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mS of Dry Dook Hotel Pro- Recently Arrested on Charge, Asserts Sho ED” MAN DECLARES POLICE PUT UP JOB, Ce wtive Declared to Have Been Revenge, and Two Detective- Will Have to De- Civil Suits. RICE’S STATEMENT _ ACCUSING POLICE, FF 414 onty what 1 was to1a to @e. 1 never saw the woman ntit she was arrested. 1 a0- @used her of robbing me be- one of the policemen age Ky the Fifth street “ me to do 40.—Con- feanton of Bernard Rive, ‘Bensational charges of conspiracy have! been made against the police of the WIL street station by Mrs. Rose Herts, ‘Wife of the proprietor of the Drydock Third street and the Bowery, Bernard Rice, the min accused of deirg in the conspiracy with the police, as made a full confession, Rice is now fm prison, and to-day he will hava to Sie fg the City Court on @ civil if eonspiracy charge I!mplicates De- e ergeants Patrick Qilday and e Barnes, of the Fifth street station, " and is the echo of the fight made ¥ the Dry Dock Hotel by the pots Fw an effort to close the piace policemen Were stationed in front of the house @m@ persons warned away until the] jor secured an injunction from Gaynor, on Sept. 6 lant, restrain- the police from continuing the tac- a? they had adopted. 4 Motive Was Revenge. MPollowing this, according to the latest complaint, the police conspired to send | Mrs. Herts to prison on a trumped-up of robbery tor the sole purpoes of Ketting revenge. Two weeks after "dhe Injunction was granted Mrs. Herts was arrested charged with robbery. + Ape” was made by Rernard i ‘and Serets, Gilday and Barnes | made the arrest. ‘Rico sald that he had come from Boffelo, where he lived, and that he ‘had been Jured Into the hotel and made | ¢6 Grink @ quantity of whiskey. Next | miofring he found that he had been He accused Mrs, Hertz and ‘ Was arrested. The sergeant at the 5 street police station insisted on bail for her. Rice represented i he was a friend of John G. Mil. “Barn, of Buffato, and that he had a living in Now York, Beshes | he said a gold watch was taken! him. ire. Hertz was arraigned the} Yorkville Police Court next day. Rice} S G14 not appear. The detectives naked! ‘time to get evidence net the woman | and for three days she was held. On | third day the detectives produced telegram in court, dated Jersey Cliy| Gnd signed by Rice It sald that he Wea afraid of more publicity in the Tease and had returned to Buffalo. In “@ourt that day a woman appeared who ore that she was a sister of Mra, Herta was discharged by ‘the Magistrate. Rice Pinced Under Arrest, "The woman who represented that she ‘Was Rice's sister gave her name as An- mle Beesman, and said that she lived 4 No. %® East Nineteenth street. shaJeft court she we ‘ followed detectives in the employ of Herta, it was found that she was living| With Rice at No. 2 West Sixteenth @treet, It was found that Rice had Bever been out of town, A civil suit was then filed agatnst ives Barnes and lay and Ides, Was then arrested on an order | | Signed by Justice Delehanty, of the City } Court, and bis remarkabdie confession | followed. Rice was completely unsiruny O84 wept copiously when placed under Grrest. After declaring that his charge Mrs. Hert? was inspired by the Police, Rice sid “I have been sorry for it since, and | WAS several times on the point of go- Ang to Hertz and telling him the truth TD Was told by a big man whose name I @o pot know to go to the Dry Dock Hotel and afterward claim I was Tobbed. He said the police were down ‘on the place and I would be doing them © Good turn. I went to the place alone apd had some drinks, but 1 wasn't @rugred or robbed. 1 think there was & Woman served me with drinks. 1 0 , Know the name of the policeman told me to say | was robbed and that Mrs. Hertz did !t. but he was a [Bie man, and I can identify him if 1) eee Dim again. 1 do not know what ‘] | 1 went to the place, but it was bart GA. M when [ left I did nor sleep there. | Bi) EE @ telegram was produced hy the | y im court with my name signed to eying I had gone to Buffalo it was forgery.’ A man and woman called at the office Bherif Prianger to-day tw arrange Dail for Rice. They offered a bank @howing a depostt of 49 ard $4 | te make up the % ball P Clete Donohue refused Bank-book and the two le Swould retern with This Rendered at Ludlow Breet Jail Warden. —— WED IN LONDON, but acvept ke Lend Mies Anna Cos, were married at St. At noon to-day. gave away ° er, of he best man. “iy “Nov. 12.—Lewis Washing: | ~ NORE Leading Protestant Clergymen Will To-Morrow Open Three- Yoar Campaign Against Ro- marriage of Divorced Peraons REV DR, DIX TO PRESIDE AT INITIAL MEETING, Object Is to Create Sentiment Which Will Foroe Adoption in 1907 of: Canon Absolutely Forbidding Such Remarriages Leading ministers and laymen of the Protestant Episcopal Church will to- morrow begin a three-year campaign to prevent the marriage of divorced per- fons under any and all circumstances. The purpose of the churehmen is te create such @ sentiment against di- vorcees being remarried that the neat Genera) Convention of the Churoh tn 1907 will be compelled to adopt a canon forbidding Protestant Eptscopal clergy- men marrying any divorced person as the divorced husband or wife |s The campaign will be opened at Maas-mesting at 4 o'clock to-n.crrow afternoon in &. Agnes's Chapel, Colum- bus avenue and Ninety-second gtreet. Dr. Morgan A. Dix, rector of Trinity Parish, wf! preside at the meeting Dr, Dix will shortly issue a statement in which he will say that In none of the nine churches and chapels of Trinity will divorced persona be permitted to marry. Result of an Agreement, “This ts not an order to the clergy of this parish,” sald Dr, Dix, “but it Is the result of an agreement into which we have entered. Nowhere in Trinity Parish will ecclesiastical approval be given to the marriages of such persons, no matter whether the persons who de- ‘re to marry are called the innocent parties or not.” The present campaten owes Its origin to the recent action of the General Con- vention in Boston, whe compromise canon was adopted. The prime mover in the canpalgn Is the Rev. Dr. William T. Manning, vicar of the wealthy and infivential St. Agnes's Church. Among those who will addr the/meeting to- morrow will be the Right Rey. Dr, David Greer, Bishop Coadjutor of New York, who is on record as being opposed to the compromise canon Seats wil! bo reserved in the chancel for clergy: men who attend. Oth et hinge Follow. “Tt {# hoped,” said Dr, Dix, “what the Mass-meeting will be followed by many others, until public sentiment has beer fully aroused. This is a campalan 0% education. The anti-divorce canon was defeated only through « technicality. 1 believe firmly that the number of mem. bere of the Church who oppose the re. Marriage of divorced versons ts con- stantly Increasing. The next conven- Hon meets in three years and by that time it i expected that so great will by the sentiment on the subject of di- voree It will be possible to obtain the enactment of the canon tn its original | torm, “This divorce evil must be checked It! wil undermine society and ruin the country If it la not stopped. There | were granted in the Untied States last 9.000 divorces, and in #0 Der cent. of them, I doubt not, there were remarringes within a few days of hours. Carriages wait at the decor of the divorce court to take those who have been pigieased to contract, other r fore the | y E Wile aecheen Ink js fairly dry “Tam in favor of forbidding remar- rhage of the divorced under fay clr. cumstances, In a few tnatances there would be hardship and unbapoiness, but the good which would come From a firm Opposition to the marriage of those who have been divoreed would far outbal- Anee any suffering {n individual cases, Me greatest wood to the greatest num: | ber should be the rule. I think the only Way Is to take a poaltion which is abe solute. This campaign has been begun 1 lines suoh as these, and we believe the country will reach such convictions that the General Convention will adopt < Despondent Man Sends Me and Is Killed, WIFE HURRIES HOME Stonecutter, After senting his little daughter out with word to her mother that he would be dead in ten minutes, Joseph silo, thirty-four yeare old, @ Bohemian, jumped from the fire-escape of his home, on the third floor of the rear tenement at No. 1464 First avenue, to- day and was instantly killed when he struck the pavement below, His slcull was fractured and the reot of his body terribly crushed. Despondency over a long !llness with rheumatism, and inability to work be- Cause of the affiletion, is supposed to have driven him to suloide, He was & stone-cutter by trade, but for the last few years had been able to work but Ittle because of his rheumatism. Nils wife was compelled to work In a cigar factory at Avenue A and Bixty- elghth street to port the family. The couple had one child, Mary, seven years old Depressed by Hheumatiom, For the vast week Sidlo had been suf- fering from an unusually severe attack of rheumatism, and was very depressed in spirits. Mrs. Sidlo went to work as uearal this morning, Waving her hushand and daughter In the tenement together, Bhortly before noon Sidlo gave the little girl 10 cents and the key to the tenement, and sald to her “Go and tell Mrs, Dusek (a friend and distant relative of the family, living at No. #8 East Beventy-firat street), that she is to go at once to the cigar factory and tell your mother that in ten minutes a wngon will come to my body away, for I will be dead” Wite inde Husband Dead, Not realising what her father meant, Mary burried out and went to Mrs. Duseck’s home, where she repeated the Message, Mra. Dusck knew Sidlo's con ition and instantly realised what was Wkely to happen, if it had not already occurred, She hurried to the cigar factory, got Mra Sidio, and the two women and the Nttle girl ran back to the Sidlo heme. When they reached there their neiati bors had already discovered Sidlo's huttered body in the yard and had notified the police, ‘Then Mary partly comprehended what her father meant, while her mother threw herself upon the body, frantic whkh grief, and refused to be oonaoted by her frienda. illo had evidently managed to climb out of the window upon the fire-ea- ape and to fling himself off. His body atruck one of the fire-ascape balcontes on the lower floor, causing minor in- Juries and partly, but not sufficiently brenking the fall, to save his The piiceman of the Bast street atation, who was summoned found that there was no need for an AmbWance surgeon, and the body was taken back to the Ridlo tenement, ONCE WEALTHY MA SOF MORPHINE Ferdinand = arff, a Wholesale Confectioner, Takes to Drink After Losing Wife and Becomes a Wreck, Formerly the anti-divorce canon withoi > the ant thout modifi —_ EDWARD A. M’QUADE SMILES, Appointed Perma Y an Chiet Clerk of Court, Edward A. McQuade, who has been acting chief clerk in the Beventh Dis- trict Municipal Court since the death in July last, of Chief Clerk Patrick McDevitt, was to-day appointed per- manently to that position for the full by Justice Herman Joseph, lary is $3,000 a year. fon of the late John 7 many years treasurer Hall Justice Joseph had a Iftie fun with MeQuade in announcing hs appoint- ment a stern and menacing court he called the clerk before him w ourt opened to-day and told him that he wanted his resign tion. When rhe Justice receive relaxed his stern expression and h, MeQuade the o' ing his appo! MeQuade's face then lomt its pursied expression, and he Itughed at the joke. Thomas Campbell, an actin tant tax commissioner, will take McQuade's piace as t clerk COL. D. T. ANTHONY DEAD, Editor of Leavenw The MeQuade (s a MeQuade, for of Tammany ded jorument Announc- th Times Vie~ tim of Heart Disease, LEAVENWORTH, Kan, Nov. Col DD. T Anthony, editor of Leavenworth Times, died at his home day of heart disease. He was ) Welldcnown pollielan, soMiier and writer, Hie sister ts Mire Susan #. ay, famous 48 & woman suffrag 12 th here y 4 and rec merit whe | lived, ny served in uring the Wa ived the Union of the Rebsliton a colonel Heutemancy by He was the only may nis aorta severed and recelved gthe ight in & gambiing HSnee— it happened to h iT? The new and War now ogy Bog The Ane answers a tem thousand other mail, 55 cents, The wreck of a once highly prosper- ous man died in