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“APTnE 7 ~ ATS, 1, k Home at Amity: Jo at the Age of Sev- Fraasiska Janauschek, actress wide fame, died to-day in the Home in Amityville, L. 1 eon .@ private patient in the fout months, a charge of the Fund. ‘years old, Hor death was aot a sur- ‘as she had gradually been sink- r many months, Her health had been feeble for severni years and she ‘no Might against the advance of often expressing the wish that sleep would come soon, was a Bohemian by ‘vith, hav- Prague in 18%, She prominent 4s an actress tn her and in Germany before her reached a wider sphere, 164 the actress met and mar- Baron Frederick J. Pilot, the as to sive the greatest set- her brilliant career, her manager at first and brought in only German rolea, but her the continent was duptt- ig until her husband ~ funds and left in to wet out Of beat wn coukl. He mot a fate afterward by dying in that language f this country. but thro t' was quite a come down for her to) rin this cheap melodrama and often i qe) over it, In the win- ‘ter of however, she determined fort to redeem her her eee, pt | What Let Frank Cotter as ma “opened in sehington, Cin, De» and then Martea' 6 on a Western on ite wan ro use. ‘The com- t randed, and, broken H ik, she with diMeuty or eight veare a, ie would return to ¢ 4 stage tment a wy, M pell loft 0 do aume shoppls return suffered hee ent ralyvia, She was taken to} of paral and sna ed there | ‘of that y n she ft live with Mra. “Amon, at No, anxivn street, Sara under the of Dr. James B, y, of that P Mbecality in expenditures during had left her without re a Wher she fell ill and a benete formance wan giv’ b ‘a Theatre, which _ theca the Actors’ Fund has looked WATTS WE S WEALTH -_GHES TO FANG *., Granted in Estate ‘of Rich Philadelphian Who Disap- - peared in Mountains, ; © -PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 2.—Ancillary ) Witers of admivistration were granted 1 teeday by the Register of Wills in the) j emtate of Edward LL. Wen the Bored young Philadelphian whose death in the mountains of i Weat Virginia has never been cleared. tale is yarlously estimated at and the bulk of od yy “te left in, it of his fancy ft trust for ,the ee, Cornelia Brook- | antre who lives In |Who Wants a Man Executive Ability? TY Phe kind that takes a SMALL F “business and. BUILDS it to 4 LARGE proportions? AL Such men aré not running around loose—most of them » | © are employed; but many of a them will not turn down a be Them V World Want She Dies at ee etic ean tr Pronk ’ Jgnauschek was seventy-four He served | America in 187, Here sho ap-| o Mme. | Lia: of airinisteation Were | SEEK NEPHEW OF SLAIN WOMAN Furlong, Who Has Been Miss- ing Since the Discovery of the Body of Mrs. Keeler. Youth Had Been Fed Frequently | by His AunfHer Head Was Found Crushed with an, Iron Bar. ——___ Arrest for homicide Frank Far- brick- long, sineteen years old, |tayer, 5 feet 9 inches tal 136 ~ pounds, broad shoulders, alight) stooped, very thi ee, ken cheeks, ruddy coimplezion and sandy hale. When lest ~ he were a shabby gray «alt and Maht overcoat. This ig the description sent out by the police in a génera! alarm of the youth. who is suspeoted of having beaten | Mrs, Margaret Keoler to death to rob her of her husband's savings and of her Jewelry—jewelry |worth not more than 100 and prized by her because it had |come down from kenown wealth and luxury. The man wantetl is a nephew of the murdered woman, He Is the one whom ahe fed, for whom she and her huthand, Joseph Keeler, cared when there was) no work for him to be had. Thetr home was his, and what they had was his, had he only asked for it, and was his daily custom when food was scarce and when there was no way by which he could get money to call at t home, No, & Kast One Hundred and Fifteenth street. ancestors who had The aunt whd befriended him Is de with akall crushed by a Diu wielded by an asaagain; her home is looted by this same assassin; the hus band is half-crazed from ertef; the two children of the Keelers are being cared jfor by nelghhora and the nephew ts | m¥extng Bvory this youth ta known has been vi by the police. | Ais compantons--and they are not eald to he the sort his aunt would have chosen for him--have been questioned, | rhe city has been searohed from the | Pottery co the Brons, but without re- sult, The nephew Is missing And so the charge Aas been made by | Pullce Capt. Heelthy, of the Rast Ons Hondred and Four'h street station, that Frank Furlong ts gully of homicide. From the finding of Mrs, Keelers | plain to the poltee nd detectives work. | ing on the murder that the crime was committed by an Ingrate—by some on¢ | known to Mrs, Keeler—who was admit- ted to her apartments after he had come for food, ‘There are three apartments on each of the floors of the flat-house, and @ ory, }even faint, would have been heard | had Mra. Keeler been startled by tho! | appearance of a stranger. Waited Until Children Lett ‘The children left for sebeol shortly | before 9 o'clock yesterday morning, ‘he |wurder was committed shortly after- ward, as nearly a8 can be reckoned, {Had a stranger come to the Keebr | opartments he would mot have been art mitted. The discovery of the murder Was made by Mrs, Keeter's young son, He and his sister came hogie from school at noontime recess fdr luncheon, They knocked at the door of thelr home, and | when the mother did not open for them | they began to cry, and wero taken in by Petar Mundy, the janitor of the byiding. who gave the children some | thing to ent and started them of tc school again, The boy and girl came | tome from school the second time ai to k. and again thelr knocks failed to bring response from the mother. Then they began to cry in earnest, and the neighbors came to them. It was suggested by the fanitor that the boy, an athletic, strong youngster, climp up the rear fire-cscape to the rooms and see if there was trouble, Boy Vinds Blood, The boy went up the fire-ercape to the kitchen window and then gave a| lery, He had discovered a pool of blood | | under the sink and there was @ trail Of blood leading to the bedroom. The | janitor heard the boy's ery and went to nim qultekly, He and the boy entered | the bedroom, following the trail of blood, and there came upon the dead! | body of the mother. | When Keeler arrived at his home and| | saw the crowde in the hallway, he | rushed to bis apariments, and there | ‘came upon the bloodstained corpse of his wife, For a time his reason fled. The children were taken ia by neigh. bors and eared for, Mrs, Keeler was thirty-six years oiq| S7O@ and was formerly a Miss Quigley. she | was connected with the New York Quig.| and with, the prominent Southern I tomy of that name, —aE |JAMES W. GOODMAN IS FREE. James W. Goodman, the Arizoaa min- | 1 ing man, who on April 9 last drew a | 1 on Col, W. C. Greene, President | tie Greene Consolidated Copper Company, and threatened to kill him} unless ¢ertain moneys claimed by «lm wore pald over at once, pleaded guilty to apwault tn the secoad degree before af | Police Fall to Find Nephew, }« RRO oP MSR YIN | RPT OEE ANT TN Ie aE THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING. NOVEMBER 29; ‘1904. SAYS RICH GIRL IS NOT INSANE Mabel Spang, Daughter of Pitts- burg Millionaire, Iegally Kept in Sanitarium, Asserts Law- yer Bebro in Court. TEACHER PRONOUNCES CHARGES OUTRAGEOUS. Asserts that Beautiful and Cul- tured Girl Is Kept Behind Bars and Not Treated Like a Civil- ized Person, Gensational evidence waa given to- day in chambers before Justice Marean, of the Brodklyn Supreme Court, on the habeas eorpus proceedings brought by Lawyer Henry Joseph Bebro to release Mise Mabel Spang from a Yonkers san- ‘tarium, = Bebro alleges that Miss Spang, & beautiful and cultured girl of nineteen years, was Illegally de- clared ingane and put away in the in- stitution, The Spangs are @ Pittsbure family. Charles AM. Spang ia « millionaire