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NTR “MAY BE CHARGED WITH MURDER Moran Arrested Here Be- lieved to Be Iron- worker’s Assailant. ‘a t u Charles Moran, one of the three men f@rrested charged with attempting to dynamite the new Biles Building, at No, 34 East Twenty-third street, on Baturday night, {s belleved to be the Moran wanted in Jersey City for a Murderous assault on an lronworker | mow dying in the Bergen County Hos- | pital, After learning of Moran's ai ‘rest Chief of Police Murphy, of Jersey City, telephoned to Mutberry street that he beileved the prisoner was (he men he ‘wanted on a charge that will grow into murder if the victim dies. Mayor Fagan, of Jersey City, who 1s a contractor and builder, identified Moran | to-day as an l!ronworker he knew to have an ugly reputation. When the man was arrested by Detective Sergeant | Jackson he mado a desperate effort to) to the foundation and breaking many windows in the vicinity. A few days prior to that a dynamite bomb was thrown into the non-union employment bureiu at No, 7 East Four- teenth street, where men were being employed to take the places of the Strikers, and the walls of the building Were considerably shattered. For this reason the detective force of the Employers’ Association was in- Greased a month ago. until! ow thirty- five men are employed. Soveral of th detectives were formerly jronwor Employers Knew cf Plot. All day Saturday the employers were in constant communication ho the @eteotives, and were discussing whether Or not they sheuld a!low the to: to be €arried to the point of actually setting @ff the bom, with All of kis possible consequences, or arrest tho men bef the fuse was lighted. Nudocy togtake the moral responsibility of aii¥wing the big derrick and tons of steel to be blown hundreds of feet above the rpofs of surrounding teacments, and so the detectives were insc to @pring out of their vlaces of hiding be- fore the match was lighted. ‘They did thelr work well, and one of the men, after a hard fight, was caught with a ten-pound d3namie possession, and a sate pounds more of thy Govered from a saad, hei detectives suw one of La @aflier in the evening “The three men arrested were repu- @iaied yesterday by A. J. Stamey w George Kelly, aelegates from tne House smiths’ aud Bridgemen’s Union to the Mentral Federated Union. ‘The positive ers Were Tat affiliated in any wa. th the fronworkers organization, and wi charged that the arrests were a lant" to create sym: trate Barlow in the York Court, and were placed on th inarles Moran. No. 62 N tan, and Johi atrect, Jersey City. Bupt. George W a ine jaration was made that the prie- on iy ‘ PAL he men were arral fersewy City Club; ‘Mh ned #5 East Twenty-f Murra wrenu of Combustibles, m t lo-day of about h a pound ¢ ‘a dynamite found on the pi get it off at Seventy-nint the Hast River, where blasting on, It blew up two t 3 Murray says that if a found on the prisoners } ploded-in the building nue It would hav the houses Po adjoining. The dy ofa Kind} 4 not used in. New It called | og “nitro powdes.” al ¥ fuse, while that usi is Ire, —.——_. Awful Crime Scented Out by, Sleuth Is Scouted Out by Magistrate. Harry $9 lnm! i nishing stove a: 5 Detectives 6 m and Gunniff, i the Bliza 1 station, went 4 Bolomon's yesterday, and Cun i nift bough of cuffs. After fur Solomon aske nishing them. is there | 4 anything else 1 can dof: F), “Yes,” ald Cunnift, or | Hi hat ana coat and conie to the station A house.” t At the station house a revolver was | found in Solomon's pocket and taker fram him, | In Centre Strect Court to-day Magis- trate Steinert ufier hearing the charge asked Cunnift: “Did you make an cise arrest yester i Cumnitt adm.tte AWell,"" suggester the Maxistrate, “it might be better if sou had looked for uch violations instead of bothering hon em merchants, The defendant ts dis charged." Cumniff then made a charge of “ear. gO pistol” acainst Solomon i have to hold you for Si sions on that,” Magistrate Stelnert sald, ue he had not “hut Wyl fix bai! at $1 so as nor to ANSE you any annoyance A Busted Virtucso. ByAléck Peabody's hare-itpred to quit trying to play on the cv nthe Wind walzres (hr Is upper Into his nose and has given nin a case of cntarrh.—Broad Ripp'e apolis Independent. | sedmother Just any more than she does. added, | ear al Sex. | ‘THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 26, 1906. SAYS SHE KILLED UNCLE TO WIN BACK HER HUSBAND +-—___—_—_ Josefina Terranova Believes She Purged Herself of Sin by Plunging Knife in the Riggios and Has No Regrets. By Nixola Greeley-Smiti. jdive-black hair, blushed and giggled | On Thursday last Josefna Yerra-; ks the happiest bride in Sicily. nove, a girl bride of a month, plunged | “Kiss me, 6! she Isugied. “Oh, & blade sharpened by hate and grim there will be lots of time for kisses— despair into the brenst of Gactano Rig: | plenty thme—efterward.” fio, the uncle who she discovered had | Before T eaw her I Nad asked myself | made her unworthy of her nearfound!a number of questions about Josefina, happiness, killing him and wounding | cniet among them this: unto death his old wife Concetta, her! Could a child be so densely tgnorant who had abetted him in bis! qs not to know instinctively that she crime, ‘Then, her sin purged from her GOEL by that blood atonement that is part of/ 4 git of her class and | id the Slclillan code, she spenc a night o€| iene of course, like Haider ings ts tse terror, riding up and downtown, east| cong mate ilke a young bird. But and west, and finally crawled to her) TO% there not be in her a almele a eeee ee eke tw awaiting her | primitive inetinet of repulsion Iiko that which protects the animal from poison This morning I sat and talked with j her in he Matron's room of the | {Bat would be stronger thin the teach- ing of @ doddering old reprot women's prison in the Tombs, where | yult Peprovere ct) bis ure of a wife? she was surrounded by the family that | It seamed to me there should be, and has taken her back to its fold since |I intended to ask Josenna this and other she avenged her outraged innocence questions, “But as coon as I saw her I realized that I might fust as well anak with the knife, and, according to their strange ethics, was made clean, them @ young robin or propound | them gravely to a butterfly, It sedte to me she killed Riggio, not break away, using a blackjack until) Her grim old mother, lean and brown 2 I . | so mush from a brooding sense of overpowered. His aged parents, wife /and toothless as Atropas with her scis- | wrong—she looks hardly capable of and little child were at one poe sora severing the skein of life, held a | that—bul mote as if she would have quarters this morning walling and la-| tiny moath-old baby, fhe ehild of oan bakery and with no greater knowledge menting over his arrest. Josefina's sister, Georgiana. in her| or apprebension of consequences, ye * Just four weeks ago last Saturday ¥ . Morals we know are matters of geor- ight an attempt was made to blow up}Mly for the young prisoner, cooing | »4or And it is a long was irom the same building, when a lighter |9td gurgling at her, while the same { Sicily, with Its code of ‘private ven: ‘ hand that had guided the avenging | tance, wience Josefina came eigh charge of dynamite was buried into the | Sit (hat Had gull ean ne | Sears ato to New York with atern laws structure from the “L’ station in Sec- | isgio’s heart tickled’ Its} ani frowning prisans. I used to go to Avenue, doing considerable damage {SW#hfoned chin or clasped its tiny |. convent in Europe, where there were fingers. A great Many Spanish and italian girls And acdording to the rule of the schoo We sil had to go to confession once a week. Here Was a Child. T ‘had pictured Joscfina Terranova] Wem Peorshme tic ett ri ' ni ear the confessional wait- a entionally, as we mre apt to do. a8} ing my turn in stoical American fasion, a large, over-ripened Sicilian beauty! {t used to be an unceasing marvel to with black hatr and smouldering eyes. | me how these children would beat their I had thought, too, that her face| breasts and moan over the prospect of : confessional, and then, coming from would show traces of the strong pas-| it, would execute the imposed penance sions within her, that the Death she | and. for a day after be trnsfigured, had wrought would have cast Jen Genelia eeuate Of Selght. Pry sheranl shadow over her features, and Fear| h dosetan Terranova is just like have clutched at her heart. Nisbande Phas inposeten tonanceran Instead, I saw a middle-sized, rath-| herself—the killing of her betrayer. She er slender child with blue eyes that| executed it, and now she ts happy, for the big spot on her soul—so these simple Bome of them are now worklig ax ron-| showed traces of tears—merely such | te Bis spofon her soul-'so these simple union men, and others are still Identified | April-shower tears as mi follow | away. With the unton, acting as snics, ‘Through | 4M Injury to her best frock—dark halr| As for thé stain—the blood stain that these men the employers learned Igst | piled In a straight school-girl pom-|/% 7, her blunt liste hands. and that Wednesday that a plot was peing made | Padour, small, even features and] floc Josefina dows not see it apparent! to blow up the Post & MeCord Isuilding. | @tlte teeth that parted frequently in Coa rier pert At re ; ieee “Riggio ix dead,” she says, “He was ‘owned by the Billss estate, in Twenty- presenti eee AT oalized | a had man. ‘Concetta is not dead yet? third street. hat of all the people in New York}No. She isa bad woman. Ah, I sec you that are familiar with the details of the Williamsbridge tragedy, there is one who Is thoroughly blind to its import and {ts possivle — conse- quences, and that is Josefina Terranov herself. “Do I Uke this place have my picture in the paper.” It Is not a good one. They are going to take an- other after awhile. I wish T could read What they say about ine put l cant read very well. I went to schoo in Se ond street and then in Eleventh street, ibut “only a little while. My uncie | wouldn't let_me she repeated | "I went, to mass yesterday 1 after me wonderingly. “Why, T got Met a French girl, Herthe Claiche, 1 to llkei1ts. T awist’ stay: here,veh?" And |o7ly, SHON) ee Mer to -eAy, good das. she wrned to her counsel, Charles 5 || "Thinks of Mf. Erode ail night tn th Le Barbier, as if she thought that muay- | CSTs. ere: lon maw. Every- here, up and down, I had $2 when I be, after all, somebody was going to!stirted, When they arrested “me. T netent and let her go back to her Brook- |had only. one. (I had spent a whole dol- lyn home and the husband who drove|!ar fot car fare. Except ten cen her from him befor2 she killed Riggio, | Qn 00te hte. 1 had them with but lias replaced the wedding ring he em with me Tt rt very evident that Josetina took away from her on tne hand that | reset the cakes. Her mouth pout- stilled Riggio’s life. for @ moment and her eyes grew There is such an atmosphere of irre- ‘solemn, hi i h sponsible childishness about Josefina She Doesn't Know How. phat in her presence you simply cannot It's a pity Whe has anything but the realizs the seriousness of her position and vs t0 regbet. For I really believe she doen't Know how, Love, & womin's «itrazed honor, the rites’ revengo—all these furnish’ the startling elemenis of a great tragedy. Only, the genta Axure In it seems the very lghtest. most. biithesome of in- venties. Aid One can't help feeling th) me Fakes “r saw my husband Saturday," she “Did he forgive you? Did he kiss rout hy. linve blundered, and that she you?” I asked rather bee y 1 meat? Worle ntatad™ Paci : ter. | ehould. nave fry An lived ‘napmlis LSE CSU Cia ever after. Its no wonder she bungled Josefina blushed to the roots of her fer role. ACRE OF FIRE IN {PUTNAM TENDER IS RACE ON STREET’ GETTING THE HABIT Caldron Boils Over at the! Jumped the Track on Harlem Metropolitan Building and Bridge To-Day Like It Smokes Pittsburg Man. Did Saturday. mo i No. 36 on the Putnam Railroad is A ble portable tack of tar turned |in a fair way to win for itself the Into a veritabl Macbeth witches reputation of being a real Jonah train, toil andj it is @ focal running from Elmsford a and bur caldron—the juble Kind—to-day in front of the }and is due at Une fundred and rity- dition to the Metyopulitgn Life's/ fifth street, where It connects with the jilding at Twenty-fourth street and | elevated, at 8.2 A. M. On Saturday morning the engine ten- der jumped the track and ripped along the tles of the bridge uncomfortably neur tne brink over the Harlem River. ‘Trafic was considerably delayed and passengers on trains following were ompelled to get off in the middle of enue, The vat, holding seven or € was stationed in) Twen tin a jungle of oullding nt bar- fourths material WAS Ky outtiow, bridge and walk to the elevated amed downward from the | station tank It Instaaty Ignited from the |""Phe dame accident to the engine underneath, and, Ww Rs galt | tender of the same train occurred prac- Jeally In the same place to-day. The us quickened, began to spread along | it. | {sain bad pulled Into the station and folding was full of work- | discharged its” passengers and was when they saw the bli | backing out when the wheels slid off up the wooden supp cs Ley) and Went Damping over the tles. ‘This down like monkeys time It tled up both tracks only tem- the burning tar was march porartly, as che coaches of the train toward the avenue, The remained on the track, and when they , were aur es end Bulied out pf the nave y c “way the outbound trac was cleared. Me Wind seoomed ‘the The only inconvenience to the “com= viaht ot ten feet oe | Muters Was another march over the sup toa heleht of et OF bridge and a short delay to those who ) aia ae e clouds of smoke swept | xo to the country early in the morning. owary vane betel SS TWO INJURED IN DERAILING OF CAR. and ting Meanwhil ng westwar t over of the guests came out and bathed him- init | “This makes me feel at home,” he | said smilingly. He was from Pittsburg. | When the firemen arrived the tar cov- n area of possibly 200 square feet. | The tank was almost empty b: that | " emained in it w: i a i seu A yea cha 1 “overal Trolley Conductor Badly Hurt in thousand persons was standing around e Eemsaind Dereon Wie Mat aked crew | Accident on Ralph Avenue, The firemen tried cheml-| rom extinguisher muc tt} t put out the fire any better than Then somnebody thought Brooklyn, A crowded Ralph avenue to: Jeft the rails last night as it was round- jing the sharp curve from Ralph ave- nue into St. Jotm’s place, Brooklyn, and di the water had. | a minute twenty firemen, ten P workmen and 200 Inno- ee Were carrying mand) Its motorman, George Kraft, may dle ° alonamde the bullding | 88 the result of internal injuries he, re. eM enbowshe tt on the biasing tar. ‘The | ceived. . Jobn Widenhora, the gonduc- af iy capitulated sand” went | tr, tied #everal ribs broken. He was | binze ‘capirula tage Fert | hurled fom the rear platform against Hiding hing H he ctirBing at the crossin sa Winek |", Broskivn Hapid Tragait inapector ‘ar in the middle! saiq slippery raile caused the accident. \ ea so street sald th in, Innaling heartily the Inst whiff of smoke. Then he went in- * 45 the Ashland House to change his collar, ty DR. CRANE BEAD IN PARIS, PARIS, Feb. %.—Dr. Edward A. yesterday, ear Crane, of New York, died suddenly here TROLLEY SMASHES (COLLIERS KEEP UP A BRIDAL COACH THE FIGHT ON MANN Newly Married Couple and At- tendants Thrown Insensible to the Street. A bridal party, singing and joking. as they drove through Meserole street. Wiiameburg, to-day, got in front of & speeding Ralph avenue trolley car, which mashed thelr coach to filaders end hurled them out into the street. There were four in tho purty, bride bridegroom, bridesmaid and best man, and all were painfully hurt, though not So badly as to necessitate a trip to the hpepital, The bridal couple were Abra- ham and Eva Fervlolpz. of 381 Bushwick avenue. Abraiiam Broick and his wife were thelr companions, ‘Phe carriage in which the happy quar- tet were driving was gayly decorated with white ribbons, Thete was a white bow on the driver's whip, cream-colored curtains in the windows and white rosettes on the horses’ ‘harness. Philip Karzolowski kept his team on the gal- lop, ‘The wedding had been celebrated In Manhattan and the festivities held throughout the night. As the carriage turned from Meseroie street Into Ralph avenue the driver noticed a car whirl- Ing toward him, but, miscaloulating its speed, did not turn out in time. ‘The motorman thought the vehicle would turn ow and did not slacken the speed of the car. The horses Were just turning off from the track when ‘the crash cane, The berivboned vehicle went to pleces itke an eggshell and the ac: cupants shot out into the street fn a jumble of lingerie and lace, and roiled over and over in the Rutter until both women and men were bumped into un- consclousness. CREED CHANGED BY PHYSICIAN'S ORDER Refusal to Let Young Woman Be Immersed Set Baptist Minister Thinking. WESTWOOD, N. J., Feb. 26.—The re- fusal of a young woman to enter the baptismal poo) has led to the resigna- tion from the Baptist denomination of the Rev, Thomas D. Wesley, former pastor of the Baptist Church here. The young woman in question desired to join the church, and Mr. Wesley, owing to her exceptional character, ex- pressed his pleasure at welcoming her into the fold, When baptism was men- tone! to the conv however, she sald ft would be a physical impossibility for her to enter the bemtisma! poo! she was of nervous temperament, and the shock caused by going into the pool would result in Severe physical depres- stn, She said that physiclans had warned her not to enter a bath, and that from childhood she had indulged only in sponge baths, The case Was laid before the church and her application for membership w rejected. Mr. Wesley thought over the matier until he reached the conclusion that baptism was a spiritual rite and not a physical one, and that the youm woman had been unjustly discriminate agal He subsequently published a pamphle: in which he announced his withdrawal from the Baptist denomina- tion. He has now Joined the Presby- terlan ranke and is in charge of the Union Church at Etna. The young woman hits since been married, but she has not joined a chureh. — CITY PARK ENTRIES. (Special to The Evening World.) NEW ORLDANS, La., Feb, 23.—The City Park gniries for to-morrow are as follows IRST RACE—Three and one-half fur- longs; ‘selling, ins Leopold wt Impostiion hoy Transiucent S108 FLittie Ororee ioe Knock Irby. Lio George Duchse Miss Jewell Martha V Merry Leap Year Azele oo Queen of Miltbroo! Larry _D. a sSagarac Heirloom |. *Sister Henrietta. SECOND RACE—One and one-sixicenth 1 Ine, Tnecithritt as Kleinwort 14 mM M1 u Dungannon . on The Gleam. eo Amberita 108, Forelener 6 Malediction. -.. 1104 Limertck Giri 104 Fimdley's Bet “304 Yachting Girl 104 Dance Music pd eHisaue vive THIRD RACE—Mile Rosnond Helerson. Rie Baw Drexel ymettus, rif! ‘Elkin: FOURTH RACE—One Handicap, Geenade. 3 Debar. John Had bt Dazzle Hosier Meine : Couple, ota Caroli: Haaur, FIFTH RACE—Six and a half furlongs: purtfack Dolan... 12 Orel é 119 Quinn” Brad: up Heart of Hya 2. Merely Mary Ann Rain Devils. Bago... i 100 Polly | Primm, 100 Oratortan, bcd Mrs Phitiips 2 8S. SIXTH RACE—Five and one-half furlongs; * 326 | Prince Prutue, Wild Tretyman SBvV! datos x ome-haif fur- Byes ra rca aaet Mt cl i 32 104 103, 388338 ou pik ea ‘SAborentice allowance. Robert J. Admits on Stand that They Are Still Hunt- ing Evidence. Martin W. TAttleton, ex-Borough President cf Brooklyn, counsel for Col. W. D, Mann, editor of Town Topics, to-day cross-examined Robert J. Col- Wer before Justice McAvoy in Special Sessions, where the examination of Col. Munn on the charge of perjury ts pro- ceading. Mr. Collier, who a ppears on the rec- ord as the complaining witness, was called by Assistant District-Attorney | Hart, ralte the monotony of the technical tetimony given by handwrit- ing experts, After a few questions pro- pounded by Hart the witness was taken in hand by Mr, Littleton. “You expect to pay the cost of this} prosecution do you not?” was the first question asked. “I admit my fether and myself ex- pect to pay It," replied young Mr. Col- Mer. Q. Have you any !dea what it has! cost to date? A. I have not. Q. Will {t amount to more thun! $100,000? A. No; but I would not be surprised if i¢ ‘had, I wouldn't care! ff it cost twiss that sum. | Mr. Littleton wanted to know all the! details of the preparation of the de-| fenge in the Norman Hapgood bel trial. | Q. You ulted with District-Attor- ney Jerome before that trial, dida't you? No, sir, I can't say that 1 Admits Hirlng Wooster. Mr. Collier admitted that It was true that he had hired an office at No. 7 Brsidway to conduct his ‘campaign against Col, Mann and Justice Deuel. He employed EB, Wooster and Charle Stokes Wayne. two former employees of | Col, Mann, to agsist him. Q. What! were their duties? A. They nud the flies of Town Topics in prepar- ing evidence. Each is paid $10 a week. Mr. Littleton tried to show that the two men were paid $100 a week just to testify az Gol. Mann and Mr. Col- ler sald that Wooster and Wayne were still assisting in preparing records. Q. For what purpose? A. For the cam- pagan, Q. You know that District-Attorney Jerome could have subpoenaed both men and compelled them to appear here without’ any ‘expense, don't you? A. Yes, I know that. Q. Did you consider the propriety of paying these witnesses $10 a week each? A. [ have. Q. He: 4 considered that {t might be a strong temptation for to misstate the facts In their testimony? A. I have considered the possibility of such a thing. Will He Keep It Up? “Have you sufficient facts in your Peesession to prosecute this defendant Mr, Littleton asked the both men ‘ant District-Attorney Hart ob- “Having used their energy. vitality and for this community with the Town Topics is a seething s of in- decency and blackmail,” Mr. Littleton said, “I claim T have the right to ask the witness if he and bis father have good and sufficient reasons to indulge further prosecution.” Hart persisted in his objection, | and Tistios McAvoy sustained him. Q. Do you know that Col. Mann ever time, money. in saturating pinion that wrote a letter demanding money from any person? A. Yes, 1 had information whiah I deemed sufficient. “Why didn't you have Col, Mann arrested for blackmall instead of mak- ing this charge’ asked Mr. Littleton. Mr. Hart objected and Justice Mc- Avpy sustained him, “Then why did you bring thls charge of perjury?” asked the lawyer. “Because I believed Col. Mann denied | putting his O. K. on the Ward let'er for purpose,” replied the witness, "I he- fleved that If Col. Mann admitted he had put his 0. K., followed by his sig- nature on the poper, it would have im- pressed the fury with the bellef that it was a blackmail scheme.” ee “FATHER OF NEW YORK.” Leading Citizens Form Andrew H. Green Memorial Association. ‘The Andrew H. Green Memorial As- jon" was to-day incorporated by certificate signed by Justice Blanchar? in the Supreme Court, on the petition of Mayor George B. McClellan, Walter S. Logun, Edward M. Grout, J. Pler- pont Morgan, Mornay Williams, Leigh- ton Williams and Alexander B. Orr, of Now York; Hugh Hastings, the Siate torlan, Albany, and Charles S. Francis, of Troy. Vv The objects and purposes of the new corpration are recited to bs “to raise @ Voluntary fund for the erection of a monument to ‘the mmory of the late Andrew H. Green, the Father of Greater New York, and to erect and dedicate such a om nument." The men abov named are the Board of Di- _—— rectors, FAIR GROUNDS ENTRIES. (Special to The Evening World.) NEW ORLEANS, Feb, %,—The Falr Grounds entries for to-morrow are as follow Viel RACE—Thre Jongs; maiden two-: Bitter Misa. Pepper_ and 8a Little Wanda . Heatrice H. . and one-half fur- saingla 1ud Lacy Marie Our Own Mamie K. Los Dorothy M. y Paul CMftord ": *Tennyburn HIRD RACE—Six and purse $500. one-half f Au Revolr The Cure . FOURTH RACE—Seven furlongs; puree $400. Superior Boy 20 *Frea Hornbeck DOUGHERTY QUITS CHARITIES DEPT. Deputy Commissioner Sends in Resignation to Take Effect March 31. First Deputy Commissioner James Dougherty, of the Departmen: of Char- {tles, ‘hae tendered his resignation to’ Commissioner Hebberd, with the re- quest that it go into effect on March 31,| Mr. Dougherty’s resignation came as a surprise to both the Commissioner and the department. He has been connected! with the Charities Department for Ure last four years and been activeiy en- Bagel and connected with charitable) work for many years i During the sorrowful days of the Slo-! cum disaster Mr. Dougherty worked day/ and night and received unstinted praise! for what he accomplished. He crigi-| nated and carried out the plans, for) che burlal ground at the Lutheran Gem- etery of the unidentitied dead. Commissioner Heoverd gant to-day at he was at a loss to account for tau reason for Mr. Douguerty resigning. He said thelr relations had been of the 1santest character, and that what- r the reason or reasons were for his leaving, they were chers than those d with the departinent, dC. Banker, who became Mr. berd’s brivate retary when he el the department, will be ad- ed by the Commissioner to. the putyship. Mr. Baker has been Jong time connected with tic charity work of the New Yor: ‘ate Board of Char- ted to the office of fill the place made He has been for n years with the State Board and is thoroughly conversant with all depart- ments of organize) charity. JILTED GIRL OPENS FIRE ON FOREMAN Shot Missed Oliver and Hit, Another Man Who Was in His Room. ‘olun: | Josephina Gorofello, young Italian woman, street, went to the apar:ment of Jelly Oliver, at No. 02 Elfzabeth street, thie afternoon, and upon his refusal to marry her opened fire with a 38-callbre re- volver. She fired three shots, one of which struck Michael Angelo in the hand. Oliver was not hit. The young woman, when arraigned in the Tombs Police Court charged with felonious assault, declared that Oilver, while foreman in a factory at No. %/ East Fourth street, where she worked. | had made love to her, but growing tired | of her had discharged her from the place. She was theld in $2,000 bail for examination on Wednesday. LAWYER IN JAIL, SO HE WASN’T IN COURT. | ‘There was a case on the calendar in| the Court of Special Sessions to-day in| which Hugh O. Pentecost, the preacher- lawyer, was named as counsel. When his name was called Mr. Campbell, his | partner, appeared and said that it woula | ve impossible for Mr. Pentecast to be in} court. ‘aVhy?" aaked Justice Zeller, “Because he Is in Jail,” responded Mr, Canmbell. “He was preaching in Sche- nectady yesterday, and some one in his Audience who took offense to his sup- posedly anarehistic remarks had him arrested,” i _—— ENDED HER LIFE WITH GAS. Frank Reithmuller Found His Wife Dead on Kitchen Floor. Lying on the floor of the kitchen with the tube from the gas stove in her mouth and the gas turned on, the body! of Mrs. Anule Retthmuller, sixty years{ olf, was found this afternoon by her) husband, Prank, when he returned from] his work as a machinist to his fiat at! Nu. 20 West Sixty-seventh street. ' Shé had been dead for more than an| hour. Mr. Reithmuller thought she had committed suicide while temporarily de- a1 ranged, ‘The couple lived happily to- gether and had three children, all mar- nied and living In this city, Se es et Hackett Carhait 6) Broadway at Thirteenth St. An End fo these Post- Season Tailored Coats and Suits Now For Women and Misses. With This Sale Over We Will Have Done with Winter. It is Spring with us now. Whatever remains as the resi- due of Winter's business must go now. Price is absolutely no consideration, as you will see by the abridzed list we furnish below. You can own one cf the suits or coats at a fraction of their worth. They are about equally divided; long and short coat su't models of broadcloth and cheviot—silk or satin lined and almost any suit you choose will be hght enough in weight 4 For Spring Wear. Tailored Suits and Coats Tailored Suits and Coats’ That “ That Were $20 to $45.| Were Wosth Up to $65. | 8 Red Broadcloth 1 Moire Silk Long Sutts, Plum Broadctota Lilac Broadclot} tr Suits, 1Lilac Brosiclo'l: | 20> Plum Broadclota uit, ly Suits, wBine Broadclowu a ts echewiat, Bulle 4 tile ‘Cheviot Suits 2 Pp oe ss t jack Cheviot Suite arn erg set Red Broadelota | tite 4 Brown Broadcloth 7 reo rondcloth { Bolte, h 8 eee n Brordcloth $ £ 50 } M4 Green Cheviot Suit COATS. r 19Brown Cheviot! ¢Green Brondcloth| { Suits, Conta, | 4 Red Cheviot Suita. 20 Lone Black Broad. Cloth Coats 1Long Hunte velvet trimmed with fur with 9) plied white coaTs. 0 Long Black Coats 15 Long Gray Coats 6 Blue and Green Chinchilla Coats, 12 Eton Coats of broflery and satin} Bleck Velour and Mined (Paris model. | Velvet. 2 Long Black Peau se| 3 Astrachan Cloth Sole Coats. Itned Conts. and interlined J While of conrse there’s still a sprinkling of all sorts of suits to be had at $12.50, the main-stay of the sale jnow lies in the moderately heavy weight fabrics. Many a prudent man will grasp the opportunity for a real money saving, have a couple of months’ wear of the fresh suit this Spring; and still have practically a new suit of proper weight to begin next Fat The dust raised by our mark-down of gooo suits hav- ing subsided a bit over Sun- day, we begin the third day of the sale. The stock has been well sorted to make selection easy —the salesmen are rested after their strenuous work, and everything is ready for the right reception of men looking for a first class suit at a small price. $12.50. Rocers, Peet & Company, | Three Broadway Stores, $12.50. Rocers, PEET & CoMPANY, Three Broadway Stores. 258 842 1260 258 842 1260 at at at opposite near opposite Warren st. 13th st. Sad st. | City Hall, Union Square, Greeley Square, THE PINK EDITION OF THE EVENING WORLD CONTAINS ALL SPORTING NEWS OF THE DAY, Because of Liqu In almost every hamlet—every neighborhood—there are living exam~- ples of what J..\quozone can do. ‘Wher- ever you are, you need not go far to find some one who has been helped i} by it. Talk to some of those cured ones; perhaps your own friends are among them, Ask if they advise you to try Liquozone. Or let us buy you @ bot- tle and learn its power for yourself, If you need help, please don’t wait Jonger; don't stay sick. Let us show to you—as we have to millions— what Liquozone can do, What Liquozone Is The virtues of Liquozone are de- rived solely from gases, by a process requiring large apparatus, and from $ to 14 days’ time. No alcohol, no narcotics are in it, Chemists of the highest class direct the making. The result is to obtain from these harm- less gases & a) tonic-germicide. ‘The great value of Liquozone lies in the fact that it {s deadly to germs, yet harmless to you. Germs are of vegetable origin; and thts gas-made product, when absorbed by them, stops thelr activities. We publish an offer of $1,000 for a divease germ that it. cannot jill. But to the body Liquozone {s exhilarating, vitalizin Fiyine Trapere ... forteing in Rani ss ONE Rurke: Coch Tidottors *Ponea, s i “Apprentice allowance, purifying. {t 18 helpful tn the ex- treme. ‘That is its main distinction. Com- mon germicides are polpons whe Bi ee aie ozone,’’ isa Tale Told Everywhere. germ disease. Liquozone is a we symptoms, calls for a germicide, We Paid $100,000 The mildness of Liquozone makes some of its results = For the American rights to Liquo-jcredible. But in that midno? ies zone, after hundreds of tests had been|the power that germ diseases need. Bede ite bis ae ie poner had|And diseases which have resisted en demonstrated, again and again,| medicine for in the most difficult germ disexses, |once to it. Maia An Then we spent in two years more than ten times that sum to let others 50c. Bottle Free. test it at our expense, The result is] !€ you need Liquozone, and have that millions of people, scattered | ver tried it, please send ua, this everywhere, have shared In the bene-|°UPon. We will then mail you an fits of this invention, order on a local druggist for a ful ‘We make the same offer to you. We |*/%e bottle, and will pay the drugeglat ask you to prove, at our cost, how |°UFselves for it. This { our free gift, much this product means to you, Let|™&de to convince you; to let the Liquozone itself show how wreng it Product itself show you what it can is to suffer from a trouble that it oe Ee to yourself, please ac- cures, CDE st to-day, for it places no obligations Whatever, hee) Tquozome costs 50c. and $1, CUT OUT THI is COUPON, Germ Diseases. Most of our sickness has, in late years, been traced to germ attacks. The list of known germ diseases now numbers about one hundred. Some germs—as in skin troubles— directly attack the tissues. Some FAL It out Companys ase sog matty to 4 TEe create toxins, causing such troubles |] 1 have never tried Liquoxond, $ an Rheumatism, Blood Poison, Kid-| ici pply me a G00, “bottle thes mit ney Disease and nerve wealmness., ; Some destroy vital organs, as in Con- sumption. . Bome-tike (he gerins cf steterseseeseoemasetbensssenees Catarrh—create inflammation; some } cause ba gest ic. Directly or indi- rectly, nearly every serious ailment js germ result. Such diseases call for Fh cr ea drug: kill germs.