Harlem Hospital to- lay, of morphine potaoning, when Fer- dinand Hart, sixty-four years old, parsed awa Tie had once been the largest caody wanufoeturer in Cinein- J ovith saothes tectory In Bt. Lonia but war the fernece tender ) the hous f Aupovus Mulleck, draughts: man, at No. 16 Wert One Hundied and Twenty-n’'nih street, for the oast two years | Mry. Halleck says that when Harft's wife died, fiftecn years ago, Harft be- came despon He took to drink and his business went to the bed, Some | Yeara ogo he came to New York, leave ling behind a brother who is a leading Cincinnatl physteian | prosperous druggist. daughters. He fell in with Dr. J. A. | Hayes, a West Forty-sixth street den- tist, who tried to reclaim him, but finally gave tt up then that he the Halle remarkably wetl-re always a gentleman until Election Day and taking Hallecks n-year-old son, visited a nearby where he treated mpariiia discharged. While siting in the saloon at No f evemng removed d a son, who ts a came to be em P ey say A man He was n he got e was and drunk A ad wh | ele | aa loc sa eda the back room became unconse.ous > Harlem Hospital tors sald he war Ing from an overdose of morphine en DR. HENRY &. ALLISON DEAD, NEWRUNG, N. Y., Nov. 12—Dr ory & Medical Superistend. was 1 leon, injory tn a jent cf Matteawan State Hospital since tte erection thirteen years agy, early to-day of Bright's disease. born at Concord, N. H., Deo, 1, 1%1, and Was a aracuete of Dartmouth, where hie received the degree s M. D. son was 9 member various sootetiea and prcetnen in Maaonry, Ms widow and four children survive, died ® ge by Littles Daughter to Wife, Then Jumps from Fire-Esoape AND FINDS HIM DEAD. Sulcide Had Long Suffered from Rheumatism and Was Unable to Work at His Trade as and two married} the lad to For thie he was upbraid- ot 2485 Second avenue afters He way eile | oc tn ean 0 apy HAH WORLD! ATTRA EVENING, Bee) [ORCA TO WAR "ATEN MATES WL BE EA" —"There Is No eh if 5 E TE gt if pees i 3 & z g z “Fr Ba | Heeman. Wright Hospital, arrived soon afte, and with Dr, Dexter pronounced death im- | mediate and due to prusstc acid, the odor ot which filled the room. | Husband Prensted by Ast. Mra, Zimmerman’s name before mar- riage was Mary Nicholson, and she was a very beautiful woman, She was thir ty-eight years old, nearly twenty years younger than her tusberd, The poljce found # very diMoult to get Zimmerman's story, as he was ao “TM LAND TIRED OF THs SUFFERING So Wrote Mrs. Zabrieskie in! Note to Husband Before Kill- ing Herself with Gas—Pain Had Made Her Insane. The potice of the West One Hundred and Twenty-fitth street station made a mystery of the suicide of Mrs. Viola Zabriskie, sald to be the wite of Nel- son Zabriskie, a lawyer with offices at No, 4 Broadway, who lives at No, 61 Weet One Hundred and Thirty- seventh street, Mrs. Zabriskie was found dead last night at 9 o'clock by ber husband. In her mouth was a tube which was con- nected with an open gascock and on the dresser was a note which she had written to her husband, | Mrs, Zabriskie had been in {ll health of late, and It Is believed that her eut- | fering drove her temporarily insane. Barly in the afternoon she called her three ttle children to her, one of whom is named after her, and told them that she was going Into her room to sleep. When your father comes hotne tell | nim that 1 am sleeping. Give him this ley to my room, Lock the door as you gv out” When Mr. Zabriskie came home and was told that his wife sleeping he did not go to the room, not to disturb her, At 9 o'elock, when he opened the door, the room was filled with gas and Mry, Zabriskie lay on the bed dead, A physician sald that she had been dead several hours. After the case was reported to the police station the name of the husband wan given ar John, and the polloe repre- sented thet they knew nothing of the case. ‘The note left to the husband read: “Lam i and tired of this suffering lite, Please forgive me for waar 1 have done. Mrs, Zabris was a woman of un- usital beauty, \She haZ been marries nine years and was known aa @ Ae | voted wife and mother. | In explaining their actions, the police say that they were not notified of the suicide until long after It had occurred and that \.9 detective sent to investi- gate the case was slow in mebme bie report LITLE BBY SAVED HEA LIFE BY CES —--— She WaS Sleeping in Her Crib on Top Floor When Smoke Awoke Her, and She Yelled Lustily. eae | Thiby Mary Notley, just @ year old, saved her own fe to-day by crying ily when the smoke made her eyes baby t# the daughter of tus m. J. Motley, proprietor of the Raines faw hotel at No. street. floor stort 106 East Fifty-niath The Notleys itve on the top of the building, which i four high Notify waa on one of the lower s <o-d@y, @ Washwoman wes tn the yard hanglag out clothes and little | Mary had been left asleep in her erth, The motier heard the baby ¢rying and ran upstaire to #ee what was the mat- ter. she found the roome filled with smoke. The baby waa sill yelling, but © Was growing Weaker. Mri ley clasped the infant to her breast and fan out into the hall, s > WIFE SPURNS PARDON; ENDS FE WITH PRUSSIG AGID “I Forgive You,” Said Jealous Husband) ing to Amerioa He Deolded to Reason for It; This Ends All,” Replied Mrs. Zimmer- man, and She Fell Dying. ay "oe They walk ? Columbus tered la as’ ae Be wite had a very tow py B.-.-f Mra, Zimmerman by at ow hysterical in the at pose atat! on te salts ne a aso acid she ha waa Kae n Ber" leaning my ne Fei the the oy 1 the man and ‘The police finally ¢ man and home. generat 4 tered the ‘om griet. mmerman He el eink to the chair in which iY sald hie wife sat with the boarder an | pay: “There it is, there it i, Oh, the Fos § poy chair!’ TALKED OF DEATH AND SOON EXPIRED Watchman on Duty Told Work- man He Believed He Had Not Long to Live—Found Dead in an Hour, —_—— ize John Condell, a watchman for some new bulldings going up at No, 60 West Thirty-aigth street, talked calmly about his approaching death to a friend early to-day in his little shanty and an hour later waa found dead. He wustitty -five years old and lived at No, 1) West Ninety-eighth street. "T feel bad to-day,” he said to ‘Thomas Quinn, of No, 134 East Beven- teenth street, a workman. “I am afraid I won't last much longer, I've) been bad all night.” Quinn reassnred him that he wae all right and only needed rest. “Well, I'm prepared to go. I've not an enemy in the world that I know of,” was the old man's reply. An hour later Quinn found Condell dead, He was sitting in hiv shanty, hie head bent forward on bis breast. The body waa removed to the Wert ‘Thirty-seventh street police station, where it was claimod later by his widow, The Coroner will make an investigution, ee OUT OF WORK, ENDS LIFE, Printer Found Dead Room with Gas Tur On, Patrick Quinn, a printer, was found dead to-day tn his room at No, § Park | Row, the gas pouring out of two jets which had been turned on full force, juinn wae despendent been ot of work for some times bis ite Bal | "Yea," B. Altman & Co. TRED TO T RCE HS LOM Enoke’s Sweetheart In Germany Wed Another, and After Fleo- End Hie Grief With Gas. | t rFEEt i i i hi if ge fe i *§ H i z zit iH tf & f Stanton, who got hia story, Adam Encke had just completed his home to renew ¢he battle he hed long ‘waged with a rival for the love of his ohildhood playmato, daughter of his next door neighbor In Theatre Platz, Frankfort-on-Main. But bie ubsence had given the rival a start and be won. Encke tied to kil Mmself with phen- acetine, but put a quart of champagne on top of the drug and that saved him. “The rival and the sweetheart were married a month ago," sald Encke. “I came to America to forget her, I was Intending to go to iny brother Loulg Encke, who is in the furniture business, I think, and lives In Brooklyn, But 1 lost his address and could not find him, “IL could not forget the young lady either, that I had loved all my life, go I decided to die. “But it Is foolish to die for a wom- an," sald Recorder Stanton. “Now you are in America, where there are thou- sands of girls—thousands of nice Ger- man girls right here in Hoboken—and | you ought to be able to select one who would make you happy.” “They are not for * said Enoke, m and the Recorder decided to detaty him until his brother can be found, To an Evening World reporter Encke , & brother 'y busin only just graduated {rom Hi and had pot decided wh \$§° int ‘here was no rar th; sat with striped | and coat s silk hat. He had in his pockets, ——— GLAD HE SAW BROADWAY. way Boy Spent $60 and Will Return to Seranten, “Smiling Harry Phillips, sixteen years old, of Scranton, Pa, was ar- raigned before Magistrate Barlow in rt to-day, hah Jetterson Market Court to-day, A | with pay wway from home. Cy | fan ite nt the morey sevttly, as on Ry y he found Siensait without inde, t night Harry met two boys, who took him to a lodging-n t | boys wrote fo, pis bow @ oe e parents not y and Harry a} fi ry @t the . near rv, “You ran away trova heme,” Magis- he replied, grinning, “Th be back. I've eten m4 avenue, Th and re , id seo the Bowery “No; That dant cages! yp se Tem intereeted in better th < ‘The boy will be sent — Aiaate-Zeitung Prepares to Move, To prepare for clearing the site for bridge approaches, the Staate-Zettung lease’ yesterday tha dutlding, No. a Park Row, now occupied by the New York Times, OF THE BEST PERSIAN IN THE ATTENTION HAS BEEN AND DESIGNS. HAVE A LARGE AND ATTRACTIVE STOCK OF ORIENTAL RUGS SELECTION OF WHICH PARTICULAR HOSIERY FOX MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN, SELECT LINES OF HOSIERY ARE SHOWN FOR MEN AND WOMEN, WHICH INCLUDE SILK, COT. TON, LISLE THREAD AND CASHMERE, IN PLAIN AND CHOICE EMBROIDERED NESIGNS, Orders executed for Women's Silk Hose (plain or open- work), in shedes to match coRumes and Slippers. . AND TURKISH WEAVES, GIVEN TO THE ‘COLORS CHILDREN’S PLAIN AND COTTON, LISLE “THREAD some unknown cause pot more than a man's length (rom the orld where t! infant lay The smoke awakened the chi! an Sree exunguished diase with small leas. RIBBED HOSE, OF SILK, AND CASHMERE. WIRELESS BIAS ENS FS Woman Kills Herself on Liner Kaleer Wilhelm Il. by Shoot- Ing — Prominent Theatrical People Return on Vessel, board the ocean liner Kaiser Wilhelm Il. has committed auicide by shooting education at Heldelborg and veturned | 4 herself. The message says that the wo- man was Mrs, Sophie Wels, and tt Is thought that she ir from Chicago. Her name does not appear on the satling list of the veasel, but the name Adam Wels, Chicago, does and tt Ip believed that the HCE BERTH FOR WILLIAM BLAYEY © Appointed Deputy Tax Commis- sioner at $2,600 a Year— Tom Campbell Gets a Place in Yorkville Court at $3,500, —_—— Charles F. Murphy wih bis family left the city to-day for the Hot Spriags of Virginia, and the majority of district leaders of Tammany have gone to At- lantic City to spend a few days and re- cover from the election. Most of the leaders who left the elty this morning will return the middle of next week, It is not known when Mr, Murphy will return. Before leaving Tom Dunn managed to make what in the light of the prea- ent despondent outlook of the crowd is considered a ‘kkilling.” Dunn landed William ©. Blayney, the treagurer in the Sheriff's office, in the vacant position of Deputy Tax Commis. sioner at a salary of $2,600 a year, sald that the woman ended her life when preery houre| If addition to this polstion, he land- ¢ sur irom New Tork. the mer having) ¢¢, Thomas ‘M Campbell, the former sailed on Tusada: Alderman of his district, In the va- bes ‘Bovet Saney In Yorkville Court as clerk for six yoars, at a salary of $3,000 a year, “Weil, it wasn't so bad,” sald Dunn to-day as he hurried to catch @ train and get to Atlantic City, where he will join Commissioner of Water Supply Oaktey and others who are now there, 1 Dail N tw Has Identified Him, { NEW PUBLICATIONS. His exposure in the New York Daily News this afternoon, Also, and Especially, Read The Sunday News TO-MORROW, NEW PUBLICATIONS, Out To-day The Catholic News Why the Late Dr. De Costa Became a Catholic All the Local Church News Clever Short Stories At all news stands 1902 1903 MOUNTAIN OF MAIL ALL ANSWERS FOR ADVERTISERS IN THE WORLD Durine “oor OCTOBER “vans” 1904 - - NEARLY 100% INCREASE IN TWO YEARS IN THE WORLD Get RESULTS Price 5 cents = - 44,904 47,622 88,212