Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ie “ be — ! oy) é ¥. Mottie of carbolic acid, <fwoman's mind had been affected by : SEEKS TO DIE. » @n extensive Hock of chickens y “ WOMAN DRUGGED AND THEN ABANDONED, Of Apparent Refinement and Not Under the Influence o Unconscious in Whither She H f ‘Drink, She Was Broadway Hallway, ad Been Conveyed Probably in a Cab, Mystery surrounds the finding in the @oorway of No. 748 Broadway at 5 o'clock this morning of a well-dressed, pretty young woman, apparently suffering from the effects of knockout drops, A driving rain at the time made !t im- possible for the woman to have been there any length of time without being Boaked through. Policeman O'Brien, of the Mercer street station, who found her, declared that her clothing was Slightly damp, but that there was no indication that she had been there more than a few minutes. Just before the discovery of the young ‘woman, O'Brien had passed the place nd was returning along his post, which ends at the block above. He feels confident he would have seen her had she been there then. At first the policeman thought the woman was some unfortunate who had wandered over from the Bowery or from the Greene and Wooster street dis- trict of tenements. A hasty exami tion convinced him that something was trong. He shook the woman and then Bent for a, patrol wagon. When she ‘was carried, apparently lifeless, into the One Hundred and Third street. She left home on Monday, went shopping, dined third street restaurant, tele- Phoned her husband she would meet him at 5 o'clock and was next heard from in Bellevue Hospital, when at 8 o'clock on ppeaeky, moming she was taken by a cabma’ Bundled Her to Bellevue. Mrs. Graham at that time was suffer- ing from an overdose of drugs which evidently those responsible for her con- dition believed must result in her death, #2, an effort to revive ner a hypodermi: injection had been given. Then, in fear she would die on thelr hands, those re- sponsible for her condition " hurr.ediy bundled her into a cab and sent her to Bellevue, Before the driver could be inter: gated to where he came from or hi number could be learned he drove idly out of the Bellevue gate and Whipped up his horee. By the time it was seen that Mrs. Graham owas in a serious condition he was out of sight. She was placed under treatment and revived sumiclently to tell wi amd to ask that her h of her whereabouts, z had been frantic at the absence of his wife, hurried to the hospital. To-day it was sald Mr. Graham was drugged Somewhere in Thirty-third street and was taken ee) a house in Madison ave- nue, kept mer and ri of Mercer street station, the Sergeant at tthe desk at once rang for an ambulance. Suffering from Drugs. Dr. Gallagher, of St. Vincent's Hos- pital, responded, and after an examina- Mion said that he did not care to ex- pre an opinion, but advised that the fwoman be sent at once to Bellevue, and this was done. found to be suffering from drugs, and the police wére informed. ‘The appearance of the woman and her ‘evident refinement convinced the police whe was not a drinking woman. Their ‘opinion ia that she was drugged and aken in a cab to the spot where she fwas found, They are positive had she arrived any other way in the driving] 0 fain which prevailed at that hour ehe would have been wet to the skin. They ‘Go not think she was in the doorway more than a few minutes. Tie belief that the woman was rugged and placed where she was found. is strengthened because of the experience of Mrs. Nellle Graham, who was carted to Bellevue Hospital yester- Way and dumped there by a cabman who rove away. Mrs. Graham is the wife of Clarence Graham, of Graham & Hammond, man- ufacturers, and resides at No. 87 West — Jewels to the value of $1,500 The fact of the fivesth was cealed yesterday to give the police opportunity to Invest tee working on the onss o obtaliea a row: oon tive er woman picked up In the dcorway th! morning presente. some of the features ¢ Graham case. There she was/of th beHeve she tro wan faving gone into some resort toe charactor of which she was Imnorant, and tmving been made heip- Tess, whatever of value she had on her person was taken from her end she was placed in a cab and driven to the spot where she was found. pers, rants. Sed gested a quiet resort to have a dri 4nd fed her: vietim to place, where bartender saw to It ¢hat she remem- dered littie afterward. Stripped of what valuables she had the woman was sent home hours later In dased condition. The police think gome euch gang this ts responalble for the drugging and robbing of Mrs, Graham and the woman 3 gt. Bociaea! Lash waists a a etme linea “placle jacket and a picture GIRL’S DEATH CAME AT THIRD ATTEMPT Katherine Doyle, of Jersey City, Who Longed to Die, Found: Lifeless—Drank Carbolic Acid + The third attempt of Katherine Woyle, of No, %9 Grand street, Jersey city, to kill herself was successful, She was found dead in bed to-day by Mer father. Beside her lay an emptied She was thirty-three years old, Her father said he had twice provented her (from drinking acid. Dr, Wolfsohn, the family physician, sald the young melancholia, BOHEMIAN GIRL Found Unconsclous with a Rubber Hose Fastened In Her Mouth, Mary Krolnoski, twenty-six y old, si Bohemian, was taken to Presbyterian ‘orrital to-day in a dying condition @rom her parents’ home, No. 1455 Ave- ‘nue A. She had attempted suicide by 4nhaling gas during the night, Her parents were aroused by tHe dor of gas and, tracing It to her room, found her unconscious with the end of ‘@ rubber tube, which she had attached gas Jet, in her mouth, She left no writing to explain her at- tempted self-destruction, and her Parents know no reason why she should mish to dle, —a— His Chickens Will Net Lay. (From the Portland Oregonian. S80 many members of the legal fi Nernity invest a part of thelr surplus Dopyards, &c., these days, that oocasion- ally one of them strikes a snag in the have of something that he cannot con- rol or regulate. One of them who has day ‘alled at tho Oregoulan office to ask ay it Was that Ms hens did not lays H ee i over 100 a art yl br poy. He Wa was tla that bert uliry enous! Ai) o Favnished them 80} ut, one pow ed blood, ‘inte. waler all ike’ that poull t it more try i ee ty ot chat last yaar panty of e is ee Gynt in Her Room| | TURNS OVER NEW LEAF BY SUICIDE, John F. O’Brien Said He Would Quit Drinking and Ended His Life by Gas. Tired of being told that he was of no value because of his dissipated habits, John F, O'Brien, of No. 33 West One Hundred and Nineteenth street, ended his life. His body was found to-day. O'Brien, who was a member of the Twenty-second Regiment during the war with Spain, lived with his sister, Mrs, Mary Balyou. His drinking habit became unbearable to the sister, who yesterday left the house, saying to her mother and her other brother she pro- posed to remain away until John changed Be ere O'Brien came home Cal peatt eae he, “1 will turn over a new iene quit zat al a and belng an eyesore to everyb ar tne i a be Sitteren' downs that the odor of gi alarm the Rane OF 8: of T0 OLD T0 WORK, KILLED HIMSELF. en UNIDENTIFIED MAN WHOSE MURDERED BODY WAS FOUND HIDDEN IN A BARREL OF SAWDUS PLVILOF-HIOOOOSHOEOIOSPHOHIOHOD CHG HELLAS OPHIG HH ESEOH : S8GOOO4 ta GOODITD OG g ae 000 302 a0. 2O-F HIDOHD9ODS-¢-2-3-90-999-6+ o> DPOS-0-D 93.9095 DOMINIE LED night not eal h Francis Barrett, Aged Sixty-|y DOUBLE LIFE? the Rev. Ralph H. Baldwin, Formerly of New York, in Suit for Divorce. ‘ Ralph H. Baldwin, who Is sald to have een a clergyman in the Episcopal Diocese of New York, five or six year ago, fs defendant in an action for ab- solute divorce, in which Adelaide B. Baldwin, to whom he was married on ‘March 5, 1886, Is plaintiff. The sult has been pending for nearly two years, and an order for the service of the com- Plaint by publication was made by Jus- tice Glegerich, as Mr. Baldwin's where- abouts could not be discovered. Mrs. Baldwin, in her petition, tells a pathetic story of her husband's double life, but her story is commonplace as compared with that of the co-respond- ent named by her, who was, when she met idwin, a widow, by name Mr: Rebecca Esther Greenwood, formerly Miss Rebecca Esther Stafford. The story of Mrs. Greenwood's deception by the aleged clergyman was told by her in a letter she wrote to the real Mrs, Baldwin, win, as she was known, told me,’ Mra. Baldwin, “that the defendant rep- resented himself to her In September, 1896, as an Oxford student under vows not to marry for two years; that ne offered aimself in marriage to her and requested her to consent to a common~ law marriage, thereby keeping the mai ter secret until the two y pass, when they could have a ceremo- nial marriage. “Eather said that she finally con- sented to his solicitations and met him at the Hote: Vendome on Oct. 6, 18%, they entered into a common-law Be, and he placed upon her finger, ring with tae engraved snitials ‘R. H. B. to Ry ‘alt B explained to me’ afterward that the letter ‘S." meant Stafford, which had been her maiden name. ‘The woman's letter ‘to Mr. Baldwin ren “We ‘lived together as man and wife until he got the call to Saginaw. Then jd he was golng to take you and lster to live with him, and ask in Detroit until the time w: would take me to Saginaw. he stopping sending me any money and left me here in this stran city without’ money or. friends, 1. told him I was golng to write and tell you the truth, and he sald he would have to think he will have to resign when people know the way he has treated a that has never harmed him in any way. He has left me here in a slrange city with nothing to eat and no “He thought I would make @way with self, but I shall live. Tell him that I will live to see the day that God will in Idleness, Being too old to work, Francis Bar- rett killed himseif. He lived in Com- monweaith avenue, near Weet Farms road, Borough of the Bronx, As long as he could remember he had tolled at manual labor, day in and day out, unti work became part of his ex- fatence, When he came to be sixty-nine 8 ‘few days ago he discovered that his worm muscles refused to respond to his wil, He was proud, of his record as a con- wcientious workman, Hather than see it suitied he quit. At breakfast to-day he complained to his wife and his soo John that time hung heavily om te hands he could no. onger labor. since aa) fait an hour liter, they found bim in bed-room dead, He had shot wimselt the head, nine, Could Not Endure Living | aut repay him for all that he has made me ‘Tell that Bi#hop Potter will know aM Thee he has done and also the Bishop of this State, Yours truly, HOR BALDWIN. ought a clergyman dre Rdelaide Raldwin hurried to De- trolt the next day, found her husband's Aitred street, and heard her slory over ‘again. whieh AGe4 PUL Tittle to Esther's woe en Miv, Laldwin told her that she Was the oily lawful wife of the clerey man. Mrs. Paldwin did not return 2 the Saginaw rectory, but came ho ne New York, broken and desivious of dla Ing her sorrow. after nearly fve years of alent suffering, she now secks her freedom aed the exposure of her hueband, Grecnwood found ber Way cast, Bt th bis mothe Ke H si Pe lant m0 th, promised (0 o u Wanted to toatlty: tn Mra tlon [or divorcee: But for, Wether refused to ean the ound that she did not wanl the notor All thd was told lw tho Janyer to pont Biancnard, ot the eu une Court, Caan ry if gation or Me compelled 12 0 and ‘8 should) AMELIA BINGHAM SUES AN EDITOR. That’s the Charge Made Against/The Actress Causes the Arrest of Graham Rice, of Daily America, on a Charge of Libel. On a charge of criminal libel, Amelia Bingham, the actress, to-day caused the arrest of Graham Rice, the proprie- tor of Daily America. Rice was ar- raigned before Magistrate Mayo in the Centre Street Court and paroled until the hearing n Wednesday. The publication which aroused the ire of Miss Bingham was not a criticism of her acting, her gowns, her mana- gerlal ability or interpretation of the Frisky Mrs, Johnson, but a reference to an alleged row between Miss Bing- ham and her husband, Lioyd Bingham. It was said by the paper that a week ago Miss Bingham reported for work at the theatre arrayed in a black eye. The optic, it was asserted by the paper, d been decorated by the husband of the actress, Miss Bingham denied the story, but the more she denied it the more angry she got. Now Mr. and Mrs, Bingham have no troubles worthy of the name. It Is “Esther Rebecca Greenwood, of Bald-| sald the actress was the author of the “gays! Temark that she had no troubles that | money would not cure, when referring to her health and domestic happiness. From just being annoyed about publication of the alleged Bjngham grew mad and then madder, until she decided hanging, jail, Ilfe im- prisonment and other things were none too good for the man who had disturbed ne aver ‘eror of her ways, Her wrath was not appeased when friends met her on the street and said: “Let me see it dear—so brave of you to deny {t, The brute! Ah, none of us ts_happy.” ‘The remark, “you can scarcely notic it” was another that caused the actress to awallow a large lump in her throat, brush back her hatr and say ‘really and wanting to paint the that {t could not be seen ten feat, away the filed to the brim, To Mr. Bing. too, there came some share of unhappiness, Men who were wont to grasp the littie man by the hand moved away and women glared at him. Of, course, Ma Binghant might haye worn @ sign up Main street reading, id not soak my wife In the eye,’ Hane has no black eye,” "She ran ‘into door," and many other ones, but he ata not He stood It and suffered, too, it 1s for Rice to protest the Ings he writes are checks. and foes not personally write the. whale aper, Miss Bingham wants him in and the first step 1s the police ure, PALA WILL BRING "HER BODY. oe: Remains of Miss Miller, Califor-):1ad Stood, a Menace to Life, nia Authoress, Coming from Italy. pet, The remains of Mirs Miler, of Miller's Hall. fae}, Cal,, who died in F will arrive bh on th American sieamvr Palatia and will be ehipped to her burial Rey. M. J Qur Lady of the Rosary, No, 7 Sta! street, who Is an old family frie will take change of the casket upon arrival apd see to the transshipment Miss Mller was a well-known wri'e and had Kony abroad won former Jucae pay, of Ban Jw for 4 now & hee eee Ke wrence, Italy Hambu due vl home torda Henry, of the Miaston « herrh the | libel Miss! GRANDMOTHER A KIONAPPER, Mrs. eten een Misses Her Baby, Calls on the Police for Help, but All Ends Satisfactorily to Everybody. After having had the sole pata of her grandchild for a whole day, John Wessel felt so badly about Hits; it yack to her daughter-in-law that it be- came necessary to call In the police to Testore the infant to its mother, Mrs. Wessel senior lives at No. 178 E'm- wood avenue, Irvington, N. J., while her son and his wife reside at No. 278 Fair- mount avenue, Nowark. The child, Georgia, is elghteen nths old and is the first and only one of the Wessels. a day from its mother, On that day Mrs. Wessels senior Induced her daughter-in- with her over night. In honor of the day the grandmother had invited several little ones to meet her granddaughter, and when the day of pleasure was over she insisted upon its remaining with her for | the night, | “Not longer than to-night,” sald the jfnxious mother who slep Mttle that night worrying how her baby was get- |ting along. The next morning she set out bright and early for the home of jher husdzand’s mother, There she was 14 Mrs, Wessel had gone away for a few days, “But Georgia, Georgia, my baby, re Is she?" asked the mother anxi- ously. 4 ow Mrs, Wessels has her, all was the reply of the servant at the house and nearly distractei Young wife went to her husba Ba wheel at a loss to understand his mother's ace ton, tried to 1m his wife's fear: On Tuesda bab. turned and Mrs. Weew at home. The mother at the home of a friend flela street, Newark, Chie of Rollee Hayes, ective with her to recov. At sight ‘of th who was pla the child. ay mother the little on yi grandmother had ‘purchased for" her. gave a joy and ¢ Claanin PUREE, iba Wed ot ie me. hysterical, laughing ok crying ju wanted to kee Emma.’ grandes in me and I inqui ° {De you ‘want ake any charge in the case, kidna ‘ thing like that?” OF Bpy “Oh, gracious, no." sald Mra. Weasel. “AIL T want is my Baby n, it she made her way to oar as fat ais ot Man . OLD WALL FALLS INTC THE STREET, days. . Ar ao tert the teotive, Since a Recent Fire Until It Toppled To-Day. Part of the front wall of i: Nos, 216 to reet fell tari ring thi race of 10 the bullding st Twenty-second the bricks and beams | ewalk and roadway. for | oi i v rhe Was comparatively empty peteste ans bicau e@ of the heavy ran, ind no one Wap Injured TheWuilding, which was formeriy o¢- ped by Gabler & Bro., plano makers. van recently @ulted by fire. It had been | © stories high, but the fire ieft only ur, and two of these Capt, ‘Twenty- cond sirees station, at ovce sent @ orce of men to the scene and o.o#ed the in froat of the bulls Fmert wee ‘noth 9 bulldlna and ai THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, APRIL 15, 1903 ‘STRIKE CRISIS Contest Between the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and the Amalgamated Union. With the coming of Representative United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, and Hugh Dufty, General Sec- retary of the American Federation of Labor, from Chicago to-day affairs in the strike of the Hrotherhood against the Amalgamated wil! probably assume A critical atage, According to the statements of the ofM- clals of the Amalgamated to-day recruits Are now being sent into the shops where cabinet work is being turned out. Such firms as the George A. Fuller Construc- tlon Company have informed the So- clety that they have enough men for their outside work and are entirely sat- isfled with the quality of the men sup- piled. ‘At the headquarters of the Brothe: hood it was said that everything wa: on the arrival of the two officials from Chicago, Unt!) the conference with the: no further steps will be taken as to the calling out of men. The question will also be discussed as to whether It is ad- visable to call out the men in other trades aMilated with the Federation. The United Board of Building Trades also meets to-day and the matter will come up for an airing then. OVERCOME BY GAS SITTING ON TUB, Somewhere in Hungary a little woman, whose sweetheart came to this country a few months ago to earn the money that would enable them to marry, will end her days of waiting in lamenting his ateath He was Joseph Kubus, hree years old. Bete, after his actival he went to. work aa 2 porter ‘a hotel, at No ip Frederick Dornheim’ col eee . His willingness im a favorite about the place. nat iat Kubus went to a bathroom bapament of the hotel, and an hour tater Reward caer a peas] of the proprietor, noting his protrac nce, went te the pachroora and get No response to his He forced the door re found Kubus sitting on the edge of the tub In a stu- por. ‘The little room was filled with a Ing odor of gas. The man dled be- fore the arrival of a Bellevue Hospital ambulance. Investigation showed that the gas was escaping from a leak in the Pipe. Kubus was overcome so quick] that he could not open the door, whici was within a few feet of him. Sullivan, of the Executive Board of the! in to-day's session of the Nati STOP STRIKES, CLOSE AT HAND. WRIGHT'S CALL. Critical Stage Is Reached in the | Commissioner of Labor, Repre- senting President Roosevelt, Says Employers and Working- men Must Get Together. NEW ORLEANS, April 15.—Interest onal As- soctation of Manufacturers centered in tho report of the Resolution Committee, which wan expected to result in a deti- nite underatanding os to the attitude the association will take toward or- ganized labor, The committee held three sessions, but the announcement was made that no report would be made until this evening. When the forenoon aassion was called to order Carroll D. Wright, Commis- sloer of Labor, was introduced and was given a hearty reception, Presi- dent Roosevelt had been invited to at- tend the convention and in declining named Mr. Wright to represent him. Mr. Wright spoke of capital and labor. In discussing combinations of capital he ‘The great combination enabdles so- clety to secure Its commoiities on a more stable basis than under the pre- vious methods. Its evila are those of management and not of constitution. ‘These evils may be handled by law and by society. “We need not fear them, for when the com.nation does not seek the common g00d and does not accomplish by. tix methods and its machinery of produc. d gistribution the welfare of s0- ety itself will take care of the Speaking of the workingman, Mr. Wright declared that Intter day ‘dovel- opmenta had grouped him as the feilow employee of thousands and thousands ler the great combination where he {x removed in a personal way from his emp:oyer. this mean harm or does it mean good? The answer to this question de- pends entirely upon the atliude of, the two parties in the new relation.” he “The workingman has risen from ig- norance to intelligence. In his ignor~ anee he did not strike; in his inte ligence he does strike. The next step in the de- velopment of his intelligence will be that he will not strike: that he de adi to accommodate imself to conditions, Decnune he will know them and under- stand them better. “Some of the methods of the iabor union are to be condemnde. So are some of the methods of the capitalistic organ- to be conagre as Dat Dace uee) they cannot get on together mean that elther or both should be de- stroyed. They must get on togeher. “The great aueation for employers ana een ia: Will they. in the con sa or their mutual irs, excite the milHant spirit or invoke that peaceful ideration which to the adoption ort highest elements of business in- terests?" Le Boutillier Brothers WOMEN’S SUITS stik, with silk drop shirt— Until Easter tt never had been separated | Of the popalar light-weight materials—E‘amine and Voile—made over law to allow the little one to remain| *MISTRAL ETAMINE SUITS—Bilack and Biae, $25.00 nd *27.50 "9.96 and a few in mobair— 13.98 Le Boutillier Brothers West Twenty-third Street, Dakss auitun > aitiun atten d aitun stun ea tun lr) 4 WORLD WANTS} FITABLE MEDIUM. id Help Wants in This Morning’s World, Paid Help Wants in the 13 O York Papers Combined. -—“ WORK cor Alb 4 PRO ff, 356 % 600 values $32.00 and $35,00 IMPORTED VOILE—lack and Bice, 536.00 SILK WAISTS For Women— White Pongee, Peau de Soie and Taffe'a S.th Watsts— 55.00 values value $42.50 O75. 00, $7.00 and $8.00 IN ADDITION WI'L OFFER AT REDUCED PRICES 400 CLOTH SUITS for street wear—train or trainiess sktrts— 410.00 — were $15.00 to $20.00 ‘160 BLACK CLOTH COATS—Siik lined— 54.50 250 WALKING and DRESS SKIRTS—plain and fancy mixtares— and 45,00 Were $8.75 to $14.00 Were $8.75 to $10.00 Bring Along the. We have been seling good shoes for 36 New . . ae a cab ares “thas ih previee tes thea tahied. The cfils { have hitherto, than our factiities. But [oe} ty Increased equi) ce for brtee ‘Surreyay torias or Opera Buses—for ping, talling, for the Parks evening engagements. fa between Sap! “to any point in same territory the fares $1.50, To the Theatre and ‘south of 75th street), $2.50; We invite monthly accounts. Jol. 2380 Columbus. too, when you get y Spring outfit. Some things for Double-Breasted Suit, of black Thibet, blue mixtures in cassimeres $3 to $8, or Norfolk Suit, sizes ak, of cassimeres or blue vie “Knick” pants, $5 to. ‘opcoats, green covert, 3 %0 12; value $4; $3 Special! Boys’ T All Boys’ Furnishings, SHO, &c., at correspondingly Prices. Outfitters To Men Style—Snap— In our Patent Calf ton Oxford—Exqusite model—Graceful in de. sign — The Acme: Shoemaking—Every i a dandy. $3.45. John Ward Con, NEW YORK STORRS: 78 Nassau St. ‘STORES EVERY JAMES | 2 BUTLER Choice Groc Best No. 1 Te all kinds, highest quality, 8 Ibs., $45 Ib, 115 RETAIL BRAN