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( } fi | ee ep on TE R. i "In thirty years there will be no} @iatesmen in this country if the per- \ nictons cigarette habit is noi curbed mea make any attempt to stop his car. Tp gat, it nevtned to Mrs. Klinge that Phe cnercased the speed. * of he dog ay from her injuries. POLICEMAN CLUBS SED LEI WNT SWE 0G Mrs. Catherine Kiinge Sprang in Front of Trolley Car When Animal Was in Peril and Was Seriously Hurt. SAYS MOTORMAN WAS ALL TO BLAME. He Made No Effort to Stop, It Is Declared, and Dog Was Ground to Death Under the Wheels, l Mrs, Cathcrine Klinge, of No. 112 typress avenue, the Bronx, is in a tangerous condition at -her home to- fay, suffering from a broken arm, which has swollen to such proportions that the surgeons are afraid to set it. as n result: of a heroic ‘attempt she made yesterday afternoon to save the Ure of a pet dog. ‘Mrs. Klinge was going to market, with ter ‘las. G@ therouschbred water spaniel wen thr frisky M{Ule animal got out in front of refiised to budge. ‘The motorman did Ghovting to the motorman, the woman farejed forward in an attempt to reach wpuniel, but she slipped on the ice ind fell within a few inches of the Wheels @f the car, beside the track, fracturing iver right arm and recelving puinfur beuises, The dog was crushed under ts ear An ambulance was sum- moned and the Injured woman taken t her home. Mr. Klinge, who remained at home with his wife to-day, sald to an Even- hg World reporter that she was suffer- ing as much from grief over the death Dog Was a Favorite, “Two years ago.” said Mr, Klinge, “my son, Emil, who is employed In the offices of Naylor & Company, No. 43) Broadway, brought the water apuniel home with him, The dog belonged to the head bookkeeper, who was going abroad and asked Emil te keep her for | Hi. We had her byt a, few months when she wan the pet of the neighbor- hood. We tanght her many trick among them one we called ‘life saving. My wife and the boys would take the dog to the Bronx Kills, where they went bathing, and pretend to drown, Theo Fanny would get out to them in remark- uuble fashion and endeavor to drag them to the surface. “She actually did save two lives last summer. ‘Two litte girls, Lena Moran, One Hundred and Thirty-third and ted up traMc both ways for almost WOMAN WAO RISKED HER LIFE TO SAVE PET DOG FROM DBRATH.,| TROLLEY COLLIDE Car Is Forced from the Track and Traffic on Third and Sec- ond Avenues Blocked for Nearly an Hour. A Second avenue trolley car crashed ihto Fire Engine No. 12 at Park Row end Pearl atveet to-day and knocked*it against the curb, In rebounding the | engine knocked the car from the track an hour, Two men in the street were Sie: land Annie Johnson, of Haat One| xnocked: down, and three firemen 0 . ie a ped inju Hndred and ernie fourth aLeey Te CRE accident was due, to, the ANstake yater at he bathi ol jotorman Dilmont tn thin a Lhe iBtol thes Grey Wate t. and the {engine driver signalled. to cross ti place on two successive plucky Ustle | a went after brought them, safely to shore Waked ap the Boarders. “ was not only an intelligent dog, bar's very valuable one, being a tplendia ‘spacimen of the thoroug wator spaniel. Lately Mrs, Klin taught her to wake all the boarders in the house in the morning by going to their doors and barkkig until they were aroused. That the dog was a great favorite and atreet first, a wmall fire to the station at No, the motorman saw his mistuke t The engine wan struck front and rear wheels a ing to the curb, striking 1 Two ‘The signal, Instead, was for the car to stop until the engine crons ‘The ongine was returning slowly A 1 William street. The car was not mov but when the motorman from the driver he threw ward at full speed and betwe Ainp-poat en near the post were knocked among the children in the neighborhood | into the gutter was evident, for while The Evening World reporter was at the house there continual string of youngsters to the place and inquiring for ny, What was left of the spaniel was placed In a box and this afternoon her little friends will bury her in solemn and mournful state. wi coming Fe BOY BURGLAR Seventeen-Year-Old Youth Is Brought Into Court with Face Battered and Body Bruised— “Held in $2,000 Bail. | ‘smith, seventeen years old, of First avenue, waa held in the Yarlem Police Court to-day in $2,000 vail for burglary, The boy's face was battered and covered with bruises as the reault of an enc er he had with Hugh $9. ass Foliceman Cafferty, of the’ Bast One Hundred ar Twenty-fifth street sta- tion, early to-day, when he was dis- eovered robbing a butcher shop. + Cafferty was passing the shop of Al- bert Metzger, at No, 42) First avenue, when he notived the door of the place open, He’ wont fiiside and round two nen engaged in orecking open the re- sister, Drawing Mis night stick lie men to surrender. Instead, one Qn butcher's cleaver and the other nd charged the policeman, He In beating down the Smith but the other man made his es- Cafferty follgwed him to the car and shor at him twies, but he got he ordered vk sucerede oy. cape wer away. dufferty Weieibilte and tok: voubg prisone: liad clubbed the boy into Jn bat man to revive him him to the police station. The adinitted his gullt STATESMEN MAY BE SCARCE. _ } trate Crane Syn Cigarettes! Are Respoustble, Seald Magistrate Crane in tho: Jefferson i ot Court to- he committed fea Wurn, twenty-three years old, of 15 Chestnut street, New Brighton, T.. to jail on a charge of larcen: Warn Was arrested for falsifying ‘the oll of w Sixth avenue dry goods where he Was employed and steal- from his seat, Firemen hurled from the running-board the struck the front of the ca: five fect off the track was thrown twenty feet over the durh- Patrick Cahill, the driver, wan thrown and Lieut, Sliter a and Sheany were Strikin, rebounded ian kneoeking It The motorman Tierney curb the engine beard and stunned. * MILLIONAIRE COP” SEEKS: BANKRUPTCY Sergt. John W. Vaughn Declares that, Liabilities Are $6,261, While His Assets Amount to Only $991. Sergt. John W. Vaughn, of the High bridge police station, known in the de- partment as the “Millionaire Cop,” has Med a in bankruptey Hin ulties, he says, are due t bles. His wife recently with abandonment and te charge of abandonment Vau: lehed his friends and the Cu serting that he had turn wife the apartment West One Hundred ani street, Valued at $35,000 und whien elded an Income of $100 a month, H aid he had turned over to Nis real estate bu about the same amount Was disniissed by Mo . Vaughn ant ask allmony plea was lower courts, but an apr to the Aptellate Div tue § Court ad she war giver 1 wee Hwance of $10 and payment of f ordered » Which viele rhe complaint te Cra, his wife nf pro f the w moand tt serve him with the Th hig petition in places his Mahilities Assets at SWI. He to keep up with his bi Aa due to’ marital w mortgages on his 4 closed one by one while ing er do ie fig,to his polled duties When Vaughn appeared in court answer the charge of non-support by his wife last October, ho said thot in addition to turning over the $3 house and bis real estate business’ her, he had stopped cathe at hon SH month to live on in res had tukcen $ a adv Ants, \ Then Mrs. SAV. SERVANT GIRL. STOLE FROM MANY Faced in Court by a Number of Persons from Whose Homes She Is Said to Have Taken Valuables. Annie Meyers, thirty-nine years old, who the police say is a professional thtef with a record of scores_of robberies, was arraigned In the Harlem Police Court to-day, where isers from whom she had @olen from $59 to $200 and valuable jewelry. One Jy woman, from whom the prixonér hud stolen the say- ings of many years and all the money she poawessed in the world, falnted when she identified her, speciiic charge of grand larceny avalnst the woman*was made by Oscar Kipplalky, proprietor of a jewelry store No. 786 Blguth avenue. On Jan, 7 ter she had worked for him a she stole $9, a diamond pin gold watches Minnle Walters, an aged woman for whom the girl had worked a week, and from whom she had stolen $150, the little hoard she had been sav- ing for years in her tiny shop at No. TM Seeond avenue, came forward and idenufled the girl. The poor woman sorvant-girl she faced ten ace was so overcome at the sight of the prisoner that she fainted and had to be carried to an ante-room to oe revived. Mrs. Julia Stenger, of Forty-sixth and Second avenue, identified the girl and’sa.. that after she had worked for her for one day ghe stole $180 and disappeared Complaints against the woman have been coming In to the various police stations in the city for the past month, and detectives have been searching the city for her, Last night they located idence of Gustave Wee- saenger, No. 1604 First avenue, where she’ was engaged «as a servant on Wednesday, After a half-score men and women victima of the prisoner had iden- tifled her she walved examination and was held tn $1,000 ball for trial. CURRENCY CHANGE KT PSTOL' PONT Importation of Mexican Dollars by Manila Bankers Forced by Government Order «and Threats of Troops. MANILA, Jan. 22.