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S one. Geena me 2 ian Mat ent . hy aaa aa tad aa Ratha a ala ' THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 18, 1904. MRS. RALL WAITS FOR ThE $60,000 Administrators of Millionaire Gilman’s Estate Say They Don’t Have to Pay Sum for Which She Agreed to Settle. 8UT IT IS VERY PROBABLE . THAT THEY WILL DO So. The Surrogate Has Decided that the Claimant of the Entire Property Has the Lega Right _ to Compromise. At last the Helen Potts Hall claim @gainst the estate of George Francis Gilman has been settled. Only the for- mal action of the administrators 1s necessary to give $60,000 to the woman who has contested so long for the e: tate of the late millionaire tea mer- chant, The question of whether the compromise as suggested by Mrs. Hall was proper has been decided aMfirmative- ly by the Surrogate, and the long-fought battle is now at an end, “The fact that the Surrogate decided that the compromise would be ‘proper’ does not mean that the money is Mrs. Hall's as yet,” said Charles H. Brush, counsel for the Gilman administrator: to-day. “though, of course, the fact that {t was brought before the Surrogate practically means that such an action would be the outcome or the decision. To Get $20,000 in Cash. “Mrs. Hall will not receive all of the 900,000 in cash. Only $20,000 will be turned over to her in cash: the other 340,000 will be in preferred stock of the Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Com- pany. This yields a dividend of 6 per oent., which will give Mrs. Hall an in- come of $200.a month. ‘The administra- tors do not have to settle the $60,000, but ft is probable that they will.”’ It was on March 8, 1901, that George Franels Gilman died at his home at Black Rock, Conn. Mrs. Hall was vis- iting him at the time. Immediately after his-death she put in a claim for the whole estate, stating that he had adopt- | ed her as bis daughter. Valuable papers | concerning the estate could not be found by the beirs-at-law. A long fight has been going on eyer since. Finally Mrs. Hall suggested a com- promise whereby she was to relinquish her claims for $60,000,. She had already brougiit five suits to recover the entire estate—two-in Connecticut and three in New York. Although Gilman was not on friendly terms with his relatives, the heirs-at- law bitterly contested the claim of Mrs. Hall, A divorce sult from her husband, Blakeley Hall, was asequence of the no- torlety Mrs. Hall attained through her connection with the Gilman estate. After Gilman's deathea corporation was organised to control the interests whic had formerly been # private enterprise.’ ‘The administrators took the preferred stock. Adopted Her, She $ Mrs. Hall has insisted throughout the Utigation that her claim was based upon an agreement she had made with the tea merchant whereby she was to re- ceive his entire estate provided she per- formed all the duties of a daughter up to the time of his death. Mrs, Hall maintained she performed these fillul requirements, Just how the eged agreement Was made was surrounded by myatery. ‘That Mrs. Hall held valu- abie papers was feared by the helra-at- law. rch was made for adoption papers in different States, but they were not found. Helen Potts was a San Francisco girl. Before she married Blakeley Hall she was the wife of a man named Pete from whom she was divorced, She wa on the stage under the name of Helen Standish. TEACHERS CLAIM PAY FOR SERVICES Those Acting as First Assistants | to Principals Want Difference in Salary to Which They Are Entitled. The Board of Education will pass on Friday night on a number of applic tions, made by teachers who have neen acting as first assistants to prin- ipals, for the payment o1 sary which they cluim is due them by virtue of the | tutes imposed. Altogether ninety appii- | cations have been recetved. M. B Dean, the attorney who Is rep- cesenting several of the teachers in their contention, said to-day: “My clients want the difference in sal- aries between the one which goes with the duties of first assistant to the prin- cipal and that attached to the position