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4 ; ‘GILLETTE BREAKS PRICE. ONE os CENT. | DOWN IN CELL AS | HOPE L Is Half Carried B + -» Cries, “Oh, God, This Is Awful!” as He: EAVES HIM ack to Cell After ~ Another Brief Session on the Witness Stand. HIS CASE TO REACH THE i cal t JURY BY MONDAY NIGHT. | “ Circulation Books Open to An” ERE LASIK | — |Pretoria, Steerage Crowd-| ed, Plunges Through Mountainous. Seas, Bu THREE DEATHS ABOARD, | Made Only Two Miles an Hour When Gale was at~ Its Worst Two children and an off man fin the steerage American liner Py of ‘the Hambu: unla-port te af >» Defendant’s Nerve Gone as End of Evidence are. there were rae Srl i A the steerage, and for-(oar days, during fo Is Reached— Witnesses Called to EEA a a at nye : . Oo thel: _ te ™M i$ Disprove. His Story of Grace ~ and panic prevailed. 7 é ‘|death odded to Brown’s Death. ‘ CEA CS (From a Staff Correspondent.) room tq spare. Infancy and ~ HERKIMER, Dec. 1.—“God, this~is awful!” “waS “the despatring | childhood, tasty im nd Womahe $a s ‘) ‘ hood, and tottering’ 0! werr-tep- ty of Chester Gillette as he threw himself on his cot in the county jail,| resented in this im > human ef | ‘ter he had been half dragged, half carried from the court-room after | Pears ore | ‘¢ brief session of his trial to-day. Bad weather was encounte | ( ¢ oy |the start, On the alght of Nov. ff) Gillette was near to collapse when court opened. The long strain | ship ran into a tremendous \ shattered his rierve. He came into court with a faltering step. There | S00" [2% Brie 28 Se* * (sa wild, frightened look in his eyes, and when Bailiff Richards hit the |i), vor with his tipstaff the nervous prisoner jumped as if pyodded with fitted outcotst _~~ When he finally sank into the witness chair he allowed his chin to; tin" cwate e ‘k on his breast and gazed Steadily at the floor. ‘Every few moments f would stari/up suddenly and rub his chin nervously. % When called to the stand he almost fell out of his chair in getting “his feet. In.replying to the Prosecutor's questions he spoke huskily ; . a with an utter lack of vitality. When court adjourned he was scarcely able to stagger to his feet. | slits f: swayed as Under Sheriff Klock put on the handcuffs, and half sup-|overboard fr + valet A 3 + tat ithe dark the nigh rting, /half leading, hurried him to the jail, where he gave that first eet eens Id cry of despair. {ae print peapeee Lt Seritton ao } } \ i) There he lay for hours on his using to eat and tuming away wh he session to-day lasted only ay ar, On Monday both sides will sum and the case may go to the jury adey night. IMette was the first witness called the stand In rebuttal by the State say. < Ward called the defendant's at- | lion to Grace Brown's trunk, which Waid be had firat seen at De Ruyter yn he met the girl there: Mr.°Ward wc out garment after garment and "them up before the prisoner. They ‘all the slender bevongings of 1 girl, including her working clothes, had brought them with her, intend} to cast her lot with the may she! d forever, Gillette, howevér, ad- | ed he had ‘left his working clothes Jortiand and taken along an equlp- t sufficient only for a prief journey, Knelt Beside Trunk. 9 defendant wae made to get down als kneca by the dead girl's trunk, her clothes out one by one and \tity them, He did this in a dull, thanical way, looking furtively over shoulder at the jury, Then Ise wns ‘sjged and Under Sheriff Klock was Auled, Mr, Ward asked Klock to | vot how the prisoner had explainad | Lim the ease with which he picked | | ‘the Eagle, Bay trall after swim- g@ ashore from the boat. When I first asked him," testified Under Sheriff, “how he found the 4, “the said that he simply walked \s, keeping the shore in sighs until iteuck the road. Then I sald to him; dk here, Gillette, I've been a woods- y thirty years, and yot I'd have frald of getting lost 12. this ‘Oh,’ ho sald tien, ‘I wasn't id of getting lost, for I tad a 2, jen Eyen Evans, turnkey of the Jal), 4 called, and asked if ho remem- ped, the condition of the prisoner’ | eh when he came to the jail, “It | /# funning,"* swore the turnkey. Denies Gitlette’s Story. ] ne defendant swore he had the! Wont | oh in his clothing when he ) the water, and that it stoppod at o'clock, the moment of the tragedy. ) young man declared that it had run since. Sherif! Richards was ro- ea, an? said when ‘he reached the where Gillette swoarg he ate nas and oranges with Grace Brown ‘ { 1 cot, seemingly but -half en spoken to. : he found’ no peelings of the ¢rult or other avidences of the luncheon, The Sheriff sald also that if Gillette had | consciaus, & | gone fifteen feet In elther direction from where the girl went down in the Inke he would have touched bottom and could have walked without difficulty, John Coy, proprietor of the Tabor House at De Ruyter, was called, and uid Gillette had asked for e rig from him, saying that he wanted to drive to South Otsolic,, where Grace Brown waa then preparing to.come to him. The young man dented yesterday he had sought to hire a ng at De Ruyter. When ex-Senator Mills objected to further ex- | amination of tho witness the District- | Attorney replied: “1 want to show the very beginning of this young man's plot to get Grace Brown tram her home| without having tt known that Cheater | Giilotte had met her. : | “He registered at tho Do Ruyter| Hotel ax Charles Georga and when ho| ked for a rig to drive to South Ot- selic he wanted to create tho impres-! on that Charles George ana not Chea- ter Gillette wanted to got this girl.” | After Mr, Ward had Kot in the hotel Proprictor'y eviderce Hubert Whalley, 4n employes at the Tabor House, cor rohorated him, i Mr. Ward Tested and-reserved the rigat lo call another witness on Mon- Gay, Ex-Senator Mills» id hé had no further evidence to put in. today, but anid he might call one witness Monday and court adjourned until MRS, P. F. M’GOWAN - IS MUCH IMPROVED She Js Not’ Yet Able to Give an Explanation of ‘Her, Injuries, Mrs. Patrick FL MeGowan, wife of; the President of the Board of Aldermen, who was ptrangely injured Jast, Wednes- day, !s much better to-day, ahd hopes fare entertained that she will recover. She has not yet recovered suMciently to give an acoount of wow she came to be injured, or what train of olroum- stances led up to her being found at Fourteenth street and Second avenug With her left anckie broken, | 1 | i beeing t should xe eet hi} Ye 2 Loe w ‘ Hn rotter, of tho Pretoria, the storm was ¢ encountered. On Noy. made only 170 miles. At was reduced to two nitle: voyage consumed fourt C.W.LYNDE, AUTO VICTIM, CUT OFF WIFE IN WILL. aN Tay RIVERHEAD, L, I, Deo, 1.—The wil of the late Charles W. Lynd mer wealthy resident of Ne but who of late had lived at’ Bellpo LL, has just bi Bate Belford, o: Lynde was killed in bile wey cident at Islip a fow weeks ago In @ codicil to his will he deprives his widow of all share in his esta ‘Tho original ‘will wax ¢ 1697, and in It he left all of to his _wite, Han zmily Hite. The ia will provided Lynde the estate should dren ol! the testatoc’s. br Lynde, of South Orar realdes now a emma, a] was mad “NEW YORK, SATURDAY |WAVE-SWEPT AND ~—. tee ee MOB SETS TOBACCO WORKS, IN WAR ON THE TRUST AFLAME < ae) “ Circulation Books DECEMBER BROOKLYN COPS TO CENSOR OUR SUNDAY PLAYS Forty Fledglings of the Force Assigned to Duty To-Morrow. 19906. TOLD TO MAKE ARRESTS. Empowered to Stop Perform- ance if They Believe Law Is Violated. Forty young and cajlow cops from consecrated Brooklyn are to be official censors to-morrow of all the theatrical performances that tae Greater City, If, In the judgment of these sauablings of the uniformed force, the performances, or any, part oF them, are jn violation of the Sunday lawe, the entertainmonts wil] be sum- marily halted. and the actors and man- agers: will be put under arrest. It promises to be a newry Sabbath, At least this ls the information which leaked out unofficially from Police Headquaytets to-dxy after forty guile Jess, beandleks policemen from Brookiyn had, by twos and threes, found thelr Way to No. 30 Mulberry street Their feoming was the first fruits of the ern.’ rade that has been started by the Prot- place -suppresaion of Sunday shows. ed re Three Hundred: Men, Claiming Live- : lihood Is Being Taken from Them, Dash Into Kentucky Town and Start Vengeance Blaze. PRINC men vitally interested in, tobacco raising in these parts, all mounted, ae dashed into ‘town here before dawn to-day. They locked up the police, terrorized the people and then set fire to two eae of the Trust. a 5 own at bay until the flames wére beyond controf {and then, mounting their horses, began a fusilade with their guns a seized the water works, tobacco steammeries, "Thy held the rode away. ‘The stemmeries destroyed were thous of Jullus Stewer and John G. Orr, the latter controlled by the Imperial To- | bacco Company, of New York. Several | cottages in. the vicinity were bedly damaged, but nobody was hurt, The lous Iu estiniated at adout $170,000, ‘Che mob, which numbered about thr hundred men, entered Princeton br tween l and 2 A. M., seized the night | town marshal and other oMcers and} disarmed them, They then went to the/ factories and quickly applied the torch, | sked men stood on guard, per- mitting nobody to come near until the buildinga were completely enveloped in ih useless A squad ne Mo! took charge of the telephone id no word of the affair was | nitted to KO out. When the-mob saw that the fire was beyond control they left the town, go- ing in the direction of Hopkinsville, dia- charging revolvers and sifles aa they | departed, The Fire Department then | eame out but could do nothing more i ban prevent the fire from destroying bulidings in the vicinity, The Hcteger Stemmery was jocated on} he south wh onthe Mitnots + Central Railroad, and the Orr Bullding | FON, Ky., Dec. 4.—Claiming that they are being de- }eons are known to have Been killed ana | « QU KILLED AS TRAINS CRESHAND CARS CATCH FIRE Others May Be Dead in Wreck on the Rutland Road, in Vermont. VERGENNES. Vt, Dec, 1.—Four per-, {t ts feared that others lost thoir lives,| while a number were seriously injur [each Captain in | two ne |rosted It tt [thing that look estant clergymen of the city for the y RTeW out of nfore the diocesan rch. ‘The movement primart a denunciation of the nx t of the Sunday statut convention of the ‘Az a result Deputy Inep Open tan In the |, ARMY AND NAVY BEGIN BATTLE IN ~ DRIZZLING RAIN. | wee ss Every Department of the Government * Represented in Holiday Crowd that Sees Teams Clash on Franklin Field Gridiron. HOW THE ARMY AND NAVY “GRID” FIGHTERS LINE UP, AND THEIR WEIGHTS. NAVY. Ingram, 274, Bpencer, 17h Douglaas, 175, | Norton, 180 NCR | Dague -Plersol «= Wrigt Siingluff Meyer Northerof: Bernard 1 78 175, 1st 16 180 16 Weeks 193 Erwin 182 Sultan Christy 190, Manton Stearns 180 Mountford, 144 Beavers, 159 Bmith, 17 ARMY. Hil, 100 ' | i o nouf ty deta oy spe of Brooklyn, was instructed hia borough y appointed pollvemen in plain clothes t celal secy avo them fastructions. — Heretotory, | |Mthon policemen were detatied to. Sun-| day -shows, the 1 themselves | with taking ovide: euring summonses agalnay th But to-morrow. the per! be| actually hal : at y= | | | 1 to them contraband WRONG MAN DEAD SHOTS HED FORA WOMAN Companion, Who Escaped FiveBullets, Says “Those Were Meant for Me,”’ ‘He hasa wite named Bella—that’s all | }1 know! From this t e argue that there | BY HARRY BURKE. FRANKLIN FIEGD, PHILADBLPHIA, Dec and Deweys and the some time 1—The futuro Farraguts jrants and Sheridars this afternoon bat- tled for football supremacy on Franklin Field in the presence of a dis- tinguished gathering of Admirals, Gener and society folk. Jt was the annual clash of the two teams, and also marked the final ending of the football season of 1906. a ind An hour . ime began, whea suard of 7 i wd was | fhrough the varlous mites, louds banked over the’ field, a soutdweat wind sprang up. (and in its 7 1 of te | entou ts + , the During the Heivala was DL steep by. 1 (We plue frivads, ACCIDENT Ch ~ HARLEM ROAD ay clad ine of were vistors Train Jumps Wrack atime: hw seuemisernnioraceaceen Melrose, Shaking Up i oti inaolas wecnca Tune elbowed yeterans Passengers. wis 6 w deep’ and sad. kes of the “nildates bacnuse . It waa George MCAutitte's fate to be| A south-boand muburban train en the | £ ence of Adniiral Dowe Killed in anotier mass quarrel—y quar- | Haplom Division of the New York Gen-| Wa forced <0 return to \ ° 4 Ntty:iteet!| 2° the iliness of iin Tel whten the police are atlil working | (ral Jumped the tra Ren AL Cote wevh ihevteeuidtat hard to probe, while they search, unde: site? deta) RLOne had. be the terms of a genoral alarm, for a Pare end builder named ALN. Ma wiccie . rr : slightly injured, life waa mystertouiely shot eart eae Or Reena He died at the J.| Mrs Amelia Wenton, who retuned aay : eau Tate) si while a Coroner | 4ddreas, were treated by an ambula Aish eat vey : leaned ove ng vainly to dmw| #ufgeon. and sent to “their homes Nluld the w wal anita ante aie |eélcinin of the railroad company. The Ie ae hours ear aac wont | ther | tnjuted passengers continued |i eroung ¢ lengitigttatte te operation, | HelF Joumey ta town by | “treretoton » ot 2 ffe hae a c opis > U ¢ War a Se ea Eurte NAS) “Engineer Jamos Haden and Conductor) Was Mallis yeho shot : i the mem- Hanford Hopkin, of White Plat SN wae Malls did G0 he) whispereds | ree eee tet ded tha the Waih witch tas wero In charge o ot ; Coaches crowded to capac d ne inthe northern, part of the town, lin a wreo f j | 5 ston he revokes ‘This 1s one Of" a aeftes” of raids on | pear the Inaratacen Rudend Railroad. | was a woman jn case eomewhere.| Haden was slowing down for a ato te Me a the ropa hy or fe ie amebunoo saris ink eravel ath ploughed Hint i MOAGLNOG Was Bot war ehwlueer,} at the station, where a crowd of pas entire prop: Uils ‘sogtion of Kentucky and in. ‘ten: | ° Joughed Into the rear| Whose home was at No. 60 West One Pireiwaniwn when the locomo-| In the esses by men who claim that tho /end of a passenger train A Arcade shea front ek es AGL Le tet te ULL TA {orem conduct ts unworth ndrust has prectically en their ilvelis |. ayy, ef mn Jitunared anu tater ho owtkeets | tive struck switch and. left the SORES AIS ae ERT oR CHET eeaeat nine eee Oo passenger ears Were wrecked] wisi Muut yale We Yased Hy the Latur Te tive and bagRaRe CAS | Denlwelf and limiths the growing of| andicaurht fre. EW Bertie wey eiae > Albert, Shevlin, (swerved): across the adjo! soutn= i declared. war on the tobacco lyaentifieds ne ne | Maas i Ws LF} bound. tracka the forward couck| } =| Negroes Raise Fund, poly” mimo tine AKO. ANd a Jnums |scemened: | Goel a, AMMdTGY sumped ‘the other, way a A fund ts belhg raised by negroes tn ea have been destroyed | [eas Adee ceemie livereck blocked’. the southbound! tions. | Jue unch i rack pias’ Sie ecard) yas ge |CARNEGIE OFFENDS | [fit Ohi ¢ A NRE GN SUS ie esnl tes 4 pring the discharg: od in Hecrel. to-day'a | raid | youn: clo: up all the suburban trains bound a aakent being Uié most daring yet. attempted. SOOT ae s ped, ) 1 oe bee iY tiene atin oel'tRae’ | LONDON WITH HIS TALK) ee a ose eroupea the, nae cures Svea AL the men m the raid were undoubt a Were HETURIDE they | ¥ Central H weiritt . ; Roonove edly. aympathixers. with the organiza- S & no sign ot ite Ati mala that Mure eet ody i MW AN } jections are being ine Lon of farmers Jenown Ve the Dark ENRON: Deg Ze aasentlon ts bake IMs A Al agen bn Hire Mii) the Consolidated rot ii teplet " | negro churches, and the f Pahaces Growers’ Protective” Associa- ome o e ernoan ‘s here} eat. Sheviin dia not ke MALS, é. the j to be quite large, nyiny whites alding | ion \ It tonot known that any member {to-day ‘to the statements made by An-|and. young O'Nell caine to him and| ‘ 1 | SOURUpaenenaaenal f_Uint’ Oneanizations wax tn’ the mob. | drew Carnerfo at.the banquet of the) 4s le nan Jet, spiinte i arn Sen BENNINGS RESULTS. mina are ranairclis St. Andrew's Boclety In New York last) win not ‘wird Oth ‘seplied | MA tines ; , mae i ’ 2 PRESSING 'FRISCO CLAIMS, [night regarding tho decline of recruiting |Bhevin, wid Uirned to talk to Most heart. and Sheer scidess 3, Dec, Me po, | It Scotland, ‘Aull nneta We FINST RACE Bea ED enan Mesers, Susto,| "pho Pali Mall Gazette heads its com-| | Mallia left the saloen. McAuliffe, St ‘ AAT AREAS and Donrman, throdrrepreson:| mane tan ANON ede’ Ana ates that {lin and younR O Nell tuilawed Tago Mas t lace) 2, Chalf tatives of the San Francisca imsuranco | even if true, “It 18 the worst of manners |For @ tine Mey tikea th a friendly i lox place) 2, Chalfont i. claimants who have not been pald by) in an alien who elects to make fre- wey ‘On ‘the street, ana then the trio (In and O'Nell t o ‘ See threa Garmnat companies, And one Ana quent use of British Donpitaltty. to,maky | Walked over towmrd roadway Wat |drod apd Twenty th i : me LE conipany, have arrived here and|it the subject of public rejolcing.”” the corn of Broadway & iin ® use. On the, way 4 ee Tat tere reine] ackemai ine the necessary omtal oai| eget tee CORA ANTY ected re: | denirid Gartediitronsy Lenina cies roile at wiinwald |: miiiiondir to & an’ ~HL 1, Cherrr.Mihtor 1 ona looking over the: feld before presa~! bike’ of Mr, Carnegie on the same oe brick and, pointing a revolver at M victim of in Madison ) #, Lysistrata B. ttiement. five times, The frat bul- is 4 tng the companies for @ pe! 4 jon i# applauded by the prese, Aullffe, ar