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see Br i ~TOTRY ABEL Young Man Who Posed as “J. Ogden Goelet” and Courted Miss Eleanor Anderson Will Now Have to Explain Acts. ‘AVOIDS YOUNG WOMAN’S GLANCES IN COURT. wned Entirely in Black She Is on Hand to Give Testimony Against Youth Who So Com- pletely Deceived Her. JURY TO TRY ABEEL. , Herman Hoops, architect, ‘G18 West Twenty-third street. Halle, ployed by publishers. Charles G. Bartlett, helling agent, of Ne. G12 West End aven Beuer, conl merchant, Ne. 47 West Ninety-second st. Béward Wyatt, drug clerk, of No. 183 Lexington avenue. . Paul J. Byok, clothier, of Fulton ‘and Nessaa atreets. Millian Repple, manefacturer, of No. 905 West One Hundred and ‘ Bighty-thira street. R. Cole, manufacturer of bar- neer, John L. Niver, retired merchant, of No, 51 Weat Thirty-ninth street. Sidney Loch, of No, 12 East Sixt}. fifth stree' With powerful interests of the Goelet family urging a vigorous prosecution, the District-Attorney placed James Nel- son Abeel, who won notortety masque- rading under the name of “J. Ogden Goelet? as the sultor of Eleanor An- derson, the beautiful daughter of a Sixth avenue restaurant keeper, on trial Before Recorder Goff to-day charged With forgery in the third degree. The indictment grows out of the man- ner of Abeel’s introduction to Miss An- ferson when he presented to the pretty telegraph operator a letter signed “James B. Van Every, Vice-President of the Western Union Telegraph Com- pany,” in which he was represented as “J. Ogden Goelet"” Believing in the uineness of this letter, the young girl allowed the young man's attentions reach a proposal of marriage. Defendant Spick and Span, Binge, the sensational revelations of Abee!’s true character, the fact that he already was married and other disclo- sures, Mr. Van Every has declared the letter to be a forgery. Miss Anderson has got a verdict of $7,000 for breach of promise, and detectives employed by the Goelet family pursued and ran down this amazing young man in Canada, ‘The defendant, who when brought to New York from Niagara was placed under $5,000 cash bail, appeared In the Recorder's court-room, Part Ill, of General Sessions, a full half hour be- fore it convened. He was accompanted by his father, Capt, James Abeel, of Waco, Tex., and his counsel, Jesse Stearns, of this city, ‘and John M, Parker and Martin Lynch, Oswego. teal ees dressed in a dark suit and a long tan overcoat bf swagger cut. Clean shaven, his round, almost chub- by cheeks give him un exceedingly yyish appearance. ine Anderson Gowned In Black. ‘The young man’s venerable father Mewed the court proceedings with stern interest. With head erect his eyes never left the central figures in the court, nor did he exchange & word.with his son, who sat beside him. ‘Miss Anderson, with her mother and aunt, eat behind the rear rail with the spectators. She wore a transparent black vell, through which her ruddy cheeks shone and her delicately round- ed features could be made out in fuil relief, She was dressed entirely in black except for a mink stole about her neck. Her interest in the proceed- ings was marked by peculiar placidity. Now and again she would glance calmly at Abeel. He, however, did not return ‘the glance. All of to-day's session was devoted to the selection of the jury. box had been filled ghe trial was journed until to-morrow. A. CASS CANFIELD’S WILL. Filed To.Day and Estate Be Worth $20,000,000, ‘Tho will of A, Cass Canfield, of Ros- lyn, L. 1, who dled in Aiken, 8, C. leat month, was offered for probate in Rurrogate Seabury’s Court to-day, at Mineola, The estate is supposed to be worth $20,000,000, but the value is not mentioned {n the documents filed. The testator leaves a widow, Josephine Houghtaling Canfield, two daughters, Laura H. and Mary C, Canfeld, and a son, A. Cass Canfield, jr. The children are minors, To the United States Trust Company all the stock of the Cass Farm Com- pany, limited, of Detroit, is left in trust to divide in equal parts, one part te each child; as surviving, to hold guch parts for and during the life of Bis wife, or until the sum of $100,000 out of the income shall have been paid, nd thereafter for and during the mi- nority of the children to whom the'same has allotted. of bis wife, or until ve $100,000, the income for the education and su children, and the balance 8 to be invested the same When the children reach ty-one years they are ft thi tok vidends, When the ad- nid to April 20.—Blaborate police pre- dave been adopted to protect mt Loubet during his coming trip JURY IS CHOSEN of No.) OAMIN DUES OLD BY ROBERTS Utah Legislator Who Went Down Under Publio Protest Admits Practising Polygamy and Tells of Secret Marriage. SMOOT INQUIRY RESUMED; SENATORS‘GET NEW FACTS. Two Wives Kept in Ignorance of Third to Save Them Em- barrassment —Churoh Took No Action on‘ Plural Contract. WASHINGTON, April 20—What may be termed the second round of the Reed Smoot contest opened to-day before the Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections, It was announced that se al witnesses would be heard before the adjqurnment of Congress and It 1s prac- tically certain that the committes will then adjourn to convene in Salt Lake, Utah, on July 18, Important testimony for the prose- cution Is expected ¥o be developed at this session of the cummittee Brigham H. Roberta was called to the #tand by Senator Taylor. He waa questioned to bring out a statement of his official connection with the church. Mr. Roberts sald he was eleot- é4 to the vosition of one of the first neven presidents {n 888, and entered polities about 1689. His Interest was manifested In making speeches, but he was not a candidate for office until 184. He then wan elected as a mem- ber of the Constitutional Convention, which met In 1896, Has Three Wives. Mr, Roberts mata he has three wives, one married In 1877, the aecond in 1886 and the third tn 180. He sald he Has had chfldren by all of the wives and by the firat plural wife since his election to Con He thought the last child was born three or four years ngo. Mr. Roberts sald his first plural mar- rage was performed by D. H. Wells, counsel to the Apostles, and he thought the ceremony was performed at the home of Mr. Wells's son Senator Overman inquired of Mr. Rob- erts whether hin first wife and his nnd wife had consented to his third No, sir, said Mr. Roberts, Contin- wing he said they did not learn of the marriage for three or four years “How wag that?" asked Senator Bove “Do you mean to say that the > was not known to any one?" “It was known to some of my frienday but not to my wives,’ was the answer Knew It Wan Iiegal, “Why was this marriage concealed from them?” asked Chairman Burrows. “Because I did not want to embare rass them." “How embarrass them?” Well, we knew (ne marriage was {egal and it might be embarrassing to them ff they should for any reason be called on to testity.” Mr, Roberts said his third wife was the divorced wife of Dr. Shipp, amd in regard to his courtshp he said he always had met her at the house of mutual friends and had never called on her at her home. He also said that sho continued to iyo in her home, but that he never called on her there until she removed to rooms on Main street, Salt Lake. Mr. Tayler asked Mr. Roberts ff he knew that Maggie Shipp Roberts lived in a house where her divorced husband resided and two of his wives, Mr, Roberts said he was not aware of that fact Senator Dubois asked In regard te the secrecy of tinge and @@elared that (Dubois) believed Mr, Wells, who married him, represented the Mor. mon authorities he witnoss Believed that, sald Senator Dubois, beg&iae of Mr, Wells's position as counse§ to the apostles. According to Mr, Rolggerts, he said, there is no record of his Mgt mar- ringe, though the ceremony ix ghe same as that which was used in das other marriages. , Chairman whether Mr, had a wife li 1 wife Te did," said Mr. Roygrts. married me to my second ate p Mr. Pottus asked if the @ifurch ever had reprimanded him or the high of fielal who performed the c@femony. Mr. Roberts said nothing? had been said to him, Mr, Taylor asked Mr. Roperts why he thought it incumbent upom him to take plural wives, “From boyijged,”” replied the witness, T had beeg@ taught the rightfulness of plural mag¥inges ana T belleved this practice to the law of God. I knew that this practice was contrary to the mandateg of Congress, but belleved that the lag of God was the highest rule and J it impelled to obey it Burrows Wells k 6 when desired to know the witnes: married the “He Practices Pol Chairman Burrows us pointed questions, whi the confession from M he, still believes In a my. Poe sald that he Woodruft manifesto spired and that now i gamy he knows he | the laws of the land God. He was asked phy he continued to disobey the laws pf God, if he be- Meved them to be theMiighost laws, and with a resigned alr, pe sald “Well, the manitedo left me in the midst of obligations Ro these wives. 1 am trying to do thefbest I can to live within the laws, buf these obligations T cannot shirk, As to At the afternoon asked concerning M tion In 1889 of the Senator Batley obj brought out Roberts that in practising leves sthat the divinely in- Practloing: y= isobeying both the laws of jon Mr, Taylor herts's convic- if polygamy. to the line of inquiries “in regan tary. ie bog nen y. He wi i of the ideas the lava vasa gaid the purpose apather the hurch had to the witness Hying one wite, B ‘Mr, Roberts mn, thit Jost wi | TWO.N. | i nis RECORDS BROKEN BY SNOW T0-DiY ~ | Yes, It’s April 20, but the | Weather Has Got Iwisted | and You May Have to Un- pack Your Furs Again Soon. 4 SPRING IDYL. WRITTEN BY P. NEUMONIA. How good it is to shiver and to hear the bliagord roar, How good it 1s to feel the snow come blow. tng in the door. Oh! gee the frozen bluebird lying on the icy gréund! Has not the little children's cough a lovely hollow sound ? Hurrah for zero weather and the brown grase in the Park! How @hearing is the snowball's chug, the Gay sea lions bark. Observe the undertaker working twenty hours a day. Bug me a sealskin coat, mother, for I'm to be Queen of the May. Wouldn't this freeze your eyebrows? ‘We mean the weather, not the verse. And there's no rellef in sisht. The storm is central off the Maine coast the Weather Man saya It is decp- ing somewhat. If \t stays off the Maino coast much fonger it will be solid by the time it gets here. But we needn't pat ourselves on the back because we have a snowstorm on the 20th of April. Nature is blowing herself to-day, so to speak. It is snowing In St, Louls—St. Louls, Where they are going to open the World's Fair in ten days! It is snowing so hard in St, Louts that the street-cars have diMoulty in get- ting through the streets. On the basis of snow In St. Louts New York is getting off lucky with the intermittent snowstorms that have been visiting us all day, We are entitled to toeberge in the bay. In Vermont the weather ts flerce. The thermometer registers below zero. and the snow Is so deep that the horses can breathe in tt without lowering their Massachusetts is buried in nd in up-Stute New York, about seven hours’ ride from here, the jingle of aleighbells in heard on every hand, It Is the coldest 2th of April on record, Up in Ithaca many of the students of Cornell College were unable to their classes because of the conditions, Oh, the Custard Pile Overcoats! Did you ever see anything more pa- thetle than one of those little custard- ple colored overcoats to-day? ‘There were thousands of them on ‘the streets of New York, and they made the weather more drear. Isn't {t nice to go Out with one of those overcoats, open-work socks and low shoes on and be caressed by @ biidaard? was turned oft on April 15, Shivering tenants who looked out of the windows and saw the snow to-day immediately made tracks for the basement and con- fronted the janitor with a request for fire in the boilers. Generally the jani- tors complied with the request, but many rent-payers had to send out for gas stoves or keep warm by running around their fats. Shad Turn Tall Again, Of course the doctors did not rejoice, but none of them was noticed making any frantic efforts to have the cold weather stopped. Doubtless the drop in temperature and the snow flurries will cause a great deal of sickness, for many have laid aside their winter clothing and are wearing light-weight raiment, To add to the misery of the Occasion tho shad, which were just beginning to run in the North River, have all gone South again, All the baseball gamas in this part of the country scheduled for to-day have been called off, The Giants in Phitl- adelphia, the Athletics and Highlanders in Manhattan and the Bostons In Brook- lyn will sit around the stvam radiators in hotels and talk about umpires and managers ‘they bave known. Kyen If there Wea a chance that people would attend a ball game to-day the players don't wart to run the risk of gettiag their hands knocked off by swift liners. ~ Down at Coney Island the newly ar- rived colony of tropical beasts at Luna Park had a most uncomfortable day The animal men were busy stopping up the chinks jn the buildings and bulldin fires in big stoves for the benefit o the visitors. | About the only anim in for | ex pul i the Bol erring of his hen the ol 5 animal the Garden were com- fortable because the steam was turned on. : PENNSYLVANIA GETS |. & BLOW ANDO SNOW, (Special to The Breniag World.) WILKESBARRE, Pa., April biesard is aweeping over this seotion we B.A | MI bs WU CV W JAPANESE CRUISERS SAID TO HAVE BEEN INJURED AND THE ENGLISH SKIPPERS WHO TOOK THEM TO NAGASAKI. [a iS C OF THE NISSHIN AND KASUGA LAND ATTACK ON PORT ARTHUR (Continued from First re.) Petropaviovsk had been steaming at full speed. and that her svdden slow- down may have caused an accumulation of pressure which burst her boilers. Those who accept the mine theo! and they are in the majority, be- lleve that the explosion of the mine detonated the magazine, which blew up before the boilers. The main objection advanced against the mine idea {6 that the water where the catastrophe occurred {s too deep for anchord mines. “I can scarcely imagine that Vice-Admiral Togo would dare to turn loose a lot of floating mines,’ said one of the highest placed naval authori- ties. ‘The tides are high and the currents strong at Port Arthur and float- ing mines might easily be carried out to sea and endanger his own ships.” PHILADELPHIA, April 20.—Edwin S. Cramp, of the Cramp Shipbuild- ing Company, said to-day: ‘he report that the Russian Government has purchased four ships in this city is all news to me. As yet we have not re- ceived any communication on the subject, either from the Russian Gov- ernment directly or through thelr Ambassador, It is unlikely, however, thet if the deal were in contemplatiun it would be executed through our INGOMAR. AFTER OCEAN’ RECORD Sails from Bristol in’a Fifty-five Mile Gale Under Command of Captain Charles Barr—Has Many Engagements Abroad. firm.” MAN DROPS DEAD IN DENTIST'S HOUSE Peter Short, a Broadway Gilder, Was Stricken with Heart) Disease While Working in Dr. White’s Residence. James Short, a gilder, with office at BRISTOL, R. 1, April 20.— : No. 190 Broadway, dropped dead in the PUTAS Phe eeibon er racing yacht Ingomar, owned by In order to show progresstveness he |basement dining-room while calling for Brooklyn Rapid Transit system got out|some frames for gilding at the house | Morton 8, Plant, of New York, and open cars on all its Ines. The conduc- [of Dr. L. F. White, of No. East | with the famous yachtaman, Charles tors worked overtime sweeping snow |Seventy-ninth street, late this after-| parr, In command, to-day started In an out of the cars, There were open cars [noon in Manhattan, too, espécially on the} short was engaged in removing a] tempt to make a record-breaking trip Third avenue line. pioture from its frame when he was {cross the Atlantic, In many apartment-houses the heat|stricken, Dr. White ministered to hin, | The yacht, looking very” trim and but his efforts were unavailing, disease was the cause of Short's death. He was sixty-five years old, The iy was removed to the t Bighty-sixth art] business-like with shortened spars, was given a rousing reception ax she went down the bay, both here and at New- Street police station port, Off Brenton’s Reef the topsail, ———— mainsail and jib were shaken out. ‘The wind wax blowing fifty-five miles SWIMMER SAVES THREE MEN, Jan nour trom the southeast and a —— heavy sea prevailed. Drage Vhe Ashore When Bo Southdmpton is the destination of the Upnet in Gravesend Day. yacht, where Mr. Plant and C, 1. F. Albert Mabry, Thomas Howard ana} Robinson, a former Rear Commodore John Mills attempted to row from the] Of the New York Yacht Club, will yon-vacht Ronzo in Gravesend Ray tof meet her, ‘The verse! wil participate the foot of Bay Forty-seventh stre in the Kiel races in « to- \ugust, for which The boat upset, and they were| the German Empercr has. offered a golng to the bottom when Peter Allen] cup. and in other Buropean cup races, fam out to them and managed to drag ee them to sh Dr. Pett lives in the neighbor-| REPRIEVE FOR WOMAN. hood, att: conscious w who re pull San A out of New Jerney Hoard of Pardons Gives Anna Valentine More Time. (Special to The Bvening World.) — PLUNKITT A SACHEM. TRENTON, N. J, April 20.—The : Court of Pardone to-day granted ~a Frond of the Fact and Wants the} coorieve to June 16 in frhipe atl ier He eee elie. Bs te. Anna Valentine, of Lodi, Bergen coun- “Why didn't you fellows run in my ty, who was sentenced to be hanged Baines Arong those clected sachems in] un May 19 for killing Rosle Salsa, oe Tammany Soctety?” asked enatol Nt x eT moe ety Bitte Mater! whom che accused of usurping the -dhity omitted from the His name had printed list, “T've been a long that th Rat to the affections of her husband. The reprieve was granted to enable her counsel to get more evidence for the Court of Pardons to act upon and the Gate was made June 16 so that Murphy may return from Eu- rop* to consider the case with fellow memoers of the board. —— BRYAN HIRES A HALL. the New York Platform mtial Candidate. LINCOLN, Ni April %,.—William J. Bryan announces that he will deliver a political address at the Princess Rink in Chicago Saturday night on “The New York Platform," the platform re- ferred to being the one adopted the New Yo: aoe Wo ‘cont vention ‘uonday . ‘be re- served seats ministers hg men, otherwise seats be wil pay the halt m in the society so ‘memory of man" runneth ntrary,” sald the Senator, as re-clected A sachem with ths rest of the buneh the other night. and} 1 suppose I will dea sachem, too. Tt's ® proud distinetiq << WOMAN POSTAL CLERK OUT. Dinminned Under Charme. Refusing to Resign. (Special to The Evening Whrid.) MOUNT HOLLY, N. J. April »— Postmaster Charles C. Cqwperthwaite to-day received Instructions from the Post-OMice Department at Washington to discharge Miss Maude Robertson, who has been mailing clerk in the office for some time, and the young woman ‘was at once relieved from further duty. Robertson served und: administrations of Mr, Cow, Age Pp. After, OCK-FIGHTERS. FINED $10 EACH Twenty-eight Spectators in Pinkerton Stable Get Off with Small Assessment. While Two Principals Each Pay $100. It was a very crestfallen lof of sport i that gathered in the Court of Special |Sossionx in Rrooklyn to-day Wefore Jus- Mees Courtney, Forker and Fleming to janewer to the charge of cock-fighting. ; There were thirty of the thirty-two men who were caught in the raid on Robert Pinkerton's stables at No, 782 Union street on the night of April 3, among them Allan Budd, who is Allan Pinkerton, son of the head of the ‘detective agency, and Richard Wilson whone resembinnce to ex-Warden Rich- jard Van Brunt, of the Raymond Street Jail, 18 so marked that even Mr. Ber- ven's friends mistake him for the War den. Two sports who travel under the station-house names of Charles Outh- waite and William Tull were the only absentees at roll-call, ‘They are in Bal- | Umore and will be tried on April 2, | Twenty-eight of the cock fighters were fined $10 each, and two of them, said to be principals and breeders of birds, were fined $100 each, although the Society for the Prevention of Cru es to Animals pleaded that they get t maximum sentence, which is $1,000 fine and a year in jail. Society Gets the Cocks. Incidentally the 21 Kve fighting cocks. four dead ones and the lamps, carpets |and other properties seized in the raid were turned over to the Society for destruction, ‘The live birds are val- ued at $18,000, and the jaws of the sports fell when the Court announced that the Society could do as it wished with them. Lawyer George F. Elliott appeared for the society and the prisoners were reprosented by a lawyer named Pear- sall. Mr. Elliott said that he had sep- arated the prisoners into two classes, witnesses and principals, and he read @ list of twenty-eight names as wit- nesses. Among these was Allan Budd who, when arraigned at thp bar, kept his hat in front of his face so that no one could get a Kood look at him. He was fined $10 with the twenty-seven others, Richard Wilson, who looks so much like Mr. Bergen, was fined $100, although Mr. Bitlott tried hard to have the max!- mum sentence imposed, Policemen tes- tiled that Wilson was one of the hand- lers of the birds, John Smith, of In- wood, L. I, the other alleged principal, was fined $100, too. He protested that he was not gullty, but the officers swore he stood peside the ring with a gaffed bird in his arms when they ar- rested him, An Honest Man W Mr. Smith sald he was an honest, in- dustrious contractor, but admitted that ho ratxed chickens at his place at In- wood. Andrew Hannigan was char} allowing the fights to take pl stable. He is a groom in the y Mr. Pinkerton. The soclety wanted gevere punishment inflicted upon him, but he got off with a $10 fine. Justice Fleming dissented from all the $10 fines on the ground that they were too » “all, Justice Courtney disxented from the “+ fine Imposed upon Wilson on the grou: | that it was excessive, After all the caxes were disposed of, the soctety applied for the right to d stroy the fighting birds In. their por gession, and to the chagrin of the spor it was granted. ————— TRIED SUICIDE IN CEMETERY Rich Young Woman, Falling,Anked Man to Shoot Her, 1 to The Evening World.) A, Ga., April 20,—Mlle, Cesa- rio Fexuera, a young French woman of rare beauty, went to Oakland Cemetery and, seating herself beside a grave, drew a pistol and fred two shots at her heart. Both buMets struck her corset steels, were deflected and lodged in her body. Sexton Burefield, hearing a re- port, rushed to her side. She handed him the revolver and begged him, to Kill her, ‘The young woman was-taken to the hospital, where spe refused — give her naire. ‘Her Identity was estab: lished by DASLINg \omesue Aaa which had been tora into bits. found In her po Sho is badly wounded, but will re y Tittle Ix known of Miss Faguera ex- rept that she is a woman of wealth tind high social position and lives in Paris Bho hax been Hotel for some Weeks and hax moved in exclusive circles. The reason for her attempted self-destruction is not known, —<$—<—a BAIL FOR DR. CONRAD. Mrs, N. KE, Steffins Signs Bo 812,000. Dr, E, W. Conrad, who was convicted a few days ago of performing an illegal operation and sentenced to serve not more than two nor less than one year for guest at the Piedmont j GG MERGER HT “TW COURT HER | Justice Giegerich Grants an Or- der Aimed at Pi eventing Dis- { tribution of N. S. Stock at Company Meeting To-Morrow Justice Giegerich, of the Supreme Court. Issued an order to-day on ap- plication of C. H, Venner & Co., of Boston, looking to the restraining of the distribution of Northern Securities Company assots. ‘The order is re- turnavle to-morrow, and the meeting ft the company's stockholders to ap- prove the dixtribution plan is set for the same date. ‘This actiow was regarded in Wall street late to-day as a Harriman move to prevent the distribution of Northern Pacific stock, which J. Plerpont Mor- gan and James J. Hill seek to control. ‘The Harriman for: however, em- phatically denied this, saving they had no connection with Venrer & Co, Under the ruling of the United States Supreme Court deciaring the big mer- ker Sllegal, the stock of the constituent companies 1x to be apportioned at the annual meeting of the Northern Securi- ties Company, which has been’ called for to-morrow, Under the Morgan-Hill plan of distri- bution Marriman will not get what he claims an his share of Northern Pacitic stock, Harriman’s defeat in the Minne- sota court yesterday and the non-suit- ing of the Venrer forces in New Jersey the day previous left the way clear for Morgan and Hill. Hence the idea that Marriman was behind the Venner forcer. 1s view strengthened by the failure of Harriman to begin sult to- lay In New Jersey, as expected, to in- tervene in the distribution of the stock. It was said in financial circles after the announcement of the suit that Mar- riman had reached an agreement with n and Hill on the distribution of ont AGING GOULD AND HARRIMAN Holland Stockholders'in Kansas AMES CLARK; jamen Clark, 434 Baltte at., Brooklyn. Me was recommen: to Dr. i he ‘Sf once, but after a number of treatments yiston. in to retumm. he couid sount Tingera when held in the trong light, to-fay Mr. Clark can read and bes In going to ‘Deafness and Head Noises. Mrs. William Lake, of Richmond Terrace, Mariner's Harbor, 8.'1.. was #0 loft ear that she could hean ing. The hed. ‘nolses “were nearly drove ‘wr distracted. _ No Staten Island ould cure her. sad to = ous phyvicians and institutions in New York \ where she treatment, she was aime teplied for terri Dr. Gardner has seoured the services of a | well-qualified physician, and expert on a cor, whe will be In the office Sen ) $oro'stek uot 4 andowil treat Gad cane Cancer by the wee of Radium. Cost of the Cure. * ‘The charges are alway made reasonad’ and within the reach ot ‘overs one. ‘3 Conssitation and X-ray Bxamina. tion FRED. | If you cann all, write for re- port blanks. DR. GARDNER, Office 4 35 5th Av., N. Y. City Betwe m 38th and 89th ste, Hours,9 A, M. to8 P. M. Sundays, 10 te 3. City Southern Railway Make Important Changes That In- dicate War. KANSAS CITY, Mo., April 20,—Im- portant changes have been made in the directorate of the Kansas City South- ern Railway. which, it is believed, por- tend an attempt on the part of the Holland stockholders to wrest the con- trol of the property from the Harriman- Gould interests now in control, |_ The following are the changes: George J. Gould has ceased to be First Vice- President and in suceeded by Herman Sielken, a New York City broker, who in representing the Holland interests John Lambert, of Chicago, a director, representing the Harriman-Gould inter- ests, Ix retired, and the office of General | Counsellor, held by Max Pam, of New York, who also repres pr man-Gould interests, is abolished. office of General Counsel paid a salary of $15,000 a year, Mr. Gould, {t is stated, will retain hin position q# a director of the raiiroad id as a member of the voting trust. The voting trust, which came into ex- Istence in 190), ‘when the Harriman- Gould contingent secured control of the property at its reorganization, will, it is also stated, expire within another ‘year, when the Holland stockholders, now in the minority, hope to regain control of the road. Resides Mr: Gould, E. H. Harriman and John W. Gates are now members of the voting trust FOR SHAVING, . 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