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WIL “THE THE STIND Prisoner to Gratify His Father’s Wish and Give Testimony to Vindicate Himself from the Charge of Murder. OSBORNE IS NOT PLEASED. Chief Prosecutor, Worried by Fre-| quent Adverse Rulings of Justice) Lambert, Calls on Jerome to Help! Combat Mr. Black. | a | ‘ | BLACK SAYS STATE ‘HAS MADE NO CA Kx-Gov. Black 1 to-day speaking of the Molineux mur- Gér trial: “Molineux fs willing rendy to go on the w stand, but ft may not be nec wary, The people's cane is n fm now, and Mr. Osborne haw failed to connect Molinenx with ‘The calling of hand- e. writing experts numonnts to Mith, They may call 200 ff they Mke. Yesterdny was a grand day for the dcfenne.* meres Roland B. Molinenx will go on the witless stand In his own behalf. This mu torneys, the first trial, a defense shall be made and as strong 2 one as possible at that. his, it 1s sald, 1s due greptly to the has heen decided upon by his at- who are agreed that, unlike Gesite cf Gen, Molineux, who insists Nad not established a case. He added that he wanted it fought to ® finish. Osborne Not Pleased. It fs evident that Assistant District Attarney Osborne jis not pleased with the progress which has been made by {he State, He has been repeatedly atng-| Not until the young couple made ready gered by tho ruling out of testimony by | to depart for the East Liberty station Judge Lambert, and as a result has ap-|0f the Pennsylvania Raliroad to begin Pealea to Mr. Jerome for assistance, | their bridal tour did the revenge on the For this reason the District-Attorney is | Practical joker begin. frequently in court and follows the pro-| Handblils had been distributed éeedings with a watchful eye. He con-|throughout the neighborhood announe: eults frequently with his assistant when [ing that a circus procession would pass important points are at issue. along a certain route at 7.30 o'clock In Ht haw grown clear that the outcome |the evening. A crowd of 4,000 people had Will depend largely upon the testimony (gathered when Mr Dimling and his of the handwriting experts. This be-|rige lett the house, expecting to get eawe evident when Mr, Osborne fatled |into a cab, Sy) prove that the bottle-holder had been| Instead they were hustled ints an Ee Uought by Molineux, This, with the | e.oroag wagon on which a big cage had encouraged the defense that ex-Gov. Black has conceded that the address on the polaon package, the Cornish letters and the Barnet letters are In the #ame handwriting. Hinges on Handwriting. ‘This being admitted, it will remain for the prosecution to prove that they were written by Molineux. Falling in this it ts conceded In court that the Jury would probably favor ac- quittal, It is known that Mr. Osborne will make every effort to prove by ex- perts that the handwriting was that ot Molineux, but to offset this the defense > will introduce expert testimony in re- - puttal. ‘They will seek to prove that tt Was not Molineux's handwriting, and it ‘Will remain for the jurors to decide which experts are to be believed. abst shin Sees POLICE HAVE TEA PARTY. Many Siolen Chests Piled in the Madison Street Station. Five thousand dollars’ worth of tea fn chests was piled in the Madison Btreet Police Station last night. It was taken from the junk shop of Thomas Murphy, No, 38 Front street, Brooklyn. who was arrested. It Js charged that the tea wag stolen The twa came into port day before yepterday on the freighter Brower. Tt was consigned to Frank Golding, of No. 43 Fifth avenue, Brooklyn. Soon “after the steamer put in at Pier 38, Kast | wer, two men drove up and asked | al t the tea, claiming to be repre- sentatives of the consignee. They piled ft into wagon= and carted tt off. "Wie tea wa. traced to the junk shop 4n Brooklyn, and Murphy was arrested. Wagons were procured and the tea put board to be carried to the station- se, It Wan ferried across to New and all night long policemen were busy tugging at it ae Lady Bache Cunard Coming Over. |slgned to Mr. and Mrs. thatthe wishes vindication as well a%| clerks and others to look out for the @cqiittal for his son, Hoe Insists that | NeWlyY married couple from Pittsburg, Wheli the tatter walks out of tho court- Time to Even Scores, room a free man, !f such should be the At last it came time for Mr Dimiing Tesult, there may be no doubt of the | be married, Ne event came off defendant's Innocence. He sald to-day | Wednesday night at the home uf’ his that he did not wish the care ruled out | bvide, Miss Wilhelmina Morgan, No. even ff it appeared that the prosecution | 7% Hamilton avenue, — Pittshiturg rullig out of the Barnet letters, has so |), were forced, fire was burned, a band appeared and the strangest bridal procession that ever appeared through the streets of the city. NERS PURSUE WALDORF BRIDE Old Victims of George A. Dim- ling, of Pittsburg, Make Life a Burden for Wife Here on Honeymoon. ——— OVERRUN WITH “PRESENTS.” Put Them In a Cage When They Started Away and Burned Aed Lights ae They Passed Through Throngs in the Strectr. Ever since Thursday morning a weird | array of pote, pans, kettles, wash boli- articles of “china ware, wooden wis, brooms, steins and similar pieces household furniture have been the Waldorf-Astoria con-| George Albert | of riving at Dimiling. The articles have arrived unpacked and have caused more embarrasment to a bridal couple from Pittsburg than to anything that has happened since they left home Wednesdu: which was plenty, by These shipmen are part of a plot to get & them practical joker, Dimling for many years was the Bryan G. Hughes of Pittsburg, He had a wide acquaint- ance and his friends were In hot all the time b for putting ations Especially strong was “Mr. Dimling a: weddings, He never failed to de rate the bridal carriage with old shoes, tle ribbons of white eatin to the trunk, walk through the train with a megaphone proclaiming to the passen- gers that 1 was a bridal couple aboard, to send telegrams ahead warn- Ing station agents, train hands, hotel water caus eof his preditection them Into ridiculous situ- Freinds who had felt the sting of Mr Dimling's practical Jokes for yearp ar ranged to get even with him. Mr. Dimling ts a millionaire, ang the wedding was In keeping with his wealth and the sockl prominence of the bride, It passed off without a liteh, heen constructed, Into this cage they the door was locked, in Pittsburg wound its way Advertisement No Lic. ‘The parade had been advertised as ar exhibition of a ‘mad bridal couple’? and {t was no ie, Mr, Dimiing and hin wife were as mad ag they could be, nor was thelr anger decreased when (he jokers supplied the passengers on the train with all the detalle of the marriage, to- gether with tin horns, packages of punk and red fire. As s00n as Mr. Dimling and his bride lett Pitteburg the following telegram Was sent to every hotel along the route of thelr gropoted bridal tour; vbody jook oltt for Mr. and Mrs, George A. Dimling, married jast hight In Pittsburg, Pa. WIM anctv: on the Pittsburg limited Thureday morning, Oct. 23, 1902, “Description—He—8 feet 7 Inches in helght; welghs about 176 pounds; dressed in blue checked sult, tan or gray gloves, patent leather shoes; Goo-Goo eyes and Happy Hoollgan emile. “She—Slender; medium tall; halr halfway between auburn and brn- nette; dreamy eyes; wil wear a dark blue hat, trimmed with grape clus- ters, and da e dress ie felp them along.’ They aro belng helped along ——— MINE-OWNER MURDERED. Wealthy Man Killed in Mexico, Preanmably for His Money. GUADALAJARA, Mexico, Ost, %— Felipe Nesdell, Wealthy Anierican mine owner, has been ed at his mines In a remote part of the State His real name is sald to have been Charles Walker he Ix reported to have come from Louls. He lived Alone. He is supposed to. hay 1 Killed for his mone me A Guaranteed Cure for Piles. LONDON, Oct. 25.—Among the passen- booked to sali for New York on the ‘Gunard VMne steamer Campania from Liverpool to-day are Lady Hache Cu- ipard, Who was Miss Maud Burke, of ‘Gpicano. and. John V. Farwell, of Chi- K i Itching: Blind, Bleeding and Prbiruding Miter. | | No cure, no pay. All drugelets are authorived he manufacturers of Paso Olntinent to refund ey where It falls to clre any case of matter of low: long standing, aves in WX Gays: the worst One applic Ntohing inat ft is the only ptle remedy nee, no cure, no pay. Price 600, Coren in rev. , THE IMPRISONED CAT CALLS OUT POLICE “Tom” Was Scratching Under a Box and Every One Was Sure that Burglars Were at Hand. “Tom' isn cit He ts used to the freedom of the city, and when he was Imprisoned under a