The evening world. Newspaper, January 13, 1903, Page 3

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GOULD FIRE 13026 000 Greatest Loss Is in Seven- teenth Century Tapestries and a Full Size Painting ‘ by Van Dyke. tertainment Scheduled Latter Part of Month - . Be Given According-to- Pro- agtamme. \ ‘ P Loeceenne in Gould Mansion; ( tapestries, Seven- teenth Century, Louis KIV. oweseee Wall size painting by Van Dyke, entitled “(4 Noble- man’ , Wortrait of Jay and King- dom Gould, painted »: ' Chartran if Scorched woodwork in ; main hallway, elevator shaft and on walls in DFOximity yee... cceeeees Total ... This is a tad; out street and Fifth ay. r, f enue last ‘As @ blaze it was insignificant, the ball scheduled for Jan. 22 | mansion will be given d. The Gould family w: . from Lakewoo, iy as to have “home to-day. Painters and deco BALUNOT T0 BE POSTPONED. $00,000 Meee ee ees. 8126,000 originally for Will 1,000 night. » and nf{the come d_to thelr Fifth avenue rators: Were busy in the house until 8 o'clock last night. When they went away they left a quantity of new curtains and other decorations piled up in the main hall. They also left some gaso- Une lamps, by the light of which they had been working, ormmer was a heap of rubbish, It is supposed that one of the and piled in cne lamps was hot when the painters left, and that the heat communicated to the rub- ‘ish, causing a smoldering fire thar @id not break out until after night. The watchman, James 0" discovered the fire before it had gained much headway, and gave the alarm by telephone. ‘When the firemen errived the streets packed ‘with the carriages of the guests of Mrs. lastor’s ball, a block away. There were humerous runaways, caused by the toot- ing of the engines and the clanging of the bells. The guests at Mrs. Astor's bout the Gould mansion wei suspended their gayeties untll jearned where the fire was And that it was not a blaze of much consequence. ‘Mrs, Gould praises the work of the firemen. She says that they worked with great discrimination and that outside of the damage quoted in her statement, the 7 ‘water damage 1s comparatively nothing. ‘The paintings and tapestries were to- It will be necessary to yrebulld most of the woodwork in the Yoain hallway and the elevator shaft. Mre, Gould arrived from Lakewood at She sent for Henry tally: destroyed. ).80 o'clock to-day. J, Dubeen, of a firm of art dealers with his assistance computed her ‘Tho destruction of the portrait of Jay !) pnd Kingddn Gould is felt by the and_mother of the boys to be the most gevere of their losses. bie. ‘Mr. Gould, the children and the sor- wants came to New York from wood later in tho day and took pos- session of the house. periousl; rare tapestrios and worl . 7 the flam: read They will have been extremely heavy. the loss ranked well for the pees. Walch, was little more t! JUDGE SAYS LAWYER | WAs DISORDERLY Attorney Insisted on Discussing Decision in Private Office and ’ Was Placed Under Arrest. Mayer Kronacher, .a lawyer, pne. living at No. 795 St. nue and having offices at No. 267 Way, was a prisoner to- iatrate Hogan in the Harlem charged with Gsorderly conduct The complainant was Justice P, Fallon, of th dng as the Harlem Court. Was not satisfed with a dects cently given by the. Justice, Fallon told Kronacher that ho yefuse (0 discus cording to pacher followed hin into his office, where he became abusive tuped to leave. under axrest, nstairs to the Police Court, “Kronacher 10ld Maglatrate Hi, ‘ They can replace the tapestries and get another painting fn place of the Van Dyke, but the loss of the picture of the boys is Jrrevoca- inconvenienced Ly the fire. ould home is & storehouse, of of BDI up the elevator « beyond the main hall, the damage would 5 it was, lze of the Nicholas « y before Mag- Ninth Muntelpal Dis- trlet Court, which is in the same bulld- According to him, Kronacher accosted him this morning and told him t the decision, but, ac: the Justice's story, mild- ‘Brien, they ‘s, and loss, father Lake- not be Had han a thirty. Broad- Court, Joseph t he ion re- Justice would REPRODUCED = wee smerar, SWEET, BUT HAD ISHAMMING, SHE |WINNIE MERCER |DIVORCE SHOCKS, TOO MANY WIVES.) STILL PUZZLES.) KILLS HIMSELE.| STAID CHURCH. Two Pretty Girls, Who C: Repress Admiration for per Harry Cohen’s Dear wae the West Side Court to-day and wistfully in the direction of # what they both called a niustache and euch lovely blue e; His name is Harry Cohen, wetting married, for in the years he has led five blushing The two young women room aro the Mrs, Cohen Nos. 4 No, 4 told Magistrate Mayo her name had changed Hall, A year later there was Harry Cohen ushered into the and almost simultaneously his father disappeared. No. & said Noy. 9, 192, she had been ca Before then she was Miss May jon and lived with her father Sa: 54 Ninth avenue. ‘You,’ came @ volee from the me $300," Now. @ short time ago. Mr. Sc’ who wus very fond of his son and had him live with him, hea there was another Mrs, Cohen li Yon He went there a) 4 wite and Mrs. Cohen 5, that: ny Isaac and his wife sitting attempt to leaye the N: bag and baggze. Two detectives him before Maxisirate Mayo, ‘As the little prisoner stood waiting for his turn, by side, and after an embarras! No, 4, noticing that No. 6 was! broke the tce and the follow! logue took place S Don’ 0. Why he's got three others. No. 6—-(looking flantly. I should thinie be amore . ‘Think of your lit te fell on each red quickly, dy conyersation. 4 (wistfully)—1'l i. and ¢ the No. We w Bath Beach, sand, It was 0 his knees to mine" ( loved the way of his tickled No. 5. tossing her head)—Fudi when Harry proposed to me we s sipping & sudden he Ie A ‘Matele, will 1 whispered * Frankie, use and long sigh) Kre private and rr ‘0 patrolmen were summoned from the police court and Kronaoher was He was taken juin that Pa with th Friday’ et another bottle. n't he emoke A little whil ad a chgar at Igaretien that see ear and pa ie ‘ wale GOLA aay, "Rot fan aon (alas ng) the he was! vd hap Mustache, Accuse Him. SAY THERE ARE THREE MORE Two very pretty young women sat In Uttle man with ¢urly brown hair and “dear Uttle and, ac- cording to the charges against him, when he js not selling clothing he 1s last few women to the altar in rapid euccession, in the coun 189, when she was just eighteen, she from Mi Frances Ward to Mrs. Cohen !n Harry Cohen in the West Side Lyce the court-room, ‘and the wedding cost e located She told him that Nos. 1. 2 and 3 were scattered about the Middle West. Before going to Yonkers he had told Ihis son Isaac, wh? wetgns 300 pounds, his came home to hold him until he had seen No, 4. When he got home the found son4n-iaw, who they had arrested in a) th avenue hou! the two young Mrs, Cohens eat on the front seat side not worth it, by never how he proposed to me. It was down at ° Wh: Y annot Dap- Little looked, dapper. yes. young. and 5. that City a little world, “prow that on Schion- muel at rear of hlosson, in-law, vd that ving in { Harry Js little drageed in Mne silence n tears, ing dia >) Well, apt to furry, nd doth they re- ontinued forget on the tein two big ships got down on dariin F that dear little mustache igo, why were a Klass of aned to- 1 vo ‘Then helt 8 lot of wo were and } we mi was awful mad. hy gambler, y, het he table, ell, T t rid of bim, mg th! —— Madelin Church, Who “Lost Her|Well-Known Baseball Memory, East Mifteenth ‘olals very best memory. ming. dition. Sidis to-da and is fun to her. it." doctors think D subject tective. The fills the bill, ® Might upon thi Sherlock says her parents or he quotes nL “AN thing." he sald, the cleverest Tam absolutely certain could tell amounts to pure cussedneas. has a peculiarly ‘tricky feminine natur and #he ts at the age—jus! developing into « woman-when a thing like thiy I've no dovbt she enjoys The nurse instantly €idis, but when he questioned Made’ she smiled benigniy and informed physician that she gook the knovk-oute because slie ‘Miked them.’ Edwin F, Merwin, Superintendent of Outdoor Poor, who has ‘had clfarge of the girl several times #ince her arpest, told him she had taken oath never to reveal che names of that Madelin t she ii Remains in Com- fort, a Problem: to. the Ci Authorities. street. are DON’T LIKE.TO TURN HER OUT ty The capricious resolve of # poutine maiden has set things topsy-turvy the New York Infirmary, at No, in 331 The whole sta(t there, likewise the physicians and of- at Bellevue and Poor estadlivnment, to-day the Outdoor trying their to make Madelin Church tell her real name. Tho psycho-pathotogical experts have decided that the young woman {a not afflicted with amnesta—that 4s, loss of They declare she is #ham- But no one ices to turn girl out in the cold, cold world ao tong @s there 4s a doubt of her mental con- the said Dr, hat she knows her name It. But she will toll al nurse in e mystery, Holmes in Sk. friends. her obstinacy Madelin Was Found Wandering. ‘The girl, who was found by the police on Christmas night wandering In West One Hundred and Fifty-first street and who pretends to have entirely lost her memory, 1s now occupying a cholce sult of apartments in the Infirmary over- looking Stuyvesant Square. heartily and feels so happy fhe cats that the herself just from sheer good nature. Sidis says that he will keep her three days longer, though he will not Madelin to the pneumograoh or perimetety They are useless, ‘What 4s needed now ts a clever de- charge nearly She elicited some confi- dences to-day from Madelin which thro For Madolin, at the mention of knock-out diops, grew talkative, declaring that she had been a victim of the chloral pellets, and that they wero responsible for her trouble. told thie to Dvr, “Y qvould dle rather than tell then.” delin as saying, For thia reason he thinks her a little mad and haw asked Dr. Packer to take her back in the Insane ward at Bellevue dust @ Stubborn Girl, about a che Madelin is not @ He thinks in Beran. evading the is method of hi TIN. Ci do the |, and Madelin |; Bhe reminds m hy she wil par in police and dna me one of of the e will; shall ue rr he hae was, ies cisco. CAUSE 0! nie Mercer, the on the gas in his room. When a chambermaid forced open, bed. pare if No caiise Las bi act. retired early Monday left no note or any word hrow any light upon the lercer registered unde George Murray and gave h as Patladelphia. mtly for several hours.. clothes and lying on u coat and veet covering was found. i Pitcher WINNIE MERCER, Well known baseball pitcher com- mits suicide in San Francisco. SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Jan, 13.—Win- well-known pitcher, committed suicide here in the Occidental Hotel last night by turning smelled that matters baseball th Turns: On. the Gas in the Occidental Hotel, San Fran- F ACT A MYSTERY. ew Members of the Duane M. E. Congregation Agitated Over Suit Brought by Communicant Against Her Husband, HE NAMES CO-RESPONDENT.|CENTRAL PARK ICE IS GOOD. COPHRIONT + bye PROWTep SOQ WIFES DOCTOR. Finds in His Bed Narrowly Escapes-Death at the Man’s Hands. BED SAVES HIM FROM RAZOR. Handsome spouse of Angry Iror worker Follows Men to Court to Say Dr, Mitchell, Her Physician, Had Been Called to Treat Her, Dr. Glovanni Mitchell, of No, 19 East Wifty-ninth street, had an exciting time to-lay dodging an Infuriated husband who found the doctor asleep in his bed. About 1) o'clock Polleemen Kettler and O'Connell, of tho Hast Fifty-first Street station, heard screams coming from a second floor apartment at No. 28 Past Fitty-sixth street. ‘They ran to the room and there found Mitchell hiding behind @ bed, while trying to put on his coat. Mariano Idono, an tron- worker and the occupant of the fiat, was trying to reach the doctor with an opened razor, ‘The doctor's clothes ware slashed and cut with the razor, but he had suffered no harm, Upon complaint of Idono, Mitchell was arrested. In court Idono told Magis- trate Crane the reason of the quarrel. Idono satd 8 had been married for four years. During that time his wife, who is a remarkably handsome woman, had been annoyed by the persistent atten- tions of Mitchell. ‘The pair had moved eral times to get away from the doc- tor. ‘This morning Idono went to work ai usual, but because of the cold returne: home, Opening tke door with a pass kev, ‘he declared he was surprised to find’ the young doctor asleep in his bed. after the doctor, but the doctor awak- aned hi YN BOYOON, THE BALL UP Now the Youngster Buckles on His Skates and Hies Him to the Region of the Frozen Lake. Old Greenwich and the members of Its] The ball !s up! htstorio Duane M. H. Church are agi- tated over a divorce case among them. Julia Louisa Keys applied through Mr, Fixman for §25 weekly allmony and counsel fee to prosecute her sult for ab- solute divorce from George Edward Keys, Ja which she alleges that he has lived for the past three years with a Mrs, Weatervelt. In her affidavit Mrs. Keys says she was married to Keys in 1886. He is a produce merchant. “For ome years my husband behaved properly and I was perfectly satisfied,” says Mrs, Keys. ‘He began to neglect me in 1896, and I was obliged to spend a little money I had received upon the death of my mother—a little more than $2,000—in the family expenses. “He often absented ‘himself. He ex- plained that he had been to the Duane Methodist Church. I learned it was not true, and watched him.” Then the wife tells of seeing her hus- band with Mrs, Westervelt, coming out of or golng into various houges, When she taxed him it, she says he loft her, since which she lias lived by needle- work. Opposing the application, A. H, Kat- fenburg presented an affidavit by Guerge Edward Keys, In which he says he nnd his wife “had‘an argument April 12, and she droye me from home.” no escaping gas this morning the door was Mercer was discovered in He was dead and had been ap- n assigned for his He Was tn good spirits waen he evening and ae would the name of pis ree’ ped Ww ng: door of which in hie it ais s head, Mercer From the gas Jet in the centre of the @ rubi er room was guapend the end of this Mos hig mouth Mercer's identity papers found among tls which read: ‘Tell Mr the Langham Hote has taken his lif ad Mi ay sion and had the ry meinber of how Was nothing harac| and he was his fellow players as ho wa: men ‘Mercer was always a cha players as age that had much t the American I uy 218 no use wh clubs et the association. come to the point where must and Will have sometil regard to thelr sale fro another, We are not catti spropose to be treated as mu ‘Bince jug fall Mercer ha ing in Call team and wa: was one of the beat pite hae ever moet members of tlemanly play surp Fined +8 bases mer tubs an mi had placed in er turning tie gas full ¢ lished by that Winnie friends outside of pearance rerather than & elu: ever, is W the pl ng to a ye y rs in ono team bo nown and was one of the } POM t be ja with the All-American jo at ne pro- ‘GEN, WOOD GOES TO MANILA. @he prought sult for divorce, and that sult i# @till pending, and tt began before the dates in which she now mentions Mra. Westervelt, He his wife sent urch pastor und im to aak him to furnish her ©.on which she could ad him arrested for non-sup him, the Duane Methodiat C others dtyorce; port, and otherwise a finally brought thi js desirous, I un a orce from me # Mr, Hammond." He denies her charges, and says ‘no one could make affidavit of my guilt without committing perjury,” and says he stands ready to support his wife whenever she will return and live with him, Decision was reserved, ——_—— OLD CITY MARSHAL DIES. Michael Angerman Was tu York- ville Court Thirty-five Years, Michael! Angerman, who for thirty- five years was a City Marshal in the Yorkville Court, died at his home about midnight Me was Saturday shortly afte at No. 21 Kast Eighty In the ty-five years man was {0 th four Judges, Monell, and the present one, german Was a crip Ke been rendered partly with he rea stricken « by rheumatism, In 15st he for strong friendslilp with John Carre who was 4 clerk in the court at the time. “Four sons, one of wnom ts him- pelt marshal, and a daughter, sur- Nive him, He was fifty-seven 8 old. pected (hat He WHI Succeed to Command There, WASHINGTON, Jan. 1.~Brig.-Gen Leonard Wood has applied for a in the Philippines and his request has been granted. He will go to Maniia in| f) feet itching. Nothing gladdens the ball i outer and inner edges, y, will trace In feathery lnes|t fin point with} confusion ssion on the choleest revi Kates, th up. 18 y's and hilarity. 5 » the interesili the Nl end will ‘hat {9 all that need be entd, ofarcont | § and his magic elctrical waves could not spread this glad news faster than the emall boy of Manhattan. ‘There is uneasiness in all the schools. The teachers wonder why ‘boy shifts in his seat and tries to get a peep at a nearby clock out of the win- dow. She does not know, but somehow thenews has been transmitted through the class, and the youngsters feel their the youngsters’ hearts more than the announcement that ‘That brand-new pair of shining nickel on which has and above all the duretiy re dow cut the volute the out of harm's and those of Mi attack, brought the police. he doctor nsserted {n court that called this morni quest. Magistrate Crane thought moments, and said if th the doctor had a pert there, at her urgent interrupted Idono. aid he.could not hold the doctor. At this juncture Mrs. Idon: court. She substantiated th he doctor was more n ber physician. ents. Idono said he would not lv —————{___— No Money to Huy Coal. cial Sessions at Jamaica, L. I. able to buy coal, and to kee! families warm they had taken trees, But both had bank the fines were assessed. small Del Dickinson While Calling om Friend. Just as she was about to call Mra, with her daughter, Mrs. r|No, 173 West Ninety-ninth street, atricken with apoplexy and died. 9 cail on friends at Hundred and Second street. ing inson uttered a groan anc floor. Dr. Burford J. Hospital, who wa the SLASHES AT HIS (A Physician Whom Mariano Idono|Capt. O'Reilly Arraigns - BiG CROWD TO SEEAT 3 Idono sprang for a razor and started ‘c|tn gaining thelr freedom on ‘ball he was treating Mra. Idono, He eald he haa re- few was the cass t Tight to be, “But hoe had no right to be in my bed,” The Magistrate agreed with him, but came into statements of Mitchell, emphatically denying that She gjso denied her husband's state- ™ FINED FOR CHOPPING TREES. Men with Bank Accounts Plead Antonio Pangarb! was fined $25 and Stephen Darteski $10 by the Court of to- day for chopping trees down in the Mor- ris Woods, belonging to the Hpiscopal Diocese. Both pleaded that they had been mite thelr scounts arid AGED WOMAN’S SUDDEN END. on friends this afternoon, Mrs, Delia Dick- inson, seventy-two years old, who lived . R. Deas, at was inson and her daughter went Mrs, Dickinson a ies West Gos liway of the houre Mrs. ick~ the hallway ec emir . Hood Wright called, found Mrs.joral tons of coal have ain) HN TAKEN TOE ——oo and Other Proprietors of derloin Resorts Arresteds: ‘Big Police Swoop... 7 % Haymarket Owner Was:Caught?! Ing Under Stalre and: Hela I He Gave Gilt-Edged ‘Ball pede in All the Dives. With nine men securely '> bars after. the biggest of the Capt. Miles O'Reilly and bis men’s questionable resorts In the Ten © the white-halred police commander determined that they should not cape a night in jail unless tished giltedged fail, \Strew were of no evail and @ score of m gers were kept busy, during the morning hours scu: around notes in search of men who .o schedule good enough real estate | satisfy the captain. : Tt was 2 A, M, to-day before thes] of the prisoners secured bail and wall outside to make the temperature loin stopped talking about’ the by O'Rellly and Inspector Walsh, oelily Get Corey. ‘These were the places visited: ‘The Haymarket, No, 483 Sixth as ‘The Cairo, No. 34 (West Dwenty- serect. The Bohemia, No. 48 West \ ninth street. fF ‘Astor Cafe (the \Athambra), Noy Weat Twenty-elghth etreet. | Koster & Bial's, No, 389 Sixtty ‘The prisonera who had such, d ae Edward B. Corey, proprietor of © ‘Haymarket; William Graham, his ager; Matthew Shea, alleged propri of the Cairo; “Jack” Smith, his tenant; Demetrius Racodulas, all proprietor of the Alhambra; Joanides, cashier of Koster & George Campbell, the manager, & Henrv Bitner, a waiter, in ¢he resort. ‘There was not the slightest in that the raid was planned, yet the’ prietors have been eo onthe alert it did not come as en entire surpr A big squad of policemen was n shalled, under the cloak that they with his | t; the Frengh 5 ste aeuth and apouts eve for wcivoraet | acta cimpeteeGe : Capt, O'Reilly said he wes that the law was enforced. — sound of warning could be gt squad swooped down on the H and carried away the has go successfully eluded viously. He was caught awares, While these two raids were in ress Sergt. Cohen raided the Sergt. Boyle the Bohemia, and Gillesple Koster & Bial's, Other quickly closed thelr doors, and nob in) years has the Tenderloin been as: fe There was no of at the Freneb b 95 et 4 x the i |. ‘The other aoa placed under bonds. ranging from = to $600, ae —————_ f Several Tous Stolen in Harlem, 1)” ‘The police have Deen asked to look Owl | fer coal thieves by Curtis & Bl 3 who have yards at the foot of Mast Hundred and Ninet street. y that since the cold weath innot a night has passed. bat are ni telepho “Hell pl. » this What? I be ready wires warm. “the ball Manha tte pall to gO WD has bee affor The anxi has kent his gradually th trated by @ Department heinous c why the sea ne rt posed lakes. Anyhow, 1th the © aring surta mitted until FREE DOCTORS our Will give our being for we will fu 4B West 2h t Fi id April Kus ni t he will Be Abed dai tis ht wlli'Eaoox : i" ade 0, oa = i) Hello, Central—144t Dick. say, tb? 4 ‘¢ and yarlous other rand dear to the bo: Not only has the small bo giad news, but Singglii Contral The he bail is wu, AN right ‘Messages of this sort The mag is up,” has at Ce put at ot nin em ey with ey ke “Whe letter was ft i her nt eating. ferred to the Park| nly denied the walt 1 luxury which the small bo’ Park and it on Contra nine f ice ia tus which not o, but sald that the reason son Ur va the ot matters that y y spread the over the town the JAM Madison Square, ison Square, ball, as backward positon of the Cent the ten at other and more ex- ball 10.90 F is morning until night the the steel on the git. | The akating will be per- » oe | To all who call before Jan many inetituts ner and will FREE KOCH TREATMENT) EXTENDED TO JAN, 20, In Response to Many Requests, SERVICES| FREE. 90 at any of as in thin couatry we is Will you ‘Good-by. ¢ keeping the gic in the wends the blood of youth dancing through many old arteries And not a few old bucks decide to take | tho trip to Central Park just to show | the youngsters how skating used to be | done in the yeara that have flown OR 1 Park. 1 Dickinson dead. thelr yards, up. words, | also “uc? || White Enamel Beds up | OUTFIT 8 be | NO. 1 al | ne to iron Spring, 3-O sizes only, from | hum | iron Spring, one OUTFIT NO, 3 or fancy Ticking, value $21.00 complete errs. OUR | $5.00 Lamps for. ‘<i || draught burners and beauti » af bronze te 98. Ri Vi Will Offer Wednesday, January’ 14 in Bed and Bedding Outfits, © Some splendid values in White last year’s entire sample At Less Than Half Cost. qf Consists of one White Enamel Bed, one-inch Posts, extended foot, heavy fi mounts on head and foot, one heavy all- one good soft top and bottom Mattress, value $10.00; Special for this sale... OUTFIT | Consists of one White Enamel Bed, massive NO. 2. | Posts, extended foot, brass rail mounts and spindles on head and foot, one hea fibre soft top and bottom Ma value $15.00; special for this sale, complete. Consists of one White Enamel Bed, with continuous Posts and brass scrolls, extended foot, one heavy all iron Spring, one black ized hair Mattress made in one or two parts in A.C. A, rearing. : special for this sale, To-Morrow, Wednesday, January M4, Decorated Parlor Lamps . At About 50c. on the Dollar, ++ $2,50| 87.50 Lamps for... $6.00 Lamps for....++ $2.98 '$10.00 Lamps for, ns $4 These Lamps are all handromely decorate Enamel Bed Outfi line gf Brass bress r 5 | 118 hag ey *: $10.98 $15.98/ ; ft ly mounted in

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