Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 6, 1902. MASCAGNI, WHOSE TOUR WATCH ! CLUE CAN OND NieriMs OF THD BOSTON *SLUGOER." ONS DISCUSSED HAS BEEN A SAD FAILURE. : @ WISCACNT HELD iP FAST TRIN are TO SLUGGER. BY SUIOLOUSTo Congress Meets in the United Charities Building to Debate About Their Good and Bad Points. ‘It Belonged to the Latest) Victim of Boston’s Queer Slayer and Was Found) in a Pawnshop. ‘PLEDGED BY A NEGRO, ‘He Fits Description of Valet Hired by Mason, Who Is Ac- cused of the Murder of Sev- eral Women. BOSTON, Nov. 6.—Unless the police succeed in having, the negro who pawned the watch of Miss Clara Mor- ton, the latest victim of Boston's “Jack the Blugger,"" identified as the valet of Alan G. Mason, the connection of this rich soclety man and Harvard graduate with the numerous assaults on women and the murder of two of them will de- pend on the breaking down of the alld! which members of his family have tried to establish for him. Yesterday the allbl was all but suc cussful in getting the prisoner's release To-day it has been weakened very much, The police, who were almost convinced that they had made a mis- {take, are now sure they have the right man and they are scouring every part of tho city with renewed energy for evidence against Mason. Miss Morton's watch was pledged Tuesday night. The pawnbroker who accepted it says the negro offering It answers the description of Mason's valet—the man who let the police into the house the night Mason was ar- rested. The negro will be brought to the pawnbroker. If he 1s identified the police will consider thelr case practi- cally proved. If he is not, It will be negative eviderice in Mason's favor, but, im the light of the other facts gathered by the police it will not give him his freedom, Alibi Supported by Three. ‘Me alld! reste on the testimony of three persons—two of them members of | Mason's family and one a friend. They are Edward C. Mason, his brother, Mrs. Mason, his mother, and Henry C. Tyler. Edward. Mason and Tyler say they were playing a game of chess in the Magson home on the night of the murder ‘They say that Alan Mason watched this game with deep interest until 9.30, certainly until after 9 o'clock.» Then he Jett the house, As.it was his cus- tom to take long rfdes or walke In the evening they did not think it remarka- ble that he should leave at this hour. Now Miss Morton was murdered in the suburb of Waverly at 8.59 o'clock as nearly as the police have been able to determine. Waverly is at least forty minutes from the Mason house on the cars, which at that hour of the night run ‘every fifteen minutes. ‘Had Mason caught a car immediately on leaving he could not have been in Waverly sooner than 9.45, even had he left the house as early as 9. Mis Story Is Faulty. His own explanation is that he took a , Highland avenue car and rode to Som- erville, returning to his home at mid- night. There {s strong evidence to con- trovert this, as well as the testimony of {ae fan’ about the game of chess, for ft comes from those with no motive to harm or help the prisoner. Robert Hider, Superintendent of the Beaver Brook Reservation of the Metro- politan Park District, says that he met Mason at 9.20 o'clock on the night Miss Morton was murdered—about thirty min. ‘utes after the crime—coming from the pond of the reservation. He did not know who the man was then, but as oon ashe read of the murder he was convinced he had seen the man who did ft and he has since \dentifled Mason swithout equlvocation. ‘This pond {s about a half-mile from the spot where Miss Morton was struck down: in the grounds of the Waverly ‘Asylum, Mason had been an inmate there. and he knew the lay of the country thereabouts. There was water fn the pond. ‘There was blood on the hands of the man who struck Miss Morton, for the chatelaine which was snatched from her body “was found the next day blood- covered near the railroad tracks along a route which a man might take from the pénd to ‘the starting point of the cars *to Boston. ‘Mr. Hider does not know what became of the man he saw that night at 9.30. ‘At 10% Condustor Edward F. Brown todK a train back to Boston. A Positive Identitication, A oneryous, talkative man, whom Brown has since {d ‘fed as Alan Mason, went into town on that train, There was an hour and ten minutes be- twefn starting time and the time when Elder saw the man at