box in the rear of the flat bujiding at No. 71 Bast Beventh atrest he objected to the confinement There were thinzs doing in the world, and be longed to be with the} crowd. Sh ‘Tom “scratched away with All his might at the alde of the box Bince a man named Everhart was murdered by a burglar in that nelgh- horhood three years ago tho people ha ho nervous, ‘The slightest sound will cause a search, and a gunshot ts enough to throw the neighborhood into a panic, So when ‘Tom hed on the box it frightened two young men In the building Half-dressed, they rushed into the Kat Fifth street police station, where they told Seret. Brown a burglar was trying to force an entrance to the house, While they were golng with Policeman Sahn to the scene they told him such storios of filing ham- mering they had heard that Pollock and Schnelder w service. A thorough search of the place re- vealed nothing, and Just as the police were leaving s6me man on St. Mark's pince evidently took the officers for burglars and blazed away with a re- volver, six shots ringing out. Luckily, none took effect, but they served to arouse the whoe neighborhood. Startled faces emerged from windows, while a second report to the statlon- house brought a detail of elght more policemen. They were surrounding the house when Dr. Zitwer, of No. 62 St Mark's place, telephoned Police Heals quarters, From this source the East Fifth street station again heard of the trouble, and every available police- man in the precinct was sent to the When the panic subsided and the p) lice gathered together for a consult tion the scratching began again. the house was surrounded two men went to the rear and traced the gound to a box in the backyard. With due caution they raised It from the round und Tom scampered away to join his friends, a SUICIDE KNELT IN PRAYER. Then Leaped Before Engine Swiftly Moving Freight, WINSTED, Conn, Oct, Y%—Kneeling beside the railroad track and pecring up into the eyes of the engineer of a rapidly approaching freight train on the Naugatuck division of the New Haven ‘Railroad. Joseph Hickey, fifty-five, a de- | spondent carpenter, whose home was in Terryville threw himself in front of tho h CUM bridge, between r late Death was’ prob- ofa train at the H Waterville ayn and ernoon. hg — BISHOP VAUGHAN DEAD: Uncle of Hngiand’s Cardinal Bx- Iren at Newton Abbey, LONDON, Oct, 2.—Right Rey. Will- fam Vaughan, D. D,, Bishop of Ply- mouth, died this morning at Newton Abbey, Devonshire. Dr. Vaughan was an uncle of Cardinal Vaughan, He was born in 1814, | vesters ably i MIR. SACE’S LOANS ARE $25,000,000 Financier’s Prolonged Illness Brings to Light the Enormous Amount of Cash He Has Out on Collateral. GREATER THAN MOST BANKS. The prolonged illness of Russel] Sage and the new form of no! which has} been sent cut among his Go | allowing them to pay off thelr indebte ness acd get back thelr collateral threugh his a 5 in case of his death, hos set Wall street to talking about th Imimense sums h which the J Mnancler has oo autly loaned In the sure If the money which he has out were | ly to be withdrawn from the market, a pinch would follow it cnude of th yet dis- tru pantes tn ti ne Vertaly of icy, when tie ratex aro unusually tempting, $2,000,000 or $3,000,000 Is added to this enormous sum. Even if he gets but d per cent. on the amount which Js ordinarily loaned Sis Income from this wource alone would be $1, Ag his tivestmonts in gil rithes#oring hy t twice i it can b At the old gent about the wolf ly a 2 Ming his ground 320.000 a vear rent to the G witch Is som Ung 1G so that his fo: tune Is tremendous rate by natu ‘ While he Is not the richest man in the world, his fortune net being nH at more than $10,000,000, he Is by all odds the greatest Individual money jend; jd and few banks In this ye out cash than he, JERSEY PRODUCES HUMAN BAROMETER New Brunswick Boy Bares His Arm and Tells You Whether It Will Rain. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. 7, New Jersey's reputation no longer rests upon “Sealdy Bil” Quinn and her dig} pumpkins, A human barometer has been added to her Hst of strange and curlous poseasions. Frank Farley, of this place, fs the barometer, and he has made good his claim to the title. it with fis arm. ver he is asked what the weather is to be he bares his arm to the Oct. %— elbow, raises it above his head, vrosses his fingers and says “Rain” or as the may be, His pres dictions are nearly always veritled. Bo great has become ‘his reputation that he Js now sought out by farmens and busl- ness men, who pay him for his tnforma- Farley is a messenger fourteen, He has a shrewd. alert look and {s noted for his modesty. His power to predict the weather, he says, ie in- poy WORLD: SATURDAY E |JOKERS START BRIDAL PAIR ON HONEYMOON IN ANIMAL CAGE AS PART OF PARADE. ta ive would be felt seriously in every |is to take clare of the construction of ntre fn tho world, the canal, Tt was at first supposed that ative estimates by bankers of fa soon as the Attorney-General had nount of cash which Mr. Bage! Satisfied himself of the sutgclency of in out on collateral at all times puts) the title to the canal property that the sum at $25,000,000, In tines of strin=| could be conveyed by the French Gov- | the count and only | ING, OCTOBER 26, 1 ~ PANAMA. REPORT Text of Attorne9-General Knox's Canal Treaty Findings Will To-Day Be Made Public. WASHINGTON, neral Knox made report upon the validity of the gitle of the Panama Canal to dent Rodsevelt to-day, It wan announced that the report was very exhaustive and covered about 300 Oct. —Attorney- piges. A synopsis Is to be made pubile | to-day, Attorney-General Knox, who took the report in person to the White House, leclined to give any intimation of Its character in advance, Non-action on the part of the Goy- ernment of Colombia in the pending Isthmian Canal treaty ts, postponing the Appointment of the Commission which | ernment the way would be clear for the appointment. of the Commission, and yon after for the preparation of the specifications upén which the work Is to be done. ‘This was upon the assump- fion that the agreement upon the out- lines of the treaty with the canal com- pany. reached {n Washington between the Beeretary of State and the Colom- bian Minister, amounted to a pledge by the latter In behalf of his,own Govern- ment to promptly ratify such a treaty. ‘ow It has developed that the ratif- cation of the treaty is a long way. off. wing to the fact that the Colomblan Congress, before which the convention must come, has not even been elected up to this time, ‘The delay ts attributed the existence of a state of war in mbla, ix now expected that soon will be so far pacified that a general election can be held and that the Congress can be assembled during the winter months _—— THREE BOYS IN STORE BURGLARY, Police Get One of Them, Feign- ing Sleep, in a Hallway and Are After the Others. Harry Moore, ten years old, of No, 331 ‘Weat Seventeenti street, was arrataned in the Children's Court to-day, charged store of Pincus Klocz, t Houston street, early The police are searching for two other boys whose names were given them by Moore Policeman Pfeifer, of the Union Mar- ket Station, heard a crash of glass and saw four boys dart out of the hallway by Kiocz’s store. They were too fast for the patrolman, so he went into the hallway and found) Harry Moore ap- parently asleep. He malntained that the other boys and not he had broken ‘man and author of books on eccleststical BLAMED THEFT 'CRANNY DWYER ON HER CHUM, CENTURY MONDE Anna Budner Says Bessie Has, Outlived All Her Long- Schieff Told Her to Hide thé kived Relatives and Possess- Money in Her Stocking and} ‘es All Her Faoulties af One Have a Good Time. » , Hundred and Ten Years. i. THEN SHE WAS ARRESTED./1$ PET GF CANANDAIGUA. Evidence Shows that Bees! Moth- Children Cry for Treasures from Her Fairy Lore and Neighbors Love to Hear Her Songs of the Greon er Had Lost 61,000 in Few Days! and that Girl Had Been Spend-! , Ing Money Lavishly. - Assistant Buperintendent Agnew. of the Soctety for the Prevention of Cruel- ty to Children, rays he may look into the case of Bessle Scbieff, No. 148 Ridge street, who accused Anna Budner of theft before Magistrate Olmsted. Anna raid in court that Bessie gave her a package containing $19 In marked billa and then had her arrested for stealing, Ih Anna, who {8 fourteen years old lives at No. 133 Ridge street. is a dau; ter of wealthy real estate operator. According to her story Bessie Schieft went to her house and asked her if al would not go home with her, Besete’ seemed to be In a great hurry, and when they arrived at the Schleff residence Anna says the other girl handed her a parcel, gaylng: “Hide It at once; put it in your stocking. We can have a good time with that moacy She did as she was told, only to find herself under, arrest a few minutes later. She admitted that the money was found in her possession Mrs, Schieff's version of the case Is that Anna came to she house Wednesday and that Bessie saw her take something from a drawer and put it Im her stock- ing. She had the girt arrested. Tm court witness after witness was in- ROCHESTER, N. Y., Oct, 2%5.—A wom- fn so old that ‘all her long-lived rela- tives have died and left her to be cared for by strangers is Mra. uJdy Dwyer, of Canandaigua. ‘To the best of ‘her knowledge she is one hundred and ten years old, and she bids fair to live for some years more. ‘The old woman does not know he: xact age, nor has she any documents fo show when sl born, but she asserts that she was oyar forty years of age when she came to this country from Ireland, sixty. years ago. She was born in'County Tipperary, and her maiden name‘was Judy Slat- tery. At the time of the “Big Wind” In Ireland she was long past her youth and had been married for several years. The “Big Wind” occurred on Jan. 6, 1834, Mrs. Dwyer retiihs ‘all her faculties, masticates her food with her natural teeth and possesses eyesight that ts re- markatte for a woman of her age. She has never worn spectactws In her life, nor has she eyer suffered a day's {1l- Although the family she Hyves with are not related to her she receives the troduced to show that Miss Schieff, hose mother saya she hag missed $1,000] best of care and ii great favor in the last few weeks, had been prodl-| with the children, She hus voracious gal in her expenditures, was testi- i Fae nee eeucnt costly (presents for | MbPetite. Meal times ‘are the events of her friends; that she gave theatre par-| the day to her. ties at the Knickerbocker Theatre in| When the weather is favorable the old boxes which cost $60; that she purchased | jady takes long walks about the streets a dlamond ring for a young man, ing $18, and that In many ot she was freely spending mone. | Ns a result Magistrate Olmated dis- of Canandaigua. Shy knows the town and the surrounding country thoroughls ving lived In the yielnity ever since missed the case against the Budner girl for lack of evidence and with the} She came to this country. rema ‘The home of “Granny” Dwyer ts close These are strange things in a chil- dren’a court.” ‘At the same time he glanced signifi- cantly at Mr. Agnew, who was present. to the roundhouse and shops of the New York Central Ratiroad, and ehe |e a@ great favorite with the railroad men. who delight in persuading her to sing olf Irish folk songs, such as are not wheard In these days in this country. The olf Indy has a strong, melodious volte and her singing really Is enter- | taining, Children ftock to her side to hear fairy stories, of which she has a great store. ~ Prominent Bookman De OSWEGO, N. Y., Oct. 25.—George C. MoWhorter died here to-day, aged thirty He was pres‘dent of the Oswego ity Library, a prominent Bpiacopal lay- subjects. é lf Your Friend Is Sick — . .Let Me Know It. As an act of humenity, tell me a friend who needs That {8 all—just a postal card—just the cost of a Tell me the book to send, penny. Then I will do this: I will mail the sick one an order—good at any drug store—for six bottles Dr. Shoop’s Restorative, He may take it a month to learn what it will do, If it suc- ceeds, the cost is $5.50 If it fails, J will pay - the druggist myself, And the sick one’s mere word shall decide it, I do that so that those who need help will accept it. T have what thoae sick ones must have to get well, and I want my offer so fair that no sick one can neglect it. You may think it too fair to be possible, but I do just ae I say. { have furnished my Restorative to hundreds of thou- sands in this way, and 39 out of each 40 have paid gladly, because they were cured. ! willingly pay for the rest. It is a remarkable remedy that makes such an offer possible, and I have spent my lifetime on it. It is my dis- covery, and the only known treatment that strengthens the inside nerves. The common way is to doctor the organ that is weak, but that way brings at hest but temporary results. My way is to bring back tho nerve power which alone operates every vital organ, I give to each organ the power to do its duty, and there Is no other way to ake weak organs well, T fail only where organic trouble—like cancer—makes a cure impoesible. Such cares are rare. My buok will convince you, for it ts clear. Almost any Book No. 1 on Dyspepsia. Rook No. 2 on the Heart. the glass. The window fancy gurters. them were stolen. —$ JESSE CARLL DEAD, NORTHPORT, L, 1, Oct, %—Jease Carll, a well-known retired shipbuilder, died at his home here on Bayview ave- filed with women's several boxes of hertted and he takes no credit to him- welt, The H-O {€:2tz!} Company's nue from a complication of diseases. He was seventy-one years old. Simply 1e which book {5 wanted, and address Dr. Shoop, Box 740, Racine, Wis. sick one who reads it will know that he can get well. Book No. % on the Kidneys. Book No. 4 for Women, \| ‘0. & for Men ( i | Book No. 6 on Rheumatism. Mild cases, not chronic, are often cured by one or two bottles. Dr. Shop's Restorative {s sold by all drvggists, The tablet ts {deal form in which to adminitter medifiie, but until recently no succetaful catarrh tablet Bad Deen at- tumpted. There te now, howéver, am ¢x- colledt ‘and palatable remedy for catarrh in \tutiet form, kaown ge ftuart's Catarrh Tab- lets, and sold by druggists, composed of ths Most recent discoveries in medicine for cuts of catarrh, apd results from thelr use bave been highly gratifying. The old-time treatment of catarth was in the form of Inhalers, washes, douches, aprays, etc. Later on internal temedies Were used with greater success, but being in liquid or powder form were inconvenient to Use, and, like all medicines in Mauid or vowder form, lost thelr medicinal proper- tes when opened or exposed to the alr... Stuart's Caterrh Tablets contain highly concentrated antiveptics, Hydrastin, Blood Root and Red Gum, which kill the catarrh germs In the blood and mucous membrane, &nd In this respect are strictly actentific and modern, because all authorities, ere now agreed that catarrh ts a constitutional blood disease, and local applications can have vnly @ transitory effect. ‘The use of inhalers, douches and spraye is @ nuisance and inconyentence and can in Wise compare favorably with the same aati septics in ta form. internally, where they can reaeh the stomach and ed and kill catarrh germs right where they are = producod. A prominent layyer and public Pot Pittsburg says: "I have been troubled with hoad and throat for twelve years, climate it Seems 1 to get rid of It The continual dropping of mucus from the nose into the throat caused irritation and hoarseness, seriously inter= fering with my public epedking. It took me an hour or more of coughing, gagging, ex- pectorating and sueezing every morning be- fore 1 could settle down to work, and thi Condition gradually Drought om Gatarrt ot Stomach, causing loss of appetite, poor di- gestion and a foul breath, which annoyed me exceedingly. My physician advised me to try Stuart's Catal I 4 I took them for two months, and was astonished to Hind how quickly. they cleared my head, throat and stomach, and T have no beaita: ton in recommending them. ‘They are not Ghly pleaant to take, Dut they seem to get at the very root of the trouble, because tince ‘usin them T have bad no trace of catarrh,"" Sbrugiists sell Stuart's Catarrh Tablets at 50 cents for full-sized package, hey can be carried In the pocket and used any time and ax often an desired, since they contain no cocaine, mercury or any other injurious drug. “Let the GOLD DUST twins do your work.” C—— 4h .@OLD DUST cleanable—clothes and dishes, ots and pane, flaors and doors-in fact, anyesin ttc. GOLD DUST lightens labor, lessens care: oily by THEN. K iv Mi by THEN, K, FAIRBANK COMPAR! 7, New York Boston, Makers of OVAL FAIRY SOAP. The Connoisseur usually drinks Straight Whiskeys: Old Crow Rye or our Scotch Whiskeys, Bonnie Brier Bush id Souvenir of Scotland. H. B. KIRK & CO.,N. Y. CHEAP FUEL, all groce) ASBESTOS BRICK CO., 61 3 | For Facts ‘About Politics H That Every Voter Should Know, Consult the ‘World Almainac and Encyclopedia, '600 Pages. ™ Aimana bound. # ¢ mail. Mee Light Biscuit Light Pastry Light Cakes Light Work Light Cost.~SURE and— Quick-as-a-wink! Par “