The evening world. Newspaper, December 9, 1905, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

r MRS. ROGERS IS BURIED AT DAWN OF DAY Few Saw Body of Woman Who Died on Gallows Laid Away. CROWD WAS THWARTED Request of Relatives that Train Be Stopped at Dis- tant Spot Granted. Pg oe i FALLS, N. ¥,, Dec, 9.— body of Mary Mabel Rogers, who was executed at Windeor, Vt, yester- day, wae placed in « vault at St. Mary's Cemetery hero early to-day, the burial following « few hours later, in the Presence of the fumily, Tt had been generally supposed that body would be brought ower the and Maine Railroad to the sta- fon here ‘ast night, and several bun- @rei persons had gathered at the depot To avoid the crowd, friends of the Rogers family appealed to the railroad officials to have the train stopped at ‘Hooatck. ‘Dds was done and the body removed from the biggige car at that station, where it was taken in charge by un- Gustakers. The casket was placed In a ‘wewon and driven to the cemetery, It hed Deen planned to make an immediate faterment, but at the last moment this ‘wes abandoned and the body fm a vault, to remain there until Qaterment at 6 o'clock, when the wim of relatives and friends for @ final qpentng of the casket was granted. ‘Meanttme the vault was secured and @p armed guint remained in charge. Aqvaiting the funeral party at the ceme- tery were Rev, Francis A. MoCranor, Wathryn Callahan and 4 sister of the @ead woman, & brother, Louls, and @ few tntimate ¢riends of the family, WINDSOR. Vt. Deo, %—Instead of teving been a well-conducted. success @meoution, the hanging of Mrs, Mary it 1s now admitted, was about oe Ing a ptece of work, from the fmmgman's viewpoint, as ever was wit- fpemeed. All that was needed to add to ‘the horwor was the brea! of the rope, making fH necessary to ha her @ wood time As was, ahe rope stretched aiz inches The toes of the @mpeoded @oman touched the ground, @nd uben the rope stretched more, let ting thewoles of lier feot rest upon the floor. ‘Pwo duputy sheriffs, standing upon the em@old abov ined the rope and Gow {t up pulling the woman's feet fem the ground They clung to the holding the dead weight of 160 4 for fourteen mimutes, while the turnsd their backs upon the ef two men holding @ struggling ‘Weren muspended until the life was ehokedstron her body RNG 10 PASS THE NEW CBE Goes to London To-morrow to Arrange New Govern- & ment with Liberals, it BONDON, Dew 9—Sir Henry Camp Bell-Bannerman having completed his Cabinet, the King will return to Lon- don to-«morrow and receive the Liberal Premier in audionce at Buckingham Palace In the course of Sunday even- fog in order to give his formal ap: paoval of the Ministry. The members of the Balfour Cabinet ‘WO give up their seals of office at Privy Counci! meeting to be held at noon Monday and thelr successors will take over the seals at a second meet- tng of the Privy Cowell on Monday affernoon. ‘The composition of the new Mintwtry be officially given out on Sunday, n the list cabled to the Amsoolated Press las might will be fownd to be @ubstantially vorrect. The new British Ministry will sub- stantially be as follows; Prime Minister and First Lord of the Troasury—Sir Henry Campbell-Ben- herman. Gooretary of State for Foreign Affaire —Sir Edward Grey, Lord lligh Chancellor—Sie Robert, Phreshie Reid, K. ©. Chancellor of the Exchequer—Herbert Henry Asquith. Georsiary of Stabe for Indla—John Morley. Georetary of State for the Colonies— The Barl of Higin, Secretary of State for War—Richard Burton Hane, KC, Secretary of State for Home Affairs— Herbert John Gladstone, Lord-Licutenant of Ireland—The Parl ot _Aberteen, Chlet Secretary for Ireland—James Bryce. ————EEEE—E—EEEE= e Laughs Last ‘And best and often who drowns his sorrow over past failure to secure employment in aa" Sunday Help Want Directory TWO WOMEN News Penetrates Jail Walls in Hackensack, Far from Execution, BREAK THEIR STOLIDITY Antoniette Tolla and Rosa Valentina Tremble for Break of Miserable Life, By Ruth Earle, The law has exacted the penalty of| her orlme; Mary Rogers is dead. And, tn the words the grim Irony of custom put into the mouth of the sentencing Justice: ‘May God have merey on her goul!” It took two yeans for justice to have {te due, The Vermont woman was oonvicted of murdering her husband and sentenced to die Dec, 22, 193, The deg of her execution was fixed in Feb- ruany of this year, Popular sentimen- tality, pitted against the law, was able to postpone the exeoution ten months, Now that Mary Rogers has reaped the wages of her sin, the sympathy that ‘was without avail in the fight to oom- mute Ler eentence to lite imprisonment ‘will undoubtedly concentrate itself on the fate of Antoinette Tolls and Anna Valentina, the two women convicted ot murder ahd now lodged tm the jai at Hackensack. ‘These Italian women found pecuiiar significance in yesterday's execution. It was 4 bat omen. It signified oat hope | and the deckhe of sentiment that would spare frail womenkind from capital punishment, It made the two com- anions In e@versity draw a little closer in mutual distress, It weakened An« tolnette Tolla's expectation that @ decree from the Board of Pardons would spare her before the day of her oMfcial death were fixed, It made Anna Valentina relinguish all faith tn the legal fight at Washingtohi to pro- cure her release, Bad News Penetrated Walls. Ne travels like @ thief in tte night Tt ts supposed to be barred from these two women, The adjoining cells where they await their fate in theory pre- serve a ololsteriike oalm, No one knows just what medium brought the message to the prisoners’ hearmg, but ihe before the newsboys in the Httle square before the jall were crying their extvas of the hanging the women lew what of peoullar import to them | tempts to spate her, mot death on the! the day had in store. ‘Their noon meal! gallows Her orkne was their orime,| MLAURIM EXPECT TO VOLATE Deacons, It Is Believed, Will Exonerate Sixteenth Street Pastor, It appeasw to be & foregone concin- wion that the Board of Deacons of the Stxtemnth Street Bapttst Church, who have been bearing the charyes against the pastor, Rev. Archibald B, Mo- Laurin, will, by @ decisive majortty, de. ote that he is nob guiky of Improper conduet, intorteation, misrepresentation and generally improper behavior, g@ va- rious members of the congregation have alleged. It ls reported that five of the seven deacons will sign a majority raport aco quitting btm of She accusations and ex= pressing their confidence in him. The | of remaining two desoons will, ft te said, file a minority report, setting forth that ‘Mr. MoLaurin shovld no longer be re- tatned ag pastor ‘That he is eawured of the backing of most of the deacons is shown by the fact that the little minister conducted prayer-mesting earvice last night, some- thing which he hed mot dane while the deacona were bearing the evidence, ‘An offer of the church wali toxiuy that Mr, McLauria would not have re- eumed his functions 4 pastor unless he had @efinite information that the Boant ot Deacons wouki vindicate him In thetr findings on the trial, The mem- bora, however, will vote on the reports before aation becomes final. It Mr, MoLaurin wins, and he evi- dently expects to, he will at once take steps to have the persons who seoustd him ousted from membership. Them is @ rumor that the deacons will make thetr reporta to-morrow, Ma. MoLaurin waa not at his study or in his bein) to-day, i pad aren stated that Attorney Henry unter, of No. 203 Broadway, had been retained by Mrs. McLaurin to begin ection for separation t the clergyman, but Mr. Hunter, when seen this afsernoon, dented this statement. “Mrs, MoLaurin called on me onoo, about two “nals Mr, Hun ter, “and asked my professional advice, Howevor, the matter for discussion dealt largely with tho charges being made egalnat her husband. J have mot seen or hi from her since." Mrs, MoLaurin attended, prayer meet- ing services with her husband lest night, sitting by his side, She sta emphatically that she had not Intendod to testify against her husband at the ‘hoaring, PAUL KELLEY, GUARDED, TAKEN FROM CYCLE RACE. Dive-Keeper Escorted from Gar- den, After “Tp” That Enemies Were Waiting to Do Him Harm, Paul Kelley, divekeeper and leader of the notorious gang which has mur dered, robbed and committed every crime on the calendar, but which has in many Instances @foaped conviction through @ mysterious influence, made ‘his firat public appearance last night ainoe the murder of William J, Har- rington in Kelley's dive when he ap- peared at the bicycle maces at Madison Square Garden, Barly to. Kelley, surrounded by bers of his gang, one of whom was ace Griffo, the prize-fighter, was aud~ Avivo of a lawyer, Daniel Rely, naa been sought by friends of the dive- cre ie te et ‘nd_posee ‘a at 11.6 of | DEPuTY~ SHERIFF BLAVVELT, , *psniaw panain EG EASY ENOUGH. SLAYERS, CO nrem fomced to fear more ever betore that her end be thetr end @notions of these two Italians to @ high degrees, With of thetr Gouthem blood, lapsed tnto almost animal apathy In sptte of ther doom the women have been almost happy behind prison bars But yesterday's tragedy was enough to | was saddened by contemplation of the | rouse them to agitation. | pehalty exacted of thelr fellow sinner and almost certainly in store for Wem. | They trembled before the fulfilment of | the ol Mosato law that exacts “a lite for @ life.” Mrs. Rogers, in spite of powerful at- NEW BATTLESHIP IDAHO LAUNCHE Governor’s Daughter Sponsor for New Vessel of First- Class Type. PHILADELPHIA, Deo. 9.—The U. 8, battleship Idaho wa» launched at 1220 o'clock to-day at the yard of the Wm. pany. The vessel was ohristened by Miss Louise May Gooding, the thirteen- year~sld daughter of Governor Frank R. Gooding, of Idaho. The battle-whip Idaho is a sister ship to the Mississippi, which was launched ‘on Sept. 39, and will be a battle-ship of the first class, When finished he will be a conspiou- ous iliustration of the important factor electricity has become in the operating & modern warship. Except for wind. Jags and steering gear, practically all her other auxiliary chinery will be tun by eleotricity, ner two mill- tary masts will be fitted with appara- tus for wireless telegraphy. \ Her specifications are: Length on wa- |ter Mne, 375 feet: length over all, 383 feet; extreme beam, 7/ feet; trial dis- placement on @ draught of 24.8, 15,000 tons, The contract provides for a speed of seventeen knots, Motive power will be furnished by twin-screw, triple-expan- sion engines of a collective indicated horse Pde of 10,000, steam being sup- ied to the cylinder by elght water Pubs boilers eet in four water-tight com- partments, TWO COPS DON’T KNOW BEER BY ITS TASTE They Swore to That on the Stand and Their Prisoner Was Dismissed, Constier now Robert Wildneuer and John Downey, the only two poloemen im captivity who don't know lager beer by the taste of it, ‘These plain clothes men belonging to the Baat ty-eighth Street Stal arraigned aurence Silver, twenty years old, of No, 12 Past Wighty- eighth street, befcre Magistrate Steinert in Harlem Police Court to-day on the charge of violating the excise law, They watd they bought itwo glasses of | from Silver, in @ saloon at o, {1101 Park yeaus Ll Sunday morning @ clock. ‘Assemblyman Robert F. Wagner de- fended Bilver, and he's the wise one. “Do you drink?’ he asked the police- men. "Oh, no," they cried, in virtuous chorus, Dd you drink this beer?” "We only sipped it," sald Downe: y. aald ‘Little teeney, weeney lps," Io you iknow the difference Det Sif ‘ou iow the Wee! weiss beer and legor beer?" 2 “We do not." “Then you don't know that this beer beer?” “Dismissed,” eat the Magtetrat And Wildnauer’s a German, too Xmas World, Out To-morrow. Twenty-four Pages in Color. A Santa Claus Cut-Out Mask for the Children, Twenty-four Pages in Color, . Out To-morrow. Cramp Ship and Engine Butlding Com- | Cloud Saddens Both. ‘They spent the day together, as ts thetr wont, but sadly, The chattering | in thetr Ively tongue became only tn- Pach wore an expression of So termittent deep sadness and apprehension. gfeat wae thelr foreboding tha MANY SHED FRM BLAZE W BROLL Twelve Persons Are Over- come in Fashionable Quar- ter on Remsen Street. A @ozen persons were overcome by smoke, and five others, one a woman ninety years old, were carried out un- conscious In a fire at the fas fonabie boarding-house of Mrs, Matilda Braden, Nos, 158 and 155 Remsen street, Brook- lyn, early to-day, when forty-five men and women were awakened to find the place filled with smoke, and flames roaring up from the basement. Of those ressued the most serious case is that of Mrs. Mattie Howe, ninety years oh], a paralytic, who lay helpless in her rvom while the other boarders were trying to escape, Sho was carried out by two unknown men, one of whom fa belleved to be a detective, and her condition 16 critical, Robert Merchant, an aged clerk of the Supreme Court, was carried to the street unconscious, as was his daugh+ ter. Mra, William L. Caniwell was) taken down a ladder after she had been | dragged, fainting, to a front window and held there by her husband until the firemen came. ‘After every one was supposed to be in the street Miss Christine Weeks, whose room was on the fourth story, tear, was found to be missing, Fire- men who acaled a ladder to that floor found her lying uncons fous in the hall, where she had run in an attempt to reach the stairs, She was passed down to the street and two doctors worked over her for half an hour Work of handling the fire was greatly delayed by defective hose, ‘The firemen lost many minutes try sections of the pipe. The gre grew excited, as firemen were seen running about, trying to get the proper pleces, as {f fitting together a puzzle ‘Phe fire staried in the laundry in Uae basement in the rear of No, 10, Nos. 185 and 163 are four-story, brown stone Nn | residences of a type common in the ex clusive section of Brooklyn, The base- ment and the firet floor are connected ‘ho fire wae put out only after an hour's fight, with over $5.000 damage, ———__— WINS FROM WHITE STAR LINE William P. Harley Gets Verdict of | $3,000, A case of consldemble {mportance to men working nong the de ke eteamships was decided to-day In the Supreme Court before Jus Addoms The action was Brought by William P. Earley against the White Star Line Company to recover damages for in- Juries, On the Mth of January, 193, Darley was employed by the Cudahy Beet Company, and was assisting in loading ft from a flat car alongside steamer Celtic. A portion of the beet, whl being hoisted into the hold, fell down on the Aft, & ries Steckler, who rep- resented Barley, claimed {t was the duty of the White Star line to manag: the holsting of the beef in a careful manner, and the failure to do so made them liable, Tho jury, after a defiber- ation of about fifteen minutes, rendered @ verdict In favor of the plaintiff for $3,000, — TWO KILLED BY TRAIN, ALLENTOWN, Pa, Deo, §—Two men were killed to-day on the Philadelphia and Reading Rallroad in @ cut two miles west of Allentown, When tho fost eastbound frel@st from Harris: dure arrived here the engineer found @ bundle of bloody clothing on the witot of the locomotive, Th ogi ink ound eh Bas men, Wain ee hs r hes 6 a SATURDAY 1 v | the Valentina nd on} ENING, DECEMY Ro, 1805, NDEMNED TO DEATH, SHAKEN BY could not bring themselves to eat. In prison life meals are events, When there t nothing to do but watch and pray prigon fare becomes a feast. That is why Mrs. Valentine has grown much stouter in the last months, and youphful Antoinette Tolla seems younger and prettier than ever before. | “Those women couldn't worry and) fret. ‘They can only eat. That's why | woman has fattened up| and the young one's grown better look- ing.” Such has been Deputy-Sherift Blauvelts oharacteniaation of hiby charges’ unruffied temperaments. But the contemplation of one's violent death as the wages of sin is a poor tonle, The rumor of a fellow-sinner’s execution yesterday was like the hang- ing of Danny Deever to the color-ser- goant and Mles-on-Parade, only a little MONe BO. Amtainette Tolla ig only twenty-four and she rotaing youth's thirst for life, ru ia Valentina ls twenty years older, y t in spite of all Ite hardships and aad- ness life 1s still sweet. Kven prison life MRS. ANNA VALE NTINA = ater Woman S PRISON, fm pleasant. There ts no want, Foot ts plentiful, and the only work to be done ig Udying up one's cell, All the rest of the day these two women prisoners are free to talk to each other, Gosalp tn Italian ten’t very different from any other eort. Bo the life couM be pretty near Plysium, if there weren't the tear | of adenth penalty to pa: Vision of Gallows Present, The vision of that old jail corctdor will be uppermost th the women's jminds—even before the death watch set on the younger girl, or Aanna Vi entina's sotitence comes from Washing- | ton, They will be haunted by the vision of {ts gallows and the hanging noose -bardly a pretty day dream But they won't talk about jt, except | to each other, These Latins are sullen fn misfortune, They mak their fears vo allence. ‘They shrink from the Intru- sion of strangers, It seoms as if death had become sudlenly a reality, Maybe they have read the mind of Deputy Sherift Blauvelt, Here's what *e hey be putting. the gail e) ting ¢ allows soon, ‘The Tolle aad Valenti 4 Una woman ‘fhwn oF | HACKENSACE | JUST OUTS: PR THE JAIL WINDOWS, “THE NEWSBOYS whe CRYING | THE HANGING OF J wwtll awing for tt. We'll have old Van Hise from Newark t) do the job. In the old days we did it ourselves—no professional hangmen for us. But Sheriff Herring | thinks it's a tickiish business. “We'll probably bang the Tolle woman {na couple of weeks, ['d gust Qs lief do It myself, The hanging of her's the easiest par It the poor woman upstairs could have understood him a4 he spoke she must, have been horrified, Hise” himself must have more human kindness in his eman's soul, The professional anticipation of an scone made this Jefsey carpenter, i sheriff. an uncanny sort of cus- tomer. | How any one ooutt calmly look for Ward to the execution of those forlorn wretches In the woman's prison ls a mystery, "And we won't put the death wateh on the olla woman for more than a week," said this tall, lank offelal, “It joosts $8 a day, and there's no use wast- jing the money.” Heaven forefend! If they must die llot tt be without unneedful expense to the State, G0) ASKED LF DODGING "OL. MAN Youngster, Pursued by Father, Runs in Front of Auto and Is Knocked Down. The automobile of Robert B. Dula, the Amerioin Tobacco Company, ran Jowm @ boy at Washington avenue and One Hundred and Pighty-first treet to-day and narrowly ascaped kill. ng him, ‘The car was being driven by Charles Sunacsek, Mr, Dula’s chaut- four, and Miss Margaret Wenlger was its only oxcupamt. ‘Tho machine was running at moder- ate speed along Washington avenue when Frank Lodaido of No. 701 East One Mundred and Elghty-first strect, who was being pursued by hus futher, dedlged in front of it. The lad was bit and hurled about ten feet directly in path of the ear. ‘The chauffeur the pped the auto Just.as the front wheel be érazed the boy's body Weniger, is a niece of the owner of the automobile, got out, took the boy's head in her lap and band up & rather deep gash. Sho carried boy to the automobile, and when Bic iceman Foley arrived, drove to ham Hospital, ‘The boy was by @ surgeon and went to sliceman Foley had the chauffeur locked up in the ‘Tremont stetion on a charge of assault. Miss Wenlger left the automobile In charge of the police and went downtown to get ball. —anehiomet DEATH OF JOHN SLOANE. Tead of Famous Carpet Firm Dx- pires After Brief Miness. John Sloane, head of the famous car- pot firm of W, and J. Sloane, died to- day at his resttenco, No, 883 Fifth ave- nue, efter a brief fines, For some Umé Mr, Sloane had been suffering with tho Infirmaties which come of advanced age, bur it was nd believed that his condition was sertolls. He had been In bed since Tuesday, when he contracted 4 cold whilo walking In Centnil Park. Mr, Sloane was born in Edinburgh, Beotland, March 14, 18d, but came to New York os a boy and received his education here. At the conclusion of his studies he entered the carpet house of | W. & J, Sloane, then an humble estab- lishment at No, M4 Broadway. Mr. Sloane's work the house soon git him to the front as a business and after tho deaths of the found vs of the house he was placed at the head of the enormous business he had done 80 much to bulld up. Mr, Slo was & director of the American Sur Company, the Equitable Life Assurance of No. 111 Fifth avenue, a director of | BURGLARS LCk UP TWO POLICE Hold Them Up on Street, March Them, to Station House, Then Smash Safe, RPADING, Mass., Dec, 9A gang of jelgit masked men entered this town Jearly to-day, captured and locked up | the two policemen who were patrolling trance to the Mechanics Bank, where they blew open a safe with dynamite, They secured four hundred dollars in cash The robbers were ween by several olt!- zens, and one, A. P, Brooks, who lives Actoss the street from the bank, ex- changed shots with the men left on guard outside the bank. No one was Injured, however, daring break was made In the of the bustiess district, and ap- ntly was carefully planned, but the picked out safe of the Waterworks which ts kept in the bank's office inetead of that containing tho bank's money and obtained hundreds of dollar instead of thousands, which the bank receptable held, of what they did got was ot Louk M. Bancroft, the bank, and clerk of the uniasion, The rest was that the de thelr appea Manning, town, The powered and taken Chiet of Police, where they hand and foot and locked tn a room » officers were quickly to the nve if the bound part of the gang ramained on guard. ‘Tho others hurried directly across the street to Masonte ‘Temple, Im which ts located the Mochantes’ Bank, and after forcing the outer door, proceeded to charge ono of three gates which were In the office with dynamite The explosion was loud, and A, P. Brooks, who lives across the street from. the bank, went to a window to learn the cause of the noise. He was seen by the guard loft at the pollen statlo warned iim to get back to they would shoot) him Mr. qutekly got a revolver, which fire was returned by no one on either hit The fustiade robbers out of th party hurried do encaped the robber apparently, was brought the And the whole ain street and of shots t GRIDIRON CLUB ELECTS, we oy the yank ¢ Manhattan, the} WASHINGTON, Dec |®econd Nationai Bank, the h Ave: |p " On the liiue Deposit Company. and a number | 20! meeting of ¢ lof other fmencial ins itutions, He was | day the following offt a momber of the prominent clubs in| President, Richard ‘town, and was also well known for] York ‘Trithy Vice- Samuel hayities, Ho was prominently Iden- |G. Blythe, New York World; Secretary tiled with Presbyterian choritaite and John 8. Shriver, ¢ jmission work here and abroad, He! Star; ‘Treasurer, ‘Geange also took a groat Interest in muntelpal | Hxecutive Committee: Beott . Rone politios was a momber of the fa-|Charies A. Boynton, Avsoclated Press 18 Committee of Seventy, | Louis Gartie, 3 te America Mrs. Shane has been well known oe] W. W. Jermane, of the Minneapolls a leader of N York society, The! Journal arst Seattle Times, was elected Rlane ave & handsome summer home|a mr wident member of the olub. at Lenox ass, It is enlled Wynd-| i hurst, ond {s one of the finest summer places In the United States, \ Joy Mighty good to be free from COFFEE AILS. OSTUM 10 days, is the sure proof, am ‘al Ni CREDIT A’ West I4th Street, Flatbush Avenue and F ortly befo ly searched 1 lo Orr and William H. | the night policemen of the QWPERTHW4 Everything Housekeeping STORES WOVE TOPE MORE BALOT-BNE | Hearst. Lawyers Not Waiting for Decision of the | Court of Appeals, Lawyers for Willlam R, Hearst to-day resumed thelr war on the ballot-boxes, ROCERS'S FATE THRONG IN PERIL MDG RO. Tender from the Liner New York Carrying Passengers Crashed in Fog. PLYMOUTH, England, Dee, 9,—For ty-seven passengers of the Arorican Line steamer New York, from New York Deo. 2 had an exolting half hour while landing here to-day. A tender with the passengers and a thousand bags of mail on board collided in a fog with tho freight steaines Magele Hou; ood The bulwarks of the tender were smashed and several stanchions were carried away, but no one was injured and the passongers were safely landod ee LAWSON NOT INDICTED. BOSTON, Dec, §—The Suffolk County Grand Jury falled to-day to return an indictment against Thomas W. Law- son, Who had been held for that body by the Munleipa} Court on the charge of criminal ibel. The charges ware preferred by Clarence W_ .Barron, t Proprietor ‘of the Boston News B: A_'no' hill was reported by the A DIFFERENCE IN LUNGS, In the eb Uni- versity three human lungslie side by side, One is of an Eskimo amd is snow white, In life, this would be rudd: with rich blood. Another that of a coal-mimer and is black, The otheris of a town dweller a:.| is a dirty slate gray, as are thelungs of most | city residents. t's why | consumption thrivesin cities, One reason why Scott's | Emulsion does so much to | keep down consumption is | because it helps to keep the lungs clean and Hes ig them with rich, red blood. It makes the lu germ-re- sisting. If the body is run down and health is at a low ebb Scott's Emulsion will build it up quickly and per manently. SCOTT & BOWNE, 2p Peas! Stront, New Yorks Coward Shoe Needs no formal introduction to deciding not to wast for the decision of | the Court of Appeals on the appeal from the proceedings in the cases ot the | boxes already opened. | Henry De Forest Baldwin secured trom Justice Stover an order returnable on Monday before Justice Greenbaum, di~ | recting the Board of Election and thi | Inspectors of Eleotion tn seventeen more election districts to show cause why the ballot-boxes in those districts should not be opened and the ballots recanvassed. In the case of the four boxes already opened Justin Amend Umited his onler to a shinple recount of the ballots, but by consent of Mayor McClellan's law- yers they were permitted to scrutinize ballots and enter objections to the counting of any ballots which were im- properly marked, | On an appeal from this order the | Appelinte Division unanimously said | that, In their judgment, the ballot boxes ought not to have been opened at all But, said the Appellate Division, as the Court of Appeals had once ruled that, having been opened the ballots should have been recanvassed as if they had not been canvassed on election night, the order of Justin Amends must be #0 broadened as to admit of such & recanvass, From this ruling an appeal was taken to the Court of Appeals by request of the Appellate Divislon and this appeal will be heard in Albany on Monday, By common consent al other pro- ceotings were postponed until the Court of Appeals deckits. But the Hearst lawyers have changed thelr minds They will try to get seventeen boxes opened with the vassing under the ruling of the Appel Yate Division, ——EE With rich, glossy | hair; itching, scaly, crusted | scalps, cleansed and purified, by shampoos with CUTICURA SOAP and dressings of | CUTICURA, the greatest of skin. | , curing emollients, 1807 | b IT \VANTAGES near 6th Avenue privilege of recan- | the public, It has been on the the mati street, and then forced en-| ‘%® ruling of the Appellate Division on|market for years; it has made its way to favor by sheer merit alone; it is the scientific product of over jo years of experience. You cannot procure them of any other dealer, SOME OF OUR SPECIALTIES :— Riding Boots, Riding Leg Supporting Shoes, Bunion Shoes, Orthopedic Shoes for Children, Pillow Insole Shoes, Extra Narrow Widths, Extra Wide Widths, Extra Long Sizes for Men Il}¢ to 13, Hockey Shoes, SOLD NOWHERE ELSE. JAMES S. COWARD, 268-274 Greenwich St., N. Ye (NEAR WARREN STRERT, ) Mall Orders Filled. Send for Catalogae, TRY COWARDS CORN CURE, Price 25¢. a jar. Note How Kapidly Chrixtmas Is Approaching your Chri + now DIAMON Watches, Pay as y | Select ait as DS, Jewelry. Wash OR L. W. Sweet & Co., 0 Malden 478 Fu ranches 2 tNINGS. iit of own patronage solleited. Heid PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Promotes tt growth of the hair an@ gives it chelustre andsilktness of youth, When tho hair 18 gray or faded tt BRINGS BACK THE YOUTHFUL COLOR, It prevents Dandruft and hatr falling and keeps the acalp ¢ and healthy, Vereneeeees: ———— Gild your picture frames, bric-a-brac, ete. with Lucas Perfect Gold Enamelj ‘ulton Street, Brooklyn, Won't turn piack At dealers 150 and 2%0 sizes

Other pages from this issue: