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SP EE NG PER NARS a RN Nn RN _THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1907. —_— romanian erence seman saat nee HESS GETS LAW'S, FORMER BELLE LIMIT FOR WRONG T0 GRADY GAL Policeman Sentenced to Four- teen Years and Five Months in Sing Sing. : DS WIFE PLEADS. IN VAIN. She .and the Man's Mother Urged Judge Foster to Be Lenient. — ee ) ‘Theodore Hess, the policeman who en- tleed Afteen-year-old Elfzabeth Grady from her home on Washington Heights ast April and fed with her to Balti- more, was to-day sentenced to serve fourteen years and five months in Sing Ging by Judge Warren a W. Foster, of the Court of General Sessions. The in- dictment to which he pleaded gutity charges kidnapping and the extreme pen ia fifteen years’ imprisonmnet. Hevs's mother, who unwittingly alded him in the abduction of the Grady girl, and hia wife, whom he deserted, asked the Court to extend clemency, Then izabeth Grady, the victim, a pale, slim little thing, was brought into court and after @ glance at her Judge Foster inflicted the limit allowed by the law mhich provides for the discharge of convicts at the end of their sentences at certain seasons of the year, Mess, after an unsuccessful attempt -. te wham insanity, pleaded guilty two + Weekes age When he was eahed for sentence to-day his old mother and his wife were seated among the spectators. Mrs, Hess:is a very pretty woman. It Was the first time she had seen her » buaband since his arrest and she did not manifest any ovenpowering desire ¥ to extend him any sympathy. Pleas of Mother and Wife. ‘The mother, in a low trembling voice, Walle excuses for her big eon,’who hung his head ashamed. Utter the way of mothers she hold that her boy was | astray by the slip of a girl he wron) Ag she sank into her seat, weeping, Mya. Heas, the deserted wife, etepped to the bench, “Sour Honor,” she said, glancing at her husband, “this ts the first time I | have interfered in this matter one way j er the other. I do want to say to you that before he met this gir! my’ hus- bend was e good man and a good hue band. Ihave no doubt that after tak- ing the firsy step in wrongdoing he got dn deeper and deeper until he lost all {) } my duty to say a word in his bebalt Cy ask you to be es Jenient as you Foster, “and 1 appreciate your pie J believe, though. that thts man will de better off in prison and that you will Be better off, too for H meat io Robert J. Haire, counsel ed leave to nave the indict: aménded inasmuch as it charged thet the victim of (Hess is but fourteen years old, -while a certificate of her birth whows that she wag fifteen last October, Judge Foster, who had never seen girl, ordered that she be produced In eo id Bupt. @ren’s led One Judge. fourteen. e on. grou turé of iis cleint’s offense shor him to be mentally anced, Calls Hint Irrational. “T$ contend,” sald the lawyer, “thet ‘phen this man gaye up a posttion that <y absUTed him a good income for life and a abandoned his wife and child with | © rom he had lived happily he dia not @ct as a rational] man. Admitting that Was agaTavated the fact that he was an officer of the Inw, Delleve you must admitfhat he was not rightly “responatble."” ‘Hess, naid Judge Foster to the prisoner, “your case {s bad and re} “siva-and -caiin for “stern -and~absolute Justice, You were a police officer @worn to uphold the laws, and your most sacred duty was the protection of children. You poisoned the mind of this chlid and diexraced her for life. You dizgraced your own family, —tiXou. showed (ull realization of the rime you had committed when you fled from the city with your victim, Yau but you did not Georive the Court. There are two. In- @ictnents aydinwt you. T shalluve” the ‘one Charging kidnapping aa the basta of sentence and discharge you on the other, Although the limit of tmprison- ment that may bs inflicted now for the ¢rime tn fifteen years the last Legisin- ture extended the period to twenty-five and that law takes effect next. The sentence of the Court that you de confined to Sing St Prison at hard labor for the period of fourteen years and five months."’ Heas_ betrayed no. emotion. He ex- pected a heavy nentence, His wife, who had stead herself in the rear of the Foon got up and. walkd out, calmly 0 The former policeman was taken Sing Sing this afternoon. SUES BROKER ORONO Mrs. Kavanaugh’s Suit Follows Raid on Ex-Assemblyman’s Room at Navarre. FOUND A RIVAL THERE. ss /He Denies Charges and Makes Soine, of His Own—Has $50,000 a Year. George W. Kavanaugh, a broker and former Assemblyman, who for years has been prominent in up-State Repub- lican politics, has made anewer in t Snpreme Court at Patohogue, L. I, to fe mult for divorce fled secretly by his wife, Mra, Julia R. C. Kavanaugh, of Bayshore, L. IL, in which she avers he has lost his heart to Miss Margaret Brown, a pretty girl of Albany, Mrs. Kavanaugh, who was formerly a belle of Louisville, Ky., tells of a raid she made with a detective on her hus- band’s room at the Hotel Navarre, ant declares he was found there with Miss Margaret Brown, who {s described as a beauty of the Gibson girl type. Kava- naugh denies it all, and has made counter .charges, alleging that his wife has been Eullty of {ndlscretions with five men. He wants het demand for divorce de- nied, and asks that a decree be given to him, Mra Kavanaugh filed her sult last May-—Bhe wishes 580. 2-week-altmony and $2,500 counsel fees, whioh snd ssy2 Kavanaugh, whe ts e member of the brokerage firm of A. O. Brown & Co., at No, 111 Broadway, ts amply able to pay. Marvied Fifteen. Years. He has an income, she believes, of adout $50,000 a year. He wus elected to the Assemb}y from Cohoes, and was @ Colonel on the staff of Gor. Morton. He 1s forty-two years old. As @ busi- ness man he {a interested in a number of manufacturing enterprises, Wor years Mr. Kavanaugh has been prominent in up-State politics and. !s his boast that he had, much to do with the defeat, a year ag of Senator Brackett. one of the Republican leaders, who sought re-election. He is « Re- publican and was appuinted in 1896 as @ colonel on the staff of Gov. Morton. It was in 1892, while Mies. Rickman was visiting her aunt at her cottace at ‘Narragansett Pier, that the captivating Loutsyille belle met Kaveraugh, who apanding the summer at... sort, It was love at first sight. They were married the following ‘December and came to New York, taking up their Tesidence at the Waldort-Astoria, Wife's Suspicions Aroused. Later, Kavanaugh bought a ‘ne us- tate at Bay Shore and presented it .t> his wife. ‘They lved in lavish style. Until thetr separation early this sum- mer the couple divided their time crin- cipally between the Bay 5! tome and the Watdori-Astoria, w! thoy had a suite of ten rooms, They had avtomodiles and carriages, and their y | expenses, Mra, Kavaneugh says, wore over $90,000 a year, Mra, Kavanaugh, in her divoree papers, remarks that Ler dresses alone cost $3,000 a year. Mra, Kavanaugh declares that she bo- game..suspicious of her. husband leat. winter because of his frequent ab- sences. He would leave her at the Waldorf, she avers, and remain away over night, explaining afterward that he had been called out of town. She secretly engaged Charles J.Roberts, a detective, to shadow him, Kavanaugh and his wife were! then stopping at Hotel “en Byck;.in Albany. A Letter of Penitence. Two days later, she says, she re- ceived this letter from him: ‘te. “Dearie—I am eo ead, and we havo cxed_each other so much. “You say you have heard so many things that I have done, and no married min that know Tas not done-very-taych mor; ‘This te no” excuse for-me;*nd-love- goes to any one in these matters from me, and I swear that you are wrong as to my having anything with that party or Mrs, C., or the other you name, 1 will admit that ‘Thursday morning's affair looked badly. ‘Now as to the divorcee, it should be avoided. You and your mother and Edward can take a three Or. four tnonths’ trip abroad, and oa your Te turn eyen this ugly course can, de avolded), tor the settlement matter can take place now, making you indep¢nd- nt of me and free to do as you like, 4 "J" stands for Janitor, The man who does right The work that’s assigned hint By day and by night. ‘'Tis plain, then,-to see That he‘is no dunce, And make note, a World Ad, Wil bring chim at once, “ANY DAY, 15 | where you choose. taken away from me with ih ny |e ing you and well Sete go when and where and with whom ‘ou choose, and I will go and live with my father and mother. People who cannot agroe often live this Way even when a divorce could be had. “Do please try and avold it You can bo absolutely Independent of me In every way, and you can live IT am consclous of ow IT have wronged, but to have you no chance of ever being with you again will be the greatest “scram of my Ife. — “gt, Peter denied our Lord, but after- ward became almost the Chief of the 3. Many & man or woman has Aposters uc nuye been helped back to goodness and loved by the one sinned fgainst. it Is hodle to forsive, even though one may not e: forget. My sins have Not beet against my love for You, bul have come because of the drift- Ing life of the past nine months, I am tri in the future as Ioam praying God to haye me do, that he will forgive me. “You bay YOu have y Weiland T am. ao glad of It, but mv Judy Pudy pet hamesky whiolt he called me) ts 4 Beyond my reach 1! you per can Ive now without this di- thus avold paining those who be) phic aist. We. vores land love ua and at the xame tme-deny our! enemies the chance vf cabal, Nothing ir death could. make me feel as as alnco-laat ‘Thursday morn- “{ have been a dog, m wretch. a vile cfeatura, an apoloRy” for Ago. have sitined mortalis aga! a Weetert, Prost perfect and the sq ities wontan Clever knew,” an, Hast the agrest, would ) to God that Lhad Med before’ roftend- ed her. 1 and: dey mive.me 1 chanoe, A you. es re iy penttent, and I feel that if I do|€ a husvahd. |tant of the Four The Comp ANNA A, ROGERS, Plaintif, 1 Ds PHE AMERICAN WOMA ant. laint. N,Defend- Anna A. Rogers, the plaintiff in the above entitled action, docs t fotth and publish as folloves, to-wit) That the modern woman fails to rest- igo that marriage 4s woman's work veins at the footsteps of the altar. That she treats marriage as a beauti- ful dream instead of a dignified duty. That she has what the au- thor calls feminine megatomanta, which in the vernacular we call a ‘swelled head.” Up to the present time no great religion, deserving the name, has ever been founded by a 1 —tcoman.; no vital tant aystem of philozbphy; no code of laws either formulated or admin- datered. That the rock on which most Amert- can marriages go to pleces ts the Dbrasen Calf of Self, woman being _the-calf, of courze. That Amiertoan | wives Hve and dress far deyond their husbands’ means. That “the indefinadle charm," the sa- the mystery of woman- hood are fast passing awoy; they consider it a. gaucherts to diueh, shyness a laughable anachrontem, sentiment “siokening nonsense,” “courtesy “bad form,” and s(t couse * for wonder that a few months after marriage a girl so often finds her husdand disillusioned and in an ugly reactionary mood? TMES THE WF BES AND CN OF HS EMPLOVER Bartender Leaves Behind His Own Family and Warrant for His Arrest. EQward Donnetty, the handsome bar- tender at Charles Knoblauch's New York Hotel Exchange, No, 412 West Thirty-fifth street, went awey from there yesteriay, He took with him the billowing posserviots’ of Knobtduch: Mrs. Knoblauch. Fred Knoblauch, eged nine, and An- nie Knoblauch, aged seven. One tin box containing $1,115, One trunk containing Mra. Knob- lacch's clothes. Incidentally Donnetly-left-dehind. him a. wife and five children at No. 4% West ‘Thirty-third street: also a warrant for his-arreat on a charge of non-eupport. Knoblauch, who runs a saloon and employment agency for hotel walters, employed Donnelly threo weeks ago. At the same time Donnefly moved his wife and five children into @ flat over a owned by Knoblauch. Took” Mer to a Ptente.- ‘When Donnelly “had been at Work a week’ Knoblauch summoned him from behind the bar one day and assigned him to escort Mra. Knoblauch, a comety, young woman, to a picnic at Unton Hill, N. J, It was early the next morning when Mra, Knoblauch and Donnelly got back. " For two or three hours pretioud to their-arrival -Knobiauch —declaimed—to all in the saloon what he would do to hin wife and bartender. The crowd. re- mained in the hope of seeing 'a fight. But there waa no fight. Knoblauch gave an Imitation of a deaf-and-dumb man when his wife arrived. The next day, to eet even with the bartender, he evicted Mra, Donnelly and her five’ children from their flat Above the saloon, Donnelly kept right | on working behind the bar, but Knob- jauch considered accounts even. No man” he declared, ‘can 40 jairt that I don't make him sorry.”” Evene Up, All Right. Mrs. Donnelly moved her furniture and ohildren to the Thirty-thord street address. but her husband did not fol- low, When she went to the saloon after Aim he told her he was fixing up a acheme to get even with Knob- Jauch, | "Be patient,” he afvised. “Let me ‘take my time. T'l} make him sorry he | Over dispossessed y: | Being unable to lve on’ advice and i promises and equally unable tog any money from ‘her Yiueband, Donnelly went to the Weat Side Police urt yesterday and secured a war- Fant charging Donnelly with non-sup- port. She asked that it be served in the, evenin Knob! to some ‘business yesterday afterngon. In his absence Mrs. Knoblauch and her {wo children and the iin -box departed Then Dodnelly faded away. Doudtienn he conalders»himself even uch, me Aa Ran Capt, Gerardin Dena Benjamin M. Gerardin, adj bh Reatment, Nation: yesterday at his np street, after a ne! Hé war fAfty-three 1 Capt, i Guard, N, home, No. Mngering i) 5 years old. For neatiy tiny’ years Gapt. Gerardi; was @ midmber of the Sete Death due to in the world, and, failing to realtee | {t, has the germs.of divorce in her discovery in sci-| ence ever made by her; no impor- Miorent! downtown’ ta altend | American Woman Called to the Bar to Answer Indictment That Marriages Here Are a Fatlure| { By Nixola Greeley--JSmith. ! ate HE American woman to the| 2 bar. The complainant {s Mrs. | Anna-A; Rogers: The indictment is an article in t | Atlantic Monthly for September, called “Why American Marnages | *Fail,”” and the charges must be an-| swered by every woman. Her arraignment of the American woman is very cleverly and inter. estingly stated, very terrible if true, but, oh, how presumptuous and how unjust if the author, who follows) the methods of French justice and acts both as prosecutor and judge, should fail to prove the charges she advances, And 1 think she does. ‘The gravest error into which she falls is perhaps the statement that women haye done no work of real_account in the world of art or litera ture or invention. If against this statement could be set only the two names of George Eliot | and Georges Sand it would be refuted. And in these very names them: | selves—tho masculine pseudonyms of two of the world’s greatest women— 1s found a partial explanation of the reason why more ‘women have not ‘striven for greatness—the power and prejudice of man which these sur-| mounted by wearing trousers at least in a literary sense, Love is the| paramount passion of woman's life, and she has too often sacrificed Ler brain and her individuality upon its altar, That under ali ofrcumstances she should continue to do eo is Mrs. Rogers's claim; thet she has not done so is her accusation. : ‘ HAS PART IN IT ALL. i Woman és as much the mother of man’s ideas as #he sa the mother of his children. Who ehifl say Dante had a greater share in the Divine.Com- edy than Beatdce, whose beauty and whose goodness inspired 1 Who} may determiné which contributed the greater portion to Petrarch's son- nets, the poet’s pen or the loveliness of Laura which touched it with sacred fire? C Every great work of music or art or literature has a father and « mother as much as every child has, and it is often as tmpossible ¢o tell which parent a book or a painting more resembles, as though it were a human baby. y ‘The women of today are individualists, more so 4n America than any- where else perhaps. Why should they not be? Even though it has taken hundreds of years, their transition out of the harem into the forum has been sudden and swift The very Institution of monogamy promotes ind! vidual. Jfa man lf to have put one wits he wants her “different."— He admires and loves her for her differences from other women—not for her points of resemblance. And to meet his ideal of her—which Mrs. Rogers contends {s her life work—aha has to be an “individualist.” wanted her to be. She has. been his footstool when he preferred to be worshipped. She is now his goddess merely because he chooses to adore. WGN’T LEAVE PEDESTAL. But once having made, the American man undoubtedly has, her a goddese—Mrs, Rogers spoke of her delfication—it would be unreasonabie to expect her to step down from her pedestal. She will never do it. “That she is a jexlous- goddess or 2 selfish-or- intolerant -goddess,-save 4n exceptional Instances that prove: nothing at all, I deny. A few idle, childless women living tn apartments and hotels in the larger cities—the female Oliver Twists of life, always clamoring for more—may justify the oritielam. But what..about the great masa of American women, the farm- ‘ers’, wives, tolling from sunrise to sunset; the married women in factories, the workingmen’s wives with the problem of apportioning a $10 a week in- come among as many children? Can any of these, who would not even claim to own their own souls, be accused of individualism? Women demand more of men to-day than ever before, it is true. It may be that in individual instances they give less. But as a eex, I believe we still realize that of Jove and tenderness and sacrifice, !t 1s mere, blessed to give than to receive. How much of what the world calle individualism In--women means the sacrifice of what that individual woman holds most dear! How much of what Mrs. Rogers calls woman's “present ephemeral successes at self-eupport” represents the Immolation of her own hopes of happiness in marriage by the duty of supporting an indigent family! HAS MANY “SPHERES. —— ae SeST : Woman is born to be a mother, as so many eritics of women rather eedlessly and platitudinonusty -tnform us. But must woman ‘whose -prob- ‘ability of life is seventy years dedicate -fifty-of-them 4o-uselesmess because he may bear children during perhaps a score? Man is born to be a father, too, and his usefulness in that particular direction {s much more extensive and protracted. Yet his right to other occupations than having children has never been questioned. Why should ours be? What js called “individualism” !n the American woman {s simply a belated awakening to the fact that happiness, or, more accurately, the vegetable well being of ay agreeably enslaved woman, 1s dearly purchased at the price of freedom, | It is part of, the divine discontent which has made-alf-the great things in the world, At the present time Jt may bring ‘about more divorees, as Mrs. Rogers contends, but eventually ‘it ) will mean better husbands, better wives, better children and homes founded FoUWD 6.EHR-OLD [CASS CHADWICK FOUND 5-YEAR-OLD ADNAN BUNDLE, BLIND, SEES AGAIN 1 North | with her son, Emil, in tha Ohfo pent- Fifth ontreet, Wiidamaburg, was going | tentiary, where she has been confined home early to-day when he heard, not | ror the past two yearg, serving a ten | the conventional cry, but a lusty bel-| years’ sentence for wrecking the Ober- |low from a bundle on the steps of the | jin National Bank, Mra. Cassie Chad- Wiliam Urhart, of No. Kings County Bank at Kent avenue | wick muffered a collapse’ that left her, and. Broadway, temporarily les blind. She was “Bome one has left his bundle after | carried to the hospital, where the prison | | banking hours,” said Urhart, peeling off | doctor found: her In a chill, het eirou- jwevetal layers. of warm newspapers | lation almost stapped: twhich awathed the cries. Contrary to| Under atrong restorat! all custom, he not a bit surprised |in about twenty minu to find a small child inmide the wrap-| and atiil aightle: | pings making: the noise. |The ‘physician sald that the collap ‘The only strange part was that the |Was die to the strain Mra, Chadwick « revived | ry weak Women from the beginning of the world has been whatever man/ | |Arratyned by Anna A. Rogers for Alleged Grabe Shortcomings and Misdeeds, a Flea of “‘Not Gutity’ Is Entered by Nixola Greeley-Smith, Who Makes Spirited Defense and Declares There Is No. Evidence to Support the Charges, _ The Answer. ANNA A. ROGERS, Plaintiff, [THE AMERICAN.-WOMAN,-Delend: he |" .ant. u Im the case of Mra. Anna A. Rogera ys, The © American Woman, Nixola Greeley-Smith, for the aove-named defendant, enters a-gencral dental, to-witt It ta not true that women have done no work of real account: in the scorld of grt or Mterature or inven: ton. Ry Woman ts as much the mother of man's ideas os she is the mother of hia children. Why should not the women of to-day be individualists? Even though it has taken hundreds of years, their transition out of the harem into the forum has been sud- den and awift. ed her to be. Having made her a goddess, tt would bo unreasonable to expect her to atep down from her pedestal, Bhe tolll never do it. : That she s a jealous goddess or a acifish or intolerant goddess, save An exceptional instances, I-deny, —— }ot-pHttate-coinpantes-the-parchmss of | broward, deputy suncriniendent of 3 Asa sea I Belleve we still realize that of love and tenderness and sacrt- foe, tt 12 more blessed! to give than to receive. Man ts born to be a father, yet rls right to other occupations has never been questioned. Why should ours ber What ts called “individualism” in the American woman is simply a be- lated awakening to the fact that happiness is dearly purchased at the price of freedom. BOOKMAKER LOST ROLL: 2 WOMEN | ARE ARRESTED Detectives. After Severa Days’ Wait Capture Girls at Ferry Landing. Florence Edwarda and May Burges, handsome women, who say they live at No. 6 Grand atreet, Jersey City, had Just atepped from a Twenty-third street ferry in Manhattan to-day when Centrat Office Detectives Henry and Kane ap- proached and said: “We want both of you. charged with robbery.” ‘The detectives have been waiting for the young women for da: after a com- plaint was made by Frank Offerman, a bookmaker, of No, 7 Eaat Twenty-sov- enth street, who alleges the women souk $1,700 from him {n a cafe last week. Offerman, who hails from the West, ays he entered a cafe some nights ago and was atruck by the handeome ap- pearance of two young women at an opposite table. He engaged in con- yersation, and then told them he was- bookmaker, and that he always carried large sum of money with him. He dently was very much pleased with hifiself, but he was no more pleased than his two new friends were at this announcement. ‘What's good at Sheepshead for to- morrow?’ asked one of the women. “Play Batlot in \the fourth race to e Imit,"” advised Offerman, @ two women were bard to con- Neither wanted to risk her money on @ foolish tip. One: that Offerman show her his ‘‘dope’ wheet. This he was willing to do, in pita of the tent that the $1,700 waa in the sheet. Hb forget ali about the money, #0 pleased was he with his friends. He Just handed over the aheet and the woman took sheet, money and all and disappeaféi.? Then her friend disappeared. ‘Then Offerman told the police. a Tou are eee WANTED SUMMONS FOR ®USBAND WHO IS DEAD. Magistrate Orders Woman, Grose Conduct Astonished Him, Sent to Bellevue. “My huaband has not supported me in twenty-one yeara,") nald Mra, Mary Farrel, a middle-aged woman, to Mag- istrate Wahle in Yorkville Police Court als set y | during her son's visit; boy was five years old and couldn't tell | ad \ndexgone Ls | nything about himself except to howl: | thet hii rede EAI RL ta) enas ned | Urhart took him to. the Bedford ave- |) Officers /at the penitentiary wald Inst i nue station, where he showed be could night that Mrs. Chadwick had entirely | \ tommy, bit mum on Sry Chadwick obtained $3,210,007. be- | After a mealhe was tween Jan. Hf01, and her arrest. in Tek. jn dgans from individuaic and bank | ‘on notes purporting to jliave been rigned | by. Andren Carneale. ree tn Brooklyn, lda't talk at all except cry, ile ts aw five-year-old, blvevoved kidusa, with | t oF inras Foattiren Wg atin SUNDAY. WORLD WANTS res He Finaa pets asc _ WORK MONDAY WONDERS. igh Brattes ane err shosa j i to-day. “I want you to iasue a sum- mona for him,’ continued th» woman, “{ have never bofore applied for uny money from John, bee: eT atwatss | figured that he neadea It all to cere for ‘himeelf, You see, he is a dhrd- working pian, Judge.” NS “Well, If you care for him and know where he Is, why don't you go to him? Tell bh) oy want to be. with him. 7 way for folks to Ket along. Have ) Been Nim latety? No. judge: not for twenty-one years’ Well, how In the world, woman, am T to Issue a summons for'him. Where lhe no’ “Don't know. fudge; T buried ht mover! Yat PIAL Fhaye, in _Calviry Ceov The Magistrate ten tolt OMrer CH ‘anaugh to send the woman. over Bellevue and have Ser piaced. tn obrervation: ward. She Rava her ad dress as No. 109 Second avenue, at NEW YORK BEST CTY ON EARTH ~ SHS CARNE Millionaire Praises Its Great- ness and Beauties in Speech at Glasgow. WILL SOON BE RICHEST. No Cher Capital Can Rival Her in. Public Utilities— Points. on Ownership. GLASGOW, Sept. 17.—Andrew Car- negie this aftetnoon appeared as an eulogiat of the municipal government of New York, compared with the gov- ernment of British cities, in a apeech of the cornerstone of the Mitchell Li brary. He said: “New York js held up before the world by her own yélidiw press as aunk whatever, To one who gets away from New York for half the year and 1s him greatly. He compares New York with London and fnds that upon these matters New York fs in advanc Continuing, Mr. Carnegie contrasted iw: York's water supply. with the as- sured future of 10 gallons per head— more than double the usual aupply in Europe for 8,000,000 people—with Lon- Gon's meagre supply, atill in the hands which would cost whereas ‘New York’a supply was se cured, oheaply, by « commission, through foresight in purchasing prop- erty when its market value was small. He eed New York's parka, her wisdom jin buying 7,000 acres wh: there were many. miles of drives through real woods, and said the Thames embankment was fine work for London, but what was it when, com- Pared with the Riverside Drive of New York, the like of which no other city possessed, and which was being extend- ed seven miles? if Mr, Carnegie then described New York's wide avenues, {tu subwaya with <normoua — sims, express trains of unequalled specu, which the city would obtain In fifty years without cost; its 23 miles of wharfage, whero granite was replacing ‘wooden plers, which were New York's own and from which it would derive an enormous revenue as a result of its thirty years of! effort; its commission appointed to reduc: } Aged Patrick Fallon Thinks of pital, F Manhattan. Unually calls for his daughter, Nelit his-only Mving relative: of The Evening World. Fallon said: n | to housekeeping and I tried to .maine tam the Httle ‘home, in iniquity, with everything going to] ola and nobody wanted’ the bad and with nothing creditable| driving alonk Prospect Park on Satur- day afternoon c overturned Woman from the deginning of the) able to look on her froma distance there| thrown -torld hoe been thatever man want: | oF? -three-or-four things that comfort] sheubiers—striitheg fire: IGHTS, FOR LIFE FOR GIRL'S SAKE Daughter Left Alone and Lives On. On a cot in the Kings County Hoe-— whith his. neck -broken and the uli fractured. Nes Patrice East Twenty-third ” street, He is conscious and con- To a reporter “Up to about four years ago I Hyed Manhattan with my wife and fidren. We were happy until oven: the children sickenéd and died. One by one thoy went until all I had left was | - my wife and Nellie, who had worried death of our other children. broken-hearted Gelivered at luncheon after the layin€| qnen 1 had only Then my wife: greatly over the ~ became them, We two went \ and followed Nellle. but Nellle got» jon with a private family, Then I was Jeft, alone. T had grown me. I wae when the horse bolted, the wagon and I was to the ground, my hea@ ang "I realized at once that life for me only wan a master of daygfand. oh, It ‘sa hard thing for a father’ to die and leave his daughter alone in the world: Sho ts much m beautitut girl, too, not yet twenty-three years old, with large. bine eyes and long golden hair, Ob. Nellie! my darling.”” Here the old man broke Into tears the hospital, will not allow an opsra- tion to be made, but 1s trying to heal the fiicture by means of @ brace 1h aimliar cased where operations have been performed they have proved fatal, he said. ———— CITY DEATHS FEWER. ‘There waa a large decrease in deathy uring the past week over that of the second week in September, 1906, ac- cording to the statistics Issued yestem day by the Board of Health. Phe ree- ord Jaat year shows that 1,522 persone died, but thie year there were 4A3 faw= er deaths, This was due, Dr. Dariing- ton believes, to the weather and the improved sanitary conditions in the elt Park &Tilford| Founded 1840 PURE CONFECTIONERY Vand electricity; ita Ing erected at a cost of $6,250,000, with its hundred dranches, seventy-elght of which the clty accepted in one jikorn- Ing, ‘the largest wiwlesale operation | ever had in this Mae.” “These,” Mr. Carnegie explained, the ‘important utiles of the ‘are Water, gas, electrinity, subways | wharves, and inet wat not least, hii) public “Ibraries, I of no etty |! kuew which rivals New Yerk in all of these combined, although several may 4 so in respect to one or mera, i alet that, forty-five rork-wilt the Tioheay city of tho world in the ownership ef re ducing properties wht her nothing. Bho has ow would find ‘some tation, Referring to mu ownership, Mr. Carnegie said ct Id preserve the titles in all cases and only lease fra: chises for periods as short-as practl- cable, This fad been done in New York and was becoming the rule with all American cities. In conclusion, Mr, Carnegie remarked: “There {# much to regret and condemn in elty government in America. Taken as a whole we are far behind you. Ti character of the men throughout the Vnlted Kingdom who dovote themselves to thelr reapective commimties Js of the high A finer body of men does not | those_who_govern the citien | ritain, and also than. und tqwns of Great Treland, and It {x a natter of pride to 4e—Beots throughout world that Glaxgow ranks among the foremos: of thein AYE” Tn the morning, Mr. Carnogie ad- drossed the [Abrariins' Association. He described the jorican for training ibrparlans, saying that whereas in the pam men ‘of tho highem skill | were placed in charge of collections of curtos and plotures, Mbrariana were chosen haphazard. Only recently | had thay teen recognised as members | of a profession. 1GOLETTO” GIVEN AT. | THE WEST END THEATRE. ‘There was @ creditable performance of “Rigoletto by the Van den’ Berg | Opera Company at the West End Tne- atre jast night, Achille Albert! had the title role of i's Vengetul dui “ back; Mlle. Ely Barnato was Gilda; Henry Watroua, Sparafucile; Geovga the Duke; Pauline Perry, and William Bhuster, Mr. Van den Berg con: ducted, and all the principals were well received by. a large audience. The meat eater and the vegetarian alike are charmed with the Grape- Nuts food. It has:a crisp taste, with the delicate flavour of grape=sugar, and is instantly ready for the table without any cooking: whatever Grape-Nuts furnish one of the daintiest sci entific dishes ever _ placed on a breakiast table. ““There’s.a rea- son.” Read ‘The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs, D There can be no better Candy made—there is no better Candy made than Park & Tilford’s. “Best quality” controls it from the ection of fmest material to a perfection of ‘finish. Sold at ail our stores and all principal druggists. Deliveries made out of town. 438 Fulton St., Brooklyn, |W ednesday Spec | Ladies’ Prince Chap Suit: | Worth $16.50. Of fine black and blue broad-! | cloth in new nobby model coat, satin-lined; turnback cuffs; doue |} ble vent in packs skirt full sel Soha sae id for FALSE TEETH Tr. Wernet's Powder Makes plog, - Wabbling, turing false teeth M14 perfectly tight atthe liewt appileation, Without tl wee te Le