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F Says She Doesn’t Think Her Sister’s Testi- t mony Hurt Her in the Least, and Roundly Denounces Coggins, Her Love-Letter | to Whom WasO ffered in Evidence. ~The amazing composire and bnoyaacy of spirits of Nan Patterson were | @gain in evidence to-day whon sho received an Myaning World reporter atl her cell with a radiant smile and sal as “It’s ail noneense to say that I um in the least frightened at the proba- {ale outcome of my trial, My confi dence has never been shnken for ag inetant and I want to tell you a few things I think about the bombs Mr, Rand believes he has explored to the wrecking of my hopes,” The young woman had come ont and the: two were sitting close together on a bench reading the morning | mail that lay heaped up on a table, Their eyes were clear and there was no evidence of weeping or nervous strain in elther one. “T am feeling fine @ia all the talking, "and I am not in thay veyst afraid that Midget—that's what I call Julla, she's so little—hurt ‘me at all when she was on the stand, I really don't think Mr, Rand made her say anything serious against me and she certainly was a brick in not breaking down as he tried to make her, Nervous, of Course, “Dia you notice qt the trial how an- ary Mr. Rand got when he handed Mid- wet the pawn tickets and she called his aaid Nan, who attention to the fact that the dates| were in October and not in June? He feirly flume the tickets down on the table, he was no angry. “Of course I was nervous, as any one would be under such circumstances and fan Julla naturally would be m her hard position. I wonder that she stood up as well as she did, considering how Inarshly she was badgered by Mr, Rand, I think tt was @ shameful ewhibition \when he offered Julia her freedom if jahe would desert me and testify for him. “Not for an wnstant did I foar that }Mldget would go back on me. ytoves me too much to do anything Mke that," and the actress embraced her | slender Sdinswoman and hugged her en- thuslastically, Julla was on the stand, for I knew she could not tell anything about me that would hurt me, I was only nervous bout her, for she ts not well and has uffered ternbly from her cruel smpria- }onment. ! Her “Cry Baby” Letter. “Now, about this letter to Mr, Cog- mina which I siened ‘Cry Baby.’ I don't |wee how much capital can he made out of that, as it wns just a foolish little girl's letter to a man she /hought she (loved, It is not true that Ciosar Young and I were good friends at thie time. (1 was ongared to Leaile Coggins and ‘had a verfect right to write a foolish letter to him, | “My, but Iam glad that I didn't mar- } | ' HER SISTER’S ORDEAL MADE NAN PATTERSON SUFFER ) By Emmeline Pendennis, ) If it had been the Court of the In- ) quisition by which Nan Patterson was { being tried. instead of Part Il. of Gen- eral Sessions, she could not have suf- fered more cruelly than veaterday when “SLAVE IS MY MASTER,” SAYS ARTIST WHITE Painter Complains that His Man Adsalam Is Too Faithful. ‘wh tlst Gilbert White, of No, 74 ‘Washin, Bquare South, was at the World's Fair in St. Louls he obtained possession of Adwalam, an Arabian, formerly a member of Brigand Ralsull's band, Adsalam had been captured by the Sultan of Morocco and put into bondage, Then he was sent to St. Louis @s part of the Morocco exhibit, At che close of the big fair Adsalnam found himeelf out of a job. It was then that Mr, White consented to take the Arab as a elave, But now, however, it turns out that, instead of being a slave Adeaiam is the master and Mr. White has to do his bidding, The artist Is figuring to-day on some nice, Christian way of getting rid of his Mahometan wert without offending his own con- | actence, |:.%% haven't, had a moment's peace @ince the man came Iuto my | ia,"" sald Mr, White to-day, “The i le with him is that he is too fait) i. Wbanever I have visitors \Wdesiam “etxen them up, and if doesn't like them he wants to kill them en the spot, “He stands directly behind these vis fora at the dining table, and, looking Weseechingly at me, keeps drawing his! Mand across his throat, begwing that dhe be allowed to garrote the guosts. In the basement of my home there is a big, fark room, Adsalam at first singled out ‘ehis room as a most excellent place In hich to hide the bodies of my enemies, hom he desired to assaasinate | *E finally became so fearful that he 1d really harm some one that I had ‘to Invent a story to make him give up 1a basement iden, 1 told him that we ula rve the basement room for he bodies of the enemies of his father 4 mother, The Mahometans, you now, respect thelr parents almost as ueh they do Allah, Adsalam \thought this was a great plan, and ho (is now waiting for me to bring some ‘of ‘the enomies of his parents to New }¥ork, “whenever the ae goes out on tho i it Beha $a f fe oe She} “T wesn't really worrted at all while! house- | he | Both seened to be in splendid &pirits, ry that man Coggins after the way ho acted, Caesar always told me that he was w snake in the grass, and I should have taken his word for it, Now 1 know it, for if he wasn't a snake he! would never have given that letter to | John Millin, “This same man Cogxins came @ last summer while I was in here, and he Rave me $0. He tad a, how sort: i y ne was for me, and ‘this is “Nan. you see you 09 marstbn edhe’ @ot Into by “I told him Twas not so #1 where I would have Been If fied woz led him. "and “when” vou dome: RAT wi to tt would rather be here 12 are Tombs than Wed Up td sudh ‘a man fe "On that day he called at th he invited my father to go down nonne Face track with him, fe told feuhee Mullin. and. try to seo ‘160n | that he would see et out of him allt ind learned were guing to do, that he and Millin spree, and that drunk Millin. Went” to And got the letters Bum "That lo what Com really bolleve he gave the letter to Mil- Un. ‘Phat tis wh irty, Ba. that at I call a dirty, “T Want (0 gay again tha one of those ‘foolist lette Will write, 1 don't pr any other evidence that. Mr’ brouglit out will hurt me. 1 hing my lawyery have done splendidly by me and T feel sure that f will be wok fet: T would ike to tell the jury my story of it all. but, as my lawyers advise me, there Is no need for a defense My In+ hocence must be apparent to them all (In spite of tho terrible things tive jSquare-jawed Mr. Rand saye against ™ this point in the Patterson, the father of women, entered the corri one off on a Coggins was his” apartments had written to | ‘zing sald, but | at {t was only ra that girl fear that this letter | | interview Mr. the two young Fan to him and embraced hie ey Hoth great show ‘of affection, Bile of letters they “took Bee, i aee re 0. the_old man ‘a over bis shoulder, Mel teed tern “We all three got a mother,” continued Nan, ty to her Interviewer, certaln as we ar come out right. letters from tae | companions in the } When We wer» out i | letter from urn “and” she i duet ae hat everything will ere are also somo "hi wo were my. Ploritora Sextet “nm the road, All the. letters are cheerful and they remind mo of some of the maa “Tt hae if years ago.” Si fi abs Prosecutor Rand recalled Mra, J, Mor- gan Smith to the witness stand to re+ sume hls examination, here was not a spectator in that vourt-room that did not feel himself Joking on at a scene from a great luman tragedy, Here were two sisters HANGS HIMSELF IN CENTRAL PARK Nicholas Nau. Cabman Out of Work, Attaches Rope to Tree on Bolivar Hill and Strangles to Death, —_—_. Walking through a secluded path on Bolivar Hill, in Central Park, off West Bighty-fourth street, to-day, Marcus Raymond and Murk Well saw a dark object swaying in a masa of shrubbery, As they #lunced at it the objoct slowly turned, and a whte, ghastly face swung Into view, agony depicted upon every feature, Tt was the face of Nicholas Nau, a cabman, of No, 07 Amsterdam avenue, who had hapged himself from the limb of a tree some thne during the night, Raymond and Well, after satisfying Uyemselves that the man was dead, no- tied a park policeman, who cut the body down, Nau strangled to death, The Angers of both hands were twisted In the noose around his neck. In his extremity he | had attempted to tear from he throat the band that wae choking him, and #o struggling he dled, The man was, fifty-five years old and |of a despondent nature, He had been jout of work a week and lamented the | fact inst night to his wite and son as hey eat’ after dinner iy night, when Nau put on his coat aed @nnounced his intention of going out, “ve got a job, I think, Up At Blghs “Tv8 a long i tyfourth street,” he said, I'll never be out of work again. Job, He Kissed his wéfe and gon and went he climbed a away, Srey arrward tree on Bolivar |. fastened of n rope around a limb. the other ond Apound his neck and’ jlimped Evidently he thought he Would be able ht Dut he was. a tall to break, his neok, but man, and the stretch of the rope fil! the give of the limb allowed h tguich the’ ground.” ‘he Yo We ten to # and Nau had to strangle, | swung in the breege for’ h j was discovered, the toes (making curious jine ‘plana upon the gras but The body had ours before It of the boots sand irregular de- 1 ‘have a Verdian cat named Mirable, and Adsalam figured that owing to this cat's atronge Sppearance the othor tabbies {n the nel@hboriood must tease it too, i he proceeded to out off Mirable's lothen Adgatante wat clot a, 8a nu jwolra ‘Arahian attire. ing he undresses, tang in the dayt! of taking off bis on more of his and in the morn- le oes about the 5) RAND SCORING A STRONG POINT. HE'D TURN Errscr, if of her cell with her stater, Mrs, Smith, | AS RAND WOULD MAKE A Pot: AT NAN “T® WATCH “tHE QUICKLY, ANP LooK _- one under indictment for consplracy and being bulldozed into testifying against her younger sister on trial for murder. The torments that these two endured would be fit for purgatory; and who could tell which suffered the more? Nan sat watching her sister, the telp- leas victim of the insinuating, sneering, | bullying Rand, as he fired question after | listen nervously to those low-s: question in the flerce volley of the ex- amination, The prosecutor led the ness on with mock gentleness and cniy- airy, worming from her small conce: alons that necessitated the admitt! greater ones; cornering her and ford her into conflicting statements; ene Ing, snarling, stinging the two with brutal sarcasm, It was profession- ally, offolally clever; {t was splendid prosecuting, but if the sisters had thelr Shoice of trial by fire or water the would not hesitate to choose the hor- rors of the old-time ‘‘ordeal" to e the merciless persecution of the yo! Assistant District-Attorne: But there could be no escape, Mr Smith chose to forego the dismissal of the indictment against her which Rana promised rather than desert her sister And yet, with the best will in the world she had already given confiicting evi dence so serious that it has thrown «a dark pall over Nan's case that it will be all her clever coynsel can do t Mghten, Unwittingly she had given Nan the He, and yet as she stood to ti WILL FORCE HYDE TO NAME THE DUMMIES Tull’s Attorney Has Plan to Put Young Man on Witness Stand. Plans were perfected to-day, which, it la expected, wil result in James Hazen Hyde going on the witnese-stand in court and revealing under oath the names of the dummy directors of the Equitable Society, A. Edward Woodruff, attorney, of No. 120 Broadway, acting for Herbert G. Tull, of Philadelphia, and cther policy- holders. js the man who will conduct the examination, Early in the Equitable troubles Mr, Woodruff brought suit to establieh the values of the Bqultable stock and the right of policy holders to participation in the surplus, Three weeks ago he brought another action In the Supreme Court before Justice Scott to set aside the proposed mutualization plan which Mr, Hyde agreed should apply to the Hquitable. He holds that the plan was adopted illegally in that of the 570 shares of stock voted in favor of it 510 were voted by Mr. Hyde, This left only sixty ehares to be voted by the other thirty-three directors present, much less than the five shares each that the law provides directors must hold, ‘The Equitable Society will have to pul jn an answer to the sult on Monday, Following the answer Mr, Woodruff will present an amended petition and will then proceed to discover just what In- terest certain men have in the Hquwt- ab! “My contentions as to the vote for the amendment of the oharter in the way of mutuaNaation,” @ald Mr, Woodruff to- day, “are all based upon statements made by Samuel Untermyer as coun- sel for the Hauitable In court proceed- ings In Brooklyn, It !s my purpose to get this information at first hand, “L shall apply to Justice O'Gorman for an omer of examination before trial, ‘Thin ls mandatory. When it és fesued 1 all summon Mr, Hyde, Mr. Alexander, ir, Tarbell and others to court and compel tham to unwind the inuricate Zot 1% . ‘tangle of atock transters which are now. wheel of torture her iy will stick to Nan.” Poor Nan! She sat straining forward trying to get even eye communteation with Julia, But the hulking frame of Rand was planted like an Impenetrable wall between the witness and the de- | fendant, and all Nan could do was to poken re- plies, fearing they boded 1 both for Julia and herself. A.. Unequal Fight. ‘The hours that Mrs. Smith was test!- fying were endured with cruel pain. ‘Whe | defendant sat motionless in agonized silence, | The witness wos fencing bravely, bul in unequal fight, and the score was jrunning up by leaps and bounds for | the prosecution, And all the tme the central was Rend. ‘The young prosecutor 1s striding up and down with the rest- lessicss of a caged lion, As he puts his questions he 1s never stil for a moment, His nervous hande are grip- ping the desk, twirling chairs before him, rummaging deep In trousers pock- ets and clinking the coins, It 1s un- disputed that Mr, Rand performs al- most as much manual labor as mental, ind that is no small amount. Another phase of his restlessness is evinced in hk drinking habit, His capacity for water ts as great as that thought was figrury | NAN HEARS MRS. SMITH TESTIFY. (Photograph taken in the court-room by an Evening World photographer, for relentless Inony, sAsk the minion Ganymede, keeper of his exceile cup, how many Umes an hour he re- plenishes that ever-emptylng glass. It is not a few But that goblot, being more or less Indestructible, can endure his cone: tryIng without showing signs of wear. Not so Mr, Rand's attire, It is the plalnest eort of clreumstanttal evidence to the restiveness of his manner, The pockets are worn and frayed with the } thrusting in of his hands, the cd \stretohed with the straining and twist- ing of his big, powerful body, and the nether garments are hopelessly bagged thanks to the gymnastics of their wearer As Rand Appea termined jaw of his oan be thrust out at his victim with all kinds of inso- lence. His mouth, strong though small, with its thin lips, can smile as sedur- t is) the words of the famous Smith letter to the bookmaker, that Rand hag en- | deavored again and again to put in evi- dence, but in yain, When It came to the other Morgan Smith letters, Rand rose in his vind@tive mignt and’ played his hand for everything tt was worth, That Letter “'s,"" “You wrote that letter, [ believe, Mra, Smith," sald he, with carcesing swaot: ness ind a grin ‘of mockery on his’ lips, “Ty did." 8 the letter ‘8S’ mean in this The yvolee had hardened rally and (hreateningly ln s enia, ed | ‘epeat: ‘To what does the letter 's’ *" he thundered, “T refuse to answer, on the ground that tt would tend to degrade and in- eriminate me," she cried. “Is it your honest bellef' (the prose- cutor's tone fell an octave, into the de. ‘The fact i» that Mr. Rand finds biy| ass, and the words were terroriaing. as Mngularly mobile face Insufficient to} they foll)—"YOUR HONEST BELIEF — express his' meaning, ‘That big, de- | that ff you explained the letter ‘Ss’ In paapeetee it would tend to incriminate witness was vistbly unnerved, uid it?” roared Rand, repeating ration with melodramatic avidity, »,”” stammered the witness, tively as a ch Irl's or scowl as| t sald the attorney with a Wideoualy: ma lihe sing angel, His |sneer, “read this letter and tot ane to brown eves, under the fin brows, can | Whom the letter 's' refers,” flash disdain, just wrath, admiration, |, Mrs. Smith took the papers with trem- daring—anything they please-with the |DUDs ‘hands, Her perturbation was rapidity of a wireless telegraph, pitta, in each of Mr, Rand's cheeks, ir Now, my dear Mra, Smith, having Imity to hls acnaitive mouth: th refreshed your memory, Will you bo a0 dent that must have heen a very nico Hood 4s to tell us to whom ‘S refora?® dimple in his boyish days, and thid small | Pe Words stung with sconn, depression speaks more’ than all hl features put together. And withal Mr Rand has a v e that can ring all the ghanges in cadence, from deepest ten- derness to scorn, with rising and falling refuse to answer on that It would tend to" Clever, Though Brutal. Tt was a cruel farce, though the cley+ the ground inflections and ained notes the most|erest plece of bullycr ; eve ¢ “raygyin) p i pitch In the mascu-| whole trial A withgas ‘cout ag Hate ine Yet he is not satisfed, He} peen more plainly “rattled.” (ust being inte play every muscle in| “Thus It went all dave” Mrs, @mith his big frame, that the Jury miss not ono| was fencing upainst oddie ton arent tO {et of Ma powers. It ta rather a olty! her. Bho did her best, but indy coset that Mr. Rand did not choose the pro-lto do unything but, Inune fare teTy, fession that leads to matinee Idolatry. | sister, that at Shihan ithe He. would haye fulfilled his destiny, As it was, In yesterday's trial he suc- makin; miserai ceeded in the most Nan and her sister je of women, HI SAY MOTHER KILLED CHILD Mrs. Townsend Smith, Once So- cially Prominent Here, Ar- rested in Virginia—Charged with Beating Tot to Death. Charged with the murder of her five- year-old son Ralph, whom sho is ac- cused of having beaten to death with a razor strop, Mrs, Estelle Townsend Smith, daughter of Mrs, Charles Town- nd, of No, 168 West Ninety-sixth Street, has been arrested at her home In Manchester, Va, and is now in jail at Richmond, Her husband, Shepard Knapp Smith, 1s In a cell in Police Headquarters in this city, charged with being implicated in the murder. He was caught at Weat Hleventh and Bleecker streets last night and arrested on the request of J, B. Lipscomb, Chief of Police of Manches- ter, He had been drinking when the detectives found him, and denied know- Ing anything about the crime, saying that he was not at home when the child died, and was in no way respon- ible for his death, The arrest of the Smiths, the death of their son and the charge of murder against them |g the tragic sequel to a romance begun six years ago, when Estelle Townsend, then a handsome, dashing young woman of twenty-six, fond of outdoor sports, a lover of horses, with every prospect that a good social position could give her, met Shepard Knapp Smith, a horseman, who made his home in New York, From the very first Smith's attentions were opposed by Mies Townsend's family, Her brothers are Dr. Wiser R, Tow send, of No, 126 West Fifty-eighth street; Otto Townsend, a stock broker, and Willlam Townsend, also’ a stock broker The arrest of Mrs. Smith and the warrant for Smith followed an investi- gation mnde by the Coroner of Man- chester, who found that the child had come to his death by beating, It was learned that Smith hud come to New York, and an officer was despatched for him when it was announced In Tichmond that he had been arrested in: this olty. Requieltion papera will be applied for at once and _Sméth will De taken back” to Virginia. a BUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK THIS WEE DOG HELD HUNDREDS SPELLBOUND Wire Haired Terrier Tried to Cross Brooklyn Bridge, Defying Third Rail. Nobedy seemed to own him, Nobody knew how he got Into the big terminal. Engineers, platform men and trackmen all rushed to head him off, Several thousand persons saw him with anx- fous eyen Invite sudden death, but he didn't seem to care, Third ralle didn’t bother him, and he only wiggled his ears at the whizing cable as it swept on, Meanwhile trains full of people hurrying to work were neld up because one train could not leave the terminal for fear of crushing yut the little fe ta front, "Twas just a dog, A mite of a bun colored terrier, whose hair stood out like threads of wire all over him, and the commotion he excited was in the big terminal at the Manhattan end of the the outgoing bridge, He appeared in track, but how he got there no one knows, Didn't Heed tre Sign. There Is a sign up at the entrance, “No dogs allowed," but this dog hadn't read it, or tf he had he didn’t heed, Toot! Toot!! Toot!!! went the whistle of the electric train as the dog’ stood in the great opening of the shed looking toward Brooklyn, seemingly caleulauny chances of getting over the bridge Bn im sinile stoie over the ties, A grh mo (maits thee aa he hele back tho train, The tooting couldn't feage that terrier, He Just sniffed arand a bit and then started across the bridge. ‘The huge crowd of bridge walkers ,on the promenade caught on at this point. Thoge In front stopped and those behind wondered, Some women waved their handkerohlefs and the men got excited. “He'll touch the third mall,” some one A dollar he gets across all sald one man, ve stopped the trains,” shouted another, as a small arm ot station men came out of the too late to capture } who was Bueaay. fi ty yarns CoA) ec tenGe. ipping trom. tle to. te and. 2 SERINE ovne the thind ral portos tinconsslous of the deadly ciirrent cuns veyed In ts mysterious Iron bosom. Doggie Headed for Brooklyn, Toot! toot!!! toot!!! went the whistle of the train, but Doggie kept on for Brooklyn, the bridge walkers watohing im keenly, while ‘way back: in every One -wes They quatled before his questions, frimed in dd Just | fy | the Won: . he Was sacrificin, el * iy plo save: “ron bad! spe UP after this day of high tension Nai went back to the Tombs a nervoun wreok, broken in v‘ v Rise Font Spirit, tt would have erty lo _[GIRL'S MURDER MAY BE SOLVED ~ > | Hoodlum Arrested, May Clear Mystery of Henrietta Bower, Found in a Cellarway with Her Head Crushed, —_—_, Geren Brown and Dante} Dougherty, Hamaburg hoodlume, were held In the Ewen Btreet Court, in that dle- trict, to-day on @ char; of attempted highway Tobbery, and Brown was iden- tifled as a euspect the Polloe had under | detention two weeks ago during the Investigation of the murder of Hen- Metta Bower, a servant girl, who was he with her head crushed in the cellarway of No, Gee. 10 Nassau avenue, The {dentification of Brown the police at work anew on tiie case, for the has set Fae a cn tie, Bower crime for which he w. held! to-day” suggeats. that tues wae succeed dn explaining the mystery ot vie pafor suns te woman's death, lennietta Bower lved with @t No, 194 Belmont street, Jersey chy, A marched sist’ lives at'No. 166 Rus. sell street, Greenpoint, and on the evens ing of the bight she was murdered Henrietta visited the home tn Russell street, She left for Jersey City about 10 o'clock, In the morning her body was found In the Nassau avenue cellar way. She had not been robbe When the prisoners were taken before ergemint at the Greenpoint station n was identified as the Bower sus. Brown is about twenty-nine vel old and said he lived at No, 65 Hun bold Willlamsbung, Dougherty. thin a boy, He sald nian avenue, the # 3 dering what caused the deiay, All kne the cable had been repaired’ and they fumed over this second stoppage last the train waiting at the tai |terminal came slowly out to ¢ oss the bridge. ‘There was an air of keen sollel- tude on the engineer's face lest he would overtake the dog, Anxiety became al: most thrilling to the thousands ‘ot watehers, Was it the psychologle effect of the concentrated thougit of this mage ot people wishing that the dog would get oft that track that affected the tonely Hkttle Utravellsry | Heaven” only” knowa but tt a fact that suddenly he stopped, ‘Ked hesilatingly around, slipped over the third rail and jumped hto the south roadway, safe at last! An audible sigh of’ reller tho crowd, the electric wild toot of triumph, some i women rippled out little erles of Joy and then the busy bridge travel wen Shag if no swift wave of human Kind. ness had iluminated tne roy oir, aa if no little wan hatred terrier's peril had hearts of the so-called o: POAC, LER OHMe cant Her? touted touched the | irose from | aipua bea | Sea-F Among the countless indorsers Gov, Higgins. Senator Thomas C. Platt. The Board of Aldermen. W. A, Marble, President of the Sons 8. V. Hoffman, President of the New Col, Asa Bird Gardiner, Secretary-Geni Mrs. J. B, Casoy, Registrar-Gnereal a! Appleton Morgan, Vice-President-Ge! War of 1812, Park Benjamin, naval expert and Pre stations even: body to While New Yorkers of all are unanimous in Indorsing ‘The ing World's suggestion that the of John Paul Jones be brought New York for Burial, © there are eral opinions as to the exact locit> on in this city most suitable for the | purpose. Voremost among the sites suggested are Trinity graveyam, Riverside Park and the Batt sea wall, Trinity is one of the few remaining landmarks in Manhattan which were here in Jones's day, and 1s probably the graveyard In which he would have | been buried had fate permitted him to fulfil his desire to live and die in New Yor The Battery sea wall is the pro: posed site for the commemorative naval arch, or water gate; and It is deemed by many an appropriate res.- ing-place and monument for the father of the navy, overlooking, as it does, the man-of-war anchorage at Staten Island, and the element where- on Jones won his deathless fame, Mount Tom, at Riverside Drive, near Elghty-third street, 13 also mentioned, on the plea that it is one of the high- est and most beautiful localities on Manhattan Island, and a fit spot for ® handsome monument, That nelghbor- hood is already graced by the Soldiers and Sailors’ Monument and by Grant's Tomb, and it ts thought a third mauao~ TOOK POISON, WILL RECOVER Helen Lord, Who Tried to End Life When She Heard ‘‘Bert” Oakley Was Dead, to Be Ar- raigned for Suicide Attempt. Helen Tord, the youne woman who tried to Kill herself in a Greenwich ave- nue saloon yesterday when she found that Bert Oukley was dead, is recover ing in the Bellevue Hospital, and will bo In condition to stand arralgnment for attempted suicide in Jefferson Market Pollco Court to-morrow, She ts well known along lower Sixth avenue, “Bert Oakley was John B, H, Oak- Jey, a middlo~aged member of the flour manufacturing family of Oakleys, He as well-to-do and had a good businnss, “ihe young woman thought Oakley wi in Plainfield until yesterday when a rumor reached her ‘that he had been geen in a Greenwich avenue saloon, Not until! she asiced about him thera did she Know that he wae dead. ‘Me igon she took Was creosote, which she was carrying in a phial for the purpose of applying to an aching tooth, a HELEN GOULD AIDS DYING ENGINEER. In and Has Boen for Two Years Paying Expenses of Wabash Road Employee in Ilinols Hosptial, TPRRE HAUTE, Ind., April 29-1, A. Barrett, a former engineer on the Wabash Railroad, who 1s \ gradually sinking after a long spinal affiletion, due to his sceupation as an engineer, has been provided for in St, Joseph's Hospital at Paris, 11,, through the gen- SHOULD PAUL JONES FIND FITTING REST —— Express Opinions as to Most Suit- able Grave for the Great {TO BURY JOHN PAUL JONES | IS THE RIGHT OF NEW YORK, that the remains of Paul Jones be buried in New York are the following!) Congressmen Sulzer, Towne, Ruppert, Goulden and Sullivan, James A, Hawes, Secretary of the Society of Mayflower Descendanta,, Mrs. John H, Abeel, State Regent for Daughters of the Revolution, F, Hageman Hall, American Historical Preservation. Society, | you to ye ighter. — of The Evening World's suggestion of the American Revolution, York Historical Association, eral of Lhe Society of the Cincinnati, f the D, A. R, 4 neral of the National Society of the esident of Naval Arch Agsociation, leum of the so Impressiveness to the Drive, Asks for Public Vote, * The Byenng Wood leurning (he opinions vt or its readers in regara (oO this mater of jocation, Readers are Write, uestion of a proper site ¢ John Paul Jones’ preference, more rt 8 as such suggestions will and published As the plan for bringin’ of Paul Jones purial originated with World, the suggestions of Bis han readers In selecting a fitting place Jones's love for Manhattan, his eoy of its future greatness, the that he received ‘here his reward the country, und that this wae last bit of American soll ever by his feet before he sailed lant eh} [romp Seas shores—thi a but a few of the many argument which give New York’: body a strong preceden any other city. bi over that Collar Chat No. 4 Stop and think! Perhaps it may not be all the fault of the laundry that your Collars wear out so fast, Perhaps it is because your furs nisher sells you cotton collare instead of linen collars, “—H, & I." Collars are linen, Two for asc, Up to the minute in style, If, ¥ fe schirour toaln canis oui robe lot,’ Linen verave Cotton,” and ges HENRY HOLMES Troy, New York SALESROOM } + $1 Unton ire West ney Ua Vere Cy Casi Gillies Pure Coffee, Write and TRY It. Siinply send postal—we'll bring you the erifee, and if it deesn’t please you we'll take it away again, ve Keen It stands to reason that we can serve Importers, Roasters, Blenders since 1840, * own advantage, Cash Coffee, good and pure...18¢ Broken Jaya, a great favorite, 0c Mountain Maracaibo, was 25c. wore signed by Miss Gould has covered a period of two year: SUBSTANTIAL FLESH Mand good Brains are made from Grape-Nuts TRIAL 10 DAYS PROVES y of Helen Gould Broken Mocha and Java, rich, 286 The first treatment for his spinal Old Government Java.,.....,.25¢ trouble disclosed that it was ecauied Bogota Coffee, fine and rare,.,283 by the vibration of the engine. It was) Very Best Mocha and Java, then thought he would recover, but Arabian Mocha, really super later ft was found necessary to re- 1 ~Family Mixed move part of the spine, Friends, know- | TEA —Choice Mixed .,... ing he was (ee fle to He Lo ue TEA —Gillies “Exquisite” 50c osplin! treatment, brought the facts ae is Le yccantlah BE UMIaa ClbulaapHiate Simply Send Postal. broher Js at the head of the Wabash) wy, f lbs, Coffeo—or 1 1b, Tem and & system, Tt hag been known for some tbs Coffee mand DELIVER FREE ih y tlme tht he recelved checks, but It wag hetan, Hrooklin aud the Dione up to 1g nly to-day made known that these 5 On Wha. with! 10) tom, Tus ill. Money Back If You Want It, Coffee ompany Gillies. 233, 235, 237 and 23 Washington $., Bet. Fark Pl. & Barclay t. Esteblishek 1849, KIO-EMULSION. FOR CONSUMPTION, Lung or Bronchial Troubles, Colds, Catarrh or Throat Aff \ SAMPLE BO” CELE in Vay Racer m ail or write, addressing UNITED STATES MEDICAL DI’ Department 140 rerences requested (a stuting their respective ideas om in New last rest- and their reasons for thelr her places besides the fore- hould appeal to Evening | public at large, in behalf of’ this to bury Paul Jones in New Yor 1 from claim to Bg re, ort will’ add beauty ‘ang BDvropr! } be’ giadly recelved the remaing to this city for final the Interment will be of especial intone est and aseetance, ; All Favor New York, i Senators, Congressmen, Aldermen 4 ehlefs of patriotic and hietorical y cleties are working earnestly, with the Congress for his great services toward ’ it x ¥