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EE ” DID NOT MEAN TO ACCUSE BISHOP Huntington Vestrymen Say Their Signatures to the Present. “ment in Talbot Case Were Secured by Trickery. CRIMINAL SUIT IF CHURCH SUIT FAILS, Friends of Dr. Irvine Declare He Will Take Libel Case to Civil Courts if the New Charges Are Not Acted Upon. Following the cha that Bi Ethelbert Talbot ts guilty of crimina Ubel, conduct unbecoming a Bishop, fal sifying and misrepr the now famous “'l ing charges against the Rey. Dr In- gram N. W, Irvine, the sensational couter echnrge is made to-day that forg ery or trickery was employed In getting the names of some of the men to sign the presentment against the Bishop, Equally sensational comes the ay Rouncement from Philadelphia to the effect that if the fri: of Bishop Tal- bot succeed tn quushing the present- ment against him on technicalities, tho arrest of the Fishop on a criminal charge will follow, So anxious are the friends of Bishop Talbot that the futl of ihls trouble with of the History the former pastor Church, shall not be made publi they are not leaving @ stone unturned to keep back all the scandal tnat has arisen since the exposure begun These friends want the Inquiry to be based solely on the charges In the "Up John" letter, leaving out the seandal which has arisen because of Bishop Taj- bot’s frlendship for Mes been several times dive whom Irvine refuse! to munion, Irvine's friends and many ¢ @ll over the country want ¢ entire scandal thrashed out, declaring that only publicity will bring about a nor- Mal condition in the church affairs, Following the charge that forgery or Gickery was employed in getting some of the signatures on the presentment, several of the signers were seen by a Correspondent for The Evening World in Huntingvon, Pa, Among the four- teen signers ts John Langdon, a prom- {nent coal dealer and a member of the Shurch of which Rev, Dr, Irvine was pastor, Mr, Langdon declared He Signed a “Blank.” “T did not piace my name to any such Gocument,R neither have 1s i. It was not unul my attention was called the matter by a friead that any knowledge whats r of being classed with Bishop bot's accusers, “I will not deny having signed a paper, Dut ft was in the form of @ private com- Munication addressed to the Right Rev. 0. G. Tultle, Bisnon of Missouri, ask- ing that the Talbot-Irvine dispute be forever atilled. The communication was Mmited to about twenty words and was @igned by the five male communicants of St. John’s Church, ments with my own. “The communication was brought to my home by Vesiryman G. W. Miller, who is also a presenter, and as It was signed by the others of the vestry, 1 id not hesitate to place my name to t at Mr, Miker's request. 1 also signed @ blank sheet whieh Mr, Miller ex- plained was for a duplicate of the com- munication “While Dr, Irvine was rector of St. John's he and Mr. Miller and Mr, Dent« thorne’ were very friendly, I do not know that Mr. Miller ever had any direct osmmunication with Dr. Irvine, neither do I know how my name be- came attached to the presentment “It 1s not my purpose to defend either of the principals in this scandal, either man were to come to our home he would be welcome, bu: I have often @greed with my wife that the trouble started over Mra, Elliott, At the tn. troduction of Dr. Irvine as rector of our little church he and Bishop ‘Tei- bot were the dearest of friends. Mrs, Elliott was also on good terms with both clergymen. “Edo not wish to charge immorality against Bishop Talbot or Dr. Irvine, but their attentions to the woman caused many unkindly remarks to be made re- warding their friendsitp. “The sentiment of the people of Hunt. ingdon, which so long favored Dr. Ir- vine, {9 wavering, aud It Is doubtful if he would again be the welcome guest dn the homes of our best people that he Once wal His persecution of our bishop is creating sympathy for the latter.” concluded Mr, Langdon. Not Ansioas to Talk, ‘The presenters who reside in Hunting don are W. G. Miller, pool-room keeper; W. P. Hillier, pressman; A. T. Jackson, clothing salesman; M. 8. Jack- fon, clerk; James Denithorne, coal operator; John Langdon, om! operator, At his place of business, the at- Mosphere of which was laden with to- bacco smoke, Mr. Miller setting up @ "frame" of pool balls, He had beon held up by interviewers several times Before during the day, hands and blurted out to me,” and sealed his lips. A. T. Jackson talked more freely of the connection of the vestry with the presentment lot, who has 4 and to give com: rehmen ou can't talk te ot 4 fact that none of Bisnop Tai- | Dot's accusers sigued toe presentniont None of them siknew the present: ment, but it was Giderstood tant ine bigniig of the requem Ww Bishop Tut- tle was equivalent to picing ones 46 ent hature do Une present Mr. Jackson is no long a. Ont of BL. son's Churca. ’ Yo go to it wacd DF Arvine Was uae frocked. The daughter of James Den.tao ed the SUMMONS Wes byen orld reporter called at his home ff. Denithorne was not at home but is wife spoae for ulm. "Mr, Demthorne did not tiga Dresentinent, and ft seem# a burning ename iMat our litle cauren should or be drigged into this scandal, It Will ruin is, and if it does 1 hope thar Irvine will receive his just dues D was his friend, bee t P| pretty, showed herself a brave girl to- _ | ‘This fire wi I haa} It) ud held up his | banging this disgrace upon out ner. tian aes HEROINE ABLAZE SAVES BROTHER From Burning Apartment Anna) Oglesby Bears Out Boys on- Shoulder and Rushes Back | to Rescue Insensible Mother. | |POLICEMAN CARRIES WOMAN DOWN AN AWNING POST. |Aided by Another Brave Patrol- man He Saves Several Other’ Tenants of Burning Fiat on Brooklyn Park Slope. Anpa Oglesby, twenty, and very y when she saved the lives of her | sting in writing |two brothers, Thomas, fourteen, and! @ hn’ letter mak- | fohny fifteen, when incendiaries set fire | @ to her home, Berkeley place and Fifth | avenue, Brooklyn, and then, with her | hatr eblaze and garments scorched, | | started to the rescue of her mother, who | was penned tn by the flames and smoke only another af the two- | | score of fires started by the incendiaries | who are working in the Park Slope sec- | |tion of Brooklyn. Like all the other |fires, It was started lo a house oceupled | in a place where \t would cut off escape to Lao stre The tre |Hoerter, of the Bergen street station Hie attempted to break through into |by the flames, which were burning flercely from the basement and climb- ing up to tho second floor, Just at this Ume Hoerter was Joined by Policeman who was in plain clothes, and Hans Olsen, a private watchman, employed tn the neighborhood, Policeman Saves Two Women, While the watchman and Hoerter | started for fire-boxes, Murtagh climbed | 4p the awning post, which runs from the firet floor to the pavement, and smashed in the windows of the apart- ments occupled by Miss G. Ashley and her sister-in-law, Mrs. H. Ashley, The women had just been awakened by the cries of fire sounded by the policemen, and Murtagh seized Miss Ashley, who tried to hold back until ehe could put | on her street clothes, and carried her | to the window. With one arm about | the youyg woman he slid down the awning post to the street. Back again he went to the rescue of Mrs. Ashley. He found her unconscious on the floor, and because of her dead welght could hot wet to the street down the awning, He made his way through the smoke- | filled rooms to the fire-escape in the’ rear and carried the unconscious wo- man to safety, When he got her to the street her hatr was flaming and her night garments were ablaze, Then Murtagh heard cries for help coming from the fourth floor of the building. | | This is the top floor, and was occupied | by Miss Anna Oglesby, her mother and two brothers on one side and by Benja- min Baker, his wife and daughter on the other, Carries Brothers on Shoalde As Murtagh ran up the fire. |he came upon Miss Oglesby. shoulders was the unconscious form ot her younger brother, Her night. | dress