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{ THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, “COTTON KING" QUITS MARK TOSAVE IS SON “Health of Child More Impor- tant Than Money,” T. H. Price Says. defeat staring him in the face, forced a recess, while Grady for the rac. enator Who Was Kidnapped by ihg men was working for an immediate vote. - FANCHER TURNS UP. : Racing Men to Deteat Bill. _ A searching force was sent in all directions, and while the hunt wa hottest Fancher suddenly appeared at the Capitol. He was surrounded by the joyful reformers and told the most extraordinary story. of the unusual features pointed to a desperate attempt to delay the Sena- tor during the consideration of the race track bills. The Senator would not enter into details for publication, but strongly intimated that the op- position had resorted to methods that had been found effective many years ago, when the lobby organized entertainment committees to en- gage the attention of legislators whose presence in either body was Some inimical to its interests. ‘The Chautauqua Senator, whose return to the Senate was hailed with delight by the advocates of the bill and with consternation by its In order to devote the next five years ef his ilfe to the care of his only son, x Nite Beet ee a) an infant, Theodore H. Price, the opponents, appeared to have enjoyed -his experience and to have profited pbs eee: cates ig ata canta by it. all his d retired from the market It leaked out that he had been lured to a poker game, and, fortune and atranged to sell hia town house, his country place, his horses and carriages smiling on him, time passed quickly. In fact, the flight of time was noi his noticed by the Senator until the rescuing force found him. At midnight last night Fancher was called on “the 'phone. A friend ook the call as he was absent. Fancher was asked to go to the outs and his furniture. With his wife, son and his two CE GAEH he will soon buy an the go to France. will estate on the re he of Brittany, coast pf the city. When the Senator received the message he was advised not only place, the doctors say, where the to go but insisted on going. That was the last seen of him. little boy can live and recover his health, His friend recalled the telephone number this morning, and in this fway he was traced and set free from the “kidnappers”? by several mem- 4pers of Assembly. But for this incident the game to keep Fancher away | Mr. Price was the head of the firm of Price & McCormick, which failed for millions @ few years ago. work to rebuild his fortune, He went to and suc- would have succeeded. ceeded, after paying off fi tly the friend who received the ‘phone message for Fan- Gebtapthat were; moren moral Subsequently ¢ Pp & obligations. Since the downfall of Dan- cher recalled that the person who ’phoned to Senator Fancher had said that the matter was very important and that $1,000 was at s REFORMERS CLAIM VICTORY. Fancher on his return immediately announced his intention to vote for -the bill. ‘The first sensation of this momentous day came when Senator el Sully, Mr. Price has been the com- manding figure in the cotton market His whole life is wrapped up in his son, Theodore H. Price, jr., who is now) three and one-half years old. The child was sturdy infant up to a few months} and| #80, when he began to fail tn health ‘| Specialists who were called in dis- | | i | filled with spectators and representatives of the gambling interests, Grattan, who had been strangely missing from his usual haunts for |Tefome ers fringed the rear of the chamber, keeping an expeciant, | covered that the ttle fellow was sut- twenty-four hours, and absent from the Senate when the roll was called) Nervous eye on the Senato : eee eM THR GEN GE RE| this morning, suddenly entered the chamber at the heels of Senator). Dr. A. S, Gregg, secretary of the International Reform Bureau | snk trom a us cow. An pee | McCarren. The spectacle shocked