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———siepected bh: ! | $160,000 OF CITY CASH TIED UPN BOROUGH BANK Comptroller Metz Says That Some of His Own Money Is Also There. HE DREW OUT. §$15,000.| This Was; Day: Before Suspen-| sion, but-He Didn't Know | | ‘Bank Was Shaky. " The Grand Jury investigation into the affairs of tia Borough Bank of Brook-| dyn touched” to-day the ‘International Trust Company, which" waa organized by 'nten Interpsted in the Borough Bank _ And the Orlental Bank: of Manhattan. | + One, Xithe witnesses was George W. Adams, cashler of the Orlentai Bank. ¥) took with him to the Grand Jury room a biz book ¢ taining records of “transactions between the Orten “THE EVENING WO rT pes | pias MAY RLD. WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 20, 1907. eet sige Prominent Society Foik in Arena Boxes at Horse Sho | | Watching Exhibits Over Heads of Passing Throng Below A DOWNTOWN —Intormeonat “Com Beny wax formed the State Superin- tendent of Banks was told that t corporators had $500,00 In cash as tal and, $200,000 additional dn cash Becuritics as reserve fund. Ks and) sfcurities displayed were | watisfactory to the Superintendent c Banks, and x certifi ©. empow the International Trust Company to do! business wag issued On Borrowed Funds. Since the {allure of the Borough Rar ft has come out that much of the al- Jeged capital and securition of the Inter- | national Trust. Company were mi dorrowed from, tye Horoukh Bank. It | Diatrict-Ain i erney ott | i Kings County that part of it was the $165,000 cash deposit of the McGutre estute in the Borough Bank, —The—most {portant —a = Poenaed for to-day is John J. Cuddjh $r., a director, Mr, Cuddihy ts execu, ter of the McGuire estate and had so much confidence in the oiicers of the Borough Bank that he deposited $16,009 ©f the oes}. of the estate in the instt- tution. It 1s charged by Samuel Whitehouse, counsel for the board of directors, that thia $145,000 was used by Willlam Gow, | Howard Maxwell and Aythur D. Camp-| bell in furthering thelr outside specuia- | tive schemes. .It was an Inactlye ac-| count—a deposit for safekeeping—and therefore easily manipulated. Mr. Cuddihy ts sore and full of in-| formation. He was to have testiiled yesterday, but an altack of illness kept aim confined to his home. Clty Money Tied Up. me Borough Bank. became known to- @eg. lt was placed there by Comptrol- Yer Metz, who also had a personal owunt in the bank and drew out $ the day before the failure ail didn't draw out the money because | I'fnew the bank was going to close, explained the Comptro neon, “1 had about $2200) or $23,000 on deposit. “A note for $10,000 came due and a friend of mine wanted me to tend bh $8,000. I drew out $10,000 to pay the note and 9,000 for my friend, The remainder of my deposit and the city's money are | ett] thera” = | Campbell Engages Counsel. Arthur D. Campbell, former cashier et the Borough Bank, foreseoing trouble, has engaged Stephe> © iscid win and’ Albert R., Lato. to look out for his legal righta In ‘Any develop- ments that may arise out of the troubles of the bank, Mr. Baldwin said in tocaay: [hurrying a dis auick on the ne: set out in pursuit of the fugitive com~ “Arthur Qampbell has bean. made ‘a scapegoat by President Maxwell and one of the djrectors of the bank. Everything he did that has bee: criticised’ was done under orders, was merely a clerk. He did not profit to the exent of a penny by any of the “transactions. All he made outside of fs salary from the Borough Bank lame in the whape of presents from ‘Mr, ‘Maxwell, who uscd his name in NVall_atreet speculation. <F TIRS Shes ond ALTRED VANDERBIZE iS WOMAN THOUGH FYHOLE SES BURCLRS WOR the Capture of Two Qld Offender: A nightatlok and ¢ Patrolman Scher Alfrod Gerber int ‘eand and drove \ of him with his gun. Both men are and both hav. were held by Yorkville Pol An examination According 10 Sci man's screams In hefore daybrexk SM 1-2 he saw two fell Court In $8,018 each for he heard “a wo- st one and then the other in the 2wo citizens, ef\t of Carl Mersch at and the pair picked up thelr tools and as given five ye ‘The excuse that Ciinpbell acted un- der orders In carrying out questiona- | Glen Side. Fe atte Stam tt dle transactions ia mot 4 Dut It merver to paltlate whn ever the man fial,done that ts open to told fully) and freely everything authorities. He has gene has turned over to the bank everything he owned—bla honie. its automooilo and even hin library. Pieces of real outaide his home property whien t recorda show he has transferred to the bank were really owned by. tad bank ptt the Utles stood ni lila nue.’ Mr, Balawin said he has also been ner and John Smith, oy trlal cs : -the be peed te dnd Feh < critlolam. Sines the bank-cloted te ting reinliicd, by Fone oy. de maintains that the affairs o knew that would be of assistance to the the Jenkins concerns a ais farsqer,” Hw and that the rey -Generat Saturday es borfar— and took charge to-day hear motions iONS- “OLD AGE. As the years of human life draw to a close the comforts of old age are seen to depend ypon the'm ner in-which one has “feathered his nest.’” makes must one li@ upon, the time to, wi ings if you would spend in pedce an! DAILY ORAT your declining yea comfort, on To-morrow may be too late, so answer World Estate’! and ‘‘Business Op; Ads. to-day, gain Investments they prove which your fu'sce hi ppiness prosperity will depend. read’ and MPLOVER TRIED 10 MAKE LOVE 10 HER GIRL SAYS Magistrate Holds Him in $1,000 Bonds to Keep the Peace fora Year. . ¢ citizens enabled | -Samuel Goodman, a manufacturer of novelties. at, No. 72 Murray street, wae charged to-day before Magistrate Har- nis, In the Tombs Court, with insulting Anna Smith, seventeen years old, of No. S Fulton street, Brooklyn, who was {n hla employ, |Miss’ Smith, who su very pretty, sald that yesterday af- ternon Goodman Invited -her Into’ his private office and endeavored to make love to her. She resisted his advances “and told her parents about the matter. They consulted with Assistant District- Attorney Paul Krotel, who, after hear- ing the story, had Goodman taken to court by Detective tzsimmons, Goodman dented the charke made against him but Magistrate Harris be- Meved Miss Smith's story when an- other youns, woman deolared that the prisoner had frequenthy placed his arm around her walst in an_ affectionate} manner: "A married men, which you say you are,’ said Magistrate Harris, In hold- {ng Goodman in $1,0% bonds to keep the peace for a year, "should know better tha to place his Arm around flopped. ‘If the evidence in this case was corroborated} awonld shold for Govdman, aiter waiting in court for two hours, secured a bondsman. a PAINTER FALLS FRO THIRD-STORY- WINDOW. Lands on Stone Steps and Sus- tains Injuries That Wiil Prob. ably, Prove Fatal. David Thomas,\a painter, lost his balance while standing on a window in the rear of an ‘apartment on jd Moor of No. 338 East Seventy- oid street to-day and felon tie (one steps leading into the basement of bullding. He waa picked ncon= ‘us and taken to-’Uie Presbyterian pital, Hix skull was crushed $n e the right ear. Thomas, wan twenty-elght, years old Uved “at No, 167 Ludlow street. Hinbed out through the window and nimbly Jumped back and the casement, He used no straps fans say ‘Thomas has small of Mving. Pp. "STABBED MAN TO DEATH AS CROWD LOOKED ON.| ALO, » refusaloot Lutet logambling debt — w Inbvacpietn to pas Kenjen! alleged he owed him, Gam- bacurta to-day drew a atiletto and stabbed Femeni to death at the corner of Misaiasipp! and Ohio streets, where, Hh the presence of nearly 100 \[tallans thelr vay to work, the two Dosing men had : won arguing over the alleged ho Itallany nude ldeiionstration, .but werp scattered. by ithe police. i x A WHITE RIBBON AT HORSE SHOW W. H. Grand, Driving Heath- ‘erbelle, Leaves Garden When _ It Is Awarded Him. Society got a thrill. at the Horse Bhow thia afternoon, when W, H. Granda, driving Paul A. Sorg’s Heatherbelle to a runabout {n Clase 38, insulted. the | Judges by: refusing to take the fourth aw.rt, snapped hi horse's head from the hand of the attendant who nought to attach the white ribbon and drove disdainfully from the ring. Supt. Frank Clark, of the Horse Show, ran after the retreating runabout with thé ribbon In-fix hand ‘and informed Mr. Grande that he would either accept the ribbon and &pologize to the committes of judges, or else be oxcluded from the show. ‘The society horseman and olub- man again spurhed the honorable men- tion and drove from the Garden. Mra, John Gerken-and Reginald Van- derbilt won the two first awards in this | class and were interested observers of Mr, Grande's djsplay of temper. Mre. Gerken‘s Shopgirl, which won the diue, his been exhiijited many times in tie same class, asd. once mie refused to accept a third award. The red ribbon was, awarded to Regihald Vanderbilt's Alert and the third prize to Lord Nel- on, exhibited by Tonzo Sausage. During Mr, Grande's driving of Heath- érbelle he’ was loudly applauded from. svas passed by for the first three {ribbons ft was unauthorized by j tie Comminstoner ga Association until yesterday to obtain a | An the result of wh) Raymond} ® uk Was captured after a Chop Down the Bridge. ” By <order of Police Commissioner} Bingham the runway soridge built! into: foeks of “yoonss ‘the Fourth avenue entrance to the Gar-|many.of whom drove: and rode thelr den was chopped down by a staff from the Buredu of Encumbrances this after-j | folks who wauntered to thelr box: Ai afternoon's social chat the attend- noon, making it very. Inconvenient for | exhibitors to drive their equipages up to | the level of the tanbark. This bridge, which hax been ‘at Horse ‘bhows ror years, enabled the teams and equipages of exoiditors to drive from the street level to the level of.the tan- Dark, ‘ Horse ‘Show Association, ance was brought to the attention of the Police Commissioner, He directed his deputy, Mr, Bugher, to Investigate, her learned that no application Mr. Bug! for a permit had been made. Thereupon e the Horse Show permtt’ from the Board of Aldermen, The application for the permit was presented to the board yesterday, and it was oppoxed by Alderman Downing, When: Gen. Binapam learned this to- day he give orders that the bridge ould be chopped down forthwith, ‘The Commissioner haa also refused to detall any policemen In the Garden, How Mr, Guyér Was Thrown, The monotony’ of, the preliminary events at tho Horre Show to-day wan relloved by the strentious antica of se eral green Jumpers, and in one case Charles Guyer, « wellknown horseman of Boston, nurrow Jury. His mount, Leroy, a big, re | | | wound the réing about his wriet, and boned chestnut gelding, balked several {imps at the four-foot hedge and re- fused to take off, Mr, Guyer perae- vered, however, and spurred the horse again and again at the hedge. Finally Leroy took the bit in hie teeth and raced at the hedge. When within a yard of it he rainmed his fore; foot In the thn bark and lifted his hind legs. Mr. Guyer turned a complete somersault in the u.r and landed on the other eige of the hedge, He had when the horse jerked pack from the barrier Guyer came through the centre of the hedge, taking some of It with him. The hunter plunged along, drag- King hie rider for neveral yards before he was caught and stopped. Though not badly hurt the young horseman was bruised and scratched. His red jacket was In tatters and his riding, breeches had lost some of thelr fullness. After he had been modestly draped in a blanket Mr. Guybr. limped from the ring ead sought the arnica and lotion department. Spending Honeymoon at the: 8Show, _Probably @he mest — enthusiastic couple in the Garden during the early event to-day were Mr, and Mrs, W. A, McGlbbons, They were ‘married only @ week ago, and decided to spent thelr honeymoon sin thin ctty, as Mr, MoGibbonx has a dosen entries in the show. Several of their entries are in the jumping classes, and both bride and bridegroom put thelr mounts through thelr paces during the oxer- vite hour, Mr. McGibbons, who la a millionaire, expects to. take. several tibbona to-day in either. the classern for hunters or in the gentlemen's and ladies’ naddie horse class The early half of the day's pro- Tamme was taken up with the exhibi, Yon. of hackne: Altogether seven een of hackneya were ‘shown—stall- d thelr get- These aplen- haughty bearing vastly admired by the ;-£r00ms and atablemen who made” up the greater part of the forenoon at- tendance, , The “atternoon pony: classes brouxh® tern to the “Garden, Uttle thoroughbreds, With’ the excep- tion of the children and the soctety for ance was slim. Col. Pabst Wins More Ribbons. Col. Fred Pabst, the Milwaukee brew- . Increased his already long string of \ribbona to-day by three more blues, one {red and a special resery { ¢ i When it was being built Inst week by | 50” £94 pony classes. former Chief of Police Hamilton for the | in the hack- he awunds’ for the hacknoys were as follows: Class 2— Yearling, Staillons. — Firat the fact that! prize, Redskin, owner Fred Pabst; seo- special ordl- | ond prise, General o€ Cornwall, owner W. C, Freeman, | Class 2(— TwotYear-Old Btalltons.— Tirst priac, Whilewall Wildfire, Fred Pabst owner; sejond prize, Land o Hurns, Jojin Mackay owner; third prize, | Prince of Ayr, rred badst owner, 1 Fortudatus, vv ‘reemun Ow her: winting firete,in Claa¥es 2), 27 and i Winner, Orange Ilosyom, Harry Don: non agent; special reserve prize io Fred Padst's Caynton Phyllly. Clasp %:—Stallions four yearn old ani four oftheir get; * Winner, ansfort, Agent. nthe pony Jans show (No, $4) Mr. Vat wor anothor bide With his Lady Kltty, Adbplton, Firebelle carried” off escaped serious in- we regrenplent Kars arr options fod eginald ‘Vanderpiit won\ the yellow with Misa Fowhadl, \ M ‘ jnye seventeen years old, Marry \Donnon |'T i BANISH MISERY —__+—__ | |Home Economic League Will Show All Comers How to ‘Tho art of home-making {s the foun- dation of prosperity and happiness,” sald Mrs. Julian Heath, President’ of the Home Economie League. “It ts b cause v0 faw wotnen undoratand this art or sclence of making a Home that there is 20 much misery and poverty in the world.” Mrs. Heath has had ten years of ex- perlonce in charttable work, and her statement $s conyinolng when she says poorer..ciaases the finst principles of idomestic science, hygiene dnd the care of children, by practical demonstration ‘and the philanthropic rant collectin The Home Econoinic League has set {twelf the task of teaching housckeep- ing to-all who are willing and anxiour to learn, end for that purpose har rented @ three-room flat at No, 41 Le- roy street. The fiat consists of a bed young en whom he employs, This }ije boxes, and many of his friends au-| 4) “ ui ung Hoey equine aristocrats were all shown| room, Kitchen, and sitting-room, which TRH, aT fama ON Tour rant haste bey apr —aympictized — with aimee he + t7 haat “amt —thetr—higtr-stepping-—-ain tis wie —40—bo— asad. asa dining-roo The rooms are all sunny, the sitting- League intends to ft it up both taste fully and hygienloally, and yet keen the furnishings Gf those who will come to, earn, _ The women of the nelphboring tene- ments are taking a: now kind of teaching, and the member: of the League have thctfully anc cleverly enlisted their sympathies and participation in the succ Aerprise DY kting them to discuss and advise on the Various advantages of different kinds of cooking stoves to be (ransformation (nat @ litte good wil Walls, Woodwork ahd floors, Once the fat has been completed, every brunch of domestic science’ will don farenervices. ‘The demonstrations will all be practical, n the sink or eriation on bow to ¢ pick MAN be Diaeked by hand ind the tone loaned before eye-witnensss. We re Clune 2.—Stulllone four years vis aMOUNt of practleal Gould Jover: First. prizi, “Oxtord, agcontense with & charming per White owner} ‘secdnd prize, Brandon, (MOP Alon years been, expert | Clas 22. Stallions years old: | HM ome to. belleve that this now Mist prize, Lowther Willan [AY hich has materialize’ now In| [At Moore ner: ascond prize, Wade! {9G Street. is the beat wav of setting iington tinder,\ E,W. Ogloby [RETR "Foor of much of! the owner; prize,\ Torcollght, Joun | touple and poverty in th Barry pwne {use districts whare Je Claus’ 13.—Champion\ prize for maroa| any ty, Diawe for Most ne the housewiGs will be undertaken and of the ald of domestic scence and lone and the beat ideas In nursing Genild training will be atthe service those women who come to. learn Care the bent way to tend the baby AA bes tauaht. ax “well ae the sens nd to witys of cookliiz and of keeping fo Ses Heath has ws co-workers Mrs. E i Caldwell, Mra. Fs Stewart Corbin, ra. George Prooks, Mrs. George Peonard Fisher, Mry. EH. Lane, ES ‘aa George, Phillpps and Mira Helen hare Collara MAKING THE HOME HAPPY: Do~Phis——_| at and infully, cut, ‘ John Watker,thecono that ,the two finest forma of philan-| thropy are teaching the wamen of the) 6) Leoom having thre windows, andthe! Within the meanr 1 interest jn. thin} 3 of the en-] instalied, and have arvused their sur | prise und aitenvion at the marvelous | hard work apd paint van Make on} GEYSER FLOODS S(YSCRAPER —___ Shoots Up Broad Exchange Building Elevator Shaft 4 and Rouis Tenants. CYLINDER HEAD BURSTS. Water*Pours Into’ Safety De-}. ' posit’ Vaults and Weis Elevator P. the Head ‘of a cylinder The hurating of in the elevitor ing Broad Ex street and. caused. an immense geyser to shoot up through the shaft, ang as a reault of- fices on the third floor of the bullding were flooded. The Standard safe depos- Ht Vaults In a mub-bdkement vers ‘tom- porarily put out of commission, and a numberof passengers {nother vars’ wore spitinkled by phe water as it fe At the extreme north ¢ battery of the elevators sop tote Midas Club the members take luncheon from ¢ to two every d Ata quarte to-day the car was packed with’ passen- gers and ad reached the seventh fioor {t af the sky-scrap- nge Biltiding, Broad qhange ‘place, to-day of one |when a Joud report was heard. The operator threw the safety clutch on/the elevator as’ it was within a. foot or so of the seventh floor, and the occupants scrambled hastily’ out. The report was caused by the burst- ing of the hydraulle cylinder which controls the plunger, and which reaches from the cellar to about the third floor, When the head~ Was broken water rushed out jn a heavy spurt and flood- ed Into the third. floor, The offices of the Standard Trust Company and the corrfdors were flooded, and the doors. of the—offiees had _ta_be clos land the cracks stopped up at the bot- tom to’ prevent any more water from | getting in. ‘The main body of the water poured down the stairwa street. A great crowd was attracted, and it,was with great dimculty that Intruders could be kept from the bulld- in MRS. PHILBIN tS HURT IN CAR-CARRIAGE CRASH. Her Driver and the Motorman Both | Thought Traffic Cops Sig- nalled to Go Ahead. Mra, Eugene Philbin, of No. 63 West Fifty-aecond street, wife of the former Diatrict-Attorney, ie kept to her bed to-day by. injuries received by being thrown when her victoria was hit at Forty-second street and Fifth avenue by a Crosstown car, Mra. Philbin had been shopping yea- terday afternoon, when her driver stopped to walt for a signal from the trafic man to croes Forty-second street, The car and carringe started lat the same time, end the latter was struck and rolled across the street, Mrs. Philbin was thrown out on her waa also thrown on his head, but not hurt Mrs. Philbin declined to make a complaint aguinet the motorman, SCHOOLSHIP ST. MARY’S ‘ USED FOR LECTURES. A ‘The achoolahip St. Mary's, which has | peen retired after being in the service|| of the Board of Education for more than thirty years, will be used for-pub- Me lectures under the auspices of the Board. ‘The vessel {s moored at tho {oot of Kast Twenty-fourth ‘street, to- ether with the sunbeat Newport, fhich in to replace It as a cruiser, The Bt. Mary's is to be used for recitation purposes. and for shopwork,- On Qiedhesday evening public lectures will be delivered on the gundeck. This evening Abraham Knechtel will give an {lustrated lecture on ‘Forestry,’ Keep In the of financial and socim: progress by clear, sound thinking anu p¥ompt action. These require a well-fed ‘brain and nervous” system. There 1s no food #0 well adapted to the purpose as wht bY KTAduAted of the schoois | be wugliic science, who have offered | 1 Pe Mon enough to give an airy dis-| fo scove. In the imodel yt she | RE Julian Heath, who combines wi] model flat the routine work Grape-Nuts This food, made from whole wheat and barley, Includes the phosphate of potash which combines with albumen in the + plood to replace . worn-out brain and nerve cellg. , Grape- Nuts will. help put you “up front’ and “There’s a Reason” | tan—inte—the-| ~ Front Line) fo Little’s Built.to-.Measure Furniture isa curious way to putit. However, Little’s Gran’ "Furniture + - tory ha heeded the New Yor Ker’s need o; compact: ness and crefved Chairs, little Bureaus, and the like. mniture that is comfortable, tistic and in an array to fit your. pocketbook and Your approval? Mortis Chaina, Cy : Wilting ese sie-7s of olid Mahosany of = Rockers. .<..-;.. $13.50 -Cellarettes,.- quartered oak. $16.50 Saunttoped onk’S22.75 : Rinkhna Blonsn. $278 : jerving Tables: $9;00 Grand Rapids Furalture— Direct from Factory to You. HERE'S A REASON for the: popularity of the Pease. piano; it’s because there have beer over 78,000-of th old to discriminating buyers in the last 63 years; and they’ never disap- | point, no matter how high the ex=> pectation. Fae Sold at- moderate prices on a 3. * year payment plan that is both practical “and economicat:— Used ianos of many good makes from 125 up. Excéllent pianos to rent. . Old instruments exchanged. Write.“ for catalogue. ° PEASE PIANO Co., 128 West: 42d St., Near Breadway, New York. Brooklyn Branch \ Newark Branch 657 Fulton st. 10 New St. Park ‘& Tilford’s Coffees are finest selections from the world’s Coffee Crop, , | reser eds panesially for ; ar] ilford inthe jj) world? greatest Coffee | | Markets. Park & Tilford | Coffees are always per- fectly matured and perfectly ‘roasted, yielding Coffee in |) ‘a perfection of fragrance side delicious cup quality. Finest:Genuine Java and Mocha..31c. Ib. ~P & T Rich, Heavy, Popular Blend, 24e. Ib. Choicest Maracaibo,....... sere 1Bc. Io, |) Deliveries made out of town ™ eA 4 Se =~ = : -Largest Eye Practice built up by prompt, efficient service and moderate prices. The Ehriich system retains Skilled Eye Doctors and talastwo complete factories. Sa ty and economy are the reault, Glasses Prescribed Only When Needed, A Moderate Charge for Glasses Only. Booklet, ‘Care of the Eyes,’ on request j Ehilich &S.ered. ESTABLISHED Nearly so Yours. 223 Sixth Aye,, Below 15th St. 450 Sixth Ave,, Below 22d St. 1274 Broadway, Bzlow 33d St, 217 Biway, Astor House Block. 10. Nassau :t, Near Ann St BLEMISHED FACE ? Dr. Pratt Can! iraighten ywur Crcuned Newey a) Nwturek Moat Clear you! A ALL Fa ie ch ©, Hle wal sheay jon, re Intended, Consultution Sree,” Houre > lu > Dally, And by xppoluiment, ON Gh 1122 Broadway, N.Y, Please mention World, “Founded of loiigest= experience ands