Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
4 n gave him a greenish pallor. i " Cornish cat with his face résting on his left hand, his two first fingers a caressing his cheek, his third finger and his little finger stretched across his if chin and occasionally pulling his under lip. g As the scathing arraignment fell from Gov. Black Cornish dropped his \ eyes. Ho could not look steadily at the tall, relentless, loose jointed, clean man, whose very manner betokerled a simple clean mind. + Circumstantially the Governor proved to be e skilful architect with "words. His defense of the woman from Brooklyn who swore she saw ’ Cornish mail the poison package was as surprising as it was earnest and | forceful. Nct in many cases has a lawyer spent nearly as much time in an endeavor to build up a circumstantial case against a man who has * never been arrested for a crime as he has in a direct endeavor to clear a client who has been twice indicted and once convicted of the same crime. | MOLINEUX’S ATTITUDE. : The attitude of Molineux while his counsel was endeavoring to put the * murder of Mrs. Adams up to another man was Interesting. He watched every gesture of Gov. Black's long arms, every expression on Gov. Black's striking face. He stretched out his arms and clasped the railing in front of him. '' MR. BLACK VERY DARING. In his closing, Gov. Black did a daring thing. He made the open as- + gertion that the case he had built up against Cornish was stronger than . the case upon which Molineux has been tried. Admitting that Molineux has _ been convicted once, indicted thrice, Gov. Black insisted that all this had been done on what he termed a “pitiful, contemptible array of evidence.” | He put Cornish as against Molineux as the murderer of Mrs, Adams and ! boldly declared that his client, on the showing, must be innocent. :BLACK POINTS TO CORNISH AS THE MAN WITH A MOTIVE. j AS oon as Justice Lambert took his) Dyke beard. 1 know It, Did he buy : 5 y to general | the bottle holder? I don't know. Was Peer, woeuo ne; then seta Pa he disguised? I don't know, but I do ! lal thie Mieaunea wcuea know wat the only man who knew hat | Bvals, altho at je holder would match Mr : Friday. After a| Rogers's silver was Cornish. a attern o silver on. Mrs. Rogers Veused, and at 10.271 o'clock Mr. Black | § rt fa ma 9 : he defense, He| pottle-holder said: "1 want a alfver bo! eiincerc Cpe ene Uehoider to match the wilver: on & is jady's dresser.’ emember a low : ay 1s Now gentlemen, don't ter your mint Sixiiiae cea RE jwander from the case. There can be an ‘Tmaginary case that will air your blood,| “Now for the mailing of the fatal ) Where is a real case, and the facts in | package. Who matied it? I don't he real cave point to another man, the | Know. Did the defendant? No, because Zeal men in the » whose name 1] he was not there. He was miles away. :Bhall name, The facte In the real case | “When Mra, Stephenson went on the ont’ to that man as unerrinzly as the dT didn't ask her If Cor- Reedie to the north star. No matter | o m she had seen What the weather or other conditions | With the fatal packfige, 1 recognized Nahe needle points. unerringly to the {{e gravity of such a charge, but when Worth Star and the facts in the real | Mr. Osborne asked her the question and ase (zreat emphasis) point to this man | Cornish was called upon to stand up, I {Bnd deviate from Molineux as the pols- Wan reltaved GErall sesponalbiiity, ie e poisol e told t e polsoner had Baer igs the man who eent the poison |e rown overcoat an, and Corian werted pa to cast the brown overcoat aside. When { Dfdn’t Buy Hottle-Holder. he found that Mra. Stephenson was put ng the brown overcoat on him he cami Lewhat ts the proof about the bottle?/on the stand and swore that he didme, *Emma Miller, the clerk in Hartdegen's| own any kind of an. overcoat at. that Jewelry store, swears that Molineux dld| time, Why? By AY RLOOaL Rt tae Hot buy the bottle-holder, And a word] that Brown overcoat Mra. Stephenson ;Bbout her I must offer a criticalm here | swore was the polson package! bf my learned opponent In this case, ‘When she was put on the stand the first Inconsiatenocies Alleged, question he asked her was if he had not} | - given her $150. I ask you if that was a] “Who would tell falsohoods in a case Hale "question: to put to. one who ike Unis must have a good memory, ‘ome across from New Jersey as a The practice f Corntah le plain begore intary witness, She sald she took the} you. The whole theory of the cuse against Money, but when she testified whe went | Am da that the package wus malled on Bhead and told the truth, Her ferry| the afternoon berore he got it at the fares were paid by the prosecution, but} club. It 9 teo late to charge that now. he told the truth just the same. And| Mra’ Stephenson says he was there, in fe said Molineux was not the purchaser | brown gvercoat, On the former trial bottle-holder, he sald he pissed the *post-oftice whout oe a ce cout the bottle pur-| 480 o'clock. "It's too dato to prove tht haser ‘I never saw Molineux before,’ I] he was somewhere else at that thme, but Son't want to take up your time with tries it. Oh, ho ito: would a ober) mi Inu ease Tike this 006000004600 resser. and the man who bought thae] ‘ $0006-0000-4000000000 POIDOGYODOPOIDSOOOHS 6; of the clty to Mr. Bigelow and his, ccl- jJeagues for thelr great contrtbutton of ot private benefaction so unusual as Library and the Tilden Trust to unite works of literary men and women which KO to complete the second most vaju- nerstone was laid was handed to Mayor ceremony an informal reception was held in the rooms of the trustees In the that at the busy man could tell at what time of Christmas no ur a. package this testimony, for there is not # singly rs fn this case to conppct | sp ave: Kood Jnemory, folltaty word "so this cage’ to conbel muah aga. Rave’ & kana uetmory. ‘one into the store where he-was qnow! © was a champlon of something. Vhere his friend Arnold was en ploy: A la‘the only one of those fn “Would, Molineux, if o Sylllvan's office who sald Cornish was there to buy the bottle-Holde: tere later than 4.20; and he says| Assailing Harry Cornish, people were pussing in’ and out of. the a . ' more | Pom all the ter He could not remem- | ‘And now I come Ae? pul ent to ber who it was that passed out. Here I Point, which am glad to Bh but to| another case of memory. So thejallbl you. Tam hi ay to pun ity a) {| foes to show, you would be made to Rellove. Crime Das been eviged cand in| eveve, that Cornish did not testify whall only so far as iow Kr Con what | Correctly, when he sald at the former @ humane and, gentle apirit, tell whit) tral that he passed the Post-Ofice Bernecannsty. bere yeaiie crimenane about 4.9) o'clock, All this belongs: in| Harry 8 Connish. ‘He has given us his arlegated terlimeny” about The brown riralt. ie must take It as true, 88 | overcoat Safe “knew in Boston a’ married | UNitOHTOeL No CRT aah ee sfwoman, Mrs, Small. She went to a:hos-| icoch; you have a negro toy unltormed Ital and lost her life, Cornish, pald| quing’ Samaria eae Meweo boy unitorme he bill, All this time she hada hus-| dee chmnds for Cornish: you have oband.And-Cornish, mind you, wax not | (Me,hottle of polkon, on Mrs Rogers's ; fifteen years old. He wus'a grown and | it the General Post-Ofhee: ¢ “mature man, sis trail begins in Bos-) What Mrs. Stephenson. sald ton, leads to Chicago and comes back | The man who malled that pac jto New York, and as he describes it] a browh: overcoat. Boe had? ts Ughtly, ‘on the usual ground,’ hin wife aun {got a’ divorce. With that record he ‘somes to New York and calls upon Mra,| |, ‘othing to stand now In the way of ogers, irs, Rogers was living with Eo ruaent 3) = Mrs. Rogers and Corn Bhé In gone “A few months Cornish js ensconsed|, “Why would Moline end the dru Wn Fighty-fourth sireec, sply. « block| to Cornish when he knew Cornish n fifrom Mrs, Hogers. They moved to Park|took it? Cornish swore on th a favenue and fved in’ the same. hi that he ne took bromo-seltze ‘What happened to Mrs, Rogers's a us rnig! poured the fatal dose into a {band? She got a separation and she and| glass. He gave {t to Mrs, Adams. Sho , Cornish; wey lived continuously in the/ sald, ‘That stuf tast gueer.” Cornish {game house from that time. Look a swallow and sald, “Phat stuft is id 1 all right." t Cally AC a) Motive: “He tells him he was very sick on the “No motive here? Mrs. Adams was alear. But he was not at hom jmood Woman and she grieved over the| Where he should by all probabliity hav ‘Beparation, for she loved her son-in-law. | been lying dead by the side of the dead yShe knew of Cornish's marriage in| Mrs, Adams. about age had rnish Nothing im Way Now. @ poor old woman | right lawyer. It {# a wise criminal who ane ie the mabe It is the one that art of waclety seeret of all ermes. | strikes deepest to the h J stamp this orlene ds one ef che moat Inte}lecutad What was Cornish’s thought that Corniéh would, siitely destroy waste-paper Adams would he not haye That was the Jo, bat at the murder Mrs. destroyed the wrapper nuatunal thing for him te suggestion of another man ho saved tbe Cornish to) Mrs. Adame, were yet Cornteh would ‘Lam golng to concelye @ plan. have to siy to himself: kill my goud ¢ whose home I liver for y criminal escape slightest ¢ ars and whom Lam going down man's address to-me Post-Otflee and mal it 3 down and mate his friends | |p that {¢ Cornish | 7P she would go down Kuborhood of ends could s nish Didn't Write Addrens, ow, then he gi package and know he 44 there. 1 J | bank feller, and bank tell sllverw: Boston and his history, and she grieved. | “It Is a wise erlminal who chooses the | them, “Who ds the fat was for this that t Havonia she let this viner Into her house? Tt was a shrewd talng } Would “she ‘tolerate ;such relations as ‘asistant. Diatrict-Attorney” for hey established? They ‘could not] Kin lawyer to conduct Ais recked empires ‘and ruined civilizations |). e. He i ee ere AMI, SCOTIDR RG ean | Was sate. iH T ean now fix it @ other motive and which Js the torney's office as my defender 1am motive that makes the| *#fe- fo Molineux ‘appear “as as Inet Black’s Closing Charge. |; “Mr, Osborne asks why don't you the funcral of Mrs, Adame? Why rove these things. I cannot pry open|he go to the services? Why? he door, 1 cannot pry Into family sec-/he, Cornish, didn’t have the ner jogers from this case. Look at it.{Mrs, Rogers have been together. Weparated from her hysbang and con-| “You ask me_to find the motive and] Pespuously living In the same house with] then the man, T have found the motive. Cornish. i fo motive you say? I cannot prove| found the man who wore the brown he secrets of the Rogers-Cornish-| overcoat—Corulsh. I have shown you jams home, but I refuse to eliminate}the min who hail in his employ a ‘ne- this Woman from the case, “On Dec. 21, 1898, a man bought a bot-| you everything that you have asked, holder in Newark. What did he say/ ‘lt is not for yo uto say whe AGH hi would re 9 Emma Miller? He sald he wanted &| Cornish is guilty or not. 1 ask you ottle holder to match the articles upon! only to say that Molineux §® not guilty. | lady's dreswer, and a few days later|The character and life of Roland B Very bottle holder appeared on Mrs. | Molineux must prevail against the weak ogers's dresser. Did not that fact sink| and unworthy picture we have been ato your brain when you heard the! shown of Harry Cornish. I ask you to testimony on this stand? earch your minds and say that all ¥ “You say Cornish did not have a Van| have tod you 1s true and jus OSBORNE’S SPEECH AS A DEFENSE OF H. S. CORNISH. ' Osborne began at 426 o'clock by have been in a position to say ‘that no- rT ting the Jury upon its patience | body could trace to him the possession Having reached the conclugion | of the bottle-holder and the poison, iabors. ‘He knew. the polson would be. dis- Approaching this case," he said to| covered; he thought he was safe for ors, “you should give the defend-| reasons other than any connected with the-body of his victim. Gov, Black {s ne consid-| mistaken when he says King was with ‘doubt, Use| Cornish the night of Dec. 23. He was Tamke of you.) with Cornish on the night ot Deo. 47, i 48 the testimony shows, and thero Is no his crime without detec«| stimony to show that Corntsh aid not jeved and grieved, for Cornish and|hastena to enlist in his Theneaeert We had the paying 8 bank and he don't. Tt is four y Rogers could not have married: if] prosecutor, the pala r of] cell wanted to. people. Neither teen OF Ng Would Mrs: Adams submit to that? r employed Mr, Metntyre up| tle holder four high, so broad and he wore a nvdwriting th booty “From the minute that t. pane UDA ee fepdwe t= | 3 y " § e for the Distriot-Atto Hrechad cuiives'and @ that has! neq's office as his counsel Mr, Cornish funtwelting: “Look at Cornish He's a big, strong, | upon some one, With the Dtstrict-At- |ne @ man who has no | ket mixed up in the EMMA GOLDMAN r of him? No. summer winds. “Why didn't he go there and attend|couldn't make polsoner out of t does this do when Mrs, Adams nds of his, but strangers. tthe paraphernalia of the ‘4 monument ts, but you must take {t all Into con-|didn't have the nerve. Since that time, | two. eration, I refuse to eliminate Mrs.|the burial of Mrs, Adams, Cornish and| Ho dell Police Stop Providence Meet- act of a guilty man? meane of Identifying the was Mrs. Rogers herself ete round une me vho was in ¢he| Was that th @ ity of the Post-OMme d he | Rave who Mrs th ro boy with a uniform. T have found| testi! of the contents of Cornish who but it was she. Black has unintenth about Cornish Corni ok T have sup- He thinks 1 can put ccording to Goy. tleyele squad, She went way without 3 sincere as he was w he charged that Mr. McIntyre had o the counsel for a red- no personal cared himself a: offense in the matter, to understand that T im conducting this case frankly and honestly have suppre! scent as to Miss’Goldman's destination, ‘ut the ticket agent gave the snap and as ably “Suppose your mother had been pots: had before that employed mo ina elvil action, would it be a crim- to me with your ‘o District-Attorney. » that he did not see any. in Cornish, who thing to come nif T MeInt evidence of - sic! looked about as usu “They talk about Cornieh not having matural that he should not want to. trude there, and that he should @o to the club, The trouble wit! ce in-| the meeting would be held. own common sense teaches you | hy Cor- | and lesb eomane & oneree ‘of, fg back severdl years n with this ¢ He tried to tell why he did not go to the funeral, put he defense would not permit him. “Dr. Philips: Adseiege that Cornish | Wan euftoriniy (rim cydnide of mercury Ralggn, and Te, Comn corroborated, thin fimony. Cornish was sfck.and he has been ppaved to have beon. sick. Helbtions win’ Mrn, Rowers. ‘Mes. Rogers, Mrs, Adams and Mr. Qornish Wed "in-the same /Nouse,” ‘That Was all, nnd enything wlse that may be Suld Is-pure conjecture, ‘Thore was. one witness here who yersined she was a Noréd ich who Ned ked for Mra Aclime—testified that relations of he peasant. My, Yocum, a reputable bus hess man who Ived" in the household fo some tUme, testified. tot same thing. Mr. Cornish boarded with Mre, Adams when she had other boarders. He and Mrs, Rogers knew each other. “If such evid points to anything then what man or woman can alumny! There is not the idence of any criminality be Commish and Mrs. Rogers e: tween M cept the hints of the defense tn this case. Nothing has been substantiated, nothing stand# against these people ex { the curious suspicions of the pe FORGETS WOUND JOCKEY SUES TO SAVE ANOTHER, | ‘Bleeding Profusely, Ambulance |Henry’s Case Against French Patient Helps Surgeon Work Over Attempted Suicide. If William Hutchinson, West Thirty-sixth street, ronovers from an attempt to commit sulslde be will partly, owe hie life to James Donnelly, of No, 432 West Thirty-seven: who, unmindful of a great gash under his own eye from which the blood flowed profusely, aided the surgeon to maintain artleficial respiration while the two were Henry, the American jockey, against the Jockey Club for $40,000 damages the result of his recent suspension came up before the Civil Court of the Seine to-day, The case was not discussed, arguments being set for Noy. 26. they “must come in contacy with, | The trials they ha unde must | ve been severe, and they have done | hing to deserve them, mW We Ket down to the facts of the * A Kindly lady comes here and you that she temembers ay min | irs ago. who: bumped into her, Sr| buen hot going tortell you anythink Uke that. 1am not going to tell you of a think | man who bumped into another mah and said in the Newark Jewelry store, ‘T want a silver bottle holder to match the on a tady's dresser,’ He might Just ag well he sald, ‘T want sl bottle holder that will match Mrs, Rogers's silver on her dresser. Do vou believe it? No, of course years after. Th desortbe the purchaser of th rs after. F beard, ‘That ds four years after DRIVEN FROM TOWN ing, Escort Her to Station and She Heads for New York. | (Spe@ia! to The Evening World.) PROVIDS: » Ro 1, Nov, 10—Bmma Iman, who made an igeffectual at- pt here last night to deliver an an histic address and was prevented by the police, left for Colonial Express at 10,08 thig morning. She was ¢ ed to the Union station by detective from Police Head- quarters and by a policeman of the making any further disturbance, She was accompanied to the station “by the wives of two local Anarchists, who at- tempted to throw the police off the She kissed her companions af- boarded the train. n lodged last light at the home af Join HH, Cook, a looal anarch- lat, and while she slept the house wan sufrounded by 4 cordon of police and detectlves, ready to: intercept any*move she might make to hold an anarchist meeting. ried t0, the house. last mght after the polige broke up. the gathering in-a down towhhalliat whien she was billed to speak, she defied t being carried to Roosevelt ifospitat. himself, was exhausted upon reaching the hospital, and was carried to « ect, ak from loss of blood. Donnelly was glass in the Mra, Arlund in ands of nls wil, ise she sald he had their thirteen-year-ol4 daughtor, AS arrested, and sald that her husband had been crink- ing and had abused the child when he came home. state of affairs has developed in con- nection with the thrashing of Col. Mose Wetmore by Peter Arlund, of this city, in the Planters’ Hotel at St. Louls last night. Mrs, Donnelly Working Over | and beautiful, sald to be his wife. The woman who Is sald to be the real Mrs. Arlund Is at the Arlund apartments in the St. Charles here, She says she knew nothing of the aftalr until she read abot It in the papers. Donnelly @ man rushe and sald that Hutchins rrholic acid and was dying, Keon put Donnelly Into the ambulance followed the man's directions Huwwhinson's home, where he used the stomach pump before starting for the COLD WAVE CREEPS NEARER. Hutchinson's Weather Bureau Warns cdénilition Became so critical on the way to the hospital that the surgeon resorted to artificial means to produce respiration, When he tired of working Hutchinson's arms, Donnelly | Bureau has issued the following bulle- un. through the bandages, worked earnestly to keep the man alive. yn lost his job recently and, tended over the upper Jakes, upper Mississippi Valley and the Middle West- ern States and will overspread the mid- " SLM TE aT a 4 ia Mita tS " wee iui! WOlbDI OWA” Kv ANNAN Gy IW VEatSiB 10,4962. FORMER GOV. BLACK TELLS THE JURY CORNISH HAD MOTIVE FOR CRIME. 2046 9984046054600O00G0G STONES LD Mayor Handles Silver Trowel Ceremony To - Day—Many _ Notable Persons Present. LIKE BRITISH” MUSEUM WII Be the Second Largest and Most Valuable Collection of Books In the World, with Astor, Tilden and Lenox ‘Foundation. ‘The corner-etone of the New York Public Library, comprising the Astor- Lenox-Tilden Mbraries, at the corner of Fifth aventto and Fortieth street, was ald this afternoon with great ceremony, many of the best-known Mterary men and women of the city as well as s0- clety ‘leaders being present. Mayor Seth Low was the principal on this oc- vasion, hundling the trowel. Among the guests present were the delegates from the Chamber of Com- merce, consisting of Albert V. Rollert and Vincent H. P. Kernell Barrington, the Board of Tustees, headed by Presl- dent John Bigelow, former Mayor Van Archbishop Farley and the Rev. Dr. Huntingtop, of the Grace Church. Following an appropriate prayer offered by Dr. Huntington, President Bigelow delivered an address,’-He was followed by Mayor Low, who said in par “The creation of a comprehenalve free Mbrary system for the cfty of New York 1s as remarkable in {ts origin as it is full of beneficent promise in its de- veiopment. I gladly avall myself of this opportunity to express the thanks time, and thought, and labor in this be- half. I know of nothing In tke history the agrecment of the Board of Trus- tees of the Astor Library, the Lenox In the promotion of the New York Public Tibrary won the Astor, Lenox and Tilden foundations.” i In a lengthy speech the Mayor com- ared the new Mbrary with the British Museum and sald many complimentary things about the values of the rarer able collection of books In the world, The silver trowel with which the cor- Low by Mr. Carriere. Following the brary. FOR $40,000. . Jockey Club Up in Court Is Postponed Until Nov. 25. PARIS, Nov. 10-The sult of Milton NOT HIS WIFE AT ALL. uinville and Not in St, Louis, (@pectal to The Evening World.) LOUISVILLE, Ky., Nov. 10.—A curtous Arfund resented an insult to a young in that a Nipp Frost In om the Way. WASHINGTON, Nov.10.—The Weather ¢ Northwestern cold wave has ex- coupled with about severt months ago, it unbala: his mind, He has been living son and daughter since his wife dle Mississippi and Ohio valleys, lower lake region and Interior of New York and western New England during the night and Tuesday. Jim Dumps moved on the first of , May. His household goods all went astray. The bread-box, teapot, frying-p: ‘Were lost within the moving van, “What shall we eat ?” wailed wife to him. “Why, ‘Force,’ of course,” cried “Sunny Jim.” ORCE ”’ ‘Tho Ready-to-Serve Ceneal ew York on the], fs queen of the May. , Sweet, crisp Males of wheat and malt, Couldn't Get Through the Day Without It, Horee Food, wn urea considerable authorities verbally and declared that She failed to make that threat Dr. Parkhurst, John D. Crfm-| LIBPARY CORNER ‘SILVERSMITHS OUT ‘DR, STEWART AT THFANY SHOP, LEAVE BELLEVUE Five Hundred Leave Factory Be- cause They Are Denied a and Speaks at Bryant Park! jVine-Hour Day. The silversmiths, chasers and finishers who are out on etrike for a nine-hour working day had another enthusiastic and Sixteenth street, to-day. It was reported to the meeting that the strike had spread to the shop of I. N. Deutsch & Co., tn Beventeenth street, where the finishers were already | out and the silversmiths were to go out at noon. It was reported that Henkel & Elcox, of Thirteenth street, had accepted the demands of thelr employees for the a strike. The chief Interest centred in the situa- tlon at Forest Hill, N. J., where the Tf- |fany works are located. The strikers here sent two represctatives there to report what happens. It was learned at the office of Tif- fany & Co, to-day that word was sent to the factory thia morning that “the house could not consider the demands made by its employees.” The threatened strike of sllversmiths at Tiffany & Co.'s plant at Forest Hill, N. J., was Inaugurated toils afternoon. The strikers number 500. Five hundrea silversmiths of the seven hundreg employed ay the factory of Tiffany & Co. in what is known as Forest Hill, went on strike this after- |noon, “Thé ‘superintendent had told | them that no change in the time sched- ule could be made, and when the whis- Ue blew only isi ‘of the 100 employees responded. |" The superintendent of ‘Tiffany's said | to an Evening World reporter: “We do ‘not look upon this us a strike. The men have discharged themselves, and we will have to look for others to fill thelr places, As to what shape we are In for the holiday trade, It would not be business to say. PATROLMAN KANE “BROKE.” “The Worst Record in the Depart- ment,” Says Partridge. Police Commissioner Partridge an- nounced this afternoon that he hed ordered the dismissal of Patrolman James 8. Kane, of the Bast Sixty- seventh street pollce station, from the force, About six months ago Kane was dis: missed from the forces by the Commis sioner on the recommendation of for- mer Deputy Commissioner Thurston. Upon advice of Corporation Counsel Rives, the Commissioner reinstated Kane two weeks ago Previous to Kane's first dismissal he had against him elgbteen charges, most of them meetng in Teutonia Hail, Third avenue nine-hour day and had thereby avolded! < ge a ead 1 Hands In His Resignation on Being Superseded by His-As- sistant as Superintendent, Much surprise ie tahed at the an- nouncement that Dr. George Taylor Stewart Is to sever all connectigns with Bellevue Hospital on Jan. 1. Dr. Stew- art's resignation was handed to the Board of Trystees yesterday, following his deposition from the position of superintendent. When Dr, Stewart removed, his assistant, Michael J. Rilckard, was named to succeed him. The former Superintendent was nominally placed in charge of the allled city hospitals, but a dingy little office, with one desk, one chair and no other conventences, was the best that was given him at Belle- vue. Feeling that the trastees wished to emphasize thelr disapproval of him, Dr. Stewart tendered his resignation. It has long been apparent that the superin- tengent and the trustees were not in harmony. Dr. Stewart was appointed three years age by Commissioner of Charities John Y Reiter, following ‘the exposure. of the Inefficient management at Bellevue. Charities Commissioner Homer Folks, oicto ‘member. of the, Board pt “True: officio member of the Boa (een of Bellevue. and Allie’. Hospitals, mare an admission this afternoon that Indicated that the Board had asked D: Stewart to resign. There have been rumors to the effect that Commissioner Folke wanted Dr. stewart to resign, ang that he had advised President Brannan to get rid of Stewart. Asked whether he had applied his_ influence to this end, Commlesioner Folks re- piled: Ne more, than the other members of ¢_ Board. “Then the Board did request Dr. Stewart to resign,” was suggested, “I'l refer you to Dr. Brannan ‘for that information. “replied Mr, Folke. “He's the spokesman of the Boant.” mmissoner Folks said the Board of Trustees would meet next Thursday ang then probably Dr. Stewart's re nation would be acted on. Died as He Ordered Dinner. Solomon Frank, sixty-two years old, a carriage merchant, of No. 237 West Seventy-first street, was stricken with apoplexy while ordering his dinner in the restaurant of the Harlem Central Hotel, One Hundred and Twenty-fitth street and Park avenue, this afternoon, and died before medical assistance could be summoned, : eS Roy Admits Stealing Matt. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Nov, 0.— Emil Banse. fourteen years old, a son, of Frank Banse, of Powers street, ts in Jail here charged with rifling 2 mail’ potich stolen from in front of the post- office Thursday. He admits his guilt. being for absence from post.. Last ‘Thursday Kane was brought before the Commissioner on two new charges for alleged violation of the Department rules, which it was sald had occurred during the two weeks of his reinstate- ment. The Commissioner sald he thought Kane had the worst record of any policeman in the Department Ghe Famous Ruszits Fars st 18, 15, & 77 Mercer St., Nar Grand Bt, ‘New York, The Forsythe Waist. Special Sale, 3 DAYS ONLY, 500 Flannel Waists $3.75. Marked down from $5.00 & $7.00. John Forsythe, THE WAIST HOUSE, 865 Broadway, 17th and 18th Sts. Establiched 1851. Retailed at the Shoe Dept. Tues, and Wed,, Nov. r1th & rath. a 1,000 pairs ° Women's Viet Kid, Box CalfandEnamel| Leather Boots, $2.85, , va & Taylor, Broadway. @ 20th 6t. Py ‘A Special Oriental Bargain. j00E xtra Fine Large Kardisian Rugs, b2 5. OO cach, Rugs worth from $40 to $50 can be selected from this lot 100 Turkish and Persian Carpets, gx12 to raxi5 ft, $75, 8125, exceptional value, 200 Karabagh Rugs, , 5S. OO each. Commencing Monday Afternoon, Nov. roth, **" Lord & Taylor, Broadway & 20th Bt. \4/\" CANDY - SPECIAL FOR MONDAY. Molasres Cream Bumps Hivos: 10¢ Sab. 18 i} *