Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
\ wt “| | vi F [ “ Circulation Books Open to All.” PRICE ONE CENT. ~ NEW YORK, JULY 31, 19 EXTORTION CASE AGAINST LAWYER FAILS IN COURT Andrews Cleared on Charge of Using Threats to Force Strosnider’s Wife to Deed Property to His Client, Swin- dled by Gambler. ‘The charge of extortion against Champe Andrews, the lawyer, and his client, Dr. John Harris, was dismissed to-day by Justice Olmsted in the Court of Special Sessions, after an examination, on the ground of insuf- ficient evidence. The Court held that Assistant District-Attorneys Gans and Corrigan * had not produced conclusive testimony to show thet Mr. Andrews and Dr. Harris forced Mrs. John Strosnider, the wife of a confidence man who fleeced Dr. Harris out of $12,500. to transfer to them a house she owned in Flatbush under threat of sending Strosnider to Sing Sing. When Justice Olmsted announced his; ‘1¢ you don't It ia because you have @ecision Dr. Harris, who 1s bountifully | promised them immunity.” 4 (si otal yi “We have promised no immunity!” equipped ial kers, placidly walked | 410% hae dono i y up to the Judge's desk and before his) “Then,” sald Mr. Fox, “either ther lawyers could stop nim essayed to shake | has been no felony committed or you) hands with the Court. He appeared to| Will be derelict In vour duty if vou don't be somewnat surprised when Justice Brosecute these two crooks, ‘Take your) Olmsted refused hand and ordered him to step down. Dr. Harris's home and the elevator man Dr, Harris on the stand to-day ad- {0M the apartment-house at No. meant eet nd i any oe Riverside Drive. The elevator man, a c 4s swindled Inq fake voluble negro, was cross-exemined by game 1 that he en- Mr. Corrigan, Assistant District-Aft- tered racy to have the | torney, ) game so manipulate Lawyers Have Tilt. house must lose. | 4/WRo fold you to eay that?” asked Gane said that Dr, MEyCorrigan sharply ‘at one answer. ee obody,” repli 1 the confessed | thought of it my Mr. Adsten | _ "You haven’ snapped Mr. Corrigan. “Really, Interposed Mr. Fox, “this ts yn of the educational. Everybody Mr. Corrigan brains enough,” torney in accepting the evi- | questions Is either a iar or a fool. Such of crooks in an attempt to ruin jRtellectual supremacy Is really depress- Feputation of a member of the bar | Detectives Reardon and Platt, who ar- hurnil spectacle |reated Strosnider and McKee, wore called by Mr, Corrigan to show that How He Lost $12,500, |\Mr. Andrews made a false statement In Dr. Harris said he was thirty-two Court on July § when the two confidence “ars old, , : nen were discharged. Meee es porn ate chs clu, educated | Dr, Harris has sworn while the case badd, and th ad served as! was In court that day he Was in Mr. . weds eer in the Englush army. Andrew office, awaiting a_call to the That he was born in New York proves Courtroom. Reardon and Platt, swore the oft-res orn eevee, that Mr. Andrews. sald’ Dr. Harris was Collar J dence man of the Jurisdiction of the court at artis aches man Was thar time, and he (Andrews) could not Tsland. force him’ (7 appeat eam Die Hartleta te y it was | In suntming dp Mr. Fox soored the shown that at two p sin i. | District-Attorney for accepting the word Sutcur the income uf Jo! trosnide of known crooks and using thelr evi- cOntidence. man, uxcerdal that of John dence In an attempt to discredit a prom- 1. Rockefeller,’ He divorecd Dr. Harris | Ment member of the bar. from 310,00) on nin just ten) Retorting. Mr. Gans sald Mr, Fox, in minutes.” On another occasion he as rosecating police officials after the ‘Ip live minutes in absorbing $2.00, xow inguiry, had not been so particu- Dr. Harris lost his $1),00) on the night | lar as oontandine of his witne t. Patrick's Day in a gambling | _Distel ttorney Jerome ha inily prepared for the occas | Sided whether be will take the « first t. There was | 98:lnet ws and . house when the doctor | Gran He sald n Was a fake plain-ceothes | he would