liv. ine with his wife, Rosa &. at No, 6 ast Geventy-eighth street. They travel extensively in Europe Mr, Spang re- voutly received $800,000 in trust from his (ather's estate, the will of Charies Spang, or, who died in Nice, Franoe, fetting forth that the son was a broker aud engaged in uncertain ventures. The “od Spang, grandfather of the girl now seeking liberation from the Yonkers sanitarlum, wi member of the iron firm, Spang, font & ‘o,, of Pittsburg. Pet © Heariug Acoorded, When the case was called at 10 o'clock Lawyers Charles C. Lockwood and Wiil- iam T. Gilbert, representing the mother, asked for a private hearing and an ad- journment, The ease was put over until 2 o'clock, when the ante-room of the hambers was crowded with witnesses: Miss Mabel Spang was in charge of a) » Mi erine Cullenane, and trl tas] been Kept In close custody since July} T last. She has red hair, fine features| and wears eyeglasses, She wore a neat | fitting black gress and, was very com) leoted and calm, Among the wknesses called by Law- yer Rebro, who himself was once false- ly locked up in am asylim, was Miss Josephine Belem, a tall brunette with great black magnetic tyes. Calls Cha Miss Sciam 8 a school teacher, and waa a0 intimate friend of Miss Spang when the latter attended Miss © Baird's select sghool for young ladite a Norwalk, Conn, Her home is Beranton Pa., and her affection for Miss Mabel Spang was the basis of the allegations upon which the girl was pat into « ranitarium by her mother ‘To an Evening World reporter Misa Bclam sald; ‘The ohargen made by Mre. Spang) against her daughter and myself are outrageous,” Tt wae learned that Mise Bolam is a graduate of Smith's College, at North- awpton, Mags, and js a Freoch lingwlct of note. Her brothers are wealthy real- deats of Scranton, Pa, and are to see her through the present dif- fleulty, She has taught in many of the leading female collegts of this“coyntry, and it t¢ charged that her friendship for Mabel kindled the fires of jealousy in the heart of Mrs. Bpang. At presont Miss Belam Is teaching in Paterson, N. J, Many Friends Testify. Among the wiinemes mibpoenaed to testify as to the good character of Ming Sciam are Misa Mary Childs, principal of Smith College; Mise C. Baird, of the Hated School at Norwatir, Conn, and heed, L. 1, With whom ahe lived. When Mist Mabel Bpang léft her mother's house she spent some days with how former teacher, who ts altered to ha’ ympathiaed with het in family matte phat Mrs. Spang sought to hide the| fact of her daughter's Incarceration wee shown to the court by the following bald notice nelated in & New York news- Oaner Aue. ty iy C ang and Miss Mabe) ng, of No, East Seventy-clghth » Will sal; for Burope on Satur- At that very time Migs Mabel Spang | wes an inmate of ‘Dr. Lord's sanita: um, No, 0 North Broadway, Yonke N. Y., where ahe had been commited | upon an ordér sigaed by Justice Pita- der two physicians having madg af. alt that shew: 0. rinm. The story of the young gir!’ in the aanitarium waa brought eins ® attention by Miss Grace tymore, & nurse employed in the in- stitution “Miss Mabel lived {9 8 room provided with three chairs, and dresser,” maid iat Bolymare today to an Be ° r ‘orld reporter at Lawye ofie, No. 1 Nassau atreot’” are e wi jows were provid bare aaa ("8 cir} was as na “ee hf yy bog poo she had committed vome rie “Aly hea heart bled for her, and reading *Rebro 1 wave up my vosition at U3 wanitarium and saw him About the matter, Peor Accommodations for #90. “She was for months (n m: ni care, "slept in a room adjoining her ihe Her mother Vl bd aw for jabout > s' ue July three private ax), and a nurse. They hed driv rom New York in 4 carriage, Boe was put in my charge,” Doctors Say Girt Sane, Among the physicians’ affidavits pre- genied was the following one from Dr. J, H Lawrence y "the sanitarium . in the care of ( Judge Poeter tn General Sessions to- day. wrlet-Attorney Jerome appeared In ed that senenue ve #de- He said the man Gant ot LY “Thin ls to certify that T consider | mie Mabel Spang perfectly sane and | rational, having carefully examined her | caso and thorceghiy investigated the falge and frauduient statements made.” Similar aaigviis were Digeeaied > b; \ pr. Charles Lambert, several women of Manhattan and River: | 88% TRIED TO BORROW $200,000 HERE, “She was a complete stranger to me when she first came In my office,” but she Introduced herself as the wife of Dr, Chad- wick, of Cleveland, of whose standing t rew. She was thon stopping at the Essex, at No, 572 Madison avenue. She tola me she had an income of $175,000 every six months, but that she had indorsed notes for $200,000 which she! had been forced to pay, In order to pay jt, she said, she had borrowed money in, Pittsburg, putting up securities and jewelry as collateral, almost due, she said, and she must have the money to meet it or sacrifice the | HOUSE IN WHICH MRS. KEELER WAS MURDERED. INBARE BE AND DIAGRAM OF THE CRIME. DIDN'T SIGN NOTE, — back. baugh, is in the city. Mr, Newton and she gave thom sufhvlent securities to avtisly t Roynolds as trustee. in Ohio are In trouble through their has it that they hold aer paper. by the present, ald this lawyer to-¢s securities, them she would meet the obligation, was all right. about the matter He suggested that would do, duced It to $80,000, but as her recurity CLARISSE AGNEW DIES AT IRVINGTON Once a Broadway Favorite, She Wed Wealthy Daniel Reid | and Was Welcomed in| Society. Announcement was made to-day of the death, after a lingering Mineas, of Mrs, Daniel G, Reid, wite of the tin ipate and railroad magnate, in her Deautitul yilla at | Itvington-on-the- Hudson. The announcement creates (Continued from First Page.) By the proceedings which were to have begun in Cleveland to-day it hoped that the exact value of the securities which Mra. Chadwick used as | collateral for her various borrow “She wanted me to stop the sale at once, and gave me $20 from a roll she carried to ring up the Pittsburg parties on the telephone and satisty | I called up, and apparently everything | The man on the other end of tho wire seemed to know all as colietoral and thus save the sale of her securities, “Later she tried to get me to secure a loan of $200,900 for her; interest and sympathy not only in. so- .%, Men | Joseph Tork and Jo! | and Dr, ja ert ~i4 Hed to teetify at ie been to Incarce' etety but in theatrical circles, for Mra. favorite previous to ber marriage four years ago, Reld was Clartuse Agnew, a Broadway| CAPR TOWN, Nov. 2—'the SAYS CARN EGIE to care whether or not there is any truth in the open charge that has heen made that Mre, Chadwick and the notorious Mme, Deve fame person. The purties to last night's confereice agemed indifferent to this, and in fact the creditors are interested only in getting thelr money aged parent, who was allowed/tv go to are one and the That Mra. Chadwick {s at present in the city and has not returned to Very much worried, Cleveland ia obvious from the fact that Aer personal attorney, Judge Al- 8 would be learned. ‘hers trom whom she borrowed money declare that avidenca of her possession of some $5,000,000 In | This property, Mre. Chadwick sald, was tled up| litis and that the greatest care must be temporarily in tio Wade Pare Bank of Cleveland, in charge of one Ira | taken te prevent anything more serious dealings with Mrs, Chadwick. ‘The Frick, {1s sald, went to That Mrs. Chadw'ck has been sorely pressed for money during the past | Patterson ¢ condition, as the best of few weeks to meet some ot hey rapidly accumulating obligations is proved ement of a New York lawyer, whose name is withheld for the He gays Mrs. Chadwick tried to borrow $200,000 only a few Weeks! The loan was she send the balance of her jewelry This she said she then re- difn't sult me I refused to act.” tlon and envy of the wives of many nillionaires, Bhe had everything to live for and the future appeared to be bright with happiness when