had been almost burned off her, but she clung to her burden, | “Take him down," she said to the| policeman. The policeman took the un-| conscious boy and carried him to safety, Then he ran back up the es- eape, Half way up he met the girl | with the unconscfous form of her see- ond brother on her shoulders. Again he relieved her of the burden and again she ran up the fire-escape, This tine! she went for the mother, wio lay in- | sensible in a room @o filled with smoke that {t was suffocating, Her burden by this time was more than the girl) could bear, She tugged away at the! unconscious mother until the policeman | leame to her and then the two carried the mother to safety. ly Baca) by Roof, In the mean time the Baker family, awakened by the smoke and fire cries, | tried to get to the street by the halls and fire-escapes, but, failing, fled to the roof. On the first floor lived Mra, A, Brack- ett and her two small children, When Hoerter returned from sounding the fire alarm he and Olsen set about res- culng this family, They succeeded and then climbed from apartment to apart- ment until seven families In the house had been aroused and effected their escape. When the fire engines arrived the flames had gained such headway that 4 second and then @ third alarm was sounded. The flames were only got under | control after the house had been gutted. | Miss Oglesby, the heroine of the fire, was taken In by neighbors, The girl would not talk of her rescues. She said that what she had done was nothing. em | PRESENTATION MADE | 10 JUSTICE PALMIERI. | ‘ape | On her Silver Tea Set from the Bench and far and a Gavel from an | Admirer, | Juatice John Palmert, who retires as @ Justice of the City Court, at the end of the year, was to-day presented with a silver tea set by the members of the | members of the bar and his associates on the tench The tea set with th was in a heavy oak case, hame of the Justice on a ativer The plate Inseripi on the tea pot read as follows: “Presented to Hon. Jona Palmeri, Justice of the City Court of Chy of New York, by members of the New York County Bar, in appre- tion of his ability, sincerity and cour- Dee t. 1904. uterbach, who presided, “AS We to-day speed the parting | west we hope that the day wih soon come when we shali sen ‘1D greet him as a ‘this be! Unger made fhe presenta- by a number of familles, and it was set | by the stairway, Be discovered by Poltceman | 4 the hall, hut was forced to the street | 4 Murtagh, of the Jergen street station, | | THE | ALL Rush for Seats on Evening DIDISHOLGG LD NON GOOF 196.196 HH-O99 4-4 OO" $ AF 9-9 HO~O-S- S-Ox3-8. SSOOPECR ES BOe-oe 3 4 ->4 —— CPLA ALLA DID AAR DDIDDIDDODIDDD DEAD AGIA DADDD DDIDDGD DUDE RA AAA DAG var) WORLD. FRIDAY EVRNING, DECEMBER 30, 1904, ABOARD! STEP LIVELY! -¢¢e—— World's Water Wi agon Jncicates that the Vehicle Planaed by Mr. lowers Will Be Well lilled, T, E. Powers, PEDDLE OED ae ~ WAT ME ‘SWAT HIM’ —~ Donr SUIPUP DONT PALL OFF THE WAGON WN NINO LD Wer Vda pyif RROD TRADER REET DE DoE YOUNG MOTHER BURNS TODEATH Mrs. Edward Platte’s Wrapper Catches Fire as She Lights Gas Stove, and She Runs Down the Stairway. While trying to ight the gas stove in the kitchen of her apartment on the third floor of the house at No, 50 Enst One Hundeed and Forty-fourth street to-day Mrs, Edward Platte got too close to the flames Wer wrapper of eldantown caught fre and in a moment she was a mass of flames. She rushed, out of the flat and down @e stairs, | where Albert Levy, a neighbor, tied hant to save her, Tho woman was burned to death, howeper, and Levy! Was 60 badly burned that ft will be, weeks before he ia able to attond to his business Mrs, Platte vas but tweny- youre old. She had only been et idegnren rronths, A child was born thr€# weeks | a0, She was Platte's third wife, Both | of his other wives died in childbirth and Platte was go jubilant over his wife's! safe recovery from eer iliness that he| had not been to business for several says. Mrs. Platte felt particularly well to- day, and Platte decided to go down- town, He could have hardly got to the corner before his wife met with her accident, The woman's gown was of the filmates; material, and caught fire! just as she was placing the match to the gas stove to light It, Instead of trying to beat the flames out herself, Mrs. Platte ran out In the hall and downstairs to the ground floor, where Levy, who was In attendance on hi wife, who has been {Il for some time, heard her screams and rushed out. When Levy realized the woman plight he ran back In his flat and grabbed a handful of bed cloth je) enveloped the woman with them, and soon succeeded in smothing out the fire, In doing it, however, he was himeseif | burned about the face, head, hands and chest. His hair was oll burned off, | also his mustache and eyebrows, in spite of these painful tnjuries he ran | out Into the street and called Police- | man Babel, of the Alexuncer avenus | statiun, Sabel summoned an ambu- | lance from the Iebanon Hospital and Dr, Barnet, responmled wrthin a few minutes, The deotor was not b md we enough. to save the woman's life, lever. He attended Levy and ordered him to bed. ' The body of Mra. Platte was left lying In the hall of the house, covered by uw shect. The police refused to move jc until they got word from the Coroner, Platte, who does not know of his wife's death, has been gent for and uniews the body is removed before his arrival, it Will be the firet thing that Kreetg him when he opens the front) oor. | —— MARRIED FIFTY.NINE YEARS. NEW BRUNB6WICK, N. J, Deo. 9—! Mr. and Mrs. Norman Soiomon, of No 32 Sehurman street, celebrated the fiftyeninth anniversary of thelr wed. ding to-d Mrs. Solomon was Miss Mer nis, daughter of Daniel f Rhode Hall, They were Rev. William Ayers, tnen he Firat Methodiat Churoh married by TO REPLANT STATE FORESTS, ALBANY, Dec. In {ts annual re- part now being prepared for, the Legis. lature the State Forest, Fish and Game Commission calls attention to tap ta Be several large lumber firma In th tate mete, rerene interested in re. Sixth “took the bakery"—got his bun, } Come, Quit Jaggin' — $60,000L0ST BY Take the Water Wagon! FIRE AND WATER Do Not Push, Do Not Shove, but One at a Time laze in Warren Street Easily Get Ready to Climb Aboard Where There Extinguished, but Valuable Are Plenty of Choice Seats Left That Stock Is Flooded—Loss Fully Are Yours for the Asking. Covered by Insurance. ‘, ‘running gear. Do not be afraid to vend = geveral times as much damage was The Cruise of the Water Cart. | [S338 fran. ‘by water catly to-day ne by fire, Fifteen men on the water cart— (Yo oh! ho! and a bottle of rum.) Bunkers will be furnished > * raduates, Passengers addicted to fhe fire started, and was confined to Wiad? cla Year," and away they | goicing pink clephants and sk). bide the manufacturing ertablishment of a dinosaurs need have no fear of being Phillip Bretdenbach, on the third and (Yo ho! hol and the tale to come.) lonesome, for In deference to them the gure foors. by far the greatest dam The first stepped off with a backward Comforts for Al. ae In the h absinthe ing at No 2% Warren street. Although Central Park Zoo has been selected as one of the Water Wagon's regular stops.) *¢@ Was done on the first floor, In the Bwear-off time approaches. ‘Lhe prober © and store rooms of the Fuchs & filp, {ime for wetting on, the Water Wagon | Lang Muntifacturing Company. dnight, Dec. a, but the lists ponte # a tieaeor tt The second one suddenly lost le nevi hing World Water Wagon wi, The fire started in the front of the whip. i) kept open until midnight, Jan. 1, third floor, eccupiet by the Brieden- (There were fifteen who started upon hour Sil Fe Aled nest eect oe (iL bach firm in manufacturing leather Bartenders’ Guide. travelling bags, ie Names burst the the trip. The Editor of the Water Wagon is, windows, and Patrolman Rohrig, of the Yo ho! hol and a bottle of rum.) = Frttred that po few applications have ciuroh Bireet Station, turned in an One went out Just to “ Broadway. Remember, no case is