The evening world. Newspaper, January 7, 1903, Page 3

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| WAS CHRISTE TOO ON STAN Wife Accused of Wholesale Transgressions to Be a Wit- ness in Husband’s Divorce Suit To-Day. ONE SUMMER AT AMENIA. ‘Law Students Shadowed Wrisley for Mrs. Wrisley and Swear, They Saw Him Exchange Signals with Mrs. Christie with Matches. ' “Oh, dear! The worst is yet to come!” exclaimed Mrs, Christie, the beautiful and stately blond-haired wife of James H. Christie, the prosperous lace mer- chant, who 1s defending herself, with the ald of Frederick B. House and Sam- uel 8. Koenig, against forty-elght ac- eusations of infidelity in thelr counter- actions for divorce. “Pho worst is yet to come, I must co ‘on the witness stand to-day and take the cross-fire of Mr. Christie’s lawyers.” Mr. Christie names Wells H. Wrisley, twenty years his pretty wife's senior, in thirty-odd charges, and Harry Sisson, @ chubby youth from Poughkeepsie, in the rest. When he brought sult he specified Wrisley's ‘private office’ In a big department store, but afterward amended, dropping all those charges and substituting his own home in the faph- fonable Elise apartment-house at Sev- enth avenue and One Hundred and Eleventh street as the scene of the transgressions of the mother of his two children, Edward Max, a man of thirty-three years, who was elevator boy at the Elise, 1s the main witness against Mrs. Christie thus far, telling about Wrisley's mwife coming to the Christie apartment to look for her husband one night when IWrisley is alleged to have ran down the fire-escape. It was expected that the charges con- necting Mrs. Christie's name with young Mr, Sisson would be brought to the front to-day. Doings at Amenia. Frank P. Meade, at whose hotel tn ‘Amenta, Dutchess County, Mrs. Christe fwas a guest in the summer. of 1899, tes- tifled that she was absent at frequent fntervals, sometimes for a period of a fortnight. She told Meade once she was going home to the city to can frlult ‘When she first vent to Meade's she fwas accompanied by her sister and two childre Once, in August, 1899, she returned from the city with Wrisley, and after he left, Meade raid, he often mailed let- ters for Mrs. Christie addressed to Wris- léy. ‘These letters were in envelopes bearing Wrisley's address in .typewrit- ing. »» Qnee Wrisley and Mrs. Christie were ut for a drive. Wristey was ill when they returned, and Meade sala his fair @ompanion called him a “drunken fool." | Oo-respondentN Number Two “Who is Harry T. Sisson?’ sudden; deaked the lawyer, is i It was the first time that young man’ ‘mame had been mentioned In the trial, id its owner, who been apparantly marnDiene in @ tack seat, aroused him- an auctioneer in, Poughkeepsle, e miles from Amenia,” sad uest at my house in fe was there. Her enildren and eir nurse slept up in the cupola. Mrs, Christle had a front room ‘on the first floor. Her sister slept In ‘the extension. “Meade sald the chubby Sisson and the tall and stately Mrs. Christie danced and supped together at the County Fair, at year, in Washington Hollow. _ “We started for home about 1 o'clock.” ‘eaid Meade. ‘We had waited for Sisson and Mrs. Christie. We blew @ horn for em and finally they appeared.”” “Was the hotel at Washington Hollow ‘within sound of that horn?’ the lawyer maked, “Tt was,” said Meade calmly and judl- wially. Mr. Koenig made vigorous objection because it referved to no charge in the but Justice Clarke al- id ne as to the = relations of the parties, It Was “Harry” and “Desste.!? Mr. Meade sald this was the Danbury walt’ of 190, ‘and that Bisson and. Mrs, Christie left the rest of the party and Sent to Danbury during the afternoon, Gilsson always addressed Mrs, Christo fs "Ressie” and she called him “Harr Meade sald Mrs, Cnristic came to the elty) July, 1899"and remained several weeks, leaving her sister, the children and the nurse behind. “This covered perlod during which Max, the ele- ‘of boy at the Elise, plans’ the Are- ite Sbisode. Ft House, cross-examining, brought out that thé chubby Sisson’ was. beat man at Meade's. wedding; they. have Benn chums for stisen years, and sisson # is guest at the time of his allege Airtation with ‘Mra, Cristie. ‘te introe m to rs, Onrt Peughweepale Pats. iehfe 9h ae feade sald one of the childre with her mother the frat esacon, bats of them In fd 190 Ghrintle: baa A aprained mwaiking on crutches at fir rot. thine. her th room lo take ‘e of her, Hertert 8. Murphy, of No, 119 West Fiftecnth street, a law student, testified that In 1900, when Mrs, Christie lived at No. 877 West One Hundred and Nine- teenth street, he and Robert Webber, anc other law, olerk, visited the nelghbochaod every ni rc watch Str. Wrisiey? Maree to May oul Bee Mrs. mmindows from Morningside Parke tage A and Varisiey together in the park and on, the Bnd ah streets of Harlen nearly slay used to sit in th ‘would meet Mrs. Christie, peaatletat midn mht or later. Sometimes as they walked he had his arm geemed to be under (by trove] S, 2 into the ini Mauer #1,rioh tibia ood wine re. ristie smiled der: ushed angrily at thin vey 804 hey had slgnal tun fork.’ “He would strike's maten, Nght Pay) clear and chen wave the ght match up and down. Then eee NP ne the'uars ee meu “Shadowed” for Mrs, Wrisley, Murphy said bis law firm, acth pars. Wrigley, sont tim to shadow tein ey and that a member of his Arta ts brother to Mr, Cherlatieys Jawyer, ‘Robert edber, NW at oclate af Murony | ee 18%" Slept tied ley y wit Kichpand sald Mra. Ciiriatie’s tea signal ted in shadowing wiht ne Wein- m. He. wald Wiis: 2 was waving & window. ' Robs B4-District-Atrorney, 5 Lukttorney Hiran A. Steele, ‘ef Hines County, Is wontning, fhe tase THE WORLD? WEDNESDAY EVE! PRINCIPALS IN COUNTER-DIVORCE SUITS NSGRESSIONS ARE CHARGED. IN WHICH MANY TRA WOMAN ATTACKS JUDGE {N COURT Mrs. McNally, Weighing 250, Came in With .a Rush, Smashed Him on the Head and Chewed Cops Clothes. THEN SHE GOT REAL BUSY. A cyclone in the person of Mrs. Mary McNally, forty and’ wolghing 250 pounds, swept into the Morrisania Police Court to-day, and before it had blown itself out the uniforms of the court squad were in tatters, the Magistrate was dishevelled, his gavet shattered from furlous rappings for or- der, and the furniture of the court- room splintered into kindling. Mrs. McNally rumbled into the court- room just as Magistrate Hogan had set- tled into his after-dinner doze, and in a volce that resembled the mingling of the shrieks of a steam siren with a t roared: "I've been mur- hundred policemen Then she leaped into the alr, and when she landed the entire pullding shook to its foundations, Simultaneously Magistrate Hogan jumped from his seat and, selsing his gavel, beat a frantic tattoo upon hit desk, at the same time thundering: “Order in the court!”” “Ye insultin’ ould villan,” shouted Mrs, McNally, making a rush for the bench in which ehe went through the court squad as if it had been paper. She made ‘a futile attempt to climb over the rail] to-day, attentive Msteners to the teat! and attack the Magistrate. the court officers caught her by the ankles and dragged her back. When she recovered her feet, however, she took off her hat, and grasping one of the CHILOREN HEARD INOWORCECASE They Testified for Mother in Court Against Father, Who Was Accused