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F maacte ee: SENT TO PRSON ~ F. B. Hesse and W. H. Jewell, in _ Default of $28,000 Bail, Will Be Held Till They Satisfy {Judgments Against Them. jy oie ishY “Suit WAS OVER SECURITIES. BP chacie Made in Court that Cer- 3 tain Railroad Stocks Left with ‘+> ‘Them Had Not Been Accounted @) For. Fernando B. Hesse and Walter H.) Jewell, brokers, at No. 44 Broad street, | the Are in Ludlow street jail for lack of $28,000 ball, having been arrested on at- tachments against the person granted by Justice Scott, of the Supreme Court. Judgments were obtained against the brokers by David H. Lamman and SWalter 8. Gardner. Gardner's judg-| Ment was for $13,134.02 to rect } intrusted to Hesse ff Lamiman’s judgment Hf} fore*Vudge Walsh in the First District Court, Brooklyn, Inst Ma: for ty ‘On the iatter Justice Freedman tasued an order of arrest. Are Sent to Jath Fernando B. Hesse is a member of ‘the Consolidated Stock e and Myes at No. 214 West Ninety-second HH atreet. Welter H. Jewell lives at No 2 West One Hundred and Seventeenth street. A deputy Sheriff arrested them under Pthe judgments are pald “Hesee and Jewell were arrested by | ‘the Sheriff of w York County, Lawyer Frederick B. Campbell, counsel | for David H, Lamman, on a judgment fdeeued against thelr persons Peeharge ts much the same as that ed by Waiter S. diner, conve of stock." | Falled to Appear in Sait , \ Hesse & Jewell, doing business @ Btoad streot @hange brokers, fa ult brought against them by Mr, Gar @iner, who claims that upon leaving firm in which he was « partner h nt Riso held 10) sha Northern Pacitic F 3 mmon stock | pad Comp all of which he asserts the defendants “un- lawtu!ly an tly converted and “B@sposed of. it was made to-day or Amount, 4, for which Mr. Lamman has secured judgment. “L"DIIDEND TOGO. Directors at January Meeting | | Rate, Wall Street Hears. | ‘A Wall street repost that appears to |rast of well authenticated is to the effect |McAnemey, that the Manhattan “L" directors, hav. |Rothlng to do with the crime, but police suspected they had, because os Mready incrensed the dividend rate |the suppowcd hand they took to robbing 4 —_ s4 per cent to 6 per cent., vwill | meet early in January and order an- | | other increase’to 7 per cent. This in- e dod rato Jp to govern until the | @earantee of seven per cent. from the whorough co ny goes “into effect Jap. 4, .1908, 3 the provisions of the lease of the B aManhattan by the Interboroug! the stockholders of the “f"' are to the receipts of the road trom April Fi¥4.1 1908, to Jan, 1, 1906, up to an amount) al to 7 per cent. on their holdings. ‘The proposed action of the “L" Ro irectors’ will’ establish the 7 per cent - Fate from Jan. 1 next to Jan. 1, 1903, It | fs said that the dividend periods of Man- will be changed at this mecting Riek: April, July and October, — | s Finance at the Firat | Meeting in New Home. @ was a large atteudance to-day | the first regular meetin ber of Commerce in Its new home, @ Liberty street, PPresident Morris K. Jesup presided| delivered an introductory address of ome. Vice-President J. Fdward| 8 occupied a piace beside Mr. | @ Hsing vote the Chamber elected dent Alexander EB. Orr an hoi member on a motion Charl Smith, * fohn Harsen Rhoades, chairman of t! tee on Finance and Curr: ted-a measure to provide aga! Honey situation’ similar to the o id that the Secreta Treasury, In his recent repor position In most particulars 1n nent with the recommendations of port submitted by his committee. a SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAO FOR TO-DAY. +:T.OT{Sun eete...4.34)Moon aets...8.47 ‘THE TIDES, High Water. Low Water AM. PM. 847 4.31 428 5.09 658 Gal iF NEW YORK. ARRIVED. Antwerp Mobtie. {New ‘Orleans Boston [ FOR THOMAS TOBIN, ON TRIAL BEHEADING MAN “Butch” Tobin, Who Mangled and Attempted to Burn the Body of J. B. Craft, Pleads Insanity Without Avail. STOCK BROKERS ‘ON TRIA SANE,@ SAYS PROSECUTOR. Man Who Figured as Chicf Butcher | In New York's Most Tragedy Has No Other Defense in Effort to Avoid the Death Chair. | Thomas Kelly, cut off the head of threw ft Into a tu preme Court t ND DANCER OF - A OML FAMINE Normal Daily Supply for This Greater New York, but There Is No Reserve. BUT PRICE MAY STAY UP. | Heavy Consumers Have the Call and Must Hustle—French Mine Strike May Affect Us, Too. In the ten days Just past 242,000 to: Pennsylvania mines. Now that navi- gation has closed In the canals and small Jakes in the North a larger supply 1s available. Unless the dealers and opera- tors resort to underhand work there In no danger, according to the best author- ity of a coal famine, even should the and Jewell, and| 1s obtained be- | 4 and addressed Justice Daly. | there appe jany Immediate reduction in price, He argued that Tobi been Insane y furnace anthra | York Ci 1 been arrested Tobin went crazy was then relea mission should be STOLE COAL FROM TAUGHT HIS SON AE. MORGAN BX TO USE A JIM Flynn Took Anthracite He Had Been Ordered to Deliver at Trinity Rector’s Home. | an order committing them to jail unt!l present state of mind. Declares He In Sane. Assistant: District-At nees of mental 4 yuld be time point a commission. |the strike Ex-Convict and His Eighteen- Year-Old Son Arrested 1 the trial procs on Sheriff! Van- 1.—By the ar- , an ex-convict, s belng tmpiicated in the pollee dis- » Who ts a noted! his elghteen- cloys and brutal. an the hands of the defendants ficates for 2,00 shares common stock | Cratt of the Reading Raliroad Company. He for a good time, | {sumers and private p Trinity Chur wvered that the excursions drifi MOP OT MLC Uh sninth street dive, where | Adel, into unconsclousness Count of the judament for the lesser |and was th¥n robbed, his head cut from on, the man was | from which tt was rescued by the pullce, | the boy to follow in his | partly cremated Women the Chief Witne Tobin's brother, Robert S$, Kelly, a the Empire, the bartender, Firet avenue, » both under arrest. | oir home, Wo. 166 amoung.ef pail | ¥ | MoAnerney, t were jointly | 10 be lonien who wan the| Pu, hs hand for the murder b Ustory he fi the Coroner's Jur; ‘e women Who wero In the Empire muner will cred the theft household went to and complains ad night of Dec. 2 | | the nigh (mounted to, $890 wo | State's a wall of the | Ratlroad, where, it | had hidden It. { residences of New- oughout the night, and Will Establish 7 Per Cent.) hous: ins and MeAnerney coiptw and gave in alcohol stupor, ore the murder, burgiurs, and the | nis was short The disappearanc and a roll of money resulted in the Robert Kelly, or They maintained they had | that tt} other fve tons Fave of the gang responsible for FUNERAL LIKE A SCENE IN ITALY, —_— TOBIN TRIED TO KILL HENRY KING IN TOMBS. BIG WAR GAME IS NOW UNDER WAY, Rear-Admiral Sumner Is to Sail Mulberry Street Turns Out in Force to Honor Memory of Its Dead “King.” Henry W. Unger, of Levy & Unger, ayndi- |Counsel for “Butch” Tobin, made public to-day the facts of a murderous assault comanitted by Tobin In the ‘Tombs two at Daylight To-Morrow to Seize an American Seaport. |tried to kill Henry J two sisters at th New York Founding son of wealthy parents who PORT OF SPATN, Isin nd qt Trintd end turned out to-day Rafael Bove, for, years Ww King of Mulberry Bend,” ng subjects showed that conyleted of Kpet in che known as th AMBER OF COMMERCE. {th Ted of the © nd denounced it ame! Kagle this n who iad also) ¢, ing the muntoation with | of the crime BE che ona or Ie was borne on the shoulders of the pall-be: large force of fea with f "no keeper and would } him right th strength of four | ¢ from King, who 1 four carriages | Behind the casket has not Indt- keepers to pull” Tobin 5 | Torquata Tasso, Five Points Social Club and a long !tne of carriages con- Conspicuous among Me says furt that | sauadre at 6 o'clock to-m taining mourners for he or Mr. After Monday Thin Smoke Nu: Hall politictan, Yhe body wi of the ‘Transfiguration, at Mulberry gtrents, e to have at least two | exit fr |feit that the with the United FIREBUG AT NINETY-EIGHT. [te t|Awed Ohio Man Held on a Charge ‘ds with them, ——— carried to the Church whero Fathers Cop- [ala and Bernadine celebrated a requiem The Interment was in yo Thousands of Italians the streets through which the procession Most of them wore mourning ew on thelr arma, was born in Naples in 1846, on the Stow to New York, . he opened a cafe, and |in time became wealthy and Influential, 2nd) He was nid to control an vote In thie alty, | HUNG TROUSERS ON GAS JET. Was Found Saffocated by his Morning. jgnace Lineman, tifty-waven y e course and spo; hen out of sight TOLEDO, O., Dec. 4.—Contessing that | { PNoiatene (oh Wierat- ho sot fire to several houses in hia| nelghborhood It ta often the oase that the cou O'Callaghan, | of the warships la followed by of this city, now held.in the County Jail in default of bond to await his trial on the charge | sink Imm #>1, or that it be burned, worked nen While apparently sane in every other y, O'Callaghan for wetting fre arranged In thelr boing read on eseveral other ‘oyed houses in w similar manner The State Fire Mapshal took up the caus and fipally Induced O'Callaghan to | |}! Grand Jury indicted him. END FRAN | pany into borty In Cuba ee CHISE TAX PLEA. Decision Not Expected Before the ary ‘Term, ALBANY, N. Y., Dec, 4—The arg! ment n.the Franchise Tax ap; Newton Fiero com- limited in regard to time, PRELATE SWOONS In Lords. West Broadway, was found dead in bed having beer Lineman was married, but where his Inhop of Canterbury Pybr- jo Kpeakin While apeaking on went to bed he hung his trousers on a «as jet and in doing so had evidently LONDON, Deo, 4. turned the mas kay, ilitten, “Gibralter, : anderson, Bordeaux. rkwonvitie, ‘Olhraltar. to the question of constitutional no particular |, the Btate or He cited numer- lecisions to bear out his con-| would have ¥, de. the education bill -day the Archbishop pf Canter- was avercome and fallen had it not paengtor ——_——- Dropped Dead of the Old 8h weather become extremely cold, but to be Uttle ikellhood of A year ago to-d y stove, nut, egg and shipped In us is 1 $7.50 to $9.50 a ton, upon the urgency of the need or It on the part of the consumer. ike was settled the deal- ers that anthracite should Le selling at $6.50 a ton on Dec. 1. Why this rice does not prevail 1s for the dealers |to explain, and they refuse to explaln, Heavy Consumers Cause Seare!ty. W. Saward, editor of the Coat udes Journal, says that the high price ofc is due to a retty which even the henvy shipments since the close of ve been insufMetent to Mi This scarcity, he says, will continue in a measure all winter, be- cause heavy consumers will absorb tho buik of the supply as it arrives day by day, “Before the month of December shall have expired the local situation oug! onsiderably,”” sald Mr. Sawarid There {s just as much coi ing In as there was at this time [xet eserve supply. during the sum:ner, when ble con- ans whd use al in a season are generaliy stocking up, there was no anthracite coming Into New York. from ten to fifty tons of ¢ jit It should turn cold these consumers will demand and receive all the coal {coming In, By that I mean to say that the supply that reaches New York every morning will, practically, tf not ypaoluimly be. smoke and ashes within | wenty-four hours. Th 1s no prospect of getting another reserve supply until of tie yards and the bina of consumers. jp) No Famine in sight. “Bat ‘there is no cause for alarm. SufMictent coal fs coming in to meet the; of the United State demands of the city. Thp dealers are working all thelr carts and as many | more as they can hire. Talk of an Im- ding famine has no basis in fact." Strange as it may seem, the local sit- uation Is complicated by the ggeat strike pf the coal miners in France. It ts sald that the French supply js exhausted and that negotlations are on foot to ship coal from this country to France, If the deal should go through the French would doubtless offer a price for coal that would result {n more profit to the whole- | salers than would sales to local con- sumers, Mr. Edward Berwynd, of the Morgan! firm, is In France looking over the sltu- ation. “It 1s sald that upon his report} will be based the action of the coal salesmen. If we should have to divide our supply with France the prevailing price of coal would continue all winie: or perhaps go higher. Welsh Coal Offered, Rarber & Co, steamship agents, te day Issued a circular to coal de: throughout the United States, offering Welsh anthracite at @ price that puts in peril the product of domestic mines. Tho prices quoted in the circular are as follows : Welsh anthracite, big vein, large colliery fereancd Red velas esses Gas slack or am Coklag slack or Heltah Admiralty amaliassccc ccc BR | This Is the small obtained ‘after the | large is sereened, as used by the British | Government, being considered the best | steam coals. ‘Tho coal ts offered in cargo lote or several persons may unite in buying a cargo. ___.—— NO MORE SOFT COAL ON “L.” nce WAM Be Abate, After next Monday the Manhattan Elevated Railroad Company has prom- lined the Health Department not to burn any more soft coal in {ts locomotives, fiealth Commissioner Lederle has re- gelved from the manager of the ele- vated road @ letter in whic nald that the company had made arrange- mente whereby “it, would then have a dumMotent supply of hard o The en- ines Of tae, Ninth avenue ‘Iing have eon burning @ mixture of soft and a hard ce os NO WOMAN IN THE CASE. Gorman Dined with a Male Friend nnd It Wan Too Late to Go Home, ‘An Investigation made, by the officiate of the New York Central Railroad Com- the death of thelr frelght gent, William H. Gorman, who. was found asphyxiated in a room In the ffotel Royal, No, 29 West Twenty-sev- Season Is Being Shipped to. that is Why the Householder | of anthracite coal in domestic sizes have | }been dumped into this city from the cite was selling in, New| for $3 a ton and the same y the ~-tce of these | , United St {to revire the s r, The trouble ts that there fs no“ larst |States in the Geneva arbitration, and {sition amc jthe United States ®! saved the Ives of two children in a NCE PLUM FOR “LAWYER BUTLER ‘He Is Appointed Official Report- er of the Supreme Court at | Washington at $7,500 a Year and Perquisites. FATHER WAS AN AUTHOR. Only Nine Men Have Held the Life Position, Which Is One of the Most Desirable in the Federal Service. . Charles Henry Butler, an_ attorney with offices at No. 135 Broadway and whose especial practice has been in the |Federal Courts, was to-day appointed [reporter of the decisions of the Su- preme Court of the United Btates In Washington. ‘The appointment to this |position {s for Ife. Mr. Butler ts the jninth man to hold the position, his eight predecessors all having filled the place a decade or more, All of them have been distinguished lawyers and thetr names are perhaps untry than are the names of the * whom they reported. ivcessful execittion of the duties develying iipon the Supreme Court re- ter requ! h standard of ability. He must arrange and classify the case as the de 1s frequently a congulting attorney for the Justices themse ~ J. C. Bancroft Davis, the last re- porter, resigned seve being over efghty years old. Mr. Bi ler was the | the Anglo-American Joint High Com- mission in 1898 and 1899 and is the au- thor of the recent standard work on The Treaty-Making Power of the Mr. Bu is the son of William Allen Butler, the author, who died a few weeks ago, and the § n of Benja- min F. But! of the commissioners ws of this State, Attorney-Gen- an der Dallas compll nt volumes of the decisions preme Court. He was a Revolutionary ero. Later he ti ccretary