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ORCED WL ANEW TINGLE Mrs. Albertina Kotze Now Claims Alicia Armstrong Es- »otate, Which Was Bequeathed Bradley Girls in Spurious Will / SHE SAYS MRS. ARMSTRONG ,. WAS FATHER’S FIRST WIFE “ | Bradiey Girls, Who Are Her Half- Sisters, Claim the Property on Account of Father’s Early Love Affair. Pollowing closely the charge that the will leaving the entire estate of $250,- @0 of Mrs, Alicia Armstrong, of Waite “Plains, to Eva and Georgina Bradley, let Cliftside, J, was an awkward |@ergery, comes the announcement that }Mrs. Albertina Kotze, of Orange, who {Was supposed to bea sister of the Brad- ‘ley girls, is a daughter and the only @hiid of Mrs, Armstrong. Mra, Kotze gays also that her father, Francis Brad- Jey. who was supposed to be a boyhood SwWeetheirt of Mrs. Amstrong, was veally Mrs. Armstrong's first husband, And tha: sue (Mrs. Ko.xe) is the rigat- bul heir to the entire Armstrong estate. This announcement, coming so soon ‘after the discovery that the will flied ay the Bradley girls was a forgery, further complicates matters in this will ase. It is charged by Mrs. Kotze that the Bradley girls and their mother, who are now making their living in @ small saloon in Cliffside, got the ginal will, which was mailed to her from White Plains. She asserts that hey saw the estate was left to Mrs. Kotse, and wita the ald of some per- gon who was famillar with the drawing nd filing of wills they forged a docu- ment and filei it at White Plaine. Mrs. Bradley and her daughters have feclared that the will was mailed to them from the Philippines. ‘They de- Wared further that they had never seen Mrs. Armstrong; nor did they know any ‘ae in the Philippines who could have mailed them the will. Couldn't Understand It. “I can't understand why Mrs. Arm- wtrong should have left all this money ‘to my daughters,” Mrs, Bradley said #0 a reporter of The Evening World. “Bhe was my husband's boyhood swee beart. She made my life miserable when I was a young wife, when I was mother, and now she has come into & to make me miserable when my hua- band Is’ dead.” Mrs. Bradley said that her, husband was constantly talking of Alice and that ox hed a dutl life, Mrs. Kotze talked jy of her mother and father to-day ‘when seen by a reporter for The Even- jing World. She said: * ‘My father and mother separated when J was small, and a short time after fa- ‘ther went to live with my stepmother, ‘who was then the widow of William Henry Lubeck,. who was drowned in Buttermilk Chanel, leaving her with four children, She was the daughter of Andrew Kimble, a sea captain, who ‘was born in Sweden. “I was about twelve years old when father’s first wife, my mother, ,called our house in Brooklyn and asked Francis Bradley. Father: was in ded at the time alfa she was shown up %@ his room. I stood near her and she d to father: ‘It's a long ume since 1 W ou, Fred,’ to which father réplied, *T looked all over gor you, but coulun't Gnd you.’ Wanted to Kiss Him. \\ & im, “Aa Mrs. Armstrong was leavi aid to rather: “at it wasnt for mie hee id kiss you, #red. Lnat {Was wwenty-tour gears a a isva "gpa Georgiana Brauley werer t was the last we uver mMstrong ana sie &f these xirle Rbeuw * Will xi “From woes . 9 MUL uur Muiried | mat tea Wweish “attet Yeaving father ana alterWaru inarried @ mas named nsurong.” Mrs. Kotze ten told 0: o.her wi which have becn Mle, vy tie Ga re acd wales nave been ave. Tegular and held uy. Taos: 0 the armstrong. wit, are a various cours, @nd all of tacm dispy.e uf the proper Of the ieutniony in t.0 wate way, ne of tere Whis is that of ra Bradley, the father Fie was fied at Hack balp up by Surrocat. Pell, woo siys that the will lu a for,ery, The wilt of son . Bolin, of Omana, Neb., Is ned up and lared'to be irregular, “Eva Bradicy, ts id to have been Bohn's goddaught Gat thie le den'ed by Mrs. Kotase wes gays that Boho did not even know th Bradeys; had probibly never head ot them. “Mrs, Kotze has laid all her evidence Ggainat the Bradley girls and their Becker before Proxecutor Koester, of of the g.ts, wales wsack, and which Ls Iackensack, and he is trying to ‘run wn what he believes to be a gang of held. will forgers. In this he ix being assisted by Surrogate Silkman, of Whte io has thrown t ill Ated be after Airis out of court, Prosecutor Koester sald to-day e penterence with Surrocate. Pell TP beltove that the Bradley girls been named aa benefciaries Inthe Anne, trong and Bohn 80 that uiderecover the moi culprits get the money afterward, | T arrest these giris would make them dae fendants and the State could not as! them for Any information. "The Sate te terested In these alleged forgeries and Will Make an effort to flad the sulprit ‘oF culprits. 8 See (ah VENEZUELA DEFENDED. FYayne NacVeagh Telin Arbitrators = War Was Financial Move, THE HAGUE, Oct. 5.—Wayne Mac- Vengh, senior counsel for the United Mates, continuing his argument to-day before the Venezuelan Arbitration Tri- twnal, declared that the question b-- fore the tribunat was ethics, whether or not the war against ta Was just and necessiry, He faalntalned that the complaints of at Writain were merely n pretext for war #nd'that Venesuela hid far greacer \ ight on her elde when she complained Of the despatch of a Britian veseel (ihe Wan Righ, later the Lioertador, then the Bolivar and now the Coluzdlan guy foat President Marroquin) 1 to the Caribbean Sea to deliver a gO of arms to the insurgents’ chief, , Matos, thr the Intermedia ¥ agents at T Counsel nald na tou tory for such a pu J no Drevedent in financial war ay bd no. of da abate antes SUES DENTIST FOR $25 00 Miss Rachel Kanter, of Chicago, Charges Dr. Victor C. Bell, of This City, with Bréach of Premise. SAYS MARRIAGE CEREMONY WAS TWICE POSTPONED. Girl Asserts that Her Betrothed Pleaded IlIness--His Attorneys Deny Charges and Say She Is Agent for His Book. Dr. Victor C, Bell, who has been at- tending to the teeth of New York's most exclusive set for many years when | he was not lecturing on dental hygiene, has been sued for $25,000 by a young Chicago woman for breach of promise. The complainant is Miss Rachel Kan- ter. Never have two stories differed more in the telling than the dentist's as de- tailed by his attorneys, House, Gross- man & Vorhaus, and that of the young lady by herself. This ts the complain-| ant's version of her own grievances: “1 met Dr, ‘Bell soon after I was grad- uated from a seminary in Chicago. It was practically love:at first sight and I remember every incident of the party, which was my first, in Chicago soclety. “The doctor returned my affection and for sev | years we corresponded, I have many ardent letters written by him and: these I will produce. Wedding Twice Postponed. “A day was set for our wedding early thin year. I wrote him of all the prep: arations. I soon received a letter say- ing that he was Ill and that the wed- ding must be postponed. Of course I i ' wis sorry for the man only on account of his illness. Then came another post- ponoment after it was time for him to recover from the first, “This the I thought my proper piace was at the bedside of my husband to be. I came to New York, looked up Dr, Bell. at the place where he should be, found that he was not ill and with of friends discovered the assistance that he was dining with another woman, “do not care for the money which L-ought to recover in this case and if I win I shall give jt all to charity. Attorneys, Deny Girl's Story. Miss. Kanter says she has suffered more on‘account of the man's duplicity -}than for any other reason. Her heart ;| has been sadly assailed and she thinks that the author of all her cardiac woes should be made to suffer, charity being the one beneficiary of the legal sutt Now comes the, attorneys of the de- fendant, and marsh@fling thelr evidence have this to ss fe “Miss Kanter met Dr. Bel in New York twelve years ago, She is a Russian by birth and her father makes soda water in Chicago, the place of business belng situated in the Chicago ghetto quarters.” “Dr. Bell never proposed marriage to ber, never wrote her an Ardent letter, and we challenge her to produce one yes, just a single one, Let her do it, We will welcome It. “Miss Kanter is the Chicago agent [bis sister-in-law, Miss Hernande tor Dr. Bell's book ‘Care of Mouth and Teeth.’ She sells this book, look- ing out for orders in the Western city, and xhe has always been a most trust- worthy business woman, They First Met im New York, “So far as seeing Miss Kanter {4 concerned at the time the primal love Was boru L can say nothing of that except that they first met tn New York. Miss Kanter has friends here in New York, and. visits them ,frequent- ly, She has been here twice this year. That great discovery which: she speaks of is better told this way, “In Mav she came Yo New York and did not find the doctor at his house, aut he waa sick, nevertheless. He was in the Vost Graduate Hospital from May until August, having been operated on for a sertvus fllness, She broke tnto his room In the hospital when he was In a precarious condith ‘hat is the truth of the matter, Che attorneys are detevinined to fght the vase to the lus. issue. They count on the fact that ihe ardent letters are ot In-esse. They think’ that Dr. Hell's will be safe and that charity sill be the only sufferer. According to taelr story there were no fervent pro- ostations, no love-making, no promises, ay Wedding daya contemplated, nos marrige deferred Miss Kanter's counsel ts A. H. Hum- mel) who. speaking for his client, # “Mss Kanter is not the diughter of a resident of the ghetto of Chicago, She is (he daugiter of one of the moat re- fined families ef that city, And ‘as tol nese letters, why. We have enough of m. and ardent ones, too. to put him. y» the rack. As far its the blackmiul) allegation goes. why the proceeds will de devoted to charity.” SE —— TO DIE IN ELECTRIC CHAIR. BUFFALO, Ovt. 6—Nelron Boxgiano, x . ted, was ,vaderuken. gv | tWeals-(oroe years old, was to-day sen- ‘at Britain and Germany fur Cay pro. | tence! @ie in ‘the electric chair at _ Veption Pallcoad eomiic.es’ Sing slog ,withn the week beginning for tae’ murder of Hurry ‘Sin Not | RACHEL KANTER AND DENTIST WHOM SHE IS SUING FOR BREACH OF PROMISE | | Albert Sellinger, member of the firm of London, Sellinger's ab!iity respon. jumping Into a ¢ ‘WOMAN TH appeared who soys he » of Sellinger Bros., in the Jefferson Counsel for the privoner moved for an $a but the fleet-footed | wh 24-00) 7 untry | IEF INHANSOM CAUGHT BY FLEET VICTIM —++-. Nettie Burke, Who Steals Englishman's Wallet at Hoffman House, Is Captured. {s a| Englishman, despite the handicap of a frock coat, a silk hat and a big cane, never let her get out of his sight. Market Court to-day to prosecute Net-| Sellinger was passing the Hoff- |e Burke, for picking his pocket man House where two fashionably Sellinger told Magistrate Pool tha* upon Uressed women bumped against him and | giving chase he had been assaulted by | oe neatly grabbed his wallet from his the prisoner. Kurst Bousoil, a yourg| inside pocket. He detected her and ac- man residing at the ‘mperial Hotel,|cused her of the theft. Throwing the called as a witn es, corroborated Sell n ST RST ONT ee ae ee ger's story of the assault in the cir by run another," Miss Burke. Sellinger picked up his wellet and took tad bd) She jumped ide who wid made the on a Br adjournment until Wedresday, whicit ixth street, and leaning j Was promptly granted. eeqnaneine Sonianat j Then Bousohi informed the Court that nd when ‘Twenty-third ‘he had business in Philadelphia and street. Wax reached and Selilnger was hearing in the case. Tiereupon the Mag. ywhere to get away from istrate directed Policeman Boury, of the Mere.” she sang out. For is the | Wert Thirtieth street station, to take tho cus Went on. north to. Twenty abeth young man to the Hous of Detention, | Fifth avenue, ond over to Broadway, e a polloaman finally hove in sight Twont enth street. ‘The woman runner, is ble for her ar-| went meekly to the station-house, gave rest. She tried to elude him by board-| her name as Nettie Burks and admitted ing a street car and afterward by te (heft The voung woman says she expects to be released on ball, MAN OF T His Wife, Hi and Then Shi Insane. LUMBERTON, N. P. F, Coupe shot himiself to-day, M Hernandez were shot (TLE IN is Sister-in-Law ot Himself While M.. Oct. 5.—AYbert and killed his wife, and and Miss revolve Coape wilh a Coape ended his own life with a shot- NEW POLICEMAN TRIPLE TRAGEDY IS KILLED BY GAS “Sir Albert P. F. Coape” Killed Believed to Have Been Acci dental, but Papers in Pocket Showed Capt. Herlihy Had Made Charges Against Him. J. J, Leddy, a probationary pe was found dead In a room in Hotel, No. Webster avenue, to-d Death was due to g: phyxiation, be- leved to have been aceidental, Leddy went the hotel yesterday afternoon and asked for a room, leaving gun, g Coape was an Englishman about for-|* Cal! for 6 o'clock this morning, When ty-five veara old and up to a short time! the hotel clerk went to call the man he go was known as Sir Albert P smelied , and opening the doer found Coape. having dropped the title recent-| Leddy on the bed dead. Gas was es- ly. He had been in the saloon business | C!PIng from a partly open The man here for twenty vear He received| had removed his coat, vest ana shovs. regularly a large aliowance from r a-!In turning off the It is belie’ ONT Cause ecan, be assigned for ,the| Heddy neglected to shut off the flow al- crime except mporary insanity, The Oopeiher, u ited, tt is sald,| 290 papers in the man's There Ix no refer F, Coape in Burke BANK OFE cier, Sent a at Massilon. city, committed sul the bank to-day through the heart, Intimate friends the act. He was not mari parents. ——— wi to Sir Albert P. s Peerage. ICIAL KILLED HIMSELT Albert M. Welter, Ohio Finan- Bullet Through His Heart While in His Office MASSILLON. ©. Ort. 5.—Albert M Wetter. proprietor of the Massiton Sand & Stone Company. President of the Massillon Steel Sand Company and @ director of the State Bank of this iclde in his office at by shooting himself know no cause ried ahd lived with for arned that he was ay + having been appointed on Aug. this year and asstgned to the Bast oan) and of waken Capt. H With wis a paper showing r Herliay had’ cited Leddy. pedr at Police Healqua for trial on caarges of fom duty without leave, ‘Tae case was wijourned on Oct. 1 until ‘Oct There was alto a paper showin, Lelay i suostiture te © day he was sce ie Tee clothing. Hia ad RUSH GAINS A POINT, Court Orders Recount of Pri Election Balle Jacob Marks, counsel for ‘Thomas f Rush, to-day won a decided victory fo hs client, who ole The eleotion one vote’ as Tammany leader tn. ti Pwenty-ninth Assembly Dxtrict, ove Joseph F. Mulaveen. Justive Leventritt handed down a de- efxion in Wh'eh he grants the motion v the for ¢ on befo! h ot th to-morry the first and second elec récount FELL FROM A SCAFFOLD, Frank Dougherty, while at work on a seaffold at 1036 Fréeman street to-uay. fell tothe sireey Mis skull was tract ken tured: id he was Fordham ‘Howpital, 4A THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 5, 10903, JOHN D, J, OPENS HS BIBLE CLASS | Many Young Men and Some of} Elder Growth Listen to the! Heir of the Standard Oil Mil-| lions After His Vacation. | BEWARE OF FRIENDS.HE SAYS Appeared to Be Serious and His Gen- eral vanner Impresse” \ - Ob-| server as if He Had Full Faith In His Way of Doing Things. The opening of the John D. Rocke feller, fr, Bible class season at the| Fifth Avenue Baptist Church yesterday was disappointing in that those who at- tended expected the young man to say |something about the municipal cam- |paign, but he did not mention the sub: Hect. He did, however, inform hin hear- | ers that the distance between Athens | land Corinth In Greece, is 45 miles. | There were probably 150 men In the class when Mr. Rockefeller took his seat at the chancel rail. About half of th audience was composed of very young men, some of whom wore straw hatn. The rest were middle-aged men, many of whom were bald. Ali were appar- ently earnest One attending a Rockefeller Bible class meeting for the first time will naturally look around and study the types. There is something In being told how to live by a young man who Is heir to tne greatest fortune In the United States, and perhaps in the world. There is curiosity concerning his brand of know- ledge and the men who listen to it Nice Muste Greets Him, An analysis, or even a summary of the John D, Rockefeller bible class can- not be compressed into the space re- quired for presentation in a newspaper, THERE ARE FOUR KINDS OF FRIENDS SAYS YOUNG JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER, po “Beware of your friends,” was the burden of John D. Rocke- feller, jr.’s, talk to his Bible class of boys yesterday in the Fifth Ave- nue Baptist Church. He said there were four kinds of friends. From three of these he said young men should run around the corner, He classified the friends as follows: FIRST FRIEND—THE TOUCHER: “Wirst—There {s the man who wants to help you spend your surplus money. He finds you have a little over your living ex- penses and he wants you to Invite him out to dinner, to theatre and elsewhere. And when your surplus has been spent he has no more use for you.” SECOND FRIEND THE JOLLIER: “Second—There {s the man who thinks he can use you. He gushes over fn his professions of friendship. But he ts a friend only until he finds out there is nothing material In ft for him. When he finds he cannot use you he drops out. If he cannot get something out of you that will be to his own benefit he passes you by. Watch out for this kind of a man.” THIRD FRIEND—THE TEMPTER: “Third—There is the man who seems to help you. He wants to be of use to you in business and social life. He says he wants to see you succeed. And his real alm is to lead you into tempta- tion, He wants to show you the thin side of life. He is a de- ceiver. Watoh out for him. Guard against him.” FOURTH FRIEND—THE CHRISTIAN: “Only one kind of friendship 1s of use fn this world. That fs Christian friendship--the friendship that {s unselfish; the friendship that will help you when you need help.” ELBERT HUBBARD'S |THREE MEN AND ALI BABA BABBLES) =A DOG IN FIGHT Roycrofter from East Aurora Is|The Mastiff’s Master, Matthew a Roarer When It Comes to} Kane, Was Under Arrest for A book might be written about it. Suf- fice to say that the doors were open, That the sun shone through the stained glass windows and that the orchestra of youths made nice music on their vio- dns, The writer of this did not see Mr. Rockefeller come into the church. The first he knew of the presence of Mr. Rockefeller was when he was punched in the ribs by an excited person and heard the whispered = information “Phat's HIM," The son of the President of the Stan- dard Ol} Company wore a gray suit, a gray necktie and a general alr of gray- ness, His complexion = {1 gray and pasty, Behind his big spectacles he hy palr of sunken eyes that shoot glances here and there and every- where. He does not appear to be i to concentrate hin gaze. He prayed. With downe: told the Maker of the Uniy class had just returned from a vacatio He repeated over and over again plain, commonplace statementa of fact. After he had prayed a quartet sang and then he talked to his class, His talk was about the missionary journey of Paul into Greece. He told of ithe apathy that ureeted ihe adven* of Faul into Athens and of the forty~ mile journey of Paul into Corinth. ela not neglect to say He to his auditors that Corinth at thal time was a great commarslai city, He told how Paut lved in Corinth with two makers of tents and earned his bread by the sweat of his brow. Out ‘of the journey of Paul and the Indora of Paul he drew a lesson. ‘The Lesson He Drew. Tho lesson was that one must be care- ful of whom he would make his friends. Mr. Rockefeller hax an idea that there are four classes of friends. Three of Uhese must be avolded. Avold the friend, said Mr. Rocket ler, who makes less mcnev than do‘and cultivates you in order that you may buy him dinners and creature com- forts out of your excess salary, Avold the friend, sald Mr. Rockefel- vho gushes over you and tries to use you to push himself along. Avold the friend, sald Mr. Rockefel- ler, who assures vou that he can help you to succeed In Hfe and gushes to you about It. Cherish the friend, said Mr, Rocke- to the John D. feller, who belongs class or to a similar Rockefeller bib institution delivered these truths Mr, Rockefeller stood in another room and le Criticising the Modes and} Smashing a Pane of Glass in Manners of the Metropolis. a Bronx Saloon. Three men and a big mastiff had an Leaving the home of the Philistines in Hast Aurora, N. Y., to mourn thetr ab- sence, Elbert Hubbard, the Roycrofter, his son and All Baba, the expert crafts- man of the Roycrofters, are now visit- ing in this city for a few days. Hub- bard and his son came in their usual garb of blue flannel shirts and top boots. Alf Baba, who !s an old man, and who has not left the purlieus of East Aurora for thirty years, came In a sult of etore clothes, Just to discover whether or not there was any such thing as snobbishness at the Waldorf-Astoria, as Mr. Hubbard explained to-day, they entered the Fifth avenue hostelry in thelr shirt sleeves, carrying their coats on thelr arms, and sked for rooms, Mr. Boldt's they had better try West street or Harlen. Instecd they went to th ray Hill where Mr. Hubbard usual gages a sulte of rooms when he pil grims to New York. All Baba Not Impressed. All Baba was