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NEWS OF ALL SPORTING EVENTS IN FINAL (PINK) WBHATHER—Cloudy; Sunday probably rain, vn EDITION OF THE EVENING WORLD, | Mi _ Circulation Books Open to All.” ut | “ Circulation Books Open t 0 An.” | = WEHATHER—Clow obably rain. LATEST EXTRA (WITH SPORTING NEWS) day —_ "PRICE ONE CENT. NEW YORK, SATURDAY, JANUARY 13, 1906. PRICE ONE CENT. BINGHAM TO Wi OUT ROWDYISM AT _ BRIDGE ENTRANCE WIPE Disgraceful Conditions Revealed to Police Commissioner by Evening World and He Acts Prompt- ly to Stop Them. WILL MAKE NEW YORK END SAFE IN RUSH HOURS. No More Knocking Down and Trampling Upon Women and Girls to Be Toler- ated if It Takes the Entire Force to Stop It. Protection of life and limb at the Manhattan end of the Brooklyn! Bridge, so long demanded by The Evening World, is assured at last. A stop will be put to the rowdyism there at any cost, and conditions will be dmproved if the entire police force has to be sent there for the purpose. The Evening World at noon to-day Igid before Commissioner Bingham a full statement of conditions at the Manhattan plaza of the Brooklyn Bridge, as observed by its representatives and told in hundreds of letters from women, girls, and even men, complaining of the brutal actions of the mob that makes the entrance to the bridge the most dangerous place in the city to pedestrians. He was shown proof of instances in which TELLS OF MURDER, ® THEN CONFESSES | GUILT OF CAIME Strangler Kills Woman by Winding Wire About Her Throat. ATTACKED ON STREET. Victim Well Known in Chi- cago Social Circles—Made Hard Fight for Life. SLAYER HID HER BODY. Left It in Yard of Home All Night. Then Gave Alarm and Later Told All, CHICAGO, Jan, 13.—After giving the @larm that a revolting murder had been cammitted, Richard Ivens, twenty: one years old. of No. 368 Belden avenue. ‘o-day confessed to the police that he was the clayer of 2irs. Frank Hollister, whe lived at No. Fullerton avenue, and wh) was i)uni strangled in the yard of the Ivens house, The woman had been chaked to death with wire And her body thrown into a heap of refuse, She hii mad= a desperate fight fo Mfe and her corpse presented an awfu! sight When found. Three strands ot copper wire had been wound tig about her neck, cutting into. the flesh ‘ber face was Hy se brutse1, her hat: hanging about her’ and her clothing badly torn, Ivins was the first to give the alarm women and young girls have been pushed, knOcked”dowt ahd trampled ‘upon by hurrying ruffftans, regardless of the ,inefficient police force there, and and aeeiy careless of the safety or Hves or weak women and girls who &re compelled to use the bridge morning and evening. es Sommissioner has had this mat- , but the condition at the bridge has geen presented to him as charitably ABE HUMMEL as possible, and he hos had little op- portunity for peraonal observation. the Comné'ssioner, empheticall fheve seen too much about what ‘Com- missioner Bingham premises that he oo oe FIGHT HIS CASE | @ to be said, that I have done some- } thing, and that you shall have a chance to say. You can quote ne as saying i that I have the matter under careful Justice Woodward Grants Lawyer a Certificate of Reasonable Doubt. @r ty for consideration for a time, { The exposure of «wciual conditions ‘opened his eyos “I don't want to be quoted as eaying . @mything about what I will do,” a x “I want to bave it sald, if anything consideration and complete and thor- ough—use those words, ‘complete ana thorough’—protection will be given to ae want to @o cover that Commissioner Bi m immediately gent for an Cae’ high in the police foree, whom Tesponsible for the discipline aay efficiency of the de- partment in control of keeping order at the bil and @ quick, short and de- Cisive interview followed between that officer and the Comiesioner. The re- @ult will be an sxpee force of men at the to protect pedestrians “a (OO mobs of hogs that have ranelt ate a nen os Dereoeers serous heretofore. STATEN ISLAND BOAT CRASHES INTO SLIP stand, The Queens Nearly Put Out of ne cue ery rx owt GOOD SPORT SEEN ences | AT FAIR GROUNDS The big ferry-boat Queens, one of the mew Municipal boats, was nearly put ‘out of commission to-day. when it ran at full speed into the St. Georze ailp, a amon: en and ohildren on eer. Piao : and’ greatly damagi . red. e ‘Nellevine ‘that the pera the mat Justice Wédodward, of the Appellate Divisio nof the Brooklyn Supreme Court, thie afternoon granted a certif- cate of reasonable doubt to Abe Hum- mel. against the carnying out of the sentence against the lawyer until his appeal for @ new trial {s heard. The Court says in granting the certifi- cate of reasonable doubt that in his Dodge, the ohief acousing witness egninst Hummel, was not sufficiently corroborated. It is very Ukely that the lawyer's present $10,000 bail bond will Merchants’ ' Handicap Feaiure | of Card that Brought Out Good Fields. en FAIR GROUNDS, NEW ORLEANS, Jan, 13—The Merchants’ Handieap, fourth on card, was to-day's stake not been fig Bs eftorts oe feature here, It was at one mile and foto wd and an evenly , have jumped overboa other rages were sufficiently interesting ! —_—_s to tempt the bettors who hoped to. get «CORONER HOLDS GROOM, more han an. oven break with booktes."” 5 mre. "vanderbire Attorney Sent to vce es, LAR HANDICI CTY PARKS STA ther personal attorney, Poter R. Gatens, "of No, 2 Broadway, to the Coroner's office to look after the interests of her erp, Mishset Mallon, who was ar. a Ug oo This certificate will act aaa stay | been opinion the teatimony of Charles A. | ft matched field atarted, The born to-lay. ne telling is father he had found the woman muntered, and poing! one to later cajl the police. @ WAS Guspected and finally broke down under the police “third degreo” and confessed the cr.me Ivens in his confession implicated other three men, and the police epect to neke cre arrests, Mrs. Hollister left her home yesterday afternoon to attend the funeral of a friend, Mrs. Emma Sempl No. 172 Seminary avenue, That w the last seen of her by any of her friends. After waiting until 7 o'clock last night for her retorn, Mr. Hollister informed the police of her disappearance, and an all-night search was instituted, Early this morting, as the story was first told to the police, the two sons of Mr. Ivins noticed the feet of a woman protruding from the refuse which lay’ Jn a smail inchosure just off the alley, They were almost soya covered. Thy men removed thé body and notified the | police, the wegon had AS ‘soon as patrol arrived at the spot a crowd gathered, areray Congdon, gholrmaster at the Wesley Methesiist Episcopal Church, Whore Mrs. Hollister sang In the choir, Tagocstieg te boay wnat “ones It was removed an undertaki husband notiti the eppearnce of, her Hollister, haa al t pefore she wag ‘ied tangled as if it had lea violently down: t the. fi ‘waist had been en and | a was ea ‘Judging trom glathing, "Mrs. small shale stele ane fv wort deen n taken ‘by the maniener, who de- to make 4 appear hat robbery ‘bee! e crime. ving & the murder as ally ¥ took bor Tvins boys, tot Mand put them "through thi . invert Confesses. Syne 5 Ay Ghiee of ‘Police Schuettler thet he had | wife Woclazed. thet yesterday as he gonking va i carpenter Hee 4 day Mis, Hollister passed found Re her, he declares, and a at: tempted to aasauke She, aiated deaporately, aud 13 ay, Oa Mes inte ber, It her Mite at the fime, and | he then wan i ne body Into oth rd @nd threw it upon th se. He Mie sined ‘here, ail 8 | slept soundly eshre o Ya morning he went out.to tl Hing to find thi ea vo and. pretend ing. ey e pola a rus! USE ate tee: Is ‘ier! Ped ‘fact 10 he cha red ister ras thirty years of rsonal charm, a end Sra as. the Justice Dowling, of the Supreme Court. | at to-day annulled the marriage of Rosa and’ Paul Weber on the ground that Weber was-and js Insan | ‘They were married Feb. 18, 1900, and on tay 28, 1901, Justice O'Gorman com- Insane. On their Rosa were HADLEY SCORES ROGERS; IS CHEERED IN COURT Remarkable Scene at the Finish of the Standard Oil Argument in Chambers Before Justice Gildersleeve. Applause {n a court-room in this city is unusual, but Attorney-General Had- won it at the con- clusion of his argument in the Henry H. Rogers proceedings before Justice Giidersleeve to-day. had impugned his motives in coming to New York to get testimony in his crusade against the Standard Ofl Com- After he had finished with the legal aspect of his contention that Mr. ld be compelled to answer to his ownership of stock in the Standard Ol] Company, of Mis- | souri, he devoted a minute or 80 to de- ley, pany. of Missouri, fense of himself. and effectively that scores of those who thelr hands and stamped thelr feet until the court of- heard him clapped Opposing counsel He did it so ficers rapped for order. The demonstration was remarkable not only because Mr, stranger, but because the audience was | not composed of ordinary court hangers- on. Most of those who Mstened with | keen interest to the arguments were lawyers who entertained toward the | ellm, Missour! only sentiments of curiosity when he arose to answer the distin- Pon, From the court-room Mr. Hadley went |a: to No. 67 Wall street to resume the || examination of witnesses before Com- ©| missioner Sanborn. Mr. Wollman opened by briefly ex- plaining the status of tr. case. He eaid that Mr. Hadley has begun suk in Missouri to dissolve a monopolistic trust that he believes existe with Pe Richard Standard Oll Company of Indiana, the ae hat the ‘body soy of hice. 4 allot Vaters-Plerce Oil Company of St. Louis, in the sable yard. fart‘ and the Republic Oil Company, as par- ties. In pursuance of hia desigh to prove ‘this he served a subpoena upon H. H. @ tort | Rogers, who refused to answer when was asked If he owned stock in the Stand- {ard Oi] Company of Indiana, and as to ;his knowledge of the relations existing between that company and the Waters- Pierce Ol Company, Hagerman Replies. Frank Hagerman, opened on behalf of Mr, Rogers, {claimed that the only points in the con- tentions of the Attorny-Generai are two the Waters-Plerce Ol! Company divide the State ay Missoun’ into parts as have combined to jin idemachortieed aes BRIDEGROOM WAS.. LUNATIC, |= Trust, ¢ ning of IN ‘witheas, * he declared, The Supreme Count of Micsourl ix now ‘advising tle queation. uw juprone ure ron: to the Manhattan bho ders a decision the courts of thi ‘to, protection. ‘Until ¢ square-jawed Hadley young man guished counsel on the other skle. At |) 5, the conclusion of the proceedings many | issing. {of these lawyers gathered about him if in the corridor and congratulated him. Examination Reserved. trade territor nd—T' hat t |e the rice of ol ‘briett ketched thi an briefly al e oe a that have Mirus ta been jourl, of Kansas that terri st, the Insuran Het On Tr bas Poe pa that the question of ip does not enter into the rata eitaoan as the ont; t issue are. the two mentione his_arzument. uid extend hi rman fall Depeactis 5 sald that when Col is_entitied PLUCKY NURSE HOLDS THUG WHO ATTACKED HER Agnes Hopkins Held Up on the West Side by Two Thieves. | Miss Agnes Hopkins, a pretty nurae, living at No. 183 Hast Fifteenth street, was held up and brutally slugged by, of testimony within the State on an of-! fense committed outside, |Pocketbook, but she managed to hold ‘the other despite his furious efforts to two men at Ninety-ninth street and Co- lumbus avenue, as she was returning from @ professional oall early to-day. One of the men got away with her escape until the arrival of Policeman Nicholas Dunn. Dunn was at tie corner of Ninety- Big Crowd in Courts When Mr. Curtis began to speak all the standing room had been taken. Con- ring. thi Of the Bupreme Court on Saturday, th attendance was remarkable. Air, Curtis asuerted that the questions put to Mr. Rogers are at pr ent under Consideration by. the Supre Court of Missourl, ‘The exact questions, he maintained, were put to another. wit: hess in Missour! that witness re- used to answer, He questioned ihe right of the Attor- ney-General of Missouri to ask Mr. (Rogers any questions at all under the governing conditions. He criticised tl method of examination followed by the Attorney-General, and boldly | stated | questions such as Mr, Hadley put to Mr. Rogers are not of interest to the public, “I want to register," he said, ‘my, professional protest against the dra- | Tnatle performances inthe public press | is called judicial proceedings. They setting bad examples and exciting a bad Influence upon the young men of the r. decision of Important Issues De tiaw of fact ao not depend upon pub Heity or flash-lights. Appeal for Rogers's “Rights.” at there is seldom a session e neatly | “1 don't for Mr. Rogers be- from | cause of his teh standing in. this com= feunity and. in’ this country,” declared the lawyer, “but 1 ask for him only his legai rights. All I ask is that Mr. gers shall not be treated any dit- ferently from anybody else because of his aie, Tad ence, success in business Tnduence, ie said. forelgn Jurisdiction len the: Have ne" Tham at home.” Dever dared question le| “Tt is true that reporters far the press f have been present when thede questions Public Minter Eieadl tek nama ngs “J es! they hi 0 be there. = y had a right “If there have been sensational re- ports of the examination they have been occasioned by the filppancy and ridicyle of the Witness Rogers hy his openly expressed contempt for the Su- prame Court of Missouri. “Actions such as those of this wit- ness and hers tend to inflame the Passions of ignorant people. I want to ask these men if they have considered that If they sow ¢ wind they must reap the whirlwind of disaster.” jBrietd will be handed up’ Monday at GOULD'S YACHTS AGROUND TWO DAYS Niagara, Cruising Along cu Coast Without a Pilot, Hits Shoal. City, He ory, ban polota at the! steam yacht Niagara arrived here to- ‘day after beng two days aground near Cienfuegos. The accident, it ts sald, was due to the yacht leaving that port ‘State| without a pilot. The Niagara will cruive northward. - ——— The Southern’s Pelm Limited third street when he heard a woman screaming far up the avenue, He jumped on a car that was passing and ordered the motorman to put on all speed. As the car neared Ninety-niuth street Dunn could see a crowd around 4 man and a womn, The woman was clinging to the former, who was strik- ing her repeatedly, Nobody in the ciowd. offered to help, and the plucky little woman was getting the worst of it when the policeman leaped off the cur and Jerked the thug clean off hie fest, Miss Hopkins said she was returning nome. from a call in One Hundred and Second street when two men ap- prouched her, One selzal ber: throat ‘while’ the “other snatched fi handbag containing some twenty dol- lars, She broke the man's hold on her | | throat and he at once began striking her in the face. the statton-house the prisoner his name as Joseph Quinn of No. Amsterdam avenue, “Aries Hopkine “was brulee and cut about the mouth and lps, She dressed hor hurte with, Materia Goon ie pre lice medicine chest. While she was so engaged a man was brought in. suffer- ing with a severe scalp wound, The nurse ‘vt once forgot her own hurts and turned her attention to the, injured man. After she had dressed and washed the the man departed, profuse in his thanks. ‘The police were ambulance for hi Hopkins saved them the trouble. | Miss Hopkins was unable to appear in the West Side Cotrt to-day, and Quinn Was held In 00 ball’ for’ examination Monday on the charge of assault. REMEMBERS HIS OLD SERVANT IN HIS WILL Joseph Huber Left Legacies to Her and to Several Charities, Te will of Jogerh Huber, filed by Moves Strassman_ to-day, bequeaths 1,000 each to the German Hospital, ; German Hospital, Brook- re Orphan Asylum, and the Deutsche Ge- Mount Vernon, sellachatt, ‘There ts a $5,000 bequest to the school fund of the New York Turn Verein, Lexington avenue and Higthy-fitth Btreet’ the income to be applied to the alntonenes of_the Genman Institutton. Duenkelberg, long a ser Rane tr “the family, gets $3,000; John Standt, Mr, Huber's son-in-law, $5,000 and his brary, and the reat of the es- and settled again in the sands, hanes >I |FE-SAVERS’ BOAT FROM THECHEROKEE SMASHED BY SEA Broken to Bits on Atlantic City Pief, . Where a Great Crowd Gathered to Watch Stranded Liner— Fear that Crew Perished. GALE DRIVES THE STEAMER BACK ON BRIGANTINE SHOAL Tugs Towing Her to Deep Water Helpless Against Wind—Great Waves Sweep Over Vessel’s Decks as Crew Throws __.$ the Cargo Overboard. Pri ee (Special to The Rveing World.) ATLANTIC CITY, Jan. 13.—Crowds of spectators braving the 3 storm for a glimpse of the stranded Cherokee, lying in the path of the rs big breakers sweeping over the Brigantine bar, were thrilled at noon when g strong glasses made out a drifting lifeboat floating at the mercy of the ‘a wind and waves. i As the boat neared the beach it was seen itfhad capsized and had no | crew. _ A hundred men rushed into the surf to secare the boat. Before any of them could rer “4 it the waves had carried the little craft under the steel pier, where it was smashed to pieces under the heavy piling. The pieces strewn along the beach show it is one belongingtto a government crew, While it is believed the boat was succeeded in reaching her. Now broken away from the stranded steam-)are tmable to get back and are sharing er by the storm there are fears that|the fortune of those whom they meant one of the brigantine life-saving crews |to ald. may have attempted vo reach shore| But two tugs are now standing by, through the breakers and been lost. with the dreeches buoys ready for-usq ‘A heavy rain driven by the gale has| It was a ripping northeaster, spriag- shut out view of the stranded vessel |img up just after daylight, that undid and her signals cannot be made out| What the two tugs had done. Hitched from shore. Just before the rain to thelr hawsers the Cherokee liad been * 4 nals were flashed telling of all being, hauled more than a mile toward free- ; safe and well aboard, although the ef-|40m during the night. A few minutes forts of the big tugs to move the lne| more of quiet weather would have seen have been unsuccessful and she atill| her floating on her own keel. { lays in the trough of the sea with waves| Then the gale came sweeping In from ‘breaking as high as her smokestack, | outside, wedging her tightly upon the # Another message sppealed for lighters | Sands almost within a stone's throw of to save @ part of the cargo, now being | deep water. Despite the force of the thrown overboard, but no boats of that | Wind the tugs still hoped to release the kind can live in the heavy sea. Capt, | Steamship on the high tide to-day. If Sole Jones of the Beach Haven Wreck. | they fail, then !t has been decided the ing crew, arrived at Brigantine this | Vessel must be abandoned before she morning, but has so far been unable to | TOcks to pieces. reach the Cherokee, The tug Somers | Should she remain where she Is very BP. Smith arrived carly to assist in the | !ons she must Inevitably begin to break work of pulling off the big vessel, but | UP- If the vessel be cleared at the elev- ly believed to have been unable to stand | enth hour the lifesavers on board will the hammering of the waves close to | @ brought on to New York, for they the bar and put to sea. could net reach ashore safely in théir Just when it seemed certain early to-| WF ear : Rend: 5 day that the Cherokee would be drawn|, The ut one woman on boa: 18 off safe and snug ir, deep water a husky, | PA*snsere being Joseph Sohwarts, Al bert arson, Louis A. ‘Train, Walter roaring northeast yale slapped into her Hadley and nate ‘M. ‘Walker,’ of New and buffeted and mauled the pee ise ard Lopo: York; de, Elias W. Amaria, steamer uatil she turned right Hilipl Armarie, Jose Amario and AnBS, Amaris, of San Prngittyt ‘The ‘master the “liner, Capt. sr- SRIDeNSL\ isa iclled navigator. A nsible for the going ash¢ fog was re: ors nts. ship. to the storm, with huge sqas constantly sweeping her decks, The wind proved mightier than the tugs. With each passing hour the pro1 pects for eaving the vessel seemed les: Nevertheless the passengers were re ported as being well and in fair spirity. | ‘They were prisoners in closely battened cabins. The crew, tethered to stanchions and rigging with ropes, to keep them from being waslied overboard, desper- ately luboredd at the task of heaving the, cargo into the sea, ete anes ae WEATHER FORECAST. « Forecast for the thirty-six hours ending at 8 P. M. Sunday for New York City and vicinity: Cloudy to- night and Sunday; probably rain The crews of two life-saving poate Sunday; slight temperature from the South Brigantine station were|f| changes; brisk to fresh northeast prisoners on board. When the liner} winds, first hit vesterday afternoon the boats Did Anybody Finc A talking parrot that says silly things; Sopa: tate js distributed the seven shistren and a igrandohil except that) 6,000 is left in trust for the children of | Huber, a dead son, and $8,000 oe the maintenance of Julius Huber, $00, of unsound mind. The will was dated May 20, 1903. No petition nor estimate of estate was filed, OUT OF WORK, SHOT HIMSELF HAVANA, Jan, 13—Howard Gould’s| Newark Men Ended His Life with | a Bullet. i EWARK, N. J,, Jan. 183—Prederick ‘Wolfumller, thirty-two years old, com- | mitted suiclle by shooting hiinseit in| “\) Exchange through to-morrow’s the right temple at his home, No, Stone strect, early to-day. ‘He had been out of work and, ft is wald, oad been drinking heavily, value of tho| ————— | A deed to a house, lot or farm; A man or a woman looking for work; A warm, cozy apartment; A place to bu: PAT a) Gi at auction; A piano that MUST be sold A man anxious to sell his Business Enterprise; A housewife who needs a good servant; Anybody who wants anything? If you run across any of these persons, things or places to-day, you will take a long step toward Prosperity’s Temple of Fanse by ofter- ing them for Work, Rent, Sale, Purchase oF [Sunday World Wai