the pond, The stance could have been * 1ked in less time, which Js less {mportant than if theré was not time enough. A man might dally on the way or wait at the starting point, for that matter, without attracting much attention, The 10,28 train would get the man back to Boston at 11.15, not much earller than Mason guys he got back from that trip to Som- erville. That is the pollce case against the Mason family for the evening of the orton’ murder. There is a square con- tradiction and it ts a case of violent family partisanship on one side agalne: possible error on the other, Mason wis a baottual vistitor to Waverly. He often went there to vi acquaintances he had met In the have terrorized the Boston suburbs is strengthened by the testimony of two Cambridge women whose names the’ po- lice refuse to reveal. They say that a week ago Saturday night they were ac- costed in the streets b; they have {Identified as in his hand. proached them menacingly thelr dog a man_whom sprang at him and frightened him away. ‘This fact, taken together with the fact that all the crimes were committed with an tron bludgeon such as one would take from a scrap pile, that such a scrap plle was in the Mason yard and that Mason has been Insane before, make the police almost certain that they have the right man. WIFE DIDN'T KNOW SHE WAS DIVORCED, La Petite Adelaide Has Hus- band Arrested and He Pro- duces Chicago Decree. George F. Feger, an actor and song- known on the stage as Paul to-day committed to jail by Magistrate Pool in Yorkville Court in default of $1,000 bail on the charge of made by Feger's wife, Mille Adelaide Feger, who lives at No. 146 Lexington avenue. She is a dancer, knowh on the stage as La Petite Adelaide. Feger 1s sald to be the author of sev- eral popular songs and is performing this week at Tony Pastor's, According. to the complainant's law- yer, the couple have been married eight years, but Feger has failed to, support his wife for the past two years. according to his wife, has an income of $500 a month. “Why don't you support your wife the Magistrate asked. “she is no longer my wife. secured a divorce,” +" the reply. “That's nev = abandonment retorted the Feger then produced a copy of a de- e of divorce granted tim in Febru- Replying to ques- ary, 1901, In Chicego. tlons by the Court, Feger sald the sor- vipe upon Mra. Feger was by publica- ‘The Court then ruled: “f shall hold in accordance with the decision of the courts of this State that the decree is null and vold tn this Stale for the fact that there had been no personal service upon the defndant. the Chicago divorce and id you to support your wife. What do you earn a wek?" asked not working Farger's reply. “His Income Is about $500 a month,’ gald Lawyer «Brenner for the complain: lil adjourn this hearing havo the cashler of Tony Pastor's the amount of In court to t salary he fa recelvin, oe LOTHARIO LANDS IN JAIL. Not Matri- But Business Bunco, monial Mixtures, Laid Him Low. (Special to The Evening World.) 6—J. Colby this county, SARATOGA, of Schuylerville, was brought hyme under official guard from Brooklyn, where he be married, despite the fact that he has a wife and five- old boy here, 1s In a new difficulty Harrington, not having committed the mplated bigam lyn, easily #kcaped a six months stay furnishing a bond of $500 f his family. only an hour of free- was again ar- aelegram from the Chief of Bssex County, y in Brook- frown Point, alleged to have secure large quality ‘of goods upon false pre- (es. ASKS COURT 10 PUNISH HUSBAND. Mrs. Carlotta Herman Charges that He Tried to Stop Her Suit for Limited Divorce. Mrs. Carlotta Herman moved before Justice Marean in the Supreme Court in Brooklyn to-day to have her husband, George Herman, a wealthy lumber dealer, ving at No. 410 West End ave- nue, and George Van Stanwitz punished for contempt of court in attempting to induce her to withdraw her sult against | Herman for separation, Mrs. Herman, according to paper: filed in the separation sult, was married to the defendant in May, 1901, by a Jer- sey Clty Justice of the Peace. Several months ago she began an action for lim~ ited divorce, alleging desertion and non- support. Since the sult was brought she told Justice Marean to-day Herman and Van Stanwitz have made frequent attempts to Induce her to withdraw It. A short time ago, she said, Van Stan- witz called upon. her In