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CUTS THROAT OF LITTLE GIRL | Woman Recently Dis- charged as Cured from Bellevue Hospital. With two great razor cuts across ! her face and neck, slashed there by hier crazy bother Katherine Wilcox, six years old, Is in Flower Hospital | to-day, her little mind wondering why | the mother she loved so much should *"rise in the dead of night and welld * the weapon on her, and with such fury. Katherine Is too young to understand | mow, but later, when she recovers— | for she is going to get well—and when | the long gashes have become ghastly to mar the beauty which was to have | been hers, some one wiil tell her this story: ‘Yes, Katherine, you went to sleep | thet night, the happiest ttle girl in } ahe big tenement at No. 346 East Six- + ty-second street, happiest, because the mother who had been kept from you so Jong by doctors, who said she was out of her mind, had come beck to you. | Bhe had not been back with you long— |g week or two—and the Bellevue Hos- : pital doctors said her mind was al | right and that she could remain annd | take care of you. ‘And your mother loved you so deeply that she wanted you to be with her all } the time, and you slept with her, while ! your father had to sleep on a cot in an- | other part of the room. But on: that awful night you had been happier than ever before, because your mother had promised to take you down town with her the next day, Saturday. That was * © have been your first outing with her ‘ gince the doctors took her away{to a { place with the horrible name of Psycho- * pathic Ward. You were nestling i | mother’s arms when you went to sleep. SEEK DR. L. A. SHATTUCK, GUNN’S FORMER PARTNER Woman Who Sues the Proposed Marriage With the mysterious dimappearance of Dr. L. A. Shattuck from his offices At No. 60 West Ninety-second street, the search that Is being made for him by numerous creditors and the filing of a suit In the Municipal Court, in Harlem, Dr, Robert A. Gunn, who figured prom! nently in the death of wealthy Mra, Florence Pool at her home, No. 870 West End avenue, a few weeks ago, has again been brought into the lmelight. Dr. Gunn and Dr. Shattuck shared the same offices and were both interested jn the Central Park Sanitarium at No. 69 West Nin ty-second street, at the time of Mrs. Pool's death. Dr. Gunn was engaged ‘o be married to Mrs. Pool, but she die’ under strange circum- stances ov the eve of her wedding day, and police investigation revealed that Dr. Gur. was mentioned in Mrs. Pool's Will for $10,000. The case was dropped, but was again brought to public notice on Thursday, when Dr. Gunn filed a petition In bank- ruptey, fixing his Mabllities a: $43,000 and his assets at $2 This, of course, does not include his library, which un- er the law. Is exempt. He also men- Honed the legacy that was left to him by the late Mrs, Pool. Doctor Long Missing. Why this should be Is also a mystery, because the Coroner waa satisfied that there was no foul play in the death of Mr. Pool, Such odd circumstances sur- rounded the death, however. that there was a rigid investiggtion, but no au- topsy was held on the body. With the publication of the bank- ruptey of Dr. Gunn, the erstwhile shaver in the office of Dr. Shattuck, came numersus creditors to the sani- tarlum tn West Ninety-sccond street. They Included tradesmen from far and Near and had claims against Dr. Shat- You were awakened, Katherine, by something warm trickling down your | neck, Then there was a stinging pain, + and as you turned you felt something keen and cold being drawn rapidly down your face—right where that scar is. It was the second cut. You screamed. Your mother was not clasp- ing you. The toom was dark. The hands you put to your face discovered the long cuts almogt before you felt tue PtYour father heard your screams, and as he struck a match you saw your wother standing over you with a razor, trying to cut you ‘here was & strange, wild light In her eyes. You gaw the blood on her hands wn.aver your nightdress and on the bed. Then you saw your father grapple with ‘your z r, there was a shriek and, poor Iittle thing, you fell unconscious." \ . “Well, your father took the razor,threw it from’ a window, picked you up and ran to street. C then, Katherine, and you had very few friends. So your father did not thow what to do with you, and he carried you qhto a Chinaman's laundry, a few ddors sway, 9nd from there they sent you to the (tal. “And ur yr mother. The police An zene pon i her. to that Psychopathic Hoke ina she kept muttering: 1 T t to take Katie to heaven bh I want to take Katle’ with PIANIST COULON'T:. tuck. They were all told that no one had seen the doctor since Jan. 2, when he left before dawn with his wife. The creditors inquired where he nad lived before. They were tole that no one knew. In fact, it has always been the custom,of Dr. Gunn and Dr. Shattuck not to proclaim their home addresses. No inatter how important the case, no batiemt was ever sent to the house. If it was\an urgen case, the doctor wanted was communicated with by the only person ‘there who knew the address, Dr. Gunn's old home address was Donocoust, No. 210 West One Hun- dredand Ninth street. The Doncourt is a faghianable apartment-house. Dr, Gunn hed rooms there on the third floor, front, on the west side. His name did not appear on the door. Those who kwew asked for Janitor Powell through him did their hegotlating ia see the doctor. Police Could Not Find Him. At the time that Mrs. Pool died the police could oot find the dector until he called on them. He was perfectly frank in telling all that he knew of the clroumstances, but he dig not tell his home address. It turns out now that while Dr. Gunn was pourting the wealthy widow, Mrs. Pool, there was another woman who he introduced to friends as Mrs. Gunn. One of the persons to whom this woman wus so introduced, she alleges, 1» Mre. Elizabeth Thompson, ‘former wife of a prominent physician PAY NEGRO CABBY ’ Result Was a Row on the Bow- ery and Police Court for Edward Von Konno. Edward Ritt, professionally known as | wauard Von Korno, a pienist with a at No. 9% Carnegie Hall, and | fashionable women as his patrons, looked like an inflammatory edition of es ‘The Music Master” Rligh, of the Muli ‘him {nto the Tombe charged with rats : atreet, where they spent half en bour @t & music hall; thence to the Park | Casino, where they wpent half an hour dowa Fifth avenue to ‘Washington Arch, to (vst Houston street, by Essex street, to a theatre on Grand wtreet; to No. 366 West Fifty-eigbth street, where the young * woman was dropped; then to the Em- 5 pire Hotel, where Ritt left the cab, telling the cubby to call this moraitg for his pay. The cabby called, but Ritt said he still felt ke riding. So he climbed in + and rode to Carnegie Hall, and from thete to the West Side Court, where he "watched the proceedings half an hour, > and from: there 4) the Bowery, where the cabman began making pointed re- touhing the paymen: of a bill #. Then, to his horror, he learned that the long-halred heer had no inoney, Polleeman Bligh pulled the Y out of Ritt’s mane und wok them th to cpurt, e Finn, in self-denefnae, sent gent for Rilt's mother, who keeps a re- 1 tail store in Third avenue. The mother came with $7, which the nego accepted jeparted in full payment, “Hed eiving Rit a hard took, “ edd + "Des ‘couse dey's all ‘haired over dey + gan't ‘spect to bilk me,” sald the colored firing a parting shot » dgor. itt left the court, “with both hands and conversation from the still wigwageini working thee Bute raged function in the Astor liome . 13. ——___ sf Denths, [ASHINGTON, Jan. 18. —Representa- tive Sulner, of New York, advised tho wee Committee on Clatms that tes at the Drees. claims for the lives wo ent -|much money. ¥ fam to Pay for Stocam | im New Jersey and one of the creditors of Dr. Shattuck. It is her sult that has been brought 9 the Harlem Mu- nicipal Court for $56 She has another sult in the hands of her attorney, Her- bert F. Andrews, No. 27 Wflliam street, for #450, that she claims the doctor owes her for services as housekeeper, The $56 represents money that Mrs. ‘Thomron says was given to Dr. Shat- tack by patients he haq nursed, Mrs, Thomson declares that Dr. Gunn Proposed marriage to her while she was in the sanitarlum. He told her, she says, that If he could raise five or six hundred dollars he would send “the otrer woman” back to Australia and then marry Mra. Thomson. Mrs. Thomson's Story. The end of ali this romance in the sanitarnium came when Mrs, Thomson was ejected from the nouse last Thanksgiving Day. She is living with a family on the firm floor at the north- west corner of Ninety-fourth street and Columbus avenue. Her story of the sanitarium and actions there is inter- esting. “I went there a year ago to work for Dr. Gunn and Dr. Shattuck as a house- keeper," she sald to an Evening World reporter, “with the understanding that I was to recelve uwo dollars extra a day for nursing patients. If I do say so, I saved more than one life while I was there. “Mrs, Pool came there regularly, and one day as she was going out, all in black, Dr, Gunn turned to me and said; ‘That's a very rich woman, She has been a widow less than a year. “It was on that day Dr. Gunn called me into his office and told me that he wanted to marry me. I said to him, ‘How about the other woman—the one that you call your wife?’ and he replied that she was nog fitted to be a phyat- clan's wife, as she had no interest in his work, ““‘Now,' he said to me. ‘you have beon a doctor's wife and you are in love with your work. That ts the kind of a woman thet I want around me. If 1 can raise five or six or seven hundred dollars she is willing to go back to Australia, where she came from, and you and I can be married,” "I declined the doctor's offer, Soon after that we parted. I didn't want to go, because Dr. Shattuck owed me s0 One night I came home and found City Marshal Alen A. Irvine, of No. 215 West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, there to put my chattels out on the street. 1 explained the whole cage vo him and told him that Dr. Shattuck owed me money. They sent for a policeman and I got out. Then I brought sult against the doctor, and when hte oase was called his coun- set said that he was fil an a hospftal, and an adjournment was granted. The ease will come up next week.” Mrs, Thomson produced @ prospectus madi | Stories are told of Former Says Dr. Gunn to Her—She Was Finally Ejected from Sanitarium. [Of the sanitarium. It shows that the capital stock is $600,000—6,000 shares at | par. Dr. Gunn fs listed as president und jehlef of staff; L, A. Shattuok as vice- | President and medical superintendent. Others mentioned in the document are Harvey E, Miller as treasurer and L, A. Stillwell as secretary. In part this ts what the circular says, the same praising Dr. Gunn's wonderful works and cures in the good old patent medicine style that is so familiar in a ceuntry dally: | “This company has been organized tor | the purpose of establishing sunitariums | for the treatment of ull medical and | surgical diseases, | ‘It has secured from Dr, R.A. Qunn |all his right, title and interest inthe property known as Nos. 6) and 62 West Ninety-second street, the copyright of his large, popular medical work, to be known 4s “Dr, Gunn's Twentieth Cen- tury, Encyclopedia or vomestic Medi- j cine,” and his family medicine case, to |uccompuny the same, and the private formulae for thirty remedies to be con- tained therein; also, his patent devices for producing artificial air, rich in oxy- an, for the treatment of consumption and all other diseases due to disease germs or defective nutrition; also the | other patents and copyrights of Dr. from which large profits can be millionatres who were interested in the Friends of Isaac H. Radfo 7 William street, say that he w: ‘THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 13, 1906. Urs FIOrERCe-Boou - Poole of the backers of the concern and that he lost money In It. Mr. Radford is out of town Dr, Shattuck is sald to be interested | in thirty-two different companies Tt cannot ascertained what the com- panies are. Dr. Shattuck and Dr. Gunn met thirty years ago, when the intter was a tutor In a medical school out West and the former a student. After Dr. | Shattuck’s graduation ey did not! meet again until about year. ago Dr. Rober. hat was the time they ened th . santtariam, Ball aces iN ANY 2S Frouse.- WITH ELEVATOR Haines Had a Hilarious Ride for Nearly an Hour in Sky- scraper Lift. If there were a Society for the Pre- vention of Cruelty to Elevators ® would have been represented before Magistrate Finn in the Centre Street Court to-day, when James E. Haines, a young lawyer, of No, 22 East Thirty-third street, was arraigned. Elevator No. 6 in the Hud- eon Building, at No. 32 Broadway, should have been the compiainant, but was in a crippled condition and unable LAWYER ‘GOT GAY STORY OF MISFORTUNE FINDS WOMAN A HOME Mrs. Frances Hanson, Deserted by Her Husband Gets Sympathy and Substantial Aid Through The Evening World. Mrs, Frances Hanson, of No. %7 East thelr drink, let them be killed. It is One Hundred and Thirty-seventh street, | best.’ of whose desertion and destitution The | “But, no, they let him off. I said to} & woman there, ‘Great God, what shail T do? ‘Go home and wait for him,’ she said. “Of course, I went home and waited. People do that sort of thing before they Evening World told on Wednesday, is destitute no longer. To-day, at The Evening World office, she met a wealthy Broadway merchant and ‘his wife, who arranged to install her at once as house- to egpear. Jim Bijou, head elevator man, was in | court, and had this Imment of Elevator | No, 6 apread upon the record: ' “I was taking a quiet rest on my cushions, thoroughly tired out after a ‘eard dey’s work, when there appeared | before me a well-dressed, nice-appear- ing young mmn. There was a far-away look in his eyes and his lip trembled. Jim Bijou and the rest of the elevator men were gossiping near me. “Suddenly this young man stepped in y gates with a smashing thang’ “Tren he called out to Jim and the B t of the bunch: “'Ta-ta, boys; bores where little Jamesy takes @ trip to Mars.” Shot Toward the Sky. “Then, before any one cauld rush to asgivance, he jerked over the lev bo full, pressure. Fhe whook of having abbut 3,000 volts ehet into your systen! \wdthout any. Ing is cruel, and writhing with agony I shot up with terrifte speed. “I shut my lights and nerved myself for the crash I fek was coming when I sailed up through the roof. for T felt the inexperience of the ‘hand upon the lever. ag I passed the nine- teenth floor I received ano-her terrific jolt with the reversed current, and down L went, ambking my guide raiis and rattling my chains with a fearful r. clampr. “All the while my passenmer and tor- mentor danced about on the floor, fum- ‘Diing with the lever and scorching me with cross-cireult sparks. Down, down I plunged Into the air-cushions, while the wind went screeching out through the escapes, “The lower part of the building was in an uproar. mighty oaths echoed through the corridors, scores of heavy ghoes raced wpon the stairs, and down below in the engine-room rang a med- lev of confused commaniis, “But nothing feazed my passenger, who shouted defiance to police and other uniformed menials and cried at every landing as we shot skyward again. “Ip to time moon lads. high above the world, smashing pretty starlets as mad- ly we are whirled." Was a Rough Voyage. ‘My joints. stays. stanchions, side- braces and very safety-brakes throbbed with agony as he kept jolting the pow- er into ma, reversing ing with a sixidenness that loosened the bolts. The engineers, lift men and uniformed poltcemen raced with us in other ele- vators and attarpted to ‘head us off. For three-quarters of an hour I went through this excrutiating expertence, when suddenly betwesn the fourth and fifth floors, in mere desperation, I clenched my safety brakes and stopped. For a few minutes my tormentor work- ed the lever until he had blown out two fuses and buckled a dynamo in the cel- lar, “Then, as we were hard and fast be- tween the fvurth and fifth floor, ne philoeaphically lay down and went to sleep. He slept bilssfully and sonorous- ly for an hour, while a small army ot workmen tolled ¢o release ua. Then I thelleve he wee tenderly carried to a olice station.” PAwhen the Court had heard this story he fined the lawyer $10. Later he re- mitted the fine in response to an elo- quent plea, the prisoner promising to woene good the damage he had done to 0. 6. el ALL IRELAND TO COMPETE. Choice of Locations for Great Charity Ball the Pi Bach of the thirty-two counties of Ireland will have representatives at No 941 West Forty-seventh street to-morrow afternoon to compete for the privileges for toe great Irish Ball to bé held in Madison Square Garden on Jan. %. The seats in the arena are to be disposed of in sections, and the bidding by the men from the different countles for chotce locations is expected to be very ively. Surprises have been planned by the ‘Irish Counties Athletic Union, under whose @uspices the ball is to be given, Last year 10,000 persons ettended. This a Tuer “Ae eepe Sree teen srcrssy fe charitable ly he of beda in hompitaks sick poor find Keeper in their Long Island country house. Her gratitude knew no bounds. “Why.” she said, “one has to be in trouble to know how gvod peopld are. It seems strange to me, now that I know, that any one should euffer lone- lineas and poverty, Surely God 1s in the hearts of most of us and it ts only sin and drink that cause ua to suffer. Drink Je the worst of sins. Of that £) am_ sure. “When I finally rebelled, after years of Mfe with a drunken husband, andjomer : asked the court to send him away to! gon" S see ane otne Only, the prison for six months, they told me,|third day vow since then, and all these get desperate. But 1 began to be afraid of myself. My little Eliza- beth bad a bad throat, with bandages |oa it, and we were often hungry. “Then I read of a woman in Brooklyn who The two and the woman led her husband, had an effect Iam yet uncertain in my Eng | lish, and I can’t tell in words just what . But it is not safe, ome one said one should not tel! jone's troubles in the rs, Maybe |they would have one wait for the Cor- killed her husband. the sick child MAN IN TOMBS THREATEAS 10 POSE SEON Alleged Swindler’s Sate Deposit Box to Be Opened by Police. From a new and unexpected quarter the District-Attorney may get important disclogures bearing upon the great Nor- folk and Western stock certificate swin- die, for which Charles Augustus Seton. the alleged head of ‘the forgery plot, and his accomplice, Samuel J. Humphries, who has confessed, are being held at jthe Tombs whiie detectives scour the town looking forthe bulk of the bogus Securities. Tt ls stated to-day that Harrison H. Melikenny, a prisoner ewaking trial next Monday along with Seton and Rob- ert Waldron, hus sent word to Mr. Je- rome's office that he is ready to tell all he knows of Seton's recent operations. This is taken to mean that Mcllhenny will give up the complete story of the deal which led to the joint indictment of Seton, Mellhenny and Waldron for giand larceny and, what is far more important, will furnish some valuable information dealing with the saner Workings of thé gigantic Norfolk an@ Western job, Seton was seen to-day in the corridor of the first ter of cells at the Tombs by a reporter for The Evening World He wae dressed as carefully as and bis handsome wife bh juss left right there in court, that I was cruel— letters. ‘Too many to thank them) all, that if he were deprived of drimk all Fxcept The Evening World will do it at once he would die. | . Lettors of Sympathy. Wears) cr Dlsgrace: | this one, signed by Mrs, 3. MM. “Well, I thought of it for a minute,| Reynolds, of No. Ji3 West. Elghty- and all’ the shame and disgrace of ‘t/ seventh ‘Street, “Inclosed please And 10 F cents for carfare. may be a Cel A RE oie dors rein bLe|¢ Ip you some way, I have @ little when I heanl his step in the hall, the| iP you some way. oT neve oe ther terror of ttying to please him with a| Clothes will do for your little Sllzabeth.” i had “any offers of mar- good dinner that 1 had worked hard to| Ns iy ! i _| riage?” The Evening World man asked. cook, and then—oh! yes, very often—| <1" smiled rather sadly as she handed then to be abused, the food thrown | per questione: a pundle of letters. about the room, the dishes broken and| “Yev,"" she sald. ‘These men offered myself struck like a dog. \so much to honor me, But I have al- “Me—a woman—to be knocked down |one ina. Pray God fms be able to and left there while he went back to) Keen. my, tae ae woe RR OLISE ack ee ives bse Mreratce: ae | worlg Tiive In ana what @ grand coun- he struck his wife and starved his child, and then he struck from nh work. He is on the ironworkers’ strike} now. It all came over me like a pic- ture there In the court, and I said In my heart, and I eaid out loud: “Let Them Be Killed,” She Said. “Very well, if it kills them to stop rs, Hansan looked very pretty when said It, ao that one might doubt her irty-seven vears. Sorrow has refined without aging her, and a neater, daintler gown and figure are not seen every day. Fully ene hundred letters reached her within three days. Her last words as | she left The Evening World office lead- ng her Ittle girl were: “Please thank them all. 1 can't.” By Advice of Counsel. BY WALTER A. SINCLAIR. Tell why the chicken crossed the road? I won't, by advice of counsel, How many drinks constitute a load? Don't, by advice of counsel. Tell us, are you alive and well, Have you the senses of touch, sight, smell, Hearing and taste? You refuse to tell? Yes, by advice of counsel, Tell us, please, your whole, full name, No, by advice of counsel. Is your sober name the same? Biank, by advice of counsel, Pray, did you make your tainted “cush” In such a way to cause a blush? Is that the reason that you hush, Hush, by advice of counsel? —_— Tell us who killed Cock Robin, pray? Won't, by advice of counsel. Tell us, please, what's the time of day, Don't, by advice of counsel, Can you explain just where you live? Could you scoop water in a sieve? Is there one answer you could give— Give, by advice of counsel? Teil us, who hit B. Patterson? Nix, by advice of counsel, What would you make of one and one? Six, by advice of counsel. Tell us, please, just how old is Ann? Tell us anything you can! Tell, do they let you be a man? Be, by advice of counsel! him, but he looked jaded and unhapp; Over night he had pver nias ost some of his “I'm sorry I can't talk to The Even- ing World,” he said, “but my attorney, Charles Le Barbier, ‘has warned me not to talk. I’m going to let other aor he talking. But I will ‘say tbls A Scapegoat, He Says. “They are trying to make a scapegou! of misery out of me.” : Humphries, who made a partial con- feesion, was taken to-day to the Dis- trict-Attorney'# office in’ the Criminal ourt Building where, under question- ing by Assistant District-Attorney Gar- van he supplemented the first statement by a fuller account of his relations Witn Seton. Then he was sent to head- “However, the deposit owever, the deposit company closed this afternoon without elther the police authorities or the Pinkertons making any legal efforts to examine the con- ents. Seton Seeks Bail Release. Seton, who wes remanded to Tombs without bail by Recorder con is to make a last effort to-day to be released on a8 small a bond as possible. He was out on $5,000 when as- rested in Maryland. That case, Cote raed witch retaiged Rim to Nout s eed road whic! ni fo float a, issue, is to be called for trial Monday, If he cannot obtain his liberty Norfolk and Western case by ‘t it was said, uld await his on the grand y charge, MARY QUIGLEY’S WILL STANDS IN THE COURT Old Woman Had ‘No Lawyer and Drew It Herself in the ; Hospital. When the Sisters at St. Vincent's Hos- pital told old Mary Quigley that her daya were numbered, on Aug. 16, abe called for paper and a pen and énk and painfully wrote her will, disposing of the $1,700 she had in gavings banks. Her will ia not in strict have money.aleo in the Fourth Avenue “MARY Quem (Her relatives io Ireland receive about $144 each. —-——— Reversing the Rule, PERSONS WHO FIGURE IN CASE OF MISSING DR. SHATTUCK. MOTHER’S DE ATH WAS KEPT hh WHOLE WEEK FROM A JUROR Louis Gore Heard of Bereavement Only After Relative Had Long Been Buried While ; He Served on Case. (Special to The Evening World.) PHILADELPHIA, Jaen. 18. Gore, the juror in the Hill case whose mother, Mrs. Sarah J. Gore, died Thurs- day of last week, knew nothing of his loss until, alighting from a car near his home yesterday, he wes told by an acquaintance that she was dead. Lator he said: “Why could they not tell me? What was the Hill omse to me in comparison to my mother? If I had dreamed she was near death or that I would be treat- ed so I would not have served on any of their juries, “To prevent me from even looking upon her face when the lissue was no greater than it was, I feel I have been done @ terrible injustice.”” Mrs. Gore was buried a week ago yesterday. —_+— WOMEN CONDEMN MERCILESS COURT, Ghould a judge deny ao juror the right to return to his home after the jury hes been irypancliled and when @ question of life and death is involved? The deaision of Judge Audenried, of Philadelphia, that Louls B. Gore, & juror in the Hill case, should not be told of his mother’s illness and death ent the jury was discharged has stirred up a wave of sentiment both for and against the judicial action. Gore had not been drawn on the jury mere than two hours when his mother was taken suddenly ill. Although she pleaded with her daughter-in-law to be allowed to see her son, Gore's wife was of no assistance. She visited Judge Audenried and begged him to allow her husband to visit his dying mother, but the Judge, though expressing re- gret, said that he felt the ends of justice might be interfered with if a mumber of the jury should have his mind distracted by personal grief. ‘The trial is expected to lest a week fonger, and while Gore is llstening to testimony the burlal of his mother will take place unknown to him. Here are the opinions of well-known New York women as to whether Judge Audenriei's action was right. Mrs. Lillie Devereux Blake. “It cannot be said that the Judge wan not right in refusing to allow the juror to return home. He had a perfect right to follow the action he did. It was merely his judichil duty, sus my syn is with the Julge who was piesa wy such a trying position where “ was necessary to exercise the stern power of the law when human sym- HOD CARRIER POSED AS TRAMP PRINTER Pickets Gather in Man Who Has Been Having Good Time for Weeks. ‘Among a buneh of tramp printers gathered in to-day by strike pickets from Big Six detailed to watch the sop of Styles @ Cash, No. 7 Eighth avenue, was a fellow who has been having the time of his life for three weeks. Instead of being a printer the man proved to be a unton hodcarrier out of work, Tne man, Samuel Gorden, told Presi- dent MoCormick, of Big Six, saat in some way in Chicago the Typothetae agents got in into thelr heads he was & printer and corraiied him and put him on waiting orders as a strik breaker, He edw the chance and took It. time Sir, Gordon says he jel on the bests lived in a inotel with the Drege ay’ waa pinged on a Pullman, car for thie olty. To-day with others he was to go to BoP at ostne ind Frpsinais fe They, accompanied. the pickets Six” to headquarters. hig unfon card ay a hod axr- or Bi ah “Gordon's picture was taken and it will be framed anit hung on the wall with | the | ineorl om "Ah Tie F. sald that every to the strength of the Ty- Isaac orhetae. More new man came in to- Say from Tlinoie and Pennsylvania, ————— MR. FIELD’S DOCTORS TO HOLD CONSULTATION. No Morning Bulletins Issued from the Sick Room of the Millionaire To-Day. Although no alarming bulletins came this morning from the bedside of Mar- shall Field, the Chicago millionaire, who ie ill of pneumonia at the Holland House, the statements made by his physichans indicated that the sick man was no better and might be worse, Dr. Billings, of Obicago, Mr. Field's personal physician, when seen by an Evening World reporter, announced an- other cosultation of the physicians in the case to-day. Dr, Billings said; “Dr. Riges. Dr. James and I will hola a consultation at once. Mr, Field passed’ eral and no one must pay for one, I] think,’ pathies were involved. I am sure ft must havo been difficult for Jucge Audenried, to have refused Juror Gore's wife her request, Of course, we feel sorry for the poor mother who wanted to see her son and we feel sorny for the man Be will be bard to bear when he learn of his mother's death, but at the same uinc we must remember it was hard for the Judge to uty. “We must reailze the consequence that might have resulted had this juror been allowed to return home. We must re- member the other eleven men on the Juzy also, whose personal affairs might have been disturoed. The present jury syrtem, at dest, {8 open to ment—but that is another story. this cuse my sympathfes are with the Judge We feel sorry for the indivicual grief, but the law had to be followed.” Mrs, Charles F. Naething. “Speaking from the standpoint of buy manity, I npt see how Judge Auden- ried was jubtified In his action, To me it seems as though he did not temper justice with a proper hand. He goes too far when he interferes with a per- sonai sorrow. The case could not hawe been so vital as to come between mother and son in @ time of death, I am afraid the Judge has no appreciation of the emotion of pity. Ha” certainly Cows not understand the situation where Larne grief, which is sacred, is in- volved, “Assuredly I value the importance the law and I respect the legal Dut the judge might be Charitatiie. | No. decidedly no—he was not justified in keeping this juror from the deathbed of his mother. Aigner than law ina site of death, and it is pity and humanitty.’* Mrs. Edwin Arden. “From my point of vfew the judge followed the only course of action open to him. My knowledge of the case is Umiked, but I do not believe a case of legal importance should be interfered with by a personal sorrow, sad ea it may be. 3 theatres we all know that a tele+ gram is never delivered until after the; performance, although it might involye @ matter of life and death. Of course, in this case the man és being kept in jorance of his mother’s death a longer me, but it is the same principle. Per- Sonal grief would undoubtedly distract this juror from his duty toward the law and the countr; “The circum: we all feel the eopest sympathy tor the ast Sy! for the mother who di without faying gocd- by to her son and for the juror who Is still in Ignorance of his mother’s death, but at the same time I do not think ‘the judge should be censured. He was justified in his action. It was the only course a Judge could follow.” Dr. Anna Walford, “T have no sympthy with a law which has hard-heartedness and indifference for a background. I think the judge's action was brutal in not allowing this poor juror to visit his mother in her hour of death. Suppose It did delay the course of the Isw a little? I don’t be- Heve there was-one of-the other eleyen jurors who would have refused to be inconvenienced for this poor map. I do not think the jndge was justified, as a man, to follow tis course although the law upholds him." Miss E* J. Hildreth, LL.D, “In considering a question of this kind we must remember that we are apt to confuse the man and the jud There are occasions when the kindest- hearted judge has to put his personal feclings. and sympathies in the back- ground. — Aithou; I know nothing about Judge Audenried’s personality, T am sure he did not enjoy refusing to of the jurors wife. n allowed to lgnore his judicial obligation he would have per- mitted the juror to go home, but in Nis position he was not allowed to follow the dictates of his sympathies. 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