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AINAL | tesuurs. EDITION are [« “ Circulation Books Open to Au” | __PRICE ONK CENT. NEW YORK, “pH RS ‘DAY, ar HAD NO PISTOL, Ha WIOOW H SWEAR FF asa: Youag Sisal She Searched Her Husband’s Clothing the Morning He Was Killed While in a Cab with Nap Patterson; but Didn’t Find a Revolver. HANDICAP WAS “WON BY HY GARISH 'Hayman’s “Colt at at Good Price | of 7 to 1 Gets Home in Front of Mauser in the Fourth Race, » Mrs. Smith Wrote that She Feared the Accused Would Harm ‘Young or Her- self— Prosecutor Rand Announces that He Has Only One More Witness. | (I! LETTER OF WARNING SENT YOUNG BY NAN PATTERSON'S SISTER, NAVARRE HOTEL, NEW YORK, May 3, 1904. MY DEAR NUNC: ‘Can't vou come up and see me at once? [ am living at No, 106 West Sixty-first screet—the sixth floor, east side apart- ment. Nan has been with me bg Monday, hould very much like to get the whole (hing straightened out and understand whet is what J Mr, Coggins dined with Mr. Smith and myself Sunday, and said s9 much that I know CANNOT be true, and which has made me MOST unhappy, and which has under the present circumstances, MADE NAN 80 UNHAPPY THAT SHE CANNOT BEAR IT. LT understand what the ma {s, and want you to do what {s right at once. Either write Nan or se? me at your earliest convenienco, We will be at home to-morsow (Wednesday) and I hope you will be able to arrange to come and see us, k the best thing to do i» 1 CANNOT ANSWER FOR THE CONSEQUENCES, You know | love Nan better than anything on earth and she loves you above and beyond everything, To see her absolutely wild, as stralghiened out. T shall expect you to-morrow before 12 v'clock, Assistant District-Attorney Rand, who |8 prosecuting Nan Piiteriaa,| charged with tho-murder of Caesar Young, practically rested his case thie afternoon, when the widow of the slain bookmaker had finished er testi. mony before Justice Vernon M. Davis in the Criminal Branch of the Su-| preme Court. The time to-day was devoted to the introduction ofa letter that Mrs. J. Morgan Smith had written to Young a month before the tragedy warn- ing him that the actress was in a desperate condition; the testimony of John Millin, the bookmaker's partner, of the relations that had existed Le- ‘tween the dead man and the Patterson girl, and the story of Mrs. Young, widow of the bookmaker, DEFENDANT MAY TAKE STAND, Court was then adjourned to give the counsel for the defendant time to confer on the advisability of putting in a defense, Their decision will be ‘announced at tho opening of court to-morrow, If they decide to call any f (Gontinued on Second Page.) a » EVENING WORLD RAGE CAAT NINETEENTH DAY AT NEW ORLEANS, RACK GooD.| New Orleans charts are Indexed from first race, ‘SOUTHAMPTON, AT 30 TO 1, TAKES THE THIRD EASILY, | Josette, Well Ridden by Martin. Beats Out Fair Field in Sec: |, ond—Cold Weather Improves) ? Track. THE WINNERS, FIRST RACE=—Dundall (7 to 2) 1, Ethel’s Pride (20 to 1) 2, Halcyon Days 3. | |1, Kleinwood Ant to to 1) 2. Federal 3. THIRD RACE—Bouthampton (30) ifs 1) 1, Worthington (9 to 1) 2,' Birchrod 3. FOURTH RACE—Garnish (7 to »| 1, Mauser. e to 1) 2, Careless 3. * FIFTH RACE—Mimosa (1 to 3) 1, Trossachs (50 to 1) 2, Unmasked 3. (Special to The Rivening Word.) NEW ORLEANS, Dev, 15 —Racegoors | had a sample of New Orleans winter here this afternoon, for the weather | was very raw and penetrating. The! Waxternera, who. brought down thelr | heavy couts were glad enough to get} futo them, when it came time to go to the track, ‘The solag was much botter to-day, for the wiod and tfe cold drove the muls- ture out of the mud al left it In good ¢have. Fast time could net be m: for the races wi nm, on the outside rail, where the gi The card was onl aented good betting possibilities, The) betting Improves daily here Dlek