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‘ } + features set in stern hard lines that BUCK TO MOT Precocious Gladys Tremayne,| . Aged Thirteen, Weary of Her, Parent’s Nomadic Existence, _|s in Charge of Aid Society. MOTHER MAY SEE CHILD AT LAWYER'S OFFICE.| Beautiful and Cu'tured Southern Widow's Life of Ceaseless * Drifting Has Been Kaleido-| scopic in Its Varying Changes, | ‘There appeared before Justice Olm- ated, in the Children's Court to-day, a/ mother and her child, the parent plead- ing with all the fervor of her passion: | ate nature for the little girl to be re- stored to her and the daughter trem-| Diing between her filial impulre and a} sense of duty to herself that had been borne In upon her by the strange life she has led in the past few years | ‘There was no crude story of human! nature and error bred of ignorance and| uncultured Ideals involved in this pa-| thetic scene. The mother was a wo- man who had been bred in luxury and| furrounded by every refining Influence from her childhood, Mrs, Mildred Mona| ‘Tremayne, a young,and still beautiful widow, showed every mark of culture, | and the story of the child of thirte Gladys Mona Tremayne, woose rare loveliness was far too mature for her| years, bore testimony of the dévelop-| ment of unusual precocity amid Influ- % WHERE HER MOTHER PLEADED IN VAIN TO HAVE THE CH''N RESTORED 7Q I!’ R KPEFING, ehhh ibitbitt rire e etree blk eer errr? ences in which the force of otrcum- wtances was the Initial motive. Gloom Follows Gay Life, The child had been brought to court under the sheltering custody of Mrs. Rosalie Loew-Whitney, to whom she| had told her story, aod expressed the wish to have a real home, a home where there might be a steady alo comfort, where right was the fostering influence and where her ingenulty ‘would not be constantly called into play to aid in providing for an existence that | became Mm ta Court. Giadys was brought into court by Mrs, Whitney and seemed in bright} iN Washington — Suffered spirits, The child was dressed in 4 long blue coat, low dancing slippers @nd a while hat, frayed and «olled, though of pretentious proportions, She clung lovingly to the arm of her kind) WASHINGTON, Oct, 14—Attorney~ friend and chatted and laughed. |General William H. Moody, who re- When her mother swept into the| turned earty to-day from a campaign courtroom, clad in a tightly fitting | trip, met with what might have been Wwilor-made gown and heavily velled,'the) q serious accident not long after his emile left the little girl's Hps and her \ Only a Shaking Up. |moraingf horseback rife, a team of |runaway mules collided with his horse neat tne Treasury Department The collision was of suclr force that the Attorney-Genera: was thrown to the pavement. Fortunately he alighted |in uch @ manner ag to sustain no tadury beyond h shnking up! too, escaped serious Injury. | Moody later at- inet meeting, howing no eldent. ‘were not childish. She seemed to have e@ged in An instant, and as the parent almost ran to her sobbing “Oh, Gladys, do not turn from) me!” she shrank back hhehind the arm of her protector. At this juncture Mr, Grossman, Mrs. ‘Tremayne's lawyer, entered and held 9 Dief conversation, while the mother and child watched Wem anxiously. ‘Then Mr, Grossman took Mra. Tre- mayne to one side and talked sternly to der. With an effort she controlled her- ext and listened patiently to the de- cision be had reacned that Glady @>ould romain in the custody of Mrs. Leew-Waltney, while she, the mother, would have an opportunity to see her) Gt the lawyers office at brief Intervals.) When her mother left the court-room with her lawyer Gladys k.ssed her with jome warmth of jon, the parent | i ing her to her breast and weeping | @oftly, Then they went their separate | ways, the child assured of the opportunities she longed for nigns of the FORGED 10 SAVE WIFE FROM JAIL Prisoner Pleads Guilty and Is Sentenced to Twelve Months —Judge Said He Was Strong- Mrs. for herself in the future. r aid that she has been offered employ- ment with a@) theatrical company that fs about to open an engagement in this city. ‘Those who heard and understood wha’ Uife had been to this unhappy pair di pet uickly condemn the mother. 8he ad m caught in one of the eddies of the great maels..om of life and had Violded ts the current Five years ago she cane to New York ‘with neither money nor friends to look Renal the care ant wporngins at a] was a ruper- Max Bernstein, of No, 12 One Hun- dred and Twelfth street, was sentenced to the Penkentiary for twelve months to-day by Recorder Goff, In Part I. of General Seasions, after pleading gullty of forgery tm the second degree. The Deautiful little da His | ly Inclined to Leniency. RUNAWAY MULES BOY DIED WHILE UNSEAT MOODY, MOTHER PRAYED Attorney-General Thrown from | Christian Soience Failed to Save; His Horse in a Street Mix Up Little Boy with Fractured) Skull—Surgeon’s Best Skill) Also Proved Unavailing. The prayers of an earnest band of Christian Scientists, led by Mrs. Min-| bad habits since, seven years ago, nle Hopkins, of No, 6% West One Hun- frat began to cause his parents trouble dred and Twenty-third street, were not lenough to save the life of seven-year- | dead In his late home to-day, the resuit jof being run over by a heavy brewery wagon at One Hundred and Twenty- fifth atreet and St. Nicholas avenue. The boy, a bright little chap, was roller-skating on the asphalt near his home when he tried to catch on the rear of a truck driven by Charles Noack, of No. & Manhattan stree} He slipped under the wheels, and one wheel went over his head, crushing it fo that the little fellow’ recognizabie. He was taken to the J, Hood Wright Hospital. His mother was notified and she hurried to the institution, She is & member of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, and a firm bellever in the eMcacy of prayer. She wanted to pray by the side of her little boy, but Dr. Severance told her the lad was dying and that the one chance for his life lay in an operation. Mother Gave Consent. It was a hard struggle for the mother, believing as she did, but when she saw the ‘boy's awful condition and realised what his death would mean to her, while the opétation was performed, but was told it wetuld be best to go away, ried to tha church. There she found sad news, It was decided that it there a case for prayer it was thia one, and led by Mrs, Hopkins, they all ro ee ne Her nature was care crane| Court sald, after Wetening to the man's| got on their knete and began thelr de and sarees e. had neimaye had| plea and his excuse for committing the ie fetes bo steadily qverything, and when she ov kot! crime he confessed, that he was strongly | *!, : Ar +} inally one of the party went to a pot ber Re se When ted ip ode recommended to leniency, but the law! telephone and ed the hospital for the it iu around her she knew| had been vtolated, and no alternative | result of Bhe was od that she lad not the strength of pur- pose for the battle, Sent Child Ont to Borrow, Lately the scenes had shifted more offered, The pjrisoner's story, as related by hs counsel, Abe Levy,was this; After failing twice in business and Involving rapidly, Friends who had been never- sabing in their generosity began to edge| his wie on several notes, Mr, Bernstein off, Money now became an objective! obtained employment as bookkeeper for which seruples had (o be sacrificed. As the mother became more and more Reedy, though she would rot keep out of the mid-channe! of life, and procured lodgings in the most expensive hotels 4n the city, the child was sent out tou with Charlés Goodman, a manufacturer, of No, 61 Crosby street. ‘ot long after- ward sult was brought against his wife on the notes he had negotiated for her, She was confined with her third baby Dorrow for her of the old ftriends—the once generous frends. ‘Often there were times when a few follars was 4 godsend ard meant shel- ter and food. Hotel alter hotel be- fame colder in ite reception, and the hild began to see what was tending. ‘hough she joined her mother tn her gchomings an! aided her with her un- at the time and Judgment went against her by default. Subsequently an order of arrest was issued against her, commanding her imprisonment in Ludlow Street Jal! Her husband learned from the counsel for the creditor that the judgment could be satisfied for $70. The amount that the boy was dead. @he return to the chureh with th ended the praying. rs. report, and learned that the boy rapidly after the operation More Prayers at Home, | The body was taken back to the home, |and the Christian Belentista athere there in great numbers last night and held a service. To-day her hours of prayer seemed to have done the unfor- tunate woman much good. To an Even- ing World reporter she sald | “Phere was a report that I went to the hospital and Inaisted upon going | to the bed of my boy and praying for his life, and that I refused \o Joperation performed. [am a ¢ Selentist, it f# true, but I am not an y child's head was crushed in and 1 realised that an overatlon un'y could save him. We did pray at the Usual wit, her frail shoulders began s could not resist the| t So bend tinder the burden, ad what | tetptiie of relicving. his wite, of the | cnareh, Wat, wmpan’t Ms tee ie Any Uhere was of childish innocence left | painful predioament of going to. fail, | Mother, Christian Be tntnl oF not, Ae fn her began to feel the torturing | bo'he forged the name of his employer | wT cai aut thas (he Oonraitce Gobta pressure. hidene | 28, 8 check, for $15, With $10 Of this bo a succesful one, surely what any A vaguo longing for a_ real e paid the judgment. With the ie-aw Up in hers a lunging that became | acter we Fal } remaining % he bought meticines for Christian “oman with a pallet in Ged THE WORLD: FRIDAY dobkhitbbe br PR br rrr Eb rrr rrr hr h herr bh rricbt arrival, While he was taking an early | ota Bruce Hopkins, and the boy lies; face was not | « gave her consent. She wanted to stay | Frantic with grief the woman hur-| other members to whom she told the) a fapking huge | Jo, where it was said he had abandoned red back to the hospital to confirm the the team and taken a train for Ne? | sank | Yorke. | 4 searched ‘for him there. Z actual want and made the buck- | his wife | y Liound of her lite seem strangely chill | He was discharged on the following | tw Pag Ree aa Era desolate, despite the precarious | day, Later hia brother-in-law got him |} 444 was fearfully crushed and I could Tuxury that had marked tt a Job in Bt. Louis, where he was ar- | eed was feanuly cwsit. th ‘A few Weeks ago Luelt oase became indictment for forgery rested after an desperate, The child had only one) had been found against tim, Mr. Levy frock and this she wore continually and handed to the Recorder proofs to sub- often slept in it all night long in the pstantiate this story, and che Court was Grand Central station while waiting | inclined to leniency. Bernstein could for her mother, Finally Inst Tuesday he waa ant to Dr. Fiske, who alweya| ad taken a fatherly Interest in the girl. Her errand was the usual one of bor. junds, but she did not adopt her been sent to jail for five years, ———— WOMAN DROPPED DEAD, he that something would have to be cone. and It makes me very angry to ave it gaid that 1 tried to stop the doctors from performing the operstion.”’ — | TONS OF COFFEE ROASTED. ‘Thonaands of Sacks Darned enious methods of perauasion,| Mary Keller, twenty-four years old, me orles of atarvation and relentless | dropped dead in the residence of F. G twockizn Fire, Pauly, where she waa employed as a an ee st. | servant, She had dreased to go out! The blegest coffce roast ever exe heeican and, fectieas Barts ey | when she was at with apoplexy cuted In this city came to to-day ler of her precoclovaness, she trournd | tn” expired almost Instantly, in South Brooklyn. Bullding No. 12 of oul her longings with ali the child's ee the Bush Warehouse Company, at the pathos that was left in her. REGISTRATION DAY TO-DAY. foot of Forty-thint street, burned. In That the physician was shocked by | ‘the story and that he made up his mind that something must be done soon to hange the course of her life Register to-day! ft were stored thousands of sacks of coffee, | phe fire epread so rapidly that two alarms were turned in. After the fire- hi tl eT og oA Polls will be open trom 7 Ay M. mon got to the some the binge was held eat the oP. M, betees fay eh f two ory atl hid ie a0 i eved to have originat uence to. If you do not register you cannot from spontaneous combustion In hemp the ‘vote, Register new! jand fute stored in the building with the cote. Juoce GQ bi OLM ster MR. COULTER EVEN CIR Will NOT f (GLADYS MONA TREMAYNE, THE THIRTEEN-YEAR-OLD GIRL, AS SHE APPEARED IN COURT, | Sketches Made by Artist Mortimer of Girl Who Ran Away from Mer Mother and Scenes in the Children’s Court, Where Girl » a> iu Cuurge of Mrs, Loew- W hitney, | and Refused to Return to Her Weeping Parent. seleblel-ebisiebeishi brie rier initieebebiebeiebeieinetel de bebsbreteielebleth siejeistefel belsteletel deleielsleieebivietetel= ING, OCTOBER 14, 1904, VISITOR'S Mrs. Mary Milward Admits that, She Perjured Herself. in Charge that He Abused His Jet CHILO Sevan) Bevin AM weary AS nite mother ENTER) Tet, a if “' Six-Year-Old Daughter, To obtain possession of the old daughter of her brother, Mra. | Milward, of Guttenburg, confessed the Court of Special Sessions, in |City, yesterday, that she perjury. She repeated the jto-day, excusing herself on the that the brother, Patrick Hanley, Be | Ing a widower, coukd not take j the child as well as & woman | acquaintance who had become ted with her. i Hanley’s home fs at No, U5 Herman avenue, Guttenourg. The neighbors” say that he is a steady, industrious — man. He was arrested on Sept. f1.on | warrant sworn out before Justice of r Peace Cilfford by Mrs. Milward. Bhe made aMdavit that Hanley abused his little daughter, 4 beautiful ‘child, The father was so indignant in eourt ~ that he was restrained with from inflicting harm upon his sister, Brother Sent to Jatt. at vi st OY OF 4 MURDER Young Paul Herbert Schmidt Traced from Here to Padu-, cah, Ky. and Charged with’ Killing William Taylor. | Charged chapter in the life of a New York boy) of eighteen who, reared in a refined and) | pleasant home, has drifted step by step | from the right path. St East Eighty-fifth atreet, and the William Taylor at the summer home of W. HL N. Crittenden, in Sherman, Conn. | Young Schmidt's mother, who is | fine-looking, motherly woman of thirty- tight, told an Evening World reporter in the comfortably furnished home| which the wayward boy deserted for, 4 roving career, the story of the boy's ‘by playing truant from school Mrs, Schmidt is heartbroken at the terrible act her son is said to have committed, but her greatest sorrow is for her lttle daughter Marjorie, a | beaudiul and unusually accomplished child of thirteen, who worshipped her brother Herbert. Nis Letter to Mother, der, but several days ago she received & letter from Herbert In which he said: Mother—Mother, by your dear heart, I swear I did not do it. I know who did, but can't tell. How wi yed at home with you, Forgive me. the boy was charged until last night, when detectives toxl her the story. Young Schmidt was arrested at Pa- |ducah after Pinkerton detectives had | The mother did not know until tast | night that the boy was accused of mur-|% Mra, Schmidt did not know with what | been looking for him for five weeks. He wd William Taylor had been em- ployed at the country homo of W. H. | N.' Crittenden. wholemle druggist of No, 7% East | Tenth street, this city, One day when | he was away a neighbor cailed and | found the doors open. side a spene of disorler was discovered, drawers and safe and desk were open jand there was blood on the floor, A trall of blood was followed to @ to-| mato patoh, where Taylor's body found. His head was crushed and near him was an old gun the stock of which was broken On searching the house it was found toat valuables amounting to over $00 were gone and that a team of horses and carriage were missing from the stable. Schmidt was gone also, The boy was traced to Paterson, N. Traced to Paducah. | As the boy had talked previously of| going to Bt. Loula Pinkerton detectives They then traced him through an employment | agency to Paducah, Ky,, and there found that a boy going by the name of Gardner has been arrested for burg: f lary, Suspecting that he might be their man they confronted him and !t ja sald | obtained from him a full confession He said he was robbing the Crittenden | 7 entered and ho} house when Taylor knooked him sense) dragged his body to the tomato patch, ‘The boy |e being held in Paducah wait- ing extradition papers. “Herbert was a bright boy, and we were so proud of fim when he was a little fellow,” said Mrs. Schmidt, who in almost crased by the terrible charge brought against tor wayward gon, think now that he was too bright. was really a genius. He Mr, Crittenden ts a |% Watking in- |j ess with a gun and |4 ae all, not walt—do The places of registration are open from 7 A. M. to 10 P. M. Register Senn et et erent een nanan creer meen amas aman IF YOU WOULD MAKE SURE OF YOUR VOTE REGISTER 1T0-DAY, This i¢ the first day of registration. Remember, you cannot vote unless you are registered. There are only four days of registration in You may be prevented from registering later on, Therefore, do -Judge Clifford was impressed |the story of Mrs. Milward and Hanley to jail to awalt the action | the Grand Jury, Hanley chafed at « finement and requested that his be hurried to the Court of Special sions. : Judge Blair, sitting in the Court Special Sessions yesterday, called tl case. Assistant Prosecutor Clarke” AUTO RACES MAKE Uncle of President Under Doo-| not follow tor’s Care Since Contest for gonfeests {t to-day. Do not shirk your duty as a citizen. to-day. ~ im 3 ane We tried to keep him In school and rea-| safe,” he sald, ‘I heard she was on the son with him, but finally our pastor at : bi |Grace Church advised us to have alm fent to Randall's Isiand to the Juve- he went away nile Asylum. Herbert was alwsys crazy for the country. #0 later the u | Children's Ald Society got him a good with murhes te She tee home with a family named Brack at A woman of her acquai the child and got Mrs. ested in the project of ar oe eae, who jopted. They agreed that of abuse would Cara ot ati against the father, as ‘ ir remarkably pretty, Vanderbilt Cup—Intends to Frame Speed Law. Slocum | “We begged him again to reform, but | That Is the last we heard of him until this terrible trouble. How he ever learned his wicked Ways I can't understand. He had the same opportunities as Robert B, Roosevelt, the venerable arjorie, and she is Buchannon, W. Va the best child imaginable, Jt la terrible uncle of President Roosevelt, ts very ti! Asteended at © “When he came home he fell in again for her. I know she wil made to at his country jseat, Lotos Lake. at with evil companions, though his father ee ee eee ere ual’t | Sayville, 14 2, He has been under a t . a “ 5 ey Seago te vor a while, gut Analiy | in the Schmidt home there ls & large |4octor's care since he attended the re- left his job. ‘Then he quit our home, | The boy ts Paul Herbert Schmidt, son | We led’in Bast Bixth alreet then, and of Mr. and Mrs, Bertram Schmidt, of| 1 never saw Herbert after he went | sway, until one day last June he came e. charge arainst him is the murder of and beeped ‘him to. way at home and be food boy. "The last tim wy & There on Herbert. “T only cam: [ & ¥ We commenced ** to have trouble with him when he was 73 eleven and kept staying away from school, yet he always kept up with the \other boys and had his lessons perfect aca All the many ails caused by cof- fee yield to well boiled POSTUM FOOD COFFEE Get the tamous bs Rat os waviie yy ey when [ opened the door there stood nicture of young Herbert, the black |cent auto races. / sheep, with his sister Marjorie and his little brother Edward, taxen two years iene The bovis late for his age and |*" auto enthusiast and has recently in spite of the fact that he Is now only | tendered valuable ald in framing @ pro- elghteen veare old he looks like a man | posed improved auto speed law. of twenty-one, | -4 |SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS, | {3 Though nearly eighty years old, he ts Hey 1 gave it to him on | et ¢ I saw my boy was was a ring at the b No Extra Charge for It. Advertisements for The World may be left at any American District Messenger Office in the elty until OP. Mt je to see if Marjorie was, tailored clothes at a popular price and _ you can’t escape the fact any more than you can avert the coming of eternity. After all the time, the labor, the thought and the fortunes that have been expended in the effort to convince the people that the ready-to-wear machine made clothes fill the bill, it needs but a touch of the “real thing” to utterly dissipate the effect che manus facturers think they have produced. HE Atterbury System, which employs the methods of the custom-tailor on an enlarged scale, represents the only sincere and successful effort that has ever been , made in this country to produce the clothes ot gentility, which are utterly lacking in the unregulatable traits of clothing bought at a store. There are thousands of men in America who have waited from youth to old age for the redemption of the manufacturers? promise to “do better,” but it devolves upon The Atterbury System to find the way—and the only way— to appease the clamor of taste. That way is to produce at a popular price hand-tailored clothes that are ready to put on, which possess the style, the swing, the dash, the individuality and character of custom-tailored garments and positively will retain them until the material is ready for the old clothes man. That in brief explains the meaning of The Atterbury System. Atterbury System Labels in Each Garment Authorized Agents in All Cities Atterbury Suits and Overcoats for Gentlemen and Young Gentlemen, $20 to $60 ¢ Atterbury Spstem Offices and Tailor Shops Fifth Avenue 110-112 New York