The evening world. Newspaper, December 1, 1908, Page 1

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. ENDS LIFE ON SUICIDE WIFE’S GRAVE’ | WHATHER-Vale and colder, RESULTS ED THON PRICE ONE CENT. ARCHBOLD AIGES 1S KELLOGG HESTIONS He ‘Admits English S. Began the Inquiry. Resigned From mpany When U, $2,000,000. LOAN AGAIN. Trust Buster Wants to Know Why A. N. Brady Sold Out to Standard. Five minutes after Trust Frank Kellogg took John D. tn hand to-day in the Government's suit against Btandard Oil the inquisitor and the wit- ness, with reddening cheeks and glittey ing eyes, were snapping retorts at each other lke firecrackers ew year, “In almost less time than it takes to tell it Mr, Kellogg had Mr. Archbold ‘badly nettled. | The Government prosecutor jumped wight in and tried to force the present head of Standard Oil to confess that his ‘eompany, acting under cloak of a Lon- ldon corporation, really absorbed An- for cross-examination on a Chinese 'thony N. Brady's competitive plants inj) Buster | asenveld! Tremble for His Future. the | PASSENGERS HURT IN CRASH OF TROLLEYS AT GROSSING Jolted and Show: score Bach Is One ar rs were Injured and a score ve ay wren ep north- bound Columbus avenue car knocked a and Thirty- off the track, breaking crosstown One Hundred fifth street ca e windows and blocking street traffic for twenty minu Hugh nue, agent, MeWinters, of Wolf: East twenty-eight years 994 Brook av edda, a book One Fiundred a salesman, and John of No. ered V Knocked From venue—Motormen C th Broken Glass When Trac Columbus xot Mixed on Signals. (and Thirty-eight street, were, tion to being heavily on in addl- ne glass, Bi were attended by a doctor and sent home T. Curran, motorman of the Colum- bus avenue car, said that he h Jaines Donnelly, of the crosstown car, but his signal was not understood and both started to cross at the same time d warned and the collision followed No arrests were made, Curran lives at t Fifteenth srteet, and QD 12% Brooke avenue. TAMMANY WON'T REPUDIATE | M’CLELLAN, MURPHY SAYS , Leader Hasn't Heard of Any Purpose of the Tiger to Promote 2 Growl That Mig! If Tammany's Executive Committee is going to hold a meeting at which reso- {tutions will be adopted repudiating the McClellan administration,Leader Charles |. Murphy says he knows nothing about [ie Hall to- |day co newspaper men and several dis- He so stated at Tamma trict leaders. “The committee will meet Dec. 28 to \organize for 1908, and for no other pur- pose that I know of,” said the leader {of Tammany. Mr, Murphy was one of the gucsia at line Freedman dinner to Richard Croker siheay Ne Hiast night at which District-Attorney Mr, Archbold dented any auch know!-|Jerome made a speech, edge, but in doing it he was driven into} DocA PRU Telecentre ‘@ series of admissions upon which Kel- loge placed great value. ‘The witness owned up that, along with jall the other active Standard Ol] men, he got rid of the directorate of the {@tandard Oi!'a English branch avout the time the United States began !ts in- vestigation into the large loans to an lndividual who presumably figured in \the Brady deal. ) Mr. Archbold likewise betrayed a jshocking {gnorance of the affairs of the ‘Afiglo-American O11 Company, in which he was a director and officer for years. Mr. John D. Rockefeller’s best plan of defense during his stay on the witness ‘chair before Referee Kellogg was ‘not to remember.” ; Mr. Archbold, on the other hand, Is ‘apparently relying upon the stereotyped reply “I do not know.” In regard to the Brady sale It was shown by Mr. Kellogg that Brady sold his Ohio off property for a price under its value, Standard Oil being apparently the real purchaser in consideration of getting an advantageous contract for ‘him Chicago gas works. When the day's proceedings opened Mr. Archbold’s direct examination was resumed by Lawyer Morris Rosenthal ) Mr, Rosenthal started in by going back temporarily to the organization of the Standard Oil Company of New Jer- sey—the particular tentacle of the oil octopus which the Department of Jus- fice 1s trying to destroy. He asked Mr, larchbold to tell him more about the ‘formation. The New Jersey Standard. ) “Well,” sald) Mr, Archbold, ‘we opmed the Standard Oil of New Jersey in 1882, transferring to it properties (Continued on Second Page.) IF IT DISAPPEARS IT’S ECZEMA. How to Tell Whether a Skin Affec~ tion Is au Inherited Blood Discuse or Not. NEW YORK, Dec. 1.