the Hughes reformers and brought a which has been promoting the track legislation, confident and smil- AO Som. | 3 ing, was fully in evidence an 2 much of his attention to the move- Een eeteseital Ee ord tase round of applause from the opponents of the bill. Grattan had announced that he would vote for the bills and he was counted among the twenty-six lined-up for the Governor. Hence when he came in, figuratively manacled to McCarren, the hopes of the reform- ers slumped, as they saw their chances of victory fading, “We will win, anyhow,” was Senator Agnew’s answer to the qu as to how he stood. ANOTHER BOMB BURSTS. ments of John Sanford, S and strong ally of MeCar Lieutenant-Governor’s desk. GRATTAN WAS MISSING. | As the spectators quickly scanned the Senators there was a buzz of | excited talk. Senator Grattan, one of the men counted on by both sides|iength of time. ‘The doctors told ni to sway the final result, was missing. This fact was not only “mysterious, |he would have to establish But immediately another bomb burst. The McCarren men boldly |it was portentous. Al! recognized Grattan, as the key to the situa- lap en Gelceaiet spurns answered this boast by declaring that they had swung Cassidy and Wil-| tion. He had been practically in hiding since sterday morning, and his| was decided that Maine would no: ao, cox into line, and that these two men, who had been counted as doubtful,| whereabouts none could guess. Representatives of both the race track| 40d % sreet spectalist Issued an order would surely vote to defeat the bills. 1 Theodore H. Price, jr, to jand the reform nterests were hot on his trail for twenty-four ho sealing ae see Jolt No. 3 came when Senator Knapp, who had been coddled by the| failed to reach hi e Racing Commissioner, race horse breeder| throat of the child a number rf} eritnied ys ‘culous glands. The oj 1101 , Who occupied a prominent seat near the|fremey delicate and unusual as possible the little paticnt was re-| moved to Atlantic City, where he !s| | now in a private sanitarlum. | Mr. could not live in this climate for any s, but | France. | The fact that Grattan had been keeping- al of) EE POLO CGE) oly CSE AS? it fter M Pric Hughes forces, came out into the open and declared for publication that | sight the Governor's friends took as a favorable sign, but the racing con- ita an 2 aaaveratieetam He he would vote against the bills. | tingent made much capital of it for themselves. | made this statement: | "I got out of the cotton market ox) te Senator O'Neil, w been absent law that will prohibit all fe i % With the Senate Chamber jammed and friends and foes of racing] gto last week, and was said to be| cling. Te hee te ne LOrme Of EAM yegan to wind up my Dualness affairs |r circling about, buttonholing, arguing in groups and pairs, and all making, cons a spec in New Yo at duty rests on tie Legis emai’ von meeksua son Usconmidens tie health) claims to vict al S was on nd when the session opened. Seay eae e of my child of more importance than claims to victory, the Senators were called io action to-day in the final] eattoentell gamoling lthe mere making of money. Furure {He had been regarded as fight over the anti-gambling bills. The scene was most dramatic as the| most earnest supporters of the. bills, | « Se ss tne. Sere ae al|developments must establisa how long idi Ficer’ ing: 5 e hsenc 5 = fife: SALE at ce the Legis-| 7 shall be out of the market. My offic nd absence, easioned by ne i le presiding officer's gavel fell calling the assemblage to order. ae a ence oes HS pea ane He deplored a Governor! in New York will be open during my Senators Raines and Agnew had posted themselves at strong van- of the b! Nea EAN Gee the great evil/absence. which may stretch over tage points ready to rush a favorable vote for the Hughes bills, while sion opened in routine fashion| “We pro neater period of five years—possibly ten, . 6 t < z of message rf fi e Go rnor) or McCarren and Grady were equally prominent, each with a battling. | Acsomtty Whee tice ee Seo Riteencaitt deceiving th* CLERK QUITS CITY dogged air that presaged determined resistance. The galleries were| 1 Ge ty Conn od Mill dit in Sie the ie Ui Cea 2 Saige Oeaeato ike tne ca tution is being violated only in re- BUREAU ran Ca ie race track bills gard to racetrack gambling. An non | UNDER FIRE. PAPER TRUST PROBE IS : $e, ica ieiises ———— During Grady's a| Chief Bookkeeper of Water Supply rried nervou pators quit th = LAST TWO MONTHS APRIL 8, Price was informed that his son| I er a SS ” |LEAVES PRISON CELL TO 19068. GRABBED CHILO NAVAL BLL CALS CUREBY CUTICURA HOM WIFE AND RAN TWO MILES Mrs. Leon Miller, Loudly Yell- ing, Chased Fleeing Hus- | spptorsaisn a band in the Rain. {struotion of two instead of four battle- | ships and eight insted of four sub- | marine torpedo boats, and carrying a Two Battleships and Eight Submarine Boats Provided for in Measure. April §—The raval With his Mttle daughter 14a, alias naval remiee for the fiscal vear ending years old, clasped in his arms, Leon! Ji:ne 30, 1908, was reported to th | Miller ran two miles this afternoon in |idouse to-day oy Chairman Foss of the rain from Westerteigh to Port|the Commitee of Naval Affaire Richmond, Staten Island, with Mounted | TS Aree Lea Ae are tec i e jes fe Policeman Hayes thundering after him me _ than me aezrenate estimates submitted by the department, and $5,98916 more than the amount appropriated for the fisoal year ending Jane 90, 198. The bill carries an item of $1,100,000 toward the construction of | rine torpedo boats and an item Miller ts now locked up in the police ation in Port Richmond and will. be arraigned to-morrow before a magis- na charge of kidnapping his ld. preferred by his wife. He is 5 a clerk, twenty-seven years old, and) SARL REdSTene oe oeoclnien a has been married four years. made for the enlistment af 6,00) men to Mrs. Miller, a pretty Ittle woman, ran the following sh4ps, which aré to says she has lived in fear for six) be put in commisrton within the next ees eal a hand mould steal | f™, Months: The Calsfornia, Missi: months tha nusband would steal| fy, "Hgane. New. Hampatite, Sout the child fron: 1 ung couple, Dakota, North Carolina, Montan: in ded. life, | Ghextor Himingham and ‘Salem, h pipe ;| for L300 men required to man torpedo pavenacr imes, and about) boats not now in commfssion. », after a quarrel, Mre, PSA TiSe er nd | Sie LAWSON AND COL. MANN— trenan in Wood| WERE THEY PARTNERS? and there | |And Did “Frenzied Finance” Au- thor Rent Furnished Houses Here for Secret Confab? called on her. Grabbed Child and Ran. told me he only wanted to see me a few minutes at the door,” authorizang the con- | wo | (28! Appropriation of $148,067,518 for the | Mrs. Miller’ said, ‘and I had the baby in my amns when T went to see him | LYNN, Mass, April &—Was Thomas| He wouldn't come in, but stood there| W. Lawson ever a business partner of Town s? Did he Col. Mann, Topi. He said he waived I told him tt was that point, that I] k im again. | in the rain talking a reconctii . b no good to argue would never go ba secret meetings of financters? Did he conduct a theatrical enterprise in con- ion with Olga Nethersole and some | Thon, before I knew wl GED) GEE a ean te ea ig Li ie & paral These questions are raised by allega- | oe whe ut when {Hons to that effect in the sult against he ran down the garden walk and dart- ed out of the gate. I knew he intended| f to kidnap nd yelled as loud as| © d and followed.” F But Miller was fleeter of foot then = his wife, and ing a corner, wea be auvlaed Nala | soon out nt. Westerleigh is one | of the most aristocratic towns on Stat- en Island, and there was a good deat of excitement at the wen of a young man whh a baby in his arms running | } speed in the ra! by a pretty Ittle woman, bareheaded. losing ground at ever: Mra. | soon found aid in the person nan Haves. Chased on Horseback, “He will go aight