Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
= Bp So —terwon, who died in Lo wis then ge So _retary of the Hxenyc Firemen's Heney > Firemon‘s Benevolent Fund a percent- | Bemtor Plate the Legtslatnns, SHO.QO0 CHECK ~ VEN TO PA ASA LOBBIST ‘History of Old Dale ~ Given in Full to the District-Attorney. FENDERLESS CAR CRUSHES LITTL Annie Grecco Killed on the Bowery in Sight of Large Throng. PLATT Exempt Firemen Put U to Get Extension of The Graft: Through Legislature. The true story of the.$10, @orsed by Lou Payn and deposite the credit of Init press Company, was Introduced in of George Burnham, jr, yest told to-day. It reoites that do et that time a profess ‘Albany, and Thomas ¢ publican leader of the York, personally deman ed from the Exempt Fire e gn the trial days was Payn on's Benevo legis- | Jent Fund $10,000 for furthering lation favorable to the pay It is] further recited that Lou Payn and | Thomas C. Platt “made good. The story was firet told to the Dis- trict-Atiorney by Samuel Patterson, | « Harlem real estate dealer and « mem- ber Of the Exempt Firomen’s Assovia- tion, In running down the transaction the District-Attorney wis alded by L. ‘H. Andrews, an attorney of No, 38 Park Row, counsel for Mr. Patterson. It appears that in 1875 the legislature passed a law granting to the Exempt age of the taxes received py the State. The grant was to run for twenty years As it approached expiration in 186 the | members of the paid Fire Departuent, | who wére mainigining ‘a lobby at Al- | bdany, laid plans to have the payment @hifted to their pension fund. z The Bxempts wanted to hold of to the windiell from the Stace and mot about 10 secure the passage of a bil to continue the payment Ww their fond Of & percentage Of Lie tax receipts tor shige term of yenrs George Wb glent Fund ie was Samuel Patier- won's father, To Mr. Patterson was entrusted tho work of getting (the Dill throuch the | islature. It did not take him long discover that the wheela of lexisia- | be lubricated, and that Tors material’ woum have tw uu Payn, who was, with in absolute control of According to the District-Attor- mey's information the Exempt Wiremen's Benevolent Pund held @ meeting at headquarters in €anail street in March, 1806. Both ALSO INVOLVED | Little Anna Grecco, Ufelems and ast drawn from trollay car t and tho through the great rowd surfounding the tody there b a mad her, She, came = street. pluck- peating hereelf tri blood followed tho WB 3 tried to halt-her, but she his arins and her- in atree: stig supposed ‘ty be 6 of Bu lot of wet at sigiit » ordinary scen ‘© a who! saw hoysehold of , the father, a peddler; Marla, the hard-working Josephina, the bady; Anna, Francesca, aged seven, and 1 ‘The three other resplendent in finery and with s their head: te Madona Dt eet, to attend » feast of the Im- the G eleven stosa the teem- in) ry Little Anna, the younge ‘away from her place between o la en and darted for She danced past @ the ndrth-boulid oar rigat into the path of Madison avenue car No, 2,2, speeding i the fender up and thirty}and ahy mishap always results In a] Which got a ble laugh trom the Gov- oppose © gouth\ wit ssengers aboard. Her ttle feet ped on the frosty rall and down sae The motorman, Thomas Barrett, good-natured Irishman, of No, 8 st Twenty-ninth street, ground down the brake, but It was too late, ‘The child “screamed once as the plough-shaped nolnt of the truck struck went a bi her urtle body! Wressing her down, it dragged hep tor Ktveen feet, crushing the iittle funk and breaking ‘the bor muy it acemed the street wae with screaming omen and ring men and curious-fuced cuil- yery tenement window titiod heads and lramic haked While Tharrett, sick urid.white, tried vainly to raw the chud’s body free. In this he tided by. Polloemen “Kington, Treazgur and McNazhara, but. finally they gave up and had to, wait for a wrecking crew to come and jack up the car. ‘Two ambulances—one from Bellevue from St Vincent’s—arrived GIRL 10 DEATH THE EVENING WORL WOMEN-IN PANIC AN THE NEW YORK CENTRAL TUNNEL Bursting of a Steam Pipe Causes a Wild Flight from Car. Fifty passengers, most of them wom- en, were thrown Into a panic to-day when a steam pipe in-one of the cars of n train on the New York, New | Haven and Hartford Railroad burst and filled’ the car with steam. The mishap coourred just about ab the train’ entered {the tunyel at One Hundred and ‘Tenth street, Only the presence of mind jot the male passengers prevented @ score of women from being severely | | injured In the mad rush to get out, of the oar. ‘The nolsq made by the pipe when it exploded alarmed the comnrunters, but |when the steam came hissing through |the break the women streamed and | rushed: pell-mell for the doors. In their haste they shoved one another about in {lively fashion. he’ brakemen and level-headed men passengers caked the frantic’ women, ‘and then rushed them from thé disabled car into other cars, Abcaut twenty we- timen tuahed into the smoking car, took | seats and remained there until the train resohed the Grand Central Sta- tlon, Several women were slightly erent 2A RNR? D, SATURDAY, D Twin Would Put Color Into Men’s Dress Reform ‘When e nn is over seventy-one years old he {s entitled to wear what he pleases. 5 I have reached the age where dark clothes have a depressing effect on me. I like light clothing, colors like those worn by -the—ladies at the opera. : The moat satisfactory costume I ever saw was worn by natives of the Sandwich Islands, When they wanted to adorn.themselyes beyond what nature gaye them they put on a pair of spectacles. Clothes in our modern civilization are to preserve decency and for us fo get ae much Pomfort out of as possible. Nothing is more absurd, ungraceful and uncomfortable than modern men’s clothing. I would suggest for men peekaboo waists, short, fluffy siceves and all the rest. Women wear our clothes; why not take a lesson from | them? They always have beantiful fabrics and splendid colors. I would go back to the Middle Ages for the glorious, gorgeous, gaudy costumes of that time, Then we could wear colors, —Mark Twain In. Washington Interview, NT RNetNeeEeN g LOVE SYNDICATE’S HEAD TELLS OF HER SEARCH FOR IDEAL. | ROOSEVELT SCORED: ~~ BY STORER IN HOT DISMISSAL PROTEST. (Continued from First Page.) (Continued from First Page.) Ambassador in tha United, States ser- ia out of the question for me knowing! i snapped thé Commissioner: | to permit the wife of one of our diplo ‘and this has gone far enough,” scalded by the escaping steam, but they refused to alive their nacnes. The train left New Rochelle at £27 and was well filled when it reached the tunnel All the way doxn the commuters in the car had been com- plaining of the cold and the brakeman was appealed to several times to heat the car, Finally more pressure was nut on and the frozen pipe blow out and then the rush for safety began, ‘There have been so many deaths from accidents in the tunnel of persons who 1 New He that ‘on those trains 3 the trains approach always un- the ‘tunnel easy panic among: the women passengers. WOMANPOUNCED ON 1 STATION CROWD lite Persons Were Trying to Steal Purse. Mrs, Viola Thompson, a young woman | “the: wit —At the present tims Jamin financial | ‘etMicuities,contassad the witiess, Mansy Apout the same dime the ttle form brongheiout tram under the: tracke| os cameo me ererenoe nol tes WiuN her husband and threo children in West ECEMBER &, HALLEGAL 20-CENT 1906 GAS. MONEY IN GAS TRUST BANK Nearly Two Millions of! People’s Cash Held “in Trust.” nited States 's now a millionaire The [gas magnate. The illegal twenty cents on every $1 wrung by, the Gas ‘Trust from many of the consumers, and then | [with affectation of great honesty de- | posited with Federal court, to awalt) tical decision on the constitutional of great sum of $1,721,289. ; (Gnder the Kwa of Uje ‘State of New York this fortyse belongs to the publio. g at the SJ qits only} 1 inst the varl- cus methods of exto:tion resorted to by} the Trust. ; Ag for those who have paid the $1 rato in the Interest of peace, thelr equity lies-In moneys paid over by the Gas the number of 3 crease mpeche He wouldn't give me my decrease the §0-cent ney vice should have seritten such jette: 3 5 hietly. di- How ‘inrge wae your Interest In thé voy qye akech the dienenat Jotter as Trust is chiefly db mahogany landa?’ asked Mr. Dorr, | Should & given the impression wu ite efforts these days, using | Mgaveral fttndfea” dollarm X" don't jdoubtedly conveyed in that letter and Bedkevetethrex ta iromenosiines| know how much." | bhould hav. ie Fae “ta this an accountant’s Investiga-| veo. ppd deh as te oral deposit required to $10 to send interjected Mr. Afinor: n to realize that. It) ing dig-knuckled zgents t6 intimidate women, Mf A [mats to engag&® in ecclesiastical in- Wouldn't Tell Lawyer's Name. trigues to Influence the Vatloan. Bulldozed for Nearly §2,000,0.0. ow you consulted a lawyer, didn't Ww. The Consolidated Gas Company leads voit (What woe his nameyy jarning to Wite. tn this work of clubbing down the 9- to a er Shiseeatne mind the commis), After referring to the report that | cent consumers, who since May 1, 103, sioner uphe her refusal. egies 5 ne was Coen) in urspe as when the law went into effect, have | “What? ot! e ne| th Merican Antbassadress" “t0 heen ge pede aapicthy pices aes i pomenea ik wore You In-| Home. “Ain, Hcosevelt cioses. thus: “fT been getting recelpts “on account ros “Oh, mining property in Wisconsin, iN is allt ecive me thiy positive the company, with balance due’; se pad y be- ise nex. | marked Lil, < to. alrliy replied Mrs. Verrault; “it fay) be-| Diop? waiting, tinue in the) marked in the margin of the Dill een Irontown and Casanayn."’ fi id whe did not hold estate, but was left an interest In It by her parents, your ther?” “I don't know," “What! you don't know whether or Dot Mr, Finnegan left it to you?’ i Honor," exclaimed Mr. Miller, 3 ineans ‘it's a wise child its own father’ —a remark and if you unintentionally vio- Inte it, I stall have to ask for Bellams's resignation, for Pi can no longer afford | to have the chance of scanda) being brought on the entire American diplo- matic service, and on the guvernment itself, by such indiscreet ahd {l-advised nas Yours has been Li € to axprans tully { nation with which Tread the letter to Mra. Storer.’ said Mr. Storer. “Though I waa In’ tie public service, I felt and still feel that who knows ernment cler&s who crowded the room. Much time was given uD to Questlo® Ing the defendant about ter Mnancial |] had lost none of the rights which Kffuike, She sald all her property was | man has to jude, of the propristy, of ted up, gs well as her Now York bank | tetters addressed to his wife and to account. What is 'tne Ma} Mr. Dorr, resent an improper communication. “I did not know then what 1 have since learned, that the letter was not Alone, but had been shown to othtsa before {twas pont, and thus used to make a case against a Indy, a trostine friend. who could not be heard in her own defense. “My wife was daltberately accused of having) quoted isolated sentences ~fromt the President's letters to convince other persons that he doing exactly what, as he asserted. he had explicitly stated In writing that he would not do, name of the bank?” {t would embarrass me to téll the name of my bank.” i Commissioner Shields told hen she need not answer the question. “Why dkj you write Keisler that you couldn't eet money from your r jemanded the District-Attarney. “Because I didn't have any; anyway, that letter to Keisler was « love letter, not a careful business communication, “Tm afraid,’ sald Mr. Miller, “that my oolleague’has never heard the ol4| “This charge of shameful conduct w: adage, “Aif's fair in Jove and war.’ If] pased on no evidence which could even we were all to_have our.love letters | have misled the writer Into a hasty Toad we'd be here til midnight.’ || | judgment, but was in answer to a let-| T wouldn't," grunted the gray-whls- | (er which, whether approved or not, at kered Commissioner, “I haven't ot any Hvhere did you get_the answers to these letters—at No. 344 Broadway?" least furnishes no such evidence elther in itself or in {ts Inclosures. Outraged Friendship. ft) to handle theo par oon rund a Indicate the contested % per cent, Here are the figures euowing how much each company has bulldozed out of the pub- Amsterdam 25385 103, 515754 erectriys $171.290,70) United States Commissioner John. A. Shields, who Is also Clerk of the United States Circuit Court, has the pleasant sonxation of crackling the checks rep- resenting thia sum of maney. Mr. Shields was appointed a special master he’ receives the amall percentage of one- quarter of 1 per cent. for his services. |The checks, aa they are brought in by the runners of the Gas Trust, once each week, are deposited in the Citt- zens’ Central National Bank and the | National Bank of Commerce — these | banks because they are the Federal | depositories, Standard Oil Bank Custodian. James Silliman is a director of the Citizens’ Central National Dank, Mr, Stillman is also a dL. rector of the olidated Gas | Company. Willigcm Rockefeller Co: [the okt man said 4 were congregating In. phe brikge 6! ORIPPEDDED WENN OLY TO ~ SOREREANG BADGE THRNG | AWAITING A CAR SAYS. SHOTER | ExcitementandColdKilled’ Declares His Trouble with Michael Mullally on Bucket-Shop King Was. Way to Work. - Over Money, | In a freezing temperature and biting wind an oid ma homaa O'Coniior. waiting long for Aj erator who shot ‘'H Hen- car on Brooklyn Bridge this morning. | nig Na Was inntrontrorathe dropped dead from exposure and ex-| Pink pivnitoniaycwoubding haustion. He was one of thousands, ago! bu bop king tn the who, chilled to the very marro of an Bye! World reporter ts thelr bones, hid shivered for fifty min-! a. in shcoting Hennig he’ had utes in the hops that trafic would. bea than he in- resumed. tended ov. ‘did him out For many years. Michael Mullally, of some n é sixty years old. whose home is at, No!) | “'t followed when he got 6i$ ‘Trathagan street, b back ‘from rity ported on time In the inachine ‘onn umd Peyer the “Brooklyn Navy-Yard. He was to| to square up accounts haye reported on time to-day, and hy |Pature of my clahnts Well, (f I should would have done so had not the trolley) tell you that, It wouldbuato tell a lot of Ory cars ucfoss the bridge stopped running be Old Mullally and’ bis on John walke rin up to the Manhattan-end’ of the bridge |fo do thar yet busket-\hoos and the nd IN shortly, béfore 7 o'clock. There ‘was| “It's ali r say there was)x woman plenty of time for the mach ta ger | Mixed pp it. There was nothing of to work, and he and his son talked T knew Hennig would! be about the work they were expected to yesterday, and I laid Yor do and about the work that had not I didn’t n to ki him, but XE been done, Their talk was of the shop, want to scare him to death. I don't think he'll get after me very hard hough, Some of the papers have: said the affair wax over the arrest of a bucket shop operator a few days ago. Why, tll they asked me about that, I and ‘both were interested. There was not a trolley oar in sicht when Mullally and his ‘son entered the appros The father and. son to the bri: « trains, There were HO cara‘unstaly they ran down. had never heard of it." : “There will be a car alonsssoon” the 3 ; Voneua: > No Eye-Witnesses Found. “We had better walk, son.” tho old | -Emil Fuchs, who represented O’Cone man paid. "We will be Jate, and it's up | nor yesterday when he was. commit- to. me to be on tme,"" | ted, will probably, it was said, attempt Cars Failed-to Come: | to clear his client on the ground that Still there were no surface cars, The | AO one saw the shot fired and It is old nian ran up‘to se not expected 3 § willashow much nn a train, ‘Then he cam eenness to pre Hl band RAR TE OreN excl k een $s to press the case. rinu Went by and The queer cate of-morality that al- ffulley car of tfain across | ways makes trouble for the police in a Wa Ghalls Havas torn for son, Sse of this kind ts operating in full "Tl must Par blast to-day, and the authorities have been able to learn little more than the ‘Transit delays,” the son replied. “I'he TA h rep men Aave chosen to tell. Kary will be slong soon. Take things) vasig tite “Bill,” tall, stout and in the meanwhile the narth wind was ,blonde-bearded, {8 no ordinary man. He blowing & bone-chilling gale through tb6 has bey mixed-up tn queer business rkige entrance. It seemed to be xgéet- A ting colder every minute. Great.crowds {rom Maine to Mextoo. He was the n; Rulding spirit of the Hennig Remedy trees: : f company, which diq-a big —mationder- ly a i ‘ Mullally this may and teat | He Was | yusiness, He announced to the world already out of breath atter his scveral runs up and down the stairs. He was at the time that his medicines repre- excited. tuo, and wa® anxious, for, hej sented the most advanced stage Of din’ be 1 ¥ a ee DSR AL ote |chemloal compeunding. Ae a matver of on time. It's go vJust one of the Brookiyn Rapid | fact “Big Mitt” came rightly by his Suddenly Muulalty, the futher, grew | medical twist, for besides being a grad pale as death, Hin breath. came in! uate of a school of pharmacy, he { gasps and he reele Then he*fell and only the strong son saved him. trom | y veing crushed by the feet of the on- coming crowds, When Dr. Bryant came from_the Emergency Hospital ho sald that Mul- lally had dled of heart trouble. “Possibly excitement killed him," the jeorge Hennig, for many % & professor of pharmacy at the University of Iunols, Served Eighteen Months’ Term. It was in Chicago that ‘Big Mitt’ cut | his broadest swath. He had a whole toor of offices at No. 14 Van Buren pryalcian added. Mr. Mulfally's body was taken to the police station, and later It was taken to street that cost him in rentals $50,008) a year, The Curnishings were most mag- nifcent and his stenographers the pret- d o Senator Platt dn4 Lou Pa TEE A re 8 J pak Mra Dore ‘: at his home In Hoboken by ht by tiest the Windy City had ever seen. 1 m Payn were |and drove AWAY. Hoboken, was fined §3 in the Jefferson | “trom my agent. I don't ber lave rector of the Consolidatea | his home In Hoboken by his son, There tiest the Windy City had ever seen. In ing of the mother ¥. Lhe dant TashS be aathiate "The tone of long-suffering and out: . ‘ecelved. b: the course of his career has cleaned present, The Pistrict-Attorney has | plier ot te wrowd, on edge. “There | Market Court to-day on a technical | the number. ; |raged patience, the careful omission of |G8% Company. Both Mr. setitman | 2h Fereired: by an old widow and | ty a half-dosen foreunes sad. spent fai ys, ee A jot of excitable Italians in the | mbarge of dlsorderig conduct he | Dismissed Keleler for Good Reason, | §!! mention of anything that the writer ioe Mr, Rockefeller are directors eighteen months in the Itentiary in Been info 7 persons who | fuititude who wanted 0 aasaitt Bar: | geruok amen and women indiscriminately | [fad himacit done and authorized Yo be |Iu Standard O11, Spee a |Tilinoix for using the for fraudu- tt, ‘The. reserve: za beth, api nwer to & questio - Mi}-| done in the matters complained of, the Sy Forla’ = | wi ne! Were pres@ut at the meeting that | Orca: station held back the angry for. | {nthe Fourteenth street, “L'' atation |), tae Verrwult,vesid: thar ats Ma quotation: from the hettersli weilten'iat Hise Leash aie excl ialye (pup: CARUSO HAS LOST Ihenti panes os t Was in the, ninetiex, both tt and Payn pledged | clkners until Roundsman O Donnell | yesterday when she dropped her purse.| Mr. McClellan in the latter part of the time of my errand to the Pope, | ., yesterday bearing upon the to bucket-shop stunts, with the soft thomefelves to get the Hee teen a CeSInIcAl Chern ny [and & py TumId ot buddies’ cn The 100 | ee ea ee ata eee eee eles neoeareiiehr mould si rebating relations’ said to exist be- HIS MUSTACHE. in erin yee a necessary. m UD © arKe e(sler for “a very reason.”” stances related above which would give | tween Standant O11 & The magnetism of the man attract BAN hon theowah toc Hoon | Home wwiey. of No. $ Est Ona Hay. | TE TBompson had been doing some | Tne.“ Commiaslonar thought thle a those Jetters thelr true ‘character’ OF | qated Gas C Bide net Ma tena we to Sim hosts of friends and in tho , 1000, | seulaky. of No, East One Hun-| heavy shopping in groceries, canned | good point to adjourn the heartnm Nowibae Ithaya Warataniranncrnecr att 3 Company, wherody the Iat-| |. LN Case of the sheriff of thy Ilinola town F would not do, however, to draw| Sey ete whine SO: | goods, and children's clothing. When ahe |, Deo. 29 next was set for. the | ad-| nlaint because what he had directed to | ter Pays ono cent a gallon in eqpess of Will Trill No More Through the | where be waa | COnnAes cOntaAUAS) Of, ‘ip check directly’ to Payn. Churien ine to the Grecco famit nA i { | Journeg examination, to give Mr. Miller be done hp become known—ihese | the standard price of’ bar f [Ncials a. Apes Qt Saar teres ies MAS sid W, W, Buckley were counsel at |) Tuit nenlnat the oar < | got up to the “L" station she passe hance to visit Virginia for Christ- things, with the abusive personal char- | oth price of; baume ~ oll ta, Stubble on His Upper Jostensibly Government prisoner, was that time ‘for the Exempt Firemen's ing Uetle Anna. Ja Canadian dime though the little Win- mas, Commissioner Shieldx will prod: qctarization of my wits ani the aasumed | One Bas companics, hax stirred +26 Linke | scon Tending a Fourth of July parade Benevolent Fund." The check for $it,-|' When me starred to Dring this car | dow of the tloket booth. She was in the bly announce his decision in the Kels- indignation with what had been, tn fart, | Broadway" to the centre of its sules Ip. Chatahariteneehon sans obilaine ta ice ect ee eee at OUR Mea amien Ou OF the HASTA anid eculaey. cE nd- | midst (of a maelstrom of eager men ler case then i permitted anf encouraged where not |departmont. ‘The discoveries have re-| Caruso has dimarded hls mustache, | 't, {0,018 Belsoner: Fic Gyatking rntediately ease Heed ANG NS atlanta oe ti eeaeeee | and women and when’ the dime rad] i ienangia, lemon on the: tree for ses prestte aed the nit of anpehine | Vived the old report of an inside rébate| No’ more will he trill through the| i epattinasyedl Memaber): Sptea WEN ME (oped to Be Back ny firm “gor ieral ser- x OL ET to tle up the fender | passed back st required strenuous del- | 4 the “pest,” sald Mr. Miller. justifiable even in stranger, | Pool Jn Standanmt Oil that annually cuts| soft atubble of the brush that adorned! wound 4m not nerious. vi hen the Buckley firm tn- go nheat narte to get at her purse, whereupon | : “What a sense of wutraged friendship | up $500,(00. i © ip, and no mo: : Hennig Won't Prosecn' dorsed it to Lou Payn and Lou Payn th nder had been down ttle i | his ‘upper lp, 9 more will he be! deposited Jt to the credit of the United | Anna w he-nlive to-day. | she became flurried. Bhe thought the | fs AroUseD Ip tis can perhaps be under- | Assistant Corporation Counsel William {mistaken for hia! dear brother-in-law, | SV nem, the ca again O Connor Benuratenticctien cones: Sea aa a Wha RENE ines rie | Burma contained, #8, | TUMBLED FROM A \the smal part of thesprivate corre |P- Burr, representing the City’ot New| Vittoria Emanuelle lacollettl, of Mont-| morning, arigiatoraesie anc Golan Fae ArT eke rg epi Ponilia se da of 10.000 until th | When an elderly gentleman stooped | spondence aiven above | York in its defense of the Elghty-C air, N, J. y re if ‘ é satisfactorily, because that. ¥ll/e), TO eof $ the tore In coneluing hia. fetter, which ts the Eighty-Cent oN. J. jamith, asked that’ the $5,000) ball nixed ‘i f Check caused all sorts of feuds anima! aria t to pick up the putwe for her she imag- 14TH FLOOR WINDOW. | catea at cincinnals, “Noveaiber, ice | Gas law from tho Gaw Trust's attempt| Charles Henry Moltzor, who etands | yesterday be reduced to $1,000, which i Glssussions in the ranks of the Repub RTE Cee trea tned he .was a pickpocket and kicked | | the former Ambaswidor aya: | to prove {t conflacatory, and therefore{hetween the Metropolitan Oper-tlouse | Wa# done, ahd the eake was adjourned ; ee Bales enw nigh it BenntorT alert him In the chin, He got up suddenly,| rede oh Ase e re Tenouk Et’ MOW" | unconstitutional, further charged to-day }and publicity, explains that Enrico do-| The yee Goldsmith peed this etter Lemuel E. Quigg Ogured. © can- and bumped againse her, whereupon Med Projecti Three! that the Consolidated Gas Company’s|nuded his upper lp in order the bet- | mignea by Hennig, which read: mh alied “check was inthe possession \cf her grocertes and canned goods, began | Stillen Landed on Projection real estate properties originally ter to fit into @ srhooth-faceq part he} “Realizing that the asxault mado jeorge B. Patteston, who took the pro- ROOSEVELT SILENT 5 ‘ ae riginally cost! with have to sing mext week, but let}upon me by Thomas O'Connor: was to flutter ¢o the floor, Ovher pohte men and women went to her rescue, but she did not appreciate their gallantry, tm- Jayining that they were all thieves — only $4,000,000. *° State's Value Four Times Greater. “This company has put In its real.es It be known that the great singur, who| done in passion, I do hereby state that won notoriety in the Cenual Park! as my condition $e not serious, {t {1 monkey house, appeared in the same | not my Intention to appoar against the role perare th a silken furze be-| said O'Connor in a ‘eriminal proseca- ~ Stories Below and May Recover, Though Badly Hurt. “Then camo Lou Payn'n appointment as State Commissioner of 1 hin alleged attempt je Mutual tteverre nsurance: ani ke down’? i caution to have it photoxrapned. | | | | to - ON STORER PROTEST. } DOUBLE COURT ROLE TrEUTATe 7man en a it; ot - = — Company for $100.00. ‘The Hurnhame, | ‘A moving ploture machine would | Ba era Ades TERS [lee NER ON OE Sa RW LAC 2 officlals of the Mutual Reserve, | have had to shoot films at express speed N° ar ne 7 (asinewatu cual Vets lecrea ba eart fy Stairs { 4 | Bure to an Evening World reporter. of the check: because Georgy: Burr 1, * to follow what happened. Mra. Thomp- | 3, & window-cleaner in renee ng on issues raised | wise Nand cost it only $4,000,000, and ras counsel for Mr. Patterson, |Grace George’s Leading Man] ‘2 £20" Saat peed et ner | late buttding, at No, 26 Llborty street, in the correspondence between the Pres-| tng company “has already sold, oft ‘ The offense wan not outlawed then, | 53 =) : Arms and legs going into furious wind- | #eems to bear a charmed Ife. If he idont and former Ambassador and Mrs. 51,009,00@ werth. I cannot see how its Sat a : : pd) senooedi ng to tia. Distriot-A tor: | Sued by Former Servant | ini action. When a squad of police | Tecovers from Injuries received early Storer was obtainable at the Wihilto| omcers now\have tho temerity. to put : A y ney s Information. she cancel , to-day by falling (from the fourteenth tose to-day, and it {x not certain that | in ‘real getate, $16,000,000 as n part’ of ADVER I ISEMENT arrived people and thingy were ming- ‘was potent enough to force Pa | to the eleventh story of the building the cost of making gas. Besides, a the President will discuss the matter | for Money Loaned. to begin «i ing can stop the success fgecept $40,000, instead of the $100,000. | ng "tike corn in a hopper. Mre, Thomp. ¥ ‘At this time the $10.00 choc st yeahh 7 . ‘he can say that he hadjas miraculous Hy i careful examination of the titles of this Wee Pea tandl the ba 000 transaction cients son had put her fist through a window, | NO CAD SAY Mi’ Oe rele te tot ot | St ny time in the future, property has shown that the company IN Mutual Reserve ere both ontawed 2 receiving a severe cut on the wrist. She | = has tio legal tile to a large proportion a Sra ceca al to The Evening World.) © | was taken to St. Joseph's Hospital and | An “ | ~ | of the Iwnd."t ‘ ‘ : VERNON, Dos. § Robert 7.| thence to the Jefferson Market Court Stillen begins work at 6 A. M. To-| CROWDED) TROLLEY " : sce SSSI van 4 og man w Orace GeotKe | tally where ob reat tite pales Ane day, while leaning out of one of the . {aie . i | tm) Hy. t No. Pros-| had lost a pocketbook, but found her dow: + with | paa | [ | Gin) lives.at No; 20m Eros | had Jeet s wpeketbooks but Her windowen on the fourteenth oor, with) BT INGES INTO GULCH SERGT. CLOOGAN SAYS:| Is Publi t was before Judge Simps cee a torty I lost my head, she re- | Ma back toward the court-yard, ho| VN S/tdibeca fine. thing Af they'd’ put | Ss ublic | e | to-day, charged with retaining $760 be: marke to Baa acres formbiiiee she paid became numb from cold and lost his) some of the force: to! work shtoppiny ] 3 , daceri teh oe domestic forz| hor he, "but the truth ts I'be eit bata’ ; ey > it } Ud tug 10 lien Kelly, a domestic for-| Ror Att, oie! Prd Path nee | BAST LIVERPOOL. 0. Deo. 8--A car| crime instead of taching them to. keep Recommendation jneriysin his Lie case was ad- : He. tumbled to the eleventh’ floor, | t Af a } Lidia Pcuek iar prleolioil onlay airewiteatreiagil ve iaiercon eterna: Liverpool ‘Tras: 4 one eye on the ledder andthe ofher one | s Hiines bo¥rowed f ‘ . i {tion Company ‘while near thin place | gy the nearest post to home." is yrounsiag ate. would te-/ LOCKJAW FOLLOWS lover p window and Jay there uncon: | jumped the track and crossing the road-| Cn} O-MOleKOW'N ‘ Soper! interest than, was possible jactoug until his absence was aotized | way, plunged Into a gulch. oe SUNDAY WORLD. brs i and that she has not seen TROLLEY ACCIDENT. by a fellow workman on the other a{de | S¢¥eFal passengers was report:d kitted, Aue, A LD, ___ First Batch of 530 Prisoners in. ee ean inoene * of the courtyard, Thon he was rescued, i ‘Kings County up oT » Uemanded It, Was | An ambulance surgeon from Hudson d } Ss M rans- ‘derly conduct. Ba-| ¢ ‘ 7 ospital com- | a x f EMIS ARS EAE sfiserderty, canduol, Be-| Seven-Year-Old Joseph Letz Dying eet ieee ae ae % 3 Anan? a of | or more than) in Hospital After Amputation | ternal tnjurles but be has @ chance to | ies money can buy, and | cere ce] Toon Me Anttion (Eee Who Gets the Most ee i: ‘This is moving day for tho priv Re ATURE And Tep:| Joseph Tate, the seven-year-old son, 28 BELOW ZERO BE fo the Kings County Wity QaMne: as of Mr, and, Mrs. Joseph Letz, of Itich- IN ADIRONDACKS = of the fitm it favors, ; gE “Crow Hil.” The first bate 2 mond avenue, Arrochar, 8, I, was re- uacnisdte. a if o We of ealthe stat t that we have 76,000 salesmen at t [athe 590 prisoners, .were transferred ported dying of lockjaw to-day tn St. ut O 1 e€ e often make the statement thal , ¢ a j sicaeyy aura udear aaron apace < A Hipwpltal (THO boy rR te te ee oe ae : ty ah) 1 work for the Pease Piano, as this is the number of Pease Pianos we }} ‘Winter mithes tt mandatory, tat the |i" Q) Wid dae oe raaeee si : 5 ‘ vi ., Deo §-— a ; : 7 wea ¢ . oien front of frolley car near his home| v1 rmometers here registered 28 degrees Not the wealthiest, not the most learned, nor the idler—but the have sold in the last 62-years, and we believe we have made a Prisoners be transferted by Dut Commissioner /Coxge: #ome tithe ago by the Con Monday anq was hurled into the gut- ter with his arm broken, At tho hospital It was first thought pelow zero during last night ‘and this | forenoon the mercury got only a couple of degrees higher Paul Smith's, Lake friend and adyeeate of each and every customer, and the gteatest man who has ‘good health and works for his living. This truth is part of our success js due to word of mouth advertising. trite, but not trivial, SEIZED, ON WAY TO HEAVEN, | Reis, 190i, us hv Intended toon { Woman Ind Hurned $1,300 to Be | necessary to umputate tho arm, Dut/ Placid and Saranac Inp feported 2 be- Every man should guard his health as his most valuable posses- If you can't pay for a piamb all at once we will give ive EMTs “Pret Ready; but In Sent to HompitaL | the child showed such tmproyement | low, sion. The more so because health is easier to retain than regain, : OUR CAn REY a piano 2 1 you.3 Mini cid’ penhyintlary, established in| en yonis € Mea, Houlea John. | tit the phyaleiana- awaited results, | ‘This was the lowest point recorded Keep your grip on health By, regular Gners ss reasonable care years’ time for just We interest extra on the unpaid part, 4534, Aas been ‘one Of the most - Rona Paes MONM U rouday, f 1oekjaw appeared, and] this season. 2 in eating and requisite sleep, Take Beecham’s Pills occasionally, ides the “Pzase’? li t son! paid much attention to religia ‘o-day elans 0 Jaw appeared, an 8 i i t Ys Besides the “Pzase’’ we now: have a fine line of sligh tp the United States. For im afters, and just’ t Dole FEMI Dr George Mont, tha family phyalclan,} GLOVERSEYIPAT,N. Y., Dec. s—| Mf to tone the stomach and keep the liver and bowels in’ good working Geet a5 Old inst t ightly used 3 the Feder authorities impri y Honp nluy for treat. | performed tha operation in an attempt} The menury dropped to 18 volow sere order, And don't worry. planos, many. makes, : rom, $125 up. Instruments exchanged, i criminals from all parts of th “ iy heaven. | to gaye the boy. ‘The amputation ap- here ently etevernares lower tem- Observe these simple rulés and you will agree that.the one who Write for catalogue. ‘ : i d! fhore., twas the one penal inetitutior yours, took the | purentiy mhowed no effect,” and. -the | peratires were rep From the coun. gets the most from life is * : : ; tn the couatiy ever Sturned oft” tens J bayieatawantenteneds ot aiatricta, iG 5 S OPEN EVENINGS THIS MONTH, ee Dorglars. This happened In the on. Sol Behleinger, the motorman tn the Seen aires Ae Ren bs, : . : aie se eighties, ated the burglars ipoted the loase, threw. off power when he aiw | This ceili tt ec f| he M. VW h U K PEASE PIANO CO. i i @torgrooms and cracked tha». . \ What no Bad dona, and withuus apply. (here, Twelve Sreraee uaa deat os were! é€ an * O ses es ; } *9 ‘ Boke) rant we , m7 wien he x brakes leaped off and disappeared | TapOF ee ro me shite ut ue clock s een ‘ nai eatene faeeb raed prison er the Bouth Bpach Meadows, If the | ond 10 below in. ‘© of tho elty, A i fr Near Broadway, pL Grown street and Reaten -six hours, allowing him Ittle| conductor had not run forward and ap-| There ta fiyo {nches of tee | Mo- +] 2 128 West 42d Street, * New York. U agents of Bishop Mer meds the brakes Bercae in Bair, Al hawk River, es i ny curve, |W vn Saree 7 exectaiocemiaion, Mon hearhy curve would “have, dauttfers | og Pheasants for Havemoyers | . Brooklyn Branch: | Newark Branch: i f 3 u The motorman was found and The ite Star steamship Colt . i < PEYSS GU IN 0 ta pays A COLD IN ONE Dar |urrented. to-day by Datecttve Meyer | prought trom Liverpool yesterday. 200 ; 657 Fulton Street. 10 New Street. mer nj and the t t] game preserves of th tm 8 to 14 Aaze or money refomded se.¢, 1 on every box. 98o.¢,¢ | tho injuries. fie AC Blaha, Ne Momnldnzi - Retinitis