Yonkers, where she moved after the separation, and offered her $2,000 {¢ she would discon- tinue the dlyorce proceedings and sign away her right to dower in Herman's real estate, She refused the offer, she pays, and now she wants them punished for contempt of court, Justice Marean reserved decision on the motion, PLANNED TD STEAL DIAMONDS IN TORE Two Prisoners Arraigned Said by Detectives to Have In- tended Working Old Game. Louls Lecau and Henry Dorand, who give Pittsburg as their home, were arraigned in Jefferson Market Court this morning on the charge of petty larceny. They were held in $500 ball for examination on Friday. Several days ago, it 1s alleged, the men went into a Broadway departmont store, and while looking at some Jewelhy stole a diamond locket. Yesterday af- ternoon the detectives say the san mén went to a jeweller's in Union Square and asked to see some diamond rings. The clerk was suspiclous and Ifstead of handing out a tray of rings, as ds the custom, had them point out the ring they wanted and only shdwed one. When ‘they left the store they were followed by the detectives to Brogd- way and arrested, When searched at the etation-house several "phony" rings were found in thelr possession, and a HOME OF MASON. TWO HORSE CASES RILE FITZSIMMONS Petty Bickerings of Lawyers in PLANS FOR YOUNG WORKERS. Their Abnormalities, Faults and Shortcomings and Alms the Sub- Jects of Papers Read by Settle- ment Workers and Instructors. Men and women who are Interested In the development of the working boy met this morning In Assembly Hall of the United Charities Butlding, the occasion being the Sixth Congress About Boys, conducted by the General Allfance of Workers with Boys. The morning session continued the dis- cussion begun at the opening session last night, when President Wil!am Byron Forbueh, author of ‘The Boy Problem,” gave his address on “The Art of Being a Godtathe: “Agencies for ¢he Workin Boys Help" formed the tople of the morning meeting, George \V. Ehler, Chairman of the Chicago Boys’ Work Conference, and Ml Director of the Central Y, MC. A. of Chicago, presided. Some of the Papers Read, Papers of the morning which dealt with the understanding of the working boys were prepared by Max Mitchell, secretary of the Federation of Jewish Charitles, of Boston, and the Industrial League; “The Working Boy,” by Rev. Father Pinkead, Chaplain of 8t seph's Home, of Peekskill, N. ¥ sical Abnormalities of Boy Boys’ Club Leaders Should stand.” by Allas G. Brown. “Boys move in the line of least re- sistance,” quoth Rev. Father Pinkead, “and the least resistance seems to be In the downward course, The allure- ments of a great city impress the young mind, also does sensational Itterature.”* The meana of reaching the New York boy was introduced by Hugh M. Fox, President of the New Jersey Board of Children’s Guardians, Bayonne, and the probation work was suggested as advis- able to be followed in New York. Soclologinix in Discussion, The men and women who are discuss- ing the working boy represent, promi- nent sociologists and settlement workers from all over the country, and the sub- fect of the working boy, treated from the practical view point. Literature of all helpful kinds bearing upon the boy question is offered for examination, and solentific deductions in regard to actual experiences with the working boys’ de- velopment formed the meat of this lit- erature. Wini P. Corbett, M. D., of Hol- derness, N. H., gave a strong plea for leniency In dealing with boys who sut. fer from some physical abnormality “If the boys’ club leader would un: dereiand the physical condition of boys much trouble would be obviated. When a boy is known to be a lar, @ thief, @ delinquent in any sense, let a physi- cal examination te made and it will be Civil Court Ruffle His Judicial | {224, ‘2ais2t* pp some physical abnor Dignity. Joseph L. Prayer, a lawyer, at No. 141 Broadway, was fined $% by Chief Judge Fitzsimmons, of the City Court, to-day |for refusing to pay the $12 jury fee in a case called to trial. He will have to Janswer for contempt If he doesn’t settle. John Beggan, a teamster living at No. 49 Ninth avenue, sued the Metropolitan Street Ratlway Company for $2,000 dam- ages, not for being razzle-dazzled by an electric car, but for , being bitten, knocked down and having his ankie broken by ‘ta vicious horse attached to a repair wagon" of the