to Port Richmond,’ she told cer, and Hayes dug tie fetes eanimuurimerarton x father. Wwerto Dok Miller litie | pa Offers exceptional oppor- rain Ha from him tunities to AMBITIOUS I tichmond a yom MEN who want positions in the following lines of GO TO FATHER’S FUNERAL. ao) Accused Man's Aged Mother Wins, chanical Engineering, Rail- Few Hours’ Freedom For roading—Freight and Pas- on, Senger Service, Advertising. Electrical Engineering, Me- amber, The stuation was ate and lolled on the blg settees of | Board Refused to Explain A white haired je woman drosacd NOM REVIOUSTAENBERI. Ni —! re the lobby i om 1 vay 2 maT, WASHINGTON, April 8—By_unant- | WhenehisnGrtnny lobiy, | Letters He Wrote. IRA MOUERIN 8 heo od aherawa ya AOR UG Ne ENCE REQUIRED. Mark X mous vote, the House Gomeiucs on ’ : Joins In Attack Charies B. Marr, chier bookkeeper of |Foster’s part of the Court of Genera! i A the Judiciary to-day agreed to report} 8 Grattan and h he goInk) Senator McCarren followed G, A haWin roa asta Sees bess | Sessions to-day and spoke to an off!- before line which interests ete Gpate atl an jt Senator McCarren foliowe: y | te u of Supply, to-day | (. eat 2 ‘eat aan ana ae Bree | and also attacked the ccgen sent a hasty resignation to Walter |CeT on Ruard near the ® eacor 1 sre a you and mail this ad. to us poset Oey Er | i was improp. , “sata, | Bene tof the Wa jc eee N Or tense E ONY fam Taner nen ofieltiena iresclitionn | improper for a governor, he sald. | Beneel. president of the Water Board. at once to Dept. 122, 127 W. Airects the Attorney-General to a a ‘© GO f n the direction of intj-| Marr received a salary of $3000 a year, e' iT Senera Wareuaes Vas Gov, Hughes had gone, He)#nd lived at N, 1065 Bergen street, |% MLR UES LL 125th Street, New York the House what steps have 1 CNL ire any | Brooklyn P gown to investigate and pros: ieemees y interested | Peonle ever oft cae S,a result of thix visit, John Kell City, for free particulars. national Paper Compan: 8) for Gratta a rested in horse racing in this! Letters written by Marr to certain | a euler ier in the Tombs charged witi npany 2. All. these remarked, were | COWtractors doing work for the Board | robbery, was allowed to attend _ the and other corporations or combinations s of voters and the Ge Ke recently fell into the |€uneral of his father at No Bast cf nor durin, th engaged !n the manufacture of wood | q tan w | campaign jast fall studious! pas se | hands of el eer One Hundred and Twentleth street, | : = ALAA i : gn last fail studiously ed One, Wr ¢ firm of Moarthur | this afternoon, The little old woma pulp or print Statement by Brooklyn Man om taking a stand on race track Tnborers to The, who talked to Judge Foster was his | ‘The other Hecretary of Commer inform the House what ste taken by the Bureau of toward Investigating the alleged * ‘Trust.’ ranigiit have dation, Veale reason to be- | would receiy Who Has Recently Become a Cooper Convert Governor now | track agitation for President * he declar ud not put “Paper | i | The following per restzned Help Wantea i ttbaresi. are ils ae se) mn ‘oughou he n __ To-Day! 0 jeans eS eae eee The ferry-boat Jamestown, flagship As advertised for in The Morning ar “Moox a Simps: President street of the Erle ferry fleet, sip at the foot of grounded in her Chambers street World’s Want Directory, Sane © was talking Gratt 1 |e e) my s ine wae ae on rx ty 5 constitution In fat 9.30 o'clock this morning and lay WEDNESDAT, April §, 1008, medicl ow aee at year then now firmly in the mud about twenty feet | Addressers . Harness-Makers .. 2 in husons Then, He Says. from the landing place. The tide was | FAgents .... ad ieuoeneri di that the legislature | exceptionally low. After whistling ten Alteration Hands. 2 ia. rf t minutes for assist fe she Was nose d | pamerentioes 1 1 ther tn by the Erie tug Elmira. Several dred commuters were de- Bakers ..... 8 nation -Bonnaz 8 ‘1 : ayed. T idest traveller could not joyment tn ‘vin: net Grady Lashe: peye! See cet ea er a Bartenders 2 H qi i 4 5 shes: remember a similar mishap. pas- Blacksmith 4 was sengers greeted the rm who Bookbinder: 2 # finally ohained the boat, with cries of Mockkeaperk 7 "Get the hook!” and with cheers. Boys ...... s Se Brassworkers Bricklayers SOCIALISTS RUN SECOND. | “Bushelmen .. Butchers .......0+ are. HE MILWAUK: Apri! 8—The Social- Buttonhole Make 1 it; ist vote, which has menaced oth Re-} Cabinet-Makers, publican and Democratic strength in Canvassers 1 Milwauker for four years past, rose to Cashier . p mind » | second sterday when Seldel, the! oeembern y f Bovias candidate for slayer, | Gigarmakers . “Chauffeurs ond ty David H. Rose, Demo- | Roofers - me 2 Salesladtes , the The isa of 3,000, Pringle, | Republican didate, is third, outgoing Mayor, Sherburn Becker Republican, vr nsultation was then that the | MOAR LEVI P MORTON SAILS. Among the passengers who salled this! ‘noon on the Oceanic, of the White ry Hne, was former ernor Levi P, eines and tt Senate In sessii neher was foul wet resid ing after the furry, | af nu can whether Driver Drug ng. or W repute d orton, nis wife and daught Blectric: x STtirsed asteaticteett sl esse Es) CELL ta Legislature shall | = Blevator Runners, 1 Tinsmithe .. Embrolderers Pypewriters (F.).. 1 people, 8 | agree or disagres with what the Exec: Bogineers Upholsterers ..... 2 1 of the| tive has done, or whether this legtsi Engraver r tion {s wise or unwise: It Is whether Farm Hands the Constitution of the State shall be . his evasi yed," now thirte { tho conclusion of Senator Hin rar Chat It may] man's specch the recess was taken. | te reconvened at 3 rady, who had spoken | Folders ... Foremen . - s a as 2 onewer d his EEA SH on | Jeriene teee T trae bills, referring especially | pee Lisp id that Senators | ilure of the bills to prohibit | ‘ . were , Sreonrin W alt street famoling: 1 He remarked he orld print 1 ) Hel as the motive} that he bad introduced a. bill against iz World printed 1,109 Help; Sad he: stock gambling, but that Senators who | is, to-d ) more th We 1 hege bills} wore Jeading the figm for the race) ‘9 . fay, C40. more ia allt ; the state | Trnck Witin Blocked as other New papers combine here is} Grady was fol! nator SM dg mbined. sere te picokes, whe wpdhe for the btlle. mother. 1 Shamo A Timely Hint to Women) etre is f} BETTER and CHEAPER on House Cleaning. HES Chemie: Real housecleaning cannot be accom- plished without proper disinfection, as soap and water do not kill disease germs. Those who think that the sick room and the toilet are the only places that re- quire regular disinfection are the ones who are usually wondering why there is so much sickness in their family, It is very simple to pour a few drops. of CN Disinfectant (non-poisonous) in all cleaning water and to sprinkle it jeverywhere about the house, By doing this you can secure a) | healthy home for your dear ones and| keep sickness away from your door. | \ The Non-Poisonous Antiseptic. | the work BETTER, lasts LONGER and COSTS LESS, indispensable for House- cleaning, Stlver, Pianos, Glasswara, etc. Sold by Druggists and Department Stores. The genuine 66 Shamo are stamped AS POPULAR AS y xsthk PR most valuable and All 10c. Vie gift (5 a Drug 25c. | erry] DISIN FECTANT 50c. | iA MOND 10K Di lasting remembrasce. Ove. price, ‘Cash or Credit || ‘No gmployer's reference reayli send for Hlustrated Catalogue Xs L. W. SWEET & CO., 37-39 Maiden Lane, N. Y, Brench, 389 Fulton St., 2CTING CO. (Inc.) Maan Special For This Thursday] ORANGE FRUIT 0 a bhakich CHARLOTTES .. rouiell C uaishs fo SPECIAL ASSORTERCHOO= 9 Oculists |] LATES (20 kinds), POUND c and || CHOCOLATE COVERED Opticians PEANUTINES... e206 Park Row sore open every evening untt) Kk. 11, o'eloc! We doliver free purchases of one dollar land over berween Battery and 200th atrest; falso all Brooklyn proper. Deen ‘SE Founders of Real Eye Service. Eyes Examined (‘r'rsitnaten ) by Skilled Eye Doctors Glasses Always at \4.derate Prices. Five Convenient Locations LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. | ve Ne a ‘W, sith et. | rent furnished houses In New York for a@ posi Looks like, feels like chamois, but does! | OH ST0.67518 AT CTY MISSION Young Woman ancsinall? in Awful Cone dition with Scabies—Body a Mass of Sores from Scratching —Trled Many Remedies for Seven Weeks —Result Was Discouraging, But a ITCHING TORTURES YIELDED TO CUTICURA ee “While T was doing missionary work in the lower portion of several cities L found it necessary to know a little of the efficacy of a few medicines and after a while I found that a little knowl- edge of Cuticura was about all I needed. One of Che very bad cases I had to deal with was that of a young woman who had come to us not only broken in spirit but ina most awful condition pe sically. Our doctor examined her us that she had scabies (the teh), incipient paresis, rheumatism, etc., brought on from exposure and the leffects of her ragged-edged life. Her poor body was a mass of sores from scratching and she was not able to retain solid food. We tried many beat a good tonic was prescribed and bat with a rubbing of lard and sulphur. We worked hard for seven weeks and you can imagine how discouraged we were when, after all that time, we could see £0 eS improvement. One day I hap- ed to see a Cuticura advertisement horr a_ little baby had been eee eitnedl cane otis eruption, and although I had but ninety-seven cents with me, I bought a cake of Cuti- cura Soap and a bottle of Cut Resolvent. When I reached hom was like a child with a new to: bathed our patient well and ga full dose of the Resolvent. that night better than she had since she had been with us and the next dar T located the price of a box of Cuticura, Ointment. I am not exaggerating whon I say that in exactly five weeks this young woman was able to look for ion, being strong enough to work and full’ of ambition. In. another month she left the home, and now hae good position in a nice family where she te respected and is strong and well, You may refer any one you wish to me, ersonally, Laura Jane Bates, 85 ifth Ave, New York, N. Y¥.. Mar. 11, 1907.” St 0 Ge Malied Pree. cuticur In Buyi ing a Piano it is jus: you buy as WHAT you The majority of purchas not familiar with piano ¢ tion and the name means every- thing. For 54 years the PEASE name has stood for fair dealing, and over 78,000 satisfied custom- ers _lells the measure of our suc- Oiir prices are moderate and our 3-year payment plan most eco- nomical. Write for our bargain list of used Pianos. The bute from $100 up, are ititeresti Pease Piano Co., 128 W. 42d St., nea- B’way, N.Y. Breoklyn Branch, | Newark Branch. 657 Fulton St. | 10 New St. PUR YORE OR CLEAMINS ALL CAEPETE ae CaTm caatocs, Durnttare, Carpets, Pianos, Phoaographs. and Seving Machines 2 un Perea, Fppctepaiecy ll leeeplaned DIED. NGKILLER.—O0n Monday, April @ CATHERINE DARDINGKILLER, loved wife of Clifton Dardingk: daughter of the late John J. Je, aged 25 years, Funeral from the late residence of her mother, 610 W. 52d at., on Thursday, April 9, at 9.80 A, M.; thence to the Church of the Sacred Heart CW. Dist st.), e solemn be celebrated for tho happy her soul, Interment Caivary. | MULCAHEY.—Suddenly, at his 51 Mott st, son of Dora and the late Curran, William Mulcahey. I 4) Thursday at 9.30 A, M, from ‘Transfiguration Church, Mott at. Ine terment Calvary Cemetery. MSHA! t his residence, 439 Weat aqth LLIAM M'SHAND, Funeral Thursday, April 9, thence to St. Michael's Church, 0.15 Interment Calvary. MYHAN,—On Wednesday, April 8, at hee residence, 112 Kast Sist st., SARAH W. FRASER, beloved wife of William P+ Myhan, Funeral from Loyola, &4th st. Apel t 10 A.M. Churoh of St, Immatius and Park ay., on Friday, Interment Calvary, Every week, month and year, The World prints more “Help Wanted’ Ads. than any three other New York newspapers combined, as important WHE RE rm