of Cruelty, but Did Not Answer Charge. (Spectal to The Evening World.) of society M. Hille against her husband, John M. Hills, whack, By this time the court equad had re- covered itse)f and seized the woman by the arms but before they could get a pe- cure hold she managed to trip all four policemen an rolled with them in a whirling mass of legs and arms on the floor, She kicked and bit and tore with all her @trength, succeeding in tearing in shreds the coats of two of the court officers and chewing off the collars and neckties of the other two before they finaly subdued her by sitting on her and securing her hands. Tis, + Magistrate Hogan Her atory was corroborated by he! other children. chased her about house with a ef toward her. articular strers was laid duct in February of last yearn on Hills did not appear. that on one occasion Mrs. r 5, police for protectton, WOMAN ESGAPES n This accomplished, omiered her to be scnt to the Igland for three months, and @ hurry oall was went {othe Alexande* avynie station for r serves to janlat the fours ‘egvad in pro- perly incare~rating the privoner. ———_— WOMAN ROBBED ON STREET. vey downtown on a shopping tour ta- fay when at Hainbridge street and Sar- Dashed to Pieces, , phis Station, entrance of, the (Special to The Evening World.) PHILADELPHIA, Jan, 1. Denied park bit and began puunging frantically. Pieces, and ——_- Big Buchre Party To-Night, | Was roaohed only the shatte were Jet A euchre, musteale and recepuon will] At the, commer of fort bo held to-night at the Grand Central alave, | Lex and orthe NEWARK, N. J., Jan, 7.—A delegation women from South Amboy oceupled seats In the Court of Chancery) H€F the articles named. One of; ony in the divorce case of Mrs. Anna Extreme cruelty was alleged, and Mrs. Hills, a woman of beauty and refine- ment, told a sensational stor: ft atrings, brought it down on the top of ‘y of the the Magistrate's bead with a resounding | jTmment, she received at the hands of band. mother, her seventeen-year-old gon and) Mis, Hilis Alleges that her husband volver, hurled a decanter at her head, | Wats robbed the savings bank of her childre, Gnd behaved generally ina cruel mane jt" was related is wa compelled to cali on the services of ‘the FROM RUNAWAY, Htallan =» Reticule Contaising 950 $126 Diamond and Maus. |She Stepped Out Just Before tts, Wilhainin ouivn was on ner| Horse Started Away—Vevicle D. nk eel a0Ks ee NC ing and ‘her puree vontalning ht and Kinn, ot’ th manele trame along Elghth avenue Ralph aventie station, gave co! an tween Fifty-seventh and Forty-fourth caught Tunining five blocks, nreels was thrown into @ confusion for wes @ fe iT y Intrate Furlong in the Gates Avene eee esvay., afternoon by en ex —_—__ Lawrence E, Holden, a dealgr in au DEAD BABY GOES AS FREIGHT] tomottes. of No. 9% Fitth avenue, wa driving a young worgan Jn a Ilght run about drawn by a iff black horse acros Found U ed at the Phi fe cicie atthe Want Fittenien coe when the horse suddenly disengaged 18 mouth from the avenue the light wagon began to go by tho Ume Fiftleth stress ¥- fou) od OW ts h Bt ee ast cata orev and urni eo ree aroui t wo full Hist Bre arnt ' over | «| Look it to. WARS SERPENT ON HER HEART Mrs. Terwilliger Opened Hospit- able Doors of Her Home to Property Disappears. SHE ACCUSES HER GUEST. The woman who was grabbed from In front of an electric car at Third avenue and One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street yesterday, and who sald she was Daisy Dell, of Chicago, was identified in the Harlem Court to-day Mrs, Ada Featherstone, thirty-four years old, of Chicago. Her husband, she said, is Paul Featherstone, of No. 682 Amste enue, under the name of Pi Watson. The police say’ nothing is known of the man at that address. The woman is now changed by Mra. Mary Terwilliger, of No, 520 West One Hundred and Fifty-ninth street, with the larceny of a sealskin coat, a pair of shoes and a lady's gold watch and chain, valued at $288, According to Mrs. Terwilliger, she met Mri ‘eatherstone on an Amster- dam avenue car on Dee, 31. She took a liking to the. woman, and Invited her to go home with her. Mrs. Feather- stone accepted the invitation and re- mained there until Jan, 5, when, ac- cording to Mrs, Terwilliger, Mrs. Featherstone disappeared, taking with Patrolman Terhune, of the West One Hundred and Fifty-second street sta- tion, was put on the case, and yesterday read in the papers the story of the woman being rescued from. in front of an electric car. He went to the Harlem Court and identified Mrs. Featherstone as the woman, This morning Mrs. Ter- Wwilliger miso \dentified Mis. Feat! ag the woma: had befriended. Mrs. Featherstone said to-day t sho had written for the Chicngo ‘Dim Herald, now the Record-Herald; that she married Featherstone a fow years ago, and that a short while after he came to this city and changed his nam Vatgon. prisoner that she Al heen crnking heavily, id on Jan. & loft Mrs, Terwilliger's house to get fome liquor, She put on the clothing -|she got t:)¢ of first and remembers nathing more until taken to court yes. terday, She sald had no idea of stealing the cloth! nerstone was held for a POPE IS ASKED TO © s Mrs. Featherstone, and Her|w. SVENCALI HELD FOR SHOPLIFTING W. C. Dudley, Accused by Vir- ginia Lampson of Hypnotizing Her to Steal, Is Placed Under | $1,000 Bonds to Grand Jury. MYSTERY IN HER DISCHARGE. Although Twice Arrested for Same Offense, with Trunks Full of Prop-| erty, Department Store Managers | All Refuse to Prosecute Her. Wiltam C, Dudley, arrested swith ‘Virginia Lampson, charged with shop- Nfting, and whom Mrs, Lampson ac- evsea of hypnotising her into theft, ‘was arraigned in Jefferson Market Court to-day, charged with the lar- ceny of a silver candlestick, valued ‘at $280, from the Gorham Silver Manu- fatcuring Company. Magistrate Bar- low held him in $1,000 for the Grand Jury. Dudley anit he was an advertising man and never left his rooms before 1.80 o'clock In the afternoon. The al- leged theft is sald to have been com- mitted at 1.30 P, M. Mrs, Lampson, who waa discharged bn Monday, no one making @ complaint against her, tear- fully corroborated Dudley's statement. Lawyer Lowenstein in behalf of Mrs, Lampson requested Magistrate Barlow to iseue an order to the police to re- turn to the woman the trunks and con- tenta selzed In her room when she was arrested. Detectives Rein and Becker assured the Court that with ithe exception of certain pleces of jewelry that Mrs, Lampson admitted to have taken from Sherry'e and Delmontco's, for the own- era of which they were now looking, everything would be returned. Although Mrs, Lampson declared when arrested that she would do all in her power to have Dudley punished and was | glad of the opportunity, since her dis- charge she has hung afound the court waiting for his ar in court before 8 o'clock. When ie. charged the woman declared that she would go home to her child, In Washing- ton. Bhe has been arrested for the same oftense once before. The last time sh: was arrested four trunks , were found in ym. ‘or some reason every department store firm Interested positively refuaed ed, to proesouts, her and she was dish nis happened the first time, too. CETS NO MONEY OF MILLIONAIRE Justice O’Dwyer Sets Aside Jury's Verdict of $1,341 Dam-. ages for Mrs. Kathleen