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| Whe FOR YAANITERS} Thompson- Starrett Company Adds $500 to the Sum Offered by the Builders of the Iron League. WIDE SEARCH BY POLICE FOR THE CONSPIRATORS. Utmost Vigilance Is Now Shown ni the Guarding of the New Structures from Injury from Bombs. Believing that the perpertrators of the dynamite outrages in this city on Sun- day morning are the same persons who cut and loosened the guy ropes and Meging of their derricks on the new building going up at No. 169 Columbia (Heights, Bsooklyn, last Thursday, the ‘Thompeon-Starrett Company, general contractor and budder, has added 3500 to the reward offered by the Iron League to-day for the discovery of the persons engaged n thie work. A thous- and dollars now awaits the person who can run the criminals down. Mir, Starrett called in person at the Mice of Secretary Cheney, of the Iron League to-day to offer the reward. He sald that the tinkering with the der- Ticks on the Brooklyn building was most attended by a large loss of life, Some time, early Thursday morning, he said, some one got in the building and loosened the clamps of the uy Topes on all the derricks. One large derrick on the second floor, was used shortly after the men came to work, nd while loaded with fron girders it fell with a crash. e Situation Is Strained. ‘That the labor situation, already bad- ly strained, has been intensified by the dynamite outrages is evidenced by the fact that labor leaders evérywhere are bending every energy to the settlement of the present trouble among: the Iron- wotkers. Samuel Gompers, President of the American Federation of Labor, and Nice-Pnesident James H, Duncan tele- @raphed here to-day that they would arrive in the city on @riday. “No effort by the Folice Department will, be spared," sald Commissioner Greene, “to discover the perpetrators of these outrages and to prevent a repeti- » thon. of them." A Warning, Says McC Inspector “McClusky sald to- atter carefully studying th he had arrived at the conclusion that the two sticks of dynamite placed in the brick pile at,the Wcker, Merrall & Condit building were put there more & warning of what would follow if cer- tain’ deniapds that hail been made on the pontractors were not granted... "I believe that the men who put those explosives there realized the effect such an act would have. It showed conclus- ively that they could place the dyna- mite, without being detected and It re- vealed: a willingness to endanger life and,property. I belteve it was more of @ threat than anything else and that the prime motive of putting it where it was found was intimidation.” ‘ne Detective Bureau is making every effort to get some track of the men who placed the dynamite in the brick © pile. Detectives were present at every | Jabor meeting that took place in the » @ity last night, hoping that something would pe dropped that would give them } @ me on the perpetrators of the opt- rage. So far as could be learned to-day ‘their extraordinary vigilance netted them nothing. s Orders were given to policemen going out on duty last night to keep an espe- clally vigilant watch over all new build- ings and to arrest any persons loitering near. Capt, Handy, of the West Forty~ seventh Street Station, and Capt. Bi feind, of West Thirtieth Street, were Particularly active In taking measures caution, . ‘The Executive Committee of the Iron League last night voted to offer a ¥e- Ward of $500 for the arrest und con- viotion of the perpetrators of the out- Fuge on Forty-vhird street. ‘whe dynamite was discovered at the errall & Condit building in third street, near Broadway the scene of the second of ui fons on Sunday morning. A quis of fire-proofing tiles had been lult he pAVewent in front of the bulld- time between morning two tis Jon tl he explosive. and carried It to the Bureau. of Combustibles, MPhese are diastiog charges euch as 6 in common, uss’ in rock work every- Ginere," said Chief Murray, of the lsu. Teau of Combustibles. ‘ney sell at 26 Gents aplace. All that ts required to got hem olf Ja fire to the free end of the The charges, set off in an open pi would do, no great damage, but Eonfiied in, & drilled