~Manager Jours, of the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank, during the discussion now going on prior the passage of the supple- mental eurr , declared that the ks had « letter from Gon, Merritt the strength of which the Im- rtation of Mextean dollars Was re d after twenty years’ prohibition. » imporation of Uhix coin was not he sald, upon the part was forced upon th authorities pri At the point of the bayonet, American #eoldicrs entored the banks manding focal currensy for ’ gold even golhg to the Jenet of eps 1g thelr demendy at the muzzle or rhere voluntary the banks, by the mill were 23,000 troops landed within three months, to pay whom the quarter. ind paymaster drew letters of redit for a halt million sterling, which art found himself unable HA Co QC LLY! do. He said his wi 1a out of the house 4 at to hate hi ¥ man Whitman, know the force as hax iso Med. a petition In bs ¥. Ho sive hf pilities are $1281 and his one ussets are Nis st The creditors are Istac Blum)» West” One syou smoke rate. the Magiatrate let fall th lagistrate let fall the above ‘wisdom, cigarettes?" Hundred and Morris Aaronson, Hundred and | Bighteonth iy er} Moses Kahn, of No. 44 Canal street, um of No. wale’ on issued an order that WEDDING GUESTS: ALL WENT TD JAIL Now Mrs. Davis, Who Was in the Party, Wants the Bowery] “Delmonico to Pay $5,000 for False Arrest. FEAST BROKE UP IN A FIGHT. Bridegroom Charged that He Had Seen Robbed of His Money. and That Started the Row In the Res taurant. : It may be funny to be sued for $5, by a wedding guest for false arrest be- cause you had to have the police take the whole wedding party for a ride jn the police patrol wagon, but "Mike" Lyons, the Bowery Delmonico, does not appreciate it apparently, as he sits rloomlly to-day dn Justice Cochrani part of the Supreme Court. Mrs, Davia Is the guest who feels hurt $5,000 worth, and thé whole Jack O'Brien’ bridal party 1s in court, . with the exception of Jack himself and his bride of May 30, 1900, Magistrate Crane, called for the de- fense, remembered all about having the bridal party of nine before him th the Hasex Market Police Court. next morn- Ing after the bridal supper at Lyons’ on the Bowery, . “They were charged with disorderly conduct,” sald the Mavistrate, “and with failure to pay the bill of $3 for thelr wedding feast, and for fightin over It. I remember that T let then & 0 on their promise to pay the Dill.” Thomas H. Raymond, a real estate broker, who occasionally visits Lyons’s place and happened to be thete the night of O'Brien's wedding, added his story to that of other patrons about the bridal celebration, “J went half-way up the stairs lead- ing to the second floor nnd stood there for n good view of the scene,” suld Mr. Ray mond. “fT saw the cocktail, champagne, claret and beer come in rapid succession and vanish, “Everybody got hilarious and happy. They chased the bride nround the table andé kissed her; they toasted her until the bridegrom got so full he couldn't stand up.” He would arise to toast his bride and then tumble buck Into his ir, until he got stupid. ‘oward the last the tonsts became hjectionable,”” Mr. Lyons went on, “and [told O'Brien and his party they would. have to be more quict, and then giiests began to smugh glasses. ‘O'Brien took out a roll of money and began counting It on his knee. Next he put up @ roar that he had been robbed, and that was the signal for a fight. Two of the quests had the head walter up against the wall and I saw several passes made. ‘When Lyons insisted on a settlement of his bill for the supper, everybody made a bolt for the door. | ‘They’ were stopped and told that they muat pay, and then the police came and took them all away In the patrol wagon. Policeman John J. Gallagher, Doorman Frank Goodrich, and Matron’ Margaret ©. Doyle, all of the Eldridge street st tlon, all testified with great positiveness to the general impression that Jac! O'Brien's bridal party was very, very drunk when it arrived at the station. Jumes McGrane, one of the _ bridal party, was called in rebuttal by counsel for Mos@ Da: ‘ McGrane de@lared :the party, was not bolgterous or il-behaved “Juat 1 nice, quiet party Mr, Tanner. “Well, it was no wake,” Mr, McGrane admitted, He also admitted ‘that he, too, had sued Mike Lyons for damages in connection with the wedding supper experience. That. concluded the testimony ow oth sides, and ag Justice dchrane was anxfoua to get home w Hudson, he adjourned the trial until. Monday, when the case will be sent to the Jur: MAS, DORNEY MUST SEAVE OT TIME Court