of the sury under Pre: M resident of the United Svates in I Wiliam fodd Otto, of Indiana, was r porter front 1876 to 1882 Juternational Arbitratio ting the «depu yn, Geor the ion 0} we Mr. Davis, wi held the positio: than any other warm weather ailows the stocking up | >) inte Lo Wout He was counsel for the Iso Assistant Sccrevary tek Minis! any and a member Court of Claims. He fa a nephew of George Bancroft, the historian, The salary and allowances of the pe nt to avout $7.50 a year, be- sides the valus # pudiication of upreme Court re to ports. Mr. Butler was not Jn ts clty this afternoon, but at his office it was sald that it hud been known several days they NOTED ranklin Babcock Noyes Victim of Apoplex>. Conn., Dec, 4.—Frank- , formerly prominent Mroad circles as TONI 1 Babes New Paymaster pf the Old New York, Prov- idence and Boston Rallroad Company, 1 to-day of apo y sidence » He was 8 r was Stat term of ( Conn arge E. Lounsbury nyes of Rhode Island, an Col, Thomas oMecer of the Army of the Revolut! KEPT HER CHILDREN. The Right Food Brought Them Back to Health, Food purchased from curiosity family ‘in Ulysses, W! The mother says: “We had bought a package of Grape-Nuts, attracted by its pleasant, suggestive name, and found it a pleasant food. As my five-months-old baby liked it, I fed it to her, and found it as satisfactory as Baby Food, which I had been using, and paying 50c. for a much smaller package, “Shortly after this three of the children came down with the whoop- ing-cough, my oldest one was taken with pneumonia, and the little three- year-old strained her stomach in some manner, so that she vomited blood and could not retain anything on her stomach. She continuously erled with hunger, and it was terri- ble to see her grow weaker and weaker, until she did- not have strength to keep her eyes open, I was 80 overworked nursing all of them night and day that I finally woke up to the spat that a change must be wrought, and that at once. | “T shall always belléve that divine inspiration whispered ‘Grape-Nuts, At first I did not give the solid part; I poured boiling water on tt ant tet {t stand until the water had drawn. out ome of the strength, added some rich; sweet cream and gave the little | Asso. miliar In the lower courts of | ns are given and| 1 weeks ago, he} 1 expert connected with | EDITOR DEAD. Charles H. Dow, Founder of Financial News Agency, Dies of Cerebral Trouble. The death of Charles H. Dow, the founder of the Wall street news-gather- ing firm of Dow, Jones & Co., and of the Wall Street Journal, was annothced to-day. Mr, Dow died at his home, No. 161 Lefferts place, Brooklyn, at 5 A. M. of cerebral thrombosis, having been W for a lttle over a month from the trouble, the first sign of which was an attack of nervous prostration. Death was finally caused by a clot of blood at the base of the brain. Mr. Dow was born in Connecticut in 1851. When he was six years old his father died, leaving his mother with a small farm, and the boy, when he be- came old enough to start out, tried various occupations, finally becoming a reporter on the Springfleld Republican, when Samuel Bowles was editor. There he was schooled In the newspaper busl- ness together with several others who thave made a success In New York, After making a reputation as a finan- clal writer in Wall street he became connected with the Kiernan News Agence: but soon decided to ‘ablish 4 bureau on lines of his own ideas. ating himself with Edward D. Jones and Cha 's H. Bergstrasser he , the iirm of which he was the late head. He was at one time a member of the New York Stock Exchange and of the firm of Goodbody, Glyn & Dow. Mr. Dow 1s survived by his widow and his mothe ————__ Pension Fund Increased, WASHINGTON, Dec. 4—The House Committee on Appropriations has agreed upon the Pension Appropria- ton bi te “appropriaves, $130,847,000, which {8 $5,370 more than for the cur- | rent year. EXTRA SPECIAL sartrosy. (. WINDOW A SEAT. Worth $1.50. tates under Prest- | Buren from 1833} f that time | He was a mem- | ap | ic Ser- | retary, General Ticket Agent and | handles of pearl, ivory and jmatural wood, solid silver |trimmings, gun metal and |solid silver caps, fine natural wood handles, solid silver trimmings, Lord & Taylor, WALL STREET ° |TRAINMEN WILL DEMAND ADVANCE, Grand Master Morrissey Denles, However, that a Great Fed- eration Is Now Under Way. CLEVELAND, 0. Dec, 4.—Grang Master P. H. Morrissey, of the Broth erhood of Railway Tralnment, to-day dictated the following statement re fsarding the reported combined move- ment on the part of the four leading organizations of railway employees to secure an advance of wages for their 170,000 members: “The reports from Chicago, that 17\< 000 men, represented by the established railway labor organizations, were forming a combination for the purpose of making a concerted demand for in- creased wages on the railway companies in the territory west of Chicago, are not authoritative and no such movement 4s In contemplation.” Conductors and trainmen contemplate presenting requests for increased wages to lines in the west ern territory with- in @ ehort time, but the procedure will be regular and orderly, and in ace cordance with the established rules an customs of the Order of Railway Con- ductors and Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, Other individual organtaa- tions, in different parts of the territory, may have similar requests tn course of preparation, and from the character of these organiztaoisn we are confident that agreements will be reached with= out any friction or serious misundere standing. —_—$—=—__- Julian Ralph Much Better, ST. LOUIS, Dec. 4.—It was stated at the Southern Hotel this morning that |Jullan Ralph, the newspaper correspond- lent, who suffered a severe hemprrhage last night, is much improved. His wife 1s expected to arrive here to-day, This pretty Window Seat, made in ma- hogany or ok frame, seat covered with fine quality fartcy veldur fastened with brass nails, actual value $1.50, for Friday and Saturday only, one to each customer, at this price, Ss4c. CASH or CREDIT. UNTIL XMAS OPEN TILL 9 P. M, EVERY NIGHT. Saturdays as usual till 10, LAS 359-541 EIGHTH Ae. , Northwest Corner 37th St. and 8th Ave. Open Saturday Sale of All Silk Umbrellas. 26-inch Frames For Women; 2,95, value $4.00, 28-inch Frames for Men; $2.95, value $4.00, One Dollar A WEEK WILL BUY All kinds of Watches, Rings, Chains, Lockets at lower prices than elsewhere. Everything is represented, T.KELLY 263 Sixth Ave.,° Near 17th St. Open Saturday Evening. Broadway & 20th St. enth street, contradicts the statemuns first made by the police that he hed been in tite place with a-woman, ‘Pho report made to the railroad by ita goneral agent, George A, Pray, is that Gorman wem tg the ace earl; ihthe evening with fy A, Curry, ent 1 in the same offide with Gorman, wad “chat after dinner there they: went to the theatre and returned to the otal or supper, Mr, Pray. ine cimplosees of the tig od tel rated ira Donahue; the, housek ee gate seers Goraae ty ease was in he one, a few spoonfuls at a time, Sho kept 1t down and {t nourished her, so that after a while I could feed ‘her. the Grape-Nuts themselves until she got strong, and she !s to-day as rugged ad I could wish. Meanwhile ne oldest, girl was unable to turn er head or swallow solid food, and for weeks her strength was kept by Grape-Nuts softened in cream, ven & gpoonful at a time, until ahi got strong enough to take other food. orld ‘They are both well and strong now;| , and I feel that I owe Grape-Nuts for’ t healthy ebildren,”| ADVERTISE FOR «, Cooks and Waiters THROUGH Sollee’ World Wants Work ‘ jai: Monaay Morning Wonders IF YOU NEED AN OFFICE BOY OR AN ERRAND BOY, AN AD, IN THE SUNDAY WORLD WILL GIVE YoU YOUR OHOICE FROM AMONG HUN- DREDS. Wants. osm Drom, Na ar “tugitsh th Paso ae if ie