Gan- non from John Goodwin. SAID HE ATTACKED HER. ——ee, Judge O'Dwyer, of the Cty Court, has ect aside the verdict of $1,311 awarded by a jury before him to Mrs, Kathleen Gannon, againet John Goodwin, a mil- Horaire «ilk merchant of No, 27 West Twenty-third street, whom she charged wtih a breach of contract to employ hor perpetually as @ consideration for her refraining fron exposing him after an attock upon ‘her. ‘Tho trial was a sensation of the day. Mrs, Gannon was employed by Mr. Good- win as a nurse for his little boy, and the alleged asvault was sald to have oc- curred in the mile of the night at Goodwin's summer home at Hunter, N. i 3, 1901. Mrs, Gannon testified that Goodwin. who is a email man, sixty-three years old, entered her rom after he had been “ t sleep She said that on her promise not to expcae him Goodwin promised to em- ploy her the remainder of her life, but that he discharged her four monthe later, ExJustice Joseph F. Daly was his coungel, She sued for $5,000 damages. ‘The jury awarded $1,841, although Good- win denied her story in every particu- CUT ROYAL BONDS. Crown Prince of Saxony Will Ask to Have His Marriage with Louise Annulled. ROME, Jan, 7—The Papal Nuncio at Munich, Bavaria, has notified the Vati- r{can authorities that after the Crown .| Prince of Saxony has obtained a verdict in the Civil Court he will ask the Pope _fto annul his marth | The negotiations will be condicted through the Nunclature at Munich, as there i nu Papal representative in Sax ony: 8 t BELLBOY WINS $250 AT LAW, burial by ita parents and shipped from] Mr. Holden jumped out and seized the New York to this like a piece of or-| horse by the head, waving the young finary freight, the body of a bay boy| woman to met down from the vehici ; Was found to-day in a telescope. which] She had hardly stepped down to an Doane McMahon, ® Young eolored sty. among a pile of Unclaimed taggage] street when the horse brash hel gent, who after graduating from Ober. | t station since Nov. 27.) Mf) y aking! jin (.) College, entered the New York| Nov. 21.) Mr, Holden's hold, and started in @ : ‘fully dreamed: | Every | ruan tor Bight’ ave mad] Law €2hool and paid his way by work pierretty. lace cap on the baby's head, | When the bopee re the corner|:2& &# Might bellboy At the Hotel 1in- were of aond auality, but there ware id of Fiftyeseventa Tunahouy| perial, got @ verdict for $250 damage, works on them that might lead to iden-| t¥ he horac cone] for false arrest and tmprisonment over | Wacadion. ins aval Se ee ee eh carrHaes| night, when & e\isat's wetch wan miss ay a vide . he New York police have been no-| 800 Adie Bway. tore on down the| im In Justice Vernon &. Davies péri of the Bupreme Court torday, It was the first case tried before the ‘|new Justice, and @x-Judge George M. Curtis prosecuted the colored bo (tis KisMahon: sued Morgan Mali aktret the hosiery, aieeuh the. “Rouse i j 4 A eMullen, elective, was rt render! ‘wial 2] Mette co the WRenierioln wialion oa lar, and when viewed in comparison with Mrs, Gannon, looked small and] feeble bealde the muscular nurse, u In aetuing aside the verdict Judge|th O'Dwyer sald: “1 find that Mrs, Gannon's testimony fs not corroborated by elther clroug stance, witness or probability, and that the evidence is, therefore, oath against oath. Hor #tory that a man who had taken Hquor, of slight physique and six- ty-three years old, attacked @ robust wonan of thirty-five years ts a propo: gition when addressed to reasonable in- feiligence that sumKest improbatde, but the impor Mitig verdict Celivered upon the sol credityof the plaintiff's tee:lmony a {i*confirmation of #0 Improbable a at should be set aside.” WPhe case Wil have to be ited again: — NEW PAROCHIAL SCHOOL. not only the ble demand for secured & summons in a Magistri court for Morgenthal. fummons was withdrawn and warrant: were issued for the arest of Morgenthal and three of jolating Section $83 of the Pena! an KILLED A WOLE IN LIVELY FIGHT. |Farmer Attacked by Animal He Had Wounded and Which Had JANUARY 7, 190. Herald Square. latest models. Three-Quarter Former prices Fancy Wra Now at #4 to $150.00. Neckwear January Sale spirit. lopped off. of lace and edged with lace. Value 75c. Tabs. Value $1.00. to 2 yards long; Value $5.00. Value 25c. quisite lace edge. Value 25c. Former prices $9.00 to $15.00. Now at $5.0, $7.50 and $ Coyats. S. 9.50 and Saka & Company Our Sale of Coats and Wraps. There are enough different models and fabrics to please your taste and In Cheviots and Kerseys; this season's 9,50 In various cloths, loose or half-fitted backs and Monte Carlo effects. $15.00 to $28.00. Now at $10.99 and $44.75 In silks, velours and fine cloths, suitable for afternoon or evening wear. Former prices $35.00 to $55.00. $28.00 We have also made a liberal price concession on all garments which were formerly marked from $60.00 Cloths. Of Broadcloth, Kersey, and Velvet. Now at Misses’ Of Cheviot, Cloths, Now at $6.59, 8.50.and 4 rt J Kersey Miss tures. and Handkerchiefs AT REDUCED PRICES Have also been imbued with the These are hol- iday echoes; they are in no sense the worse for it except in the price, about one-fourth of which has been Bishop Stocks of Taffeta in pink, light blue, white or white and black; medallions At 50c. Taffeta Stock, with Chiffon Jabot or Lace At 75¢. At At Boas ‘of Cocque Feathers in white, pink, white and black or white and green; from 1 assortment is incomplete. At $8.50 Women's Handkerchiefs, with initial, all linen, daintily hand embroidered. 190. Women’s Handkerchiefs, hemstitched, ex- 190, fabric or construction. this season’s design. regular prices. “Z. Z," imported straight front, white or At 850, ft” “AUGUSTINE,” real whalebone, white Mi or black; also Z Z Corsets, French Sateen, At $1.75 fi “C, B.” French hip. “Straight” front, lace and ribbon trimmed top and drab Coutil, sizes are incomplete. Value $1.75. in pink, blue or lavender. Value $4.00. also the new dip hip ina Brocades, mauve, white, fancy white or pink. Value $4.50. Three-Quarter Coats. Of Kersey, Cheviot, Melton and Novelty Sizes six to fourteen years, Now at $5.%, 7.25 and 9.50, Broadway, 334° to 34th Street. % fancy, be they as simple or as luxurious as they may; the reductions ave- rage from one-third to one-half. : : hilar Silk izes four to fourteen years. $6.25, 8.25, 10.50 & 13.25. + Values $12.00, 15.00, 19.00 and 25,00. kets and Montagnac Sizes fourteen to ei piern years, Values $10.00, 15.00 and 22.00. es’ Three-Quarter Coats Of Kersey, Cheviot and Oxford Mix~ Sizes fourteen to eighteen Now at $6., 7.90, 9,00, 12,90, and Values $10.00, 14.00, 16.00, 18.00 & 22.00. A Sale of Corsets That are without a defect, either in ff They were | made for us of surplus materials of | 4.00, Hence, they are offered at less than half their bottom, - variety of fancy - blue or black, ff At $1.95 “AUGUSTINE,” in the latest French shape, straight front, either long or medium hip, some trimmed with ribbon, others with lace and ribbon; fancy Brocades in pink, blue or white, also dainty silk Batiste. lain white, pink or blue. ‘alues $5.00 to $6.50. _ WHY WAS HE FREED BY “ABE” LINCOLN Negro Who Couldn't Get Food in Restaurant Asks that Ques- tion in Damage Suit. ‘e ‘The right of a negro to go into & restaurant maintained for white people and be served with food, was talked about at great length to-day in the Weat Side Court before Edmund B. Brown, a negro lawyer, had Magistrate Poo! he affirmative side and the fleld. None disputed his statement that negro has a right under the Fifteenth amendment to the Constitution to eat Grinking, and startled her out of a sound | with white people. meaning, the nei Lincoint'' says Mr, Brown, Brown went ne at No. 678 Kighth avenue, # and walted patiently f omething to eat. food he Later on ht his walters on a charge of 1 Code. ‘Morgenthal denies that any discrimi on was shown against Brown, here Was a rush on in the restauran! d that the delay was unavoidable, Terrorized Neighborhood. Ise why was 1" — ico areed by Abraham into Morgenthal's or The walters paid no tent him, After making a formal Leer ures Toft the place and ates | He sald Write for Iiustrated Catalogue, Bet. | t f t Open Lrenicgs till 7. LEVELAN BSTABLISHED 1857. 144 BOWERY, “Bowery Savings Bank Block.” Broome Sts,, north of Grand Bt, Station, Weat side of street. and MRS, MIX MUST APPEAR IN COURT. Children af Dr. George W. Bull, Her First Husand, Not Sat- isfied with Property Division. panned SATURDAYS till 10, nn Wall Orders Filed. Inquiries Solicited. This case is warranted solid 14kt.gold throughout, the movement is a genuine nickel jewelled Waltham, This watch is espe- A Cially adapted for railroad Bmen or those performing heavy work, (3-button). Walnut Creams Chocolate Marshma Pineapple Bowbo: a, — a Chocolate Or a . ; mints -«* puitt for the Church of Our] SOMERVILLE, N J, Jan. 1—George] pppawwood, N. J» Jan. Tre ady of Good Cou Flowell, a wealthy farmer, Mving fear! George A, Mix who, with her husband na have been flied at th Jpottersville, had an exciting encounter | jay jived her for four 3 in & band ue Midings, Manhattan, for a wits a wolf which he caught in the wet] po. resldence in Van Dion avenw of Bullsinat cochial sehooiomouse, to (et Militia & Mopornd bag belonging 12] was serve y with papers In NP ereoies. be him. When Mr, Howell appeared the) yeorion with the disposition of the « re wolf fled. tate of her former husband, Dr. Geor ‘ho farmer hurried home and got his!} yy uli, who died in Palladelpaia and tobi well | thon , and an ex by He came. vp Mis, Mix was Dr, Bull's second wife, 2ox4s wil 98 of one beriel, (he}] 4.) name oume prominently bets ‘ . brick and Lerrw catty. In th een ubiie wt the time of De. tull's > be rae audits e publle a a Tee eee Rees MC ye wounded animal sprang at h'm. | death 1s eaid that the doctor left] Me rector. of the chur Mt he dodged to one side and before ii {ait his 5 ty, valued at $100,000, to his Meuron. of Yon could make # second spring he killed) widow, now Mrs, Mix, and bie children [ieat, The coat hi Fatal FL VIENNA, Jan. 7 of lives have been foot in Aushla as the result ee ee ee hdd bi oe r oh s with @ second charge of shot For a week ie woll had been wander: | ng around Peapack aad the ¥.c! iy, asing avhool children and gearing ola- nw suppored to by ” ju ?V ae’ ree wise were diosa tates pers sary Hance t the Bhat i d (o-Gay satied for Philadephia on Qo. dleposs : bs 8. VINCENT, 6th Ave, at 12th St., Broadway at 224 St. SPECIAL FOR THU Thibet Suits $15.90 (Black) (Black) A soft, pleasant cloth to “touch’? and eye, Will not gloss, dressy, serviceable, and now the correct thing; single and double breasted bb. wm «Bb, RSDAY, thy na At $2.75 — Forsythe THREE DAYS ONLY, Linen Colla Women, Girls, Boys, | Sizes 12 to 144. > $1.00 perDoz Regular price$2,75 per Best Quality 4-fold Linen, All Styles. John Forsyth ! THE WAIST HOUSE 865 Broadway,17th & 48th! SPECIAL FOR WEDNESDAY, oe

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