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} } MILLIONAIRE BANKER NO LONGER POLITICIAN. MKF. CARROL - QUITS POLIT. Business Interests Are More; Important, and Then He May Lay Foundation for a Social Staircase for His Palace. | (HIS HOUSE COST $600,000. | | We Very Rich, a Banker Now, and) Associated in Great Enterprises, 80 He's Going to Forget Some of) the Past. | + John F. Carroll is out of politics once {nd for all. He iv milltonaire. He has social aspirations. He has bullt himself @ palace for $900,000 next to the granite! Pile of the late Collls P. Huntington at No, 8 East Fifty-seventh street. His Disiness Interests arc enormous. He is a banker, the friend of Charles W. Morse, the owner of the biggest string of banks in the world. of in THE WORLD: SATURDAY EV 108 FOR SOLO AND SOLOMON, ‘The remarkable | Clark, art |Augustus Clark Further Compli- cates His Suit Against His, Previously Much-Married Wife by Filing an Allegation. \BRIEFLY IT SPELLS DRUNK.| Meanwhile She Is Suing Him, and So) is, Mrs, Campbello, ‘Vho Says He Owes Her Money, Which He Bor! rowed. It of Augustus W. | expert, for an annulment his marriage to Jullette Letitia Chil | ton Tuttle-Wright-Havens-Clark, whose | three previous husbands are still ving Plattsburg, Philadelphia and New- port, has taken another unusual turn Cc loravious divorces were married after alx-year courtship by the pastor of the | heroine of three al lark and the fair oe ENING, DECEMBER 20, 1902. | MME. HUMBERT AND HUSBAND WHO PERPETRATED THE GREAT $10,000,000 SWINDLE IN PARIS. CF OF HRS, CM Guard of Honor from Memo Association Marched & the Hearse from Train Steamboat in Jersey City. TAKEN BY BOAT TO THE TOMI It Will Be Laid to Rest In thd Sarcophagus There To-Mor with Impressive Services and Notable Attendance. Accompanied only by the Smmi relatives, the body of Mrs. Julla Dent Grant was conveyed to Jersey City, in special car of the Pennsylvania road from Washington late this afters | noon. The sad funeral party was met | at the station by a guard of honor from — the Grant Memorial Association, whlete marohed beside the hearse, bs 4 Thousands of sympathetic sightseers “Te, Why should John F. Carroll stay long- iwestninster, Presbyterian \Church, int t eeronged aout the brocerion and 4 2 cil take him «: a ‘ rit. | to the y _¥Y- piiker in politics? It will take him some West Twenty-third street, Inst April Se fn of her enormous sclously embodied in thelr Judgments the | marching slowly at a respectful distanes: ‘time to wipe off the myd that has been | She says she “married Gus to get rid sential facet that the vast estate dtwelf | ne 2° hurled at him while he was amassing| Seininny becnuseche was always coming (Continued from First Page.) two Amertcans, Henry and) ¢ r with heads bowed and uncovered as the: BO "ine great fortune that is yow his. His| around to her agartments In Fitth’ave-| — Robert Crawford, produced a will welt) onish! it no ona| body was taken on the Government aspiration to take the chair of Richard | seer nopperfanely and. updetting her |(aow from some of the most prominent |ter and signed by the late Henry Tob: | nown either the late/ateamer Gen. Melgs m! ee ‘ a a cap of Pa Trawt oi yn up, Uke vford, the: tes! . Croker Ahdveule Tammany, Hallas! its Bran She save he “apolled her en- {Diners and capttalists of Paris, All ert Crawf oe drawn up, Uke the former | ped coan iu AL In Shadow of/the Tomb. Piatensolute despot has been defeated. In i fa to half a dozen. wealthy {tls Was done upon the sole security of Nice, and of the same date, By oh. vet there phantom! Noe q sound was’ to be heard as the “18 hig own district-the Twenty-ninth— hol SLB tM dla nen ¥ Ja zealously guarded but empty safe. iN the testator bequeathed to hia | piaintifis and defeniants have bean ex] 0 So. Tage ite way into mils > y men. yoines ory Soe awe {ocnting wills and legal summonses, an; : '’"ehere were insurgents gunning for him Tn thren weeks he left her ina huff be-| The Mumberts Well Connected. proinenes wa, Henry and Robert Craw ling the alleged complicity of judicial of-| stream and up the North Rivers 40 8 That’ a eht- fh + ord, and to 3 Mu younse! als hove been signing and conte: night and day. What's the use of fight cause their marriage was published. She} M. Frederic Humbert ts an ex-Deputy |aigtor, Mile. Marie d’Aurignac, the whoe Se inetent Ma without any one be | landing near the tomb In Ri ing Murphy any longer with probable defeat aheag of him when he can retire| to Millionaires’ Row and Indulge him- self further In that golden silence which | helped to transform him from a petty} wi ani : clerk in a city department to one of the fourth itving husband knew It millionaires of the greatest city in the W. W. Cantwell, on her behalf, de- «country? |murred to this complaint, and now His Rise to Riches, ‘ | Clark intervenes with an amended com- | Carroll's rise to riches has been won- @erful—a commentary alike on Ameri- ean opportunity and American munict- pal politics, highly gratifying in the ‘one instance, possibly not so much 89 fn the other. Carroll has made politics @ business and his business politics. ‘When he came out of Manhattan Col lege, bis father’s friend, Joseph J. ble SE STIUST POISON CASE IS wh za tit LOVE LED tt He got his name be- © reporters. He rarely talked for | fore the public. Antunano Kiliod Himself at!Coroner Adduces Little Addi- In 1886 Recorder Symth had him inted Clerk oF ccenietal Beasionyy a te D, ‘ing 7,500 a year. Carrol Kenda thought he had fixed himself in @ soft berth until the day of his death, Mhe men who had held this fat plum before him had hung on for more than forty .years each, for $7,000 Jobs are ce in politics." Carroll ‘said nothing. ie worked two hours or s@ a day at the clerkship and the rest of the time St politics. fe became n district loader The sharp eye of Richaru Croker fell Who Is Now Held in a Con- necticut Jail. Could Not Win a Barcelona Senorita. BODY FOUND ON THE BEACH./EXPERT REPORT DELAYED. s By the finding of the body of Jullan] WILTAMANTIC. Conn. 0.—The Tho had allen the drugs, but Mr. Calnen !3 said to have given no evidence except as to the by ing of alcohol. After ‘the examination of Calnen the Coroner adjourned the inquiry and de- parted for hia home in Danielson, de- He was to be roker's le other mon. Grant, Gilroy. 3h im vehen thelr har Croker would Antunano left Barcelona and went to Havana to win a fortune and his loved ‘one. He was employed as a salesman by a sugar corporation. But the fortune that he had dreamed Not pleased the down or betrayed reanization In could be trusted. run things wh S Enrope. Carr f came not, and the young mgm sailed If He | nominat ert A ree ee eee this cM, whore |clining to talk about the cage, It has and Tammany rode back ‘ been reported that the body of Mrs, he expected to do better. He went to] fixed Carroil. We ran Van} the Putnam House, Aifew days ago he awilyon would be re-exhumed and the Wyck’s administration, jie, mare than] moved to No, 15 Concord atreet, Brook- | Pra! removed for examination, but the Sho wern to get Job ho were not,/1yn, @ Spanish boarding-house, His Vea? refused to say whether or not Gharles W. Morse ‘ong with his| money was going fast and he was de-|'Ni# would be done. He said he had lan to control the Ice market of New! soondent, taken tho stomach, liver and kidneys ‘ork. There soma hocus eonew very one in the boarding-house knew |of the dead woman to Hartford for about piers. yes OF NN [of Antunano’s romance, ‘The Senorita’ | analysis by Dr, Wolff, and that ho ex- a 1s | Dhotograpa was always on his dresser.| aca no 5 howl, People sail that the city admin-| Fr, CO ee eh aoid watch. cit was|Pected no report from the chemlst for qateation Fn Renae wna {itton.| found in. his pocket after ne a dled. several days mvestization folto iM Y Yesterday the Spaniard was particu-| An officer Interested dooks were made public Carroll was larly blue. For awhile he read a ro-],. 0" vueer “nuen own the eolution of found to have 5.00 shares of the stock, te ytory in his own language ent!- ystery surrounding the case, valved at nearly 31.0000 ed “Maximo.” Then he told his land-|(ay expressed tne opfiion that thera Fortane Was Piling Up, lady that he was golng to look at the] would be another arrest, and he added ; ; | sea ae oe that he belleved this arrest should A llfe clerkship for $7.00 wasn't to be body was found to-day lying face rest should be compared with this, But Carroll wasn't] qawnward, near Sheepshead Hay. By) made immediately, When asked about | Reports that Mra, Emanuel Glauber, satisfied. He Kept on kolng into deals| the gide waa a bottle that had held eat Tenia, howover, the Coroner sald he did of No. 96 Greene street, Brooklyn, had 2, who forsoo! , i ack! pinalows weide vicesPr mnt of one | Doue Sent: ee not expect to make any more arrests, eater hone pues weeks a ane gone the Morse chaln of banks. He got in He declined to discuss the views of the | 7a” With an actor were refuted to-day = Saher oor in een, $250,000 AS XMAS GIFTS. Jones: quoted, by ernie in the prevence of her aitor- and gas com s. 8. e c — ee TY » Emanuel Frien he has not been il the money he could Three weeks ago Mrs, Manson went ’ maner.. He hed nition War toustay In| Chicago Firma Are to Glve Em=lto the house of Mra, Mary Johnston, | ut Of the greater city, and the aocusa- y polttics and win, the penton the ean ployees Big Suma. with whom she once boarded here, and | on ie been cruel and false, as Mra, % who had made him. He wont out for) CHICAGO, Dec, %—The big depart-| ot an octoroon girl, Eliza Olin, who|Guurer has been living temporarily Croker’s Job as Boss of y | CHI | with friends while 1 b D When the wave of indignation swept! ment siores and manufacturing con-|@!so boards there, to go to Chest { preparing to bring | ® Richara Croker back to Wantage and | cons of this clty are going to remem-|U0tuusl's urug store una buy for her an action for separation from her bus-| some some pe The VU: was in Carroll | }ber thelr employees in a princely way ve this Christmas. More than $250,000 will ile forced |, distributed on the basis of a & per some carvolle acid and! int water, Nl testified that the alcohol bottle, and that the other | put Beth Low In the City Hall, ried to ride Into the place of the cated dictator on an antl-Croier of indignation, He falled x! Or PRT aac TRAN Eaten two soludous were in small bottles Bethe ener ieats of luke cont. system that was devised last year. } When the bottles were brought back to Spot” and “Snort” he M en, He} This provides for the reward of a| Mrs. Joanston, according to the land: lady's story to the Coroner, Mr. Man- ; 80 poured the contents of one of the tlés into the large bottle. he asked Mrs. Jonnsion to say ing tu George Wilson about having vd the contents of the bottles, Within two months Mra. Manson went vue to Asniued to k wut for old as she told her friends Was trouole right away, but the of it until a con- ea Warrant on ndham cou: fried, to do Murphy, when pe main Siqqi worker, just aa It-he were a stock- vated to the st nd holder, the assumption being that he felled again: He unrtow Vt, ‘really becomes ome by. the investment 8 t his laoor. Out of politics. He's turn |, The Crane Company, employing ov! ‘on his former compantons, 4,000 people. heads the lint. 1 will give ways, He's to be a ‘away in ihe neighborhood of | $120.0 0. and the glad b mong other employers who will make wih freeze vtif If he ever Christmas xifts In the way of money In, the direction o the! ut o: turkeys are the Armour and swift feded, silent man. who hag packing companies, Siegel, Cooper & (i Beene aa oN Montgomery, Ward sels the Deel te 40 he obnobber x ) The Pair, and the Efarsioved centiomen of Wall streat. | People's Gaslight and Coke Company. THis s ecialiy brent istrict ne Increases ° He has namel own leader Sin Twenty-nh Joreph F. Milqueen. a lawyer of N. r $600,000 will be Broadway, but that is nelther here nor to ail the engineors’and | there, Muiqueen will have to fineht his toby the Chicago nd own baitles If he Is to hold the place. western Rajlroad and {ts branch a amt now urned hist hia. forme a. finance ward worker ats it out smoot ha mt Hem missing. When the constable went ut to get George or the price of the Kets he found him walking with Manson. ‘dhe three went up to the Wilson pald the bill gon from Jail. ‘Then sne| sharply to the con-| on unl 2 ee WITNESS SHOOTS HIMSELF. Moynihan Jury Complete, now, while you are about it 1) for a The jury was completed to-day In the | * OUUICLANFGR\ THAR WORD Bhai) | But Friend of Millionatre Roodler | supreme Court, Criminal Branch, before | buy into this Troulle and wee) wel (ie | DY Butler Fallx at Snictde, Justice Davy. for the trial of ex-Capt, | im Into more trouble than, this 12 gg £0 7] y cy ante bi Moynih on pc! of | isn't taken away from ere. TOUISVILLE, Ky., Dec. 20.—Frederick | Daniel & A aaauaaarne A charge of) Dr Hef, a young dentist of Brooklyn, |" g Gaus, confidential friend of Col, Ba,{ bribery. He ls accused of ‘accepting $25) who tx visiting his father, Theron fle, | £! Butler, the convicted millionaire boodier | eM i" pial 1. Court wan mds | ulenged the autopsy Just Wednerday: [an fot St. Louls, and one of the most Im-|journed till No morning. ie, looked at the dead woman's teeih | Bee ee tenet BAR ENBDED IPE And MOULD, and Cooernity tia exuMI- - n e fal. to-da Mealth in the notorious bribery case \yyolving. 