hole, these’ two ‘would lft about eight tons ‘of rock." "Bach charge was covered with heavy paper, on-which was stampod the name of thé maker, the Forcite Powder Com- * Pany,, acd a statement that the sticks Sontdined 40 per cent. of altro-glycerine ‘and 60 per cent. of absorbent susstanc It was apoarent from the way ‘the stile! were disposed in\the pile of tiles. th. ft. was intended not to use them to b up the material, but to keep them there until opportunity should offer of placing them Inalé» the building. The fuse, Cour 1a halt yards, was woursd aroucid the 3. not Trace Purchaser, Inspector of Combuetibles Murra made a. careful examination of the sticks of dynamite to-day and found that the urchased from the Foreite Powder Conminy,. of No. Liberty street, Hi Detece % notified the “tive Bureau, and Inspeotor McClusky mt two men down. to gen Agent athewson, the New York representa- tive of the company. Mr. Mathewro fold the detectives ihat ho dynamite ‘was ever £0) e company to Ftran= thers wersfabout 400 ors, Jt wouk 1, to trace the two sticks of dynamite found ‘on Forty-third street, William Buchanan, President of the Anternational organization of the struc- Athi ron’ workers, sald that ‘he. would ©) pay id Uheral reward out of hia own ‘pockst for uiformation concerning tl Herat SD places nthe dynamite in brick pile. He rajd that the insinuation “Aarti it wag, cndust Sights jus night's ‘ 08 the ualor, id, every nt was called. upon to do to" the per- 120) wi CAT. RINE REYNOLDS, WRo is’ ‘HQ SAVED HER LIFE SEEKING MAN frit Y) (i SEEKS HERO WHO SAVED HER LIF If He Will Come Forward and ‘Reveal His Identity Miss Catherine Reynolds Says She Will Thank Him. Will.the tall young man, whose col- oring is dark, whose face is smooth and whose hair ts curly, Sayed the life of a pretty girl on the corner of One Hundred and Fortleth street Sunday afternoon, Nov. 29, please come forward? Miss Cath- erjne Reynolds, who lives at No. 6&7 East One Hundred and Twenty-eighth street, is the young woman In ques- tion, and she is most anxious to ex- press her grateful thanks to the proper party, On thé day Miss Reynolds's life was hanging in the balance she was stand- and Wh! pwoitth street, tie old Jones aransiva, | a SOCIETY. WOMAN IGORES SUMMONS Mrs. M. Hone Jones Fails to Appear for Examination in Supplementary Proceedings— Ladies’ Tailor Has Judgment. | Marguerite Hone Jones, descendant | of Mayor James Hone and wife of Her- jinan, Le Roy Jones, of No. 6 West failed to appear for examination «in supplementary proceedings to-day as ‘to her ability to pay a judgment of $778 In favor of Hnas Brothers, the ladies’ tailors Justice McCarthy, of the City Coure, noted her default pn the mo- on of Maurice Meyer, in behalf of Haas Brochers, preparatory to con- tempt proceedings. The Herman Le-Roy Joneses are con- spicuous {n fashionable society, and the judgment against Mrs. Jones was for the balance of her account with the ing at thé crossing on Seventh ave- nue. A big automobile, hitting up & terrific’ clip, was coming her way from the north, She had just es- caped being knocked “down by & horse and buggy, aid her mitid was ‘bewildered, She didn't see the auto- mobile until St was almost upon hér. Coming from the south was another automobile, smaller than the first, but painted red afd equally fierce looking. In this automobile were two young men. Man Saved Her Life, The occupants of this machine real, ized the danger of the young woman, The man who was driving brought his machine to a sudden stop. His com- panton was out on the street in an instant and at the side of the young woman. Shoving her toward the curb- ing of the street he put her out of harm's way, but he himself was struck by the big auto as it whiazed by. He, was thrown, but was not seriously hurt. Brushing his clothes he jumped into his own machine and wag soon away feom the scene of the accent. Bince the fateful Nov. 29 Miss Rey- noldés has been out on Seventh ave- nue, the park roads, and all . places where automobiles might run a reg- ular course, looking for the man who vaved her life, for she-1s convinced that she would have been ground to pleces if help had not come when’ {t aid. To an Evening World reporter ‘Miss Reynolds said: Forgot to Thank Mim, “In my excitement 41 forgot to thank the brave young mar, I was so flustered that I ailowed him to jump into his automsdile without showing him how grateful I was. He was tall, dark, smooth of face, had curly hair and 4004 «looking. At the time he was dressed in ‘clothes of good make and texture, Now, he will anly come forwam 1 will tell him how really grateful T am." Miss Reynolds fives with fer parents and has a knowledge of what is and ‘hat is not proper in automobiles, From the hasty glynce at the big auto- mobile which nearly proved her un- doing, and the Nash. of Ber eyes on red machine, ahe was abl® to tell pattern the make of both. —aa OCEAN LINER RUNS AGROUND Hamburg-American Steamer Anay- rin Fast in Delaware River. PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 15,—The Ham- burg;American Ine steamship Assyria, which sailed form this port yesterday id ene the} for Hamburg, is aground on Pea Patch Shoal in the Delaware River about ten ‘miles below Newoastle, Del, lant and ts ing easy. uae hae pees n a ve. to her aasistance, en eent, ladies’ tailors, after trial of thelr suit in the City’ Court a year ago, when Mrs, Jones set up that her husband, not herself, was responsible for her dressmakers’ bill ‘The avcount was a long one, begin- ning in 1897, and amounted to nearly $1,600. Against this were credits ag- gregating about $800, leaving a balance of $193, whén the ladigs’ tailors sued a year ago and got judgment. Mr, Meyer says he spent a year try- Ing to serve a summons on Mr. Jones in supplementary proceedings. ONE KILLED BY GAS, ANOTHER OVERCOME Two Unidentified Men Found Un- conscious in Their Room, Tube Having Slipped from a Stove Left Burning. One man was killed and another over- come by the accldenta! disconnection of & tube of a gas stove at No. 800 Green- wich street early to-day, Mrs, Fallon, who owns the house, had never askéd the men their names, although | they had lived thbre several weeks, and thelr identity is still undiscovered, Mrs. Fallon's eon and daughter came | home together and, found the house filed with gas. They. awoke their mother, and traced the odor to the room of the two men’ on the top floor. The door was broken in and both men were unconscious in bed. ‘The gas stove had been left burning when they wenc to beg ned In eome way the tube had 8 off, call was sent to St. Vincent's Hos- vital. When Dr, Canfield came with the ambulance one man was dead and the otber in a serious condition. He was taken to the hi where he is now ‘at the point of death. A search of the room was made by the'police, but noth- irg was found which would identify the aus. 6 men, both of whom are young, came to the e a room. ‘They were sober and industrious and appeared to ho me- chanics, They did not give their names and Mrs. Fallon did not ask for them, —— Judge's Daughter Weds To-Day. Miss Eleanor Stuart Patterson, daugh- ter of Justice Edward Patterson of the Appellate Division off the Supremd. Court, and Harris Robbins Childs are to be man‘ied this afternoon at 4 o'clock in the Chureh of the. Heavenly ig Guide, and bis. peide wil alt on, Mary} house several weeks ago § AND DfcO IN JAIL ee Jimmy the Paup, After Thirty Years in Raymond Street, Passes Out Forever, Leaving His Wife Behind the Bars. WEARIED OF THE WORLD HE PREFERRED A CELL. Silent, Good-Hearted, Fond. of the Races and Trustworthy, He Was = General Favorite with the Prison Officials. “Jimmy the Paup" is dead, and all Raymond Gireet Jail, where for more than thirty years he had been a volun- tary prisoner, mourns him. ‘Also Jirhmy ls mourned by Kate Davis, a blooming inmate of the women’s prison, half his age, whom, two years ago, the seventy- year-old prison trusty took to wife. Further back than reaches the memory ‘of James Kadigan, the prison engineer, who has been in the Raymond Street Jal! for a quarter of a century, James Davis. since known as “Jimmy the Paup,"" was committed for twenty-nine days on a charge of Intoxicatiqn. Jimmy was at that time about forty years old and his ocoupation up to the hour of his incarceration was briefly given in the replygof James Radigan, his most Intimate fetend, €9 a question as to what Jimmy did, “Did? echoed the engineer. “Why, everybody! In a small way—of course,” he added. y At the end of the twenty-nine days of his prison sentence, James Davis, who had tired of the ups and downs of the cold world outside, and had come to realize the immense advantages of a place where the morning, noon and plight meals come as regularly as the perlods of the day they celebrate, de- clined to leave. And tradition says that he had to be forelbly eJected from the prison. Sheriff Then Kept Open House. In those days, however, the Sheriff collected @ fee for every prisoner in the Jail, and for that reason kept practically open house. It was easy for James Davis to have himself recommitted to Raymond -street. And such was his longing for the gray walls of the prison that within three days of the expiration of his first sentence he was back with another twenty-nine days to the good. The proceeding was repeated and re- peated until the prison officials, weary- ing of the formality, and having found Jimmy a very useful person, told him that he might stay. mo ae odd jobs about the prison— cleaning, whitewashin, bimselt’'s0 “generally uecessary ‘that ft was several times proposed to put his name on the pay rol], This could not be accomplished, but he finally obtained the privilege of selling candy and to- prisonei “SWinen Simeny a id's i james Rad- igan to an Vorid reporter yes- terday, “they found omy $14 in his ef- fects. For thou: he had been selling tobacco and ca: for over fifteen years he was so kind-hearted that he let the ‘poor devils who had no money but were crazy for a smoke have things on credit. And If they couldn't make good Jimmy never said a@ words He was very quiet and never sald much about his folks or me ee Peon, be came here. 1 ow is t he was born in Ir and came over very young.” pene No Relatives Outside. “Had he no relatives? asked the re- porte a “No.” said Mr. Radigan; “that ts,” added, after seme hesitation, “non. but his wife. Maybe you might call that a relative, now. He got married two years ago to @ woman named Kate Willa who was an inmate of the prison. I guess he used to outside sometimes. But gen: saved him the trouble by ge ye er if you want {o, but «he don't know aaything about Jimmy. She can tell you less than anybody here.”” And, as" matter of fact, Kate Davis, a blear-eyed. toothless woman of per haps fifty, who reluctantly confessed to thirty-two, did not know anything about Mr. Radigan's Jimeny, the ellent, faith- fut. kind-hearted, trusty, of Raymond ‘street. But she ehed a’ good deal of light on James Davie, nevertheless, “{ met Jimmy outside the prison two years ago," she said. ‘'T tock a fancy to him, and him to me. Next time I saw him. I was in the women's prison and ho came over there, to do some cleaning, Did I get committed just to see him? Wetl, one time I did, But after that I came becauve I wis ment. Jimmy Wanted to Marry Her. “Jimmy toll me that he wanted to get married; that he had never had any use for women before me, but that was a true sport. We got married and took rooms in Clinton street, near Ful- ton. Jimmy took gteat pride in the roome, and we sent lots of money fix- ing them up. He wanted me to dresy fine, and I spent all ‘his money for clothes that didn't go for horse racing. For Jimmy was fond of playing the races. We lost $75 on the last Suburcan That cleaned him out. You see, he was kind and trustet people, andthey didn't pay him sometimes, “He never told me anything about his past life. I didn't ask him any ques- tons, He didn't ask me any, Yes. 1 miss him very much. But he only left $14. Do you know anybody that would buy moa pair of shoes?” “Jimmy the |Paup"—he died of heart dino180 In the Brooklyn Hospital, wh adjoins the prison—was buri in’ Hoty Cross Cemetery McLaughlin and the other prion offi- clals attended the funeral in a body. BUILDING SHAPED LIKE PIE. v Jen © Structare to Be Occapted by Candy Makern, A ple-shaped building is nearing com- pletion at the southeast corner of Bar- clay street and West Broadway, form- Ing an addition {6 the many bulldings ty. trlangular- ed pot, the apex of which formed @ frontage of one inch on Barclay aireet. The hy Neuse of the trlan- gle ran 108 feet back on West Broad- way, where it joined the base of the triangle, which is twenty-two feet long, This gives the arpearance of a very slender cut of ple. ‘A five-story building has been erected there, and Will 9 Used 08 an annex by Loft & Co., candy manufacturers, the structure Joining thelr candy factory id one of their stores. \inique bullding is constructed of with fancy stone and fron ind while th Tx odd a very presentable 4 a “TUESDAY EVE WARRIED, LVED ad ‘Opte Read Sees the Bulls and Bears in Their Law Famous Author Visits Wali Street and Is Impressed by the Obliging Character of Morgan and Extravagant Tastes of Sage. BY OPIE READ. Author of “A Kentueky Colonel,” *‘A Tennessse Judge,’’ “The Jucklins,”” “The Starbucks,” Ete. eolved problem of man; to the ignorant it is not a revelation, but a blow between the eyes. Thousands of times have nim- ble and nervous pens sought to por- tray it, and as many times have they recorded their own failure. Write up Wall street? You might as well try mentally to master a stormy sea. On its curtetones gather the flerce tatters of frayed specula- tion, and within its crowning palace, the Stock Exchange, there Is a bel- lowing and grunting opera whose Wagnerian strains are heard to the furtherest bypaths of the financial world. And it is the countryman’s belief that on the floor of this palace the “great manipulators of Wall street as- semble early in the morning and haggle with one another until night. ‘The fact is that the giants are rarely seen on the floor. The active tear- ing down or building up is done by men rarely heard of on the outside. Here we have the physical out- break of human cupidity. It hes been called ¢.¢ arena of fortune and the hear garden of finance, but it is even worse. It is noisier than a Western cyclone and more active than the fruitful jimjams of wildcat licucr. . . . . And with it all there is the American’s unconquerable spirit of humor. Boisterous frolic breaks out, when some man makes a fictitious bid of millions his adversaries pounce upon him, there is a counter whirlpool in the great maelstrom, and the grave and reverend Chairman, white-bearded Talbert, from his balcony casts upon them his cold, north-star eye and calls them—not, indeed, to order, for that would be impossible—but snatches them back into the general whirlpool. How venerable he looks, this high priest of fluctuating coin, and, as observed on the ground, how easy it would be to mistake him for the genteel exhorter of a camp meeting. On e surface It does not secm that he ever would risk anything but his Wess- ing. ‘ z : In the swirl there were individualized bits of driftwood, Bernard Baruch, moving about from one tangle to another, spruce in dress and with a roving eye. Beside a pest sat Dick Halstead, the wag. seriously concocting a funny story with which to drive away the nightmarish de- pression of his friends. He mopped his ample brow. Jokes were coming hard. But for the bullishness of his - size and the ponderoys muscle of his make-up, he would havo reminded one of a weary and overworked poet, exploring the storehouse of his mind in search ofa rhyme. Through his thin and flaxen hair he ran his fingers and sadly he shook his head. The joke-was elusive, but at the end of ap- parent despair he suddenly brightened as if with an Inspiration, and get- ting up hastily he ran to a tangle of bellowers and let slip his fancy. Then arose a strain out of harmony with the general chorus, a too-human laugh, ©, mischievous shoving, and again was turned downward the reproving eye of Father Talbert, sitting in the marble clouds. . . . . Xendy-Money Frothingham moved about with a pink flower on his coat. He smiled. He can afford to smile, but the countenance of a nervous fel- low who buttonholed him was not !llumined. On his brow the sweat glis- tened as if he were in a close place and no doubt he was. But Frothing- ham, the Beau Brummel of the street, was patient with him, listened to his distress, adjusted his necktle, pulled down his cuffs and by a sign admin- istered to the agony of the applicant, that is, he agreed'‘to let him have the money. With our exploring party wes a Southern planter and he requested the guide to point out a member from the South. ‘There is F. B. Tilman,” said the guide, and finally the planter succeeded in settling upon him, “You don’t say. Well, he looks all right. ‘Nhey tell me that the Southern men are daing right well here. I've got a sof that I thought I'd let go into the financial world.” “Do you think he’s well equipped?” “Well, sir, I haven't investigated it, having hed something else on my mind, but they tell me that he can shake five aces oftener than any boy in the neighborhood. His mother wants him to be a lawyer, but 1 think it would be a shame to waste such material. Who is that pale gen- tleman walking about as if he wanted to bid somebody good morning and talk about the weather?” . B. Hopkins,” the guide answered. Appears to be a right nice man, sir. But is Mr. Morgan down there?” “No, he isn’t now. | think he was sent out on an errand.” “You don't tell me. Right accommodating man—in his way—I reckon. And has Mr. Keene dropped in yet, sir?” “Think not—saw him just now with a bundle that he said he had to take home.” . ALL STREET, a mystery unto woman and the un- DICK\HALSTEAD, WIT, EVOLVES JOKE: “Considerable of a family man, I take it. Ihave heard of a man named Russell Sage. Suppose he's any- where on the premises?” “The chances are that he's not here. The fact is, this place isn't expensive enough for him, He likes to spend money—wants to see it go in drifts.” “Just exactly like my son, sir. If he's got a dime he wants to spend it for something, And I reckon that’s the way with Mr, Sage. But hold STARS HE SOUGHT DON'T SHINE THERE, lon, there's a fight down there,” . . . . A new member had come sneaking in. Timidly ,he had stepped about, but he was recognized as a fledgling and they jumped him, pulled him, and would have walloped him but for the frost-glinting eye of Talbert. “Why, sir, they are insulting,” said the planter. “If a man should treat me that way he'd get into difficulty.” The old gentleman had applied for the privilege of the floor, but it was, as in all cases, declined with the po- Mtest but the firmest of thanks, “But when I visit our State Legislature,” lead he, in urging the matter, “I am always invited to a seat on the floor. iBut let it go. 1 have heard of the exclusiveness of New York society, but |1 didn’t know that asa corpofation it was quite this close.” ‘When he saw how they pulled and hauled the stranger, he sald: “I am now that I was refused. I can imagine what it would be. Once a yoke n away with me and plunged off through a wild plum thicket I have escaped a personal difficulty, gad 1 steers ral and tore my clothes bodatiously off. Wall street, the astonished gazer soon discovers, is a neighborhood yather than a street. To the ruralite, living on the opposite side of the con- tient, it is a broad thoroughfare, stretching mile after mile, and upon it ¢ the residential palaces of the nabobs of New York. But, compact as it is, tt would take years to encompass jt. Monstrous are its marble structtires, clean and smokeless {ts atmosphere, genial its surface manners—dominat- Ing the finance, the speculative business o! with its money to rule this lower universe. f the western world, and destined | t/orence Peeves TWO GIRLS HELD FOR A RANSOM Postal Card Declared They Had Been Kidnapped and De- manded $100, Threatening Removal to Another State. Bessie Mordough, of No. 606 Bleventh streot, Brooklyn, and Florence Reeves, of No. 660 Vanderbilt street, Windsor ‘Terrace, each seventeen years old, have ‘been missing from their home since Sat- urday and thelr parents have reported to the police that they belleve the girls are in the shands -of kidnappers. FA neighbor said to-day that Mrs, Reeves had received a postal card which Tead: ‘ “The girls have been kidnapped, but they. are all right. 1f we do not recelve $100 we will take them into another State." Both girls ‘worked in a dress-pattern factory in Fourteenth street, Manhat- tan, They were to have attended a party or a dance somewhere in the lower part of Manhattan Saturday nigh,t nad when they went to work Saturday morning they wore their best dresses, intending to go to the dance without going home after finishing their wor ; ‘Another girl who lives in Brooklyn rode down on the Sixth avenue elevated roud with them to the Franklin street station. ‘Chere Bessie and Florence eaid hey would get off and Ko to the dance. i yas the last seen of them. That wae, Heeves iad told her parents Saturday morning thut she would prob-. ably no: be home that night. but them not to worry about her, as sho would remain at the home of Bessie Mer tou eee had not’ reached home sun- day afternoon her father, one of the oldest. employees of the Unton Ferry Mordough home Company, went to the Car ound that neither had been there. Mrs. Mordough was as much worried us was Florence's father, and together they called on the police. Heved that both girls are being it is selleved that both girls are beln id traint. Florence held vere mcreased Saturday, Sh Wages eatiy please’ and had made a for extra work to be done ts of the two girls would not dscuss their disappearance to-day, sayin} t the police had Instructed them to fay nothing to any one and as~ suring them that they would find the girls. USED BOOT TO PUT OUT WIFE'S CALLER anes John Galleny Said He Would Be Back Early, but He Came Un- expectedly Through Kitchen Door. rangements this week, ‘The parent When John Galleny, of No. 7 Van Bernan strect, West New York, started of employment tn this sacd his pretty wife | be home early. He was. He waa home about an hour after he Thad lett, reaching the Interlor of his house by way of a back fence and a |icitehen door. Soon after he entered the nelghbort that there was somet ne when he came out, . son of the Chief of the He ceded him iby a narrow margin, had a firm grip on the back of the collar Bgleson’s shirt and at frequent inte: vals be planted the toe of his right foot oa the person of Eggleson about mid- way, aft. In this manner he escorted Eggleson to the town lock-up, followed by akmnost the entire population of West New York. It was great sport for the population and the exercises kept Galleny wanm— If, indeed, exercise were necessary. ‘After a ovliceman had gone to Kal- Eggieson's a leny'’s home and secured Clothes the son of the Chief of the Fire] arraigned defore Re- 1 held for the Grand Galleny went to Hoboken | aigwyce to bring sulk for 6 Jury. tained vores, +|— for’ mawd that he would) solid silver trimmed, gun- New York Woman Arrested: in Hoboken on Charge of For gery Remanded for Furth Examination. id ES 2 eee Charged with forgery and-obtalning money under false pretences, Catter= ing O'Donnell, of No, 326 / Eighteenth street, this. city, was: rested to-day in Hoboken. She taigned before Recorder Staaten nu remanded for further examinations | Miss O'Donnell ty girhe eighteen years old: ‘(ohetee Nae in Hoboken. with her parents, whotare — highly respected, When she- there yesterday with, checks the forged signiture of.Robert Huite- — meyer, the mil¥liLonalre pocketbook manufacturer,X she was enadlGed to exchange them for merchandise and get balanFcesin moneVy without ity. Complaint was received by of Police Hayes to-day that at least two of the checks were bogus, and Policeman | | — O'Donough was sent to look for’ the — | young woman, He found her in the” shopping district. pes De Frank Sunkel, a druggist, and C., Fy Koegebehn, a saloon-keeper, a against the girl, but Koegebehn ‘ withdrew his complaint. Miss O'Doanell offered no defense. Hor friends aay that her head has been turned by the ventures of Mabe! Parker, the girl who" is now on trial before Judge Cowing in the Court of General Sersions on a forgery charge. c Sale of All Silk - Umbrellas. For Women,26-inch; handles of pearl, ivory and. natural wood with solid silves caps and trimmings. : For Men, 28-inch; fine natural wood handles p'ain and with. solid silve trimmings. ‘* 2°Q5 : $2. 95; value $4.00, For Women, 26-tneh; handles of ivory and pearl, tee. ae metal, also fine silver caps with partridge posts. For Men, 28-inch; handles of horn, ivory and natural wood, solid silver trimmed, 3-95; value $5.00 to $6.00, Lord & Taylor, Broadway and Twentleth Street, and Fifth Avenue, : New Entrance on 19th Street. 7