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BNilig BP i & “IVE INFIRE Mt ~—WASLUM “FiftyeTwo Panic - Stricken ~~ Patients of the Colney _» Hatch Hospital in London ’ Burned to a Crisp. SOME- ‘STILL AT LARGE. Six. Hundred Unfortunates Bat- tle with Their Keepers and _ Impede the Work of Rescuers . in the Flaming Building. L . 22.—Fitty-two patients were burned to: death by a fire at the Colney Hatch Asylum this morning. The outbreak occurred in the Jewish wing of the institution, The flames spread with great rapidity, and before they could be controlled fve wooden buildings, including dormitories and the doctors’ apartments, were destroyed All the efforts of the officials were Girected to removing the insane inmates, ‘Dut the latter became wild with excite- Ment and so panic-stricken that not only were they unable to help them- - nelves, but greatly impeded the opera- “Hons of those trying to save them. Six Hundred Women in Peril. ‘There were nearly 60) women in the eMuFned annex at the time the fire was +“ Alscovered. Most of them were safely “transferred to the main building, which _Wag,uninjured, Some are still at large. ‘The work Of searching the ruins con- -tinues, The officials admit that fifty #'bedies have been recovered. “AM Victims Were Lunatics. the wictims were lunatics. Their charred remains presented a horrifying “*iepectacle, “felatives or friends of the patients, who “arrived from all quarters, Pitlable ‘scenes were witnessed as weeping men “sand ‘women left the promises after as- certaining that relatives or friends had Mrperisned In the flames. : ‘The nurses had a terrible experience in _ trylng_ to assist the insane people, who lyrere Go" panio-stricken that they had teraly to be driven to a place of most Immediately became a _ furnace Nothing .was left standing. The cor- om. “fron; roofs of the dormitories the bedsteads of the patients were melted by the intense heat. y ernca in Their Deas, thelr beds, and the charred remains of Hers wetp found huddled together in +Oorners, while groups of partially con- umed ‘bodies on the site of the cor- dors. showed that many persons lost eit Ives and sacrificed those of others in their frantic efforts Lo force a passage through the flames to the main building. E}L All the? victine were women, —— "MAY DIE LIKE SISTER. Member of Mililonaire Baby °Clark’s Family U1 in Denver. DENVER, Col,, Jan. 27.—Pneumonia, following the dangerous surgical opera- tion, threatens to bring another death this month into the family of Senator W. ‘A. Clark, of Montana. Yesterday morning pncurecn’s: complicated the condition of a ts. Frank Shaw, who was brought to Denver hospital two weeks ago. Mrs, Shaw is the sister of the late Myre. W, A. Clark, jr. who gave her life ‘for ‘the so-called million-dollar Srandson of Senator Clark, urns to Death in Home, DUNKIRK, N. Y., Jan, %7—Fred Teadt was burned to death early to-day In a fire which destroyed his home. Three boarders escaped by jumpl from the windo: y dumplog WORLD WANTS Benefit Employer and Employee. 1/136 Paid Help Wants im Ss 3 , World orne’s “BUT Paid Help Wants in the 13 + 518 ceny. pagers combined, AGENTS®...... .++ 16| IMPROVERS APPRENTICES IRONBRS . AND’ LEARNERS’ T/ JANITORS ..., , SMRTIFICIAL FLOW- ‘BRI JANITRESSES JBWELLERS KITOHENWORK LAUNDRESSES , LUNOKMay MACHINISTS MEN i +38 10 a OMNIBUSES ,. PAINTERS 5| PIANO HANDS , 3| POLISHERS ,, 4] PORTERS . MBLKMAIDS .. 3) | PRESSEKS POSITORS .... 