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———— efit ven Newt PRICE ONE CEN RUSSIA FLATLY. REFUSES TO P N JAP’S DEMAND, Although the Envoys of the Mikado As- sert that the Czar Must Pay $600,000,- 000 or Fight, the St. Petersburg Government Will Not Vield. BY SAMUEL G. BLYTHYF. PORTSMOUTH, N. H., Aug. 24-—Tho Japanese envoys say that the demand for $600,00,000 from Russia for half of Sakhalin Istand és im effect an ulti- matum. ‘They declare the Japanese twill not reduce their demands a penny Russia must pay or continue fighting. enpondent of Renter's Tele- thorized Count I orf, the For- elgn Mininter, to state officially and tn the most formal manner that Ru will pay Japan no contribution, direct or indirect, nor will it make any cession of territory whatever, WITTE AND ROSEN NOW SHIFT RESPONSIBILITY. Gee : ' Tzinohe Valley occcupled the village of By Samuel G. Bly thes” | usgoviseukey vanoiher operated in the Bram Coupiays was t PORTSMOUTH, No H, Aus! St-—Mr:)lGireation of @chimladasy, cand va; Ghitd Ww and Baron Rosen have shifted | cislodged the Japanese trom. thelr p respons{bility for making peace. They sition to the southw will not attempt to grant Japanese | Jrtantee’ panes changed demunds on their own au- djan.”” thority. Gen, Linevitch also reports the re- pulse of a detachment of Japanese which was advancing on Kiaujoroujou, in Corea. LATEST NEWS OF THE DAY ——>—__ Peckham Gives Ball. If the Czar will consent to the pay- ment of $600,000.00 to Japan, taking as his “value received’ half of the Island of Sakhalin, peace can be arranged im three days. If he will not pay this sum for the island, which, of course, is = mere subterfuge to get around the payment of indemnity, as sach, the Japanese say war must con- tinue. THE RUSSIANS HAVE NO HOPE THAT THE CZAR WILL YIBLD, THEY SAY HE CANNOT. ‘The full terms of the Japanese de- mand were cabled to St Petersburg. Mo answer has yet arrived, When an answer comes Russia may meet it with a flat refusal or with » counter propo- Then everybody will mark ime munication with Tol The situation is very simple. The| SARATOGA, N. Y., Aug. 24.—Freder- only stumbling block In the way of| ick A. Peckham, of New York City, ar- peace {3 mone it either side yields | rested tm connection with the cotton on this point ¢ will be peace, If] scandal, this afternoon furnished $10,000 ithe: i) yield, the war willcon-| bul. EB, D. Starbuck, president of the Hereney one Bs aa Citizens’ National Bank, and W. W nue. The other three disputed point | Biekner, vice-president of the First the jon of Saichalin Island, the lim-| National’ Bank, ame bondsmen. ta n of Russia's sea power in the Hast and the making over by Japan of eee ee seen as auineu, No Alderman Drowned. BRIDGEPORT, AUG. %4.—The Jaunch run down in the harbor last night was ties. The ships and the Imitation of | sea power provisions were put in by test a " Japan for trading purposes, and Russta/@ tender to the yacht Genevieve It i | was a Bridgeport Alderman, 8. BE. Mur- Will not Jet Sakhalin Island stand in| Soe and note New Tork ‘official, wie the way of peace. It all depends on| was aboard. He escaped. m ROOSEVELT'S NEW MOVE FOR PEACE, (fy Assoclated Press.) PORTSMOUTH, N. H., Aug, 24.—Pres- Seizure of Tobacco. One hundred and eight bales of tobac- 00, valued at between $15,000 and $20,000, Were seized by special Treasury agents in the warchouse of Baker & Wiliams, at No, 309 West street. The name of the {dent Roosevelt's moves to save the| Importer wae not made public. peace conference are following each other in quick succession. He ts now believed to have taken a new stop-| PYinter Drowned, The body of a man was found off Fifty-elehth strest, Brooklyn, this af- possibly final one—In the shape of] @ last appeal to both sides to leave the question of the purchase price of the! ternoon. In the pocket was a Typo- northern half of the Island of Sak-/¥raphleal, Union card with the name halin to arbitrament of a board or * SR aR comminsion, He sent to Mr @ long messa) Deserter Surrenders. PATERSON, AUG. 4. — Cornellus F. Cogian, who said he deserted from the |Maryland six montha ago and was tired of dodging detectives, surren- dered to the pollce to-day, To Try Mutineers. ODESSA, AUG. 24,—The trial of the seventy-five sailors who mutinied on the battle-ship Pobied te 0 battleship Pobledonoseta here in June HOCH DODGES GALLOWS AGAIN. Writ of Supersed Granted Chi. cago Bluebeard Whose Nerve Witte during the night >, without doubt outlining the new step had resolved upon, Presumadly (ils message was prepared afier the President had received the ac- count of Ambassador Meyer's audience with the Emperor at Peterhof yester day, It would seem to follow logical that Mr, Meyer's reply was not satl factory, and therefore necessitated an- other appeal not to allow a mere ques- tlon of money to etand dn the way of Peace and to suggest a new form of compromise for the point atill in Jasue, The message of the President reached Assistant Mocretary Peirce and was Pluced In the hands of Baron Rosen at A reply XO the Provident delt | to Ausistant Beorotary Paes, Whether it was @ response from Peterhof is not Known, “Tt may only ‘have’ been ane from Me Witte ering | ie. ney Da Desert Him. he step taken by. the President, Mp, Pelhes was win ae eis ana] CHICAGO, Aug. 4,—Judge Magruder, Baron Rosen twenty-five minutes. ‘The Message given him was immediately placed in the Btate Department cipher gente, Gol. Mlohas nthe gles oi of he rough t ‘Washington, /- oon ROOSEVELT SENDS MAN TO SEE WITTE, PORTSMOUTH, N. H., Aug, %4.—It ie reported that the President will send fome one to Magnolia to oommuncate of the Supreme Court of Chicago, to- day signed a writ of supersedoas, there- by staging the execution of Johann Tioch, the wife murderer, who was to have been hanged to-morrow morning. ‘The writ was algned after « long hunt on the part of Frank D. Comerford and J. J, Niewer, attorneys tor Hogh, who have travelled from one end of tthe Btate to the other seapching tor a Supreme Court Judge. Hoch deciared all the time tis attor- neys were hurrying about looking for a y, With Mr. Witte and Buron| Supreme Court Judge that he would not josen during their stay there, hang. Never for an inetant did his —_——— nerve desert him, but he sad that if it ere Ne RENEWED ren unr witoit scone GIRL ADMITS PERIURY IN WOOTEN CASE May F. Trimble Implicates Prominent Lawyers in Tak- ing Back Statement. SHE WAS NOT COERCED. The Typewriter’s Revelations Clinches Charges Against Oth- er Men Sought by Jerome. May F. Trimble, the young woman who was employed as the stenographer for the Bank when John W the convicted lawyer, Federal Wooten was Sts counsel, while under examination in the District-Attorney’s office to-day con- fessed that she hid perjuned herself at the tral of Wooten when she swore that she had been coerved by Assistant District-Atrorney Kresel into making an affidavit damaging to the then de- fendame and to Armitage Mit once Seeretary of Republican Coumty Committee, who ts under m- dictment Her confession deals in full with the looting of the Willinm Weiscell estate and covers the wrecking of the Fed- eral Bank The young woman's confession, {t fs declared in the District-Attorney’s office, contained many astonishing rev- wlations that will help Mr. Jerome tn clinching his changes against several Prominent lawyers besides those al- ready Indicted in the case. The young woman was drought to the District-Attorney's office as a re- sult of a voluntary statement made by Wooten to Prosecutor Kresel. Although Mr. Jerome's assistants have been for- bidden to make any comprehens statement as yet about Wooten's allega- tions ft is known that he confessed his part in the wrecking of the Federal Baik and the looting of the e:tate of William Weisel. Girl Was Nervous. Wooten had been in Mr. Kresel’s office several hours before Misa Trimble was| brought in, She was very pale and} seemed to be in a state of great trep-| {dation when ehe entered the lbrary | of the Criminal Courts Butlding, where! the Assistant District-Attorney was con- ducting his examination, Sometime ago she was threatened with Prosecution for perjury because of her declaration that she had been bulldozed into making an affidavit for Mr, Kresel, After Lawyer Wooten's conviction and his sentence to serve nine years’ !mpris- onment with hard labor, the case against Miss Trimble seemed to have NEW YORK, AUGUST 24, HE HAS MANY WIVES. y the board. The conytcted man’s sudden breakdown, however, and his re- quest to be allowed to make » full| statement in the case revived che part she had taken in the trial He undoubtedly made revelations that the young woman had perjured herself, and when she was faced with his sations she broke down and confesse: ou In her original afdayt: for Mr. Kressel she declared that Wooten had drawn up certain parens for David Rothschild and that she had typewrlt- ten the documents. Afterward she de- nied this and created a sensation by deola t Mr. i had coerced her into making this a t M rimble also confessed that her original story, told to Mr, Rand before Wooter was placed on trial, was the true one, This was to the effect that the larceny Wooten During Wooten’s trial the girl changea her mtory comple around, and a result Mr. Jerome threa to hay her arrested for perjury. Rothschild Quizzed, was actua ly committed by David Rothschild, the wrecker of Federal Bank, 1s st!l] in the Tombs, and has been there since his confession, which resulted in the indictment uf Armitage Mathews, Samuel I. Peegu- son and Wooten, Since the convict wyer began to lay bare what he knew about the looting of the Weissell estate, Rothschild has been repeatedly taken (0 Mr, Kresel's office and examined. It is said In the District-Attorne: office that a brother of Wooten wae in- |stromental in getting him to make a statement, [is counsel, George Gor- da ltatile, declared to an Evening | World reporter to-day that he had heard nothing about the alloged contes- sion until he read of ft im the new! papers. He evident! Was not taken into is cllent's confide e. A report Ie current about the Crimt- g that Lawyer Woo- ugh, dining luxy nal Courts Butlé |ten had been living | rlously in a Bri ay restaurant since he began to un his mind to the It is further report- pasts have been tu the Fombs. indictments against Wooten, Mn- thews and Ferguson charge specifcally at they conspired to obtain control of funds of the Welssell estate, and at they committed grand larceny througa David Rothschild's hypothe tion of securities of the estate for 00, Tt is charg: at Mathews and Woo- ten were to get 9 per cent, of all the money Rothschild borrowed, TORN AWAY FROM HS GIRL BADE Rejected Suitor, to Escape Whom Girl of Fifteen Fled from Home, Causes Rival’s Arrest for Revenge. The belle of Little Italy in Mast One Hundred and Tenth street until a week ago was Clarlo Morianina, fourteen years old and pretty, of No. 309 East One Hundred and Tenth street. Her father, seeing the number of sultors she had, told her on Aug. 11 that he had arranged a marriage for her with a good-looking Itallan thirty-five ycars | old and having money. Clarfo preferred | Dominick Fortino, twenty-five, of No. 300 Hast One Hundred and Hleventh street, whom she had known in Italy. ‘That ight the girl went away trom hume to Dominick's house, She found him sleeping on the roof, Waking him, she ‘old her troubles and asked him to marry her. Dominick was overjoyed, “They packed up their little belongings and next day went to Providence, R. where Fortino had relatives, There they were married in a Roman Catholic Church and since have been on their honeymoon, Laat night Little Italy celebrated the Feast of St. Philomena, when decora- tong are rampant and flreworks lavish The young couple desired to witnes ‘this celebration and came back for tt, ‘The resectod suitor saw the young couple, and In revenge went to the East One Hundred and Fourth sireet sta: on and told the police, Detectives Simon-| ett! and Beattie found the couple and! arrested Fortin, His girl wits fol. w> | ed him to a ceil and was taken to the | Childrens’ Boclety rooms, Magistrate Baker in the Harlem Court held Fordno in $1.00 ball on a charge of adduction aud sent the crys ing and protesting bride Lack to the 4.~Tae | #ullty Uf this horrible murder,” he sald, Hoch was omoking a olgar when told 67. PETORSBURG, bmpero ng ten | and now 7 will have the opportunity Of the issuance of the writ, “I am not ue Y hae teoelved the fello wocloty, OLD, BALD AND JEALOUS, WIFE SAYS OF BRADY He Had Police Alarm Sent Out for Her and Was Him- self Arrested, James H. Brady, proprtetos of a sum- mer hotel at Liberty, Sulliv aty, Was arraigned in Harlem day charged with assault by Mrs, Margaret Brady, a handso young woman, who ectered the tribunal with her three bewuuswl children clinging to her skirt Brady was a 5 East One Hundred sirect after he bad ance and tied two away from his wife, gent broadcast a report wat his wate and children had disappeared, and had the pouce send out an alarm for them, ‘Khe wile wld Magivirate Haker Unt hud been driven from home at the fof revolves and had lake her dren woth hi ‘My husband ‘Is sald Mrs. Brady, “and suffers from ti Jucinations. He’ believes that 1 am. in four young nen fomesteud,’ lagt night at No. id Thinty-se mud pated a disturb: drag ils children He had previously insanely jealous, our hotel ny, Whole trouble is tn ou c8 in age. yo thirty years old ani * forty-ajx, He Is wetting i Ho Helleves fam in love. with young man that I talk to, aud bas made my Iife miserable. ua thy hotel tn Libeyty, and he 1s trying to Kot tt away from me, He has alfeady speat a fortune of rise 0 playing thi ha and wants to spend all we left.” The husband, who had spent the niplit In the jail of the Bast Ono Hundted and Twonly-sixth street fon, Was silent. Ho Was placed under $900 bonds to keep the neace FIRE AT POTTSVILLE. POTTSVILLE, Pa, Aug, MM-rThe TO PAY CUBAN SOLDIERS, HAVANA, Aug. 24.--Preaident Palma breakey, office, boller house and eng'ns house uf the Bae HIM Curt Company t Miiereville Was to-day destroys vy lose was! $150.0 ; ae ROE boarders | 22 PRISONERS PLAN ESCAPE Noise Made by a Falling Bar of Iron Prevents a Big Jail Delivery in Somervile, New Jersey. floor of a cell in ‘County Jail at Somerville, N. J., at midnight last of the jail the first intimation they had of a plan in which some twenty-two prisoners were concerned for a whole- | sale jJall delivery. But for this incident | and the curiosity ft aroused in Night Watchman William Moore there ts lit- Ne doubt that the prison would be without a prisoner to-day, for the men had made careful plans for their escape Moore was just entering the Jail eor- ridor when he heard the clanging of the bar on the stone, He quickly sum- |moned Deputy Sheriff Anderson and every light in the jail was turned on Not a thing was found wrong, so the ighta were put out aguin, foore and Anderson were carefully lis- tening, and their suspicions were soon confirmed by hearing some one prying at the door of the corridor, ‘hey opened tt and found several of the prisoners in the corridor who h 1 pave been in thelr cells, At r head was John Regan, nvieted with two other men of rob- the house of ©. N, Sterling at Fin ‘The Men were hustied back to thelr cells and an investigation begu | It was then discovered that Regan hud dug @ hole from his cell to the corridor with a poker, had Mberated som prisoners, and Was getting ready to turn the whole jail loose ‘The Iron bar which he used had been ripped from his cot. ——_—— FELL FROM FIRE-ESCAP! Seven-year-uld Samuel Casper from the fourbheatory fre-esrape of the tenement house @t No, % Orchard street to-day and fractured his skull, ! stone derne, ‘The dropping of an fron bar on the} the Somerset | night gave the officials) Meanwhile | recently | other | teu} The Kind You Have Always Bought ___| “Circulation Books Open to All.”? | _ cAll the News. PRICE ONE CENT, WITZHOFF HAS. NEARLY AS MANY WIVES AS HOGH Man Indicted Here Known to Have Been Married Many Times. |HE POSES AS A DOCTOR. Two of His Wives Hired Law- | yers, Who Presented the Facts to Jerome. Dr. George Witzhoft or Winnttzhoft, a Swiss chemist and dentist, Is being sought by many women fn various parte of the country, all of whom declare he fe a giib-tongued adventurer who mar- ried them only to rob and desert them An indictment charging Witehoff with bigamy has been found in New York, and District-Attorney Jerome ts trying to catch him. Facts in the possesston of Mr. Jerome and attorneys John H. Rogan and Ben- jamin Franklin, both of No. 115 Nassau street, show that Witzhoff has been go- ing about the country, marrying every trusting woman who would have him, In tho cities he has visited he has left ja trall of weeping wives. His record Is only equalled by the enterprising big- amist Johann Hoch, the Chicago mur- |derer, now under sentence of death. Attorney Rogan 1s counse! for Miss Anna Parkhill, a Brooklyn girl of con- siderable moans, and it was he who laid the matter of her deception before the Grand Jury. By a strange colne!- dence Attorney Franklin, who has offices adjoining Rogan's, was engaged about the same time by Miss Dora Dort, of No 227 ‘Third avenue, another victim, to prosecute Witzhoft. Third Wife App Harily had commumication between the two unfortunate women and the lawyers been established when Miss Hita Randall, formerly of No. 2 Forest street, Somerville, Mass., and now of No, 124 Summer street, Boston, wrote that she too had also married Witshoft and been robbed by him Upon the three women comparing notes the identity of the rascal who had abused thelr confidence and blight- ed their lives was fixed bevond ques- tion, and each learned enough from the other to lay in the hands of the attor- neys @ record of Witzhoft, showing that he oontracted marriages in Kansae Clty, Chicago, Minneapolis, 8t Paul, Long Island City, in Newark, the Or- pes and Menlo Fark, New Jersey, | Witzhoff married Miss Parkhill in Brooklyn in Sepiember a year ago. Shortly afterward her fatner died, and then he induced her by threats to lend} him $1,200 belonging to the estate left by Mr, Parkhill, A few days later he disappeared, fle had represented him- self to the Parkhill family and married Mise Parghill under the name of Dr. Goorge A. Westhoff. When he married Miss Randall in Boston he called himself Dr, George A. Muller, He said then that he was a dental surgeon by profession and also a doctor in chemistry, Miss Randall lent him $50) for the expenses of the honeymoon, because he sald he was temporarily embarrassed by the non- arrival of a remittance from Switzer- land, In a few weeks he disappeared, Since then his victim has borno bim a elfld and has been compelled by cir- rmstances to support herself as a stenographer. Takes New York Wife. It was following the Randall bigamy that W ff came to New York, and under the name of Weston wooed and won Dora Dorf, a pretty German girl, It was a rapid courtahip, and Witzhoft appeared to her to be ail that an Ideal suld be, fier dream was shattered on the wedding night, She jtestifind before the Grand Jury that | Witzhof! tovk her to a house of evil |repute and, with a pistol at her head | ferced him to give her £800 of her sav- ings whloh she had drawn from a bank the day before, believing that she was to bet abroad for her hon AS s00n aw he wot the money Wizhort left the Louse and she iva not seen him since, Attorney Rogan Js In communication with a widow in Newark, who fell a victim ty Witzhof's wiles, He took every cent she had in the world. and it | 4s @ struggie for her 10 get food. At the tme of this marriage Witzhoft told the Wowan that he Was employed as a ebeinist in the laboratory of Thomas A Ligon, at Menlo Park. Vne widow be- came acquainted with the bixamist Uirough a personal in « New York newspi which ran for weeks and jxet forth ‘that @ doctor with a good | practice wished to ticet a woman vf meane with the object of matrimony, ———— WAGGAMAN GIVES BAIL, WASHINGTON, Aug. 24—Thomas B Wagguman, under indictment £ . jegalomnent, to-day appeared in fee of the clerk of the Crim and gave bond In the sum of -CASTORIA For Infants and Children, POLICE SEEK BROKER WHO IS MISSING Customers of Former Stock Exchange Member Want His Absence Explained, HIS OFFICE IS CLOSED. When J. W. Ritchie Had Trading Privileges Cut Here He Lo- cated in Jersey City. The potice of Jersey City are investi- gating the short career in that city of J. W. Ritchte, who some months ago was expelled from the New York St20k Exchange, while he was the board member of the firm of Yates, Ritchie & Pope. After his expulston he did bust- ness for a time with Pope, but soon dropped out of aight. The police suy that Ritchie opened an office in Jersey City at No. 76 Montgom- ery atreet, in one of the principal bulld- ings of the city, and for a month sent out large numbers of circulars inviting customers to give him their orders for bonds and stocks, which he represented he could execute cheaper than his com- petitora in New York, on acoount of the new stock transfer inw. They say he secured a large patron- age, and ree men were necessary in the office to send out the mall and count the money as it came in. A week ago, they say, the office of Ritebte & Co was closed, and nobody camo in to take the mail and cash. Later customers from various States began dropping in and found no one to meet them. Tho number of dissatisfied customers ‘noreased until they becam enor sae and finally the police were called and esked ‘to find the head of the akan ‘This they tried to do, but up to his_eftermoon not ‘been able to re- portranyjpnosreas: They are still look- Ing for him. FELL INTO BIG MOLASSES TANK. Workman Escaped Suffocation, bat Was Badly Injured by Barrel Dropping on Him. John Hill, twenty-six years old, who lives in Water street, near Gouverneur, Manhatten, had a narrow escape from being suffocated in a big molasses tank at the H. L. Hobart storage house, on Fifteenth steeot, Hoboken. As it Is, he is suffering from serious injuries re- celved when he feli into the tank and a barrel of molasses fell on top of him, Hill was standing on a skit placed across the tank emptying a barrel of lnolasses when the timber broke and he fell into four feet of the sticky mass, the barrel falling on ‘top of him. Owen Farley, @ fellow workman, jumped fn after Hill, and with the as- sistance of others pulled out the man who suffered bad gashes in hig head | and possible internal injurtes, ————__ VANDERBILT YACHT AT HAVRE. HAVRE, France, Aug. 24,—The Amer- jean steam yacht North Star, owned by Rear-Commodore Cornelius Vanderbilt, of the New York Yacht Club, has ar- rived her For Invigorating Breezes 5 cents and a trolley toa home by the sea, Halt Hour from Herald Square, ERST ELMHURST, cus, City, on picturesque Flushing Bay, THE IDEAL PLACE TO LIVE Send Postal for Circular and Views, BANKERS LAND & MORTGAGE 00., 887 Manhattan Av., Brooklyn, N. ¥. — Tailor Shops: 110 Fifth Ave. | Even if you are just a “week-ender,” it’s to your: advantage to jump into a smart suitat a pricesmart- ly reduced. <All the cus- tom tailor goodnesses for~ muchless than youusually~ pay for Atterhury System Cnthes “Ask the Man Who Wears Thom.'* $20 and $25 Suits, $13.50 $30 and $35 Suits, $z8. 75 Salesrooms: 39 and 41 Cortlandt Street, Clothes. Ale |Furnishings. Sole Agent. New Havent ‘Shoes, Conn, AMBER) Ee CANDY SPECIAL FOR THURSDAY. Asserted Genesee Creams..Lb. Chocolate Peanut Clusters.Lb, SPKCIAL FOR FRIDAY. 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