Metropolitan. The lawyers for both sides answered ready when the case was called, and Prager carefully examined the jurors empanelled. When the clerk demand the usual jury fee, $12, Prager consulted his assistant and then said he was not going on with the case. “But the jury fee is due, just the said the Court. ‘You have em- panelled and examined the jury “Ir have no plaintiff; Mr, Beggan has not appeared, and I shall not try the returned the trial and refused to let another cas? take precedence of yours, I shall enter a fine of $2 against you for trifling with the Court,” sald Chief Judge Fitz- simmons with much severity. The lawyer walked out of court, but if he does not pay that fine he will be court, The attorney for the Metropolitan says that Beggan volunteered his as- sistance when one of thelr sorses had attack of blind etaggers, The horse 1 upon his leg, breaking the ankle. Tho Chief Judge had had his judicial dignity ruffled by the case just pre- ceding this one, and was not 1 a mood for trifling. It, too, Was a horse case—the famous case in which Hugo Relssinger, t horseman, sought to make Richard f 400 mare which Relssinger bought right out of the “four on the Carman coach, and return his money, with tn- Relssinger says the mare turn- to be balky and bad when he got farm. a yesterday. Reis- t ready, “but ine aving the case at the top of lendar. He told the Judge would consume the entire day, ‘fo- od for another adjournment 1 refused to go on with the trial I shall dismies the case,” sald Judge Fuzsimmons, “and assess ‘your client 5 Carman, the tally-ho man, take back a] i) g small side office with but one win- mality."" Elias G. Brown, M. D., of New York City, in his paper, “The Development of Character in Boyhood,” introduced practical statistics based upon research extending into the lives of boys among all nations. Myron E. Adams, of Buffalo, gave in- teresting experiences of police court work with boys in Buffalo. The danger of a ilttle education in child labor was questioned, and the minor Influences which bear upon the boy's life with seemingly small importance, but which count in after life, were di ed. Mrs, Florence Kelly, secretary of the Consumers’ League, questioned the ald given the working boy when heart recre- tion 1s denied him. “Heart reat and stimulation 1s essential to the develop: ment of the working boy, and It seems as though we hhve been begging the question to a great extent In regard to the, working boy's development," she said, ‘The Alliance corresponds In {ts own sphera to the National Conference of Charities and Correction. ‘The member- ship is scattered among thirty States and several forelgn countries and 1s composed of persons who are studying methods of helping boys. The Alliance |s performing a kindly service to American boyhood by scten- tiflo study on the advocacy of impor- tant social agencies of the boys’ clubs of various kinds, camps, playgroundi the juvenile court and the home library system, MAYOR’S NEW OFFICES. Extensive Alterations Being Made in the City Hall. Mayor Low has abdicated in favor of organized labor. He has resigned his fine suite of offices In the City Hall and chief executive has retired to an In- significant Inner sanctum. From this humblest of all offices Mr. Low views the work of desolation being wrought by the men of brawn, They have torn down partition walls, ripped up floors and demolished brick and masonry walls, In a word, the Mayor's offices are undergoing extensive alterations. /His staff of assistants and retinue of attendants have also been forced to flee, At present the Mayor's quarters are dow, overlooking City Hall Park. A paper sign printed in violet-colored ink posted on the wall simply announces “Mayor's office. Side door.” When the alterations are completed Mayor Low will have a more commo- dious and sumptuou: ite of api ment than any of his predecessors, ————__— GRIGGS CONCEDES HOUSE. Democratic Chairman Figures But Fourteen Majority for Victor ATIMER CRANK IS IDENTIFIED. Prisoner, Who Confessed Mur- der of Brooklyn Man, is Ralph E. Doughty, a Drug Clerk, His Sweetheart Says. HAD NO HAND IN THE CRIME. “Do you know this young man?” asked Sergt. Edward Harrington early to-day of Mins Mae Renbe, of No. 149 Meserole avenue, Greenpoint, as he pre- sented & tin-type picture of William G. Johnson, who says he is tho slayer of Albert C. Latimer, the Royal Arcanum collector, “He is my sweetheart,” answered Misa Renbe, “His name is Ralph 5. Doughty, a drug clerk. After a week of tireless effort in run- ning down clues which might lead to the identification of Johnson, the mystery of the prisoner was solved, but the mys- tery of the murder remaina as deep as ever. The police are convinced that Doughty, allas Johnson, had absolutely nothing to do with the murder and are furlous over the trouble he has made them. "I made Ralph's acquaintance last June," sald Miss Renbe to an Evening World reporter to-day. “He was down at North Beach. For several weeks he courted me, and then proposed that we get married. He was embployed at the Academy Pharmacy, No, 109 Academy avenue, Astoria, and seemed to be a real nice young man. Girl Belte’ Miss Renbe {s young and attractive- looking and her large brown eyes filled with te: as she continued: “T have my wedding dress all ready, yet I am now convinced that there will never be a ceremony. My intended Is clearly insane and now that I remember he always did act queerly. He told me that he had bought me a $175 diamond ring and that in bringing It to me it was broken and he had to return it to Jewelry store for repairs. It may be that he uses some terrible drug. Once he brought me some stuff that he said was oplum, and I know that he was a terrible cigarette flend.”’ neerning the movements of Dou, gnty rior to hig surrender to the police, Miss enbe ald: "On Sept, 1 1 got a postal card from him saying that he was going to Derby, Conn, He gave me his ad- dreas there at the Birmingham Hou and although I wrote him several times he never replied. Tuesday of last week (the day before he gave himself up to the police under the name of Johnson), he called at my house, Mr. and Mrs, J. W. Weeks, with whom I live, never liked | nim and wanted me to give mu was in my employ from May until Bep- fomber 2. He never had “ot y time oft save on Monday nights. Latimer was murdered on a Wednesday shortly after midnight. It could not have been my clerk, as he slept away from the store only two nights, June 30 and July 7. Latimer was killed July Doughty will be arralgned to-morrow in the Gates Avenue Court, charged and it ia the Intention of the Brooklyn police to make the prisoner suft for the trouble he has i them in spinning his untruthful They will have the prisoner ex- mined as to his mental soundness. and he is proved to be insane he will be sent to an asylum, Hin Plausible Story, Wednesday of last week the young man called at, the Greenpoint station with vagrani and laid the charge of murder against himaclf. | ie tolt a plausible story his connection with the Latimer crime and said that he hat just come down from Derby, Coun., where he had_been mployed since he left Rr n. Sergt. Cornell University Creates Saper- ward Harrington, of the Throop ave~ nue station, went to Denby to ascertain ff the prisoner had ever been th Inquiry at the office of the B ham Tron Works resulted tn e that led to the identi Emple hy g man who ohnson as Doug! of the plan were announ:ed to-da: duties will be LATINER CASE SILENCED HER Remembering How Brooklyn Man Was Shot Mrs.Lawrence Let Burglars Loot Her Flat, Fearing for Husband’s Life. . THREATENED TO KILL HER. T. Lawrence, No, 65) Carroll Brooklyn, tells a thrilling story of. how memories of the Latimer mur- der kept her from calling her husband, asleep in the next room, while two burgiars, armed with revolvers and a dark lantern robbed the flat and stole meney Mr. Lawrence was holding for ment who had made election bets, The experience of Mrs, Lawrence happened about 3 o'clock on Wednesday morn- ing, but she did not report it to the police until! Inst night. Mrs, Lawrence has two childre: four and two years. They were In the room with her. Mr. Lawrence was sleeping in the next room at the rear of the flat. The woman describes her sensations as follow: BY MRS. T. LAWRENCE. I heard somebody fumbling around the room and opened my eyes. I guess I must have moved as I woke up, because Just as I got my eyes open one of te men in the room turned the light of a Mithenthal Says the Composer — Pulled the Bell Cord and — Brought the Flyer to a Sudden Stop. GCING TOO FAST, HE SAID. Other Oddities of the Father of — “Cavalleria” Are Mentioned te Indicate How Disaster Came to His American Tour. Ss Aubrey Mittenthal, of the firm of Mite tenthal Brothers, who have charge of the Mascagni tour, returned to New York to-day highly incensed with the Itallan virtuoso. 4 Mittenthal says that his firm, in a@dt- tlon to dropping $75,000 on the ventuns, have lost confidence in thelr star te make money. In the citles of Philadel- pita, Brooklyn, Pittsburg, Baltimoré, Washington, Toronto, Boston, Montreat and Rochester, he says, Mascagni drew audiences of foreigners Instead of fash fonables, Seats sold only for $1 or instead of $%. “Mascagni ts Impossible,” declared ¢he manager to-day, as he bewailed tte lonses. “Why, he does the most un- Just imagine! when our train was nearing Buffalo he oud denly jumped from his eat and the bell cord, bringing the train te @ dead stop. 5 Wants to Die in Italy. “Back came the conductor in @ = and demanded the reason. ‘Why, I Mascagni, ‘you're golng too fast, that's all. T want to die in Italy not Ameriom, and I'll thank you to go more “Another time when ‘we were Montreal Mascagni refused to start, 7A. M. So I secured a special al car, But when he came to the deg and looked he refused to enter, ‘ “Any car that I ride in must have electric Ughts,’ he said, With that he sulked for several hours before he could — be persuaded to travel. Sai ‘When we failed to draw big houses Mascagn! was utterly disgruntled amg kept repeating every night: ‘Where this rich America that they told’ about?" Mittenthal says that the trouble with the orchestra Is Mascagni himself as much as to” musicians. ‘The latter, he says, twenty days pay in advance, although they have already recetved ten daya/ad> vance pay. aa He thinks the musicians might Be ~ pacified, but Mascagnj} binders S by his eccentricities, the most t some one being a habit of getting to. thearre half an hour late at every/pete formanc: seh ‘The Mittenthal firm is in consultation » with lawyers to-day. If Mascagni shows willingness to settle for the $21,000, whieh” amount the managers clal arated is Mega ot Be ooo To the contrary Mr. Mittenthal to-day that he would both bring and take steps to prevent contin! of the American tour, + ase Janitress Accuses Four Tenants dark lantern full in my face. The flash was so sudden !t almost blinded me, but I refrained from scream- ing. The memory of how Mr. Latimer was awakened by his wife and shot dead by a burglar came to me. One of the men came to the bed and pointed a pistol at me. He held it so clore I could feel it against my head and whispered that if I made any noise he would kill me. I asked him not to harm my babies. “Damn you," he sud. “If you don't shut up Tl dlow your brains out.” ‘Then he told me to put my head under the covers, which I did. I heard the men moving around the flat, but was afrald to lift the bed clothes off my head, After what seemed an hour to me, but was probably a very few min- utes, the covers were pulled off me and one of the men took me by the throat. The other turned the light from the lantern on me. “If you mace a s: to me in a whisper, nd." said the man ‘we'll kill you, if we have to hang for it. Keep quiet until we are off the block. If you don't we'll come back and kill the whole I waltod until I heard them shut the outside door of the bullding. Thon 1 ran back and woke up my husband. He found his trousers on the floor of the dining-room with a check for $8 and §21 In money missing. The burglars stole my gol] watch and $16 from the dress T don't know how T kept from screan lng. Tf the men had made any move towart my bables, I believe I should have screamed. But I was so afraid that my husband would wake up and that the burglars would kill him th forced myself to keep quiet. << RETIRING OLD TUTORS. nuated List for Professors. ITHACA, N. ¥., Nov. 6—Beginning with the comencement in June, 1963, Cornell University will relleve all pro- se of 4 tessora who reach the ‘ofessors will serve as) in thelr respective dep. a peniod of five years. Thoir| igned them by Pr he salary for the retired lecture: ments an. |Hids Opened To-Day for Recome eventy| during the calendar year, The details; «| "Trustees, wr the work. Plans for a and Stranger of Stealing Her — Savings. Mrs. Mary Wuernar, janitress at $31 East Fourteenth street, caused arrest of four men and @ woman morning on a charge of burglary. prisoners were arraigned in the ville Police Court. They were Wall, Joseph Gordon; Joseph Schenedit” and Henry Kuppel, all of No. 31 Fourteenth street, and Robert Ht of No, 128 West oF rty-ninth ett The story told by the officers; | made the arrests, was that Ki went to the Fourteenth street house this” morning and asked the janitrees to show him any unoccupied rooms she might |” have to rent. He spent so much time fn examining the different rooms that the Janitress's suspicions were aroused. Bhe | left Kiernan for a moment and went 4 to her own apartments, meeting Schem~ eck coming from them, as it is alleged. ‘An examination disclosed that $10¢-whtch ~~~ Mrs. Wuernar kept in a bureau drawer had been taken. She at once seized — Kiernan, who had followed her, an@ © Scheneck and cailed for help. | In fe — sponse to her cries two policemen came, While the case was being exzlained to | 7 them, it is safd, Mrs, Wall came dowB- | j stairs with the missing money, whick A ‘ee sald Gordon had just given her. @bs and Gordon were then placed under 6 jp rest, Kippel, who lives in the same 9 house, was ala arrested, me?” BELLEVUE’S NEW COLLEGE. © struction of Buildings. In a few days’ time the work of teume | ing down the Inside of Bellevus aa Medical College, as it (s known, will begin, as the Inside portion ts to be @om= structed anew. Bids were opened to-day by P Brannan, of the hospital's Boar@ onstruction of the Inside of ¢he Dutt ing have been filed. It will remain four-story building and the out walls will not be touched. The two. lum. The p e two witnesses | apg aseea acl = itt gay hee was mete on te ee en |FORTUNB CAUSED DEATH, ne murder. They are Mabe er ee ecarns They, knew him by| ELKTON, Md., Nov. 6.-Overcome by|tion of the prigoners to palm off the haying seen him 60 oft en In the suourb, excitement at the prospect of receiving | “phony” ring for a good ring if the hey say they saw him abou fortune of $160,000, John H. Heaton, | tray of rings had been offered for thelr o'clock In the afternoon. Here is again | ® R , : H D ‘ Se a ton Edward: Mason ave [residing In a village south of here, died |'"aPection. + he can produce a dozen witnesses from |in the office of his attorney at Spring- plano factory to whow that Alan|field last night Heaton and his lawyer Pope Recelves New Yorkers. at the factory all afternogn, were mol over some papers relative to! ROME, Nov. &—The Pope to-day re- ye @udlence Mr. and Mrs. eee fe having worked there] dent Schur pawn ticket for the locket. first year The detectives say It was the inten- short time 1 be that recelved at the| per floors are to be made into day} ‘They remarked that their fellow e of retiroment, after that $1500 per| ries for the employees of the EE a AE a otto Re ci ouse of {workman had a Statue of Liberty tat-| year, the: oleate: oth = Hapabtioaa: House, of beer Tenet hand, and. as| ‘The professors who, in consequence of) and will be fitted up in the proved manner. BABY BOY DROWNED. scapoelita trea 4 si i 2 oe orisoner had the same mark on his] this ruse, will de retired next June are: LENOX, Maas, Nov. 6~-"Juck” Clark,| While the Republicags still adnero to|hund erat. Harrington went no further | Hiram Coron, profesor of | English ———- literature; Charles Mellen Tyler, sage) “che Sunday World is the four-year-old gon of J. W. E. Clark, |their claim of a majority of 26, Chalr-|in his quests on gent r Charter n Eeter 3 worked there from Sept. | professor of the histary of religion an 1 everybody. Sunday was drowned in a pit on the Jules Par- | man Griggs figures that the next House |, DOW Greg, He boarted at the Bit] Christian ethica: 1. P. Roberts, director 0 of Agriculture. and! reach all eyos and cover mingham, House, where a small soap] of the Colleg dean’ of tao, Gollega| Bota. 4 fonds hes ci ‘Mhe Beggan horse case came next. Campaign Committee, concedes t tooed on the back of hi sone place this afternoon. The Clarks: |will have 20 Republicans and 1s Dem: who have been spending the summer tor thi here, were to return to their home in/Ocrat#, or & majority of but M4 for the New York City in ‘a tow days. dominant patty, ~~... the handy man of labor ts In complete | 1, Hp Will 'rebili kk, pri i called on to answer for contempt of] nq absolute possession. ‘The city's|ackdemp Pharmacy, “wala: “Doughty | muy. percent of tho full amount ‘of his| WASHINGTON, Noy. 6—Chairman im, $433.0. Griggs, of the Democratic Congressional i with personal articles was! Francis M, Finch, = olan a ca ta enn ty a Bt me aaa tied