Brown, a member of the Metropolitan Turi Association, nakes the bigest beok here, He handled over 4,00 on the last race yesterday, The atten- dance to-day was only far, Many horsemen have gone over to the Now Orlehas Jockey Club track, where | the Stabling room is better and where | the horses can work on the track at aii times. At the Crescent Ci: iy track no horses are permitted to work when) the track Is beavy, | Shovk the Tatent Valls. | Dundall was the favorite in the open- ing event, but the race wes a very Se open affair, and he was not warmiy | O12 1-3, 0.26 3-5, 0.0 0S. | supported. . 4 the Talent and Dun- | ling. Start good. Won driving, -}dan got away bgether and ed | ae AvAur, ths turn where, ktoel's Prid it | Ca, ae wedish Lad Closed and there was « ait te eek ‘ HB |ecramble in wlten Dave sie u 5 1 » |. Kthel’s Pride showed the way to falevon, Dus H hot mh ae $ §-8lane stretah, but there Dundall ‘closed | , se 8 ya Ot $f EE FS| trons and got up. in-timo to win by a esha, palioe Oe Oe a gg EE Shi neck. Bthel's Pride was 0 halt length # Dixie A Memnesy 0) 4) ae hg he ji front of Haleyon Days. Nichol 108 8 g i % My & ¥ 3 % Martin Pat Up Good Ride, | ; Hoge & we ® % % 3| Josette the cholce In the second yen a. 8 32 B+ 8 BB) ence, and she won very easily. Martin SSE TR a eee % 10. Si rode her varll,* waiting on Dusky and | last quar ter, Ethel’ Pride hui Talent fell on frst tu ee Haleyon 8 tg oa Saco we ee pues Oe lee 45; ae cm a ne Fin < roa Pi BH. | ar a yt at Som Geide ae 8 AS 8 s hp ® 4 4 al 7) Be XK im ‘ Fd eS 43 ‘ hi oR Fe ad 4s et -| 2 + = o* » me 8 w ee ie ee 3 th B® he he oo 2 yo 7 48 8 9 98 = to am ot i__* 1 1 10 100 300 _WOrtninaton fouaht out fateh Kamely, Birch Rod 4; 1.20 23, ta 23 e— Mile and a axteents, Jen out. Winner, b. ¢. 1B. ree S000: ea, _4_ Fin Open. Cie. Bi Wh iy od Lord of the Valley to the tura, where he sent the mare to the front. Klein- = | wood then moved up on the outside, but | he could sever reach Josette, on whom Martin made ho move. lengths in front of Federal, heavily backed favorite, Myrondate quit | s ‘ ted a a certificate of rragonable iad xo Kieinwood was Lang Shy Land e Money, followed by “ ory "Sus He'dorn, tae Worthy un the tuto and be Sgen So a he | came away and won by a length end n half from Worthington, who Leat Biron | Rod half a length } (Entries ‘on Page 14.) —E “DIAMOND PHIL” OUT. | French turt. Veank A. Acgr’ Deposits “a10,000| While it was true that loan had been Cash Ball for Weinseimer's Pend- associating with ua unsavory crowd of ing “Appeal of Casa. American cracks it was not shown tat |" he had been personaily concerned in|” “Diamond Phil" Welnseimer, who has been in the Tomba singe Oct. 15 last, and who je under sentesce to Sing Bing of the lower court Ww for extortion, wus relersed late this at- ternoon, $10,000 ball having been | ed with fiy Chamveriin by a orney, Tan Court Justice Miller recently | ra Ne | aa ured to- the pest, and this a Jing ond call on hia services, |for three years was remarkable jfode In England and France | the sensation of the hour. Gardiner, the Australian turfman accepted a present from Mr. Gardiner DEC :CEMBER 15, “1904, 30 TO 1 SHOT AT NEW ORLEANS, | AND JOCKEY’S DREAM OF WINNING aed TOD SLOAN WINS BRIDGE FALLS; $40,000 SUIT French lohey Ou Club Must Pay ‘Structure at ‘at Charest, solron Tad aanidann wr late Rider Big Money for Its Edict CHILOREN DIE Va., Undermined and Pupils on Warning Him Off Turf Four) Way to School Go Down with| Years nau Span to River, | SECOND RACE—Josette (11 to *) FRENCH COURT OF APPEALS FRANTIC MOTHERS ARE UPHOLDS FORMER DEcigioN! “KEPT FROM JUMPING, Judgment May Result in snl Pou? ‘Litte-Ones. Resoved with statement and Great Jockey May Be Seen in Saddle Again) Next Year, i PARIS, Dec. 18.—Tod Sloan has won hin sult for $0.00 damages against the French Jockey Chub. The, Court of Appeals to-day confirmed the Judgment of the lower court, whieh awarded dam- ages to Bloan for an edict of the French Jockey Club warning him off the turf two years ago last summer, The Jockey Club appealed from ‘the first decision, ‘The news that the verdict of the lower court in Paels awarding bim $40,000 has bern confirmed gnd that he will now wet the money 1s probably the most wel- | come information that ‘Tod Sloan has| ever received in the thirty-one years) of his eventful life. He needs the money; more than that, he needs the vindication that the verdict carrfes, be- cause he has been under a cloud on the turf for jist one week more than four years. On Deo, 7, 1900, he was refused a iloense by the Enalish Jockey Club and hay not sidden in @ race since It Is extremely likely ‘that @loan will now make an effort to get a license from | tiie Jocpey Club with a view of seek ing ongagements in this country next season, He can train dows easily, and | his friends say that the experiences he | has gone through will serve to make) him attegd strictly to business and re- gain hhs jos lautels.as the best jockey’! in the world tf he tq given a chance to rehabilitate himself, Sloan made a great name for himself on the European tracks after his great success here, and late In 1897 his Income was enormous His ambition took him | td England. He made a poor showing that year, In 1808 he wag engaged by Lord Beresford, with the Prince of Wales, now King Edward, having’ sev- His success Ie and was In the Cambridgeshire taker in Eng- lund in 190 he rode Cadoman for Hy and bet on his mount, For was practically ruled off the Bi turf, Inasmuch as ft was announ that no license would be issued to him | for 191, Sloan has been on the ground ever since, living abroad mostly. In May, 182, he with other Amer leans was accused of crooked work in connection with tye. victory of Row Las ae \de Mat in the Prix de Diane at the Chamtliy races and was warned uf us, any dishonest woik, and suit for sWA damages. a he brought fall and the hearisa ui begun on Nov. Wi, # and exhenses Bloan should nei bout 0" from the ver te A NOVEL FOR ONE CENT. syste Serorday Ag. Evening Work aut p x a te novel pr “ at hyd }o ew bel att ul Great Diffioulty, as Stream Is, Filled with Broken loe—Sev-| eral Teams Lost. ipecial to The Evening World.) CHARLUSTON, W. Va., Dec, 15.—It [1s supposed that about twenty-five |schodl children were drowned to-day | hy the collapse of the suspension bridge actosw the Hik River, connecting Bast and West Charleston, | The river was full of floating lee and there were few rescucs, Some of t children. were taken out of the watr } 40 Immersion was too much for them | tnd’ they died while the eescuera were | working over them, } | The children were wall bridge in groups on their to school, aid the teaths were Jogging along when the structure pitched into the river ithout warning. It Is belleved that e of the vlers was undermined by | the floating fee. The bridge was not |#trong and eaved in from bank to} bank, ‘The lone fall into the fev water ren dered many of the childreo senseless and thev sank immediately Because of the approach of winter the boats along the banks were all housed and effective | rescue work. was delayed so long that the task of saving any of the victims | was hopeless Some brave men jumped Into the {water and fought their way through the giinding cakes of fce, but their | desperate efforts were of little avail. News of the accident was soon spread } to all parts of the city and thousands | | flocked to the acene. } Hundreds of mothers In East Charies: | ton, not knowing whether their |ittie lones, who had started for school a few bourse before, were safe on the other side of the river or not. were restrained iby force from jumping into the water, Four children and four of the drivers of the teams that went down with the bridge were rescued alive. Ali gf there are badly {njured. Some of the chil- dren fell upon lee that had completely formed and sustained broken lige a) | the firat Impact. The ce breakius | through the force of thelr great fall) dropped them to the bottom of the | river ‘vhe drivers were able to escape be- leause they went down witi ons, whith floated after surface of the water, Hepry Pieider,a driver, managed to drag himself to sully cross the | feo and leked up and carried to shore, injured. One Of the oxble holding the ridge remains stretched from shore to k River. This od of anchor for on as it collapsed and ¢ turtie, Maay ot thos wh». under water rie from the wr Busi reee in th suspended, and ail the ae he chtdr | BN of the Fi Jeparimeniaand hunileeds | are searching for bodles. oS | sent of two to ¢ call it off- nnd that call- | Several men and | ing such episodes off is a branch of teams went down with the bridge, | | Gnanclery,” LAWSON STILL AFTER GREENE Bound to Prove Who the Liar Is) | and Declines to Consider | Their’ Frenzied Finanoe Epi-| sode Closed. _ COLONEL PROMPTED TO ACT BY OTHER PERSONS. Support Promised New York) Man’s Copper Company Be- fore He Made Published At- tack, Boston Magnate Says. son to-day reopened his controversy with Col, Greene In a statement sent | broadcast, In whieh he sald “Bil Greene, a good fellow and an| honest chap, started in—pardon, 1 | should have sald was started in—a day | or two ago as generalissimg of the mud- | ling: The Colond, after calling me a. variegated assortment bt Mars, and jdimeelf a truthful man, solemnly in- | formed the American people that he would be at my office, “He sald it not once, but three times, with strong Intimations he would bring [his three-notehed gun along. The! Colonel inoonventended me not a IKtle by gettie me to walt two de or his visit and then with considerable solem- nity proved to the American people that he. not I, was the lar—that he was too hasty, sorry, and | was a good fellow und that the episode was off, “vhe genial Colonel from Arizona | overlooked the fact taat whon a thing | has been declared on it tak he con- | my education that has been neglected, “IL want to say to thé Colonel and to all people who read his manly ef- fusion that the épisofe is not only on though Ht was here to stay @ fow days. “1 don't mind saying to the Colonc that this episode will be off when I have absolutely demonstrated to the | American people who Is the liar; wheth- er I have misrepresented Amalgamated coniitions—whether there have beou | foul frauds and erlmes committed by Amalgamated Insiders,” , Mr. Lawson then goes into the} charges made agatast him by Col. Greene, and declares that the advértiae- ment printed a few days ago over the Colonel's signature was prompted by others, Ho says the epivode. will be off only When It ts stown how “big ‘frensied hours before Greene wrote ft, happened to pledge certain supp ty Greene stock if it wam published.” Gasket Blew Out of the Massachusetts, Lying ‘LIEUT. COLE, CHIEF ENGINEER, BUM, EDWARD dy botlermaker, HAMILTON, ALEXANDER, bollermaker, WILSON, JOHN, by RITZEM, CHARLES, helper. engine room of the hattleshijy Massachusetts were killed by this afternoon, Three of them were instantly killed; the. other t hemmed in by th® closing of the automatic doors, were scalded to d Lieut. Cole, Chiéf Engineer, was badly scalded, but will recover, hired in this city, were eat work, under the supervision of Lieut. Cole,” THREE INSTANTLY KILLED. qcroes the room, Bub, Hamilton and Ritzer, betng directly in line with the | explosion, wero blown against s bulkhead and crushed to death, Adore and Wilson were knocked down, son as they were slowly cooked, come anf open the doors from the vuiteide. To have gone down on the fin would have been suicide and his own injuries were rapidly boners. ENTIRE SHIP. WAS JARRED, +” effect of driving the crew to quarters, For a moment it was thought th the Massachusetts hj smoke up the companionways, warning the officers and men on deck @ ha something had happened below. fire, brave volunteers opened .oe automatic doors, crawled in and dragged. Le out the Injured end the bodics of the dead. Soveral of the members of the ~— crew were hurt In the wor., of rescue. An investigation has been ordered to ‘| determine the cause of the accident. He concludes “the eolaode will be oft when, 1| SIXTH AVENUE SUBWAY PLAN APPROVED BY BOARD, WOULDN'T STAY DISMISSEO, — addition to the above, a full, peakaly fulr and square denouncement of rete d end some things been made, and | don't mind sayin, Col, Greene that { my compilations of the d Siater Bt long enows’ the facts in regard to Gr fited property and stock ect, and that when they are com wietel T will Jet him and) th r people have newber, Col GREENE MUST PROVE CASE AGAINST GOODMAN Notice was served upon Col, William | C, Greene, the copper magnate, to-day that he muat aisengthen hia care |” | against James W. Goodman before he | ean hope to have the truculent West- }orner put in pricom for threatening bis life, Goodman's surpended sentence on he off charge of Ing to kill COL Groene hangs "| tim Judge Warren Wo rusier is Lot disposed to re. Judge Foste to-night to » Contract Looking for Line In Year| Def The Board of Rank | sloners by a ma ented t jor 0: 608008 Bh f New York World, have traced my best results to my Real my contract for another year. Le ait SH +e ee at Anchor at the League Island Navy- — Yard, Philadelphia, Releasing a Great — Volume of Boiling Water and Steam. INJURED BUT WILL RECOVER. eben: sentonecinn anthas ing the Dead and Injured and Two of the Victims Were Scalded to Death, Cole Hearing Cries,, bu: Unable to Heip. THE DEAR. ADORE, JOSEPH, helper. Hermaker, (Special to The Bvening World.) PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 15.—Five out of six men at A gasket blew out without warning, carrying a heavy manhole cover The detieately poised automatic doors, disturbed by the exy swung shut, imprisontng the dead and Injured. Adore and Wilson, \ to help themeelves, were boiled to death in the volume of steam and that spoufed out of the boiler. the dodrs, groped in the darkness and roaring of escaped steam to an wy right, plece of machinery upon which he climbed to escape the {before lite was extinct, but the shoew| [ut Aimiy reted. and looks t0 Me 84) water that covet tho floor. ) Lieut. Cole, who happened to be near one of Above the terrific noise Lieut. Cole heard the shrieks of Adore and 3 All he could do was walt for, res The shotk of the explosion keeled the ship at her movrings and had been blown up. Then came a burst of steam & There was a rush for the engine room, and in spite of the steam at =. hy | MRS. JEWELL SAYS SERVANT annt in ree Salt she Couldn't Get Ria “ot — Confidential Chambermatd, — Transit Ovmmis- Mra "Caroline L. Jowell answered @ arity of six votes ac-| (6% auestions in redirect examination > regort of the Commitiee on | toay, to clear up some doubtful racts at a meeting this in her testimony In setf<defenge” 4 teport and amt of Colonel James Ay Je tor the Will fe Signed at Next A, T. Meeting. @@ 1 franchise 0} Hoand at Its next @ one contra feral women, confidential chamberm against her, will be aired, of his charvtee Mrs. Jewell said trday stat 1 woll, the time whe Ferguson in she peat eh . but that Alice After Trying All. Brooklyn, N. Y., Dec. 9, 1904, Washington St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Gentlemen: Havingtriedall New York paper N. Y. Worid, and will ce as Respectfully, Py John J. ie Advertising in the