The evening world. Newspaper, October 28, 1908, Page 3

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| (‘Y —_—= OATH AND SECRETS OF NIGHT RIDERS NOW CONFESSED ecliin +“Tip” Burton's Statement Bares All and Traps Ring- leader of Assassin Band. INVOLVED. iN M 300 Another Member of Tennessee “Regulators” Says Women Were Whipped by. TI BAMBU leader < en tion, it be} Camp Nemo. T! such is Garrett Joh ral opinion y in be compelled The con: sensation, cluded the whipping « as pbed brother T th The s camp are Jon With his borther Tom, and \ Watson are kept in solitary cor.ti HAWLEY'S OWE HER THOUSANDS, SISTER ASSERTS Relatives Whom the Brokers Sue Says She Was Partner in Business. Jennie M. Hawley Levee resumed her testimony to-day in the trial before Justice Erlanger and a jury in the Su- preme Court, of the suit of William and Alan R. Hawley, bankers, at Ni 28 Broad street, to recover $34,350 which they say they loaned to their sister on her notes, the evidence of which, they charge, disappeared from the family safe when she eloped last April with Charles Levee, the young French bal- loonist. Mrs. Levee, who is older than her brothers, denies that she ever borrowed @ cent from them; that she was an equal partner with “Billy and Alan in the Broad street business, and that they are indebted to her, She says she left bundles of notes, checks, statements and other papers in that safe in her room and their home, the $30,000 mansion at No, 2 Hast Seventy-sixth street, owned by , including indisputable document- ary evidence of her partnershi but that these papers had vanished when sho returned from her honeymoon. The Huwley brothers, William and Alan, have testified that Jennie carried the only key to that family safe, and after her elopement they had to call in otal o » the safe open, Alan wuperintended the work, William re- maining in an adjoining room, and they Bay that the safe had been rifled of its eontents. ‘William R. Wilder, her counsel, to- elicited from her a story of the gro Of the business of the Hawley Broth now looked upon as one of the moi successtul Wall street houses. In 184 the report to mother and me,” she said, “showed an accumula- tion of $27,000 for the four years of the artnerahip, and our share was $7,000). We drew and spent $300 on our first The profits grew each trip to Europe. rear from then on, except that in 1897 hey were unpaid tween Alan losing be- me, $30,000 and $40,000 in speculation Campaign Speeches Bd N EDITOR has called attention to the fact that campaign oratory is robbing many a political candidate of his powers of speech, ‘There is one voice, how- ever, that increases in per- suasive power the more it is used—the voice of a World advertisement. World advertisements told 19,018 separate stories of “opportunities” during last weck's 6 work days—5,817 more than were related by the Herald, nd More This Week AL \ q immerman cup sn the basket are Mrs. Thomas Rose and Mrs. W. L. Norcross, contest-|of sky crnistig, ‘00, when, in the bal- | Tu | /f; eti Mite "Ply From Philadelphia 10 New york WoMLN AERONAUT iy —| Uh UP 9,300 FEE : ll PILADELPI pellficiamsenn ied to Make a Flight te New York, but Gas Gave Out. “GREAT,” SAY BOTH: Had to Throw Wraps Over- roard to Make the Land- ing Soft. Four enthustastic Philadelphia aero nauts—two men and two women—wh expected to make air trip from Philadelphia to New York but didn't, at least are congratulating each other on the twenty-flve mile cloud eal they ended ist night In the Philadelphia, the bis zest gas bag in the Philadelphia Aero- Society E. Eldridge, the president of the society; Dr orge H, Simmer- man, vice-president, Thomas Rose, ¢ Ambler, and Mrs, William A. Ni rose, of Glendale, co ed the part and for the women it was their first trip off the earth, They enthustastically lescribed thelr trip as “great.” Dr. Elbridge, who acted as pilot, vegrets that a series of experiments tn 5 and descen rough cloud belts | used up the gas to such an extent that the original intention had to be abandoned, Therefore, two hours r the balloc left the K fon in Philadel- | phia the valve was opened end the| big bag led down as gently as tired bird in the well-tilled flelds of Dante! Campbell, two miles east of Bordentown. | The highest altitude attained was 9, feet, at which height the temperature was down to 40 degrees. The women of | | the party had a taste of the exigencies | pe, who made the ascent, accompanied loon’s descent, the party had to throw Dr, Eldridge is their wra} and overcoats overboard tn CCASTELLANE AND PRINCESS SAGAN 10 SETTLE SU Custody of Children Will Be Arranged by Boni and For- mer Wife Out of Court. PARIS, Oct. 28.—The petition of Count Bont de Castellane for a modification of the decree of divorce obtained by his wife, who was Miss Anna Gould of New York, on account of her subsequent marriage to Prince Helle de Sagan, |came up in the Tribunal of the Seine to-day, but at the reguest of the defense |the hearing was adjourned until Nov. 4 The Count makes this petition with the idea of giving his mother custody of his children, There ts+reason to believe that ne- gotiations are under way to settle the case out of court. |RUSSIA AND FRANCE WANTED TO INTERVENE IN BOER WAR. BERLIN, Oct, 28—~Phe Foreign OMice said to-day that the interview given to an unocial representative Englishman by Emperor William, pub- Mshed to-day In the London Daily Tele- graph, had ben sent to the Emperor, who {5 hunting at Wernlgerode with Pringe Stolberg the Emperor told of profs of his good will to Great Britain during the Boer war, The interview 1s regarded as a substantially accurate reproduction of the distinguished Englishman. “Tt {8 an historical fact,” an official of the Foreign Office sald, “that the French and Russian Governments made suggestions to the German Government Which, if accepted would. have leq. to jJoint intervention {n the Boer war." |" The mention of this historical incident | WAS not intended, it was explained, to effect the relations since est between Great Britain and Fran Great Britain and Russi ———.—___ PAPERS FILED IN $100,000 SUIT AGAINST J. J. ASTOR. TRENTON, N, J., Oct. 28—Charles M Myers and E. M. Colie, of Newark, re- celvers of the Telephone, Telegraph and Cable Company of America, to-day filed in the Supreme Court « declaration in the sult against John Jacob Astor, of New York, to recover about $100,000 for pany, in. which, the Asto aned’ and efused 0 pay ass ts thereon |when demand was made. ‘The summons the sult was served upon Mr, Astor me time ago, —_———__. “MY WIFE THE CAUSE OF THIS.” BOSTON, Oct, 2%—"My wife Is the cause of this,” were the words of a note which was found beastde the bod: Jtham, in a to- of George room in W. Stone, of W the Castle Squai |day. Nearby was a revolver head was @ bullet wound examiner olde. Hotel id in The medi pronounced tt @ case of sul- WOMAN KILLED BY NEGRO BOY, SAVANNAH, Ga, Oct, 2&—While alte ting {n @ rear room of her home at Pooler, ten miles from Savannah, to- day Mre, W. EB. Torrence, wife of an fired 4 instantly I str Sa ey In this conversation, | the conversation the Emperor had with | crowd that had followed the balloon from Bordentown uttered exclamations horror as the garments sailed earch- | ward. They thought at first that the | party had falion overboard. Yesterday's trip was far more auspi- cious than the Philadelphia's first voy- | THREE IN BLOW. (|P |age, when the gus bag burst and tho | | auronauts were ducked in the Schuyiktil River. The general direction of yes- OF LOCOMOT NE terday's cruise was northeast before a ea As fairly brisk wind. For a great part of the time the balloon was invisible and wreathed in heavy clouds. | Trainmen Covered With Burn- ing Coals as Explosion | Startles White Plains. FIRE SHOWERS | possible and make the descent soft, A : : MRS. HOWARD GOULD’S WITNESSES CAN’T LEAVE. Elijah W. Sells and His Daughter Ordered to Defer Departure for Philippines. The examination of Elizah W. Bells | and his daughter, Marjorie, witnesses | tor Mrs. Katherine Clemmons Gould in her sult for a separation from her hus- band, Howerd Gould, which was to) have token place befpre Referee Whit. | taker this afternoon, has ben indefinite- ly postponed. Three men were injured, two proba- | bly fatally, when the crownsheet of the | botler of an engine drawing a milk train on the Harlem Railroad blew out near the Hamilton avenue crossing at White Plains early to-day. The victims are Engineer C. J. Ranus, of Mount Ver. |non, scalded about face and arms; Fire- | hot coals and scalded eabout the body, Justice Bischoff for the examination of the two witnesses before trial was de- | nied by Justice Truax, but Cornelius J. | Sullivan, of counsel for Mr. Gould, ob- tained a stay-in the procedings through | a technicality. Mr, Sella and daughter | had planned to sail next Sunday for the | in dying condition; Brakeman C. M. | raver, of Hillsdale, scalded and burned | by hot coal, skull fractured; in critical | condition. | The train was made up of twenty-nine care and was on @ run to ‘Thirtieth street, Manhattan, from Chatham, N, Y, | Philippines. When near the Hamilton avenue cross-| Mr. Shearn, ihg and running Afteen mies an hour |dectared thet, while Howard Gould had eee ae ease nat startled people | gathered “back-stair’ witnesses against seeitped Inca cloud of etegn: ata asite [his wife, and called in her discharged sparks, In @ cab at Wie Line were the | servants, his lawyers naturally opposed |the presentation of reputable people in counsel for Mrs. Gould, three injured men. Fireman Sommer Ville was blown out of one of the cab | Oe society as witnesses in her favor windows, while Brakeman Traver was ———— |cab and tender, the red-hot coal being | blown out of the firebox and covering | {his body. His clothing caught fire, but | Ranus stuck to his post, although en- | Moving-Picture Man Who Accused veloped in steam, long enough to apply | st Faila to Identity Him. the air brakes and prevent a wreck. He | Prenaee™ George H. Bristol, the moying-picture Kuocked flat on the deck between the FORGOT POLICE GRAFTER. was extinguished by rescuers, Engineer | then jumped out of the cab window. The engine was practically new 4nd | machine man who said he had been one of the latest type used on the York Central system, The Public Ser- shaken down by Policeman James vice Commission was notified and an in- | Prendegast could not identify the spector was sent to make a thorough investigation. See POSTAL CLERK INDICTED. policeman to-day when Prendegast was placed on trial before Third Deputy ‘Commissioner Hangon, | “What! Do you mean to say you can’t recognize him @# the man who called on you last March and asked what it yorth to keep your show rune demanded the Commissioner, | | James T, Hand Accused of Stealing | From Matis, Aine John T. Hand, a clerk at Post-OMce — prigtol shook bis head. “He jooke | Branch Station B, Grand and Attorney |Mke the man, but I can't be sure,” he streets, was arrested this afternoon on Teplied: Rear ORly, atin the charge of stealing letters from the SEAR Aa POHOSOAR was. Aim! ssed. mails. The case was taken up by the ee ena Federal Grand Jury and an indictment | THE OVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1908, of} n “ieligaeit He cmpain, aay OUTSIDER WINS STAKE oft FROM DANNY MAHER, they caught the clerk pilferin |the mails by means of a spec de- jivary test Jets hy fi Hand, who as been lin ‘the postal service six’ years, Is mars} oo. | rt and re 's at No, 178 Spencer| NEWMARKET, England, Oct, 28, street, Lrooklyn. ‘The Cambridgeshire Stak for three- | ~~ year-olds and upward, was won to-day | CORTELYOU HERE TO TALK. y a rank outalder, the Duke of Devon- | Marcovil, Ci 3, RK Secretary of the Treasury George B, |Shire® Marcovll, Capt, J. B ray bere | Cortelyou arrived from Washington to- Kinkaid Smith's Buccor third, Twenty- three horses started. |"Lord Derby's Cocksure II. was rid- den by Danny Maher and was a warm favorite, The betting on Maycovil was | 60 to) against. |day and was a yisitor at Republican National Headquarters, Mr. Cortelyou comes to New York at this time special ly to deliver a speech In the Murray Hi Lycoum to-morrow night. pe |$5,935 ADDED TO BRYAN FUND. CHICAGO, Oct. 28.—Campaign contri- | butions, aggregating $5,035, recelved yes- PRINCE GEORGE OF SERVIA GUEST OF THE CZAR. terday in sums of $100 and over, were | | announced at Democratic headquarters | to-day, Samuel Untermeyer and J. ser- 8T. PETERSBURG, Oct, %—Crown | geant Cram, of New York, gave $1,600 | Prinoe George of Servia arrived here to- Gnd HW reapectively day from Belgrade and has been lodged DR. BULL A LITTLE 8TRONGER, | "HHt*wee sien ‘ane Dra, Delafield, Blake and Potter, at- |{ellroad station s& he made his |tending Dr. Bull at the Plasa Hotel, a Hye Unis afternoon posted the following bul- pa teeta, > comfortably stronger to pointment . Who wer ol of ee wo Presidcn’ and Secretary of Girls’ c lub, Who Wil Never, Never Marry forTi—E QOCONNER MILOREOWEstHORE EIGHT FAIR MIDS WHOLE FAM HAVE FOREVER AFFLICTED WITH FORSWORN NEN WHOGPIG COUGH — ae | And If One Should Backslide Actor’s Bema Wife and Children All Well Dressed but With- out Means. the Punishment W Something Terrible. Mrs, Bessle Clark, a handsome woman the Men do not interest SHELA GIT URE DENTE SERIE NGHO of thirty years, and her three children, re Aes atta Lede |Jcan, five years; Hazel, three, and ile if any the | Melba. sixteen months, were sent to the Wil even, ever, ever | Willard Parker Hospital the Board 4 of Health yesterday. Mother and chil- ong aa she lives—so there Hong Has shelliver=—s Jaren had whooping cough In an aggra- vated form. Barring this affection all it jus ‘ate, Here are! seaeiotyeuie se ethat Sour lunches | Of them were in good condition physi to buy * powdering your noses|*Y and very well dressed. ry nd turnin parlor light down to! ark would say only that she ba i * is the wife of John Clark, an actor who the very uraging flicker and seen et there nae | 8 0 the Toad. She acknowledged that ‘is tarning ‘em away, yanking |®2¢ 18 Ineneed of money. She took sant ut pf the pond, only to unhook ‘em |@F little farally first to the Bureau Sora Bee eT \of Dependent Children on Third ave- and throw ‘em back again! There 4 ht a ye a lew against it! Posi.|¥e From there she was sent to the eee ; : |Municipal Lodging House on East ure q "> ol | Twenty-third street. She arrived there It 1s not any “sour grapes” club. Oh, of course there will be lots of girls who say ft 4s, but ft ten’t, efther. Dvery panguaes fei Las ticiguully lee one of the eight, from the president, fat the family had whooping Miss Mildred Wuesthoff, of No. 310 and despatched them to Bellevue South Sixth street, right on d | Hospital. They were put in an isolated pean ward awhile and then sent to the W! Mine had to sive up—ahemi—somebody | jarg Parker, a hospital for patients suf- in th® club, fering from contuglous di t's a duty, not a pleasure, this club,” Se expluined Miss Wuesthoff; “I moan, of CRAZED BY COLLISION. course, that duty 1s always a } ve have had to give up—but, then, = UNS, AN Injured Driver Acts Like Madman When Car Wrecks Wagon. asure, what we give up was ly of no tin- portance, anyway. We vubtless— T mean, we shall of ec hap-| Emil Fister, twenty-one years old pier. without any" — "st; | was thrown to-day from the wagon he NOD e SUDRSECLREPR AWE | Was driving for Charles Binkel, of No. We are to snth avenue, when & car crashed the se it at Sixth avenue and ‘Thirty-first of No. $7 help us to © Injured man arose f. fs usually began running arc Wed: meu: reet—T night that if tl uny {ished vehicle shrieking Ike a madman, so that 18) at the New York Hospital it wae said 154 eur a wound on his head had caused Oe] : n_Up-" | hysteria “And there 18 a tly territ awful, dreadiul punishment for any one | San who oes it on the rea Mine ROOT IN TAFT’S TOWN TO TALK lian Borgman 6 Columbia! Giscinwam 1 Bvenue. "Real UIA not talliyhat | SoeNOINNADI: Oct. 1M 7-Gecret ms evento Seely State Root, who 1s to be the speaker at who hreaks a Wg Republican meeting at Music Hall He was niet at the by a s that we fon committee and the have not be elther," Hotel. Later he bi Dhorused the lor Girls’ reception and was ¢ E Club, consist es Rose At he was Lister, El! ‘\tzgerald, Chamber of Co », where he made a Cora Strad? Dewtek brief address to business men HE Arrow Collar 1s remarkable not only for its quarter sizes, but also for the permanency of those sizes after washing. ARROW COLLARS 15 cents each—2 for 25 cents CLUETT, PEABODY & CO. Makers Anxow Currs VIS DEFIES REFEREE, - GRABS HIS FIRM'S ~— REGORD BOOKS — - L. B. Wood Threat of Proceedings for Unawed by Contempt of Court The hearing In the bankruptcy case of r, Knapp & Go. which has been golng on before Referee P. B. Olney tn is office at No. 68 Willlam street, took eldediy Uvely turn this afternoon when LB, Wood, of Marshall, Spader © Co., who was on the stand, refused to How the stenographer to mark certain hooks of the firm In evidence, In em- phasizing his olfjections to having the ames of prominent customers being ade public, Mr. Wood grabbed the ks and threw himself into a warlike attitude. The referee announced that he would secure an order for Wood's urrest for contempt of court. “Pretty nearly every one in the room ot Involved In the row, and the referee nerily declared an adjournment. As there Was no court officer present, and | nobody ran to get a policeman, Wood retired hurriedly, but without having to mit to the indignity of afl arrest. @ trouble started when, after much | wrangling ney Stone, for the tr tee in bankruptcy, insisted on examining |the Marshall, Spader & Co. Clearing- Houre blotter. Mr. Moone: Mr. Wood lined up alongside, As Mr. Stone took hold of the books he was pushed aside and witness Wood leaned over the two large blotters. “Y instruct you,” said the referee, directing his glance at Wood, “that what you do renders you Mable to fine and imprisonment. I have no court J officer here whom I can direct to ar- rest you | sibity you take.” | ake the responsibil! retorted “I am willing to surrender ers in which Mr. 1 Mr. Wood. the data in all mat Coster, or Coster, Knapp & Co, are in- terested. Hut there are the names on those blotters of many representatives business men in this clty and my firm. does not intent to cast before the public. Already much harm has been done to Marshall, Spader & Co, in this matter.” |RICH AUTOIST PARALYZED AS HE RAN MACHINE. Alfred Wannamaker, of Toledo, Helpless, and Companion Knew Nothing of Car’s Mechanism. TOLEDO, 0., Oct. %—Helpless trom an attack of paralysis Alfred Wanna- of the Toledo maker, vice-president | bile, and it was only the pecullar ac- I tlone of the machine that caused his companion, Edwin L, Camp, to notice that Mr, Wannamaker was Ill ir, Camp w nothing of the mech- anisin ¢ , but properly made and threw ught the car to ted an accident. Our Yorkville Store At 3d Avenue and 86th Street is now en- larged to double its former capacity, which places it on the same basis as our other eight Best Stor hie lead- | ing shoe stores in their districts. This improvement has been made | possible—in fact, demanded—by the widespread appreciation of Blyn quality, Our Children's Departments are filled from end to end with sturdy footwear built by the best methods that a lifetime of experi- ence and study have taught. BI: Shoes for children are absolutely re- liable, fit p nd wear as long as the hest n ls make possible. | STYLE No. 182334 Aine See CHILDREN'S STORM BOOT, ate: in tan | and black; a ‘high gra quality Style not to found in the ordinary shoe stocks and now! else in the same quality at our price, Sizes 04 to Il at $2.50 | li}, to 5 at $3.00 | NINE BEST STORES | BROOKLYN: | WEST SIDE; | oth Ave. & 27th St, |D'way, bet, Park and Ellery. Ath Ave. & 39th : HAST SIDE: Fulton St., opp. Abra+ ham & Straus’. _ ad Ave, 1226 Stree! g'w'y nenr Ureeae Ave JW Ave. & 150th Street, PAC TORI Bowery near Broome, 511-519 East 72d St. | The Noiseless | Style-Comfort { Red Cross shoe | for Women \ “It bends with the foot.” Sold in New York Exclusively by | Sic the firm's lawyer, and/ I have told you the respon-| pread them broad-| Look for the WISS GIRL Wherever you sec this sign that dealer sells the highest grade shears | and scissors for every conceivable use, Scissors and Shears | owing to their unique construction will cut easily and clean the tough- est of goods or the thinnest of silks ani always stay sharp. The Wiss name on every pair is your guarantee of satisfaction and Wiss dealers everywhere will replace free of charge any unsatisfactory, + or we will Popular Styles, including left-handed. shears, 50c. to $1, according to sise. | Cloth Cutters, Ripping Scissors and But- ton Hole Cutters for Tailors and! | __ Dressmakers. Embroidery, Nail, Manicure Scissors and | _ General Utility Shears for Home Use. Pocket Scissors, large and small. Office Shears—Special ones for Editors | and Bankers. Shears for the E Candy Make: Glass Shop. Tinner Snips—all patterns, Pruning Shears and Flower Scissors. Paper Hanger, Worker antl Wiss Razors at $1.50, $2.00 or | $3.00 have the keenest of cutting Jedges, which insure the smoothest |shave and yet preserve the natural | softness of the skin. Perfect shaving satisfa jon guar- anteed or your money bac | ) with small Melba in her arms and ihe|Gratn and Milling Company, sat at the | That Bathroom two toddlers clinging to her skirts, At! steering wheel of a speeding automo- | Bath tubs, bowls, | kitchen utensils, ete., ave so |enameled that their smooth surfaces may be ‘easily kept clean. | Scouring bricks and gritty powders ruia the polish of the en makiag it rows hard to clea: Use Gold cleaning all enameled and surfaces, Gold Dust sim 2 leases dirt allowing it to wash away e2 by rinsing, “Let the awe! Hel, 2 Stk, nr Dust for paiated Yan SiuLy yy ad v et] \\ Most nutritious \ Most delicious ] Frank Jones // Nourishing Stout [ JAMEST HARRIS, 6 Cedur St., Phone 191 No xtra Charge for tt, aave enue fi at any American ae dy the Gy MOK # Mt lett dee iia

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