too Slarm from the box at Murray and The fourth—"“absent-minded tr far gone for our attention Church streets Clouds of smoke and | masses of flames were bursting out of ment” plan. A Hot Denunciation, the windows on this floor when the fire n men when the | The thanks of the Editor of the W. . “ (There were fiftee Wagon are extent sone ihe Water | men arrived, and Deputy Chief K trip began. rly Teeture ‘on temperance, sent in a second alarm, The fire prac ‘ us, It ts the tirst goud | gy, . ror, and x Yo hol hol and a bottle of rum.) ion We a Go reneites Lat tically gutted the third Moor, and ex: The fifth succumbed to that old H. F. has lost three good jobs thie year tended, In the front of the bullding, to on account of drink and he k whe fourth floor, sume damage ‘“juet one;” he Is twiking about wien he assures us ‘ ii tet a that rum is bad medicine J. E. M. is informed that the seat he (But fifteen started upon the run. marked Ma hs, jollt Maa the first to wend entra fhoct time. wer in an application calling for a particu aye be - Yo ho! hol and a bottle of rum) ie peat and indicating it, on a pletace ) eet out with perfect safety. as The seventh happened to stub his of the Water Wagon. His reason for famea started in the front of the golng on the wagon is that every time toe, 158 gets souses and falls down stairs or » the two Were x Off a street car or gets a black eye, his a re Ai = ater One landed face downward In the /f & since! oat oF By mi snow. Driscoll et al, who marked all th seats and the steps with reservations, (Fifteen started. See 'em go. will be taken care of One fell aff with an awful spl NJ. vrrites “Put me as far in front as possible have often ridide miter The tenth wae cursed with too much py vob alt enc eee Lured thats HY sh. rt fell off at the frat opportunity h of (There wore fifteen when they began Th! Year I hope to hang on conservative the dash. Wants an Annex Seat, br Yo ho! hol and a bottie of rum.) C. W,, & Trenton, N. J, ts an excep. tion to the number di seate. He wagis one int hex, where the fall t* not s9 far. Fle, fe W Why don’t you move from Pa ar The next one op y akon Thres more lives he caved upon the spot. The enthfe mehr ip MONEY FOR ARCTIC SEARCH. (Fifteen had started—a hopeful lot. 70% om MAS gai ihc tobe Yo ho! ho! and a bottle of rum.) bday, (they ‘ 1s Peary Arctic Club Formed by Upon the cart is left one lone chump, |0 thr ow) ’ Boow al Wealthy Men to Kautp Peary. Bing! and the wagon has hit a bump. bind bi Niccht willine from: Mose ‘ ul (There were fifteen men right off ON Conn, says Chat he bet veut t g ad mi been 9 drunker North Pole Bh: n Yo ho! ho! and a bottle of rum.) whiskey his wife, m: nd friends Me pets geataa ausived. A WALTER A, SINCLAIR. wealthy men has. been formed t (Note —Mr. Sincla'r, one of thn Even- 1a shtp spectally designed for th work of Arotle ex and Lieut ing World's numerous puete, has been R E Peary wind the in (he newspaper business long enough | Start. } r porated to acquire an attack of cynictem We re our Water Wagon passengers of In sending 1" us With Y our hope that they will sign articles to Water ride 386 Wagon.) full days.—Biditor EVENTY-TWO applications tn one ¢. 4 noted S mati for seats on The Het’ teow te nae World Water Wagon were Wa svinpathtae ! to-day, and the eminent architect, T. E. Brekivn, who wri) mus § Powers, was Immediately delegatid to me he take ome hig and plan another addition. If the rush keeps wife caresses him with 4 . A up it may be necessary to get one of f° gd BS eel We aka’ the act those New York Central electrical a chance to heal writing from! Perki anee our Water Wagon, “The Human Sponge.” © wee ee ee “3 the Amon Corner of the Fifth Avenu But no one ansious to uncoll the Horcl, inquires If passengers will be Bibles and other books are diMoult to aro ne ny | will be re- oditor's personal knowledge of some of ih a nor Gay. A & seat a ‘ater Wi Mr. them it will necessary to use nails eter Hall. London, the other day. ‘als | a are ‘eats Adarear Your applica! one to Falter work on chemistry was reneted, be: rater. SHOT DEAD AND “LEFT IN FLAMES Man’s Body Found with His Clothing Afire—Woman Under Arrest Says Some One Fired at Her by the Door, BROTHER SHOT BROTHER IN JEALOUS FURY. Man Wounded in the Head Seen Running Through Street Taken to Hospital—Shooter Is Captured After a Chase, Kealoviay and euapicion that his rother hud stolen his el the Ten " to-day during w asia hilled and John Brown s riously ed in a Mat-buihting at No. 2 Twenty-aixt Two hours after the discovery murder Sterling own § affections Green, brother of tho murdered man, WAS arrested and confessed to shooting both men, Brown betng his brother-ins law. ‘Three days ago Sterling Green and hia wife, Edna, who are young, engaged the flat on the ground floor from the Jan- itor, Isatah Kate. Cassius Green, bre r f Sterling. came to live with the coupie The woman {fs young and pretty and all three were under thirty years of age. Sterling Green was employed in & Madison avenue apartment house Heard Shots in the Flat, At 10 oclock Inst night the tenants of the flat were aroused by pistol shots ant shouts In the Green flat, but when the noise died out the Janitor locke the house for the night and no tu attention waa paid to the matter Quiet relgned Ul ten minutes to 6 this morning, when the janttor rushed to Engine No. 1} and said that the building was on fire. Capt. Murray, teaching the scene, found smoke tssuing from the Green iat. Forcing his way in, he discovered the body of Casstus Green lylag on the floor, with a bullet wound In the abdomen The man was dead and his clothes were on fire, Every. thing denoted a flerce struggle. Woman Missing. The woman and her husband were nowhere to be found. | About ten minutes after 6 o'clock Bo- HHiceman O'Shaughnessy, of the Tender- Join station, found a man running at yventh avenue and = Twenty-ninth try | Was flowing from a bullet wound in the head, and he was taken to Rooseveit | Hospital, where he became very weuk. He said his name was John Brown, of No, 12% Rodman street, Mhiladel- |phla, but could give no account of now he came te be shot The polloe kept @ watch for the wom- and at 7 o'clock she appeared at |the flat, She was placed under ar- |rest and taken to the West Thirty- seventh street station, Somebody Fired at Her. When questioned, she told @ story to the effect that wi#n she reached her home at 1 o'clock and entered the door somebody fired at her, th itlet ja a ne }ran away and hid in the cellar of jadjoining flat. Later she went to Jhouse of friends and remained with j them until she returned to her flat. She failed to give any Information Jand sald she could not tell why any Jone should attempt to kilt tus \Green. She sald that while sing the rooms of her flat some one shot at her, the bullet passing through her waist, frightening rf into running from the ho The Shooter Is Captured, At 7.55 o'clock to-day Detectives Me+ Ivor and Murtha, of Nineteenth were in Gai saloon, and Twenty-ninth street, the breaking of a window cited mulatto i called for a His appearance was h was $0 excited keeper Gallagher refused to wnd ordered him out man pulled ou rushed Into th drink of wh Murtha rus! the hegre » fled up Tw stree » Broadway, where the de scaug At the at wing hlentitied ing to the flat Meat pght a ihe Dia brother, whom he claimed to have found with his wife He refused y siv raything at the shooting of Brown or O'DONNELL WILL GIVING $500,000 TO CHURCH GOOD. Led by Strogele Involving a Half Million of Dollers Contestants, Niece, Lone Will case involving the legacy O' Donne a | to seventy cath ‘ . sa st been de ! will is s tained and a stand. 8 ‘ acta es atives who were it w ‘ it was alleged. was making t favor passes by the w CHINESE GIVE PAVILION 10 PRESIDENT FRANCIS, payiion, which Was erected at w cost yaue. to David RF ia, Presiden | of the Exposition Company. Mr, Kwone aiso stated th Francis t, and took him into custody, Biood| WOMEN AT JAIL DEMAND FIEND Would Inflict Suramary Punish ment Upon Young John Huteh- ings. Who Attacked Seven- Year-Old Julia Scofield. CHILD SAID TO BE DYING IN HOSPITAL. Prisoner, in Deplorahie Condi- tion, Captured After Pursuit, First Denies, Then Breaks Down and Confesses. PORT CHEST ¥.. Dee. MA crowd of onraged men and women sume rounded the prison here to-day demand> ing that John Hutchings, twenty-one years old. a gon of George Hutchings, of West William street, be turned over to them for summary punishment, Hutehings ts charged with attacking Julla Scofield, seven years old, the daughter Mr. and Mrs. Danlel Seo fled, who live In Rast Port Chester, just across the line, ‘The gtrl is dying in the Ladies’ Hospital, A charge Kas been made against Hutchings, but he will be taken to the county jail at White Plaine to await the outeome of the xirl’s Injuries ‘ The utmost precaution was taken byl wuthorities to prevent th getting at Hutchings: Hf was taken first to Bast Port Chester and then removed to the jail in thi elty, Surrounded by deteotives and po lice officers and he way hurried from place to ancther and when placed prison a double guard was ime the pole crowd f in t mediately ons | Prisoner Admits Crime, The aasault occurred yesterday aad As soon as the police were notified they began a search for Hutchings, Captala | Donovan found him early to-day agd placed bn under arrest. His clothes | were In a deplorable condition. He was covered with bay-seed from head to foot and had evidently passed the night in a hay barn, , At fire: Hutehi:gs denied the crime bit when put under @ vigorous examl- nation broke down and confessed, He ndmitted haying dragged the git Into one of the box cars that ned che rad parallel to the ratiroad tracks. His are ralgnment followed before Justice Wile vox, who ordered him committed to the courty jail The Scoflelt and the Hutchings fam. ltes are related, Young Hutchings, as was bis jfelts yest afternoon, After dine ner he was ni by Mrs, Scoffeld If he would go on'an errand for her to Port | Chester. He replied that he would, but arked that Julla accompany him as he ferred he would be unable to find the rte of the woman to whom he was carrying the message. Youth Brings Victim Home, Hutchings and the little girl let the house at 6% o'clock lust night. These hours later Hutchings, half dragging, half carrying the girl, returned to the | Rast Port Chester home. He was tpet ‘oy Mrs. Scofield, who saw at once thag the child had met with an aceldent, Jat a blaze In the five-story brick bulld-| graging her shoulder, She turned and Julia was in a dazed. semi-conscious | condition and all questions put to her were incoherently answered. | Hutchings sald that the child had | slipped on the fey ground and had cut | her face badly. He accounted for the | blood on Julta’s face and hands tn this | way, and as Mrs. Scofield had no reagon to rouht [ils word believed this to have been the cause of the girl's Injurjes, Hutchings then left Soon after the girl regained Come sclousness and told the true story, Mira, kd then summoned Dr. Ralph RB ri » who, after an examination, ordered an immediate removal of the child to the Ladies’ Hospital in Pott | Chester. | At the pital four of the best known phvesictans of this county agreed that an operattn was receseary y placed the «irl om doctors sald aftes he At there is littl chance af ine deat of the case, the ther dreamed last night lid was the victim of ident. She hurried over ome this morning and m had vome true DOG GAVE FIRE-ALARM. Govdwin Owes Her Ho rhaps Her Life to Mer Pm WINSTED, Conn., Dec. 9.—The fam. saved ase of Hubbard {T 4, from destruc. ves barked Mrs. and Goodwin dog to the 4 ® front n and the «e hole ip tv vungushed with Physician’s : Good Luck. Or.Hart’s Fortunate Experience of Special Interest to Many in New York, a New England toe ! ! . reeving congratulas 4 Poll % years red with catarrh 4 ah tt the intext seleme geman & Co are the the famous treatm arch © at stomach plete outfit — o.; jes. ae. They eet! it under fund the money if it doty relief. i | : 4 : 4 a { 4 ne re