The evening world. Newspaper, February 24, 1905, Page 3

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HER TO MILLION | | i r” | MISSING MORE THAN 20 YEARS + Paleo Whe Contry Se 8” Henty 8, Bartlett, Last Heard from in 1882, Nh i Father. and Brother Devoted f., «| Years and Fortunes th Vain : Search for im, * EQUAL HEIR TO ESTATE. Dr. Bartiettis. Will Provides :for a ‘New’ Sbarch—Sleter Bollbves He ; Wae Murdered In Kangae City. AM over the country to-day olroulare “aA advertisements were sent calling |, Noon Henry Soot Bartlett, acon of one He oldeet families in JBrooktyn, to Some forward and claim his share of a _sfprtune of almost’ $1,000,000 which 1s tlea tip becuse of his strange disappear- ance, ‘Twenty-three years ago the youfis SP ahacat } y vanished under oiroumstances that any net forth in fiction, i ‘then the history of the véentrable ‘Wand’ atistocratic Bartlett “family hes been filled with tragic ineldents, Henty /Boott. Bartlett's shpother, disheartened , aidtet @ search of several years for the missing youth, pucoumbed to typhoid fever, brought on, physiciany sald, by hig weakened condition resulting from \. dip ceaseless ‘runt. if i Then the health of Dr, Homer L. Bart. Ytt, (the head of tho family, falled. He @loned up his palatial home at ‘No, 635 Platbush avenue and went to Thomas- ‘ville, Ga., hoping to recover his waning evitalty, ‘There he died on Feb, 3, Not until his will was filed for pro- Patein the Surrogate's Court in Brook- tyn 4id the tragio story of the son's dis- @ppearance become generally known. In the will Dr. Bartlett recited the (istory of the boy's mysterious absence, 7 with one last forlorn hope that | he might atill be alive, left one-third of | dhe big emtate to him, stipulating that \Watete the wealth was divided all pos- gible means to find the missing youth @hould be exhausted. This is why the ,seerch on a most elaborate scale was i’ : ‘begun to-day, a qj From the boy who vanished Dr. Bart- ett had always expected great things. ‘There wore three sons and a daughter fn the family, Henry Scott Bartlett, as @ boy, showed mate fondriess for ‘musle, while his brother wanted’ to be- come @ business man, The third { wréther died when a boy. Henry Scott CHORUS OF MEN OVE J. P. Morgan, J. W. Alex ander, Benedict and Others Say They Are “Not, Ready for Death, NO POISON FOR: THEM. Al ‘Legislators at Washington ‘Also Laugh at the Idea—Doing Their Best Work Now. MADOO GIVES HIS) VIEWS. “Old Age Has No Terrore for Me,” Declares. Depew—Mark Twain Held Up As.ah Example. 4 Bexagenarians, septuagenarians, 00- tagenarians, nonagenariang and scores of really old men who are still phy- sically in the hammer-throwing class and mentally. as-eound as Solomon, de- clare that Prof, William Osler's radl- val statement that a man outgrows his usefulness at’ forty and should be tenderly put to death Ot siaty with chloroform of other soothing ‘an thetic Is altogether Incomprehenslb! Commissioner McAdoo, who ,a few weeks ago mado a futile attempt to re- tire a number of his officers as over the age (imit, tokes the professor's remarks seriously and anewers them, He has geen several of his venerable inspectors “akin the cat’ and tun double hand- aprings, and knows whereof he epeake. He saya: Mr, McAdoo's Ideas. “The statement by Dr, Osler pub lished in to-day’s papers that @ man at forty has reached his best for any work, public or private, and that from that time on he js deteriorating, !s in actual facta presented by the dally lives of the men around us, and par- tloularly in the sharp competitions of this great oilty, "T think bt would be an error to make any general hard-and-fast rule on this subject, Many men exhaust their re- pvurces, physloally and mentally, before they reach forty, while others husband them and are better at fifty than they were at forty. ' “Men and women ¢re muoh like plants and trees, Some develop phyal- cally and mentally very rapidly, Others eure Bony) grows nn irmer, coclous, boy who plays the violin in a ublic hall at nine years of age, before large and enthusiastic audiences, wear as well ag the boy of nine throwin, snow! around. the coruer? Wii the boy who has becn subjected to a hot-houge-forcing mental process a8 good a men mentally at Forse, as the. boy who |» educated, either from books or experience, in a ‘hoPial an tadual way, 60 that, insteud of swal- lowing all his anes at a me, aa it were, he remains a student Good Up ‘to Seventy-five, ‘when eighteen years old he was sent to Germany to take plano lessons under ,the @neat masters of that day, } He remained in Germany nearly two years, and’ then returned to Brooklyn, ‘He was at that time looked upon aa a remarkable pianist, So hard had he worked at music that his health began to fail, and it was decided he should travel through the West, In 1883 he etarted on the trip from which he never returned. The young man first went to Kaneas City and from there Dr. Bartlett received the following postal card: “Have arrived wately in Kansas Clty, Will write to- morrow. H, 8, B.” ‘That was the last ever heard from ‘him, | No Trace to Be Found. ‘Winen the letter mentioned in the poa~ tal card failed to arrive, Dr, Bartlett “began a search for the youth, He hired detectives and lawyers, and spared no expense in his efforts, Absolutely no trace could be foundot the boy; Even hs trunk, which had deen. checked ‘through to Kangas City, could not be Jocated, Mise Eliza Lefferts Bartlett, a sister of the young man, who js now yleiting friends at No. 660 Flatbush ayenue, Brooklyn, sald to-day that the family pallores the young man ‘had been mur- er “We have about given up hope," she sald. “It is my belief that after Henry had written the postal card to father, he wandered about the streets to see something of Kansas City, He was a ‘youth, innocent’ and full of | boyish spirits, and had no thoughts of the evil Bhat treater ed him alone in a range DP “I belleve that he was waylald, killed and robbed near the depot, I think the robbers took his trunk as well as the few hundred dollars that he had In his pookets,'” a LEAPS FROM SINKING BARGE. Captain Seriously U1 in Hospital from Shock of Cold) Swim, Suffering from shock and chill caused by a plunge Into the river to escape from his sinking barge, Capt, Matthew Burns, aged fortyenine, ts in Flower Hospital, and his condition is sald to be serious. Burns has the reputation of belng a practical joker, and some alleged hu- Morist cut the hawser of the coal barge at Fifty-sixth street and Bust River early to-duy while the Captain was asleep, When Burns awoke he found the cabin half full of water and the nh midstream, yerboard and swam to a charge hundred feet distant, swhere he wus rescued, His own craft, with a cargo of coal, filled and sank shortly afterward, —— DR. SHIPMAN DEAD, | wae encouraged in his ambition, and J For T Christ Chareh's Pastor, The Rey, Dr, Jacob 8. twenty-three years the pastor Episcopal Church, Broadway enty-firgt street, in dead at try residence at Whitesboro, The death of the noted clergyman was due to a etroke of apoplexy which he suffered in the apting of 1001, He was then sixty- five tat) old and was admitted to the ries In. 1858, Dr, Shipmen's first charge wan that of the int lahes of St, John Whitesbot ve children survive Dr Shipman, of Christ and Soy- his couns = Ufe? “Many famous men began their lives as delicate boys, threatened ' with early death, who, .as they reached mature , with care and exercise developed fara and strong constitutions and lived useful, active and famous lives up to Uae time they were seventy or seventy- | go, ive, “he general role applied to the mil- | wie and naval pervices I think 's a The navy retires at @ixty- ‘one, ALPS TUNNEL: Switzerland and Italy Rejoice as the Workmen Meet Under the Mountains—Great Sub- way Will Soon Be Ready. —_— ' GONDO, Switrertand, Feb, 2%.—Plero= Ing of the Simplon tunnel through ¢ ‘Alps was completed at 7.20 o'clock this morning, The work was commenced In 1%, ‘he meeting of the two boring parties (Swise and Ttallan) we signalled throughout Switzerland hy ringing ot church bells and salutes oy cannon, a ny unexpected obstacl were en- area) ane most serous, being hot aprings, which threatened ta wreck the whole’ enterprise, and, a temperature which at one time rose to 181 degrees Fahrenhelt, making a continuance of the work impossible until the engineers found means of cooling the atmosphere, Now that the borers have met it will enable the water accumulated In the north gallery to be drawn off, ‘the work of preparing the tunnel for a permanent way will be pushed as Fapidly as possible, and It ts hoped to inaugurate the tunnel about March 20, th of the Simplon ‘Tunnel from Bane in eawitaurland to Iselle on the je of the mountain Is about teaees mi Work was begun over seven years ago, A very hard forma- {fon of roak as encountered at ihe tion ton the Iselle side which rendered necossary the construction of spec Imachanery for the tunnel work, iter, the boring had been pushed about two miles powerful aprings were ae grom whlch poured more than 5) faiions of Water a minute and which for a time caused fy nuppension of all work 0 an side, Oa TT aT Chis difficulty, been over come When about 20) feet further on it Stratum of shifting materla |Countered, and the further tunnelling of Jabout 160 feel red! 1 Six months (Tiwp and an expenditure of over $100,- 000, A and the work proceeded [tw found thal the brie work att erent for Hbedpport oF the AMnished portions of thebtannel was threatened with vuln begguce of & slippery submlanee cons talfed in ther mountiuin’s | formation, tnd moést of the work on the archway had to be gone over agali But the greatest diMlculiy encountered was last Seplember, when hot water began. to pour into the tunnel and caused for 5@\ On the Shipman, among them being the Re Heehert Shipman, chaplain. at Went {| jon aide exists an erie ay th ve my judgment not warranted. by the! -told—was too bus} BORE COMPLETE: Was en-| further suspension of work | mo iii, Awiss or northern side there | MUA oumulation of water which | end, to precipitate to the hy his, bea to frame | ther words.” | | Bohift taughied | Read | Jewelry a two: "I have trament in the police too, if for no in fe railitary ant ‘seent-milve: ye mi \* rvice, The life 1s routine ‘and the ‘tendency as they advance in age ts to drop into eighty-five at What more oi |you think of plat John EB. | not think tie J. Edward 8! \ too buay to t | think | now." admitting — #ix' .| ance Company | AND THERES | he same can | A rut and atay there and fose all ideas | MEN of progress, | Morgan F Only Forty, | J. Pierpont Mo! had vance, at forty and fi him, “Bhould a man berehloroformed after he {e-aixty, or is he worth preserving at ¥ for a while longer?” was the| kins, does not ieation. Mri» Mornen read it and laughed, lancing through the glass partition foward the reporter.and saying a few | nd few are words to his sepretary, “Mr, Morgan shys he has about thirty engagements to meet during the next hour or two,” sald the secretary, ‘and he would ask to be excused from way: ig anything further than that he feels as young and can do as much now as he could before he was forty, seven-elghths auernes tebie Alemender, President, of United States @ le and over sixty; ‘That H hite mel Tf that ie true they ought to | ens ones: & chloroform me, and I wish they would, niously, however, I do not. think re is any room for discussion on| be created dn A casual examination ps glance at the history of 4a look around at the| VY, and all have been: taken to prevent a cataa- frgphe. je construction pompeny has con: tracted to have the tunnel ready for trafic. on May 15, under a heavy pen: alty, birt owlng to the unexpected dif- ulties encountered it ig not likely, should the contract be broken, that the penalty will-be enforced by the Swiss And Italian Governments, who have jointly @nanced the undertaking share and share alike at the cost of $15,000, HENRY Go soon as the boring is thorough! completed and the track laid, a Bey tunnel ts to be constructed parallel to the large one, which willl by Increased In alae 80 as to permit of traf- fle both ways at the same time, In the meanwhile a switching station {8 to be Sete ee a ae Win the large nel, 0 allow fo oe eeing r the passing The piercing of the simi +. garied as being one of Aap eateai engineering achievements of the age, MAYOR OPPOSES || L” BRIDGE LOOP | Announces that He Will Veto a Franchise for Centre Street Structure if Board of Alder- men Grants It, Mayor McClellan will not consent to ‘the erection of ‘an elévated structure in Centre street as proposed in the so- called Martin plan for the establish. ment of a loop in connection with ob H. Sohitt, . has to gay, and am Benedict, ~~ | poventy years old ughed like a if Parsons, sevent a leader of the New York bar: “I do | president of the Fourth National “Tam very busy and am almost, alwi deak eight hours eye of time to talk to my fi everybody that comes around askin uestions. I don’t ‘feel any older than 1} id at forty, and am worth more by a) deal in every way, an R 60--WE DO (Some Pictorial Views by Artist SOPHOCLES? OREW uP THREE CUr RATE BULLS ED OFF leaders of to-day je all that is neces- ‘an answer without fur- 14 if no the subject,” heartily. | head of the great Benedict Brow, and! Y ook at Tiffany at) the head of his business. an be sald? For myself {I am here at my derk and in charge, every day, and as young as J wae at forty, A’ friend the other when |] told hin | wes seventy: eptern ber, got off the old compliment, ‘Well, | jyou don't look {t,"” but he added, ‘You! look Wke you ‘were Be “What do) that?” ‘and Mr,” Benedict tyselaht, and Subject admits of’ argu- tent. There can be but one opinion | that fs entitled, to. any w if ht immons, aout het hink about what ie tho | proper age for a man ‘to retire, 1 may ft over some years later, but pot Mr, Shannon Feela Young, FE. 1, Shannon, executive officer of the | Mutual Life Insurance Company, an ign tys five: execute I belitve be sald of shundreds of my business acquaintances that I have known since they were boys,” — oe WASHINGTON ! A UNIT AGAINST OSLER. (Bpecial to The Evening World) WASHINGTON, Feb, %4.—Worthlews it only to be chloroformed at wixty years of age, the new theory advanced by Dr. Osler, of Johna Hop- meet with any hearty proval in official circles, where pretty nearly: everybody is more than forty inder sixty years of age, Official Washington gasped and gulped when It read Dr, Osler’ would have to submit to the anaesthesia; of the membership of the ‘Supreme Court would be majority of the desks of the House of Representatives would be draped In mourning; vacancies would at least half of the com- misaioned officers of the army and the solentists who make | the S. BARTLETT, bridge car trame. “T will never agree to, tliat plan’ said the Mayor to-day, "If the Board of Aldermen grant the franchise I yhall | veto it, and keen on vetoing it. ‘The jerection of an elevated loop in Centre ‘atreet, would degtroy the thorough tare {and increase dumagex enormously.” It is known that the Brooklyn Rapid [Transit Company ts In favor of the {plan and has been quietly pushing the! [project If the loop were to be built the cara of the R. RT, would be privs Heged to operate: for a considerable | Was itt /apace over an Important stvest fn Mans | Valley data, “Do you Commissioner Best's | Van for th alternat.ve plan for a structure through | thought The vaults trust con.pant by At Head, fayor LOOKING FOR WILL, 10 $41,000 ESTATE. Relatives Searching Here and in Pittatield, Ma ment of J. F. for Last 1 hemok, of a al New York es are being searched to- the J his country Pittatteld, late Frederick Peaklenne Mass, rely lUvea and court officers have searche) e missing document partment in whieh it wa Will Would certainty | | Baxter street? was asked | found only a few sonal effec or | Phat plan would cerualnly be mach Soret At VOR ADGUERERL Ot cheaper, Init 1 doubt if the rattroad| personal property. Mr. Schenck wits company vould be Willing to pay 41-2 | Suppo: per cent, of the cost of construction,” | He lanswerc | the Mayor, “L know that | something must be dohe for the reltet of Brookiynites, but Manhattan streets |. TH not be suerificed to attain thar | St WY |, Where must be found another plan | Mr one that will meet all the pequire. | tors. roke @ ments,’ Siich'a bilan ‘wil be evolved, 1] {he oa The eb c. W Hotel Cn r ist beam Ryoadway, min celebration, and & in ‘good wishes for the 1 to be a very wealthy man atl nis death, May Celebration, n the new addition ¢ HKorty-third #irer, Was laid yeste Witt Valiicky one of the proph. botttle of shemnest bY a ON'T a thelr homes here would be somewhere | ele. documegt that the Mutual Life Insur- | x , a [in the Senate, and will be appointed to Morgan Ar 68 | Hotn MARRIED Mes OP His WEVES AFTER Senator Franvis Marton Cockrell, of | Missouri, who has sefved thirty years A HEA sl RS — CHLeReF OR MOCARREH the Intersiate Commerce Commission when his term expires on Maroh 3, le one of the young men of that body, He} was born in 184, and took his seat in| Senate when President Roosevelt GIRL SWINDLER ROBS DOCTORS Police Looking for Clever Young | Woman Who, by Means of | Bad Cheoks, Has Robbed Many West Side Physicians. Handsomely gowned and with an) @asy, assured manner, & young woman who Im declared to be a swindler hea | been mulcting the physicians in the! wWeatern weotion of the olty, and en: | pecially along Central Park West, out of mums of mooy ranging from % t $4, and to-day the detective force of New York, with an accurate descrip: | Hon of hey, iw striving to run her to sarth, Last night there were many complaints against her, and each phys- lclan had the @ame story to tell of having been defrauded by a check scheme, 3 The woman oalled at the homes otf ihe phyaiclans while they were away. | She represented to some member of th 1ousehold that she was a wained naree and that she had got a position nursing (hrough the physician, She would pre- jent a check drawn on we Riverside 3ank, Fifty-seventi street and Elghch | (venue, and made payable to the order if the physician, In every physlolin's | \ome ahy had the same story to tell | if having vollvcted a bill owed to the | physiclan, which included a small jum owed to her for her services ax a} } turse, Invariably some member of the ghyatelan's family would take ‘ho! | sheck, advancing the difference in cash © the woman, After getting the caso the would be profuse in her thanks and | day in the hope of Anding the will that | depart | She called at the home of br J. J oagrove, No, Sl Weat Fifty-elgnti treet, timing her visit woen the doctor Vas nov at pome tam awfully sorry,” oo bad, Dr, Cosgrove did a big favor | rome, He got me the position to jurse one of his patients, Mrs. Kellogs, | nd asked me to collect his BH for sie sald #, while the eheck Is drawn | i ls or § The younhk woman falled to collect he money here, and ahe left hurried! tho Next visited the home of Dr, Jaa ra NO, 3) Weat treet, ant succeeded In colltoting %, ve iy jhe is fifty-six years old. jhe | tor Depew has been twice @ was preparing for Harvard. ‘& man ie as young as he feels," eald the Benetor, striding out across the ley pavement for a two-mile walk to his home. Senator Cullom, of Ttinols, Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations, In seventyenix vears old, He was & Presidential Hiector for two years be- fore the birth of President Roonevelt and {s still in the “pony” class in the Benate, "Doc Osler should take his own medl+ |) “Dam told He should cine,” Senator Cullom paid, practice what he preaches,” Depew Young at Seventy-one, Banator Depew—he has never been re- ferred to as "Old'’ Senator Depew, He was born in 188% and is seventy-one years old, can make @ speech, eat a dinner and tell @ atory better than any young man, and according to Dr, Osler should have been chloroformed eleven years ago, Since that time Bena. to the Benate, been married, and js far more bprightly tian many @ man halt, his age. : “Old age has no terrors,” said the fenator, ‘There ts no such thing, I'm eolng to live.to a hundred, and I don't @xpect to be any older than I am to- iy) Dr, Osler ld @ great physician, Senator Platt, of Connecticut, tu seve enty-elmht years old and in presiding over the Swayne impeachment trial be cau his legal acumen, “Longfellow and Pierce and Haw- thorne wern atudents at Bowdoin Col- lege," he sald, itty yeara later Long- fellow wrote ‘Moritur! Salutamus.’ Does | that signify any decay of mind?" . John Sharp Willlame, the minority leader, is accounted a young man in the House, He ts forty-nine years old, lenry Gassaway’ Davin, the Vice- Presidential candidate of the Demo- cratic party, was elghty-two years old,” Mr, Williams sad in’ answer to @ ques- tion, Gen, Charles H. Grosvenor,, of Ohio, {s seventy-two years old, and no man Is more adtive mentally or physloally than he, Eleven Children After 78. ‘De lesseps,. the Frenoh éngineer, raised ‘eleven children after he was sev- enty-elght years old," said Gen, Gros- venor. ' ‘Then, too, there is our old friend J, Werren Kiefer, who after an absence of twenty years’ returns to) Congress,"’ Senator Allison, known as "Pussy Foot” because of hia reputed ability to walk from Washington to Iowa on the made, only a emall percentage of tine physiclans who were @windled are he- Moved to have reported thelr losses to the police, Pal SS CLARA LIPMANN SUMMONED. Actress Charged with Failing to Keep Sidewalk Clear, Mrs, Louls Mann, whowe stage name in Clara Idpmann, appeared In the Wost Side Court to-day in answer to a aummons Iseued by Magistrate Whit- man, Mrs, Mann had failed to keep the sidewalk in front of her home, No, 310 Weat One Hundred and First street, tree from snow, Polloemun Hartman testified to-day that_the sidewalk was now cleaned, and the Magistrate diemiased Mre, Mann, — TELEPHONE GIRL FOILS BURGLAR Hears Him at Work in Drug Store Beneath Exchange, Gives Alarm by Wire, and Fel- low Is Caught, RENTON, N, J Feb, Mise amie Bond, who Ives at Morrisville, Just acroae the river, and who is employed as night telephone operator in the local office here, proved herself a girl of nerve last night when a strapping burglar was at work In tho RN E 15. OVER 30 AND (3: DOING keys of a olano without atitking a note, venty-alx years old, "1's folly to say aman {A old because lived a certain number of years,”” Benator Allison sald, ‘He should know, fow he fs chuirman of 18 CHLOROFORM the Committee on Appropriations, which jmakes the appropriations for the run- ning of the Government, y Beoretary of the Navy Paul Morton, who is forty-six but looka ten years younger, and who as the exebutive head of the Banta Fe Raiiroall directed men of all ages and grades for years, smiled derisively when ho’ read Dr. Osler's statements, Man's Prime te Fifty, “The Doctor may be all right, but he doesn't know," eald My, Morton, ‘The average man does not réach hie prime until after he Js forty, and be is at his beat’ between forty and wlxty, "Men do |hot begin to go dows hill until well at- | work that the best years of my ite | Wete not defore me, “Tt le food for thou ‘only comment, of | Becre rat when hi @ $ dia ot for ne, eles ‘could, "uate 0 Free acny it. ite dooe. ne has, Feuched’ the ‘age noformed, President himself 1s, forty-seven yearn old, an a him old, olf, and any one who ti he wae old ‘would Tose his friendship. SIDNEY RIPLEY ~ PASSES AWAY Failed to Rally from Operation for Aoute Appendicitis—Peri. tonitis Set In and Patient Rapitlly Succumbed, ' Sidney Dillon Ripley died to-day at his home, No. 16 Bast Seyenty-ninth wtreet, Mr Ripley died from an operation for appendicitis, which is thought to have been accentuated by constant worry over the recent up- heaval in the affairs of the Equitable Life Assurance Soclety, of which ‘he was an officer and director, The dead man was a brother-in-law of the vice+ President and principal shareholder of the Hquitable, James H. Hyde, Perltonitis followed the operation upon Mr, Ripley, The first indication that he was a viofim of appendicitis was last Tuesday, when he felt/a slight pain in his abdomen, He ald rot consider it seriously at the time, but Tuesday night it became so excruciating that he summoned Dr. Joseph A, Blake who called Dr. W. 7, Bull Into con- sultation. ‘The physiclins were amazed at the rapid advance of the disease, whioh appeared in a malgnant form. ‘Almost at the conclusion of the opera. tlon, at 8 o'clock the following morn- ing, peritonitis set In, and the phys!- ‘clans became alarmed, A few hours later jt was sad that Mr. Ripley had drug store under the telephone ex-j}some chance for recovery, but early b- change, |day the announcement Is made that ‘The young woman was alone in tho! death was momentarily expected, office, when she heard a noise as) Drs, Blake and Bull, with Dro Rich though some one was breaking glass, ards, who Ix the Ripley family phy- fn the store below. She hesitated for) sician, were in constant attendance a few moments as to what course tojupon the stricken man, pursue and fnatly decided to call up) ‘To what extert the affairs of the Marsh's Hotel, feeling sure there, Raultuble Life Soclety are responst- would be some men there who would} Mr. Ripley's death, 1s proble- come to her aid A close trlend of the funily She lowered her vole as much as) states that Mr, Ripley manifested an possible. and explained to the hotel! {ntonse Interest in the recent business clerk her predicament w to a point in fact Uhit pro: In a few minutes there were a seore Ae. of men in front of the drug store look: very nervous condition and ing for Che burgiay, but Che jatter ran) hls wystem In such a state thie Che through & back door and took refuge| ravages of diesuse found little resists in the yard of Constable Mason. Mason, wiio had been awak noe and shouts of the mei | iim, My: blll inoluded in the check. | pursued the taluf, saw him Tying {n ane | I suciety omuey of the yard and ptmnptly ar- vested him, ~ Se ~= When you “outgrow” your flat @ «partment and desire to get a mod vertion in World Wants, Read the ja ne Mr. and Mrs. Ripley are weil known They have given many en |tertalnments, and last year’s Com. ng-out {hall for thelr daughter, Anna, at Sherry's was the largest of the senson, | Phe business ftiteresis of Mn Riploy lure extensive, Aside from his connec. eighta | /f% One in & good neighborhood, ade | tion with (he Equitable he th a director el in many other corporations, He onthuakast automonlility” * ¥ o y Lawyer, Cocdemned for Murder Wants Time t Present It, Bases Action on Theory ¥ Embalming Produces far Effects to Chloroform: HAS MEDICO-LEGAL Experta of Society Hold that lonalre Died from Old Age,” and Heart Failure. ce ee : ALBANY, Feb, %.—An was made in the Court of \ day for further postponement’ of argument in the case of Albert rick, who is under sentertice of for the murder of William M, millionaire, of New York City, Patrick's case had heen argument next Wetlnesday, Td The application for further ment {s.on the ground of newly, ered evidence: This has special, reference to Patrink's claim, that ‘the embalming process @te fects a congestion of the lungs stmlia to that produced by chloroform, Wi rwhich Mr, Rive is alleged :bo iuwre, ie munored, Patrick in prosenting his plea’ new tral will ask that the ree porte of the Medico-Legal Fegards to millionaire wonaldered. The experts of the hoki that Mr, Rice died from. and heart fallure, instead of form polsoning, ‘The application in Patriok’ ‘was made by ex-Gov. David B, this city, and was opposed for the pep ple by Assistant District: q aos of New York, and fornet iad he opposition \? ras based upon the god new evidende, Ty discovered bois ito-Legal fe suMclently conclusive arrant h delay in the ¢ MRS. CHADWICK WOULDNOT ANSW. OLEVELAND, , Feb. wick, when placed on the bankruptey proceedings day before Referee Rettin at first ta be sworn, After: tion with her attorneys, she wi he wented to take the oath, 1 bt is then name, She refused to any other questions > WINTER RASH Instantly Relieved Baths with ticurs Y SOAP: And gentle applications of CURA Ointment, the great SI Cure and purest and sweetest emollients. This is the speedy, permanent, and treatment for torturing, disfiguring. itching, burning, bleeding, ‘ crusted, and pimply skin and humors, eczemas, rashes, and i tations, andis sure to succeed when all other methods fail, Sold throughout the world, Cul in rr eh 1 Landon, i faa be in, Oo ‘ow to Cure heey Huma,” any fie Pilin'dhe, per house 89. Vs are. Potter D ad fort FOR MAN OR BEAST! : SLOAN'S ins

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