read over the testimony and to warn the docior Hf it ex s him that Justice Olm- calling the evidence insuf- sion in a crowd the d. place was a gambling-house Stel erre’ in Stage Set for the Game. j ficient he woul ask for indictments man in the house, “supe” , the occasion. ‘The star actors Were, Strosnider, "his partner.” Meigea, MILLIONAIRE IN and Dr ris. Unfortunately jhe doc- tor's memory as to just what was sad BIG PARIS CRASH, and done there 1s vague. ‘fhe cues and = action and scenery of the $10,000 pel formance are all blurted ‘0 iy ree | Two Leading Sugar Houses Suffer ection, although he pald for it wli—| by M, Jaluzot's Leeses and paid the rent uf the house for the nigpt. he! rent "of the tame. lay-out Ap SIRS Suspend. of the supes. All these oxpendituzes| PARIS, July 31.—Two of the leading had been arranged for In ihe oxpecta- , >, . tion that Dr. Harris would ee ‘on | sugar hous‘e of Pars were compelled schedule ume, go through rele in| to suspend payment to-day, Lt is waid which he had’ been reheursed by Stro- | that thelr failure was caused by the enider and McKee and drop whatever . Sate a aii Minn Pp Whatever | immense losses of M. Jaluzot, the mill- “Did you KO willingly to that gam: | jon: e propr f the famous Prin- bling-house?” asked Mr. Gans. | tcenps dnd owner of the papers “T went there a* Strosnider's invita-! Pacrie nd Presse tion.” | M. Jaluzot ben plunging in the there a scheme to beat @! su 1 specula ? crash on the D: “There Was practically no scheme.’ sugar that resul Joss of 15,000,000 Strosnider told me he was in hard 1Gtl: francs to him. He could not make good market. ‘Ther was a change in and could wm out if he had cap: Ana dt ie claimed Gin ebHeRtnne Gomes When I lost the $10,060 he told me } T Abert he nc linen witli eaten ie rhe would repay me. Lt didn't think Twas Seon gealing losing my own money f ung "What was done waen you got inside | Saaiaee. ages the house? Pape STE “phe ¥ locked the door on me." FEATHERED SOUP “Dpid'you sit down?” air) 2 ey made Ik down, T put con: WASN’! CHICKEN.) 5 but 1 feared quse you had Oxtenalble r because you, Mestauri arantee Displeni nt Hatrons, Who Wen Not Pay the Bill, h “What di@ you de afte yor sat, Because, as they asserted, they ore down? | dered chicken, but got only soup with Followed Strosnider's Lead. fathers in it, Emile Poharely. twenty> “T followed Strosnider’s lead. He told’ seven vears old, of No, oi4 East Sev | 4°" : ‘You do just what I do,” entyesixth street, and Anthony Fraze 2 you fo lose that | ty, nt inutes, But I didn't think 1) Tenth stre my awn mor Strosnider g a to me when the money was y im lost 4 arged | ng Did. Me lice look ke a gambling: of BON RE a tiie think so, Tdi! know how! py iaisan,’ entered hin restaurint this Dr. Harris suid tuat after losing hia! ering And ordered chi #10.00 on the night of March 17 he was @linsea of milk. | When it came to paving Buddenly bathed in a great white Hight the %0 cents whieh Elsen asked for his wade y ated ing ereat ite Han, food there wae a dinpute, then a night Mar thens momothing strange about | JWINE the fracas patrons Jeft the place that gambling-house, ‘The next day ho| Without paving thelr bills, went to see his friend and counsel, | sustioe | McAvoy? afer hearing the 1, A’ resinurant keeper nue C. ve men, according to the story told Champe Jrews, who was not born | Story, re in New York, but who sad heard of Vink you are getting off cheap ames similar to that which the doctor | in being aaked only 20 o-nts for chiek: nl played #0. dianstrously What tind You expe Mr. Andrews advised him to keep | 1! ‘ mirentiy friendly f rant wilow the! the béll'of fare a regular home dinner rohim again, for 15 cents!’ M “Was it fried, roast or bolled chick on ch jem in ae Ny Snauines ane Court ‘osmidew and ie ‘0, dt Was only soup, an Phey gat $2.00 from the doctor) game feathers in Me and Mat el op the afternoon of March 20, and when! we wouldn': pay the bill."’ the trap was sprung the game Wan side Mav ov looked ‘at Bone, this $2500?” asked Mr. Gans, Five minutes,” ———$——--— itor, y wis very mush excited." iT No Immunity Promised, SHOT IN FLIGHT FROM ‘The attorneys wrangled a great deal DETENTION CAMP, dane, Me ox treaueny exposes |p Gans, Mr, IRMINGHAM, Ala, July # way the DisirietcAtiorney had acted ‘on |#pevial from Meridian says tt tn reported ‘ee were tao the menu eoners. and Strosnide: ore bere Gaturday’ Mr, Fox, were billed and three were won’ PARTED BY HUSBAND'S DEATH AT WEDDING FEAST. STEPHAN PETRIE UT LID BACK ON SARATOGA, SAYS HIGGINS Town Is ‘Governor Hears ag Wide Open and Will Not Aen Allow Conditions. CAMILLA. MARINO PETRIE HERRICK TAKES A FLING AT JUDGES the negro. ““T/ Cowardly. He Says, in Dodging Responsibility in Cases In-| volving Constitutionality of| the Law—Against Ambler Act (Special to Tye Evening World.) tion was called to a report that gam- | bling had opened up in Saratoga and | that the lid was way off, Gov, Higgins | said to-day that as soon as he received information WANT A BANDIT WITH AED HAIR Police Got One Auburn-Thatched Man in Tracing Hold-Ups, but He Wasn’t the Righi| 9 take the proffered The defense called a servant from | “We will have to see that the Ha is put back,” he said. not act until 1 am officially notified that) “Of course, ‘Saratoga,’ It was remarked, “Is not! information as gambling helps the business of the vlace and makes it| any formal way replied the Gov- “Phere is an clement In every | | community s of the place kept up.” All the sports who did business here | during the legislative session have gone | Sr to Saratoga, and faro and roulette are | summoned, while an exelted guest sent | Jout of commission and only the pool- | rooms open. | as bad as that,” | upstairs to his newly furnished apa | D. Cady Herrick, candidate for Gov- headed men who do not wish to ernor on the Democratic Ucket at the last election and Supreme Court Justice for many years, apeared in the Special Term of the Supreme Court tice Greenbaum, y conatitutionality the Raines Innv. Incidentally he created a sensation by remarking that ft seemed to him for Justices Supreme Court | constitutional to the higher courts. surday night will give Williamsburg arresied, charged with being the “Red- as was Charles our years old, and attacked By Frank W. Thorp (Special to The Evening World.) SARATOGA, week ago was a sleepy country villag rriages drove up visitors then actous ‘hotel ve- Shopkeepers sat in thelr door- and yawned from sheer f{dleness. | has awakened from ay is alive with hun- eds of well-dressed, prosperous-loo) Ing men and women. and down the main thoroughfare business-like adr, | everywhere the honk of the automobile The shops are thronged ‘The faro tables and ¢ wheels in the brilliantly lighted surrounded by disciples of the goddess of chance, hotel people have cast aside the enual alr of a week ago and become | the haughty, independent master, In short, Saratoga a week ago in the chrysalis stage lias now become the gay jand brifant butterfly by comparison. | reason--the races have come something of dern was arrested on an alarm for a red-headed and although sailor, of the ship Northtown, could-not town dozed on the custody of his wife, her when the Saratoga to-day n was one of two men arrested Re-| in the same neighborivod char: ries of hold-ups in the s riet that Incha appearance which Carriages dash up | cently Borm obtained ¢ ng Department and er from enforcing eS a mysterious dis- the Exatse Co: may be heard. man arraigned before Magis rate H. with cager buyers. Avenue Court down partitions in! Herrick argued that the law was unconstttutone man of this property w! He was held | club-houses examination, hout due pnocess in 31,000 bail y-General ‘Mayer argument and accomplices, held up and robbed August Tenth street, and Miss Freda Lentz. MET HER DEATH WHILi BATHING Miss McKay, of Yonkers, Dragged from Water Dies Before Help avenue, near Grand street, If it were not for the races Saratoga of would drone along in sleepy fashion all If there were ne races there Miss Anna McKay, of Yonkers, w B money, and Saratoga knows with @ young man at Richmond, Staten The yours man refused to eve Saratoga is wide open this year, There about it or pretense. 1s no furore clubs are of various si From what the police learned ‘he ay went into Richmond Cree who left. hoi high-roliecs, there are the Man-| 1 watch | hattan, Chicago and United States clubs Bank and |for moderate gamblers the Empire Club and Sweeney's and one or two smaller places where the piker |can buy his stack of whites for a few) You can gamble high or gamble low, according to the size of your bank- | msburg Savin ‘Then there are selzed with a cramp, She grabbed mpanion and carried Finally she be young man HOUSE SINKING; OCCUPANTS FLEE, slous and the with her on his back. e brought Dr. Jessup from was dead before the ghysiclan| Building U, Jermined wy Heavy ‘oundations Are ——_————— MOTHER SAYS HER SON STRUCK WER. elzht vears old, of No. 217 East were arraigned in the sex Market Police Court to-day harged with assault, The complainant TRIED SUICIDE O HUSBAND'S COFFIN, stone dwell- ing at No, 06 Franklin avenue, Brook- trate Crane Scores Clerk and Holds Him for Trial, twenty-one years o'd, a olerk, living on Villa avenue and | |Southern Houlevard, in Morrisania Court his mother with having struck her, “You struck your marked Magistrate Crane, your Ife and man who strikes bis in this fe." me Hawke had rotused to answer the charge, but tnen he de- Flushing Avenue Station, saw that the house appeared to cks In the walls and the foun- peared io be Kiving way, * Into the house d the members of two familles, who occupled it, and hustled them Into | find Widow Inhaled Gas and Was Found by Neighbor Unco scioun Over Dead Body Blind and with no cne to care for her, Kate Pabhsakel |} commit suicide by inhaling gas as she lay across the coffin of her husband In a miserable apartment of two rooms in the rear of No. 1754 First avenue. When Peter Shider, a neighbor, broke into the room he found the woman un- was held for trial day, charged by the nolicema The house, which is owned by Fellgi undermined rain of yesterday. Its condition to the Building Depart- Sufer for it. —— mother has no char CHILD’S SUDDEN DEATH A MYSTERY,| i", r “ ” | Wel pied Frazer, “he had on) Presbyterian Hovpital and may recover, Mary Ryan a reduction of ball, saying she wished Three Other Children and Two justice done to the young man, she was Wives of Vermout Man Also Died Suddenly, ND POND, heart disense the bounty 01 On Saturda: dhe funeral Was set for A charitable undertaker had \igreed to Gispose of the vemains, but Hahhsakel's | union took charge of uffatra, and If the | woma nilves will have provision made | ordered from the bridge, ahhsake died and said the trouble with her son this aiternoon: ae RA SCOURGE FOLLOWS FAMINE} Bridsh India, July 81.—A of cholera prevails How long did it take you to love] Pmigntgeseurent and discharwed the July 81.—State Amey 1s oMclatty investisat-, CHOL clroumstances connected with sudden death of Lilla Waterman, the three-year-old daughter of Walter! Waterman, of Victory, ts State. The father bas been detained by the! uuthorities and the stomach of the dead among the refugees from the famine- | stricken distriots who have been crowd- ing into the city for weeks past, Numbers of victims have been found ts, The death — —— WILLIAM IN DENMARK, COPENHAGE imperial yacht Hohe: peror William on board, arrived here erious epidemic A July 31.—The German : child has been sent to an eapert, jollenn, with: m- Ran Sener. ¥ sald that three other children of Waterman had died suddenly avd setond wives, testimony of two self-confessed | there that five men held at the deten- tien camp at Lumberton attenptod to You oan prosecute these men, MoKee emape to-Gay and weve fired unor by on Oye Imony they the guerds, It wald hat tye 547i, ‘Those wao the State Actor King Christian, Town Prince Frederic! and Prime Minister Christensen, aa) dead or dying on the st: Hf hor ie avid, [FINAL EDITION | pen to All.” | _h “ Circulation Books ca) cAll the News. PRICE ONE CENT, — ——SSS— —— MAID, BRIDE. AND A WIDOW WITHIN HOUR Bridegroom Falls, Writhing, as He Greets Reception Guests, Maid, wife and widow, all within an hour's time, ts the unvsual and terrible experience of preity seventeen-vear-old Mrs. Camille Marino Petrie, whose newly married husband's tragic death At the racention following the wedling last night caused the Coroner to roan aubat vliy at the home » 181 Columbia street, Brooklyn. It was decided death was due to ptomaine polsoning Petrie was thirty years old, a pros- perous young business man, with a whole Market, “He lived at Sixty- first street and New Utrecht avenue, Brooklyn, where he was the head of a family of four brothers and two sis- ters, A year ago at a party in Union street he met Camille Marino, She was Manhat seventeen, very pretty and the little mother In the family of her widowed | father, Martine Marino, a baker, living on the second floor at No, 181 Columbia street. She was not the oldest but had assumed the family cares, Wooed and Won Her. Stephano fell in love with Camille at the party, He called often, proposed and was ac That was months ago. Recently they announced that the wedding would take place July 30. Invitations were sent out, prepara- tlons were made and the young couple fitted up the third floor flat at No. 18) | Columbla street so the bride could be near her kin, Last evening they were married by the Rev. Father Vogel and hurried to the home of the bride's father, where 173 guests had crowded to meet them, The couple wer standing to receive them Wishes for a long and happy lite when Petrie, who had complained of pains in the stomach q little eariler, suddenly fell writhing. Some of his friends selzed him and carried him ments, while the women forced the almoat fainting bride to remain below. Disd Within an Hour, Dr. Glavonni Vulbuono. of N street, and Dr. Nicoiw Poor, o¢ in an ambulance call that brought Bur- geon Bull from the Long Island Col- lege Hosnital. ‘I'he doctors worked over Petrie but in vain, According () a brother of the widowed | ame In fulfillment arning. which had | bride, Petrie's death of a fortune-teller's bothered the man before his wedding Five days ago the bridexroom to t intended brid friends Ww Marino's hi dresses, w! a, woman friend rus! greatly excited, erving: "I hav seen La Donna de Nero de Maar woman in black fortune-teller) says the bridegroom will never ily. with the bride, that he will only sit by her sid a chance to wear her pretty clothe: The woman's startling words pr sea P short time. CURB BROKERS IN A FIST FIGHT, e fruit business in Washington | | possibly the line “of trends (coming) tomer |icompany, Bend 1 to Company | iot the 139 De 163 President street, were hastily | the Martine Marino and in the parlor in King over’ wedding the She at she will never have ed upon the mind of Petrie and he did not sleep a night from that time until his death, being nervous and unstrung, and never remaining at home more than SAYS CARLTON MURDERED MAN IN HIS REGIMENT Fellow-Soldier in Sixth Infantry Writes Details of Crime Alleged to Have Been Committed Before Desertion, A letter that throws an entirely new light on a very ugly chapter in the life of Frederick E. Carlton, bigamist and suspected wife slayer, practically accusing him of the brutal murder of a fellow-private in the army, and then deserting when the members of his company charged him with the crime, was received to-day by Police Inspector Cross, The In spector would not give the name of the writer of the letter, but made public the document in full. The police hal heard that this man had served with Carlton when the latter was in the army under the name of James E. McCandless, and Inspece tor Cross wrote to him asking for information, This is the reply that he