10| PRESSMEN SALPSLADIES SALESMEN SHOE HANDS SKIRT HANDS SLEEVE HANDS SOLICITORS | .. STBNOGRAPHERS. TAILORS ruokens . Whe asylum was besieged by anxious | “safety. The inflammable premises al- | Some ‘of the lunatics were burned in| | Home to Die, but Was Over- MILLINERS , 12] for E. 1 Vincent, tne conductor, and W. MOULDERS ., 3|J, Grant, the. porter. When they NEOKWEAR 10\/ reached Mr, Schiller's berth the man NURSES .... | was dead. OPERATORS ral |mission was obtained to take !t to the HOW SNIFFEN ISX MONTHS FOR ‘ELOPING COUPLE: Clad Only in Borrowed Trousers Pretty Mrs. Cook, After Repeat- He Flies to the Police, Who}: LOST CLOTHES. * Procure Him a Dress Suit but No Shirt. There He Discovera His Suit on a Prisoner, Who Is Stripped in His Turn and Wrapped in Old Police Uniform. Frank FE, Sniffen, a wealthy dry-goo: merchant, of No. 90 Washington ave- nue, Brooklyn, acted the star role to- day in probably the strangest comedy- drama that ever was played in the Adams street station and the adjoining court, Mr. Sniffen came on the scene via. Washington street in the van of a crowd of several hundred small boys. He was clad only in a pair of trousers and they were so large for him that it was all he could do to keep from Sliding down through one of the legs, When he reached the sergeant's desk he unfolded the following to the accom- paniment of chattering teeth: “Late supper—home over pridge— bottle of wine, Woke up this morning at No. Washington street, Clothes gone—money gone—watch gone—every- thing gone, Hollered for help—man gave } me trousers—kicked me out in snow.’ Sergt. McCarthy immediately de- Jepatched Detectives Marian and Mann and Polleeman O'Malley 0 the Washington street address. He Sniffen's home, in Washington avenue, to tell the man's mother that viver and needed some clothing. The man’s aged mother in her excitement packed & dress suit in a satehel and ave {t to the policemen, When Sniffen saw the dress suit he said a few harsh things, but was forced to put it on over |his nakedness. ‘There was no accom- panying shirt or underclothing, and tne figure he cut when he was led Into the Adams Street Court demoralized even Magistrate Dooley's solemnity. Washington street nouse. They were James A, Lawrence, thirty years old; Als wife, Kate, twenty-seven, and Joni Connolly, twenty-five, who suid he jived at No. (3 Atlantic avenue. When Snit feu caught sight of Lawrence he falt |leaped in the air, shouting: Imy sult on.’ ‘Strip him, then,” ordered Magistrate Dooley, attempting to swallow his gavel. ‘The prisoner was taken to a side room and stripped and as each garment was taken oir Jt Was restored to Mr. Snit- fen, who in this manner replaced his dress suit with suitable garments, After | Mer, Sniffen had come into his own again & inessage was sent to the Magistrate | asking whether Luwrence should be ar- | raigned as he was, clad only in a pair of socks, ‘The Magistrate gave orders that one of the policemen lend the prisoner an old uniform and Mr. Lawrence was led up before the bench jaressed as a bluecoat, ‘Ihe policemen who ‘arrested the pris- oners in the Washington street house announced ‘that they found in the pock- ets of the clothes of Sniffen worn by. Lawrence a pawn ticket for Sniffen's overcoat. Magistrate Dooley remanded the prisoners for further examination. Later In the day the three prisonera were arraigned again, and Magistrate Dooley held them in’ $1,00 iball each, They ‘pleaded not guilty to aharges of grand larceny CORPSE LAY IN SLEEPING BERTH, Herman Schiller Was Hurrying taken by Death on the Train. For more than a hundred miles the sengers on train No. 54 of the New, York Central Railroad travelled with a dead man during the trip from Albany to this clty early to-day, and not until the train had almost reached {ts dest!- nation was it learned that the man supposed to be sleeping in his berth w. really dead, Herman Schiller, forty years old, of No, 460 East Twenty-sixth street, Brook- lyn, and his wife, had been travelling in the West, and were returning home. Mr, Schiller was ill with twherculos| and the dostors gave him no hope, Mr. Schiller told his wife that he wanted to die in bis home In Brooklyn, and sadly they started east, A ‘They broke the journey at Albany and early this morning boarded a train there for the last stage of the trip. Schiller and h!s wife occupied berths on opposite sites of the Pullman car ‘Torgas.” Mr. uier was very weak when the train srted, but not until 6 o'clock, when she drew back the curtains of the berth to see how he was, did Mrs, Schiller ap- prehend a sudden crisis, She could not rouse her husband and sent hurriedly They broke the fact to Mrs. Schiller as gently as possible, and when the train arrived at the Grand Central Bta ton the body was taken Into the poltc tation there until the Coroner's pe home in Brooklyn, Mr. Schiller's death occurred while the train was running between Albany and the Highlands, near West Point, OLD WOMAN FELL OUT, Tumbled from Window and Died as Result of Iniurtes, Aged Julla W, Pettibone, of No. & Debevolse place, died early to-day from injuries received in @ fall from the third story window of the house in WAIST HANDS WAITERS ..,, WAITRE@ODS which she lives. The old women was attempting to close the window when ORLD: TUESDAY | MRS. LORET AND THE HU. ed Promises of Reform, Suc- ceeds in Breaking the Heart of Her Loving Husband. SO CLAD HE GOES TO COURT. , COMPANION APPEALED TO. pleaded repeatedly not to break up miy i that he wou J and my peace of mind my wife to give up this man's atten- 1 pleaded with Both have broken thelr pledg T am heartbroken.” So sald James W. Cook, an industrious | young employee of the Navy-Yard, as | he talked with an Evening World re- porter to-day, just after his pretty little sentenced In the Gates Avenue Court, to six months’ imprisonment In the penitentiary. In Another Man's Company. ‘The Cooks had been married a trifle more than two years when the husband learned of the attentions paid his bride by Jamen D. Andri of nineteen. a handsome youth They were seen together at the theatres and at other places. Cook Implored his Loretta to give up ndria’s society and he made a similar | request of Andria, coming to his rival, not as the indignan: husvand, but as the supplicant. Both promises were given and speea- occasions Mre. Cook remained away from home; only y return to the forgiveness the comforts of 2782 Atlantic thelr apartments ‘at avenue, Brooklyn, BBD 6FFF4GHTTS9-4-044OOOOO09 sent iow other policemen to Mr. | SOOAHHSS pressed repentance and a des Trip to Long Island, Cook's latest disappearance was few days later the hus- received a letter from her, ed West Sayville, he had accidentally fallen into the | a prisoner by Andrla and had no m abe did not retuy: In which she ex- EVENING, JANUARY 97, 1903. TA COOK, WHO ERRED AND STRAYED, {. police and the erresi of th pass: ook and A sullty, the most the “court-mom Mugistrate lay, pirad nsolate person | BAND WHOSE HEART O9OPOOG DE ODE Pin nnoxe PASTE CEMG TO OYREDEEDEERDENE DED has brokea | costs $200, and {t would not be this price NARTINLETTERS, IN BABY CASE Wife of Man Who Refuses to! Acknowledge Child as His Produce Missives to Prove Claim To-Day. KANSAS TO TAX TS BACHELORS Yes, and the Spinsters, Too, Will Have to Pay $25 a Year Each if They Don’t Look ar. Sniffen had hardly got before the | Des eh when pergt. Mevarthy’s men | brought in three prisoners from the | y ‘He's got! AIMED AT THE GOVERNOR.|!S CONFIDENT OF WINNING. Mrs, Elizabeth Starr-Keefer Martin, whose husband, Dr. Joh tin, of Boston, TOPEKA, Kan., Jan, 27.—Representa- ell’s Dil to tax able-bodied bacholors and spinsters is the talk of The ‘bachelors will, If the £1 goes through, have to pay $50 a year sters half that sum, ‘The age imits for the unmarried mals Population Js between. forty and aixty- five years and that of the “girls” be- tween thirty-five and fifty years. Mr. n McLeod Mar- ng to prove that the baby she says is theirs is spurious, before Health Lederle to-day for cross-examination by her husband's counsel, ‘When Mrs, Martin packed up Sunday and suddenly left her boarding-house at! West Twelfta i variously reported that she had disap-! eleven In the party the crisis in i Martin moved to No. 34 West One Hundred and Nine- teenth street so that she might avold the annoyance of women who called to express their sympathy. Commisstoner ‘a funeral on those who have families to support ace peared just was renched. The host of Indigent relatives that these bachelors and spinsters will dig up for the purpowesof evading this tax will be something alarming. The men regard the bill as a joke, They declare it Is ‘worth $ a year to have the priv- 1 in the single state, declare that in return for the payment of the tax the State ought to Brant them immunity or protection from the spinster. flege of remainin; fe to Women. Woman Is by nature economical. she will not pay that $25 if she has to go out and grab some “able-bodied bach. | clor"’ by the hair of the head and yank ; Martin's attorney asked questions which him before a clergyman or justice of the {intimated the belief that this child was Peace, The bachelors fear this sort of not of honorable birth. The documents thing and will demand that the Stato;now held by Mrs, Martin prove to the fesue a icense or certificate which will ;contrary, Protect them when the spinster gets them ay far as th: "tle-up"’ stage, her head soornfully “The idea of making us pay a tax!}baby last June. If we are spinsters it is not our fault.) refused, and to-day Mrs, Martin wi Of course we have all had a ohance t) get married, good men In this world that a respect: woman would care to take asa If it dw the Intention of the State to make us marry them, of that we will Juries sustained, and eight others we: offer copies of the letters sary evidence, letters are filled with pathos and tell of the sorrow of an estranged wife and of a mother who Is fighting for the name of her child, WOMEN VICTORS 1 LONG LEGAL FIGHT Mary and Elizabeth Donohue Gain Possession of Rockaway Water Front After 25 Years. 3 the neces- claims and sue for a lun assert that the engines Ww sound law, an of the approach of t 1 DEAD,{ OVERCOME: “GAS TURNED ON, They. say they are able to take care of themselves if any bachelor should come around and try to Induce them to enter into the marriage Hits at the Governor, aimed’ at Gov. Who are. unmarried, ve had several posalq from women ; celpts from the taxes go to the school 8 thousand pr: ee TO DISCUSS PHILIPPINES. Edward M. Shepard Will Speak Cooper Union, oward the Philippines" ts ussion at a meeting oper Union ‘Thursday evening. The situation in the new col- ony will be considered in its different phases and particular stress will be laid upon the call for ald recently made py President Roosevelt, Spencer Trask, banker and philanthro- | pist, will preside at the meet By the verdict of a jury in the Su- the subject for di in Long Island to be held In preme Court Mary Agnes daughters of the late Judge Don son of a tri y. the possesslon disputed for f which has over # quarter of The property Donohue by B00 feet of shore frontage and extends Tt equals in dimensions six clty blocks, James Gaftrey man and merchant, | On J ecessity of & $3,000,000 appro- ph omon® ‘Helix Adler Will peak of the proposed introduction of "Coolle Labor" back 600 feet of Cornell Universit who was ohairman of the firat Phill ine Commission, will sp J..G, Beburma simers, alleging that h of all the outer beach, It ts aaid that Gaffrey I» particularly —————EAE_— was the right- Schwab Leaves Palermo for PALERMO, Sicily, Jan, 27. she lost. her balance and fell to the court below, annoyed by the decision of the Court as be owned a system of small bridges |of Union Made Workingm: extending from the inner to the outer|@at in convention to-day at the Hotel beaches and made a big income wery | Albert, oummer by chagging (ii GY the privi- bege of eoumnia® M Schwab ral, He is on his way to FANILY I CRASH ASKS DAMAGES Eleven Were in Two Sleighs! Struck by Train and Survivors | Merge Their Claims, Suing) Railroad for $155,000. TWO OF THE PARTY KILLED. BATAVIA, sults aggreg 5,000 have been Drought by one family agatnst the New | : York Central Ratiroad for an acotdent which happened on Jan, 12. Two of the family were killed outright and none escaped Injur; Samuel Mott and hig family attended . 12, and there being | two slelghs were i to the cemetery and were among the last to leave the grave, In driving home it was nece-sary for them to cross the New York Central | tracks near Stafford, and they were Jog- 4 of having any fear of the re-{ ging along at what Mr. Mott ‘says was sult, Mrs, Martin says she is very con- | Bhe has received from her form- er husband, Rev, Dr, Benjamin B. Keef- er, now editor of the Ottawa Citizen, Canada, affidavits and other papers to prove the legitimacy of her first child, Terry Starr-Keefer, now about twenty an “easy trot” when they rea track He says he slowed up, as he was driv- ing the first sleigh, to listen and ascer- tain if a. train was approaching. He ned the iheard none, and, as was his custom at ,fuch places, whipped up his horses so {that thoy would cross the tracks quickly At a former session of the hearing} Health Commissioner, in case a traln should be approaching, e two slelghs were on the tracks, the road crossing them dlagonaliy, when a fast passenger train bore down upon them, The fict that Mott was going with the wind prevented him from hear- {ing the train when he slowed down, requested Dr, Martin to put in eyidence certain let- On the other hand, the spinster tosses | ters received by him from his wife prior 1to and subsequent to the birth of the ‘The doctor's couns The two slelghs were smashed to pieces and the entire family thrown tn confusion about the tracks. Two mem- bers of the famlly were killed outright another Is said to be dying from in- bady hurt The surylyors have tle did not the crossing, as provided by that they were given no notice Liquor-Dealer and Brother-in- Law Retired This Afternoon— No Cause for Suicide. Joxeph Smith a jituor dealer, of No: WE Centre strec 8 found dead from wax in his room NUT Leonard tots aftcrneen, fy an adjoining room hh rother-In-law. Cornelius Fitesimmy wae found unconscious Fitasimmons will recover ‘The gas set In Smith's room was turaed on Smith had lived at the Leonard stree nouxe for five sears, He went home to Winch today w 4 bro Af 11 ey Wen Margo wax ut dy of Smit Fy xbort t 1 Mrs. Fligh tzsimmon Sinith had no reason for sultde —~ Garment Makers Meet, Memb National Aarociation a's Garments + of the f ver by H. B. Peters, of | ver Node the nt. At the sea- Tin to be brid to-morrow officers for following. sear wil) be elected, ones—as a diamond Is about the only | | stone which cannot be successfully tm! tated. We are ding this kind of work all the time.” i | “It wouldn't be polley for the firm | to say who {ts customers are," Was ©) the evasive reply 7 Aged Yardman Who Wandered) t\\° reniucen “by. parte. produc ions. he from Home at Morris Park} waix. to Son’s House in Troy Will} Gornam & Be Cared For. ve seeweo war ovzeo| CROWD IN A PANIC his neat cotttage In Morris Park, L. 1, e nume of Nis sun in arey, NX. i me was, Urouat ts 3; |Got Beyond Control of Gripman (down his inenta powers wie ended und} and Dashed Down Columbia vme of the pleasures of life of which he le some of the plea Heights Hill, in Brooklyn. When he ayycared at the home of his He could not and the doctors Jan, 27.—Damag> wus ne nnally Hiwit where he had be r x there and in Brooklyn were puzzled, He | A ear on the cable line In Montague regaining bis normal |street. Brooklyn, running from Wall think he | «tree ferry to Clty Hall, ar-[the nil! between Columbla Heights and He and his wife | the (erry-house to-day Long eee TE passengers were slightly ris Park. lieved that they escaped serious Injury During all that tme the | had no change from the |dines In a box, The work ‘ 6 hours rip slipped from the cable about half rand foul, the ‘vig {Way down toe bill, ‘The gripmar They formed a part of the} is now gradually d the paystelan, ly hale and hearty, home near the d Ratiroad station rious, but for tw man’ had been c The doctors tt strain benumbed his mind just as keep leg or arm too long In one pot ramps the limb, to restore him to health the unending |!he rails, gaining momentum wit! They hope soon | the car was runnin, —- Jing and’ praying ‘when the car struck the biimping post. at the end of the; | "the front platform was smashed back | tare bur the} dow. Ws Seeurtin vrohen gla All of the Injured were | able to continue across the ferry to this Two Humorous Young Men of Brooklyn Do the End-Men Act. While Congregation Stares. and Olaf Swans. the | Chureh | they od «the ywhere else ave: é A b : Brooklyn. Dur-| to the Executive Offices, + Sunday evening Tryck : “el New York, putple | al Janes H, Ataxanoen, Formerly Vice-Fresi- S' nue and Pa inaugurated eged Jokes and singing funny songs in Swedl hemaelves for the | Arcuty Brows “HEY, ED! HOUSE IS AFIRE!”| ®t sieioutelpspue The house was on fire had i ved her two children. Mrs. Manning of dt, Pi All of the| Rey fn the burning bullding got out i Rev. M. DAD, damanugh din the Menning flat i epee Peres hy ot Bape _AFFLETHEES | Reported Robbery of Mrs. Chas. | Fair After Death Brings to Light Clever Scheme of Some Wealthy Women. REAL JEWELS LOCKED uP, Nine-tent'a of the Brilliant Orna- i; ments Worn in Great Ballrooms Declared to Be Nothing More than Fac-Similies in Paste. $ The published statement of a Paris © jJeweller that the Jewels of Mra, Charies 2 Pair were not stolen after her death {| with her husband in an automobile a jeldent In France hecause she had le } | her real ones In America and took only P| pasie imitations abroad was partly ® | corroborated to-day by New York deal- © lors, who asserted that the majority of Pl wealihy New k women who own | precious gems wear imitations of the ¢ | originals in order to protect themselves agalast robbery FW. Frederikd, No 993 Broadway, who makes a sperinity of manufacturing ste Jewels for the moneyed cliss, said an Evening Wort reporter: “Nine-tenths of the jewels seen in the aristocratic dallrooms of New York are nothing more than paste. The real Jew- els are left at home under lock and key or else stored in a safe deposit vault, their owners not caring to run risk of robbery by wearing them. %) “You see this," he asked, holding up * [what appeared to be a beauilful pendant “| of diamonds and emeralds. “We have jJust Anished this plece for one of the | wealthiest women i'n New York. It is la nile of a pendant owned by her ch Is worth $10,000, The {mitation were Jt not for the fact that we were! obliged to use real diamonds--very small | “Did you supply Mrs. Falr with paste similes of her jewels?” he was When J, P. Moore, head of the dia- mond department at Tiffany's. was asked whether It was a common prac- Ue eireles to e jew- merely raised his eyebrows and took a sald R. L., Locke, of It's done every day. although we do not make imitations.” rtainly it is, on Several of the cut, Tt ts bee because they were packed in like sar- rere Were mbout fifty pa © car, which isu smail one, gers on when the the brakes, but the car slip ft | foot traversed, The passengers were not aware that away until they ottom of the hill were almost at the one of them could escape, they were) tightly wedged, and all were scream P into the body of ¢t matorman escaped Injury. broken, and the only damage to passengers was caused by ery win-| IACK THE HOG INLAW'SEMBR and Hoboken Indulges His — Fancy Once Too Often. IN THE PENITENTIARY: NOW.: He Was Pursuing a Girl When Three Men Appeared on the) Scene and Seized Him—Old and! a Laborer, ‘o longer will the girls of Jersey City} and Hoboken have cause to fear the une}. welcome caresses of “Jack the Hugger?! for he has been caught and ventenoee to the County Penitentiary for months. For weeks this man ieteiigae! : the residents of the fashtonable sections! of the two elties, and even when caught). it took the united efforts of three men j and a policeman to hand him over te justice, * Miss Minnle Kloproph, of No. 266 At+ ington avenue, Jersey City, was returns ing from the home of her sister, Mrs, Marion Bridgeman, when she noticed tall man following her at @ distance, . As the stranger came nearer she started to run, When she reached ber hom darted into the areaway, closely fol- lowed by the persistent mashe' 3 Desplie her struggles, “Jack thé a ‘ ger,” for it was he, held her close: him and kissed her several times, ‘Tha terrified girl screamed and struck: him over the head, Then she broke from — him and darted out of the yard to the sidewalk and ran down the street, hugger pursued her until R. G, Weare aud Caarles Swartz, who chanced to be passing, hurried to the girl's assistance, urned and fled in his turn, but plunged into the arms of Bx Commissioner Thomas G. Lennon as turned the corner, y: * After hearing Miss Kloproph's story — aver called up the police over the ‘phone while the other two heid capuve. Patrolman Lockwood qui : responded. After another struggle freedom the masher submitted to fits and was taken to the station-ho! Wien arraigned before Justice Mur- phy In the Oukland Avenue Court: t= nev sald he was J y years of age, a laborer, liv= ing at No. 39 Woodward street, looked sheepish when confronted by eof his captors, and although he 4a plea of not guilty he was sen. tenced to lx months’ imprisonment Im ‘ounty penitentiary, ‘ Weavers two daughters, Ethel tentified that they 380. been accosted by the hugger, wi 5 tral residents of Union Hill identified ” Mills as the man who had insulted girls in that neighborhood, LOVERS QUIRREL LEO TO ARREST “But We've Kissed and Made Up Now, Your Honor”—Dis- charged in Court. bis A young woman who gave the name of LAlllan Langbein and her address as No. 3 Windsor place, Brooklyn, was arraigned to-day with Joseph Bojland, a Syrian dry-goods dealer, of No, 6 Washington street, before Magistrate Pool jn the Centre Street Court on ® charge of disorderly conduct. ‘They were arrested last night In front of the Astor House, where they were the attraction of a large crowd, The man was trying to foree the womas to enter a cab, and she kept crying: “I'll {not go any further with you, Jog? ‘They retueed to, move on ang Were taken jnto custody Miss Langbein became hysterical after aching the Church street station, Mes ngers were sent for friends and she was bailed by Harold Clarendon, an’ad- tor, of No. 428 Gold street, Brooklyn. ‘A fellow Syrian effected Bojland's Te- ease. Fa ' “tt was only a love quarrel the wom man told Magistrate Pool. “Sure that t< vil?" borough ngregation forced him to dent Standard Ol « Danie Avruartox, Publis New York Gromce HaLoox, Mining Attorney, Butte, Monts sand we have kissed and made. up.” and when they were told to go they left the court-room arm In arm, Oppenheimer Institute | Has recently enlarged its capacity and is now ready to | meet all demands for treatment of cases of alcoholic. intemperance and drug addiction, For information as to terms or treatment, apply in per . Fritz, Son to the Superintendent, at the Institute, 131-133 West. went 45th Street, New York City. For literature and general information, apply by mail Room 210, 170 Broadway,’ ~ DIRECTORS: vivestar T. Evenert, Banker, Cleveland, Ohio ant H, Fowan, Carter, Hughes & Dwight, N. We 4 ier Vo Ouvex H, Lav, M.D, Surgeon, Detroit, Mich, Jose Ay New York Jour M. actin » Vice-President United Copper Cty | Lanoy W President Empire State "Butte, Mon 4 Veust Co. Vork Kexxeri Ky McLaren, Corporation Trust Coy af © gers, Brown & Co., New York New Jersey r Now York! was | Ciamurs RK. Bows, Banker and Moker, Issac Orbesngiinn, MuD., Surgeon, New ¥ yal | New Nork Dict W. Panpes, Assistant Treasures Tn Sfiter rorce S. Davis, Formerly Manager Parke, M.S. R.R. Co. ty) Davis & Co, Mig. Coemists, Detroit, Mich 1, woxann W, Swe, Wholesale Jeweler, New Yor. ADVISORY DIRECTORS; 1, Fowirn, D. LL.D, Bishop ® ©} Protestant Episcopal Ch kon Dana Boane s Church, Philadelphia + Vana al Congregational Chuseh, Brooklyn Hi Kr Conne. DAD. Pastor Messiah 1 Church, New Vork College, Poiladelphis #00 Place Bapust Church, Brooklyn Church Roy. Joun J, Hvonms, Paulist F ul the Apostle, New mst, D.Deg Pastor A> Church, New York Rev. Hesny ©. Voriey, DD. ELD, Bahop Gen, H.C. Comm, Major-General of the Up Q » DUD, LL.D, Hon. Cuauscey M ev. J.P. Price, D.D., Pastor First Methodint Gopal Church, V onke States Army Derew, United States trom New York DD, 11D. Pastor Hon, Lyman J.4 ex-decretary U. Se a. Mancus A, » Kure Newson, U, S, Senator H. Conwast, DD, President [Hon tC, Parse. Feseehe nea C, Pays, Postanaaten Gr Hassos, 0.0, LUD, Pastor Han. 10% Lewis M. Sa, Section ot Uy N om, Wit A. Srmit, G Wiarvon Bans H. Da Hay