The evening world. Newspaper, January 12, 1909, Page 2

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@terliny, sencrai counsel for the Con+ bolidaved Gas Company. Jamer Meck, former Deputy Attor- ney-Generai, now a member of & Blerling’s law firm, said before the meeting: “This gaw question applied to the com: panies other than the Consolidated Gas Company has a business as wel, as Its legal side, It might not be good bu neds policy to charge more for gas in one section of the city than In another, even if the company has a legal right to do ao, This is a question these bu: nes@ men will have to settle, The | side will take weeks to straighten out.” Some Talk of a Fight. While there ts a community of In+ terest between the Consolidated Gas | Company, the New Amsterdam Gas Company, the Mutual Gas Light pany, the Standard Gas Company Northern Union and the Central Union, some lawyers holding an advisory ca- | pacity toward the minor compantes hold that the decision of the United States Supreme ( applies ¢ to the Con- Bolidated. Officers of the minor com-| panies are considering the advisability of going right along on the dollar basis and fighting the question through the courts. Such a move would be radical in the extreme and interests allied with the} gas monopoly are strongly upposed to it. | ‘The more far-seeing of the capitalists | Interested say that this ts not the proper | time for a show of defiance on the part of public service corporations, especially as the general belief {s that the Con- solldated Gas Company controls the | wminor companies which are trying to; eneak out of the #-cent rate on a tech- | nicality. | To show that there ts a communtty,) of interest between all the gas com- panies, Mr, Sterling, the lawyer for the Consolidated, is on the directorate of all the minor companies except the Mutual, But in the directorate of the Mutual are Anthony N. Brady, William Rockefeller and I of the Consolidated. | 408,000 Get New Rate. The Consolidated Gas Company has | 408,000 customers in Manhattan. All of, these will immediately enjoy the bene: fit of the Si-cent rate, and such as ca! resent proof that they have been pay- at the dollar rate stnce May 1, 190 will get a % per cent. rebate on thelr bills, | The other companies have, all told, 2%,0k) customers. ‘The New Amsterdam fas 91,00) customers and owns the stock of the Central Union, whieh has 65,000 customers and the Northern Union, | which bas 22,uX) customers. The New York Mutual serves 50,000 customers, and the Standard 61.040 customers. The New Amsterdam company sells 60 per cent. more gas to the Congoli- dated than to private consumers. The tandard sells Kas to the Consolidated ‘he Mutual selis gas to the Consoll- dated In some instances and buys gas from the Consolidated In others. It {s plain that the interests of all the fas companies are interwoven and that he decision of the minor companies to refuse to abide by the S)-cent rate would subject the men who auntrol the gas monopoly to a lot of criticism. TRAWIING SHIP NOT FOR MERCHANTMEN —_——_— i A committee of five, appointed by the Maine Society of the City of New York) to Investigate the recent enforced re- trlement of Capt. C. Marsden, executive officer, and Ca E, Littlefleld, nav- fgating officer, from the schoolship Newport, reported this afternoon The report 1s rather a confusing document but the commi appears to have found as follows: That Capts. Marsden and Littlefield, who were not protected by civil service regulations, after five years’ service on the achoolship St. Mary were trans: ferred to the Newport, under Capt. Everhart, the commanding officer, Capt. Everhart and his two new officers could not Ket along, friction heing espe apparent during the cruise of tl rt last summer, W leclured them incor ee to gall with. | Accordingly, the two asked to resign by mittee, and they a) their action the re “Your committ to quote from Capt Teport, whici dence, staff of all hava the supposition th graduate 15 States rather ¢ chant service. “It considers that cc Newport were intoleraly Mared: d jen and Littlefiel self-respecting the app offic it W Newport |s to Tnited member of the Society could or should endure On ‘the strength of the Marine Society adopted resolution "Resolved, T of the City of fidence in the & its members, tlefleld, ex-na New York Cit r regrets the loss of it by said members when times were so bad ‘ pes they may ptain not commands In whic t be recognized and appreciated.” eT SAVANNAH ENTRIES. Istria, 1 i Masks St Abe. 07) Maly Me At FOURTH RACK. Thr one mile. bon Voting Gyup THE n for Am @elected by Eyer Name of voter tiie B. Gawtry, directors © EVENING WO VICTIM OF SHUT “CENTRAL PAR BF ‘Capt. Hilliard Was Aide-de- ; Camp to Lord Milner Dur- ing Boer Campaign. 'REVOLVER FOUND NEAR, Wounded Man Insists Footpad Fired Bullet and Then Robbed Him. Robert O. Hilliard, the Englishman | who was so strangely shot in Central Park last night, {8 a captain In the British Army and was alde-de-camp to! Lord Milner during the South African campaign. He resides in London at the Wellington Club, No. 1 Grosvenor Place, Hyde Park Corner, 8. W., one of the most exclusive clubs of the Britian capttal. ‘This Information was made public this afternoon by the Injured man's counsel, Herbert D. Mason, of the firm of Ivins, Mason, Wolff & Houget, of No 27 William street K Mr. Mason Issued his atement ortly after Capt, Hillard had de- clared emphatically In Roosevelt Hos- pital that he had been shot down by a footpad while strolling in Central Park at midnight. No Reason for Suicide. The attorney added his emphatic be- Hef that the Englishinan had been as- saulted by a highwayman, and atated further that {t was ridiculous to Intl- mate that the distinguished British Army officer had any motive for eul- ide, such as financial distress Capt, Hillard,” said Mr. Mason, ‘‘has spent a large part of the last several years in this country, principally in New York (at the Waldorf-Astoria) ,Boston and Denver and ts president of a large oll development company in Wyoming. His friend, Richard 8. Richmond, who was with Mr. Hillard at the Waldort until & few weeks ago, is also heavily interested in this company. “Mr, Hilllard js not and never has been interested In any mining or timber enterprises in the West, losses In which are stated to have caused him to at- | tempt to take his own life; nor is there |any other basis for such theory,” Capt. Hilliard was questioned at length this morning by Police Captain Farrell, of the Arsenal. His condition is not critical, and he was much stronger after the surgeons had located the bullet and prepared to take It out. He sald to the captain: “After dinner at the Waldorf IJast night [I strolled up Fifth avenue to the Park, then along the Park to the Circle, I thought I would go see the show at the Circle Theatre, I had seen it twice before, but there wan one part I Ilked especially, so 1 bought a ticket. “Before the performance waa over I became bored and went out, I went to Pabst’s for a drink. I bought a clgar and strolled to the park. I walked along that little pathway until I came to a small rustle bridge, I smoked there a while, and then went back to Pabst's, where 1 had another drink. 1! bought another cigar and returned to| the park.” "And you went up the same path to, the same little bridge?” asked Farrell. | Says Thug Shot at Once. "Yes." replied the injured man, “It| was restful and peaceful there, I en- joyed it—just stroiling along easily Suddenly ide me the dark figure of a man. 1! h sensation in my chest. I had never seon the man before, and In the darkness did get a good look at him. I could deseribe him." not not Hilliard declared there was no truth a In report that he was in financial dim 4. T own extensive ofl propertics and real estate In Colorado,” he sald, “and besides have a competence at ho is absurd to try and make {t appear that I sought to kill myself. I was shot and robbed by a thleg.” scene of the shooting was two blocks within the West Sixty-second pireet entrance to the park, Tt was a pecullar place for a man of Mr. Hilliard’s splendid appearance to be at midnight. He was clad In even- ing clothes, and, only a few minutes before he was shot attended a per- formance tn the Circle Theatre, Wi Policemen Daly and Reeves summoned to where Mr. Hilliard ) on the thickly shaded path nh stretched on his back, ot partially upon a wire as carried out of the park pharmacy. While being cried to the policemen en ruMan bolted the wall n the stomach and das: wallet, Then he mum- been a pricad Biauly Chorus, consid on of phot LD of a erican graphe pub 0 7 the cand{dat Beauty Ch vote for No. Ie nto “Ame York City __THE EVENING WOR MEXICAN SUGAR REFINING CO, BANKRUPT, ITS CREDITORS SAY HEROINE OF WEEK “TRIAL WARRING With Assets $475,000. | ——— | An involuntary petition In bank: ‘The petitioning creditors are the, But Mrs. Caldwell Says It’s ruptey has been filed this afternoon! Babcock & Wileox Compa Bll eae ; " | Simply a ‘Union of Intellects’ | LD, TUE SDAY, JANUARY with the clerk of the United States) Meyer and Carl Rosenbaum, who District Court against the Mexico Su-|clalma on notes and for goode sold + | and Is Looking for a Job. Preferential payments and transfer | i gar Refining Company Limited, whose | and delivered aggregate $16,292.67, officer are at No, 60 Wall street, and | whose extensive plant is at Tlacotal-; of property and preferences in legal cam, Vera Cruz, Mexico. proceedings are alleged by the peti-} ELOPED WITH MR, MILNE! | ite The company manufactures raw and Uoning creditors. refined sugar, molasses, alcohol and The liabilities are stated to be $500,-, | Carried His Locket When She Went to the Altar With the by-products of these articles. 000, and the assets $475,000, Rich Kentuckian. Plea of Unwritten Law Made to Save T. J. Hains Bite se. ers, i | Hains's mental condition, Mr. MeIntyre | farms sai \ Up to object to some of Mr. Mcintyre: He¢ore discussing the evidence I! statements, but each fie Panui Mrs. Jane Parks Caldwell, the hand- some Kentucky woman who tried a trial marriage with Charles A. Cald- well, of Eminence, Ky. admitted to an Evening World reporter, who found her | at a boarding-house at No, 4 West | Seventeenth street to-day, that, after a (Continued from First Page.) They looked puazled when he hat. Several times Mr. Darrin: rose . 12, 1909, LASSO LUNATIC INA NGHT HUNT ON DUKE ESTAT —_e—. Asylum Fugitive Was Naked and Stiff With Cold When Captured by Jerseymen, One hundred residents of Raritan, N. | » headed by William A. G in business in Newark, carry hunted over the estate of James B, Duke for a lunatic by the name of MeMurray, believed to have escaped from en who is torches and ropes, The man had been seen half naked In the woods early last evening and the word Went around that a madman was at large A huge bonfire was started on main street, Raritan, and this attracted the posse that took part In the hunt. All were supplied with torches and, lighting these at the bonfire, the band of one the State Insane | Asylum at Trenton or from the epileptic | village at Skillman, | detail, let me say that the killing of Set nie down and allowed ithe New y ‘e a vy oO work on, col is [Annie was done by a madman. It Ws jp cilenta nalvation tinhanipered oe digmantled and dethroned by the con- | Mcintyre Curbed by Court. |duct of a libertine, It was done by a) When McIntyre mentioned his baby jman who was crazed when he learned 8!tl, Moille, Thornton Hains showed the that his home had deen wrecked, hie gray pmoiom except fear and bravado, that he had manifested since hi 1 children deprived of the love and care began. He put his hand. to hie even of a mother, but there were nc signs of tears on his | "It was not prompted by Thornton, | Sheeks when the hand came away, It was in the insane act of a man A little further along Justice Crane, crazed with grief, You will bo told by | at Mr. Darrin's request, cautioned Mr McIntyre that he must refer to Annie's the State that Capt, Hains wae not ine Suseet relations with Fetet Haine's jsane, We ‘teil you that the sight of | which had been told to Peter Hains, | Annis transformed him into another) Once In a frenzy of denunctatlon of | being. I tell you the evidence In thie nny wavure aie Chit of his | | lassful of drin vater case established that he wronged the | fying over the tailing Tate the tees eee mother of Hnlns's children. The Court | soaking une of the jurors, Se will tell you it matters Iittle If tt be| Mr Mcintyre was just saying, “even true or not. {f Thornton Hains thought {n his heat , | of hearts ‘that fellow Annis got all that Captain's Insanity. was coming to him,' even if he thought “The Btate has tried to show he was) Annis deserved ceath, the law cannot rational, Do you believe that the re] mega BT ue in gustice cital of the misdoings of Mrs. Hains Crane. “If you mean to quote the law, were not sufficient to destroy the cap-|Quote it — correctly, our — ollen , 5 taln's mind? Melancholia seated her- | {houghts were his own, but If taken in self beside the throne of reason—taint- ed and tortured his brain and altered | the emotions of his heart. “When the Captain was told of his wife's Infidelity his eyeballs glowed with living fire best described by the blind & part of the evidence againat him.” Refreshed In voice and body by @ rest of an hour during the noon recess, M; | McIntyre started in at the afternoon ses- sion with renewed vigor, He had a blg- ger audience than even tn the morning, for now every seat waa taken and prab- old man of the Iliad in his description *>ly two hundred men and women stood of one of his heroes, and subsequently |s0,4%o we tise wp omtomen: Who were . a ¥ sald to be wives of officers at’ Fort Han- developing Into an insane frenzy over cock and Fort Hamilton, came in with which Capt iaine had no control Ie Major Hains, it to be wondered at tha je became @ raving madman? What man in this sThennten) Eeoked: Up. jury box, what man In this common-! Mr. MeIn-yre created a flurry of sur- Wealth, after hearing the revelations prise by saying he would probably told In this trial, and what friend now | take not only to-day, but all of to- of Annis would be willing to raise him | morrow to conclude his summing up from the shades below?" He resumed with a few, a very fow, words for his two discredited allenists All through this Gen. Haing sat with his head in his withered hands, with his Then he spent Ume In flerce denuncta- tions of the evidence of Skura. the lps Working under his grizaled. close- clipped mustaché. Major Hains kept, Bayside cabman, and Ellerson, the club waiter, saying their evidence showed his face averted and his eyes on the Pattern in the carpet. But the prisoner, | conspiracy, perjury and subornation of dropping. nis pencil and his pad, had! perjury. Suddenly turning to where swung about in hie chalr watching the! his client sat, he shouted: Look Thornton, look up and jurors with a shifting, black eye, to: u fea, if he might, from their faces, what! gaze your Furors {n the face and read there, as I think T have, that they will never convict you.” on thelr minds. connection with overt acta they form | | hundred started for the woods, | marital experience that begun on! After several hours’ searth the posse | Christmas Day, sho eloped the day after came on McMurray in the woods on the New Year's with William Milne, tho te, and near the summer home head eritheleeiesdeenetmanticen the s Evelyn Wentworth Murray, of sew York City. The man was entirely lace firm of Clough, Pike & Co, of No.| nude, standing with folded arms, nea 55 White etreet, this city. a chimp of bushes, Paul Janz, who Milne is an elderly Scochman with alcarried a lasso, finally colled It about | wife and children {n Haworth, N, J.,| the lunatic, who toppled over like a but that didn’t make any difference log. It was subsequently discovered when he met the dark-eyed Kentucky that his limbs were stiff from cold, He beauty In Cincinnati a year before she was wrapped In overcoats, which mem- to Caldwell, who keeps a department bers of the posse supplied. | store and is a raiser of blooded stock. When uestioned as to the | At the boarding-nouse Mrs. Culdwell abouts of his clothes, MeMurray raid | was registered—she declares by a) ‘In his office up the street.” His out- | strange migtake—as “Mr. and Mrs, J. C.| fit, which consisted of a suit of cloth. ling and overcoat of fine erial, and a pair of patent leather shoes, was subsequently found hanging on a fener | Patks, of Kansas City.” ‘The landlady when The Evening World man inquised | for Mrs, Caldwel) and finally identified her as "Mrs, Parks," said that ‘Mr. | tn the woods. When asked {f he did not | | Parks” a "“fine-looking. elderly man! want to go home, McMurray answered with @ gray mustache and gray sprin- | ‘I would like to go to Morris Heights, kled hair," had left the house a short but I hate to get off of Broadway.” James McUar Jed out of bed fi a farmer, was rout © posse and got out rket wagor and filled ft with and {t Was used as an ambu- lance to carry McMurray three miles over the country reads to Raritan There he was taken to tha office of Mr Green, where he was warmed up. Later | in the night he was taken to the county jail. where he is now, under the care a phystelan time before, “A Unlon of Intellects.”” "sald Mrs, Caldwell, or 48 she Insists shegshall now be called. “I am stopping here alone, Mr, Milne? Well, yes, I'll admit 1 love him, but ours is a union of intellects— you understand? There is nothing coarse or worldly In it. His wife under- inds it perfectly, straw, “Ridiculous, | Miss Park lin when he got there and found we'd perfectly, gone “Mr. Milne did send me a telegram We got here a week ago, and Mr Milne took these rooms tor me uy asking me to meet him In Cincinnati ndome something to do. could 4 after I had written him that my mar- yf{)no-—oh, | know all about her an red Ife of a few days was miserable knows ail about me. You see, Miln with a man to whom L could never be Mme in Cincinnatl whiie he was on busi- { have not seen him more than twice, got home, and then went on an awful when I dined with him, spree, and she wrote to me, calling me a pirate.’ ‘ things in a better light now, though. I've got a lovely letter frome her tn my grip. Of course, woman-like, when she heard T was married she was "You see, he promised to get me 9 some sort of life work here. A nurse or & Newspaper woman, or something lke that, Some sort of career, Picture ‘i Raia waith i tickled to di and sald that her me," and Mrs. Caldwell's dark eyes | husband could ee me whenever [ liked | Mashed, ‘the wife of a country store- | 1 guess she's changed her mind now | where- | | | he made things blue around the Hav- ¢ffect MoIntyre's work was haying "| Quotes Latin to Jury, own side and attackin, of the State and from 80 Thornton looked up and gazed. keeper!" Mr. Darrin objected once to Mr. Me- Billy offered to give her a lot of money and the house in Newark If she'd get a Mr. McIntyre was at his best along! Intyro's characterization of. the room|, %"% Caldwell Is in appearance any- | Afvoree, hut she won't, she's so spiteful. | here In analyzing the evidence of his| where witnesses for tho State were| thing but “the typtcal wife of a country | "I have written to Mr. Caldwell and f, the evidence Kent furing, Hier trial ish “school of | storekeeper’ she says her husband told him to go ahead and get a divorce | oth extracting instruction,” an r Melntyre, pro-| y, Tate i as soon as he wa Berne ng | ating that Ne meant ne paceialra. | wanted to make her. To-day she wore | Mine wot ion what comfort he might ductions, Thornton Hains went to Bay side with a legitimate, proper purposo; | torney. had no active or passive part in the killing of A and only interfered when he believed his insane brother was In danger of violence at the hands of Annis's friends upon the dock float He worked hard and skilfully to put the best possivle contruction upon his client's acts and words and bear- flection upon the former District-At-% dark brown silk gown of pronou went ahead and used the ob- noxious phrare repeatedly thereafter. each time looking fixedly at Elmer White, the special prosecutor. After McIntyre began an arraignment of Mre. Annis he suddenly Interrupted | to ask for an adjournment, Court ad- journed until to-morrow, when the de- fense wil! close in time, it Is hoped, to Places, flashed diamonds in various tings. The diamonds'she admit! can have them back If he senda twelve trunks full of clothes “A Boul Above Groceries.” directoire cut, on which, in appropriate were the gift of Caldwell, but she says he an He says 1 woul or a writer o ne. [ don't care pas the wife of keeper wit a te ‘At the tices of Clough, were ivarned that Mr. Milne appeared there early to-day and hurriedly left | hin desk in the private office after re- | [eeving a telephone message. He said | inced set- a country perament.” Pike & Co. it her | save out the following Heavy snow may be expected this | QVEK BETWEEN BAPTE Te eee te TT eitihh st also all Broo! Jattérncon and to-night: in a lye at Prcekln and southern and western H in Manhattan above and. hoken and terany “City, — — ) Cand ‘or — fawn, cuatomers carelully. pecker hipped from our special mall or- there sprang up in the path} rd a siarp nolse and felt a stinging | I] jallow Darrin to begin hia argument, "T want the case to go to the jury by Thursday,” sald Justice Crane before Court adjourned, In, fie only mistake Mr. McIntyre made was In quoting so much Latin to a jury of Queens County tradesmen and truc | there was a black, scorched hole in the shirt bosom. ‘The revolver had been held against his body, When the wounded man’s clothing was | searched at the drug store to which he | was carried only two cents were found in his pockets. Later, a search on both sides of the fenced pathway where he | was found discovered a large black |S Phi y towned young woman dice cardease and a brand new revolver. | to the Roosevelt Hospital in an automo- |The revolver was on one alde of the! bile this morning and sent her card to The card case bore the Englishman's | hrought to his bedside. She held a whi- inttlals, “R. O. H.," and contained a | Pered conversation with him for fifteen memorandum showing that J, P, Mor. , minutes and went away She gave the panion, however, who left him to sail | to England a few weeke ago. This was Roland 8. Richmond, of London, olro a British aristocrat, Interested in \eat- ern enterprises with Hilliard, At the office of J. P, Morgan & Co. |{nguirles concerning Mr. Hilliard threw Jno light on his business affairs. He had no personal acount with J. P. Mor- }@an & Co, and the draft of Coutts & | Co, had been cashed several days ago. gan & Co, had been ordered by Cout* Equally myster'ous a wel ‘i ‘ ~ ory: " a World rep |Co., of London, to pay R. O. Hill, | groomvd young man, who called direc ‘I wrhlepered to Caldwell while we oe een eee eiaome Howe tis (on demand. ‘The memorandum was after. the young woman departed, — He | were belng married, ‘I can never be a| fraworth, | | would not give his name, nor would he talk with the detective An examination to-day showed that the bullet had glanced along b with. out penetrating or diaturbing any organ. It entered the body above the abdomen, on the left side, but wide of the heart. It can be removed by a simple operation jsigned "J. P. Morgan & Co.” There was |also @ passport, made out tn Hilllard’s name in 1883, and signed by British Government officials. The document passed the bearer through all the Con- tinental countries of ‘ope. There were also numerous clippings of English | ——_ focal affairs, The case contained no tela | LOS ANGELES ENTRIES, Papers Not Rifled. “(08 ANGRLES, Cal.. Jan, 12—Th The papers In the wallot were not tum- | tries for tu-morrow's Taces aro as pled or creased as if they had been tows roughly handled or any other papers Brening World.) folded with them had been disturbed. five and a balf fur Also the case was the oppoalte side Detector, “110. Empire Bxyeti-| he would not be back to-(a5 “You see I only married Caldwell; James Pike jr, one of the mambers of after he had pestered me for faore | tie fim: ale att wate ine me ear,” iS worked for the firm radford, Eng: than a year.” she explained “I met) tang, had been advanced to the him about the same time as Billy | position of their American travelling Milne, but I loved Billy and never representative and head of the sales de- ved Cabé partment some years ago loved Cabswell. T had a soul above | fig salary, and is apposed to have in: groceries ahd dry goods 1 reckon, vested it to good advantage “Caldwell was so persistent, and) Mr. P that Mrs, Milne ap- Cynthiana, a few miles from Eminence, jn love with a man in Kentucky and kept telling me what a good mateh It would be, that finally J ylelded and we became engaged At that, the en-! | that she was afraid he would marry her and become Hable to prosecution for bigamy. She said that Mr. Milne had told her gagement Was broken three times be- he Joved ae Raldwwelli and that ithe i jonly thing for him to do was to live fore we VAR) married on Christmas| poare from his wife. Thereupon, said day, In my sister's home, All through | sfra, Milne. she wrote to Mra, Caldwell the ceremony I kept tight hold of a Mrs. Milne Weeps Hutle locket that Billy had given me.) sfrs Mitne, an elderly woman of dignt- and that had his picture and mine in{ fed bearing, whose hair {a slightly It. | touched with gray, had cvidently been wife to you; I love another man.’ He only laghed and said, ‘That's your sen- tlment,’ but now I guess he thinks dit- ferent." Mra. Caldwell laughed a rippling laugh aa she spoke of her married life. Had No Love to Give Him, “My husband has not been home In the past week,” began Mrs. Milne, ang then checked herself, “But I have no anxiety as to his whereabouts, He Is stopping at the Broadway Central Hotel, 1 believe.” Mrs, Milne admitted she had visited | her husband's office In New York and had sought to find out where he was “Tt was one long fight on his part for) The reporter asked her if she knew a love on mine,” she said, "but I had no| Mr: jdwell, ee Aen Ky. vi v vi ‘No, ner 1» Dat now a Mist love to give him, and I told him so. Jane Parks, of that place.” But he Inalsted that it would be all ight in time, and everybody kept call- | ng and telling me what a fine marriage I had made til! I thought I'd go crazy. | "He gave me diamonds—ae though ti could buy my love with those. Why, | “Is shea friend of your husband?” “Yes, fhe knows her. He met her in Cincinnat! a year ago, Tf belleve, but there |s hotiing more in it-If you mean | that.” husband in Cincinnat! this Day?" of the fence from where the revolver 110; Mr. Bishon. | the books and pletures Billy gave me admitted Mrs. Milne, “he was C f Pearton. 1 a business trip. wes found. afford, 107: vay | are all I care for, and that's why I Vani asa hin slace tt If it was dropped while In filght by Tanama, 100) want my trunks, I'll send him back jaye not,” an Assailant and robber the man must \ RACE Put six furlongs | everything he gave me if he'll send point of the Interview Mrs ¢ doubled his tracks In a strange 104 Lagiorin, 10%, ‘Caimar, 100. me those. Milne's daughter, Mrs. Cornell Blair, 106; Port Mahone, 106) Oyparde “ t the wife of a New York lawyer, came manner. The first warning of the Pept en eed taint r4o) “Finally the situation got so critical | byt tig drew her mather gently away shooting Was carried into the Circle RACE-Belling; seven furiongs,— | tha, could stand It no longer. T wrote | an. axpiained that Mrs. Milne was tired 3 * W: Oulee, 09 4 ton Pe to Billy to come and take me away, 1 {ll and could not talk any more. by Giovanni Cantonl, elghteen years {esi sos stacdongr pas Areuent, He wired me on New Year's Day to| ad [lla i jd. He was dressed’ like a boot- Bymwood, 114 of Gotham. 48) | meet me In Cincinnati at the Hote) Hae. | ee bla vher 1 where t weep, 108 1 Rail, 07, His ln. The village operator brought ack, When asked where he lived he £i0t!' Proper, 114; Glaucus, “10% telegram up to the house, and my hu G. F. BAKER QUITS BANK, arinned and sald “No 190 West Twenty- ; Hee AIChE ats fait , band was very curious to know what| George F. Baker to-day resigned as ni street.” He said he had heard al FOURTH RACE. Selling: Aye furton, was in It, but I eked up some sort of | yregident of the First Natlonal Bank, @ sound of rustling in the tickets | AMP J12, Bitter Sir, 18; Mad Musgrave, |g story, and ho went back to boss the | Prentice nancial institution nd then a fail In- a ( 108. ahort ue, Weighing out of sugar and measuring of | one of the ta Foam era cae tee over the body Hilly May cloth in the store { this city, and was sucoeeded by to emen orine “Tr left home with only the dress J| rrancis L. Hine, formerly first vice { the Weat 8 xty- *. 103; Entre fave on, and none of my other iovely | presideut. ey jotted it In tiings. "I only packed my jewels, s0/ ~ - — : the bey ona and three. that I could make tlm come to terms| — my ; When Nore Merling. jater over my trunks, [ am not @ COM- | |_| Bureau, uA = | mertelal woman, but I had that much morning he Seltin ive turk sel ‘ H MoT enlse eae: RAC SMe tiTincaratts: Slipped Away at Dawn. Brain and Nerve Cells a hoards ut. 4 1a c 10 Balerian A “tall phe out of the Baus at dawn ( nowas une All Alone. 108: Pinay Jrphan Hoy. | New Year's caught an early r SE dite, tite O Toole: WH sere VAN fo Cinelnnatl 1 met Billy inthe | require right food Regarded as Mysterious Guest. | twostiger If. iit aueivert Hell, Wren” | Haviin just as he was calling up my I LLM ALASeLENTASEIRNT | FoMreniice allowance. Track muddy, ome tn Brninence on the ‘phone He to replace natura a [guess your hubby's awful mi - a WOMAN HANGS HERSE Just got him on the wire and he told waste TENTOWN, N. Y., me to go to hell.” nigh Herhar. Kendle en I said iter get out, for wid ty Chait knew how hot-headed Rentuckians ly A the very nitted suicide t are, even when the’ as old as Cald- ‘n . rom a beam under the attic, woll, who Is more than fifty, [ didn't bt sions when Millard er home. No motive for the | want a shooting scrape r there in ha at the Waldorf-Aa- act Ix known the Havtin. In the mean time, though, ver mixed soclally with oo a girl friend of mine in Cincinnat! had ry ‘, ud " nther guests, nor was he met Mr, Milne and I on the street, and There's & Reasen ver ween to spenk to a woman. He The delicious favor of ‘Salada’ wil the mean thing telephoned right to my ad one fast friend constant com. plesee you. Your grocer selle it. prnedend where we were. [ understand He gets a| Me | eee, disposed to defeat the resolution, ba cause, they charged, the Mayor had not honored the Board with an Invited tion to partielpate with the Committed in planning the celebration. Speer HARRIMAN AT HI8 OFFICE. SANG OPERA AIR ~AS HE WAS LED TO E. H, Harriman was at his office iq | | the flnancial district to-day for the firsd CHAIR OF OFATH time since Dec. 2% when he was takea slightly Ul. } SS SaeEEEEEE an _cueeneeneeeee” ‘ OAKLAND ENTRIES. | , | Special to The Brening Woetd | John Mantasanna Pays Pen-) oa ithe tethe Benne Word) | for to-morrow’s races are as follows FIRST alty for Murder of His Confessor, I eart. Hujor, 104; ‘Talentosa. Sweetheart W: Buward Ormonde, 07; ( Brief, 17; The Peor, 9% Nett, Ot | a a a SECOND RACE-Stx furl i wolling.. TRENTON, N. J., Jan. t2—John | pargin, 1a: Chusien Green, 1A: Funayelag | Mantasanna, of Essex County, con-| Hi Waren Yell. 100: Modicum, i ii | victed of murdering his thirteen-year. | end, Russell, 101; Little Sia, 0; Berens | old sweotheart, paid the death penalty eaten RAC et vied Eurtonee, al one, 114; Revon,, 104-0, Ky He |last night at 9.16 o'clock. | Twin Serew, lls ‘TMpaier, 101: Kaname Just before he marched to the death | Faurusa, 101 FD ana io biter, 104) Amido Jones, 10) chamber he promised his spiritual ad-) ‘tTrihona,’ 101, viser, Father Fish, he would make no| FOURTH RACE— Futur Coureat sellinet trouble, He had sald he would not fight | ;Deutschiand V2, Lane, vans | 1030 Stokes, against being put in the electric chair. | herty, 108, Madm: “I was @ soldier in the Boc war and| eae ues am not afraid," was his last statement. | .aiing Yremacco, He sang an aria from “Il Trovatore" Just a he was entering the death cham. | 1!) Wartare, 101; an. M4, John 107; ‘Trols Tempe, 0& Mile and seventy y. | Vids Buchanan eat Ge Ae fannie, Be ‘ey ee nflammadi Ba jira Mae DS: Bak rai 2a: ‘Bi Gow 02. Ec ber, | tls, 105; "Katte Powers, ; | acSoran cin, Lid Guunty, Seat "Ho? Hares LOEBGIVES OUT LETTES first igi ie "oat id 105; Joe Nolan, 10, Nat a ON MRS, MINOR MORRIS. One From Woman's Son Says He| Hopes She Will Do Nothing | Rash—Answer to Tillman Speech, WASHINGTON, Jan, 12—Answering | ja reference by Senator Tillman In his | | 197; Sainspowal, 105, Speech yesterday to the incident of Mrs. Minor ris being ejected from the White House, Secretary Loeb to-day | made public letters from Mrs. Morris's | Have No Nose son, 1. H Highleyman, of St. Louis, and Francis J. A. Darr, of Somerset, for Eyeglasses. N. Ja, bearing on Mrs, Morria’s act ° . The letter from Darr, addressed to Sons Suchion Chip | President Roosevelt, under date of “2 ; Sept, tl, says holds eyeglasses as rigidly and “Lam writing you my amende hon- a mistake [ made three years | This refers to Darr's belief ex- pressed at tat time that Mrs, Morris | securely as spectacles, The dif- ferent points of CONTACT and the suction pressure make had i ‘ GEN aa in her eject-| eyeglass wearing a pleasure. Rent The letter from Highleytuan re-! Attached to any eyeglass for 35 cts ferring to Mrs, Morris says: T can| QU aCed 0 alk by opie 4 only hope that she wit! do notiing ras; SOLDONLY AT OUR FIVESTORE: n Washington, however, evary moment LT expect something to happen." ge 54 East 23rd Street, near Fourth Ave. 54 West 125th Street, near Lenox Ave | 442 Columbus Ave., 81st and 82d Sts. told weather ts 76 Nassau Street, near John Street. Northwest and 489 Fulton St, (Onn. A, & 8.) BROOKLYN ‘outh western States. ; ZERO WEATHER IN WEST. Snow Added to Frigtd Conditions at Varlons Points, CHICAGO, Jan. 1 general to-day in the Central and In Chicago the mercury stood at six above zero, Twenty dexrees below zero. was the official weather orted from St. Paul to-day. Winnipeg reported 10 below zero, At Havre, Mont., It was 1s below sleet or snow has occurred generally over the district south of the lake (Trade Mark.) SPECIAL FOR TO-DAY—%2TII, ORANGE & LEMON WALN BON BONS BO : ASSORTED CHOCO. ).. POUN! SPECIAL FOR TO-MORROW—13TH, TUTTI FRUTTI CREAM 1 KISSES. +. POUND SPECIAL ASSORTED CHOCO. | 1QQ LATES (20 kinds). POUND WE DELIVER FREE PURCHASES OF ONE DOLLAR AND v' rel PTRRY AND region, in the Mississippi Valley and the Southwest. The temperature Is at the freezing point as far South as Gal ton, Texas, and ranges from five to een above In Northern Texas and Arkansas, ‘ ——S SNOW iS ON THE WAY. The Weather Bureau this afternoon WINTER”S HEAVIEST SNOW STORM UP THE STATE, epartment 54 BARCLAY ST, Cor, West w. ROCHESTER, N_ Y., Jan. 12.—Western Con Church $a, New York {s to-day in the grip of the PARK ROW: [first big snow storm of this year, In or 06 BROADWAY | this city three Inches has fallen since | 45 206 | Con Pulten G8 daylight, and it is sti v snowing hard est of Rochester, toward Buffalo, the | fall! ‘s greater than In this c¢ The i snow is light and {# not Interfering | greatly with raflronds, INTERLAKEN, N. ¥., Jan. 12—-What FOR MEN 25% REDUCTION to clean up stock of woollens, He= ONE, PRIGE, +, G00D8 TO MEASURE ONLY. ALL OR WRITE FOR HaoRLEE 68. promises to be one of the heaviest snow and wind storms in years Is raging here to-day, More than five inches of snow failen and there is no sign of aj let-up. The temperature Is 17 degrees above zero, > $25,000 TO LINCOLN FUND. Board of Aldermen Finally Votes s an Appropriation, | ‘The Board of Aldermen to-day voted an appropriation of $25,000 to defray | the expenses of the Lincoln Centenary Committee which is arranging a mon- ster celebration In this city Feb, 12 W.L.DOUCLAS | $3.50 SHOES 13% Atrialwillconvince next Stores in Greater How York : #3 [Wroadwar, cor, Howard, Broadway, cor. sth Bt, HS. Broadieny, cor, 1th St, 1449 Broadvvay, cor, seth St, 1ae-1449 Broadway, oO. Ast, mau Stree! i toreen 146th & 147th St BA Sitth Ay., cor, 2d ry neh a eT ever CRIs Newagk Av,iftl ark—85 Broad Street, 213 BRoo) tan Bes gor, oy 0. | A Most Delicious and Gratifying bever- | age, Drawn from the wood, it Is truly a Cream Ale, pleasing to the eye and palate and soothing and gatisfying to the stom- ach, besides affording the superior build- BRANAGAN,—On Jan. 12, MARY, wife | of the late James M. Branagan, “ ng-up qualities peculiar to Evans’ Ale, | renee {roms nee ap) 5 whe | at. on Thursday, Jan, + at ne ot ere ‘ AL M.. thence to the Church of the ates, Saloons. Oseter and Chop Houses,| pauiigt Fathers, Relatives and friends are invited to attend, 13 EVITT.—Jan, 10, DANIEL SWERNY M'DEVITT, beloved son of Mary A, Mo+ Devitt and the late Dennis McDevitt, Notice of funeral to-morrow. ‘ew York City Depot: —_ B6th St. & 12th Ave, ic = You get advantage of ‘Tour 63-year-old policy of high quality and low prices when you go to AUCTION SALES. ae ALE. CRABT TO-DAY at At, Automobile De REE, AUCTIONEER, will seit 5.50 Me a OT Wied HELP WANTED—FEMALE. eral work In smal apart te } ut. Apply to-night or Moody, 539 West 154th i Uy RIKER’S Drug Stores New York, Brooklyn and Boston, HATONS, thoroughly experienced & Gibbs powet machines, on pata, M: ita i lade

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