received to-day: “Inspector Adam A. Cross: Mrs. Dear Sir—Your letter of recent date | y on hand, and In reply I wi!l endeavor | ay to give vou all the information that 1 n. To begin with, I met t ndless, in November, 18S crulting depot at Columbus, O, 1 was in the army, having heen enlisted | fed that in St ouls a short time before, in the month of March, Were Chums in Army. “MeCandless and myself were sent to Fort Lewis, Col. He was assigned to Mi and her so} and brother ol | interest riton was 1 y kau, Wa and roobs had man, the 1 offend any Iled to hold Sixth Infantry. McCandless having told me that he was from St. Louis we be- ————————— | One fast friends, and 1 soon found| MRS. SCHMITTBERGER DEAD, out that he was crooked. Various petty thefta were from time to time| ora was received at the Pldridee committed and suspicion was Iald to} gireot Station this afternoon that the MeCandleas, but there was never enough | in o¢ Police Inspector Mix F. Schmlits proot-to) warrant oherate agninet lim: |(eisen ajani today, abl herchorme) Leeks “He was always amooth enough notto| ro | ang Geanaview avenues, Far ger caught. He frequently said that) po Cia way, énly fools work for a living, and that | MOrKON ay naa been Ill for a ho had a scheme to make all Kinds Of} 10.4 time with pneumonia, but recently money, without, \wering. 5 (ite Tee lies condition was so much {mproved claimed to be an adep: tn occultlam. | thy, apes for her recove ‘e enters viet Wor r was a favorite with women, appeared | (oy neq, i tayere good “Aveation end was a] aise ago, however, the patient! good penman, became worse and gradually. lost het “I am as certain that the man you a rey aaa strength until she died from sheer exe have In custody is J. A, McCandless as | 7U008 Iam that I am writing this letter, I am willing to swear to it. I know that = — there {s not another man that has eyes i ante GRATEFULTO CUTICURA “Tn the fall of 1889 our vompan! were “to Fort Riley, Kan, Here M Candiess became worse i ever. One i day. shortly after our arrival, rrme sot. | FOF Instant Relief and Speedy Cure diers from both companies visited Junc- of Raw and Scaly Humour, ton City, Kan. two mlles away from Itching Day and Night. the post. There was in the company a man named Rush, who was said to have |a considerable sum of money in hiv cos- | SUFFERED FOR MONTHS session Rus! Found Dying. ; “After spending the day in towr, Me. |. {I wish you would publish this lett Candless and this man started to walk | ter so that others suffering as I have Nelther Carries a Mark and Police-|*0 the post, taking the rat'road tracks, may behelped. Formonthsawfulsorea man Who Was Called Made No Arrests. Wall street is Interested In the story turday between Louls E. Whicher, a memter of the shange, and W, EL Mitchell, a curb broker, and former Co- of 2 fistie clash on § New York Stock F lumbia football ain, Ey clares that the other str blow. Neither has any “sible marks | of nunishment | The tight orcurred on the eiwhth floor the rBond Exchange Buliding at No, 2% Broed street over the removal of fur- niture from the office of Ives Whicher, which, {t appears had b that firm by Mitehell. Wo to have pur the firm Whicher says that Mitchell on Sat- urday objected to the furniture being taken until he had exami its tente, He declared the contents w private, and that he wouldn't have Mitchell examining his personal effects, Then came the trouble and @ policeman Mitchell, who Wwelghs 220° pound wanted tlie policeman to arrest Whichor, He sald Whicher had hit him first Which, who weighs only 1 pounds and holds the opinion that’ Mitchell might make a mol of him, told the bluecoat that he had ben hit first, The poll man wasn't in an arresting mood, and there the row ended ee CRIPPLED, SO HE MUST GO BACK Immigrant Sold Home and Rual-| ucar Expecting to Make Mir Fortune Her A case demanding deportation by the Immigration authorities and which has attracted unusual att its pathetic nature ts that of Adolph Hilz, thirty-nine years old, of Glesbech | Saxony, Bilx Zurrived here on the Pa- tricla with his wife, Marle, and four children, Bile is a cripple, having curvature of the spin, but is waid to be an unusually skilful (nstrument maker. Unul early in June Bllg was contented in his home city, with no thought nor desire for America, At that time an old friend, Henry Friedelfeng, of Bpring- field, Mass., visited Glesbech und spoke #0 slowingly of the Btates and the ap: portunities and business and with his family came to America, rigid, and in spite of efforts of socletios Interested In his oise the fam- ily will have to return on the Patricia, Billig has only about 100 marks jeft, and a nearly heartbroken at the gloomy ou! | That was the last seen of Rush until | covered my face and nu to hicher claims asad the furniture from | rled four women, that he has travelled ition because of | in sppedr the Butler Street Court to-day on an | she had posed for the nud ere that Bilz sold his house | | hearing Magistrate Tie Dut the law excluding cripples {s| Woman for Special Sessions He Gorman | Was continued in the same eum, $i a , Scabs forme the next morning, when he was found | ing, itching terribly day and nighty with his head crushed in and otherwise | brcaking open, and running blood ant \injured. He dled a few days later, The| matter. I had tried many remediet soliiers had tholr suspicions that Me- | but was growing worse, when I starte Candless had done this and knew more | with Cuticura, The first application (han anybody else about the crime. gave ne instant relief, and when I had Fled Under Accusation. used two cakes of Cuticura Soap and Phe post surgeon was Dr. Van Hert. | three boxes of Cuticura Ointment, F \tal records at Fort Riley and | Was completely cured, (signed) Mise a. J. W. Powell, of Co, C, Sixth In- | Nellie Vander Wicle ceside, N.Y. statements, The memt ompany all sus- pected McCandless and I accused him He finally became secured and after borrowing all the money he could and talking all he could he d ed in April, 1sw, with a man named Murray. also wish to say that I knew a m named Carlton, and he was an Ider man than McCandless and was ving his second enlistment at the Eyesight Examination—by an Oculish time. No doubt McCandless took his a registered physician whose specialty name. Carlton belonged to a wealthy | Is the treatment of family and was @ man well liked by all | NO CHAT who knew him, The officers in Me miosset—and Ave Ave Candless's company were Capt. 8, Thie bold and Lieut. W. F, Burnham." Some time ago the police in Brooklyn heard about the Rush murder, and when Cariton was questioned about it ared that the man had heen ktiled by @ train. Confe Bigamy and Desertion. Carlton has broken down under the fire of crogs-questioning aimed at him by the police, and to-day he admits that he is @ bigamist, that he has mar- under several allases and that he is deserter from the army 15¢ Carlton made this confession after his ATED, Bound, remarkable statement mude to ‘The SPECIAL FOR TUESDAY. Evening World that he was the victim cyoconAlh AND VANELL of a cousia, who was so much like him SCOCONNUP KISSES, i ce Tat the crimes comanlt- ARROWTED FRUIT AND NCE 186 ted by the relative were laid at his CH ATE Pound, door. Eleanor Vandeventer was arraigned in adjournod examination on the charge Of oes iw tors In pre photograph Awhony Comstock and) Assistant Dis: trlot-A Toroey Willlam) White appeared ty priss the complaint, and a number of witnesses Reve testimony Ceorge A, Walden, a ceiective om- pinyed: in rooklyy Tistriet-Attor= rey's office, tit of a Jayne’s Tonic Vermifuge: The strength giver y' F Vandeventer woman made. t pleture 0 rie Breslin sion of Ni A the young all which the head of Miss M Wis prodnced ALL 2 =—— HELP WANTED—MALE, i) paling) elead ‘oth et. 4 Many Wanted to See Cariton. In the expectation that Carlton would | be arraigned on the same charge, the kM @ourtroom was jammed with spectators, work,