she was stricken last spring with, an Ulness that the be medical skill in the United States was| unable to overcome. Mr. Reid was a widower, when idie fancy led bim one vight to a Broadway theatre, wi on the stage, He tin and in Wescern railroads, but his | Lfe was lenely. He sought an intro- duation to the little soybrette, ay apd in September, 1909, thay were marri ‘The best of tutors and governes: h to the education the up In the little town I Attar a vear of nolety and was wel; ifth en town the country nce irviagwon. cee oF Rar He gutaies and and ie watadi me Troe old friende ot nhs Hay ‘ue Yo the ¥ think of her and their sorrow ma bd “untimely end Is sincere | i ASN ew | haustion that they r 82 East //5'h Sk HS TOS |Ficrodora Girl Accused of Shoot ing Caesar Young on the Hoss | Carefully Watched, Nan Patterson bas been placed on the hospital list In the Tombs as the result of a sayere attack of tonsilitis that d>- veloped to-day. Dr, MeGuire, the Tombs physician, ordered the young woman to keep to her bed after visit- ing her and requested the prison ad- | thorities to forbid everybody but her , | father to see her, According (o the doctor she Is a nervous wreck, as the result of the sirain put upon er during tho ordeal of her interrupted trial, Though she held up bravely her atdmina could not withstand the attack of diseasn, Her her cell for a few minutes, came away He sald he feared {that if she did not recover her strength rapidly ghe might not be able to face her second trial next Monday, | Awoko with a Fever. | | When she awoke this mornin Mr, Patterson, “she had @ hig @ was suffering from a sore ‘throa LAs soon as the doctdr looked at throat he declared that she had tonal- from. developing, EAMBL - TOADE Telegrams from All Parte of West Pour Into Tombs Offer- ing Cash to Man Indicted for Murder of Guy Roehe, “WON'T NEED IT; WILL GET OUT OF SCRAPE,” HE WIRES, Sister Under Doctor's Care. —_——— Telegrams from atl parts of the West, some of them sent from mining camps to far remote from clviliaation that |*M they have been delayed many hours. {th came pouring Into the Tombs last night ynd to-day to “Bia Frank” Felton, the gambler indicted by the Grand Jury to- day for the murder of Guy Roche. He witl appear to-morrow moraing In Gen- eral Sessions to plead. All of these telegrams are from @am- blers in the West who are anxioun to | subseribe to the fund for Felton’s de- t In each instance Felton has replied to his Western friends. thanking them and assuring them that thetr assistance was not necessary and that ho was sure of getting out of the scrape. Confident of Acquittal The confidence that Big Frank has that he will be cleared of the charge 1 shown in one of his repifes to a man of the name of Hunter in Elwood, Ind,, which is a sample of the wording that ne sent to the others, It reads as follows: “Thanks, olf man, Won't need it. Will got out-of scrape O. K. These telexrams come from faro deal- ors, roulette dealers, three-card monte pital List in the Tombs and! aan and proprietors of “green cloth” It Bie Frank needs anv money his ‘riends In this clty are prepared to sub. Sortie $20,000, as that vot ht as that sum has ‘already Big Frank ‘s the “star boarder” In he Tombs. He lives on the best that san be provided, and the attendants 4re only too willing to do all in thetr cower to make his stay comfortable. Gamblers to Ald Felten, “If Belton hadn't shot Guy Roche some one else would have been forood {o do It," sald one of the pool-room men, “ard ite wp tits now to help Big Frank’ out of this trouble.” “We had decided on drastic measures to take the case out of the Coroner's hands," sald Mr, Krotel yesterday, “ahould he have taken ‘Bob’ Nelson's ball for Felton, We have evidenese enough to indiet Felton for murder in the Arst degree,” Felton's victim was buried tn Green- wood Cemetery yesterday afternoon, There were about thirty persons pres ent, including Tenderloin “bad men’ and four heavily-velled women, Miss Roche was vrostrated and under the care of a physician as soon as the body was buried, ‘The Trolley Club pool-room, manayed 4 “Bix’’ Felton, was closed yesterday, Tit ‘Pian antes Ra Faint sixth aes have been cl down since the ng. "On Buturday last she caught a bad) shoot: | Ir, the meantime ‘bere »ve persistent rumors that other banking- houses | cold while walting In the prison pen to be taken to the eourt-room, It did rot Wodstor Naltonal Banke was in temporary trouble on Fridad, and yesterday | develope! unttl to-day, when it middeniy there was a run on tue Wayne County Bank. F.C. the recaue of these banks with large sums of money, There is no positive evidence that Mrs Chadwick had dealings with these institutions, but ramor | sae even liquid f broke out in the form of tonsilitis, Faint white spots are visible in” her! | throat, and it ts E Sie can do to swal- MeGuira said that there was no Voce season for serious alarm about Mise care would be taken of her a ahe could Rot take + yd Ly Bay © would hat gravate her malady, He @ she will be fully cured befote the em eo | of the week, SUBMARINE W TOW MENACED BY GALE New London, but Was Hauled Sound Trip. NEW LONDON, Conn,, Noy. 3.—The United States torpedo-boat Lingey ar- rived here to-day with the submarine boat Plunger in tow, after a rough cruise across the Sound from New Suffolk, The boats were bound to Newport, but put in hare on account of stress of weather, They anchored to the west of this harlor last plight and the torpedo-boat had to cut loose from the submarine twice to escape going ashore, | but was hauled off without damage. The two men on the Plunger were #0, much overcome by exposure and ex- wired, the atten- von of @ physician when they arrived here. DAY, %, ya ® aanirs, bona Se eek W Arove's aianature on each bax. —— KRUGER'S BODY AT CAPE TOWN Dateh steamer Ratavier, having on board the body of Paul Kruger, Preal- Plunger Twice Ran et at| Off Without Damage—Hard) | | Never in the his- tory of Vantine's have we made such a mag- ' nificent display _ of “Artistic Oriental Ob- jects” for Holiday Gifts. We invite your inspection. A.A.Vantine&Co. Broadway, bet. 18th & sgth Sts. CANDY PURITY—PRICE. SPECIAL POR TURSDAY. snorted rait and Net But- row “Ee 308 ‘The Plunger went on the beach twios, | 9” = CLOTHING on CREDIT FOR LADIES AND phy, ese Prisoner’s Friends in This City Already Have Pledged $20,- 000 for His Defense—Viotim’s ELON” — | sulin om ot Ootld Not Bold HteShe Tore Her Fact-and: Arms. cuted and I see no traces of popes, left. Tecan frbtelly ray that Ag saved her life, a y one feraap ee she did, I shot advise to give Cuticura a fair trial."— MRS, G, A, CONRAD, Lisbon, N. Feb, 7, 1898. Five years later, viz., Feb. 23, 1908, Mrs. Conrad writes: “tt is with pleasure that’! can fn- lform you that the cure has been per- manent, as it is now six years since she was cured, and there has been no return of the disease since, and I have advised a lot of friends to use the Cuticura Remedies tp all diseases of the skin.” Instant relief and refreshing sleép for skin-tortured babies, and rest for ‘tired, fretted mothers, In warm baths, with Cuticura Soap and gentle anotnt- ings with Cuticwra Ointment, the great skin cure and purest of emolll- ents, to be followed in severe cases by mild doses of Caticura Resolvent. This is the purest, sweetest, most speedy, permanent and economical treatment for torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, bleeding, scaly, crusted and pimply skin and scalp humours, eczemas, rashes and irrita- , tons, mo 4 t the w colvent, ‘We. cy ore oy eee ie Examination of EYES By Speciatists that “Know How.” Special for This Week Only! *5,00 Eye Glasses *1.00 This 0 the most sensational otter aves. wiatth ds geek eb RenY ne a COMB AT ON! Pant sar ie "isvaniage a hia Limited of of $5.00 Lax td ii 6, with the best optical service in the TT ST TstH “TSO °THIRDAVE:. 11’ EAST 14TH’ ST., ba 1 4 eee AL 4 STH AYE. and 125th St, Btores