80 many prominent men,” ate )Yempied suicide here this evening ‘by S Boeting himself in the head with ar Ss i ~ ye ahot was fired in Gaus's room wRiter’s Hotel. The ball ghinced oft his sal. The Bows rap anys eri. but 5 Oo ‘01 core pondent {nthe hospitals where. Gaus guard, be. “T found distinct traces of burns, both inside and outside, It occurred to mo then and Iam still of the opinion that carbolle acid was the first cause of the oid lady's death The burns were auc sare usually caused by carbolic acid. Btate’s Attorney Hunter, who heard fourteen dayn. cation given ease andj the substance of the testimony given Feet, Relleven ttebing t Thiv te a *, Coroner | Bilt t iveovers, and It’ t» the only plle remedy. sold, the his apinion slope areemhant” Be ee earns sure, 80 pay, soning was the cause of Mra, nteed Cure for Piles. Bleeding and protruding Pil no pay. All druggists are authoriae nutacturer of Paso Ointment to re- fund the money where It f ure any capa of pil nding. Cares, the worst cas hu sel hai © on! 7 al | sued for an annulment Before !t came to trial he sued for an/fath annulment on the ground that he had a| Fre: | plaint in which he makes this remarka- ‘riage to th Clark) plaintiff (Clark) had been drink- (ng intoxicating Hquors In such large O'Donoghue, then the Tammany leader | quantities and s0 continuously that he of the old Sixteenth Assembly District, | naa become dazed thereby and semi- Byaa him appointed s clerk of the Grand | unconsctous therefrom; and that at the Secale i was 1b Ae time marriage was solomnized, settezgung a CE Gg on ei | plajatife (Clark) was stil under the in- ‘ ut he attended more closely to politics, epee ne | fluence of said Hquors and was dazed He mace friends. He coldied news: | thereby and semi-unconsctous ther from and was not then in the possession pablice tion, but in ple cart yeara ine H of all his mental faculties and did not was talkative enough whe: . Isl; se le ti inst Mrs. M IN, | realize what he was doing.” meant making friends, Coney Island Becau ional Again NSO Mr. Cantwell, answering for Mrs Clark, denies this and sets up that there was already pending annulment Clark brought the suit. George W. Carr, formerly President of the Knickerbocker Athletic Club. To add to the trouble of Clark, who Club and jives there, Mrs. Emily Camp- y that there was some- % Dee. bello, wife of Francis Campbello, of No. Sepa eie tat faiths young man, First|Amtuano on the Coney Island beach investigation to-day Into the cause ot lia ‘Weat One Hundred ns Sixteenth nd foremost he kept his mouth shut.|to-lay the Brooklyn police revealed a) the death of Mrs. Julla Wilson, of Ash |street, bas sued, him, through James This habit had grown on him unt , fromance of old Spain. From frlends of | ford, yielded apparently tittle result. | ONeill, in the Harlem Court, for #130, gort of thing. Carroll became one of nis/ano had Idiled himself’ with carbolle | was James Cajnen, 4 clerk In a drug|stock, the senior member being a. brow runted ‘men. ‘The ress of, he ‘Jortora)acid for the love of a beautiful inl In Istore here, vho testified that a week [er of President Cleveland's Secretary of eae eee oe ean. the. direrenc i Parcelona. im Antunano loved was [2"2,Mt® Lella Manno, the soman now Cease uebalion tae (a. mip tor paper Then one October day in iss, Carro| 0 unano Io S| held in Brookiyn Jall on account of the| which ffers in proof o i torgw a Dott of ant ning ante. polttl 1 {far prove his seen, - Hes lateeecnee suspicion that Mrs. Wilson did by pol- Then, Reads, under nies of sae. , a ‘circles by resigning that ob @jexo Antunano begged the girl's father | aon” pure ahaa “1, O. U. one hundre¢ jars and five. Men saw that he had been doing» gor hig daughter's hand in marriage. a Paes ees A aie pen ‘A. W. CLARK, Power of thinking and Miceriied avan{ite was then cweaty-elght and she Just | wines, was desired co snypart provious satisfied with his lot. But Carroli was |twenty. teatimbnsautvankevivicioae Aeranns ambitious, He did not explain hy He The father told him to go out in the ane M M Tesigned, but {t soon came ou MOLGlEdd cach aireriane: garting Mrs. Masson's purshase cf! . She Left Her Husband, but De- HAS NOT LEFT THE CITY. band. Mrs. Glauber was Miss Mollie Lavy, She is a handsome woman, and {dolla her band has not allowed her to see since me left the Brooklyn house. sham some time past her husband and heraelt | thelr beautiful home. way, {s owned by my client, even to te furniture. been tmes, and conferences have been going resenting her husband and myself look- Ing to au adjustment of the differences. | ‘Theny altogether unexpectedly, came this thorized the immediate filing of papers| a note for her husband ax a delibe: tally, and to say otherwise is to mislead, As for Mrs. ren in Brooklyn, she 1 have been tr: ‘Mrs. Glauber stated when her counsel ou Waa anythi sain ff the marriage. Minnle Davis Judson, who took him for her fe in London, a that the lady » allegation in explanation of his mar- defendant while he had a fe In Lorgon: ‘For some time prior to the solemni- thon of sald marriage (to Juilette Ls fa Chilton - Tuttle - Wright - Havens- her sult for an on the same ground when His lawyer is & member of the New York Athletic DD NOT ELOPE nies Running Away with Ac- tor, and Says She Will Sue for Separation. child, whom she says ‘her hus- Never has a woman bee ully used,’ said Mr. Friend. more For | ve had varlous differences, which cul- nated three weeks ago In her leaving| ‘This home, by the | ‘Since coming to Manhattan she has in my officg at least twenty-five all the ime between an attorney rep-| kind charge. Mrs, Glauber has au- a separation. ‘Concerning that Chleago trip made Mrs. Glauber six months ago, I want brand the story that she left behind te sehood. Ahe ts not acquainted with| actor, She Is perfectly sound men- Glauber leaving two chil- 8 only one, and i best fo get her band’s permission through hig coun- to let t 'd closed his remarks that ape wished iy for fair treatment. Her conversa- ent of the Seine, and his | ble to identify or flid them. Park. where rest the remains of of the Departm OF TTeRG! rida cere P WAN EM Ini Merion Tuntive talMitds [Coy telin wnenr Con cnne amare were Irgafly looked for at No.|late General. Under the shadow of | ; f. 4° | aying to Mins, Frederte Humbert an| yap roadway, New York, but thin ts he s Cabinet of 1882 Mr. Fred-| annuity of $72,000, 18 Paid toe n furnished apartment, | mausoleum the escort placed t ero Humbert and his wh formerly " vouse. where no one of the name of|which will be guarded during the Mile. Therese d'Aurignac, moved in| Thereupon the rival claimanta brought | Crawford aver tly and when the dom-| by the members of the U. 8, Grant lfashionable circles. ‘The: resided untit | (Me case before the courts The law'a| |rlle of the cider Chas tort, wee tries | unt!’ the final entombment In the |the exposure of the scheme at} ‘lay dragged the affalr through multi+| | thore was a park, cophagus to-morrow morning. | No. 65 Avenue de ta Grange armee, near |Ple phases, during which Mme. Hum- rious Asature, was that| Before leaving for New York a the Are de Triomphe; they owned sev-;bert. the Crawford nephews,and Mile. rite ta She and. wecratt | religious service was held over the b eral well kept country seats; they had Corots, Metssonfers and Zlems. conception and briefly summarized. nursed the kind-hearted votedly during a long i!Iness, Meanwhile, Mile. had married M. Frederic Humbert. smart and swift steam yacht, Le Lev- The method of procedure of thin queen of swindiers was almost Napoleonic In execution, and may be Twenty-five years American de- Therese d'Aurignac But just as Mme. Humbert was about to en- @'Aurlgnac won and lost alternately, came to terms or attacked each other in from the civil tritunals a to ng by the other parties, fon, The hareement, d lab a detwaen her and tere fords. she woul: Hundreds of thousands of dotiars were | were to touch i ; i Nevertheless, spent In counsel fee and legal expenses. | Novo um Those who aro “Wise after the even her extreme pl now point out that, amid this wilder-| tie of her case seemed destined never ieee contents of the safe. $29,000,000, and aided b; isibility and by the pres. jal position and by hei ago there died at Nice a Mr. Henry an Robert Crawford, who left to Theross | ness of litigation, the mysterious Craw-|belnR the wife of an ex-Deputy and | by the Ret. Dr Eee G@Aurignac his entire fortune. She had| ford brothers never appeared In person. | Justice, Mme. Humbert borrowed vast obese. same date, which had the legal effoct {nothing but an empty of a codictl, go that the Judges uncon- had made the swintle possible. Voltairine de Cleyre, Him Over. ———— (Special to The Evening World.) individual action which An Anarchist what Anarchy Is. order and set up world cails license. And 414 not love him. hot Down in the Street, wh sit she wanted So, not that longer at her feet and to be free the street and shot her down without word of explanation or even a to warn her. he the pupil, but her Anarchy beautiful theory, his Now they muat both pay the penalty. at Fourth and Green streets. Hansen, No was walking along the street when and then snatching off the beard ani roRgles he sald: “TL whot her and I dor away. We were sweethearts and roke my heart. She deserved to die." This man was young Helcher to face her, She looked at him and sali 8! had shot her. she groaned and whisp for the nurse to hes will they do with him?” When they led him aw. loud enoug Russia fourteen years ago of Emma Goldman, had mixed with th embittered gpirits of the Chicago colon; Millionaire Frick by Emma Goldman‘ lover, She was of brilliant the Anarchists of America. but that of a weak- a person, heer dress is known her counsel, whe ie perfectly willing gift for verse writin, out her disiorted sympathies for thi ANARCHIST SHOT WOMAN HE LOVED Who Taught Him to Worship Her, Dying Because She Threw SAYS SHE DESERVES FATE. PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 20.—The defl- ance of law and unbridled freedom of Voltatrine de Cleyre taught all her life have come back to her like an angry curse and to- day she lies dying In the Hahnemann Hospital with three bullets in her body. and a friend of Emma Goldman, she taught Herman Heloher She fired him with the Goldman theorles of contempt for before his youthful eyes to worship that Mberty which the in so doing jehe taught him. too, to love her, but she nshe told him that he must learn, of him and hia wild love, he followed her along threat She was the teacher and was grim praction. ‘he crime was committed yesterday Miss de Cloyre had left the house of Mrs, Mary 7 Kairmount avenue, and man with a false beard and green gog- word he walted untli a policeman came, want to get she! ‘The police took the woman to the hospital and an hour later brought her murderer e did not know {f he was the man who Poor boy! What Six years of Reds, had defended the shooting of| intellect. She aspired to be the literary leader of She had a nd she poured world’s down-trodden in poems which! BICCAR WITNESS made her the {dol of weaker minds re- belling against their lot In life and grop- ing blindly for a remedy which would transmute all, Helcher fell. beneath her Influence. She taugnt him English. She tanght him Anarchy. She taught him love. This is a dangerous mixture for a son of a Russian serf transplanted to a new world, where men have’ been free for generation after generation. The climax came yesterday Wheh she dismissed him three months ago Helcher went to Boston, He brooded and three weeks ago he came back. He begged that she would take twp the old relations. She refused, and all the flaming theorlas of the teac sprang up in the mind of the love-mad boy. The dragons teeth sue had planted were arising to take her life. It ma be that to his memory there came bac! this poem which the woman he loved had written and published: One Poem to the Czar, UT SHMENTEM FRCERIS, ITS METES. (To the Cear on a woman, @ political prisoner, being flogged to death tn Siberia.) How many drope must gather to the ekles Before ‘the clowd-buret comes, we may not now tress, Suddenly Disappears. How hot the fires in under hele must «low (Special to, ‘The: Brening Werle.) Ere the voloan: idlag lavas rise, Nowe can my; but all wot the how Who dreama of vengeance has but eure! endure! important the State's most He may not may how many blows must fall, How many lives be broken on the wheel, How many corpses stiffen. ‘neath the pall, How many martyrs fx the thuod red weal But certain la the bervest time of i ud when weak moans, by an tndignant Resechoed, tora throne’ are bacawart butledy Veho Histens hears the mutterings of fate! Fplletetpita, February, 1900. | 8 love Was turned to hate, and wit his own right of individual ‘set Healizs her right to life, above the low of s0- clety, he went and shot her down “Tshot her because she was not min he said later, “I loved her. She did not love me. I mean she was not constant. One time she would be affestionate; an: other ¢ime she would send me away. She sald her love was her own, like her soul and her body. She willed’ to do as she pleased with thezell, She was the one woman I loved. She drove me away. I shot her—not to hurt her, to kill her, I would not hurt anybody. Otaer men have killed women who were not faith- ful to them: why should I not kill the ong who would give no love in return for ine? What do I care now? It's all over. Make no fuse. [ shot her. | nobody's business about the past. We live to-day: to-morrow we die. “We were sweethoarts—yes, lovers true, She would not hold her dove for any’ man. Sue dbelleved in #x freedom for women, I could not bear to think of her loving any other man. I could not wet near her without a disguise. I watohed for her in front of her house for three days. When she saw me she would not come out. I fooled her to-day with that fine mustache and a different conspiracy to get estate of the Jate Henry M. Bennett, him, has been spirited out of town. ‘The impressién is that she has been falling into the hands of the defens ‘The witness 1s Moilfe Deskin, a maid in the household of Bennett when he lived at Farmingdale. It was the pur- pose of the State to put her, with two others, on the stand Monday to rebut some of the evidence for the defense. When Miss Biggar was on the stand she was asked if she had not sald to Miss Deskin, “Oh, Mollie, I wish Pop would marry me. get anything.” ing said this, Yesterday the defense asked Judge Helsiey for an order compelling the Gtate to permit counsel for the defense to see the Deskin girl, who, the defense alleged, Was being kept at the American Hotel, where they could not get at her. It was Ween that she was belong forcibly detained. justice fleisley refused to grant the order unless It could be shown that the «irl was really at the American Hotel. ‘The defense was preparing to do thls, It now appears that the girl left town on the Jersey Central train at 2 o'ciock yesterday afternoon, She js supposed to have gone either to Jersey City or New York. At any rate she {s where tha Miss Biggar denied hav- s sult, I heard her say that #l sles came to her side and drew a pistol. |new me She didnt, Troha, Mat | defense cannot tale tO end Whetee He did not speak but stralghtway fired| But Voltairine de’ Cleyre does notier she his gone Wullngly or not ts an- three shots, Two took effect in the sompian: me Di EAR te ae 8 She other question. While none of the law- ‘4 b $ lived, She has wa at path Vers for the defense will make any woman eset and one in the neck, too long to turn back even In the pres- charges they intimate that improper he ran a le way and fell. The man|«nce of death. From the day the Chi-:arruments are being used to keep her followed and stood over her as she|cago Anarchists were hanged for the out ot the way until she has given her writhed on the pavement. Without a| Haymarket tragedy this woman, born testimony of French and American parents in a Miss Biggar displayed her power as am Kttle Michigan town, had preached and emotionar actress when she told on the taught and sung her theorles. If she witness stand for the first time any- {realizes that whe ls dying because of where how the original of her marriage |them she has no word to say againat her certificate disappeared. Against this por~ |rate. She may even deem herself a tion of her evidence nothing will be of martyr, some think fered in rebuttal. B ve a certificate of mar us asked, ———————— joey Ou | SLIPPED INTO MATRIMONY. |" ed, Loved, Wooed, We a » e Virat hecame of It? r Bennett tore it up one day ina Met, An rage Within a Week. “Relate the circumstance as you can recollect it jens and relatives of Jennte Mo- >i “Was at the thme when he was | Nab, of Gutenburg, N. J., are wild-eyed | taken so lil. He was amMicted with the with astonishment over the news that | (disease ch finally caused his death. a vas then An Pittaburg. she Is married to @ young man named | jim “wursing him and caring for him, ad parly as y h Spirit of Anarchy im Her, Charles Hislopp, of No. 717 Orange a a wito should docwore snrealt orp lett ve yout and Was almost in a state of col- Heloher is about twenty-ilve years wark, whom she met less than jy 02! Vhen I asked him one day if I old. He came to this country from might not go out for a little recreation. |n . now Mra. Hislopp, visited | He retused, for he would not allow any some relatives In Newark last Saturday | one to walt upon him but me. 1 told ago he met Voltairiné de Cleyre, who! ind was on her way to the Pennyylva- him 1 was ill from nursing him and had come on to Philadelphia from the tion when she slipped ant fell. needed treanais and fasts Ho flew Int Fest i “ t a Ken islopp, who chanced to be pase- a rage and, ge ct - Wert, Bhe was filled with tho spirit) Toni sisted her to rise. After thank. cate, core it to pieces. He then got up of Anarchy. She had been the friend! {iz'him for gallant services she returned ft the room, He was gone all vy home ‘WMhree days later she received a letter | from Hislopp, in which he asked per-| mission t 1. She immediately gran’ ed his request, and on his arrival at he | —— The Credenda Club's Elec The Credenda Social Club, of Manhat- home the young couple started out fo tan, held Its first meeting last night, and walk. Then followed a rapid court- the following officers were elected: hip. Hefore they had passed two strect | President, Fred J. Turner; Vice-Preal- ners Hislopp proposed and was ac-| vent, Ovide Mevers; Treasurer, Mi! pted. Without any loss of time they Sullivan, and Secretary, Miss J. proceed 1 to this city and were mats After the meeting a social was held Het, by the Rev. C. McKenale, retired | the home of the treagurer, where piscopal clergyman, times and merry-making were in iss J. cat fe money and securi- over $20,000,000 and had been intrusted to her uly attested and exhibited, phantom Craw: lose all rights if she on the security of this but only by attorney. Moreover, they| sums of monew from financial eatab never contested the will itself, They | ™ehen"apenna’ by the please repute. simply produced another will, of the| Humbert safe was found to contain jewel box, some waste paper and the official seals which SPIRITED AWAY. Mollie Deskin, Maid in the Ben- nett Household, Who Is Ex- pected to Contradict the Ac- LAWYERS TRIED TO SEE HER. FREEHOLD, N. J., Dec. 20.—One ot witnesses against Laura Biggar, now on trial for possession of the by alleging that she was married to hidden by the State to keep her from | ¢uneral ft he dies now 1 would not at the Grant residence In Washing and later a public service took place rer; thelr art gallery contained rare| all the courts, iently she had In'reality|the Metropolitan Methodist Bp mediaeval tapestries, and among the|to the Court of Appeals, and from the er available for cash|Ghurch, of which President Grant” at paintings 1s a valuable collection of |Court of Appeals to the Court of Cassa-| payme' according to an|—~ ttended a member and which was also by President McKinley. Roosevelt, surrounded by the of bis Cabinet and officers of the and navy, in full uniform, were at both services, which were ¢o Speaker Henderson, Secretaries & and Wilson, Maj.-Gen. Grenville & Dodge, Senators Cullom, Kean, banks, Allison, Foraker and Platt as honorary pallbearers, while J McLean, of Ohlo, and J. C Davis, of Washington, assisted solemn duty by walking on elther of the draped casket. At the entombment to-morrow ing the burial services will be co ed by Bishops Edward 5 Mackay Smith. As the reserved Bf is so small that but few guests accommodated, admission to the quies will be bg ticket. i Among those Invited are Gov. O and his staff, Mayor Low, Bishop ter, Archbishop Farley, ‘Grover. land, W. C. Whitney, B. F. Tracy, Fitzhugh Lee, Gen. Joseph President Butler, of Columbia Ui Senators Platt and Depew, troller Grout, Corporation Rives, the Borough Presidents, ae Fornes, of the Board of Aldermen; Ge Gordon, commander of Confederate Vet erans; Judges of the Court of Juetices of the Appellate Di tices of the Supreme Court of New County, Judges of the United” Court of Appeals and Judges of United States Courts of the Sou District of New Yorke ‘The Family in Town, Mrs. Alphonso Taft, widow of G Grant's Secretary of War, and a of Goy. Taft, of the Philippines, lima come from Cincinnat! to attend the of her _ well-loved red ‘Though she is nearly elghty she Js 3 markable for her mental and physio vigor. ‘Sn their arrival in this clty this, ternoon the members of the Geant oi fly went to the Fifth Avenue where they are still receli Hons of sympathy from all organizatiqns and other patriotic ” cleties of the country. CONVICTED FORGER COMMITS SUID Solomon Barmash Shoots self in His Cell in London Being Sentenced to Prison, | iL | ‘ke | | | | LONDON, Dec. %.—The three note forgers who were committed trial Dec. 10, pleaded guilty and | sentenced in the Old Bailey this me ling, Philip Bernstein to twenty yea | Solomon Barmash to fifteen years, William Barmash to ten years’ prisonment. {ler being removed to thelr Solomon Barmash shot and killed seit ‘The police were dumfounded. Barmash’s death, The prisoner | paralyzed after bis arrest and tora thought some friends htm in the infirmary eome Eaves, Ri the revolver with CATARRH: SUFFERE ; C. G. Archer, of Brewer, “{ have had catarrh for Water would run from my eyes: for days at a time, About ago I was induced to try Catarrhal Powder, and sinc wonderful tack. It Saty a one papas: