The evening world. Newspaper, March 22, 1906, Page 1

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WHATHER-Patr and much colder) Vriday tain, PINAL | RESULTS EDITION = * Circulati | on. Books Open to All.”’ | s EVENING « wor ; NUM ere) ficrratrers, = ) | “ Circulation Books Open-to.All,’” FI RESUL NEW YORK, THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1906.. PRICE ONE C SPRIGGS GUILTY IN WHITE SLAVE CASE ELEPHANTS ON STAMPEDE It CIRCUS RING Eight Performing Pachy- derms Made a Dashand . Smash Down Doors, BANKER WITH 2 WIVES HIDES FROM POLICE Kiley, Who Admits Big-' amy, May Be Arrested To-Night. DETECTIVES SEEK HIM. SCARE IN AUDIENCE.) | Big Brutes Not Quieted Until They Had Reached Their Quarters. Wives Living in Separate Mansions Knew of Each Other—Kept Secret. Elght performing elephants stamped- ed ‘om the middle ring during the pening performance of the Barnum & Philey Circus in Medison. Square Garden this afternoon, dashed down to the doors at the eastern end, crashed through them and went all the way to the elephant inclosure in the basement before they were controlled, | The great sUdilence, electrified by the sight of the big brutes bowling over ™men who attempted to stop them end butting throuch immense doors as though they were barriers of pape arves in the seats and shouted, Increa: Ing the general excitement. Occupants of the arena boxes on the north side of the Hippodrome scrambled out and climbed over those behind them, for at the beginning of the stampede it | appeared as though seven of the ele- | phants were bent on going right through | the seats and wall out into Twenty- eeventh street ‘There were sixteen other elephants in It {a probable that Thomas W. Kiley, We millionaire president of the North Bide Bank, of Williamsburg, who went fnto hiding yesterday, after disclosing fhis dual identity as the husband or two mives he maintained in luxury, will be ferrested this evening and locked up im Raymond Street Jail to await extra- @ition to Hammond, Inj., where his erime of bigamy was committed, Hie fhiding-place has been found by the, police, Deputy Police Commissioner O'Keefe, of Brooklyn, and Inspector Cross con- ferred over the Kiley case this after- fon and telegraphed to Hammond to ask if the authorities there would Join in the prosecution of the millionaire for bigamy. The District-Attorney in-| formed Inspector Cross that the crime committed had violated the laws of In- @iana and that that State would have firat right to prosecution. If the Ham- mond authorities reply to Inspector Cross's telegram to~iay and request the| the arena at the time, elght in each arrest of the banker he will be immedi-|of the end rings. These were old per- @tely taken into custody and held for| formers and their trainers kept them extradition. ‘from joining the others. While no one ‘Cutting off all communication with his! was hurt. the situation was tense with business assootates, but sending word | possibilities for a minute and even the to the home of his bigamous wife that| veteran James A. Balley was on the be was alive ond well, Kiley seques-| point of jumping into the arena and tered himself to-day. taking a hand, Conaiderable alarin was expressed for Ris safety by both friends and relatives A Big Act in the Show. . 4 ‘not return to this home when he earlier in the day, for when he disap- peared yesterday after the disclosure of his dual identity as the husband of | the two women he maintained in luxury | he @eclared that he oould not live to! carry the burden of his shame i ‘Wilkins Colt, the son of Mrs, Flora! A. Colt, th woman the danker married | fm Indiana three years ago when his @ther wife lay at her home tn Brooklyn | fm what he believed would be her mortal | Mines, sald when seen at his mother’s handsome home on Brooklyn avenue to- @ey that word had been received by Mr. | Kiley's whereabouts. Is Alive and Well. “T am only at Iberty to state,” sald young Colt, ‘that Mr. Kiley ts allve and”! fell. Where he ts I am not at liberty to all. I feel sure that everything will jome out all right, though there will be jome sensational revelations when all fs told.” At the other home of the banker, on Jefferson avenue, however, no one would gay that any word had heen received from him, and considerable surprise was expressed over the statement of Wilkins Colt that Mr, Kiley had assured his mother that all was well with him. District-Attorney Clarke, when he learned of Mr. Kiley's confession .of digamy, consulted with his assistants and then turned the matter of investiga- fon over to Capt, MoCauley Crime In Indiana. ‘Mr, Clarke said that the question of Jurisdiction waé a very delicate one, at the bigamist marriage occurred in Il- diana. If it could be shown, he thought, that the plan to commit the crime was @oncelved in Brooklyn before the trip ‘West, then he would be able to prot to-day. | eute, \ th None of the officers of the North: Side Bank, at No, 81 Grand atrovi, ¥ burg. were able to get any word of Mr, where- wo any to abouts «ince he hurried away in & cab at 11 o'clock vesterday morning, In the offices of his hardware concern at Nos. 67-67 Grand street, a few doors from the bank, his nephew, Thomas W. Kiley, said that he had also been un- @ble to trace his uncle. He did not @ome to elther place of business to-day, 4nd his business associates were un- able to conceal their anxiety over hia @bsence. They admit that for two months he has scemed to be a broken man and had aged ten years, He is a mun well in the winter of Ufe, When he committed bigamy three years ago he was sixty-one. His loga! wife has a beautiful home at No, 21 Jeffereon avenue, Brooklyn, and she, a Woman past middle life, is prostrated ever her husband's disappearance, He saw that his crime had become public property, nor had any word been re- eeived from him at this mansion to-day, Another woman, who has heid her head high In Brooklyn social circles as Mre. Flora A, Colt, bas also fallun fto nervous prostration in her beaut!- ful home, at No. 216 Brooklyn avenue. She married him in Hammond, Ind, when she believed that the lawful Mrs, . | Qhe of them fires a cannon by puling a The elephant act ts one of the big} features of the circus. It occupies the three rings to the exclusion of every- thing else for a stretoh of about fifr teen minutes. The troupe in the middle ring 1s composed of young and small elephants, some of which are new to the show business. In the courge of the act the little ele- phants—lttle only by comparison wita the towering giants In the other rings— give @ representation of a sham batue, tanyard with this trunk This is the cue for another elephant to pick up @ waite | flag and Mmp out of the ring on three Ss though wounded. as the white elephant that caused all the excitement this afternoons | Ha picked up coe flag all right, but he | didn’t limp out on three legs. ‘Instead, he vaulted over the side of the ring and started for the eastern end af the Gar- den as fast as he could go, trumpting | like a steam wadstle, An elephant doesn't seem to be going | 8 he suambles atone hut the are willing to e affidavit | that this one got along at the rate of | thirty miles an hour. He left two] keepers who started to chase him as | tcough they Were anchored, smashed his forehead against the partition and went into the dressing-room In a cloud of splinters, curtain and sawdust. Seven Elephants Followed. Naturally the attention of the train- |< ers Was attracted by the runaway ele- hant and the seven remaining pachy- Merms were left momentarily unguard. THE CALL OF THE RACE TRACK. yy} LONG SHOTS RUN ONE, TWO, THREE |Real Sport Knickerbocker ts getting reports of the wonderful bursts of speed shown in the training gallops at Biennings, and he is ready to start to Washington for the opening on Monday, = GIANTS TACKLE NASHVILLES; HIGHLANDERS IN GAME, TOO Baseball Weather for McGraw’s Cham. pions in First Exhibition of Season— Sunshine for Griffith’s Men, Nashville, New York. New York. Birmingham. Wiseman, rf. Dondin, ef. Hahn, If. Molesworth, cf. Kanzler, cf. Strang. rf. Keeler, rf. Gear, If. | Russell. 3b McGann, ib. | Biberfeld, ss. Montgomery, 3b. Boharmon, 2b. Mertes, If. Laporte, 3b. Smith, rf. Stafford, ib, Dahien, ss. Yeager, 2b. Elby, 1b. Reisinger, c. Devlin, 3b. Conroy, ct. Waiters, 2b. | Speas, if. Gittert, ab. Chase, Ib. Alcock, @s. kins, as. Presnahan, 0, Kleinow, & Matthews, o Kiyatrick, p. Wiltse, pe i Og, D. Ballee, p. Umpire—Rudderham. By BOZEMAN BULGER. (Special to The Breaing World.) AT CITY PARK Draco, 20 to 1; Red Ruby, 20, and’ Oliver at 12, Split Second Purse. CITY PARK, NEW ORL®ANS, March 2%—The usual card of seven races !3 offered here to-day. ‘The fields are al of good size and on paper evenly matched. There is no telling what to expect, as the form of the horses {s very erratic, Despite this a good-sized crowd was at the track, FIRST RACH—Three and @ half furlongs. Botting. Starters, weights and jockeys. Str. PL Mamie Cohen, 108, Nicol......... 8:5 3.5 George Duchscheree, 105, Schilling 10 won, 113, ar 72 65 Charley Ward, (110, 4 Tom Morgac, 110. Mui Ww 4 King of Mtilibrook, 108, 4 15 Hale, 108, J. Dal 2 8 i Mol! 2 Ww rarac, 105, She © 15 Agala, 110, ‘Troxles 40 15 Beleay," 118, Larsen: : 9-2 8G Won by Mamie Cohen: George Duch- rer was second and Spion third. | TNme—0.42 1-5. SECOND RACE—Five ond a halt furlongs. Bettins, if In obedience to a command | 1 | they charged out of the ring in the | 1 direction of the arena xen, falf a hundred circus roustabouts, waiting to set ihe ringe for the suc- ceeding acts, were reposing in re or less graceful attitude on the s dust, They saw the elephants coml, ,and their departure was precipitate. Some of them nad such good starts that they leaped clear over the arena boxes and into the reserved seats. ‘The seven stampeded no desire to go into the turned to the fight gnd charged down od tow GAS 3 ey hippodrome ® track rd the doors. re elephant handlers tried to ston them by famming hovks {nto thelr ears or hides were yanked In the alr and slammod, to the ground. A big coach dog that had taken part in the act was swept out of the if in the tush and after the elephants had gone he lay In the arena motionless. There was pandemonium for a minute or two. The circus pegple. were afarid that the sixteen big fellows would break loose and follow ‘the others, but they were cowed by the trainers. Two of \the attendants picked? up the dog. Dog In a Deaid Faint, To thelr surprise theysfound that he was breathing, He had collapsed from | fright and was actually in a dead faint. !qney massaged him, held acunonia un- der his nose and soused him with cold water until he came around. To show that he was all right he returned to the ring, but he was wabbly on his legs. ‘None of the elephants was Injured, but there. Were narrow escapes’ as ‘thoy charged through the crowded dressing- room towand 6 runaayays to the base- ment. The elephant handlers are used to stampedes and managed to keop from under the ponderous. feet. Mr, Balley was on his way to the centre of excite- ment when his trained eye saw that the danger was over. ‘The accidental interruption dit not delay the perform the suoceed- ing acts were put on as arr: yharbdbenstatheuield LA SAVOIE NEARING PORT. CAPE RACE, N. F., March 22~The Frenoh liner La Savole, from Havre for New Yor! was in communication by wireless with the Marconi station here when 125 miles south at 9.45 o'clock last night. La Lad will prol reach | elephants had boxes, They | More ed. iy and Oliver third. Time~1.09 THIRD RACE—Selling; mile and a halt, Bettine. Starters. weights and jockeys. Str. Pi Iiddon, 110, Nico! ‘5 25 a iy ba 13 pai) ‘Orewar, 10 8 Won by Lddon: Morendo was second and Bradley's Pet third, Time—2.96 2-5. ——>—_—_. FREED FROM INSANE ASYLUM Wife and Son Protested, but James 8. Sykes Regains His Liberty, MIDDLETOWN. N.Y. March 2% — James S. Sykes, a patient in the State Hospital for the Insane here, wrote to Justice Keogh recently declaring that he was perefectly sane. The Justice ordered the State hospital authorities to produce Sykes in G t a special term of court. Justice Keogh ordered that a Sheriff's jury hear. Syke: and testimony taken before the jury and Joseph Merritt, of Goshen, as com: fnissioner, has just resulted in Sykes dischange from the Institution. ‘At the hearing Dr. Maurice G. Ashley, superintendent of the hospital, testified that Sykes had not recovered his sanity, and letters read at thi ykes's wife and son expressed the di sire that he be not allowed to return to his home, Sykes was connected at one time with a large manufacturing concern in Syracuse. —————— Francis Suits Austria. “WASHINGTON, MARCH 22. — The ‘Washington Government has bren in- formed from Vienna that Charles 8. ted to be Ambassador will be acceptable case, (Special to The Brening World.) BIRMINGHAM, Ale., Mareh %.—A flood of sunlight fel! upon the South to-day and fans flocked to the bail park to eee the game between the Bir- minghams and the Highlanders. Both NASHVILLE, Tenn, March 72—It | Was great baseball weather that the { Giants were greeted with when they { arrived here fer the first exhibition ‘game of the season with the Naghville 8 | Wiltse filea to Kanzler. Chub. The fans-here are ail worked up over the Champion Giants, and were clamoring for seats an hour before the game was scheduled to take nace. McGraw had his men out early, and the ginger they shows in the prelimt- | nary warm up set the colored boys here all afire. McGraw hail Wiltse and Bres~ nahan down to db the battery work, whe the Nashville nine sent in thelr | dest siab artist against the Champtons. First Inning. Nashv@ie went to the bat first. Wise- man popped to Gilbert. Kanzler filed to Dahlen. Russell out, Wéitse td Mc- Gann, NO RUNS, Donlin out, Bohannon to Stafford. Strange filed to Wiseman. McGann out, Watkins to Stafford; a good stop and throw. NO RUNS, Second Inning. Bohannon struc kout. Stafford filed to Dahlen ,who made a good running | catch, Devlin made a fine stop of Reis- | Inger’s grounder "j then threw him jout at first. NO RUNS. Mertes fouled out to Stafford. Dah- lent hit to deep left for two bases. A | wikl pitch put Dahlen on third. Devlin j singled to left and Dahlen. scored. Dev- Vin was caught off first, Kilpatrick to | Stafford, to Watkins, Gilbert was hit by a nitched bal He stole second. Bresnahan was called out on strikes. ,ONE RUN. € Third Inning. | Speas out on strikes. Watkines also struck out, Gilpatrick out, Gilbem to McGann, 4 great stop and throw. NO Donlin out, Kilpatrick to Stafford. Strange beat out a bunt and stole second. MeGann was safe on Watkins error, Strange was caught off third, Kilpatrick to Rus- sell, NO RUNS, BOY SAVED HIS TWO SISTERS FROM DEATH. ‘The bravery of Tony Mazzeralll, a boy of nineteen, saved his two little sisters from a horrible death to-day. He dashed into a bedroom of his parents’ flat at No. 34 East Twelfth street and pulled them from a feather bed on which they lay terror-stricken with flames leaping up ali about then. The children had been playing with matches and when they had set the highly in- flammable feathers on fire they were | too frightened to cry out, but the smoke attracted Tony's attention. He was slightly burned about the arms, but the little ones, Toinette and Catalina, were borne out unhurt. ‘Suil’ carrying them he ran into the hail and gave the alarm to the thirty Ter lin tie tenner Erste tees put out the fire, which had. cutirely consumed the bed upon which ones had been, meats WEATHER FORECAST. Forecast for the thirty-elx hours ending at 8 P. M. Friday for New York’ City and vicinity: F, vd shuch colder tonigh; minimum | [temperature about 18 degrees; | prricay fair; high to brisk westery winds. teazs had greatly improved since thetr| last contest, and the’ playin 4 py from the start. Stiffness bed ett the New. Yor! etre went at leaquere of wy style. $ Manager Vaughn was not certain about Eecntcheoy, it. Like Grifffth he fs @Alttie’ afraid to take a chance on injuring hig best ma- terial, Wilhelm wanted the dhance, however, and warmed up. During prac- tice Laporte made some senéationsl| ‘They hounce yesterday “that voung. Koen is nounce yeste! yy “that young ler nly. a. comer." Gri hy says that he believes Keeler will make good. It was a day for yi pitchers, but it was so warm GriMth Intimated ‘that he might run in one of his veterans be- fore the fight was over. 2 Firat Inning. Molesworth drew a free walk to first as 4 starter and took second on Geer's stops at third. Tike peaeoe ie ready in the unk alee admire Witte ier aca eam went so far as to an Es landers, eee That” moment 20 10 1 SHOT I BEATEN QUI BY LUCE MARIE Favorite: Gets, Home - in Time:to-Save Talent in Second Race. NEW ORLEANS. March #,—An interesting card was ‘for debvision heme-to-dev and furnished ‘a > goed .conteat. * was in good shape, too, and th: helped swell the attendance, FIRST RACE—Five anda naif. weights and Livingston. vingeisoe Gad Ross, 10 P fs eae poner Sa Be, by Gold eee; Bers wae aaiucomurrncngie fatie Se Livi aS 13 fea Beet 4 32 2 45 iola C., 97, 0-12 MoCormick, 103, % 3 He 2 Laces, 10%, Aubucho Gohrader’s Midway, 100, L. Smith. ‘Time—0. Won by Lucy Marie; Helmuth second and Runsum thin. ‘THIRD RACE—6Iix furlongs; pelling. sacrifice, Montgomery ilfted a long fy Betting, to Keeler. Smith walked. Elby hit a|_ Starters, weights and Jocks gtr, Pl Mne drive ito Blberfeld and esworth | Tom Manktns, 111, oe 2 Bh ‘was dribbled at eecond. NO RUNS. Ro a ay 1s Hahn placed a pretty single over | Einmilc, U4 Prien aii o5 38 short but was out steal! seoond, | Bit Ea 5 Ns. 9, Conly, ‘oO % Keeler walked, Elberfeld filed to stort | {aay dHenrletia, 100, Aubru 15 night 4 leeler, imtho had etarted tol ‘Arabo, 112. Rabbini » 7 steal, Wis doubled at first, NO RUNS. | Sterling Pepper. Chisman-- 705-00 18 Won by Tam Mankins, Van Ness Second) lnntog second aad Elastic third.” Tom 3iin- Walters went out on @ foul to} kins disqualt for foul. Third Chase. Alcock walked. Smith filed to] Alarm gots third. Conroy and Sallee expired on @ grunder to Chase. NO RUNS. LOCAL OPTION MOVES ALONG IN SENATE. ALBANY, March 2%—The Senate Committee on Taxetion and Retrench- ment to-day reported the Tully Dill, providing for local option amended so as to omit the provision for remonstrance to a court, and prac- tically merel; cleetion. priv of cities. _—_— FIFTH SON FOR CULKIN. Clerk of the Court of Special Ses- sions Smiles Te-Day, Charles Culkin, the ex-Alderman and now Clerk of the Court of Special Sos- sions, wore a smile while at his labors to-day ‘t's another boy, thank you,” he sald to Justice McKeon, ho Incuired the cause of the clerk's joyfulness. ‘Mis makes the fifth son in the family of the Court Clerk, ere are no . Mother and child are to residence districts TRAIN KILLS FLAGMAN. John McNally, in the, employ of the B. R. T., statiqned at Benson avenue, ath Beach, was instantly killed by @ train early to-day. He had stepped from the north«to the.douth track to| allow a train toiga. by, "when a south- bouna train struok him, hurling him to in ctties, | tend the local option | doing | 2, death. > LATEST NEWS OF THE DAY. French Spy Caught. CQLOGNE, GERMANY, MARCH 22.- ‘Volks Zeitung says that a stranger The parrested. today at ter French spy. Saved from Snowdrift. WOOSTER, Ohio, March 22.—Seven- ers on three oars of the ev efand, Bou uthwestern Traction line, snoybor by drifts five miles from Wooster, after spending an un comfortable night, were rescued to-day by farmers aid livery men from ‘Wooster, who sent three big eleighs to the snowbound cars. Suicide In Office. SALEM, Mass. March 22.—While ‘alone in his office at noon to-day John 8. Jeffre: pinnae ae Of the: Tooet Brenan the ade oadt Sees himeelf | me aS the head iver caus! Saeco Sis known pe dine act, ae aa fifty years and @ native Philadelphia. He leaves. a widow, Roosevelt, Sorry. but-Can‘t, WASHINGTON, MAR 2.— sen’ res. Berger, and Lien jon heur, of New York, to-day extended to he tent an invitation to attend on April 7 @ banquet to be given in honor of Senator Elsberg, of the Twenty-ninth trict, ent ex- Senator Hls- "USC be would be unable “Bob” Spriggs was found guilty out less than aight minutes, amd the After a short delay Spriggs was DR, DOREMUS, HOTED fs CHEMIST, DEAD Passes Away at His Home, Aged 83 Years—Was a Born New Yorker. Dr. Robert Ogden Doremus, the fa- ‘mous chemist, died to-day at his home, the Strathmore Hotel, No. 1672 Broad- way, at the age of eighty-three years Born at his fétter's hme on Bowling Green, he was graduated trom New NEGRO MASTER OF WHITE GIRLS MAY GET TWENTY YEAR Jury Returns a Verdict of “Guilty” . | Against Bob Spriggs, Dive-Keeper « and Politician, in Less than _ Eight Minutes. N. TS_EDITION:¢ PRICE ONE CENT. of abduction in tthe notorious white slave case, on trial in General Sessions, late this afternoon. The jury was crowd in the courtroom was on the point of cheering, when a warning order of silence was given. arraigned. He trembled like a leaf, and his bony jaws furrowed with deep wrinkles visibly. The Clerk tool bis pedigree, The prisoner said he was forty-seven years old and was born in Virginia. Judge Cowing remanded Spriggs to next Tucsday, when sentence will ‘be pronounced. The maximum sentence for the second offense is owenty years. In summing up for his client Lawyer Henzelman attacked the character of the white-slave witnesses and deckéted that while Spriggs was a bad man gen- erally he was not guilty of kidnapping girla and keeping them unwilling pris- oners in his vicious resorts. Assistant District-Attorney Garvan pointed out the discrepancies in the de- fendant’s testimony regarding the raid on his howse and the knocking out of Hatite Warren's tecth. He said the jurors could not put Spriggs’s unsup- ported word before the evidence of four reputable policemen and a rep utable dentist. t Charge to the Jury. As soon as he had closed, Judge Com ing charged the jury. He told them that Hattle Warren was entitled to the | same protection that the law would ex- | tend to a moral and reputable woman. ‘He urged them to dismiss from thelr minds all prejudice ar sympathy, If, York University. in 1842, remaining at the university in various teaching posts until 160. While there, in 1849, the intro- | duced a chemical laboratory in the! Free Academy, which atterward became | the Callege of the City of New York. Made professor of chemistry in the col lege shortly. after, he retained this pos!- tion for fifty years, and among other positions he held the professorship of cheniletry and toxicology in! the Belle- vug Hospital Medical School., He was & member af the Union League Club, New York Academy of Sciences, Amert- can Geographical Society and numerous other soleties. His Honor said, it had been proved that Springs had detained Hattle Warren for tmmoral purposes, the defendant should be punished. H¢ pointed cut that Spriggs had once before been convicted of a felony, and that naturally he would | hvave every motive for attempting te snield himself. | Sallie Bennet PH¥lds Guilty. An unexpected denouement occurred when Sallie Bennett, Spriggs's womat | confederate, was brought in t plead | gullty, she having been jointly indicted | ‘with Spriggs. Her counsel, Frank Wheaton, a negro lawyer, had arranged with District-Attorney Jerome that she | should confess. Sie is a big, yellow ne- gress, wearing glasses. Her features were working nervously. > It had been agreed that upon her plea of gullty to abduction the other charges against her (assault and keeping a dig- orderly house) would be dismissed. I giving her vedigree she said she was forty-elght years old and a native. of Philadelphia, She was convicted of stabbing Matilda Hamilton, an inmate the body, save that he was in| of one of her houses, In 188%, and served e thebestof spine tee night when he! four years in the penitentiary, She was # tlone of suicide. He was forty-five| also remanded until next Tuesday. The years old and unmarried. specific offense of which she was guilty N.Y. CENTRAL OFFICIAL FOUND DEAD IN BED. David Ketohele, for many years super- Intendent of sigrals at the Grand Cen- tral Station, was found dead in bed to-day at No. 720 Third avenue, where he boarded with Edward H. Thompson. Whe cause of death Is unknown, as the Coroner has not passed on the case. He had boarded with the family for six years, and Mr. Thompson, who found the body, says that he was in GIANTS AT NASHVILLE. NASHVILLE... . WANTS... SIRMINGHAM {IGHLANDERS LATE WINNERS AT FAIR GROUNDS. ; Fourth—Little Scout 3-5, Blennenworth out pl., Footlight’s | Favorite. ’ tect ‘As AT, CITY PARK. ‘ \Fourth—M’dow Breeze 6-5, Pr. Brutus out pl.. Norwood 0. Fifth—Mynkeer 7-2, Gamara 3-1 place, The Only Way. +42 HAS DEVEL QUIT THE BENCH? Justice Joseph M. Deuel did not preside at the Court of Special Sessions to-day. He visited the building and talked with the other Justices during the recess. ‘He told the report- ers he had nothing to say. . : STEPHENSON MAKES RA'D IN MERCER STREET. Capt. Stephenson, of the Mercer street station, made a raid | gn an alleged pool-room late this afternoon and bagged, three, risoners. and a quantity of materia}, said to be used in gaimy ping. The room was @ No, 230 Megber street. wig

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