Refuses to Issue Habeas Corpus Writ for Theatrical Manager’s Wife Now In Jail for Intoxication. iReested An effort to free Mrs. Katherine Kelly Dorney from the Queens County Jail, where she was sent for three months some time ago, for, drunkenness, has failed, owing to the fefusal of Supreme Court Justice Garrettson to fesue a writ of habeas corpus. Mrs, Dorney {8 the wife of Richard Dorney, who was manager and con- fidential agent of the late Augustin Daly. About three months ago Mrs, Dorney, Who had been to Calvary Ceme- tery to visit the grave of her step- daughter, caused the arrest of several young men, whom she claimed had as- gaulted her, She failed to mako out a case against the men and they were discharged. Shortly after that she appeared at Richmond Hill, L. L, and tried to see her children, who are there in charge of a guardian appointed by Mr. Dorney. Bhe was arrosted, charged with intoxt- cation and disorderly conduct, and later sentenced to three months in the Queens County Jail, It is sald that the effort to effect her release was made secretly and that Mr, Dorney's attorneys only discovered at the last moment. It was time enough to oppose the application for a writ of habeas corpus, owever, Mrs, Dorney will have to serve out her time. ee CIGARETTE STARTS FIRE. ey Street Store Damaged to Ex- tent a¢ @ ‘The wild cries ‘of Morris \Schwar' |standing on the sidewalk in fi A Vesey street to-day, were directly re. of turned fn and the neighborhood wn into a grea wartz owns & the grouni |*ponsible for a double alarm being Engine No. 7 er of Fulton out-horse of rea of Engine No. #ani came together at the cor jand Chureh streets. The (No. 7 was thrown to the ground and his fet log was badly cut. He was put in © of a veterinary. and changed for the troops ours under guard and toned to lock him up. ‘fhe dis+ ftx into money those he would place J thr cussion will be continued, _ -raigned in the Yorkville’ Court Makes an Accusation Against Policeman Galvin. , tempted to Wrest a Bracelet from Her Wrist, but He Vigorously Denied Her Entire Story. When Policeman Edward ‘Galvin, of the East Twenty-second street station, arraigned a pretty young woman, whd described herself as Mrs, Lixsie Hoft- man, of No, 24 East Twenty-fifth street, in the Yorkville Court to-day on A charge of solftiting. the prisoner told a story about her arrest that caused Magistrate Cornell to make a searching iuquiry before dismissing the case. Galvin, who has been on the force only three months and {n plain clothes only a week, sald that he had arrested the young woman at Lexington avenue and Twenty-fifth strect last night after she had stopped two men. Then the young woman spoke up in her own de- fense. ‘ Your Honor,” she’ said, “it 1% true that at one-time I led a wayward life, but T have reformed and am married and reap)ctable. Last night.an Twas returning to my home from the 4 petor's office this policeman came up to me and said that unless I gave hitn’$10'he would place me under arrest. Says She Refused: to Pay Black~ mail, “E replied that I had done nothing to be arrested for, and sald also that I did have $10 to give him, Then *he pointed ‘to a gold, bracetet on my wrist and said: ‘Well, givé me that.’ I told’ him T could not get it off my wrist as it was locked on. He said: ‘Break it off.’ He tried to take the bracelet off, but it was on too tight. Then I was thor- oughly frightened and told him that if he would come to my home I would get the key to unlock it. ‘ “He sald he would not do that, and then pointed to my wedding ring and asked: ‘Is that Third avenue gold or real gold?’ I sald itywas real gold, but that nothing would persuade me to part with it, Then he placed me under ar- rest and took me to the police station.” The young woman told her story In a straightforward manner, and Magistrate Cornell called upon the policeman for xplanations, Grlvin sald th 01 had offered him her, bracelet as security for $10 she promised to give him to-day if hy would not arrest her. ‘As he had sen her violating the law, he sald, he immediately placed her under arrest. A Good Word for Her. “1 will Nave to Investigate this mat- ter," sald Magistrate Cornell, sand summoned Miss Alice Smith, the pro- bationary officer attached to the court. Miss Smith said that she had seen the young woman before when she had heen arrested on a similar charge. She had then been requested to keep watch upon the gitl and had done so. As far as she had learned the woman had been leading a respectable life. gistrate Cornell called sup Capt. Gallugher, of the Bast d'went second strect station, and ask high about ,Policéman Galvin. The: captal said that. tie policeman had been on the foree only three months and as far as he knew was un honest young man, ri e Court anid that he would 2 dismiss the .charge against the woman and she left the court-room. Cornell would not say whether oY not he would go any furt! in the Investigation of the —yoiort woman's story. SAYS GIRL STOLE WATCH. Womoan Has Fogmer Domentie Ar- rested and Held. Kute McManus, & domestic of No. 616 West Sixty-third street, was arrested yesterday on complaint of Miss Annie Powers, of No. 152 West Elghty-fourth street, who charged her with stealing a watch and some jewelry valued at $150. Ki McManus woman formerly was employed by Miss Powers. The latter wished to withdraw the complaint in the West Side Court to-day, but Magis- trate Mayo would not permit it, and held the woman for trial, | COP DEMANDED Sf, NBLICA TEA YOUNG WOMAN SIS} WO Mrs. Lizzie Hoffman When Ar-|“The Way of the Transgressor MAGISTRATE SET HER FREE.|ADMITS HE STOLE $60, She Declared that+the Officer At-| judd 8. Muckle Asks Police to Send is Hard” Stared Him ir the Face and He Confesses He's an Embezzler. e Him Back to Davenport, Ia. 90 He May Be Punished for His Theft. i Two weeks’ work as a walter in a Park Row restaurant, where Biblical texts adorn the walls, disgusted Judd Sherman Muckle and made him repent. He waiked into the Detective Bureau at Police Headquarters to-day, an- nounced he was a fugitive from Daven- port, Ia, and requested to be sent back there. “What are you wanted there for?" in- quired Sergt. Morris. “I atole $60 from the Western Union telegraph office thera last Muckle replied. “I came to New York to see the sights. When the money was spent 1 wot work #s a walter in a restaurant.” Detectve-Sergeant Aufken arraigned the wayward youth to-day before Mag- Istrate Breen in the Contre Street Court. “Why, do" you want asked thé Magistrate. “Well.” replied Muckle, “It's this way. Tho table I waited on in the reatawrant was under the Bible text of ‘The Way of the Transgressor Is Hard.’ 1 got thinking of this, and It has preyed on my mind night and day,” At the reauest of the detective Magis- trate Breen femanded Muckle to the Tombs until the Davenport authorities can be communicated with. a ACTOR NEGLECTED ALIMONY. W. H. Sloane Now Must Pay Wife $15 Weekly. William H. Sloane, a variety actor, now performing {n Brooklyn, was ar- rested to-day on complaint of his wife, Daisy Thompson, a chorus girl, who charged him with failing to pay her a! weekly allowance of $20 awarded her by | the courts nine weeks ago, when she began an action for divorce. against him. Sloane had no excuses to make when arraigned before Magistrate Crane in the Jefferson Market Police Court. Miss Thompson, who said her maiden name wus Katherine Madden O'Brien, 14 that Sloane earned $260 a week, but that she had recelved but $50 from him In nine weeks, be Sloane promised to pay his wife #15! a week and was allowed to go. Service— Most Helpful Telephone Service NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY » 15 Dey Street to. go" back?" is yours for musi¢ and standard of quality. ANDERSON & CO., 870 FULTON sf... 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CHARLES CO.,2° Fase Outs ~ Rivariranwary APR Hore all your days and all your money lost by advertising in poor mediums? ARE you have “no cxcuse. World Wants bring you the de- sired results, We show that the majority of adver tiserg are continue to SATISFIED me « uable medium to secure their help.. and still HEGEMAN CO. (@ corporation), 200) + r Eibaiia tle"ant' Rag" istic) This Ought,to Convince You. THERE 573 Paid Help Wants ARE in this morning’s World. i Paid Help Wants in the sut 250 43 othér New York pa- pers combined. AGE JANITORS .,,. 2.10 BONN. KITCHENWORK. 5 Boys | LAUN DiESSES ., 8 BUTCHERS. .« | MEN... it SANVASSERS |) NURSES .... 5 CARPENTERS OPERAS ORS av CASHIERS .. 7} PACKERS |. 3 CHAMBERMAIDS. 5| PLUMBERS ’ CLERK3 4) PRESSERS 6 COMPOSITORS .,.13 PRESS} aN a cooks: 18) SALESLADIES ... a CUTTERS +. 4/SALESMUN 0.00011 | DISHWASHERS, . 0| SEAMSTRESSES , 4 | DRIVERS .... ...12 SHOE HANDS .., 6 DRUG CLERKS ., 3) TAILORS BRRAND boys TRIMMICRS: AND GIRLS ,., 4] TUCKERS ... EMP. AGENCIES. 8) USEFUL MEN 8 ENGRAVERS «>. 8) WAIKS HANDS .. 3 EXAMINERS .... 3} WAITERS ..., 10 FEEDERS we 3) WAITREASES 8 FIGURES 4) WINDow FINISHERS 4 CLEANERS FIREMEN 24] MISCHL.- FOLDERS 24] LANROrSs GIRLS. . a) ; 8, HALL BOYS .....4 TOTAL... MOUBDWORK ,..50! - 4 fn