—Sometimes it 46 hard to determine whether a skin affection is a sign of a blood disorder or simply a form of eczema, Even physi- elans are often puzzled in their diag- nosis. The best way for auy one af- ficted is to go to any good druggist who handles pure drugs and obtain 6 cents’ worth of posiam. Apply this, eyd if the Itching stops at once and the trouble is cured in a few days It may be set down as haying been eczema, as this ie the way poslam acts in the worst cases of eczema and in curing acne, herpes, blotches, tetter, piles, salt rhaum, gash, barbers’ and other forms of itch, scaly scalp and al) surface skin affeo- dons. Those who will write to the Emer- cy Laboraturies, No, u& West Twenty- ey K, Can secure by i Of charge, a suppiy sutticient $0 Clive a amaii eczelmm surface OF © eat @ complexion overiight and remor twenty-four hourm EL @lisii's, ANinwinan Makes speckaity of ‘on ana, both the teanas elaee. Adve comment to make on It," said Mr. Mur- THAT NEVER Negroes in the Almost Impass: ht Make the Mayor Phy. ‘'T enjoyay the dinner and the company tmmensety," he added “Mr. Croker has stated that you are jone of the bese leaders Tammany has lever had. What do you say to that?’ | Mr. Murphy was asked. “I have nothing to say to that,” an- swered Leader Murphy. “Will you again confer with Mr. Cro- ker?” “I ghall drop in to eee Mr. Croker frequently as long as he remains in the’ \ elty."” Of the presence of Senator MoCarren jand other representatives of warring Democratic factiong at the dinner Mr. Murphy ead nothing. Nor would he | discuss Politics, past or present. He dis- | missed Bryan's latest utterance with ret- Jerence to Tammany by saying: “I an- jswered all that before I went away.” ‘EXPLORER DISCOVERED RACE SAW WHITE MEN able Jungles of Dutch Guiana Spoke a Language Which Was a Mixture of Wymans, a lieienant in the arrived the Royal West India mail steamer Suri- nam, which docked to-day, in from South American and West Indian ports, way back to Holland to expedition he conducted unexplored sections of RH Dutch Navy, on Duteh He 4s on his report on an into hitherto Duteh Guiana “We started out from Paramaribo,” said Lieut. Wymans, “and proceeded more than a hundred miles up the Suri- Later we cut across coun- River, a boundary Guiana and Dutch nam River, try to the Coranty between British Gulana. “We encountered a strange tribe of negroes. They spoke a Innguage of their own, although study showed it to be a mixture of European tongues wifh terms they had themselves added. Dutch and Portuguese were in the mix- ture, and there were many traces of English “These negroes appeared never before to have seen white men, They were probably had escaped on the © were very black, but not of the thick- lipped type. We found ourselves able to converse with them after a fashion, and when they found we had medical men with us, they wanted to know cures for malaria, which is very prevalent in from their white holders The World Printed 107,590 Separate Advertisements Last Month, BEST! 14,456 MORE THAN THE HER- ALD OR ANY OTHER NEWS- PAPER ON EARTH, BOOMING! 6,941 MORE THAN THE WORLD PRINTED DURING THE CORRE- SPONDING MONTH LAST YEAR. Which Newepaper Printe YOUR Advertisements? er | descendants of negroes who! st a few centuries ago. They ropean Tongues, Says Licut. Wymans. | many of the sections we journeyed through.” Lieut. Wymans said there is much | gold in the wild country, but that the cataracts on the journey, wild animals and other obstacles are so many, aa to |enean that extensive mining of the |country could not be carried on with | profit. JUDGE DOWLING DIES AT DOCTOR'S HOME SS )Stricken With Heart Disease After Serious Attack of Pneumonia. Judge Edward ©, Dowling, of the Sec- ond Municipal Diatrict Court,. Brooklyn, | died to-day of heart disease at the home of his physician, Dr. Hubbard Mitchell, No. 17 Madison avenue, Manhattan. The heart disease was an after-effect of pneumonia, from which Justice Dowling recovered a month ago. The condition of his heart became so alarm- {ng that he moved from the home of jhis sister, Mra, Luke Doyle, No, 242 Monroe street, Brooklyn, to his doctor's home in Manhattan. He was last seen publicly in Brooklyn at the dedication of the Prieon Ship Martyrs’ monument Justice Dowling was born in Brooklyn, Noy. 29, 1870. He has been prominent In politics for many years, and was a member of the Assembly for several terms, Hv 4athered the bill for the rear- rangement of Municipal Court districts, and was appointed a Judge when it be- came a JaW. He wes unmarried and }was a member of several clubs in Brooklyn, i —_— | WANT TO ELECTRIFY RO, D. On the application of the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad Com- pany, and the Harlem River and Port- claster