not in the least im- pressed with the magnificence of mod- ern New York. All Baba fs an old man, His whiskers are of the spinacn varl- ety, In his store clothes he is an irre- siatible magnet to the bunco fraternity, But Ali Baba Is what he does not look. He js an artist. He makes andirons that bring fabulous prices, He makes furniture without the use of a nail or screw that millionaires journey ail t -"to East Aurora to buy, He prints and binds books by aand that surpass anything in the Hne of modern bool binding. A little boux turned oot All Baba‘e deft fingers readily brin a0, Therenre, an the the Bast urora era and his eyes sou ite great bulidings he did not wonder Or gasp. All Baba ortticised. His criti- clams took the form of little paragraphs y of philosophy, Roycrofter Riots im Criticiam, wiad playfully sifted ‘yay-seed from his ht the cornice Having shook hands with the members of his bible class ae they fled out If Mr, Rockefeller ever bad a real, overpowering impulse to sin It does not show in his appearance or demeanor, Of his absolute belief Inthe principl he announces and the methods he uses there cannot be a shadow of doubt, ———— CASE MUST TESTIFY IN MRS. RICH'S SUIT Justice Barrett Will Not Accept the Excuse of Algonquin Hotel Manager that He is a Busy Man. owe & Hummel, counsel for Mrs. Nancy Rica, whose troubles with her husband, William, have been atred in the Supreme Court several times, ap- sired In Part [ of the Supreme Court day and asked Justice Barrett for order to compel @ank M. Case, manager of the Algonquin Hotel, answer certafn question to be put um, Lawyer A. H. Kaffenburgh, for Mrs. an Raba saw much and criticised in this manner: ri ‘Me not peautiful that aspires high. ‘square tower of bricks Is as beiu- All tiftl as a square tower of bricks, ‘A. gorgeous entrance over-daazies @ f shams. multitude ¢ structure ts as hen the front of a On Wall the wall would do as the front. In all this dazzle of brick a man must think In squares and ob.ongs. ‘Me thinks the oblongs are of the lon| green variety, ‘The honest craftsman loves. whats Is reen In nature. ree New York caiftsman delights in this other green, New York ta machine made. i hear {tis run by a machine, One machine can do the work of ffy ordinary men. No machine can do the work of one extraordinary man. ‘A man who jaa the hes nurses few {dean clotmes many in New York whose genius ta in the creawe of their trousers hough a man's shirt te clean, he may not uncover It except within four shel ering Walls. tenRore better for New York soclety if the anme held aw to the uncovering of their thoughts. Merely Eccentric, That's Al ‘A miliignaire In a flannel shirt is ec- conic mployee in the same garb ix In- tolera aly commen A woman who, cow with a shaw! ts dow ‘The woman whe ders ts styliea' care of many her shoulders y overs her shout- mere to be more family dis- rsement family gatherings in the higher planes of New York ; The way for a milllonafre te summon bia family is to die and haye bis will end vepiaee too many children wii) seem- ingly have no desire to sofl their lathes, Rieh, suid that husband had served no mn her that he would on Frida ext apily to Justice Barrett to award | him the custody of the children pending the decision of the Court of Appeals on} Via ult for absolute divorce The law or said th taMr. and Mrs, Rich lived the Algon@uin Hotel with thelr etit- fron, and that Mr, Case wos im tant witness for Mra Rica, and that re had § to put in amMdavit sev eral facts mportant an | Rionard T. counsel for Rich, priged the aopliow and a for Mr. Cave said that his elle al very busy man and did not know “| hing adout the case. | Tusticn Barrett auld that he fact thar Mr. Care was i man mado no. dit forances that he must make the amtayict and that 1 he knew ‘noone " case he ¢ 80, bat he MuUaL "1 hy hat he ki ee sabd Would appolut.a referee to go to the hotel and take his testimony. [n Why end loves to wall See itkers would have more ideas J not spend much time miik- i¢ they ‘di one dry mK Gee leaves a bad taste In the mantal bromo-seltzer abouid have a tremendous in New York f the jangle than the Phere ism jingle to th York wedding bells Howare man who would make valet to The soul on Fifth ave nnet The * man whe promenales ve should tunsmigrate to k fa who walks Aro woman ereie qeserves more sympathy than the cripple —_ RiNGHERTY MATCHED. ay the . — pethe totaherty, the clever feathery weid States sinof Philadelphia, who is Sawer of foreignaMoGovern to’ get tivn the United Stig bariles, has been number of persorrck Lansing, anocher & exceeds 25,000.0Nq for ten rounds @t Sorda of immigration’; 1 caudal ee) ae ates very elegant clerks advised them that's | eas exciting time for half an hour to-day in front of No. 800 Pelham avenue, the Bronx, with the result that two of them were locked up charged with dis- orderly conduct on the complaint of| the third man, who was Bicycle Po- lceman Kiely, of the Trenfont station. According to the poMoeman, in re- sponse to a telephone message to the ‘Tremont station, he was sent to the Hquor store of James Shanley at No. 8i8 Pelham avenue to arrest a man who had thrown a rock through the win- dow of the saloon. Near the place he found Matthew Kane, twenty-four years old, of No. 800 Pelham avenue, who appeared to be running from the direction of the galoon, With Kane was his mestif. The poficeman alleged that he took Kane back ito the saloon and was about to enter the place when the proprietor, Sbanley, rushed out of the place and, with an oath, attacked Kane, kicking him in the abdomen and striking him in the face. The policeman protested against the assault, with the result, he alleged, that @haniey furned on him and sald: 4 “I'l do him and you, too,” and at- tempted to assault the policeman. Meanwhile the mastiff had gotten a firm grip on the calf of Shantey, and Shanley gave a howl of pain and turned his attention to the animal. He got loose from the dog, and ‘then renewed his assault upon the policeman and Kane. In the scuffle that followed all three men lost their footing and rolled on the sidewalk, the dog attacking alternately Shanley and the policeman. To save himself the policeman shoved tis club down the animal's throat and thea sum- moned assistance with his whistle. It Was about the time that the morning de- tall was leaving the Tremont station nd a half-dozen policemen responded. It took six of them to get Shanley Into the patrol wagon. When there he had to be restrained from attacking Kane, The dog followed the wagon to the statlon-house and later to the Mor- risania Court, where Shanley and Kane were arraigned on a charge of disorderly conduct, Magistrate Crane observed that both ease of liquor men Were under the Intl and held them for exaim!nation to-mor- row. The dog which was with its mas- ter tried to follow Kane into his cell ‘The trouble between K we and Shaniey siarted, it is alleged ov the pol fo the ejection of Kane from the salooi In his anger Kane threw a rock through the window of the saloon, STRUCK WITH AXE WHILE SLEEPING Henry Stemler Says He Was Attacked by His Roommate After a Quarrel—Part of His Skuli Is Cut Out. As the result of being struck with an axe while asleep at his home last night,! Henry erman, thirty years ng Course lane, Newtown va's Hospital, He ts} dition, His alleged Burgle, ifty-nine arrest, fs under | are farm hands and were| y Herman Krollage. ‘Daey | room in a barn on They A quarret iit is alleged that after td gone to sleep Burgle at In tne same Hage’s pla night had Ste | got SAM PARKS bs, ASKS FOR PEA. Convicted Walking Delegate Re- ° turns from Kansas City and Denies that He Wil! Tie Up Bridge Work. BUT WILL FIGHT FOR RIGHTS, IF NECESSARY, His Union Must Be Recognized He Says—No Delegation at Railroad Station to Welcome Him Home, pa Sam Parks, the convicted walking’ egate of the Housesmiths and men's Union, came into town was met at the station by no only by his faithful wife when he: ed his home at Eighty-third street ‘Lexington avenue. He did not want be seen by any one. He was secking eo clusion. But to a reporter whovintere cepted him he said: & I am for peace éf my.union és reqage nized and we get what wwe want. Othete wise we are in fora fight, first, Iast em@ all the time, We never got anything before without fighting for end dow expect to gain anything in the future without a fight. Of course, if weeam we prefer peace,” oy Parks denied the stories coming. Kansas City to the effect that he Dag declared his intention to call everywhere In New York on his valling out all. the men on the River bridge and on all the buildings being erected dy the Fuller, Constrae tion Company. “These stories,” he said, “were gotten up by somebody who is endeavoring $@ prejudice our cause more than it hag already been in this city. I have reall nothing definite to say et this time Opposes Arbitration Plan, “You might add that the union 6@ which I am a walking delegate never, so lopg as I can help it, ace the arbitration agreement as proposed. by Mr. Eldiits, of the Employers’ tion. That subject will be~ i I within the course of a few days, hope we can come to some satisfactory to) all concerned. I fougint Buchanan on bhirty-three issues won out on thirty-two.” President SGuchanan, who recurned from Kaneas City on the same ifaim with “Parks, eaid: ra “as the head of the International der I say there will te no strike ‘@ bridgemen on the East River Brifge, -] can rally to my eupport 3,70) mon New York City to-day. Parks hms. bis own grave and he will be repud: by his own people. ake “For the first time I will express self on certain events of the In the first place, I think a great m! take was made in'seating New York N 2. It had been suspended at the req of the better element of the Repeatedly I was urged to take such. tion, but di not do so unt the mat was brought up in the Executly meeting, notwithstanding what Parks people may my. Didn’t Know All the Facts, “After reviewing the sttuation I I believed it my duty to suspend local. ‘There was no protest, and ingly T ey gia te conven ae been in possession of all the {ts action would have been different.” committee of the better element to.come from New York and present sid “The majority of the delegates from the Reet belleved Wo. 2 should be sented, and when It became evidere a ae this was to be the sense of the tlon the other delegation was wil ‘The Unaeating of Parks ome Would have. hastened w pew ls bound to come, his ellmini as a power In the labor circles of 3 York City, The fight will now be rled on tn the Ei but the result ¥ be the same. “As to Parks's declaration that ne bas ? hands by electing an Executive tea my evorable to him, that non to come. know I have the support t counting my o' sense. four out of six, mo! vote” RICHMOND, Ind., Oct. 3—Prof. Wille <. Hiatt, of the Department of iam Stunanice at Purdue Univer Mechan Piss necn uppointed director of th Government _timber-testin, stati ; re just been estabiian Which have dorestry of the. Depa ture. One of these Is loca’ a3 Sere. ‘one at Yale, another at t ity of California. and a fo b.¢. IT’S A MISTAKE bate Coffee Grades of Coffee. Many people lay all the blame for the diseases caused by coffee upom the poorer grades of coffee, but this is an error, as the following proves: “T have used every kind of the best grade of tea and coffee that can be from a first-class grocer, but never found one that would not up. set my nervous system, and it wag not until I began to drink can Food Coffee in place of coffee ni tea that I had relief from the ter fic attacks of nervous sick headache from which I had sufferod for $8 yeal I had tried all kinds of medicines, but none helped me. “Soon after I stopped drinking cof fee and began to drink Postum the headaches grew less, and it was not long until I was entirely ow end | have never had a return of thi distressing trouble, for nowadsys & never drink coffee, but stick to Postum. Ae soon as my wife saw whet Postum had done for me she gave up coffee, which she had drunk all her Hte. This was six weeks ago, and she Tacwed im with an axe ‘Sirmier has wounds on_his left arm which make It appear that he tried tol : throwing his) arm pe a | Re there ares two, decal one four Incnes and | oles long, there | : ch wound on the soalderd re is also a three: trangularsshaped wound on the which Is fractured, (Wel Slrong, the hed physician of th hor pital, say parc of tne aku ut out. has been completely . urgie (s locked up in the Newtown gure an) refuses to talk, Th of the trouble between the men “| ne wd. is righ inca sku! ‘ ny | the _famor is a changed woman, for her nét vousness has all disappeared, HES ne has become smooth and her cheek have a good, rosy-red color aaa We sleeps well, too, something she never do while she drank coffee, consider Postum a househol sity in my house and have ind many friends to try this wi food drink in place of coffee’ given by Postium Co,, Battle, Mich. Look in each p little ”