borough ot Brookly:., isa de the municipal police force of the city of New York “That as he Js informed and thoroughiy believes on the tember, 1902, at No. 102 West Fifty-elghth sireet, In the New York, one William Hooper Young aid felontousty "Annie Pulitzer. dopose w Yor} DE Goutiat, ind re) that -sergeant attached to town ven miles fron agture was due day of Sop ot and murder one t thus describes the conve Ned) & happe and County ton “BY have intere. when Young appros do kill 6: hy oung of the said ld to answer for the | anxic “lat handed the man narrowly watched bi to the stock market Immediately at the story of the mur der, Ha hands tremOled «0 that the “And therefore he does accuse the sald Willlam Ho. é oh veo of the-said Annie Pulitzer and pray that he b elo. sAsatane District-Attorney Garvan asked that the examination be I a led for a few days. This was agreed to by Lawyer Hart, acting for Magistrate Mayo set ihe examination for Sep ——_ + ¢o—. paper rusted and his Nps quivered 4 YOUNG'S “CONFESSION” OF ie 85/010 60 ca THE PULITZER MURDER, |i" hart g'n a i th is my visitor wer and the He nen Tb lenew t i Pe, At Police Headquarters to-day, immediately Neuened into the n after his arrival from Connecticut, William Hooper ule ~ Young, the Mormon slayer of Anna Neilson Pulit- prisoner , made this remarkable confession to Chief of Detectives Titus: Reve “Three weeks ago, in Central Park, LT met Charles Simpson Filing. The man was a degenerate, ereafter he called frequently at my rooms in the Clarence, 03 West Tifty-cighth strect. “Filing knew Mrs. Pulite: and met her at other places, “On the night of Sept. 16 wi ixth street by appoiitment and took he: _ § Wet drank a few glasses ‘one Whiskey. 1 left Kiling and Mrs. Pulitzer together Hu. When T returned Filing wes There was.a gag in her arrow hallway Uhat lawyer agein forward log amt Mr Detective The to the at Bureau, be and prisoner and hurrying the pushed to the reay. Suddenly Young halted Where's Hart?) Where's Hart?” he He some one shouted, and Young Then prisoner and counsel were pushed into Capt MOST MARVELLOUS STORY. ‘After an interview with Young Law: World reporter this morning Hart asked, ightened way at fi 8 otlice, ine i s comin t no’ es Titus but we heeame friends, and No. ft er t sxid to The Even “T haye just Hsteneil to the most marvellous my Hfe, “Tf chiy mun was what fo think of the ‘It seems the story Y story [have ever hosrd in Te called on her at her home ne, if he is in his it tory he has told me of a madinar Really to have an expert on sanity see him before 1 beg Me. Hert would not cdmit that the responsible for the erime, act of a religious fanatic. Young was hurried from the train to Pollee Headquarters and taken at) ence to Capt Titus’s effice, He was questioned there in the presence of his attornoy, NOT GIVEN THIRD DE He not given the “fhird Degre Thus and Lawyer Hart tien In view of his waiving extradition. The wondertul necye displayed by identification had deserted him. day, When he was almost {1 a state of physival Lawyer Hart hor {a wreck at Mount Vernon a Jock this m He dro! reaching the | place at mor of the Barsett Honse, whieh is across the str jhe found Detective-Sergeants Finley and 3 now, nai ku at Br to ny room. met her adway and Foriy- astounding. 1 w of beer and then L went out to get Koon th in the Pulitzer was “blood that the ey doet but he left the inferen 1 as gone and Mrs. mol ©) SL ripped open hex clothes at the waist and tried to restore her san by artificial respiration, 1 moved her arms backward and forward > over her head Then I tore open her clothes at the waistband and) + felt of her heart. It had stopped beating and T knew she was dead. *T started out of the house to call a policeman, being satisfi thot life was extinct. ted for Police , Meadquarters, which I thought was in the City Hall, “T got on an ‘1? train and on my way down thought it al! over, **T thought of the terrible discrace it would bring on twee any family and changed my mind. off the train and vent back tot: Sai, intendin; hod. | “JT took a long knife aud stavied to ent it np so that Dnigh more easily get it into the irunk. When Tniade the first i © the stench’ was so bad thar 1 ned from doing any more, “a Lawyer Hart intimated alter the prigoner bad made hig confession that y the defence would be insanit: ha 3 FRIED T GNIS nervously, and chatted at times with the New York detectives. He wel- va MOOTING aM Wi D RELO WS PRISONER, ‘omed Lawyer Hort when the latter showed him a cablegram from John W, soon as Young had finished his confession he was taken to the) Young in Parts, ‘rhe lawyer and prisoner were In conference fi Criminal Courts Building ina cariiage with the detectives, bis lawyer and young doine most of the talkine. . rence ES RAL MONED Assistant District-Attorney an Me The carriage was followed all the way 4s had lined up to await tho arrival of ‘tho a + side of the building. »»Sergt. Langan, of the Court Squad, with a dozen men, had to fight a taken through the crowd for Youngs and h_ escort. The prisoner was en to +2—_—_—_ ‘MOB GREETS MURDERER ON HIS ARRIVAL HERE.’ { Lie prisoner would be shown every considera- Yo! while facing the ordeal of Ho was a cringing. nerveles : om the iain by the dotectives he seemed ng a policeman T sta ‘oilapse, at 8.45 o'clock a did not ven . Who left Inst night Bride was delayed by Conn, until 1 country to Deri When he register ad | reach n mito port, 0 g. and | 3 o'clock i to get rid of the Hughes awaiting him, cision | BIS client's call |SLEEP FAILS VOUNG, Young h2d not attempted to sleep during the night. He paced his cell N After leav!ne the prison Lawver Hart saw the New York détectives and told thom he and bis cliens would be ready to leave with them on the first train for N York Mr. Hart retired to his room an’ breakfasted and went to Young's cell, arty loft Derby. Young wae visited ty his cell early by an Evoning World reporter, was ina terribly nervous condition, He eda clay trembled visibly when he took the pipe from his lips. I AM W. H. YOUN We had been told that Lawyer Hart we after bis in- terests and he was greatly worrled by Ue T can say noth- 1 my lawyer comes,” he sald. “1 Lope you will excuse me for not ement. Iam William Hooper Young. That is alll can tell The New York detectives here Lave been very fait with me,” doand a mob) at the Franklin streat o'clock for an hour's rest. He arose remataing with him until the He pipe, aud his hand i ” 2 coming to look 3 delay, " . arrived in this | a crowd of over ajing 1 “When William Hooper Young, slayer of Anna Pulitzer (eity at 9.19 o'clock thi: morning from Derby, Conn, thousand persons were at the Grand Central Station. | makiess The throng swept back and fo: rushing forward with the arrival of | }you now. each train. Guards, porters and the little squad of a dozen police on duty | After the ordeal of identification and the meeting with his old friends, at the station were swept aside when the crowds jammed around the gates | Mae tivy and Dixie Anzer, Young was in a torribly nerveus state. Ho ip their eagerness to catch a glimpse of the murderer. passed ut uncomfortable night, as Chief of Police Arnoid admitted a greet > “The arrival of the train from Derby caused almost a riot, Detectives | man, of his cronies to the jail to get a look at the New York murderer, Hughes and Vinley refused to take thetr prisoner through tho gates when | After the crowd had gone De: 8 Fintoy and Hughes went t) Young's saw the waiting 0b. coll and had @ long talk with him, Ile inde the temont ic tsem | Finley ordered the polive to clear a path for them and the bluecoats foil |that he had to bis friend, Mae Li who came out ell earlier ir With their sti Station employees rushed into the lane they formed | avening with a statement which Young had signed in a wagiie “pd kept open a path throug! which the prisoner was rushed. ‘which showed not the slightest tremor. “YOUNG SCARED BY THE CROWD. eet rnd OOEBLICH SMEs coe blanched when he saw the waitiig mob, Ho hat bs TELLS OF ACC QUE ai ; from his laweyr and he called alond for him while the gates were! To Mac Levy ee A ue ‘ opened. Finley was handvutfed to him and ho dragged him forward CS ee eee tas eee il , ge inp | Part. and that ne 7 © NT oleae ata a ta ees Ob ee pbaey hed an accomplice, ‘The wan fs Charles rhe woman wes dead when I fovad ber dead when I found her. intiiered the wound in the abdomen, but she was dead. before T did it, *It was | also who pui the body ti the closet. And it was 1 who dig- dof the body. But with all my coanvction with the crime I Renee easel nue teas AW zoy Mariwas “apalaialselne| eat that tho woman was dead before I laid hands on her. Bulontaly ANE fiorward Elling and I went away Logetl Thursday we spent in tives bundled the prisoner into a carriage without ceremony | prewsters, iiaving walked there. the lawyer made hie way through