The evening world. Newspaper, January 26, 1904, Page 2

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@ THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 26, 1904. } HEE ACUSES that He Stole Checks from .Mail Boxes and Gave Them _to the “Forger Queen.” \WEARS THAT SHE KEPT THEM AFTER EXAMINATION Asserts that James Parker Told Him About the Checks and that He Made $70 Out of Them—Got One for $3,500. Mabel Parker, who ‘s being tried on a tharge df forgery, came into court looking just as she did yesterday and smiled at her counsel. Detective James M. Armstrong was the first witness called. Armstrong testified that after the arrest of James Parker he went to the house and lookea over the place, but saw nothing. Assistant District-Attorney Train, in he oburse of his examination sai “Are you on the sick lst Armatrong said “Yes.” Then Train asked: “Where were you in December last, when this case was tried before?” Armstrong replied, “I was (il in my ‘tome.”” When did you begin to recollect all ‘hat happened on that day?" “Two days ago," “And you never gave this case any tonsideration until two days ao?” “No,"" “You saw no paper?” "Yes, but I saw no evidence of check 2r check books."’ Attorney Le Barbier asked Judge Fos- ter for an order on the Warden of the fombs to permit Mabel Parker to oc- cupy the same cell with her husband. ‘The Judge refused to grant the order, saying that under Section 278 of the Penal Code male and female prisoners muat he kept separate. Stole Checks trom Mail Boxes. The prosecution sprang a surprise an the defense when it called to the stand Wallace B. Sween an inmate of the Elmira Reformatory. Under question- ing Sweeney said: “During last summer IT called on Mabel Parker avout eighteen times in her room at No. 121 West Twenty-ninth street, and met James Parker there ‘ly every time. le asked me what I was doing, and £ told him nothing, that 1 had ‘been following the races, Wut found it bad business. Then he asked me if I was willing to make a little easy money ind told me about tne checks, He said T would get a third of all checks made payable to bearer and a half of all others.’ “How did you get the checks?” “T stole them out of mail boxes, most- iy, mare mail boxes. “How many did you get the frat month?” our or five.” NAGEL PARKER Wallace B. Sweeney Testifies: a “BRYAN HAS THE STAGE; LET HIM GO IT,” PRINCETON, N. J., Monday asked to-night for his opinion on ¥ man who voted the Palmer-Huckner ocrats, smiled and sald: “I haven't a word to say on the stage; let him go it. 1 guess that's —Kormer SAYS EX-PRESIDENT GROVER CLEVELAND. President Cleveland, when Vilham J ticket can be nominated by the Dem- ryan s statement that no matter except that Mryan has got tne definite enough,” to Hide Their B BY MABEL PARKER. When I was first placed on trial sev- era] weeks ago for what my accusers proclaim ‘“marvellously ingenious for gerles"” some just a8 marvellously in- genous person imputed to me that T objected to bald men sitting In judgment over me on the jury. This 1 dent for in my short though exciting career J have had opportunity to observe that there Is much kindness and tenderness under an unfringed domo of thought But now on my second trial, as T am gain called upon to make a physiog- nomical study of those from whom 1 would select my Judges, I am suddenly inspired with the consclousness that I want no whiskered man to hold the balance of my fate. I do not mean by this I would not accept a man with a mustache to sit on my ju T do not include mustaches under the general head of whiskers— that Is, the normal mustache. There ure-some mustaches that are in reality beards, gathered together on the upper Mp in fan-like, feathery sprouts for no other evident purpose than to resist the wind or curl about in the vagrant breezes. These abnormalities J include under my general and behind them I feel there is little of the milk of human kindness. Whinkers Only Hide Dlemiahen, As 1 study it out from a woman's viewpoint a man who decorates his face with stfange hirsute drapings docs so in order to hide some blemish or istigurement in feature or expresaton, Ho is a man who would rather not allow his face out inthe open, ana therefore he {x a man of unusual van- ity and self-centre. As his face Is masked in bundles of hair, no matter how smoothly they be combed or how artistically cropped, he ts not frank and outspoken. He has not a pleasant smile—a ten- der, honest smile—or he would not hide it belind @ bush, He has not a gooa mouth—a mouth with good Ines that tell of a heart that can be moved to sympathy, a soul that can be stirrea head of whiskers | MABEL PARKER DOESN'T CARE FOR BEARDED MEN ++ “Forger Queen" Thinks They Wear Whiskers lemishes and that They Are Not Sympathetic. fat a story of distrens—or else he would |not group about it the savage scenery that decorates the terrifying counte nanees of the howling dervish bloodthirsty Bedouin or wie wiid men of the Himalayas I know there may be exceptions, b from ihe time T was a child T always {magined something sinister behind a ragged cloud of whiskers, It ts that I have met kind and sympathettr men with beards hat is, they w kind and sympathetic as far an f knew 1 always had a lurking suspicion th there was some cringing meanness ain |buscaded behind thelr beards, dodging Jabout under the hedges of thelr dun Irearies. or drooping their Goatees, There are some men. of course, who are scarred and disfigured so that they have to wear beards, not out of vanity \alone, but because they fect they would otherwise be repulsive. Somehow you can rend these men behind thelr whis the beneath kers, There Is a subtle something that at leant can appeal to the feminine mind. But a man who wears a beard merely out of wanton preference for {ts pres- enco on his face, thinking that he ts aking himself more beautiful thereby, als something that one would Ww Whose happiness and freedom de ds on his judgment As for a mustache, I have no objec tion to tt. A mustacho is more or leas an experimental shadow above the lip, It hides nothing unless {t droops so a 2a whisker,and then [ argu: itis no mus at all From observatiog and from what 1 have read and heard, a youth when he can sprout this “shadow above the lin.” Immodintely experiments with it, Tf it doesn sult his ipeealar style of benuty he discards tt forthwith. If it does, ho keeps it, and tf he keeps it for a certain length of time he must always keep ft, for, as T have seen, even the slimmest little thread of hair’ above the iip if worn for any length of time stretches the lip in « way that breaks its curves or hardens them s6 that he knows himself not again without his little whisker. Then. normal mustache | hides nothing that one would look for in the jaw or chin or the mould of the lips, ind there ts where T look for expres ions of warmth of heart or sympathy. Of course the eyes tell much. but you lave to watch them under favorable clrenmstances, and not in the yellow, iht of a court-room, ‘To whom did you give them?" Mabel Parker." “What did she do with them?" he looked at them and examined the writing closely and then kept them.” Sweeney said that he had made about $00 or $70 ont of checks which he stole out of mall boxes in Brighten Reach Stole Check for 81,500. Continuing. Sweeney testified: “On one occasion I saw Mabel Parker sit down at a table and write off a check for $84. made payable to bearer. T took this check out to a store and had {t cashed, but they found some. thing wrong with It, and before T could fet out of the store the special officer made me return the money. 'T went to Sarntogn last summer and got a couple of cheeks there. and when came buck T got a check for $1,600 out of a mail box at No. § Washington uquare. "When I gave that to James Parker he said that if we could get a few more like that one we could soon retire from the turf. But the check was too big. and_we were afrald to pass it." ‘ou ever see the defendant Practised Signatur: “Did you ever get, any other check for a large amount?” “Yes; one for $890. I gave the $880 check ‘to Mrs, Parker and she prac- Used the signature. Witness said ax arrested Sept. examination he said that cro he was twenty-one years old and ad: mitted that he had been convicted of petty larceny when twelve years of Ago, He admitted that he had been arrested in Chicago in 1902, when he Was charged with stealing checks ut a and told of his wanderings NEW TRIAL FOR MRS. TAYLOR ‘Woman Accused of Slay ~ © band Wins on Appeal. ALBANY, Jon. 2%.—Mrs. Kate Taylor will have a new trial for the murder of her husband, Lafayette J. Taylor, whom abe shot and beheaded at their home near Centreville, Sullivan County, a y . She Court of Appeals to-day reversed the judgment of conviction of murder in the first d on the ground of im- proper exclusion of evidence, and or- dered a new tri TRAIN CRASH IN SNOWSTORM. Passengers on Express Shaker Up and Engineer Killed. TORONTO, Ont, Jun. 26.-—The: Chi- © express on the Grand Trunk shed into two light engines near London East to-day, Engineer Phibbs, in charge of one of the light engines, was intently killed and his fireman, Norwood, so badly hurt that he ts not expected to recover. people in the passenger train badly shaken up. but none was Seriously injured. ithe secident oc- ourted in a blinding snowstorm. WIFE ALLEGES CRUELTY. Anks for Counsel Fee tt. wife of Claude W. In the office of the ef Accounts, applied to Fustice Dickey in Brook- few and alimony Mikado’s Government TOKIO, Jan, 2%,—The Cabinet and Elder Statesmen conferred for an ex- tended period to-day. They discussed the financial programme in the event of tho commencement of hostilities, The Japanese financiers in general are of- fering very generous assistance, and tt is now fully evident that the Govern- ment will be enabled te raise un enor- mous sum of money at home, without having to place dependence upon bor- rowing from abroad ST. PETERSBURG, Jan. 26.—Refer- ring to the reported Intention of China to remain neutral in case of war be- tween Russia and Japan, the Viedomostt Bays: io ‘A direct declaration of war by China would be much preferable to dubious neutrality, compelling Russia to take the sam@ precautions as in war time without permitting an invasion of Chi- nese territory. “It war Is declared,” th Viedomost! WAR COUNCIL HELD BY THE JAPANESE CABINET Sure of Enormous Fighting Fund and Cutside Financial Aid Not Needed—Russia Calls Reserves. further asserts, “the question of Man- churla could be settled forever by its annexation as a conquered country.” LONDON, Jan, 26.—Advices from St. Petersburg say that the first reserves resident have been ordered to hold [themselves in readinesy, This dees not mean war, but it is considered a move to prepare the people in cause vf con- fict. ‘rhe order for the reserve to hold it- self in readiness ts published in the ot- ficlal gazette and has cuused much commen, It 1s hoped that tt will strengthen the hands of the war party by arousing public opinion. With the publication there has been a general sagging of securities an¢é a marked financial depression, From other sources it {s said the re- serves of Odessa and other points have been ordered to hold thomselves in readiness for mobilisation, PAWKeD MOTHER'S JEWELRY TO BET Magistrate Ommen, in the Jefferson Market Police Court to-day, sald he had sent a letter to Police Commissioner McAdoo, calling his attention to an al- leged pool-room on the west side of Eighth avenye, between One Hundred and ‘Twenty-fourth and One Hundred and Twenty-fifth streets, as a result of the arrest of Robert 8. Ejler, sixteen years old, of 219 West One Hundred and Twentleth street, who was arraigned in the court to-day. The boy had been loitering on West Fourteenth street and gave as an ex- cue that he was afraid to go home. Ho said he had pawned his mother's Jewelry in order to bet on the horses in the Eighth avenue place. “fhis is what you get for having @ wide-open city," said Magistrate Om- men when he heard the boy's story “Lf the people who want the ld taken off New York could only see what ef- it has upon the young boys, they Idn't be #0 anxious to have the laws liberally interpreted. Young Eiler was then are of @ probationary officer, The al- leged pool-room {a situated in the same place where a gambling-house raid Was conductes out two yea ABO, All the gambling paraphernalia found in the place at that time was found to be fixed so that players could not win. ‘The Walls and floor of the place had been strung with electric wires attached to the roulette wheels, &c. -@e Cure @ Cold in Ome Day ea at MISSING GIRL'S BODY IN CREEK? SALEM, N, J., Jan, 26.—It ts belleved that the body of Miss Anna Newkirk, who mysteriously disappeared from her home on Jan, 12, is in the creek at Hancock's Bridge, five miles from this place. Chief of Police Waddington and a force of men were dragging tho reeek to-day when the grappling hook came in contact with a heavy object under the bridge. While the men were trying to raise the object to the surface the hook broke, but when the rope was drawn to the surface there was found entwined around the end of it several strands of hair of the same color as that of Miss Newkirk, The searchers feel sure that it was her body with which the grap- pling hook came into contact. Owing to the jamming of the ice further drag- ging of the creek had to be postponed until the ebb tide, Miss Newkirk disappeared from the home of her grandfather, Waddington . Ridgway, at Hancock's Bridge at slock in the evening on Jan, 1 tending, she sald, to visit the home of a relative, Mra, Hdwin Newkirk, whose house fi xt door to that of Mrs, Ridg- way. She did not return and ‘in the morning It was learned that she had not visited Mrs, ‘Newkirk, who ts her aunt. HANNA'S HEALTH IMPROVES, WASHINGTON, Jan. 26,—Senator Hanna, who J tll with the grip, was very muoh ter to-day. ‘is physictt has’ ordered wim to” remald In his: hotel rtments for several days until he aly, regains his normel nealeh, GUNS IN COURT AT ~CALLARAN TRIAL | Lawyers and Spectators Heavily Armed in Court When the Cor- | lears Hook Terror is Arraigned | for Murder. EVEN PROSECUTORS GO DOUBLY “HEELED.” |Judge Forced to Instruct the Officer at the Door Not to - Allow Any More Weapons to Be Brought In. Isaac Eckstein. the two. }decades he h known for been Cerberus to |Court of Generat Seatone as “The Ba gle.” spread his pudgy form in an arm before the ¢ of Part II. court room te-day and walted patlently for the coming of the warring clans of Cor, lears Hook, who are attending the trial of Thomas Callaian, ‘The Nigger,” for the murder ef Jim Irving in Jackson street jast May | The Eagle’ deniet emphatically be- fore the convening of court that he had in nh dest might after away from the al crowded court-room a hundred men whose very nick strike terror tu the hearts of the timtd. “1 Know thege. fellows who talk through their teeth and blow In your oye to emphasize thelr requests, and ry gine as big as cannons in thelr pockets, but I am no more afraid of them than of a brood of bat 1 "Say, you blue-blow dumplin’” came a harsh staccato from a six days’ growth of swarthy beard, "Is ‘om Callahan—are you w up against the gaff in this booth The Eagle” Nlanched, blew 0 "The t his cheeks, axle turned three shades of adobe white and gure “Got a ticket A what?" asked the frowsy one closinss one eye and resting his hand on his hip. a A subpoena, a summons, «hail nk. A witness check.” bubbled "The agle’ gathering courage in his volu- | bility “No, L ain't got no ticket, but I'm golng inside, see—phat?” and the lank figuy the rely-poly door- swung past 2" he asked as he passed into “A'right,” gasped “The Eagle.’ “As a personal favor TN let you in.’ “He was rather polite about if," commented the corpulent doorman, “'so 1 let him pase.” In the same manner he passed “Haggard Ham,” “Mug Fallon,” “Tow- Allen,” "Pork Chop Sam," “Bum O'Shaugh- nd a score hed no tiekets and ‘9 aL ho Oiler Introduction than, "We're bush from Corlears Hook, an’ our password *Phut,’ see?" When istant District-Attorneys Clark and Kerrigan, who are trying to conviet Callahan of murder for shoot- ing Jim Irving In a Corlears Hook feud, arrived they carried between sitchel containing, to wit. hre revolvers, fo «jimmy, @ corr spike. Netther Mr. Clark nor his assistant Mr. Kerrigan, t: timid man, but they would not enter the court-room through the maln entrance and brush by_ "the push." The assed quietly and de murely through the Judges’ corridor, And upon forcing thelr grit. behind the grin of firearms gave thelr backs to th spectators, No Arms, Says the Judge. milately after the Judge MeMahi i trial was re sent for “Th ‘and insireeted ini to be sure And let no armed men enter the court- room, The first witness called was George MeCawley. of No. 34 Madison street friend of Jim Irving, the murdered man, He had met Irving on the night of May 9 before the murde: ‘Jim. sald to me," testif ness, "George, are you my friend?! 1 ald, ‘Im your tiiend. "then he said ‘If you're me friend get me two guns,” T got two, but L want to supply-the vd the wit- gan “Then I said, ‘Who are you goin’ to shoot now?) He said, ‘I'm going to shoot “Nigger” Callahan,’ ter that T heard shots an’ seen Jim do od T got disgusted nn A short time and when Tw an’ seen the U went hom McCauley was excused and “Hoppy" Doran, nineteen old. who sald he waa “in newspapers an’ ‘was one of de push,” took the stand, Doran wore no collar and talked in piston-rod Jerks. He was near the scene of the murder when he heard the shots. ‘This Is his dramatic story of the tragedy “[ heard them shots an’ run over, Down on de strect by Jim Irvin's body an’ right In the blood Was the gun. ty" picks It up an’ goes down to’ the river? when I takes a nail an’ pushes out th’ cartridges into the water. Then T goes home an’ tells me sister that Jim Irvin’ was kilt. She says, * ain't It too bad. I (ie an’ she says f i T s an’ tries to sell it to a lceman do’ mine for $4. He wouldn't buy it, so f takes it back home an’ keeps t. It was two months later when “‘Hop- py" went to the Coroner's office and turned over the revolver, Benjamin Childs eloquently described the characters of “me two friends” Callahan and Irving, “Dat. feller, Jim Irving,” declared the witness, in reply to Lawyer Frank Moss's duestion, “had a’ mean dispo- sition, 80 help me—I mean dat he was a bad man, drunk or sober. Once he got a grouch on me and shoves me {nto a veatlbule, pushes a gun into me stomach. $o holp—he'd a blowed me Apart if E hadn't knuckled to his play.” Wasn't he quiet and peacefit when sober? asked Assistant District-Attor- ney Clark. “Not on your Hite, nded the wit- res} ness. “He was black-hearted, drunk or. sober. But Nigger Callahan was alee a decent feller mn he was drunk ho was decent was sober, an for'he was jolly and full of laugh when he hada kate, He's all to the white goods, is ‘Nigger’ Callahan,” ‘Tom Bassctt, another witness for the defense, him he wanted to “git a couple more guns for de gang to do up ‘Nigger’ Cal- Tahan." Cal han's Own Story. rhomas Callahan galled to the stant bow to the Judge the prisoner, was He made a low 8 he sat down in the witness chair. He said he and Irv! had been ‘friends for twenty years and lived in the same rogm at No. 6 Jackson street, the time of the mur- der He sald his father was killed in 1s9t and his mother died in 1898. He was convicted of simple assault in 18%. He served nine months in the Penitentiary. the third degree. t three years and six montis. e witness ct I) ly. “I wag hauled ‘UP again in 18% for hasault Ta deen Arinking for four years. T told th Judge I didn't know whether T was guilty or not, I '¢ remember, A “T naid 0 the | testified that Irving had told | In 1090 he pleaded guilty of burglary in | y | WHITAKER WRIGHT, WHO FELL DEAD | ’ | AFTER HE WAS SENTENCED T0-DA v. HELL'S KITCHEN WRIGHT DIES AS - HE IS SENTENCED (Continued from First Page.) crash that ended tn his financial de- {and organized a company. Among the struction prominent omen Interested in’ his , a ve nes were the Duke of Connaught He was born in England about fift the waooe een five years ago, and.at the age of twen- ty came to the United States. n Beresford and Vis- nt Chu operated all through the West. In the] tralian cand. South Afri Haney middle 80's he settled In Philadelphia, | Which Wright's compante Inter- where he married, Ho promoted what |°NCd, were Practica ve tee efor are now known as “get-rich-quick” con-|over two years. He offered at one time cerns and made a fortune up in the|to settle with his creditors at terns z Saleen Jor. [equalling 50 cents on the dollar and Peers na Sika nae et Haver’ | sacrifice $5,008) of his own money in ford, Pa., was close to the home of Jan effort to reviy nising schemes. coming to Miss Brown val and con- fined In Ludlow Street Jail for ir months. His healt broke down, und early in July he went back without ex- tradition papers, a prisoner ev Rot me again In 18% for burg lary in the third degree and they sent DAUGHTER IN LAW me along the line for three years and six months.” Hin ‘Trouble with Irving. (}f SENATOR DYING The witness was Instructed by his counsel, Frank Moss, to tell of his dit- ficulties with Irving. President Cassatt, of the Pennsylvania Railroad, Wright went to London in 1889 and started as a_speculator in mines In a small way, He got cgntrol of a bi mine in Australia that pald enormous! any boy snid I'd smashed him on the mouth. and I said to the Judge, ‘Iet it go at that’ and [ got a vear.” i “Twas siceping In me room on May |. v t salor gawnen hoard a row in the sana Wife of Charles W. Clark, of Jim Irving, Jacksy Trying and a couple more, ‘They wanted to do up the bar- tender, but I called them off. T went) , back to bed, and soon T heard a bane | on a door. T went downstairs and saw | California, Suffers a Relapse and Her’ Relatives Are Hur- them busting open Patsy Colton’s | i n busting open Ate gooimana| riedly Summoned. Patsy in the face ! That ain't nice, ksey.’ T sald. | ‘Give him a show rhen they went) dawn to the saloon, and Jim Irving got| Mrs. Charles W. Clark, of San Mateo. an fron bar to go at Colter: ns ent Cal,, daughter-in-law of Senator W. A. he 0 lar andehe anid to Calton, ‘Come on out | “lark, of Montana, ts dying In this city, nd Til give vou a feht. Just as they |and her husband and relatives have Went out the door Jim swung on Cole! he “4 e Fee aee ae dete Mn RDAN ec Htig level tay) summoned -byawire (oj the: death wan all.cut up. We sald he'd better go | 26d Mette Koapital and get It-fixed. but he) Mrs. Clark, who has been visiting Mr, faid it was bad enough, ‘Then fim Trv-|and Mrs, Addison at the Algonqultt ing said to me, ‘You —— -——- —~ Tl | Hotel, in this city, has been 111 for some do you next time, but of late has been improving How Tt All Ended rapidly and was considered out of dan- ‘The next | ge! ‘You_better| She suffered a relapse last night and vay from him, but “Phen I went back to bed ning a_ feller told me, ont for Jim Irving.’ an’ T went to-day there is slight hope of her re- k to my reom and gat a gun Td yo Mr. Clark, considering her en- Nad when T worked as watchman on/tirely recovered, left a short time ago Fnst River Bridge. for Jerome, Ariz, but is now hasten- the hen T went out, and T took a walk round to my brother's and got a dollar oft him he owed me on a watch. un ing back to, New York, Si Clark, who sometime ago ent an operation for a disease of ry irted for untown, and as T was|the ear, has now so far recovered that waiking along the street Irving |he is able to take short walks and ome Up_tp ine and says, ‘F ‘Tom; | drives. ahake! Fe grabbed my hand too tight ence for a friendly shake. and T says. ‘Jim, are you looking for me?’ He sald, ‘Yes, you ——— —~ * and he jumps back and pvlis out a revolver, T had one hand in my trousers pocket holding my gun, and as he gets his out T pulls TO SELL ALL FRANCHISES. ae Constitutional Amendment in As- Action. —The compulsory William E, Brockway at Eighty- two Is Released from New Jersey Penitentiary at Tren- ton After a Long Term. Jan. sale of all public franchises in cities ALBANY, and their resale every twenty-five years is the purpose of a constitutional amendment introduced to-day by As- semblyman Finch, ‘The value of these franchises as as- sensed last year {ts $233,000,000. SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY. Sun rises, 7.14l8un sets.. 5.11/Moon sets 1.50 (Special to The Evening World.) TRENTON, N. J., Jan. 26.—Hale and hearty despite his elghty-two years and looking more like Roscoe Conkling than ever, Willlam E. Brockway counter- felter, was released from State prison this morning on & warrant commanding Head*Keeper Osborne to turn him over to Deputy United States Marshal George D, Bower. Brockway was taken to the Federal PORT OF NEW YORK, ARRIVED. Building, where he signed the > , poor con- gaxonia - + Yyewee! | victs’ oath before United States Com- KiSrauetee . London | missioner Lewis W. Scott. “As the Com- ‘Tennyson rnanbuco} missioner discharged the old: man Bailift Kentucky John Deacon was the first to congratu- y ‘own | late him. Jacksonville] ““Brockway's eyes filled with tears as Hamburg] eighty-three-year-old ‘Uncle John” Rotterd emda) Deacon grasped his hand, Just then a carriage was announced, and Brockway went over in the vehicle’ to the Windsor Hotel, where he chatted for an hour with “Plunger” Walton, who knew him Pin: Rotterdam . INCOMING STEAMSHIPS. DUB TO-DAY. Mexico, Havana, Cyrano, Brest. Valencia, Frankfort, Bro 5 Re 2 years ago. Port Limon. otterdam, Rotterdam " ed his future ane, Brockway OUTGOING STRAMSHIPS, Gay, ana’ trom there progeed, to New SAILED, TO-DAY. Haven, Conn., where 1 shall lve with Kaiser Wilhelm IT. City of Augusta, my siste! T amian old man, and the ‘Bremen, Savannah, |Goverament has nothing to fear from Amateraam, Princess Annie, me. I was hever guilty of the crime for Legis" FET ia calves | Which T wan Imprisoned.” Aire a ‘ey " No: one came to witness Brockway's Pe ey Roose) Antrnnias release, This was at his requ . heatnel uotetily Yourseir 6 + inst sickness Pema lariat Sasa eer or TO SETTLE POLITICAL ROW. Leader in Twenty-ninth District, ‘The political tmbroglio in the Twenty- ninth Assembly District over the elec- tion of a leader to hend the Republican To ix the district will be settled by tl ee tes he following committee appointed to- i] | da, All the People from the Water= yor Mt ans front Disgusted Because It | ts Turned Into the Sewer by by Charles H. Murray, President of unty Committee: William M. K. Ol Eyck, John H. and Alderman _ Mason Pranklitr for the Ie: was Internal Revenue Collectors. | ‘iscted ate Semember primaries, “O |secceo STONY HEARTED MR, JUSTICE. | OFFICIALS FOR A DRINK. FINNEMORE The Brewery of Conrad Stein's! Sons Is Closed and. 2,972 Judge of the Natal Supreme ha ve Me Town. Gourt, Sands the Following To the Infinite disgust of Hell's. Kitch- en and its environs, barrels of heer, | stored In th brewery of Conrad Stein's | Sones ‘At Now, 414-498 Went Fifty-seveith street, was turned iuto the sewer th-day ' Remarkable Testimonial by two deputy. internal reventie ‘col- TO GUTIGURA <iupyaawues noped 1s be aol see" The World ts Guticura’s Field. effort was made to prevent the direful Used Wherever Civilization Has Penetrated, ‘ Jnews of this shameful waste from gét-| ting over to the water front and into the bac alleys of the nelghborhood. ! But somehow or other it got out and there was a big crowd of thirsty ones} “IT desire to giveumy voluntary testl+ outside of the brewery whe denounced! mony to the benefeial effects of your ne proceedings as n scandalous out- rage and would have tried to sneak | nears Remedios Eh ave neutered iitle of the brew out for themselves | fOr some time from an excese of urle acid in the blood; and since the middle but for tite restrain Influence of | |force of pollcemen which was xum-| of Iast year, from a severe attack of | moned, | Eczema, chieily on the ecalp, face, eara tire ae ee ngby a and neck and on one limb. | was for , several mouths wuder professtonal |they would give up the business and re- {ure on thelr fortunes, which are said to | treatments, but the remedics prescrived: |be of ample proportions. ‘Two days age) were of oo avail, and I was gradually they notified Internal Revenue Collector | becoming worse, my face wae dread- ‘Thomas Whittle that they were going] fully disfigured and I lost neariy ali my to close the brewery and that they/ hair At last, my wife prevailed upom would not be responsible for what bap-| me to try the Cuticars Remedies ahd £ pened to the beer they left behind them. | gave them a thorougl’ trial wit® the and! most satisfactory results. ‘The dij@ease sus. | soon began to disappear and my batr fue] commenced to grow again, A fresh growth of hair is covering my head, and ny Hmb (although vot yet quite cored) is gradually improving. My wife thinks ao bighly of your remedies that she has been purchasing them tn order to make presents to other persons suf- fering from similar complaints, and, as President of the Bille Women Society, has told the Bible women to report if any case should come under thei: notice when a poor person ts so | aMicted, so that your remedies may be resorted to.” ROBERT ISAAC FINNEMORE, (Judge of the Natal Supreme Court) Pietermaritzburg, Natal, Oct. 29, 1901, * Bold throe=nout Pati None of the beer was stumped, the Steins figured that it would b ler to give It away or let It Ko tow j than to pay all the inte 1 fees on it, Depultes Nejedi ‘went to the brewe wih the assistine for ‘thirty-six. years foreman of the Stel) brewery. pulled the bungs out of the barrels iid kegs and lot the pre- clons. jiu ts ‘The beer Will still be Mowing to-mor- row. for it will lot be possible to. get rid of it all to-day, Hloboes by the s begged the deputies for drinks to; Dut the officers were udamant, They had ft ructions not to let single drop of tie beer be consumed by iny- thing but Mother Earth, Ait of the plant and fixtures of the big brewery will be suld at auction on Frida: 050 PERSONS HOMELESS) and Forces the Occupants to| Eye Ache, Headache, Ne.salg a, / depressed feeling—all may come from Spend the Night in thejthe eyes. In the Ehrlich eye-testing Churches. Qn tonto of 0 Tie. ver vial. of ‘Olntment, ae don, 2 Cer ton, 18? Colwmte p. Role, Prope. ‘and Sealp.” rooms these Oculists will advise vou: A. W. Brewster, M. D., 217 B’way. (A vearn Brooklyn Fve and Bar Disnensary.) G. B. Brigden, M. D., 1345 B’way. (5 years in private practice.) M. Kenyon, M. D., 223 Sixth Av. (A yerrs Manhattan Five and Ear Hospital.) O CHARGE except for glasses, and that moderate. One of the fires destroyed a row of to 653 Avenue C, causing the tenants to QPTICIANS—41 Years’ Practice, lose most of their possessions and to | 25 Broad St...Arcade, Broad Ex. Bldg stand around, half-clad and homeless, | 217 Broadway ....Astor House Block for more than an hour, 228 Sixth Avenue ....Below 18thst, While this fire was in progress an- | 1345 Broadwa: Below 36th St, other occurred at No. 520 Avenue C and | _ 81ORES OPEN SATU TY BNL one at Nineteenth street and Avenue D. In the case of the tenements the fire originated through an explosion of SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY. Pecan Cream Ki seeeeeekby 104 gna meter and soon spread along the row. While the firemen were at work on this blaze the others occurred, and their efforts had to be divided, In one of the upper floors of No. 683) Thoeoiate Cream Butter Chips hb, 180 SPECIAL FOR WEDNESDAY. Orange Fruit Me! 10¢ Chocolate Lagoo! 158 ‘Three fires, two of them believed to be of incendlary origin, all about the same time and In the same neighbor- hood, caused 26 homeless persons’ to spend the night in the Synagogue at Twentleth street and Avenue C, Bay- onne. Avenue C was Mrs. Dora Neuhause, & mother of a few days. It was decided to carry her downstairs. upon a mat- tress, but it was found that the mat- tress would not pass through the doors, : r A smaller one was obtained, and she was ately taken out and transferred to 54 BARCLAY ST. the Bayonne Hospital. 29 CORTLANDT ST fiddle FAST TRIP TO MEDITERRANEAN COR GHYRCH The Hamburg-American ne an- nounces that its express steamer Deutschland, which left here Jan, 2, pee 4 Gibraltar at 1 P. M, to-day, hav- DIED. QUINN—After a short illness LILLIAT? GERTRUDE QUINN, beloved daughter of Johu P. and Bilzabeth Quinn, aged made the trip in five days, twenty- two hours. This breaks all records from pre naMthe Mediterranean. Among the | — twelve yours, elght months and twentys passengers on-board aro former Mayor| two days, at thelr residence, 101 Chria Beth Low and John D. Crimmins, tapes ett —_——_ Notice of funeral hereatter. * M188 LIVERMORE MARRIED. PARIB, Jan. 2.—The wedding of Count Odon de Lubersac to ae? Gnostanee Livermore, daughter 0! the aroness: 4 Sefiliere by her first marriage Raymond, Sellvermore, of New York, oc- cured to-day. BARGAINS FOR EVERYBODY. Wide Range of Selection at the Callahan & Morrissy Sale. The great liquidation sale at Callahan & Morrissy's, Nos. 4 and 50 West Fourteenth street, and 47-49-51-38 West ‘Thirteenth street, which began yester- day, is drawing throngs bargain seekers, ‘Che announcement of the dis- solution of the firm and the sale have found thousands who are taking ad: vantage of the reduction in prices in all lines uf goods, ‘The merchandise offered for sale {x all THE DAY'S WANT CALL. 2,287 LITTLE BUSINESS MAKERS | IN THIS MORNING'S WORLD, CONSULT THE LIST. FILL YOUR NEED: Situattons— Female .. Malo ..+. Help—Female Wanted to Pur chase .. Auction Bales, Amusements ..... 49 seagonuble. There are novelties in woman's dresses, cloaks and skirts. Piso . pinata! For miasea there are many new put-| Houses, Rooms i terns and good duravie stutts. The mil-| \Apartments . Instruction . itpery. Mieraroment algo haa & big stock | Boarders Medical ,. of ti Phe A Silks, wash Horess “end!” Ce: lace oui and portieres are vilaee ae Settee wale thele worth 4 s Bibo'be thad at startling there ‘are Kilts and alt of in- wools and -wi something for ev Miscetlancoun \

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