The evening world. Newspaper, November 2, 1904, Page 3

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} rr WORTD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 2, 1904. NAO SON WITH EW Proposal to Stop Reinstatement by Courts of Dismissed Police- men Arouses Ire of Tammany and He Tacks Into Still Water MOYNIHAN REBUFFED AS HE ASKS TO BE RESTORED. Commissioner Will Put Him on Trial Again—Emergency Hos- pital for Brooklyn Bridge En- tynnee, Folloying the passage of @ resolution ‘by the Tammany Hall Executive Com- mittee last night, assuring the members ‘of the Police Department that Tammany 4s not in favor of a court-martial sys- tem for offending policemen, Commi: sioner McAdoo, who advanced the vlan. gracefully retired from his positiaas ¢o- day, But he continues to insist ghat the present system, by which it Is Ail Most Impossible to get rid of a police- man, no mater how fiag:ant *t dere- Netions, {# unsatisfactory and should be changed. The Commissjoner, in a lengthy state- ment, asserts that he has not made up his mind as to what would be the beat course to pursue, He suggested the court-martial system, he eald, mere- ly as a tentative plan, open to discus- gion, and in no sense as a policy, At any rate, he says, he would not advo- cate any change in cxisting conditions without the earnest approval of the Mayor. Me Admiren Honest Copa. Assuring the policemen that he ts the friend of the honest cop and‘the ain-) cere enemy of the Cishonest cop and the shirker, the Commfssioner assures the force as a body that it has his Geepest friendship, He announces that he will remain at the head of the de- partment unless asked to resign by the Mayor or summarily removed by the Governor, Force was added to the declaration af the Commissioner that the prevent fyatem of dealing with recalcitrant po- Uoen.en is unsatisfactory by a demant him for reinstatement to-day by b D. C, Moynihan, who wis dis- etlssed from the force under the Part Sage administration. The Supreme t has granted him a new trial Moynihan made the demand for rein: Statement in person and carried a copy of the ruling of the court in his hana. Commissioner McAdoo refused to rein- state him offhand, He tokl the deposed captain tw see the Corporation Couns ‘who will decide whether or not the cree of the court is final. If it is so lared the Commissioner will grant loynihan a new trial as speedily us possible, His Appropriation Cat Down, Commissioner McAdoo bewalle the cutting down of his apportionment by the Board of Estimate. He asked for $140,000 for the repair of old and un- heailiy siation-houses. Toe appropria- tion for this purpose was cut to $4,» In all the poilce appropriation was cut $619,700. The Commissioner will have to get along without two additional cap- tains, 87 sergeants, $l roundsmen, 1 doormen and 3 boller inspectors that he had counted on, By order of the Commissioner a rest room wili be ereoted at the Manhat- tan end of the Bridge for the use of those overcome or Injured in the crush and a trained nurse will. be kept on y there. Hereafter persons injured at the Bridge will be taken to Gouv- erneur Instead of Hudson street Hose pital. Gouverneue Hospital is not so orewded as that a¢ Hudson street, QUOTE LECTION LTO MORGH Tammany Committee Calls At- tention to the Fact That He Must Appoint Democratic as Well as Republican Deputies. @uperintendent of Elections Morgan received a letter to-day from the chair- man @f the Tammany Hal! Law Com- mittee, which was followed by a per- onal call from Chatrman Charles H. Knox, and other members of the tom- mitteethis afternoon, Upon thelr leav- Morgan left his private office a few moments later, but refused to talk. he letter sent to Mr. Morgan by Mr, toad: beg to call your attention to sec- 5 and § of the act under which form you duties, Section § pro- ‘The State Superintendent shall H a i if i il} ge 3 Se Bat latn cei ae It fe ieee & Republican deputy to any ratle Zepuiy, te be thete repnain ‘there aa tong sn tne remains, section 6 of the Act it (© appoint 200 additional depotiee, 1 pedtion,. whlch provid Provides: Sppoinied under this section shai not a be entitled to attend at the poling aces on election day.’ "On behalf of the Democratic organ! gation that the above provisions of be enforced on election day, case you have any Warrants for ime bantecte Ceeceasea moorAtic olty of or York 1 that warran' executed ejay Fe abla In es “it wo Hae peed tact ade > '|ASKS SUPREME COURT ACCUSES JUDGE OF HATING RIVAL Brother of Julius Kremer, Who. Was Defeated by Sanders in the Thirteenth District, Says | He Cannot Have a Case Tried, TO ISSUE A MANDAMUS. Judge Sanders Files an Affi- davit Denying the Statement that He Hates Kremer or Say- ing He “Would Rub It In.” Political campaigning on the east side varies in method from that in Harlem And presents many novelties, One of them appeared in Justice Amend’s part of the Supreme Court to- day, when the friends of ex-Judge Goldfogle lined up on one side and those of Joseph Levinaon, his rival can- didate for Congress, on the other in a serap over & suit for $192.9 in Judge Leon Sanders's Thirteenth District Mu- nietpal Court Irving. I. Kremer got an order from Justice McCall, In behalf of Louts Pol- stein, directing Judge Sanders to show cause why 4 mandamus should not be issued compelling him to try the case of Polstein against Hannah PR. Simon to recover pay for tepairing the chim- ney of her house, Says Judge Hates Him, Irving Kremer declared In an affidavit that he was the brother of Jutlus G. Kremer, who held the oce of Justice jin the Thirteenth District for a month by appointment of Mayor Low, waly to be beaten by Sanders for a full term vt dhe election vast year, and that | Judge Sanders hates his late rival and jhutes him because he is ex-Julge Kremer's brother, He alleges. that [Judge Sanders has sald that neither of the Kremers should expect ary con- [sideration tn his court, and that ae |“would rub it in” to the Kremer | says the Polstein case has been hang ing tire since Juno and that ne coult pet 't to irial because Judge Sanders keps putting hin off, and yesterday told him the papers in the cass were jlost. He also says that the rulings have bean against nim in every case before Judge Sanders. Judge Julius Kremer argued for the mandamus (to-day, and Moses Fel- tenstein appeared tu opposition In be- [half .f Judge sanders, He presented the affidavit of Judge Sanders setting forth that there are al- ways $0 cases on his docket, with a day calendar of fifty cases; that he can't possibly keep traca of them all, and has no special recollection of the Polstein case, but that if it has been adjourned from time to time it haa been either by consent or upon legal grounds. As for the lost papers, tney are in the custody of the clerk of the court, whose quarters are temporary and inadequate, and, as the papers are handled over every day, it # nothing remarkable that some should be misiald or lost As for any enmity toward his |; | rival or his brother, Judge Sanders \t is preposterous and that he never allows personal or political differences to affect his judicial action and has treated Kremer ‘no worse and no bet- “T never spoke disparagingly of his brother or himself to Samuel Zirpris or any one else, not the Kramers | should expect nothing from my court, nor that I ‘would rub It in’ to the afore. mentioned gentlemen, not In hic verba, orin any language Samuel Zirpria also makes aMdavit to the suine effect and says he never said so to either Kremer, who, as @ matter of face, have neither of them spo- ken to him since last election, when, Presumably, he was @ Sanders ma: Herman Friend, one of the court clerks, reduces the whole thnig to a tempest in a teapot. He says Irving Kremer demanded yesterday why his case wax not on the calendar, and when he put his hand in vhe proper pigeon: hole he did not find the pavers, then he told Kremer he had misinid the pavers and he'd have to walt tll he hunted them up. but Kremer wouldn't wait Later he began the mandamus proceed ing, In the mean time the clerk foun: the papers In the wrong pigeon-hole, an he says the adjournments marked on them were all “by consent.” The Sanders faction all declare that the proceeding was taken by the Kre- mere because theye are for Levinson for Congress, while the Sanders party are for Goldfogte. SCHOO, CHLOE WARE PA Boy Rushes Into Classroom, Sounding Alarm and Pupils Flee from Building—Clothes Torn, but No One Hurt. ‘Two hundred children who attend the Westerieigh Colle at New Bright § 1, were scared inio a panic to-day by the cry of “Fir They rushed Out of the class-rooms pell-meil, many having their clothes torn, but none be- ing seriously burt. A boy returning Iate to school dis- covered a fire in one of the buildings adjoining the main bullding, He rushed into the classrooms sounding the alarm. ‘The children didn't sand upon any ceremony, but got out the quickest and best way possible. The fire was exUn- guished by the firemen, who were soon Upon the sc-ne. Two years ago Wesverieigh College, which Was then at Westbury Park. burned down, a music \eacher losing his Hfe by jumping trom the window ee PEW IN GRACE CHURCH SOLD. Pew No. #, in the south transept of Grace Chureh, at Broadway and Tenth | street, was soll atyhe New York Real Estate Salesrooms to-day by Auction- A. H. Muller & Co. for the trustees rt eatate, ‘The didi Re M1 m he | ot $240, and after a serlen of ree t oy at it was pur- BRADLEY MARTIN, |r... AND BRIDE, MARRIED TO-DAY, AND CAS1iLE WHERE WEDDANG KLECEPTION WAS HELD LEN PAPAS HART'S BADE No “Ostentatious Display of Wealth” Marks Simple Wed- ding in Scottish Church Near Castle of Bride’s Father. PLANS CHANGED AT THE LAST MOMENT, Ambassador Choate and 200 Other Guests Attend the Cere-| mony—Young Couple Will Be in New York for Holidays, INVERNESS, Scotland, Nov, 2—Miss Helen Phipps, daughter of Henry Phipps the Pittsburg steel magnate and former partner of Andrew Carnegie, and Bradley Martin, jr, son of Mr, and Mrs. Bradley Martin, formerly of New York, were married at 2 o'clock this afternoon In the Presbyterian kirk, of Kiltarlity parish, near Beaufort Castle, the Archdeacor of London, Dr, Sin- clair, oMfciting. Although plans had been made for an elaborate wedding, the corenonles wore extremely simple, The change was made at the las: moment at the re- quest of the bride and bridegroom, iiss Amy Phipps, sister of the bride, w maid of honor, and Frederick Townsen| Martin, the bridegroom's un- ole, acted as best man, Ambassador Choate was the guest af honor, There were less than two hundred guests pres- ent, most of them Americans, The original wedding programme led for a great reception and wed- ding breakfast at Beaufort Castle, which he Phippses have leased for a long term of years from Lord Lovat. Instead of this there was an informal reception, at the conclusion of which the bride and bridegroom went in an au- tomobile to Beauly station, whence out than any other lawyer in his they went: by train to Coombe Abbey, . Coventry, the country seat of Lord Ne Never Said It, Craven, "Mr. Martin's brother-in-law, where they will spend the first two weeks of their honeymoon. They will travel in Egypt for a time and then to New York for the holida: JURY TOOK WOMAN'S WORD GE DONT Verdict Awarding Mrs, Gunther $2,500 Damages Set Aside as Contrary to Evidence— Witnesses Against Her, Justice Clarke, of the Bupreme Court, to-day set aaide the verdict of a jury awarding $2,000 damages to Mrs. BE. J Gunther for Injuries sustained in get- Ung off an open horse car in Elm street. The jury had belleved the woman's story, although the conductor, driver and two passengers, Henry Hess and a Mrs, Lach, testified tn contradiction, Mra, Gunther wanted to alight Worth street, her destination being the Five Points House of Industry. She said the conductor on the car elgnalled for a stop and that the car halted in the middie of Worth street. While she was getting off, woman fashion, with her back to the horses, the car started again and threw her, injuring her spine, §he had no corroborating witnesses The four witnesses for the company all teatified that the car had not stopped when Mrs, Gunther started to get off, and conductor and driver both declared hey had obeyed the rule forbidding a stop in the middle of the street. # The jury awarded 2.60 damages and Justice Clarke set aside the verdict as contrary (0 the weight of evidence. ee HAD “REVERSIBLE JAG.” (ried to Hiteh Horse “Wrong End to” and Walk Backward to Statt Patrick Reedy, of No, 189 West Forty- eghth street, whom Polleeman Nach- var, of the West Thirtioth street sta- ion accused of having a “reversible " was sent to the workhouse by (agistrate Barlow in Jefferson Market Vourt to-day, Nachoar found Reedy in tromt of the Vendome Hotel trying to hiteh @ horse to a hansom, facing the seat. When arrested, Reedy ingisted on ing backward all the way to tho station, ee RAILROAD PROPERTY SOLD. The Rio Grands, Sierra Marre and Pacte Ralitoad, tho Ui Paso Southern MIN | | | | Bradley Martin Ir. MANY DEAD RUSH OF WATERS Reservoir in North Carolina’ Town Bursts and Residents Overwhelmed in Streets.While | Others Drown in Homes. brick walls of the reservoir collapsed, | burying the home and family of Martin! Peoples. A million and a half gallons of water were released, and over a mile of ter- ritory was devastated. Thirteen resi-| dences were destroyed, and It Is im-| | possible at this time to state how many | lives have been lost | | Mayor O. B, Eaton ts at the head of | |@ large rescuing party and search ts! 0 yw being made in the debris for pos bie additional victims. The greatest { jexeltement prevalis and the volunteer rescuers are heroically workirg in’ the hope of saving mary who are known to have been carried down by the rushing waters, ‘The colored settle: | |ment In the vicinity of the reservoir | was entirely wrecked, and the negroes | are working diligenUy with the whites in the search for the missing. The cause of the disaster was the overtiow of the reservoir, and a thor ough Investigation will be made in order to wacertain if the negligence of any of | the employees at the pump station was | responsible for it . The reservolr burst without warning and some of the victims were drowned were overwhelmed on the streets. A negro man and his wife floated on thelr bed for 80 yards, Neither one was Jured. The water supply of the city Is not! Interrupted by the accident The reservoir is located on Trade | lwtraet, In the thickly retitled portion of |the city, The authorities held a meet- Ing this afternoon to prepare @ state- | |ment for the public, | MINERS PLUNGETO OATH SET Engine Is Disabled as Ten Are, Descending in a Cage, and| | All Are Hurled Down Several) Hundred Feet. | WILKFSRARRE, Pa, Nov, 2—-Ten miners were crushed to death ef drowned in the Auchine oss shaft of she | Delaware, Lackawanna & Weat.rh Coie | pany at Nanticok. to-day ‘The men had taken thelr position on the cage to be lowered in.» the shaft, NAN PATTERSON - MUST FACE JURY: |Despite Story of Oneonta Wit-| “ness that He Saw “Caesar”, Young Shoot Himself Girl Will Be Put on Trial, HAZLETON TO TESTIFY FOR THE DEFENSE. Fearing Detention, He and Fel- low-Mason, Seeing the Sui- cide, Kept Secret — Con- science Makes Him Appear. mit suicide in a cab in Weat Broad- y on June 4 last, Nan Patterson, who has been In the Tombs all sum- mer charged with murdering Young, will be put on trial. Hazleton has told hia story to Mr, Rand twice To-day he was accompanied to the District-Attorney's office by D. W. Couch, of Brooklyn, who assured Mr. Rand he believed Mr. Hazleton sincere and reliable. Mr. Hazleton Is seventy-elght years ald, but does not look over sixty, After he had been closeted an hour with Mr. Rand to-day the Assistant District-At- torney was asked what conclusion had been reached about Nan Patterson. He replied “L make it a rule never to discuss & caee that I am going to try.” This means that the Patterson girl will be placed on trial, Mr, Hasieton will probably be the chief witness for the defense. Quick Trial Promi: A trial this month has been promised, [but It le not certain the girl will face | 4 jury for some time. The District-At- torney's office has pursued a policy of walle asleep in thelr beds, while others | delay in her case, threatening to hold | her in the Tombs until her brother-in- law, Morgan Smith, who is alleged to have bought the revolver with which Young was killed, voluntarily eurrea- vers himeelt. ‘The Patterson girl was when she learned of the Hasleton con? feasion to-day, She has gained flesh since she went to the Tombs and the regular hours have greatly improved overjoyed | SAID HE WAS A WIDOWER; | June next. ls in Bellevue Hi | tien @ eine and a wa CMDB LOVE OR NARED MAN Margaret Ansing’s Mind Gives Way on Discovering Duplicity| of Person She Nursed Back to Life in German Hospital. ASKED HER TO WED HIM. When the Man’s Wife Heard of Their Relations She Caused Young Girl's Dismissal, and She Is Now in Bellevue. Margaret Ansing, a beautiful young Dutch girl, who has been a nurse In the German Hospital for the last three | years, and would have graduated tn | tal rav- ing mad to-day, the result of the du-! picity of a marred man, who, posing | aa a wealthy widower, won her affec- tion and confidence on a promise of marrl ‘The shock of learning how she had been decelvel was a great one to the girl, but she bore up under it bravely vntll the man’s wife, learning of the re- hition, had her dismissed from the Ger- man Hospital, adding disgrace and pub- Melty to her other troubles, It was too much for the young girl, and her mind gave way. At Bellevue Hospital tt was sald to-day that she | might never recover her mental facul-| Mes and would prombly have to be sent to an asylum. What makes the case particularly pathetic fs that the man was nursed back to life and strength by his victim, and won her love by his Mes, when she was work- ing night and day to # the ravages of disease B ty Made Her a Favorite, The unfortunate girl comes of a good Duteh family. with a Une of steamers running between Antwerp and Cherbourg; her brother, Otto, is purser on a steamer plying be+ tween this port and Bouth Americ and her sister, Gertrude, is a nurse like herself. Shortly after coming to tha country Margaret Ansing entered the German Hospital and worked hard for saccess. Her great beauty made her a favorite with everybody, and for three years she forged steadily ahead. Six months ago the man mentioned entered the howpital as a private pa- tent, He Js of middie age, sald to be WINSTON BALEM, N.C, Nov. 2—) ws ieithetanding that Milton W.| in the real estate business in this city Thirteen persons are known to bis) sito of Oneonta, Otsego County, | His first name ts said to be Charles, but dead apd many more are missing as the) | Assistant District-Attorney | the héspfth) authorities refuse to give Feault of the burating of the reservoir) Oo) 4 2 i cumstantial story of seeing |hie last name, Mise Ansing wag as- at this place early to-day. One of the) Caesar Young, the bookmaker, com-|#l€ned to the care of this man, No one noticed that there was anything par- ticularly intimate in their relations, The man was very tll, and night and day Anally discharged, completely restored to heaith It develope now that during his time in the hospital this man told Miss Ansing ne was a widower, that he was worth $0,000 and it would give him great happiness to have her marry him when he got well, and share his little fortune, From laughing at him first the girl came to love him very much, and after he left the hoepital she met him frequently by appointment on her nights away from duty. Told Sister of Her Lover, Thare was nothing the giel's love then for her t© be ashamed and she told her alster Gertrude ard a friend of hers, | Haacken, all about him, Some tim She took these two gl to the theatre, and said "Cha pent her the tickets. She alae sho: h he tad giv: She sas-she w very mach ‘n with the man, and thit as soon as Wey were motried incy were going to her old home in Hoiiand, buy the old Lome stead, which dad fallen fito other hands, and give it to her father. Her sister laughed at Margaret's onthusiasm over her lover. weeks elapsed after this, and Bom the girl wes as happy as ever. ‘Then came a change. The girl met the man out walking with his wife one day, She was his w fe, although @ had believed In him before tha: a nue Veritie pst or It and went on but she bore up unde: we vr Wute at ihe German Hospital Last Monday the man's wife caiied a the hospital and showed Dr, Stohiman thé superintendent, a batch of letters er were the love letters of Miss her health. In appearance she ta much | UO* 1° her, sweetheart, written wh m tractive than when arrested, ‘The wife demanded her dismissal, and “This man," she said, “must have yy, sropiman euled Miss Ansing in and told her she must leave the ho been there. He knows what he ds taik-| ital. He expressed regret’ cece “e, ing about, As well as 1 can remember trance hut sald he had no other ho |# stating the truth. Of course I Was 80 agitated my memory of events ia not quite car, Under instructions from my attorneys | am not allowed to tell what 1 remember of what hap- poned in the gab pervious (9 the death | of Mr, Young, but it seems to me the statement of Sir Hasieton is desirving uf attention,” He Feared Det * Hasieton suys (he reason he withheld fis lestimony 90 long Was that he was ahd OF bung LOCKE Up Lu Lie Flow ob Menten, aver aye, ue CAMeNICe Has veer prodding aun aod Haaky He deverm vreust of the wi yur pose he came Lo rk from home and visited the District-Attorne ® ys de at the hospital had’ violated ule. He told her to take her time avout guing, Girl Hecomes Insane. Inder this blow the She saw her di it was to viotent irl collapsed ut- erace Kenerall ¥ insane tha: tor ar would infure herself she was fined In a room and watched be other nurses As she “arse it was decided nd er to tellevue, and she was taken there last nieht wht has won her the dee sympathy of all the nurses at the Ger- » Hoapttal who know her story. Dr one af the moat «known. ‘The girl he swestent. through her course much as anybody th oe her away * necesaity woof ev the total deoth of which is 1709 fee..|? uvevet, #6 J At the boitom is a sump filled with was walking 4, | Maula chee water. The shaft is a double one With| Hroadway, under the eiey oad | two carringée | Goon o¢ spout tnisty oe thirty When tne signal was given the en-| oi age. ‘He was oe wena _ is sald. ginger to lower the cage engine got beyond the con gineer, One of the cages shot upward | to the sieve at the top of the shaft and this caused the other cage carrying the men to become overbalanced and it fell to the bottom of the shaft. A party of rescuers was organised quickly, but the work of rescue wus dificult, The sides of the shaft were torn out by the car in its wild rush te the bottom, and the foot of the shaft Wes filled with debris of all kinds, ‘The bodies of the victina were horrl- biy mangled, Those that were not ferns or »| of the en+ « light m business Aa chat member of tho saw my cha “We had & for some tie Wa that was coming toward ua Was a man and 3 # sitcing parily (acing cacu cored us As (hough their hands were clasped together. re ay peared to be some commotion 'n that eam “1 looked up a w sone id he looked ‘Masynie tra wad apone the Shot rired, 4. 1 saw the young $e her hands—; oman aud Pere ne: | Sees claims it te ru 5 i | NEW YORK CLAIM OPPOSED. from Spain and Germany Warships Tatked Of, ¢, in bet SAN NC Coneu Government povern eat of Germany nted a for ma] protest to the Dominican Govern ment and the American Minister gainst the execution of the arbitration finding In the claim of the Santo Domin- go Improvement Company, of New that joa and ee mored that German war- cont and >» of th prese te, bo sumone’ Bore » & bet © him from | | man, Fisher wanted to pilot himself as/omcers of the Eoultable Life, whe. he had for five hours ever since the| gan an shooting. Hor father is connected) ; Miss Ansing attended him until he was| Wb that Miss Ansing in writing to| t] other ter BLACK A HD EAL SHMOLE Arrest of Man for Writing Threat: Leads to Indictment of His Accuser for Defrauding Insur~ ance Company, g SHOT HINGE WALKED HOUR Bullet Lodged Over Edwin Fish- er’s Heart, but He Wandered About the Streets Until Picked Up by a Policeman. The arrest of Pasquale Cortese last’ July on @ charge of writing a Hand" letter demanding $10 from | rino Capparelll, a banker at 3 and Hester atreets, led to-day to arrest of Farino and his brother, . cesoo Capparelll, on a charge of larceny. Francesco |s a foreman r Street-Cleaning Department, 5 Aa Indictment has been found agains © the Capparelll brothers on be furnished by the Baultable Life Tae surance Company. The charge ls «rand latceny and involves the alleged @he Gagement by the Capparellia of @ healthy Itallan to impersonate thetp brother, who was dying, in an exaiminds | ton for life ineurance, This bappened, according to Alexander & Green, attorneys for the inauranes |company, back in 19% The favte ‘ae jet forth to the Grand Jury might never have come to light Lut for the arrest of Corte 7 When he was arraigned in f Street Pollce Court during the Sia Hand” excitement last Me charged with thrextening the Iie of ry y banker, Cortese admitted that byte WENT TO CENTRAL PARK TO PUT AN END TO LIFE. Young Candy-Maker Had Been Worrying Over a Love Affair —In New York Hospital and May Die, Edwin Fisher, a young men employed as a candy-maker at No. 2M Figtith avenue, accompanted by Policeman Louls Olpp, of the West Twentieth street sta- tion, entered the station at an early hour to-day and asked for the sergeant | at the desk. ‘I'm shot,” sald Fisher and@ to prove it opened his cout showing @ bullet wound near his heart, Blood had soaked his vest and under garments, “I shot! myself while in Central Park around | 12.0 o'clock,” It wus then 6 in the morning and! Fisher had been wanderiug through the Streets for almost five hours with a} wound so serious that an ordinary man would have collapsed at once. written a letter demanding $100, sud, 1¢ was money lawfully due him services performed, coo Then he told how Genaro Olpp saw Fisher stagger down | was dying when his brothers put it am 0) Elxhth avenue, near Twentieth street. | application for $8,000 insurance om He is a well-built man and was fairly] life, They sent Cortese to take the) well dressed, The policeman went to| physical examination, promising Fisher's stance just as he reeled | $10, Genaro Cappare:i died in 108 and fell to the pavement, When | nig brothers compromised with the ine Fisher was raised to his feet he pressed | surance company for $00, Because am & handkerchief to his breast and told|iney had to compromise, Cortese eald, | the policeman that he had been shot! they refused to pay him his $10 4 five hours before, | Cortese was discharged. His story Annoyed by the presence of the police-| was brought to the attention of Investigation, Ce In the station he told Ser-|witresses were discovered and the m f ory. He waa tired | dictment was found, De affalr was at the bottom | qeants McNaught and O'Connell: of his misery and he shot himself to! rested the Capparelils to-day at @ end it all. He threw the revolver away | home, No, #4 Ttroome street and started out on his long tramp. “I'm | corder Goff held them in $5,080 ball tired,” he said, ax he braced himseif| for trial. against the Seraeant’s desk = eae An ambulanen was sent for from the 23 New York Hospital, where Fisher was £m LESCSES ee ne taken. The bullet lodged directly over the heart and Fisher's condition is critical, An operation may save his | Hfe. Rudolph H. Von Dohien le the owner f the candy store where Fisher was lemployed since June last, He boarded | with the Von Dohlen family, and has n nas been act.) queerly during the last three or r days. He bas stayed out late at ht, and I thin worrled aver flairs with two women, He leit y aternoon, and | 26 West 23% Street - $ Individuality in Ly have not ne At first Fisher refused to give any In- formation leading to his identity, but | ’ . en told by the police that he would QJ men’s dress is most |protably die he volunteered his name 3 and a 4. desirable. The Perrin hand- wear for men has §% styles to suit all in-Q dividualities for all ¢ occasions, Walking, % riding, driving and dress wear. Ne Men's Chevretie Gloves, For Street Wear, 1200 DOCOOOOKXKKN n > DEMENTED MAN DES TO EATH Plunges Head First from Third- Story Window to Street After Fighting Off Wife and Knock- » ing Neighbor Senseless, . Delirious or Insane from Iliness, | Honry Deggers, of No, 04 Ferry street, | Hoboken, leaped from his bed early to- day. and when his wife grappled with him in her efforts to prevent him from | «pringing from the third-story window of their home hé turna@ @pon her und fought her with his flats The woman screamed, but held fast Hor cries attracted the attention of William Johns, a tenant in the house, and, bursting through the door, he ran to the woman's asalatance The most fastidious can be Degaers was a powerful man, and | easily suited. The same care seeing Johns in his Tes bent bie esl to workmanship and Te- dened him w [renay . ; Y Ry ‘ to the floor with his fists and turned | liable quality of material is a bi, part of all “Holly” Waists— — UMgain the’ wife grappled with her rengih was gone and ve ugh the closed window, carry. | “ ” , dived (BrOuE te ee Mack theaiee |, $250 TOU: 5 eam in nua mad dive Deggere struck a| aie table in the room on which @ jamp ite, TMA the ‘room, eetting “are to Tz HO J 10 WEST 2DST. lupon his neighbor, dealing him a olow “| $3.50 to $100.00, oll band, but her | he weve de and, with a spring, plunging | *4 head first to the stone Gagging ps ey | suits, a hundred diff rested. ‘The table was overturned anu| | curtains and chairs, | “Pifth Avenue Styles and Quality at © * Pith Aveuns Pleas” “Holly” blouses are made» in over 250 different mod , on the polm of the jaw. Johns fell | he brushed her a |gowns for all occasio dashed out his brains } models, $15 to $150. he lump fell to the floor, creaking in With Johns unconscious amid the James, and her own strength gone from lithe struggie with her hushand, are | reamed and ted to pull f the room. Her streng.n| yal to It, She then began fire with her bare hands. | ignited, and she surely ¢ heen burned to death, along neonsclous Johns, had not nts in the house heard her | screams and hastened to her ald | WRENN PLEADS GUILTY, Deggers ® % Drnegist Indicted for Assaatt tn IXI Firat Degree. i Robert T. Wrenn, a druggist, of No. tK 1 Sept. @, waiked into the office of John _MORE THAN 100 81. LR G. Van Morne, a civil engineer, at No, ‘ % Broadway, and fired two shots at For This Week Only, we wife, Who Was employ.< sana yet, wodlay pleaded guilty to 75 pi ment (ct ateault in the frat at Cc. veer een. when ne fired the two shots st wis Wife, succeeded In bisting W vam H, Lyons in the left should since hie arrest Wrenn has beer in the ‘omus, and when he was arraigned be- fore Judge Newburgee looked ver jawed. His counsel entered a plea |Full AP ua Nove i foe Sentenre, oy uni % | the prisoner,” the lawyer told Judge New pis act) He. te of mort AR eg | 81.00

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