the crush and joined his| ts Gh t we did afier that, b ninweinite etive Finley jumped in beside the orfeoner and Detective] priggeport ce.” to" Bay iW natiare) Old atti hats Qe: think wl ltaeils pin ‘limped on the seat with the driver. PO. POLICE HEADQUARTERS. | DETECTIVE DOESN'T BELIEVE HIM, ie "Young talked freely with us,” said Detective Finley, “but his state- drove to the Mott street entrance of Police Headquarters, | He told Mac Levy no more than he 2 than’ sce ial ns awatced it. very employee in| ments were a rambling tissue of lies. Patecti admitted to us, Of course he said he had an accomplice, but he was lyin Hughes saw thet Bc le ‘When we asked him to describe tho fellow he beeame confused. The fellow Hote Feisonleel heiplagenapivedctasgetitett dhe eB ieuetme dk ; a i em § the am guilty at all it ts onty “ia he That Is ali 1 can say hore, ick work had to be done as the crowd, in its eagerness to see Young, , ‘through the line the police had opened and the detectives and thely were josticd about. Detective Hughes was not known to the sta- and they tried to separate him trom the prisoner. i She w: tbe the detectives were | it was agreed between Capt. | 5 creature to-! «from Police Headquarters, | £ They | yy /2Woke Chief of Police Arnold, and the lawyer was given permission to visit | ~NOUNE'S GLUE did it, when he friend. but claimed she was d her body to protect t ‘the closet and having carried it to th j taken the woman's je 3 | “The only spark of feeling he has {showed him a telegram from his fathe | him. {to h'de hle emotion.” | He admitted having pawned |MURDERER WILLIAM HOOPER YOUNG AS HE LEFT POLICE HEADQUARTERS. and that he intended cutting up thrown the body into orris Canal, And he sald he had at Simpson's. shown w he prin Paris, sayt e the newspaper men g he would stand b; That brought tears to his eyes, and he turned to the wall of his cell | \¢ of Young, his style of conversation ° “CIGARETTES TO BLAME. SAYS SLAYER YOUNG, 1 Central Station, ang read with ab-| t the morning paper Hentifteatior a the mur- of Mrs, An Pulltrer. He seeme sed with the notoriety had hieved and did not jet a sin- | detal] of the newspaper accounts es- “him. Several times he turned to this. wawyer end commented on the | stories. a ‘The prisoner wore the clothes in which he had been captured, but before reach- ling New York he took off the overalls =| ers i he with Deter him and Detective Hart opposite. at by a curious hundred — persons jail Derby, » stations wh de on the tseers entered ed him jboiind bis newspaper | : was not at all abashed by the| J Hughes and He had been pwd of when he nd at} st {de Lawyer at way w the wer: Ip t he his face hia in the} putskirts: sim Amid home of t of the village of T H services were held lthe body of murdered Pulltzer. Chief and most pathetic figure In the sr of mourners gathered In the lquaintly furnished front room was the iheart-broken er, Mrs. Katherine Nelleon Norsowoman she had not the strongth to bear up in her hour of trial, and as the words of the Danish preacher, Rev, J. 8. Christiansen, fell lipon her ear she gave way to torrent after torrent of grief “A flesh is as gri of man ts asa flower, The geass will die aw with fall off, but Lord will be foreve ‘The minister. spoke in his native tonque, his yolce sounding in mournfal monotone against the narrow walls of the room. He dwelt on death at much neth in general terms, Then wiih the} on the rth Amboy, this afternoon over Anna N though she is i the glory the minister sald. y and the flow- word of the ‘MURDERED GIRL BURIED AT HER OLD JERSEY HOME. ptoriety, His lawyer had given him but he was so Interested tn the pers that It went out fre not show any signs of ne He had been o refused It, 3 howe are the thi brain to the bad, I'm dong, with them. I'm going to be different after this and quit on rum and cigarettes." Taen turning to Detective made the latter promise that when they got to New York he would get bim a packuge of a well-known cure for sobucso habit, newsp He di ness but he u ‘ my to the dz “four hours en mmyailt up men int Hicting sai things which wore remar “TE atrelbe Thy wall (ell the ed to me this morning he pen ti acquitted." wil be which had brought sorrow of these plain, simp “In the sorrow of the caw Is is very good she did a self, It Is a horrible cfime ing al eal 1 offer tie consol: Father to the fam f bereavement.” The minister did 1 woman. The St. Stephen's Danteh for two years he hal ne seen Mrs Pulitzer into the 1 anctuary to worship with her devout mother. ‘After the sermon—punctua and moans, from th the Rev. Lars Mer Danish Meth Ast words of ol lesion to the nto the house devd heran Church pastor of the sald a fow made ho aly of the dead tragic’ end ore to the casket jas the me auivering with the asin her, te her sons, Anton then the other hands Jn theirs and The body wae taken ¢ tery and buried In the £ would jost care, he approached the tragedy: ” 00.8, EILING. Description He Gives to the Police of the Man He Says Really Mur- dered Mrs, Pulitzer. IN BRIDGEPORT. LIVES Murderer Willlam Hooper Young gives the following degeription of Elling, the man he bea fet was his accomplice In the Pulitzer: rite re | pale. face and® He wore He ts very es and a straw hat. Elling is a degenerate, Ail T know about him t# that he used to Hve tn Bridgeport. [don't know where he lived In New York.” Capt. Titus sald be had men searching tebe and up to noon No trace of a man could be foand there. at the hunt for him hag not bean given up vi EUROPE STILL | LURES. Krouprina Withetm ‘Walt, Crowded to Her Capnoity, The Kronpring Wilhelm, of the North Germap Lloyd Une. which salied to-day, carried an unusually large Hst of pas sengers for this season, several of the a oMecers having fo give up their roo) ‘Among the peesorgers Was bty Lit. an Blauvelt, the opera ah who, on her arrival on Mie ather side” will be- gin her fifth munval tour of | pean Rhrisihdat ‘olties. To Fron) “RIVALS. DETROIT, Seats. al Y have kille! or of | uD YOUNG SLA "KATE FEELEY? ILikeness of of the Mur. © derer of Mrs. Pulitzer} to the Chief Actor in, Another Tragedy. i MYSTERY NEVER SOLVED) The Cther Woman Like the Later One Was Lured to a Room by aMan, Where She Was Brutally Put to Death. There is strong reason to believe is the| ast seen in the com-| that William Hooper Young ae who was |pany of Mrs. Kate Feeley, whose dis-| membered body (bh Seventeenth street. was found within a of her lodging piace on West} Iny myst gation tending to solve that which startled the commun- ity nearly three years ago, is now in progress Althou: the positive identity of ‘the man who prevailed upon Mrs. Feeley to accompany him to his flat fer the pretense that his wife was ailing and needed the immediate ser-! |vlees of a maid has not been fully} joetablished, there are circumstances jin conne with the murder of Mrs. Pulitzer, the life of her slayer, and the riking resemblances he} | Dears to the man connected with the se that warrant imme- | aqiiry by the police. m ) lured Kate Keeley to generally the de- The mannerisms tion diate The ath on of Young. a anawel ‘tne tone of his voice, his age and gen- | nl characterist tally to a start- degree with those of the man de-) of the murderer binnce Ix Marvellous, CHARGE FRAUD BANKRUPTCY Creditors of the Hecker Luncheon Co. and Danziger Bros. Ob- ject to Assignment. TAKE CASES INTO COURT. Judge Adams Appoints Re- ceiver and Full Investigation Wi I! Be Made of All Trans- actions of the Firms. in the United States to-day appointed BA- receiver for the Heck- Company, which yester- involuntary petltion in The receiver was appoint- ed on the petition of the Hunter and ‘Trium Company, creditors, who allege that the assignment made by the com- pany, Aug. 1, was Irregular, and ask that it be inquired into. ‘The Hunter & Trimm people say that first intimation they had of the signment was avhen one of their salesmen called at the company’s place business, and found an auctioneer wosing of the company’s assets, un- orders of the assignee, James H, Adams, District Court, ward 8, Thom: Luncheon filed an ankruptey Judge of dis, der The petition charges that the assets were disposed of at values considerably mor than set forth in the schedule of ed by the assignee. The peti- Into the large the Presid consists of t idlides. Accords Junsky, of Hugetion, amout stated to be due of the company, which fourths of the total la- criminal courts, will follow bankruptey petition fled Dauziger Bros., at No, 31 Bond s clients are B. Bernhacd » On thels pe ition taat the skirt makers be ‘ ot jayoluntary bankrupts M. Linn wus uppolnted receiver by Judge skirt manuf ‘Tausky says the firm contin- 0 that thre rom thet s of goods were large ¢ some time dur= store and words, Both were stowsh Both bad eve ath Western State, folt hat, he ey to his apart ked Into the | s a charact er: | of Young and the pley are to be com= be had to the chi- r r murderer for the p he who indlc engo to Mra 1 frend, af vii “Dam alive and well. Johann Clifford, Mrs. Fee- sy days after the mur- Will write KKATI vor writt and ctives off the lke that he wrote Cant, Titus and addressed this lott Jtus, Sear myn ‘Captain “Dear Sir: in vain, I H, YOUNG writing In the letter to Capt. that on the telegram sent 0) to Kate Feeley's friend will be examined by Will the sand 1 Chie: is Tragedy. was murdered in Octo- She had been living apart husband and was described ttractive woman, industrious ed to her son. ley was then stopping with cle, at No, 154 West She advertised for » deseribed as her the house, Mrs. 1 ee to home His wife negded he said. Mrs, Lucie said in a general Hooper Young." | never seen~ allye| & the man, Her dis- as found In various hberhood in which nh ce were completely since the murder of have taken up this ni 1st, from her 1s an and dev murderer at Lu ley “ar > saw him. pund the an at on man,” this f way of |.she lved. \bamed, but Pulltzer they clue. © ARM SNIPPED OFF BY GIANT BUZT-SAW 'Careless Employee in Coffin | Factory Turned His Back | to Machine While Steering a Board Through It. Long famillarity with a bugz-saw im ‘ine eoMn factory of J. W, Stoltz, at No, | (29 Kast One Hundred and Sixth street, ado Alb: Nast io Hundred and Filth street, careless, e he lost his left hand boen manipulating the aw for years. He could work at tt with ais eyes shut, ‘This afternoon he started the saw throusa a board, With his hand on the board ty steady it, he turned and began to digouss the latest shop gossip | with a fellow workmen. he next instams bis right arm waa Manging by a few sinews, Just below the elbow Welson had presence or mind enough to Jam the arm into a box fot of mw beping (0 stop to come Ltoraacey Mek rth “Wileon had committed by [* FACED DEATH I HARBOR WATERS Peterson Rescued Af- ter Struggling for Many Hours in the Bay to Keep Afloat. ABOUT TO GIVE UP HOPE. In the darkness preceding the dawn to-day Thomas Peterson, who fell from the dumping scow Shannon, after strug- giing for hours in the waters of the bay, was picked up exhausted by Capt. Honvenue, of the Harbor Inspection tug Nimrod. Peterson does not remember where he fell from the scow or how, but he swam about jn danger ef being run down by assing vessels until he was thoroughly exhausted, When he had practically iven up all hope of being rescued he saw the Nimrod approaching and in his struggles to prevent being run down by it he attracted the attention of Capt. Benvenue, ‘The captain saw the man and heard him ery out for aid, but immediately lost sight of him because of the dark- ness, He stopped his tug and began slowly steaming back and forth. Finally he located Peterson, and he was hauled aboard Peterson was so far gone that he was almost speechless from exhaustion and cold, He was bundJed In blankets and taken down to the boller-room. He recovered rapidly and was landed by the Nimrod at Quarantine, ‘A message sent to the Marine Hospital at Stapleton, Staten Island, to send an ambulance for the man. son was also given warm food pet ary clotaing, and Svetore the arrival of the ambulance had so far recovered that he refused to go to the hospital, FEAR NEW RIOT AT LEBANON. Governor to Send rotect Town, LEBANON, Pa., Sept. 23.—The streeta are filled with exctied people this after= noon and the plant of the American Iron and Steel Company is under guard. ‘here 1s a resentful fecling against the colored Ironworkers brought here from. the South. A citizon reoelved a flesh wound in his arm from a bullet fired by an unknown persen. During a rlot last night the measen- er of the steel company was killed. KY “committee of citizens of Lebanon waited upor the Governor at Harrisburg thie afternoon and requested that he furnish the. city with military tion. The Governor has the matter un- fer advisement and unless the situation {inproves troops Will likely be sent thera toehalntain order #nd protect life and ‘opert Prepe Cammittee explained that the elvil author ties were unavie to maintain order authonat the presence of tr20p8 was abe dointely necessary, “the csumittee, was with the Governor, Attorney General and with (inedeneral for nearly two hours, a DEATH OF A SCHOOL BOY. sw Anke ‘Troops to Citlae Leppus at Hin Home, — thie afternoon from tnjuriesc due to soboo) DUT. neice Ge At No, #8 E

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