at which they are rated, “They have been acting as first as- sistants in some cases for three or four years, and the difference will amount to $800 in nn. individual case, There are three hundred teachers in the depart- ment who have suffered yn account of the board's neglect $10,000 FOR SON’S DEATH. Moy Was Killed by Fall of Ca paign Banner 1900, A jury to-day before Justice Truax awarded $10,000 damages to Jucob J. Durfield, of Birmingham, Ala., father of the youth who was killed during the hurricane that swept over this city on Sept. 12, 1900, by the snapping of one of the poies upon which a Bryan and Stevenson campaign banner was strung across Broadway at Duane stre: ‘The father sued for his son's death, naming the Cit of New York as well as eqnipment. company, barics and Meyer Bimberg and ‘ow: ae larkson, Claiming that ie city (ieee eeltaea cance eng LOVES HUSBAND © AND MAA HE SHOT James G. Newman’s Wife Shows Remarkable Affection for Him and Wilbur Van Tassel, Who Is Near Death. FLUTTERS FROM PRISON TO A COT IN HOSPITAL. Assures Husband of Her Love and Then Rushes Over to Caress the Victim of His Jealousy. (Special to The Evening World.) POUGH PSIE, Jan. 18.—When James Newman, whose love for his wife led him to shoot down William Van Tassel, who ts also {in love with Mrs. Newman, is arraigned in court here late this afternoon the pretty young woman will stand by him in the prisoners’ pen | anc will do all in her power to secure freedom for him, All through the morning she hovered ever the cot on which Van Tassel lay | dying, for she loves Van Tassel, too, when she ts with him and she grieves for him, when the presence of her hus- band makes her love for the husband stronger, Strange, indeed, is this young woman's affection. As she bent over Van Tas- sel's bed to- he told her he had forgiven her husband for shooting him down. Then she repeated what he has heard before. She told him that she loved him, “You are so different,” she said. “You, are not ike ‘Jim.’ You are always Inughing. and you tell me stories that ‘Jim’ can't tell. I love you because you amuse me, : Then the woman went to her husband. | He 1s behind the bars and he suffers much in his cell. In his hand he holds the picture of his wife, She sent It to him last night and he cherishes it. “TI love you," she told Newman, “You are so serious and so stable. I love you, Jim,” she cried to him as she went to his cell, anys He W , “T am justified in shooting that man,” Newman told her. “He came between you and me, and any man who will separate husband and wife deserves death. He got his just deserts. I only grieve in here because it separates us.” “Why did you use that revolver, ‘Jim she asked. “I feel that you should have cuffed William soundly. You cannot win back a woman's love with a revolver. You should win with your fists. But you have not lost me entirely, ‘Jim.’ Not that I love you less, ‘Jim.’ I love William and when I am with him I be- eve I love him most. When I am with you I love you most,” Mrs. Newman then tripped from the jail and went toward the house In which Van Tassel les dying. She spent the day fluttering between the jatl and the hospital. Almost as strange as the mood of the girl wife is the mood of Van Tassel. When Newman was brought before | him for {dentification Van ‘Tassel looked at him reproachfully, but re- fused to say that Newman was the man who shot him. ‘This notwithstand- ing the fact that Van Tassel knew that he was not going to live, Newman cooly questioned the dying man, asking him when he first met his wife and whether she had been ju- troduced to him as a married woman, Van Tassel readily answered the ques- tions, saying he met Mrs. Newman on the streets in Wappinger's Falls, und that she was not known to him as a married woman. Didn't Know It Was Wrong. ‘hat Mrs. Newman has no conception of the position which she occupies is evident. She says in the most innocent PMR a adiatacat ony “I cannot understand why Jim shot Wilbur. if it was all wrong why did not Jim tell me to stay at home nights and tell Wilbur not to see me again, dim was kind to me even It he was big and strong and rough. But Wilbur was 80 different from the other men I had seen In Marlorsville. He was just like fone of the heroes in the story books T have reag."" There is much sy) for both Van Tassel and Newman. Both are hard-working industrious young men, ‘Van. Tassel lived an exemplary life up to a few months ago. member of the Baptist Church, of the Christian Endeavor Society and the Bible clans. “He earned’ $3 a day and contributed most of It to th of his father and mother. |'* SHPPOFC Newman has always borne an excel- lent reputation. He is a hard-working, Honest chap. six feet tall and muscled like an athlete. He has enormous strength. Ile is being held without ball jé protesta that he did not Intend. to ‘oot Van Tassel and merely fired the Fevolver (0 make him stop running. mpathy expressed He wax a FIRE DESTROYS COTTAGE. Flames Supposed ite, Hav Been Started by an Incendiary) William Kamp's new summer home, which was in the course of erection at Monmouth Beach, N. J., ts to-day a hean of ashes, The loss is sald to be $40,000, ‘ ‘The origin of the fire is a mystery, There had been no fire in the cottage for many hours and the workmen were to have begun plastering to-day. It {s said that the circumstances indicate the work of an incendiary. As the building was not completed the loss will fall up- on the contractors. It is sald the: fully covered by insurance, eae Is a New Yorker ani he expected to oc. cuny his new cottage early in the sum- mer. —————— FIRE DOES $50,000 DAM. GE. AMESBURY, Mass. Jan, 18—A fire which started here to-day in a large factory occupled by the Burbank Car. riage Company und the Charles F, Worthen Carriage Company destroyed the building and its contents and par- Uully destroyed an adjoinin Decupled by Nathaniel 4. Bolger sen, heat ted the sprinklers in the fac- tory r& Druinmond. just across the street, and their lo: by water was considerable. The total loss will aggregate $50,000, $< POPE SEES AMERICANS. ROME, Jan. 18—The Pope has re- eeived in private audience Mr. and Mrs, &t. John Gaffney and Miss Humphreys, of New R44 Pope was extremely Mr. ‘Kamp | DAN HANNA, HIS FORMER AND PRESENT WIFE, WHOSE MARRIAGE JUDGE CALLS BIGAMOUS. | \ ! MRS. HANNA NO. 1, "KID" MECOY AGAIN CAPTURED BY CUPID This Time His Bride Is Indiola | Arnold, a Member of the “Wizard of 0z” Company— She Will Retire. According to Townsend Walsh, bual- hese ma r of “The Wizard of Ox” company la" MeCoy ‘Is again a bridegroom. The brid» ts Indiola Ar- | hold, jaueen in * has been playing the fairy fhe Wizard of Oz" for sev- eral months, The news was announced in a tele- | Sram sent by Walsh from ‘Foronto, It j Stated that McCoy and Miss Arnold were married ten days ago in Proyi |dence, K. 1, MeCoy returned ta New York after the ceremony and Miss Ar- aold remained with the company, his is hgt MecCoy*s tirst marriage. He has been arried so many times that he ts letter perfect in the part and can ge out a rehi |rlages, howe’ an, Mrs, Three Umes through the ceremony, with- arsal, His previous mar- , Were all with one wom- 1 Woodruff MeCoy. led her to the altar. and onc as plaintirt Ju he Twice she applied for divorc McCoy appeared in court in an action for separation ‘the first Mra. Mc tic spouse a lence. After they the second time's! up $1U,00 in cus him the third tn her one divores Induced nim to give belore “he uccepted At one Ume, dur- ang 4 disagreement, she also accused |him of having sold out to James J. Cor- bett in his fight with that pugilistic uctor, Some months after McCoy had mar- ri€d her for the third time she disap- veared from their place at Saratoga Ralph Thompson, the son of a Schenee: tady’ banker, disappeared at the same time. McCoy brought sult for absolute “vorce and also ‘began sult against Thompson for $100,000 damages for the alienation of his wife's affections. The new Mrs, McCoy Is a tall, beautt- ful blonde. It is anid she will retire from the stage at the end of the cur- Tent season, TOOK HAIR BLEACH TO END HER LIFE Mrs. Cornelia Dusch Tried Sui- cide in Vain Because Her HusHand Refused Her Re- quest for Favorite Doctor. ugilis- exisi- d fo Mrs. Cornelia Dusch took a bottle of peroxide of hydrogen internally to-day | because her husband wouldn't go to Jersey City for. the doctor she liked William Dusch, the husband, a clerk, who lives at No. 520 West One Hundred jand, ‘Twenty-Atth street, 'fetch a physician in the neighborhood. When | back Mrs, Wuseh was in great agon: Dusch then made ddéuble-quick time to the One Hundred and ‘fwenty-nten street police station. As soon’ ua he rould recover his breath he told the pos lice a long story. Berore he’ was hale id j Way through with it (wo policemen were on the way. the an “ambulance Dusch hom Dr. Sahneatock, of the J, ‘Hood Wright Hospital, ‘took in. the. situatioy at once, ‘The polson was the variety peroxide that makes 9 beautiful sunset glow where all was blugk before b “The lady will not di®,” said the 4 tor,” but she. will be’ sick—so. slex. Poroxide {5 bad for the stomach, It upsets the digestion for some time. Mrs, Dusch Was in'great misery, Tho husband said that his wife kept up with the Jerse uta Went out to | {the detectives for their emcien train bound for New York. and they went to the Savoy Hotel, w maid and children, of Boston.” by detectives. used in delivering goods, driven to the French line plier. not find his wife. She was locked in off the boat and stood on the pier to WON'T RECOGNIZE | HANNA DIVORCE (Continued from First Page.) on Saturday, July, 13, 1901, to seize the little boys, Mrs. Hanna, the Baroneas de Palland and the boys were climbing aboard a fast Lake Shore, On the way they wired and reserved staterooms on the Campania, dug to sail from this city the next afternoon. here they registered as ‘Mrs. Brown, GAVE HUSBAND THE SLIP. Dan Hanna heard of their departure from Cleveland and followed them on the next train, after arranging by wire to have the hotel surrounded He arrived in New York the next morning, and while he and his sleuths watched the'Fifth sveuue and Fifty-ninth street Savoy en- trances, Mrs. Hanna, the children and the Baroness went out by an alley entered a cab in Fifty-eighth street and were Mr. Hanna got to the boat an hour before sailing time, but he could He got her stateroom with the boys. see the ship sail down the river with Mrs. Hanna and his sons on the promenade’ deck. WILL CONTEST HIS BROTHER'S WILL Jehn H. Bird Returns from Trip Around the World After an} Absence of Ten Years—May Be Long Fight. . What promises to be a prolonged fight over the. three wills made by the late Col, William Bird during the elghteen months: preceding his death was for- mally opened before Surrogate Fitager- ald ‘to-day by the testator’s. brother, John H. Bird, just rned to settle down after nearly’ ten years occupied in clrcumnayigation of the globe. John H.' Bird was one of the attorneys for the old Broadway surface railway company, He Is not mentioned in elther of Col, William Bird's three wills, nor ts his son, Clinton W. Bird. Appearing in behaif of his brother Jo- seph, who ix a legatee for $5,000 under the will of Dee. 1, 1908, executed at Dunellen, N. J,, he insisted that Col Bird was a resident of New Jersey when he made that will and when he dled, and that surrogate Fitzgerald has ho jurisdiction to try the contest, Surrogate Peter F. Daley, of New Brunswick, N. J., in whose court the! Dunellen will: was filed, was in court, prepared to testify {f needed, George H. Schurman, however, rep- resenting Col, Bird's only son, an heir at law, Col, Harrison K. Bird, military secretary to Gov, Odell, who is made} sole legutee and’ sole executor under the second will, dated last April, asked for a postponement to Monday next, which was granted, D. Frank Lloyd, representing four nepliews and nieces, named as legatees of $00 each in a still earlier will, which | may be declared to be the only will of Col. Bird should the charge aiid coun- | ter-charge of undue influence be proven in the present content, ‘assented to this| arrangement. Col, Bird's estate is sald to have ap- proximated nearly $230,000, | a DETECTIVES GET BOUQUETS. | Mawtatrate Cornell Compliments Them on Exciee Arrests. When ‘twelve —excire cases were ‘brought before Magistrate. Cornell in the: Kasex Market Court to-day ten of | thera were so strong that he held them for Special Segsions and complimented | | ‘MWe majority. of the arrests were | y detectives on Inspector berger's staff. 'T early all of a trivial n ° the capes ‘was heirs te’ Cofnell, turning 1 sanndelinum, counsel for the » Denlers’ Assoozation, “didn't, éxpect ‘this before elec- tion, did your’ # “No; it is a disappointment,’’ respond- hs os hth SD ta Te i HEALTH SHE SOUGHT HERE ELUDES HER While the Marquise des Mons- teirs-Merinville Is in No Im- mediate Danger, Friends Are Alarmed at. Her Condition. The condition of the Marquise des Monsteirs-Merinville, who is {il in her apartments at the Buckingham, was re- ported’ to bé about the same to-day, It was said that. while there is no {mme- diate danger, her condition is such a to cause her friends much alarm, The Marauise, who was Miss Gwen- dolin Byrd Caldwell, ts being cared for by Mrs, Terrence Donnelly, who ha: been a mother to her ever since the death of her own mother many years ago. The Marquise ts best’ known for her charities and her lavish entertainments, She was one of the founders of the Catholic University, and her gift of $900,000 to that institution gained for her a token from Pope Leo in the form of a gold medal She and her sister Lena, now the Baroness Voh Zedwitz, were educated at the Sacred Heart Convent. ‘Through her mother's family the Marquise is re- lated to the Breckinridges of Kentucky. At one time she was engaged to Princo urat, but when he demanded one-half her fortune as a settlement she prompt- *¥_ broke off the engagement. DrO™Dt In 1896 she’married the Marquis, and since then has resided in Paris. She came to this country quietly in search of Health a few months ago, suffering from nervousness, only a few. of her most intimate friends being aware of her intentio $$$ BOY ONLY OBEYED ORDERS. Apartment-House a Wo A ft Jury Notice Servers, Commissioner of Jurors Thomas Al- lixun appeared in the Tombs Court to- day as 2 complainant in the case of Edward Burney, a colored elevator boy. in the apartment-house at No, 55 Cen- tral Park West, who was arrested on Friday for refusing to allow Stdney Liv- ingston and Samuel Seiner, two jury notice servers, to go to apartmenta in the building. The men had notices to | serve on’ Charles Beers and Gilbank ‘Vwigg, and were refused permission by the boy. Burney was held in $100 bail for trial In Npecial Sessions. Supt, MeAllister, of the apartment- Lovee, aad that as there had been me burglaries In the building he had given orders to: Burney’ to ‘allow ‘no + in the bullding unless they sr told thelr busines: Allison sald that a ot be interfered with in per ¢ of their duty, Young 1) 3’ was paroled ia the cus- tody stn . Hagan, fhe “Demo- the Their train arrived late at night FENIAN VEL OS SUDDENLY Man Believed to Be the ual Irish Nationalist Is Found Unconscious in Street and Taken to Hospital. | GAINED NOTORIETY BY KILLING BRITISH SPY.) He Had Lived for Many Years) After His Pardon on the. Bounty of Friends and by Doing Odd Jobs. | A man supnosed to have been "Bob" | Keliy. the noted Fentan, died suddenly in the lower Fulton street police sta- | tion, Brookliyn. to-day, He was found almost unconactous late last night at! Fulton and Prospect streets, suffering | from general debfilty and alcoholism He gave his name as Robert Kelly and | naid (hat he lived at Park Row and | James street, Manhattan, He said he wan sixty-five years old. This is about the ago of “Bob” Kelly, the Irish Na- tlonalist wouid be. Kelly had a slight cut on the head.) on which he had evidently’ fallen. Aj) surgeon from the Brooklyn Hospital fixed him up, and he was put in « cell] for the night charged with intoxication. | He appeared all right this morning and! was taken out to the general muster-| room with the other prisoners to be taken to court. While sitting in a chair Kelly fell over suddenly, and before Dr. | Smith could respond from the hospital cond time the man was dead. Kelly, the Fenian, won his notoriety’ by killing James Talbot, a spy hired by the British Government to help wreck | the Fenian movement In 1871. Kelly got} fifteen years for the murder, but was | pardoned in 1880. He then came to the United States, where he lived on the | charity of other Irish patriots and by | doing odd jobs. For a few years past) he was very sickly and was often in/ Hellevue Hospttal. In telling his story to an World reporter the last Ume Kel in Bellevue, in Uz, he said: “1 belonged to the Dubin Circle of the lirish Revolutionary Brotherhood. Tal- ne in Iss¥, and soon won i Not until any against hi every movement planned by the order had been mysteriously balked by tho English Government. When suspicion was directed against ‘Talbot he way shadowed day and night, The evidence against him convincing, and it was decided to do away with hf “We drew lots. I saw « mark under my name. I knew what it meant, The next day I watched and Talbot came by with two constabt I dodged into a doorway in Temple street. fired and Tan. ‘Talbot dropped. His companions chased me and I shot one, William Sherwood, but they caught me, “I was freed from the charge of mur- der because William H. O'Leary, a med- ical expert, proved to the jury that my bullet had’ not caused death, but that the surgeon in probing for bullet had severed an artery and thus killed Talbot. I got fitteen years, but was pardoned in 188. I came to New York in 1882, and hope to end my days peace- fully here. But before I die I hope to avening y was HINTS OF FRAUD IN DNORCE CAS Conspiracy Is Charged in the Suits Involving Daniel P.; Moran and the Bride He Took Last November. Declaring that somebody had commit- ted perjury, and that he smelt a con- spiracy, Herman L. Roth asked Justice | Leventritt. of the Supreme Court, to- day to send all the’ papers to the Dis- triet-Attorney in the suit of Daniel P. Moran against Kate Moran, his seven- teen-year-old bride, and her counter-| suit for an annulment of the marriag Tt all’ came about in the course of argument on a motion by Andrew J | Smith, for Moran, to open a default} upon which the wife had been awarded $15 weekly alimony and $130 counsel fees. Mr. Smith submitted aMdavits of Mrs. | Adolphus Judas, with whom the co-| respondent named by Moran boarded. | | Daniel P. Moran is the superintendent of a big steamship company with many “plants.” He and Katle Moran, the| prettiest girl In Bradhurat avenue, were | married the night of Nov. 7 last. He| says she deserted him four weeks later | and names John McFalls, of No. 2183! Fifth avenue, as co-respondent | On Jan, 3 the screams of a handsome young woman in Eighth avenue at- tracted a pcliceman, who arrested man fourishing a pistol near him, The girl was Mrs. Moran, and she charged her husband with attempting to kill her, but next morning she withdrew the charge in court In answer to her husdand’s complaint Kate Moran dentes alt his charges and asks for an annulment of her marriage to Moran, declaring that he forced her to marry him with that same pistol, threatening to shoot ner if she refused. | She ulso asserts that she was and still| is under the age of legal! consent, and | that two. clergymen had refused to marry or to Moran on the ground of | her youth. i Juatice Leventritt reserved decision, takin the papers and declaring that h would examine them, and if he fou any reason to believe there was spiracy or fraud in them he would se tho matter to Mr. Jerome. | SHIP TRUST CASE DELAYED. Judge Kirkpatrick Too 111 to Hexr the Arguments, to The Evening r ON. J. Jan, 18.—Owlng ty the sudden ines of Judge Kirkpatrict of the United States Court, the argu d World) ments on various motions in th pre ceeaings against the United States Shipbuilding Company and Charles M. Schwab were ¢ ty. indefinitely Dost- N Sento ual see Ireland free.” | | formerly 50c., 7 Relist eI WATERS RIE PIANOS The great reputation of WATERS PIANOS is based on the} high . standard of all-round excel- lence they have maintained during a long period of years. By reason of their RICH, SWEET TONE, | SOLID CONS TISTIC DESIC FINISH, they occupy pesition among the pianos of America. 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