Ratlroad Company foi porn sion to electrify the latter line, extend- jolted, cut by fly- | YOUNG WOMAN WITH REVOLVER CAUGHT IN PARK | ———— {Gives Name of Lydia Hinon but Is Sent to Bellevue for Observation. HOME IS IN BROOKLYN. Tells the Court She Carried Pistol to Protect Herself | Against Mashers. | An athletic young woman who 4is- | played a loaded revolver and announced that she carried it for protection against | v@pshers was arrested in Central Park | to-day by Mounted Policeman Martin. She was locked up in the Arsenal. | charged with violating a park ordinance | in walking upon a driveway. A eharge of carrying concealed weapons was) held in reserve. | The woman said she was Mrs. Lydia | Hinon, of No. 767 Thirty-ninth street, Brooklyn. Her revolver was an up-to- date 2 calibre weapon and she carried it in the front of her waist. convenient for quick service. Policeman Martin | suspects that she wes waiting to shoot @omabody, but she insisted that she always carries a gun because men a@ in the habit ef following and edmiring her. Warned Her Away. Maftin first saw the woman saunter- ing along the driveway leading from | the entrance at Sixty-sixth street and | Fifth avenue, which ts intended only | for vehicles and equestrians. There is danger to pedestrians of being run down by an automobile. The policeman rode up to the woman and told her she would‘ have to get on the footpath. Without paying any further attention he turned his horse and started away. There is a three-foot stone fence be- tween the driveway and the footpath. Yrs. Hinon placed one hand on top of the fence and vaulted it like 4 cross country runner. As she landed lightly on her feet, in tront of several women in the footpath a revolver popped out of if ! | quarters the Heutenant sent his prisoner to Yorkville Police Court. | When arraigned before Magistrate) Harris the woman said her husband ts/ in Finland, and she returned from that | country only four months ago. Bhe had quite a sum of money and considerable | jewelry. She said she owned the house at No. %7 Thirty-ninth street, Brooklys and had worked for several wealthy families in the vicinity of Central Park, as a nurse and governess. | Policeman Martin produced four loaded | 82 calibre cartridges, which he said he) found in the prisoner's pocket. Mrs. | Hinon stoutly maintained that she did/ not know where the cartridges came | from, although sbe admitted that she| made a practice of carrying a loaded | revolver, Magistrate Harris after ques- tioning her at some length committed | her to the psycopathic ward of Bellevue | Hospital. _ REBATE CHARGE INQUIRY. , Federal Grand Jury Investigating | Chicago, Milwaukee and St, Paul. | GHTICAGO, Dec, l-A Federal Grand | Jury to-day began investigation of re- bate charges nade agalnst the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Ratiroad Com- pany by an agent of the Interstate Com- merce Commiasion oe DR. BULL 1S WEAKER, Dr. G. H. Wynkoop, who is attendin, Dr. William 'f, Bull at the Plaza Hotel, | said this morning that the phyatcian ‘as somewhat weaker. During the early | part of last night, Dr. Bull, he said, was very restless but later went to sleep and this morning was # ittle| ‘ing tvom One Hundred and Twenty- mith street and the Harlem River, nor through the Bronx to New lie, the Public Service Commission f ring, Commissioner weaker, biting 2 ereSan, “Ae tending iRugstans Th will mot leave imotoriety | TICKET SPECULATION IS ABOLISHED | Che | “ Circulation Books Open to All.”” $< sree — LroiaA. TItNon TICKET SPECULATOR NUISANCE | ABOLISHED BY VOTE OF 87 TO 1 orld, { “Circulation Books Open to All."' ] | NEW YORK, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1908, ‘Woman Who Was Arrested in Park tor Carrying a Pistol ALLS Evening World’s Ordinance Passed in Board of Aldermen by Overwhelming Majority After Long Debate, aad Mayor’s Wk Peddling of Seats. Signature Wili Stop Side i Wilh AC ICE ONE CEN HIMSELF nnn} T. <==? D BESIDE HS WIFE'S GRAVE ——e $+. Despondent Since Her Suicide Two Weeks Ago, Dr. Rudolph F. Hass Ends Life Despite Effort to Prevent Him. HIS FORMER ATTEMPT AT SELF-DESTRUCTION FOILED. Woodlawn Attendants, Attracted by Violence of His Grief on Visit to Cemetery Last Week, Wrested Revolver | From His Hand. Dr. Randolph F. Hass, a dentist with an office at No. 1696 Lexe ington avenue, killed himselt this grave of his wife at Woodlawn Cer | | A jhe tchman sw Dr. Hass at d the vial to his lips, but w LLED WOMAN) her clothing and fell on the ground | By a vote of 57 to 1, the Board of | unsert is Theatre managers, 1? there | The women acreamed. Pollceman| aldermen late this afternoon repealed [AF any, who sell out their lobbies to | Martin heard them and rode back, Mrs. |ty.6 city ordinance which permitted t peeulators while shoeing away the | Hinon, paying no @&tention to the i sidewalk operator. If this measure ts to spectators, picked up the weapon and|#ele of theatre tickets by speculators | get my vote, it must be a clean-cut one, examined it carefully. on the sidewalk. This change was the | withont hiteh or «ide track Placed Under Arrest. result of a crusade pursued by The insults Converted Him. ) Dismounting and jumping the fence, | Evening World during the last two I have been with the ticket specu Martin questioned the armed woman. | years ators, but when they openly offer in- She did not appear to be greatly ex-| The resolution was adopted after ft | sult and imposition Tam against them ead cited or incoherent, but there was some-| had been filed by the Law Committee, Any legislat here must apply to r F thing about her demeanor that did not | Which considered the wiping out of the erswhere, whether they do|Mrs, Layer Run Down satisfy the policeman, He decided to| sidewalk speculators. te property or not. T perpen ~h. aoe mS Place her under arrest and asked her| It now comen before Mayor McClel-/am i Wiping out the whole} Banker's Chauffeur Hurry- to walk with him to the Arsenal. lan for his signature, which he has) b Fo pie Bhellcent inane without: praveats ecmised Alderman’s amendment that, in | ing to Theatre. gave her name and address and smil- By a wumanimous vote of fifty the ¢ it of passage, the ordinance } Y lso passed a resolution go into effect thirty days after signa ingly permitted herself to be locked Embers was also p 5 So, dT Wr up. nya explanation that #he carried forbidding the sale of th tickets ture by the Mayor, was accepted Herman Miller, of No. 247 West One} the revelver for protection against bold anywhere outside of the box office at a Alderman Redmond in an eloquent | Hundred and inth street, chauffeur mashers, made firat to Policeman Mar- | theatre or at a rate higher than that speech adyocated the adoption of the | for C, B. Richards, a banker, of No. 40 desk in the police station. After a tela- | P% f nose, jong,” he explained, “as dexired | : seat car phone consultation with Police Head- Alderman Johneon called up the end is att ed rested to-day and charged with running | ticket speculator ordinance when Alder At this stage the gallery became filled | down and killing Mrs. Caroline Layer, man Frank L. Dowling moved that the| with ticket speculators and thetr| sixty-four years old, of No. 64 West minority and majority reports be voted | friends | wighty-eighth street, last night on combined. Aldermen Brown and| Alderman John Walsh spoke for al my, Aniby tapidetes Kchloss objected. Alderman Redmond | resolution which, he said, would afford @ arrest was made by tw asked: “Is Alderman Schioss satisfied the public adequate protection. He | tives of Deputy Commissioner Bugher's to vote for the original resolution, charged that the Board's real aim was| staff, and the prisoner was immedi- which I introduced at the request of to “wipe out the sidewalk ticket #pecu- | ately taken to Police Headquarters, He linjury of Frederick W. | struck down the old Indy. | admitted having run down Mrs, La » he had been a friend | hurrying to kee! and also his subsequent flight and the Diessroth, who tried to stop him. ‘The young man declares that he was p a theatre engagement friend when he When he aw with a young woman | what had happened he feared he might | be lynched | | The Evening World, and for which [| ators and throw their business into the | take full responsibility ” jlaps of the voracious theatre man- "Tam," answered Alderman Schloss. | agers.” "And," continued Alderman Rea “Little Tim" Indorses It, mond, “are you also prepared to vote! aiderman Timothy P. Sullivan took as suggested by the Corporation Couns joy TO erea OH sel in his opinion to this board in siared that, whi which he advises that two resolutions oy speculators TCD Aare PATH AnTORT be adopted?” Walsh's charge compelled him to vote Sidewalk Men a Nuisance, for t solution “T am," again answered Alderman Alderman Walsh is not the only im- Schloss, “but before action is taken I Hate member of thie Board," sald want to explain why I suggested the Alderman Sullivan, “and J want to say minority report. We have absolute t notive whieh actuates power to wipe out the sidewalk specu. Vs ts the mative that does (le most Kood lators, whom an enactment — by Shira ligming lainatanciiwa iene board brought into being Walsh was met by a ste and The ticket speculator is a public nul m President: McGowan that those sance, and the public has suffered much Wv.wished to anplaud inight do so out abuse at his hands. But have we the right to legislate against the ticket agencies which do business on private SETH LOW IS NAMED. property, for which privilege they 2 3 rent? Agencies are brokerag: ALBANY, Dec. 1.—Goy, Hughes an- and have a legal right to do @ broke need to-da at he had appointed age business.’ yfhine follow Kates to represent “Lam willing to wipe out the sidewalk New Yc nivsance, but we can't late against | bor the brokers.'” | Dex | “Ls there anything then to prevent t | Serb broker from charging § extra on aj Pirland Ucket ?"" asked President MoCowan perir Not a thing in the world, but we} Ward H haven't the power to regulate that nunved Ald Be hie Alderman Frank 1 AK spoke CUNe favor of the majority report, saying tha ata it the y the head ta 1 Ix the only so- | and @ must block the {fiat te De W will be in Washington Robert J. Mc nD. Kernan evens, State Su: rks, and Ed- €. WALTER GETS LICENSE, INNATI It is id wsued to- © actress, ani martied (his even- | and fled Told of Accident. Miller had told of the accident at the garage where he kept his employer's car and in that way his identity was ob- tained by the police. drs. Layer's husband, janitor of the apartment Nos 64 and 66 Went Highty-eighth street. 8 had started to a fair at the Martha Me- morial Chureh, Fifty-second street and Ninth avenue. A black automobile with limousine body darted north as she was crossing from the east to the west side of Columbus ayenue, and instead of mplying with traffic regulations Nicholas, 1s house; tow ned eighth street before turning w ard Amsterdam ayenue, it tur the south side. Mrs. Layer was directly in ite path Fireman Dieasroth, standing on the co ner, saw her danger and shouted warning, but was too late, Tl e woman | stood transfixed for an instant and ther | th a own, crossing »! ble r knock her e 0 one of the ran over her body Dragged Pursuer Along. Inatead of stopping the chauffeur went M hy|« by | (the River and Har-|continuing to the north side of Eighty a afternoon while kneeling beside the netery by swallowing prusic acid. the grave and ran toward him when as too late. h occurred within a few minutes, | By the time Dr. Riley arrived with an umbulauce from Fordham Hospital the polleo of the Wakefield station had tuken charge ef the case. Suicide was so plainly established by the testimony jof the watchman that the body was {taken to the station-house before the | Coroner was summoned on the case. | Dr. Hass’s wife committed sulcide at thelr home, No, 439 Manhattan avenue, by shooting herself during @ fit of melancholia, She was a very beautitul young woman and had been married only a short time. de of distressir ces unding the particularly of her disordered was jealous of her and compelled him h of the fous to her act ute M Ise it pati lome with weeks. pre letion, | mental co isband's o t for two jof self-dest Heard Fatal shot. On this day he had important engage- ments his office. He told his wife About them agreed to let him upon to return within was leaving the apart~ heard the sound of a s body was lying on the room when he burst through n most she his promise ie two hours, ent t. His x floor of he the door The doctor was nervous and daspond- ent after the death of his wife. He left nis home this morning tellimz Dr. Jacob Garrison, of No. 1598 Lexington avenue, t he was going to the cemetery te placing floral decora~ his wife's grave According to Dr. Hl. Kanne, an nf No, 167 St. Nicholas avenue, closest friends of Dr, Hass, ude an ate Woodlawn On 6 about ome tions on optician, one of th the grief stricken tempt upon Cemetery dentist: made his life in last Wedne e visited his that occasion knelt a ife's grave and ind, weep ing ngs tor Disarmed by Attendants, Two of th nad been grie saw poe but cemetery attendants, who his extravagant They his racted by were watching him closely, Iver fc inzl draw a before n is head, could pull nd place t disarmed him the trigger. He was cemetery { the will manufacturer, of Broadway, was er his poignant had subsided. mmised he would furt! tempt his life, The lent was known only to a few taken and hi am eldric |Psventy-aixth street for, Dr omce ¢ law, to the a Haas, # gricf make no on rionds and relative adi faster, Di n ee plucky jolt dis the pave ng the refore lodged m der wi and h a sprained ankle and sboul of his clothing tora eff, most

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