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HIGGINS WILL OPPOSE DEALS ON INSURANCE Bills Will Stand as Pre-| sented by the Commit- “tee, Governor Says. (Special to The Evening World.) | ‘ALBANY, March 12.—Gov. Higgins is opposed to any material changes In the! insurance reform bills, He sald to-day that while some of the suggestions of- fered by the Armstrong Investigating Committee might not be altogether ‘wise, the measures on the whole were | commeniiable and should be approved | Dy the Legislature. “The bills,” he said, “may be modi- fied in part; that is, the policy of the Investigating Committee may be al- tered in som details, but the general purpose of that body will be approved. “I am somewhat disappointed at the Gelay in the progress of the insurance Jegisiation,” added the Governor, “Oth- erwise I have no’ criticism to make." Speaker Wadsworth has jacked up the committee chairmen of the Assembly and he now promises to have the desks cleared by April 1 of all legislation, in- cluding insurance. Other legislative | Jeaders do not share this belief. They as- sert that it will be nearer May 1, when the house gote rid of the insurance mat- t ‘Assemblyman Prentice, a member of the investigating committee, said te-dty fn discussing the arguments made by insurance officers before the committee: | law that are designed to protect citizens “{ do not desire at this time to go |from unjust incarceration in insane asy- 4nté the matter in detail, but I have no|lums, Mrs, Patterspa has been in Belte- hesitancy in saying that so far as the/vue since Saturday afternoon, when she evidence presented on Friday was con-|was decoyed there by her husband. cerned nothing of much weight was ad- @uced against two important projects |terson and his lawyer, Arthur Wateon, of the committee, namely: Abolition of |of De Lancey Nicoll's office. consulted at the deferred dividend and the limitation |length with Magistrate Barlow. ‘of the actunl amount of business to be |Mrs. Patterson was escorted to the bridge all the pther cases had been dis- On the other hand the opinions ex-| posed of. written in any year.” pressed by Mr. McClintock and Mr. Hornblower rather tended to support the position of the committee on these points. In three other respects valuable sum- gestions were received which deserve agi will receive careful consideration— mamely, In the Limitation of contingency réserve, opposed by President Ide, of the ye Life, in his address, the recom- misqoation concerning the cost of new bi ess, attacked by Mr. McClintock, and the standardizing of policy form: whieh evoked the protests of companies from without the State (BEAUTY SAYS | Ward for observation, days. SHE'S VICTIM | MAY BE IN OF CONSPIRACY Virginia Knox Patterson Sent to Bellevue for Observation. How tuportant the District-Attorney | holds the charges he has made against | Robert Spriggs, the negto procurer and | disorerly-house keeper, was shown to- day when Judge O'Sullivan, in Part L., | of General Sessions, fixed ball on the | three indictments against Spriggs at| $8,500. This was done at the request) of Assistant District-Attorney Nott. who sald that the case of the Peovle | is not ready. The indictments found last week are three in number, charging abduction, | assault and keeping # disorderly house. | Ball on the abduction charge was fixed at $5,000 on tho assault charge at $2,500. and on the disorderly house charge at Despite her passionate protests and her pathetic appeals to her husband, Mrs. Virginia Knox Patterson was committed to the Bellevue Paychovathlc by Magistrate Barlow in Jefferson Market Police Court to-day, She showed no traces of mental derangement in court, but ad- mitted she had been drinking heavily and promised to reform if allowed to return to the mansion of her miillion- aire husband at No, 11 Bast Ninth street. Striking evidences of the beauty that mado Virginia Knox a belle elghteen years ago were evident when she reached court to-day. She was richly gowned and carried herself with striking dignity. Her auburn hair was tastefully dressed and her dark eyes sparkled with anima- tion. It was easy to see what fascination she had exercised over the bogus Italian nobleman whom ehe married twenty only to divorée him in a Her present husband, Jo- seph Patterson, a merchant, was deeply distressed at the humiliation to which he was forced to expose his wife. Her arraignment before Mugistrate Barlow wes one of the forms of the Svwyer Mark Alter appeared for Spriges and protested at what he char- acterized as the persecution to which tals ollent is being subjected by the Dis- | triot-Attornay. He said that Spriggs |s a respectable boarding-house keeper, leader of the Colored Tammany Dem- ocrats and a man of standing. When he failed to get the bail reduced he en- | tered a plea of not guilty t all three indictments, with leave before next Wednesday. | Served Three Years. priggs was sentenced to three years in prieon by Recorder Smyth in 1889. He stabbed a man named Charles Mayo in the back in a saloon at No. 12 Grand street. About a month ago Spriggs was up on a charge of keep- ing a disorderly house, but was dis- charged because the complainant, a white girl, failed to appear. The Dis- wuict-Attorney has been told that she was abducted by agents of Spriggs and | probably dead. The girl, Mary Rooler. lived until last | fall at No. 437 Carlton avenye, Brook- | lyn. She was seventeen years old and extremely pretty. Early lust summer fhe obtained a position with a Brooklyn doctor as maid. In the doctor's employ | Prior to her arrival in court Mr. Pat- When “Mrs. Patterson," said the Magistrate, 52 Girl Who Caused Spriggs’s Arrest Has Disap- peared, and District-Attorney Says She Is Either a Captive or Slain. Ithdraw | Charl er i! blocks away. called before Magis girl was not In court, dismissed the complaint. passing a dimly lighted alle aw: under look and bolt In MURDER PLOT Was a negro coachman, who it later transpired, was a “runner” for Spriggs. ‘The coachman, after gaining the con- tdenee of the «irl, told her that she tov pretty to work as a sorvant and t he would get her a place as house- keeper In a Manhuatian boarding-house. The trap worked. On Sept, 16 the gir was driven in the doctor's private car riage to Spriggs's resort, on Cornelia street, Once Inside she was thrust Into a dingy room and informed that she was in a den of negroes. The girl, as others betore her had done, hysteri- cally protested, but was told there was no escape, For four months she was made to associate with negroes. Life was one perpetual horror. She told the other girl inmates at length that she proposed trying to escape. They assured her she would be taking a desperate chance, She concluded to try it. On Jun. 5 the girl hid in the cellar of the house and, when no one was watch- Ing, forced a small window and crawied to the street. Once cutsid:, slie did not | stop running until she had reached the Street Police Station, about ten Detectives Stebbins and McVeigh started out after Spriggs, and the girl went to her home tn Brooklyn. Mysteriously Disappears. When the case against Spriggs was e Pool the Rouler Magistrate Pool The detectives learned that the girl. home, was seized by two strange What became of her after that they could not discover. Word reached them from a mysterious source a week later that the girl was dead, but there was no verification, The District-Attorney 1s convinced that the girl w priggs'a men and she is being is rent a houses. “I think it would be better for you to go back to the hospital and place your- self in Dr, Gregory's charge for a few days.” “May I make an appeal to you, Judge?’ asked the woman quietly. “I don't think it would a any good, SAVE CHARLIE RUSS | But Gallant Cop Was Taker Back When He Found | Tepiied the Magistrate. ani of the opinion that you had best go back to te hospital.” “Joe? cried Mrs, Patterson, turning to her husband, “‘you wouldn't send m' back to that inferno. I have been herd- ed with criminals and outcasts for two You don't know what I have suffered there. Joe, you ony oondemn jease 7"? BRAVED SMOKE TO LEASE OF LIFE FOR MAS, MDERMOTT —— Evening World Readers Con: rs to more of i Y noteamredconacs ME, Payers, th a Simian, | ene oe a r extended, rr. Wai . ACTRESS ASKS FOR atepoed between them. "Mrs Parenon Food and Clothing. made no further effort to reach her husband, but turned to the Court. stg as fs CoDMpIracy,” she deciared,| Policeman Cooke, of the Tendertoin | ; ‘ to. ate me from my husband. i | love dearly and do anything Station, is a hero, but a murderous light) Many contributions have been re- 2 cui hin: walk. never drink by kindles in hts eye when you teil him so.|celved from people who have been x for my cousin, Arthur Kennedy, Judge. | OMcor Burke, of the same balliwick, ia; UChed by the sufferings of Mrs. He wit" You that Fam not ineune Nicholas McDermott, who, as told in And that it 1s cruel to lock me up with oe in the hero class, but i takes/ Tne Evening World, was lett penniless ‘ a Man to tell him so, by the death of her husband, with her Mi ‘Bar! la 2» 5 (Miss Howe in Court a Second peat Te go nee TN | woth aoourmplished deeds ct daring at|turee children in the bare’ end" iter Time After Insurance Left |furried t's cab waiting at tie side one |® fire back of the Woman'a px.|/¢8s room at No. a1 Bast Sixtieth by Silcock. “Mr. Dunlap and I and Bileock and others have our sitting in the Cafe Martin on Sunday nights," said Mrs. Imogene Van Vechten Dunlap, wife of the proprietor of the Hotel Dunlap, “when Mr. Sileock asked, ‘Where did you get married” “Why, at the Little Church Around the Corner,’ said I. “Then Mr. Silcock asked my husband and me to go with him and Kate to the Little Church Around the Corner ang be witnesses to their marriage.” ‘Phis was Mrs. Dunlap's tale from tno! witness stand before Justice Gtlder- sleeve-in the Supreme Court to-day, It was the basis for the sult of Kath- rine B. Howe, a full-figured, hand- some blonde, against tne Equitable Life Assurance Society and Caroline 8. | Hagan, to recover the amount of three policies of Insurance on the life of Mrs, Hagan's brother, the late Peter Gil- | cock, as his fiancee. Siloock died guddenly before the wedding, but not until after ne had assigned to her his insurance policies, aggregating $15,000. Mrs, Duniap, wie is a bright, vica- clous brunette, identiled the handwrit- ing of “Pete” Sileock in a pader, which | read: t hereby assign, transfer over to Kate B. Howe, iy ai Wife, the within tires polictes, iss Howe Was formerly an actress, | 14 with the Donnelly é& Geruri | ing Gas" company when ehe first I-known ma Janu. Mrs, and set Manced sister, “Hagan. rs or millionaire| ‘Oh. please save Nancy Brown?" life ¢ ns. Into the smoke rushed Burke, not to re won tn a | ean Ingram took Villard tnto| be outdone by his fellow cop. From bron years | right after the opening. Mr. go. but the judgment was reversed on} Weolworth accompanied — wh jo | One of the side rooms of the exchange technicality and a now: trl millicnaire five and ten cent store man | there came to fim a shrill moaning, Joni J, Aduins. for Mlas Howe, ‘a sik hat and un aggrieved ex-| which he traced to a tiny poodle that Biloock’ began ite salesman had become involved under ano} er- BA ahg cotton Meenrt tinge eas G sald Magistrate Crane, | turned chair. He rescued Nancy : as armigned. “How fast! prown and returned her to her be- PICKPOCKET GETS A FIVE-YEAR TERM dake Davis Came Here from Bos- | 5 ton to Find an Easier Field, Jake Davis, of No. 331 East Second sireet, but late of Boston, was tc Sessions to five years in Sing Sing for Pocketplcking, Jake had been having hard luck tn Bostin woen in au evil moment some- told iim New York was easy and no danger, Ag Jake had junc last OL tive siretches at‘t tion oft the Manhatt, for iis and came and on ni red cod ft ry, Lt was dast—this eeagon at least. 3 4 Rin 4 i have norved five term: Judge Cowing tn the Philip Rosonchelm. of No, etree | tipathy, an automobile. alny.st | PT easoke Cg p or him | Change, at No, 182 Madison avenue, to to ride tov the hoopltal with nes, ‘bat nted econ ride, e Ww 5 he said {t was hard ¢ tor ‘him ga | C2%: They aprimed to the eene from it was and he was afra! stand to see her again. JUDGE WON'T RIDE id he couldn’t| near-by posts, arriving in time to en- counter & great outpouring of women. “Is everybody out safe? cried the! wallant Cooke. greeted his ears and struck horror to his heart, as he groped through the thick vapor toward the back of the ex- change, “Have courage,” he shouted, “Til be wid yes in a minute.” Magistrate Crane Rejects Invi- tation of Millionaire Wool- worth to Try His Auto. coated snake colled round his neck and he felt the grip of fingers in his hair, more fingers in bis mustache and a couple of feet tugging at the buttons on his vest. He had Charlle Ross, a! red-faced monkey clasped to his bosom, | and chattering thanksgivings in his’ ear, Condemning the Simian to the deepest depths of Erebus, he ‘carried it out Into the street, where it was plucked from Magistrate Crane, sitting In Yorkville Police Court, was to-day the recipient of an invitation to ride {n his pet an- ‘The invitation was extended by F. W. Woolworth, | whose chauffeur, Jules Villard, had just ; been arraigned on q charge of running the Woolworth automobtle down Fifth avenue ut the rate of forty miles an hour. him by the stout woman, who smothered What, \t with caresses and led it. hooping and | : Ride In| squealing to her carriage. In dis boll-| of destruction? . And I'll hold your chauffeur in $300 bail for trial downtown.’ le invitation was extended in the course of a conversation between the Magistrate and Mr. Woolworth that was marked by considerable heat on both Magistrate Crane has no pa- ing rage Cooke forgot to get the lady's | name. Meanwhile Policeman Burke had been equally heroic, A gentle-faced ttle woman had timidly pulled at his cout sleeves and asked in tearful voice: they going officer?” ‘About forty miles an hour between |Fiftieth and Fifty-frst streets, ally’ repiled the policeman, Absurd,” broke In Mr. Woolworth. “Why, I was wearing a ‘silk hat and sinoking a cigar, Could I wear a silk hat and smoke a clgar in a machine going forty miles an hour? We weren't % over elght miles an hour." <e Magis- snapped the » the most persistent viola- iy law on God's earth, You'll hever Ftp until you're compelled to. ‘ Millionaire ike Carnegle and Vand bilt think they can do as they please. joey je in an automobtie, asked Mr. Woolworth, r dared to," replied Mag- | dstrate with as much asperity ‘aa though he had been asked if he had | ever robbed @ baby carriage, “Then you are prejudiced," declared !Mr. Woolworth. “Come out with me and VM give you a chine,’ reaved mistress without comment, not even waiting to recejve thanks, Though & prodigious amoufit of smoke issued irom the pla there w little de- structive flame. CAPT, DEAN-REID SENT TO SING SING PRISON. Former English Army Officer Con- victed of Bigamy May Have to Serve Two Years, Capt. Albert V. former British army convicted of bigamy, Dean-Reld, the officer who was vide in my cna- was to-day sen~ As well have invited Magistrate Crane) tenced by Judge Cowing in General to take a grip on a strap attached to | sessions to serve not less than one year see Pwochorses," he informed Mr.|@nd four months or not more than Woolworth. ‘They ‘are two years and four months in Sing horse are plugs, But I'm afrala| m up and take my family fat that; t Sing. {to hiteh Dean Reid was convicted on the testl- A moment later something like a fur-|} { tine ‘everywhere throug! greet. She has been able to buy cloth- "Sten for the little ones, fucl and food. ough she has not-yet found em- joyment she has been given a new lease of life by the kindness she had Come to believe did not exist, and she hopes to obtain work that will insure a living for her three little ones. The Evening World acknowledges the receipt of tne following: $5 68, B. “No,” cried a atout woman, her voice; Downes, No. 208 Duane sireet; $1, Agnes choking with sobs, “Charile Ross is in| W: Milligan, No. 100 Wes: One Hundred among the smoke and flames. Oh, Mr.|f"" Staton daiand, $%, Gneiovtoa: Polloeman, save my Charlie Ross,"' Métropolitan Auto Company, No,’ 2183 “I will,” cried the gallant cop, and Kegel L Wie et and dashed into the h % - | Jacl ryer: ow; $2, 1G. S., nto the house. Strange cries | Jack Ds Fruices i, O'Brien . 8.; $1, A Read Montelafr, N. J th 8 er; $1, Mrs. ; $2, FI Brooklyn} Georse, $3. ddie asd Fan- ARGENTINE’S RULER DEAD. BUENOS AYRES, March 12.—Dr. Man- uel Quintana, President of the Argen- Republic, died yesterday of ca- tarrhal preumonia. ‘The end was some- what sudden, althovgh President Quin bo deileate health for TI is ge put the republic. tana hat some time in Tr. Quintana was seventy-one years of age, and y rs had been re- gurded ag one of the ablewt lawyers in the country. He was ure in national politics trom early life and held a position provincial and national deputy in the national govern- ment. He represented the Argentine Republic at the Pan-American Congress at Washington in 1889, J.MORRIS. C@} GRAND RAPIDS FURKITURE. Ke A Carpets, Bedding,Rugs, OUR SPECIALTY. urnishing Homes Completa. Rooms 49.93 99.98 124.98 Jout because of the recklessnes mony of his wife, Alice A, Reid, of Liv- erpool, who was married to him in July, Thai, Atter wolng 1 Canada, Dean- demanded Mr. Woolworth. “Drivers of] Reld left his wife and came to New fast horses violate the law al] the time, | York. He married Miss Sara A, Delano, but they are never is of White Plains, on Oct. 25 last, and was Maglatrate Crane e didn't | at once separated from his bride by her ra, Who had her shut up for ex- as to her sanity, The first arrest men who exceed the speed Imit in road wagar wHicne neir her} mea. ! To | he was pal rabid ‘al mourning | a prominent fig. | A FIRM GRASP of the HAND— and that THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENLVY, MAHOH 12, 1¥u0. DEALER IN WHITE SLAVES PUSHED TO DEATH HUNDREDS SEARCH UNDER A TRUCK. FOR MISING GIRL Patrick Larkin Instantly Kille)| Tammany Leaders, Priests While Coming from and Police Seek Little | Ferry-Boat. Hannah Dillon, | | | j | All sorts of persons—pziests, schoo! | nue, was Instantly killed toalay by be-| Spee convent sisters and Tammany | ing pushed under the wheels of a ma-| distrl: ters, besides two detectives chinery-laden truck as it was coming off | ceaciayitwes sees Hand th Bintore | the ferry at East Houston street. Mor-| who since last Wednesday afternoon has ris Friedman, a pediar, of No. 26 East Pyrieperas bert eee bier ST j Gy street, has been arrested on the en sobs the child's mother, Mrs. charge of homicide and will be arraigned| NeGaire: a ined cotting eck, aeanes before Coroner Hurburger to-morrow. |toid the’ story to a reporter Ha admitted that he shoved the man be-| Evening World to-day at her home, neath the truck, but claims he was justi. set Onu Hundred and Fitte fled, as the other attacked him first, Larkin and Friedman were passengers on the Greenpoint farry-boat. She was toaded with passengers, trucks and car- riages. Prk = ti rded the ‘passengers tial crow forward part of the boat as sie bumped . With others he was Patrick Lerkin, of No. 102 Bedford ave- enta “I'm worn out with looking for he she sald, with her apron to her eyes. I've been to every relutive we e looking for Hannah. The fathers sald Prayers for her safety yesterday at St. ! Thomas's Church, One Hundred and| Nineteenth street and St. Nicholas ave- nue, and the nuns at the Convent of the| Sacred Heart, where she went to school, | prayed for her, too, but we can find no| trace of her | ywnere. “When she laden with Ddurilles, was i tepped out of the house last Wednesday afternoon uli she had in the workd was one dime. eve she ran away good ebild—no better ever lived—and happy at hime with minding little ‘Tessie, her two-year-old haif sister. A y, Joe} Johnston, who liv here in the same house with us, thinks he saw her last Friday afternoon at the Lenox avenue Subway station at One Hun and Sixteenth street. He says he didn't pay much attention, not knowing then that she was lost ‘from us, and I'm sure he must have been mistaken,’ A general alarm has been sent out Hannah Dillon. Two plain-clothes 1 from the West One Hundred and y-fifth street stattos Green and esnan, are searching for the chthi. is a’ puzzling case, thoy y. She is have disappenred, y and moved away. Larkin, it $8 satd, Qoliowed him, and at this mo. ment the crowd surged forward through the open gates, The middle gates were thrown open and the truck drivers urged thelr horses to take the fncline un the little bridge to the street level. ‘The second team was a heavy palr attached to a truck of the Hee Press Company, loaded with ma- ohinery, Suduenly there was # ecattering and a disturbance of the crowd that was pass- Ing out at the side of the truck. Then a woman threw up her arms with a scream and fell swooning to the floo The Hoe truck caught on some obstru tion and the driver swung his whto when men ced the plunging antmals aunehes, There as the men drew i ed body from beneath the wheel. | many leade hen they saw the man was dead the | fourth ler who had | Thirty-fifth tw Bri Wright, of oh They struck | the missing girl, pp) Berane nd threw him to the| When she stepped out of the ¢ floor, Were rapidly kicking | ment last. Wednesday litte tania him when policemen | Wore a short gray ccat. a plaid sacket a blue waist and a white tam o' shanter He was taken to the Union Market | cao, with a small pioce of white fue Station with the driver of the truck,! around her throat. “She hus red “hate Toh Rese he tate | {alr sk!n, blue eves und Is about 4 feet ‘ ner Harvureer in height. t when Lar- nd and struck | H fn“capte un cromm tehund’ and sciick | FAIR GROUNDS ENTRIES. | in came un from be He gave him a ni had sipped and fallen directly beneath ——— | the wheel. NEW ORLEANS La. March 12—The A CHINATOWN RAD eworrturold solder pane NAIR Bile gaaeanpnialy abe Fantan Game in Full Blast Despite All Promises Made. the ‘fe out of rescued him neddler said furlongs onay. Watash Queen...) Bias se jer Midway ut hroed amial ‘i Ret s OND RACE —Five anil a halt’ fuctones Pranic Feeatry Wie Keate Entopiaty The protestations of*the On Leong Tong and the various other Cinese so- Dromio cleties that gambling ras been sup-| Beech wood 100 messed in Crinatown following tre se ORES Ho cessation of hostilities between the rival aspirants for the gambling privilege were disproved to-day, when Capt. Serlottman, of the Elizabeth street sta- tion, raided a big fantan game on the second floor of No. % Mott street. The raiders took thirty-five prisoners, and as many more succeeded im escaping through winding halls and = secret passagewar, Capt, Schlottman, his right-hand man, “Tony Bowles, and half a dozen of- ficers in plain clothes filed into Mott street at a concerted signal at 3 o'clock. when the whale quarter was crowded with Chinamen from all sections of the miatrope cas district, on hand to attend une: The policemen made a rush for No. 4M. overpowered the lookout before ha ¢ door the gambling room before the players knew anything about the rald. Special attention was ‘paid to half a dozen Chinamen, who were placed under axrest as principals, ‘The rest were taken to the station house for good measure, After they had been recorded on the books they Were taken to Ceatre street Police Coum and arraigned, some on a charge of maintaining a gamblin, house, the others on charges of gaml | bing. 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Liniment 231306400) * Morch, 9, 1908 000.00 of lots In our modek T, on Flushing Bay, dur.ng the, din the past four months $270,060 of t our now townsite of ELMHURST HRIGH’ This unprecedented record in Queens Borough | bas resulted not only because of our HAVING GIVEN THE BEST VALUE FOR THE MONEY. but also because of our CONTINUOUS ADVERTISING In the BEST PAPERS. | We have not missed an insertion in your paper, and having “keyed" our advertisements we volunteer the statement that. the returns from THE WORLD are greater than from any. other morning paper. Yours truly, . Editor World: Dear Sir—We townsite of EAST President and then work hard @@ mtortab! NO SECURITY. NO INTEREST. NO INDORSEMENT No Employer oF References Required. You positively save the middleman’ profit by dealing «s L.W.SWEET & CO. 39MAIDEN LANE NY. G'kiyn Branch. 467 Furton st ) Sunday World Wants Work Monday Wonders. A Tennessee we Druggist’s Appreciation TELEPHONE 24-2, TT. P. weire. fees ts —wT. P. WHITE & COs »- & DRUGS, DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES, PERFUMERY, STATIONERY: $ DEALERS IN i, PAINTS, OILS, WALL PAPER,. Erc PARIS, Teh oes Pai THE WORLD, New York. Gentlemen—The 1906 WORLD ALMANAC: I prize it very highly. T. P. WHI received. TE: