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STUDENT RESENTS HYPOTIC CHAE Hurd, of Yale, Seeks Early Op- portunity to Deny He Influ- ) | enced Mrs. Lavina H. Foy, Whose Affairs He Managed. THINKS SERVANTS TO BLAME FOR TROUBLE. ; , Wealthy Widow Cannot Be Seen and Relatives Who Got In- junction Against Him Confer —Matter to Be Aired. (Special to The Evening World.) NEW HAVEN, Conn, May 18— Buarded by a cordon of nurses and servants Mrs. Lavina H. Foy, the widow whose relatives are secking to prevent Ernest H. Hurd, a Yale senior, from obtaining her money, estimated @t $1,990,000 or more, is in her palatial / , Fesidence at No. 62 Dwight street, this tity. “Mra. Foy is too {ll to receive vis- ttors,"" was the response of the house- keeper to-day when an Evening World teporter called to req an interview. “Is Mrs. Foy's ines caused by the teporter. “I am under instructions to answer ’o questions concerning that matter, You must see Gen, Harmon." Gen, George M. Harmon is the son of Mrs. Foy by her first husband, and one if the relatives who secks to Mtudent Hurd restrained from commu- eating with the old lady, claiming that Hurd has obtained large sums of noney from her and 1x Ukely to get nore, Relatives Conanit. + Gen. Harmon is {n Boston, where, it ts said, he has gone to consult with Edward Hellyer, another relative of Mrs. Foy, who is one of the parties to the injunction proceedings against Hurd. No one of his family would talk Soncerning the matter. The neighbors of Mrs. Foy generally sympathize with her and think she should be free to carry out her wishes. Ernest H..Hurd, the Yale senior who, It is alleged, has controlled the old widow's mind and obtained money for two European trips, is highly indignant at the charges against him. He moved out of the Foy residence during the Easter vacation and has since’ been stopping with friends. He refused to say anything with reference to the mat- ter, except that the charge that he had influenced the aged widow in any degree was a fabrication, A friend of Mr. Hurd said: / A “This charge is preposterous. Hurd was engaged by the relatives them- selves to live at the house. His ante- cedents and his character were care- fully looked into, and he was decided upon us a suitable person to reside there and manage the affairs, The ser- vants resented his presence, and they, we believe, are partially responsible for the trouble. Her Acts Voinntary. “{t is true that Mr. Hurd fs not in the est of health and that he has been obliged to work his way through Yale. Mrs, Foy sympathized with him and out her liberal fortune saw fit to reward bim for his kindness to her. “But her ects have mn entirely vol- untary and were not of Mr, Hurd's seeking. He was in no way attemptin; | JH to Influence her against her relutives.” , Hurd ts so anxious for a hearing in the matter that he has asked his lawyer to have an early date fixed, and next Monday has been assigned. ‘Then Hurd’s counsel will make a motion for the dissolution of the injunction. It is not likely that Mrs. Foy will be able to Appear in court. At present Mr. Hellyer and Burton Mansfeld, a lawyer, of this city, have ubsolute control of Mrs. Foy's fortune. By a trust agreement, executed April 8 last,| Mra, Foy makes affidavit. that n order to relieve herself of the bur- lens and responsibilities of managing ner property and having perfect confi- fence in Messrs. Hellyer and Mansfield, the gives them full power to handlo + and invest her property as they set fit, paying her the income ‘to’ do as she chooses with until her death, when they are to act as trustees to dispose of her property according to the terms of her will, made in 1900. ‘The will was made prior to her meet- ing Hurd, and the trust agreement signed since his removal from the house, ‘The will, it 1s understood, disposes of all her estate to her relatives, DIDN’T THROW WIFE OUT. Woman 4dmits that She Fell Out of the Window, | Mrs, Augusta Grunst, of No, 100 Fast Elghty-a¢venth street, admitted in’ the Harlem Court to-day that she had told an untruh yesterday when she had her hustand arrested, stating that he had aoe her out of a second-story win- low. Ernst F. Grunst was rearraigned to- fay’ on the charge, and his wife was in court, She fell from the window yes- } o , p | ‘ ¥ terday, and told bystanders and the po- Hoo that her husband had thrown Ror oul Mrs. Grunst to-day said bhe had quorrelied with her husband and thought he was going to assault her. Bho opened the window and called for ‘ help, and lost her balance, In the heat of the moment, she sald, she accused her husband, Magistrate Baker dine charged the defendant: GANG OF GIRL PICKPOCKETS, Three Plead Guilty, and One’ In thereupon Attentions of Mr. Hurd? queried the] > have| ? NARROWLY ESCAPED [POWER-HOUSE FIR 92009500000 WILL SHE 17S WASH, |@ WASH FOR WASH FROM | HER THOUSANDS MONDAY TO |B 2F DAUGHTER SUNDAY! LIKE A REAL MOTHER © < Bu wning THE MiDxIGHT 2 ® TERM IN SING SING Two Teamsters Whose Only Crime Was Getting Drunk Came Near Getting Ten-Year Sentences for Burglary. Two teamsters, whose only crime was in getting drunk, had a nerrow escape from being sent to Sing Sing Prison for ten years each this morning as the result of a drunken frolic during the night of May %. ‘The men, Thomas Rock and Louis Crener, were arrested early on the morning of May 4 by Policeman John 8, Burke, who found them sitting on the parlor floor of the house in which he lived, on Main street, Westchester, ‘The two were embraciig each other and half asleep. Burke told the Grand Jury he was returning home, when he heard a crash of glass, and found the window alone- side of the front door broken and the door unfastened. Inside he found Rock and Croner. They were placed on trial Monday before Judge Newburger and convicted ‘on the charge alleged, the jury recom- mending mercy, Both men dented on their trial that they had entered the house with any criminal intent and could not remomber anything about the cir- cumstances of their arrest. “Under the law," Judge Newburger told the two, “the minimum sentence for the crime of which you have been convicted is ten years. I am going to remand you and have your story in- vestigated.” Both men were remanded to the Tombs. Prison Agent Kimball and Cen- Fogarty were instructed by Judge Newburger to investigate the cage, each Independent of the other, and to-day they reported that both prisoners heretofore had borne excellent reputa- tions and their only crime was in get- Ung drunk, After consultation with District- Attorney Jerome Judge Newburger call- ed the prisoners to the bar and sald: “I have decided to sct aside your con- viction and grant you a new trial. I am satisfied your presence in this court was due to nothing but drink. I will allow you to plead gullty to unlawful entrance and will suspend sentence.” Both men have famfles in the Bronx, They will sign the pledge, FOUR SEEK DIVORCE ON “BARGAIN” DA Unhappily Mated Persons Ap- pear Before Justice Leven- tritt, and He Promises to Grant Several Decrees. Recause Nellie Russo was only seven- teen,when Gluseppe Accomor led her to the City Hall and married her on June 29, 1901, Justice Leventritt to-day promised her a decree of annulment in the “Pargain Divorce Court," and she went te the home of her parents, No. 307 Hast One Hundredth street. Sent to « Reformatory, Three young female pickpockets pleaded gullty before Judge New- burger in General Sessions this morn- Y Sng. He suspended mience Me cases of Ida Davis and Tessie ciurko- Witz, both vixteen years old. Fannie Cohen. of the same age, was seut to the Female Reformatory. e girls were members of a gang > Max Hochmann's action for absolute divorce was dismissed !n gplto of the testimony of Nathan Rosenthal that he found Uda, his Russian bride of 1892, living with another man. | In mpone: “bargain day*' case Fred- Fae ollock testified that he had met “Patsy Lockwood" at dancing school, y|and for three months in 1901 went to THERE WILL BEA SHOP-GIRLS MAGAZING BY SHOP-GiRLS. ON THE ShELF? TIES UP B. A. T. Complete Blockade of Brooklyn Cars and Six Lines Entirely Without Power Because of Blaze. The entire Brooklyn rapid transit ser- vice was supended for an hour toiay fas the result of the burning off of the insulation on the great condult cables dispensing electric current in the Third stret and Third avenue power-house, The blockade of traffic caused a great congestion at the Manhatan end of the bridge, and along the big shopping and Tbusiness districts in Brooklyn. 1 ‘The trouble started at noon with the grounding of the current distributed from the Third avenue power-house by five great cables. This was followed oe by the burning off of the insulation on/ there are the csables and the envelopment of the dynamos in sheets of flame that drove WILL THE SOCIAL MOTHERS” COURTSHIP TACTICS PUT THE GIRLS TRE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING. SENT ee seme peree RTE MT TTT Sie EP ey coer. MAY 18, 1904, WHAT MAY HAPPEN WAEN THE PROFESSIONAL MOTHER GE Ts TO WORK REGULATING THE AFFAIRS OF THE SHOP GIRL IN AND OUT OF THES PPOIFDGO9 DH EHISHOOHOODOOEONH ee SHELL SHOW HER HOW TO HUSBANDS ACRE 10 SWAP IES Just for a Joke Mr. Schwarz Persuades His Friend, Mr. Scher, to Sign Agreement to Exchange Helpmeets. An agreement to swap wives forms the centre of interest in a strange mat~ nmontal e which the gossips of Long Isl City are raveliling (nto thrilling tdbit The principals are Mr. and Mrs. Isador Schwarz, of No. 1U4 Vernon ave- nue, ahd Mr. and Mrs. Alexander }to an Bvening Mr. 8c! Schér, of No, 10 Vernon avenue. Mr. Sohwarz 1s the proprietor of a large furniture store and Mr. Scher deals in and wall paper. friends for a Schwarz 1s two years paint, putty, varnish ‘rne familes have been number of years, Mrs. nineteen, | Mra. Boban ie ran th are igreament to swap wives ee Several versions and miay This ig the sory of 1 World reperter to-day 2 Ash age the opinions, r. Schwarz the workmen from the structure. An/ furniture dealer noticed marked atten- alarm was sent out, and though the | tous bein fire was smothered quickly the officers of the road were confronted with a dificult task in making repairs to the damaged cables. by Simultaneously with the grounding of the current all power was cut off to the Third, Seventh, Fifth, Vanderbilt and Hamilton avenue and Court street ines, As the wires serving current to these Mnes are interwoven throughout the city the blockade soon became general, and even extended to the elevated traf-| | fic. Within a Wery few minutes a great | ang string of cars were stopped throughout the length of Fulton street and other |# thoroughfares, In less than fifteen minutes after .the accident to the power-house not a car was moving in tral Office Detectives Dowling and 11. western district of the borough. ‘The delay at the Manhattan entrance of the bridge lasted an hour and ten minutes, and though !t was during the slack four of the day the police had @ strenuous time in handling the ane goon collected. The same condition ineyalied at the Brooklyn cnd of the ridge and dn the shopping district of tho PorouFT ering with the injured cables at the Third avenue power-louse fewas found that It would be imposs!- ble to disseminate the current again for several hours. Then in order to fastore tramic it was necessary to splice fn cables fromm other power-houses with fe damaged cables of the Third ave- nue distributing station, In this way the lines directly cut off from power were enabled to resume, and the tle-up was lifted. daid by Scher to his wits. What n't notice Mrs. Scher in- formed him without hesitation. “IT spoke to Jennie, about it, said Mr, Sohwarz to-day, “and Mrs. Scher spoke to Alex. It digm't make no. dif- ference, so I thought up a trick. I get a friend to reexe me an eare eat % sw wives: ween me . “HLS Serer ae ein ““Let us iJ 5 Bure, he says, quick ké a flash. “Just_ae quick I says, ‘Sign her Alex.’ He signs and 1 take the agre majt home to Jennie and I says to her ferieanie, do you want to trade to lex as his 10 a “Oh, Ike, ie ‘I take Lena wife? D ke, you're foolin’, eins to laugh, “71am serious.’ 1 says; nd you take Alex. Mbho thinks a minute, and they she signs the agreement, and I put Mt in my shfe, I have them in @ trap, like a sword to hold over them, But while Ty was thinking over my trick, Jennie, she 4s gone, last Saturday. When I fopk for her, Lena tells me Alex js also gone. I went to my mother-In-law’s home, and Jearn that Jeanie and Alex are at the Thalla ‘Theatre, just ke a honeymoon. I find them. there and get a policema to arreet my wite in Long Island C yesterday ware was arraigned in the Long Island City Court penne at- ternoon, charged by her husband with lecting and degrading the morals of neg’ year-old child, She was re- Tetsed under $900 ball, and is now with friends in this y. ‘mah, who appeared aa ‘sol for Mrs, Schwarz yesterday, de- coed today that all four, Mr. "and oret nwarg and Mr, and Mrs, Scher, had’ ontered~ into the wife-swapping agreement, and that when the case Is eile in. court the document will be put, in eviaence In Mrs, Schwarz's be- alt. Benjamin Ly SILENT STUDENT (GIRL ANSWERED + SHOOTS HIMSELF} “AD” FORA MODEL Morris Neudermann, a Young}Man Met Her in a Queer Way Roumanian Devoted to Study, Goes to a Hotel and Blows Out His Brains. Driven to a sudden frenzy of despair and She Had Him Arrested as Suspicious Person by De- tective Escort. ——_—_ A young woman, who sald she !s Anna Wardell, twenty years old, of by a letter he received from his home| xo, 271 west Eleventh street, called at in Roumania, Morris Neuderman, young man who for the past six months | night has lived at No, 252 East Houston street, where he was known as the “silent| made. She said that she pad ans) student,” committed suicide by blowing out his brains at Slevin's Hotel, Four- teenth street and Union Square, to-day. bes ah Ducker, a Grednpolnt grocer, testified that he knew her as Mrs. McQuade, of No, 25 Kingsland avenue, Green- point, The Court promised a decree for her husband. Georgia Starr Beattle, Seventh avenue, of No, 2810 dances and hotels with Ker, not know- | divorce from James 8, Beattie, to whom f |ing that sho was the wite of his friend, |/she Was married by Rev. Arthy Leonard HWsher, who asked Justice ‘twelve~ ‘gon, ked for an absolute | the detec’ ur B, away. of @ althe Charles Street Pollke Station last ‘and.asked that a detective be sent with her to keep an engagement she had wered an advertisement for a cloak model ‘and that she received a reply in which she was asked tg meet a man at Tenth street and Broadway. A detective was went with her. ‘A. well-dressed man came up and spoke jo her. Together they walked to @ hotel, and the man, produced a tape- easure from his t and asked her 0 ZO to @ room er ‘used . ‘The woman then called tive and had the man arrested, e Charles Street Station the man em a room. sald iy John Campbell, of Far Rock- pin his pockets the measure and nae money, He was charged with being @ suspicious Deraon. Sof ILE WOAH CLIMBS UIGERTY' LEDG TORE, Looe oe SHE WILL ABOLISH THE POMPADOUR IN THE STORES. THOUSANDS HAVE KIDN Walks Narrow Coping 85 Feet Above Ground to Reach Out- side Stairway and Make Her Way to the Ground. | LOCKED IN STATUE BY FRIENDS AS A JOKE. | when They Wouldn’t Release Her She Gained an Exit by Getting Out of One of the Windows of Liberty. THE “SOCIAL MOTHER AT THE DYNAMO CONTROLLING, THE PARLOR LIGHTS. is $ o “Steeple Jack" has been rivalled by a & | young woman of social position, beau- @]utuny gowned, who climbed from a @ | window in the Statue of Liberty, §& feet from the ground, made her way round the structure on a narrow ledge and walked safely to the ground Capts, A. young women Breeze and Hawthorne, U showing a party of Bedloo's sland. They had gone the top of Lib- erty and several of them had de- scended. when In a spirit of fun the ground door was bolted by some one, leaving Capt. Breeze and one of the visitors locked in the statue. “You can't get out,” came from the outside, “You are prisoners of war.” Capt. Breeze and his companion rat- Ued at the lock and tried to force it, but It would not give way. They then asked that the door be opened 8. were over to SHE WILL ABOLISH THE (CB GREAM & PICKLE O1ET— GO00900000090S 0H GHOL OOOO OOOO ODI OGHSDH.OHOLED9OOOOP a without further dolay, “You are prisoners of war,” came FT DAUGHTER | from the outside. ‘We are your jall- ers.” bs Climbed Out of Window. Capt. Breeze pleaded that the door be unlocked. His pleadings were of no avail. The young woman and the army off- cer climbed back up the stairs to the Window that, looked far out over the bay. It was too high for the young womun to reach, but with Capt, Breeze's assistance she managed to mount to the window. On the outside fs a narrow ledge which, If followed, will reach to the outside stairway, The young woman stood bravely on the ledge. Capt. Breeze followed her Looking toward the sky she began the perilous walk around the statue to the $1 HS WIL Thomas L. Heape Makes This Provision for Mrs. Fannie Aspinall, and Ignores His Other Two Girls. Although Thomas L. Heape made 0) outside sta! bequests whatever to two of his aaugh-| | hud Oe te net aoe ee ded tony ma mes | Nef shuddered. One misstep would have . by. bis i ys meant that she would be lashed voted a paragraph to a bequest’ of one to deat : Rest dollar to hils other daughter, Mrs. Fan- | Be ony the rocks): Dalow pi Riowly she made her way along the ledge, fol- nlo Aspinall, of No. 52 Clifton place,| towed by the offcer the seed an Brovklyn. | ; é : stairway and : Mr. Heape Nved at No. 68 East One y and ran down to-safety. Refused Her Name. Capt. Breeze, pale and trembling lest she lose her balance, followed. Hundred and Twenty-third street. His widow and afl the children excopt Fan- nie live there. He left the contents of toxether the house to tile widow, Muri ether) “I wouldn't do that again to gain with what mon i freedom,” di ed the young w na Beni tS a d the young woman “Jt was more than I counted for. | would rather be a prisoner of war.” Many persons saw the woman's perll- ous climb, ard attempts were made to learn her name. Her {tentity, however, wad Carefully convealed, When ahe was approached at the Battery after the nding from the Island she laughingly said: “My name? Why should T give my name? 1 don't want to get pst other banks he left In trust to his ey ecutors, with directions to establish h sons, Thomas L. und John Heape, in| business, The balauce of his estate $s | to be enjoyed by Mra. Heape for life, | ‘at-her death ts to go to the sons, e daughters, Elizabeth Sanrez and Ada ) Are not mentioned /éxcept that ane is appointed an executor, and Mr. Heape Instructs his executors’ that his children are all to be reared in the testant faith In accordance with an) agreement wiih Rey. Father Anthony | Kessler, of Columbus avenue dnd One Hundred dnd Twenty-fifth streot, when he'married him and his wife, The will was made In 1900. SOCIETY. WOMAN GETS SEPARATION Mrs. Pierre Van Arsdale Smith Gets $50 a Week Alimony and the Custody of Her Two Children. a Trinity Chureh steeple. to do this again, though.” SPEEDING. AUTO RAN NTO NER Mr. and Mrs. Leener, Ameri- cans, Touring Brussels, Went Over Bank to Avoid Injuring Children—Woman Badly Hurt Mignon Ly Smith. the pretty young wife of Plerre Van Arsdale Smith, mem- ber of one of the wealthiest and hest- Known families tn Brooklyn, secured a separation from her husband, $50 a week BRUSSELS, May 18—Mr. and Mrs. Leener, Americans, while motoring from France along the Meuse rah into the river, They were some ct trying to avold running and the car was my and the custody of her two children !n the Supreme Court in Brook- lyn to-day ‘The couple were married in 1899, and nk. but Mrs, Leener was Both were saved, seriously Injures The namo of Leener does not appear have only been separated a short time. " Smith ts sald to betiving in his father's| 9 the New York di fine mansion on Clinton avenue, = Brooklyn. WRECKED SCHOONER SAVED. When papers in the case were first water-logged schooner William filed he put in a general denial of the of Rockland, Me., which, as charges of brutality and intemperance. | ro |. was in collision about twen- When the case came up to-day before} ty (aist of Fire Island with the viet: 1} rn ne steame ‘urnessia, a Justice Gaynor, however, he put in no] At re to-day I the Wree appearance and allowed it to go by de- Lee naten fault. I, J. Merri © tug Mu. For 35 years my one aim has been to perfect a remedy for Rupture whose merit and small cost would make all other trusses and treatm 3 a waste of time and money. 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