The evening world. Newspaper, December 9, 1910, Page 3

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| . THE EVE EVENING WORLD, DRIVER ACCUSED OF STRIKE MURDER UAL SET FREE Mulligan, Who Made Charge Against Alfred Mule, Fails to Identify Him. TRIES A NEW SCHEME. | Joseph Murphy, Detained as aj ’ Material. Witness, Released Under Parole. Alfred Mute, had made an alleged confession charg- ing Mule with fatally stabbing the | taine was that for the first time in this voung civil engineer John C. Warner | city of many beliefs and little faith—a | Juring the recent express drivers’ | ojty religious even unto its Tenderloin—a strike, didn't have to stay very long | walking, talking figure boldiy named as!/ a cell, He was brought from police | Jesus in the directory of the cast ap- Headquarters to tne Criminal Courts | peared as the chief character in a the- Building to-day and stood in a line with | atrical representation. Sarah stood back eral men in the office of Arsistant |as the sinful woman of Samaria wiile District-Attorney Rubin. Then James | M. Maxudian, an actor fitted physicaliy F. Mulligan, who had accused Mule of rather than spiritually for the role of the murder, was brought In, Rubin called on tim to pick out the man whom he had accused. ‘Wom@n made up the greater part of Mulligan didn't do tt. He wouldn't of | the audience that witnessed the the-| couldn't identify Mote, although he] atrical coming of Christ at the Globe Ad professed to know him well, Con- | Theatre. They were curious, not shocked | vinced that Mule had no hand in the | nor yet startled. Their eyes were open, | idling, Mr. Rubin at once took him | but thetr lips closed when the acto 1 before Coroner Hellenstem, who {9 con-| personating the Saviour came upon ‘he jucting the inquiry, and moved for|scene. There wasn't a murmur for a Mule's discharge. moment. Then feminine tongues began Mulligan “Sweated” Again. Then, in the belief that Mulligan knew @ good deal more abdut the crime than e had admitted, the Central men proceeded to sweat him again. Under the questioning Mulligan another idea, plek o his removal to another county, to make good his words, Joseph Murphy, an organizer for the teameters’s union, who had been in the House of Detention since yesterday as also released He was paroled in the custody A material to-day. of former State Senator George W. Piupkitt, when his testimony might be néeded. witness, was > the man who was ar- rested last night after another prisoner and Mr. | Office nad He sald if he could get a look at the Rogues’ Gallery at Brook- | Iyn headquarters he felt sure he could t the real qssailant of Warner. Jadge Crain signed an order permitting and De- tectives Reilly, Kear and Jones took him ueroes the bridge to give him a chance who promised to produce him Actor Impersonating the Saviour, Made Up With Exact- ness to Traditional Pictures, Seen in Sarah Bernhardt’s Production of Rostand’s } “La Samaritaine.”’ f M. Maxudian’s Part Boldly Placarded ‘as “Jesus” on' | Theatre Programme, and Scenes Represented Jacob’s Well and Market Place of New Testament. the midst of Jeers woman spoke of the Nazarene, Her | faith transfgured her, the Ber | har fire burned with rebigious fervor. and new the BY CHARLES DA RNTON |" SS‘ BERNHARDT has ted Christ to the New York stage. This is no dramatic miracle; it ts simply | Rostand plus Bernhardt, though Saran herself has not been moved to embody the Divine Messenger. The significant fact about yeste afternoon's performance of “La Samari- day the Messiah, stood forth as the strikings, | figure in the drama. { to wag in whispers, “He looks like the | picture of Christ." This was the one and | only comment to be heard. Almost in the same breath there was silence for the first word that came from the lips of | the strangely familiar Prophet. Picture Had Religious Tone. A loose white gabardine fell from the neck to the feet of the figure upon which all eyes were tumed. Light | brown hair and @ lighter beard com- | pletea the identification. The face wore | beatific expression. The hands were extended, palms outward—the stained- glass attitude, The voice was as soft and as gentle as the Gallic law would allow. The diction was of the French theatrical school. But the picture was in the religious tone that the wor'd re erenc ‘This was the impression conveyed by the actor. 1 have tried merely to give you a rough sketch of the portrait he | eae good pehavior—and, sinners that we are, | Mkely to be destroyed. Alonzo Stewart, | Strikes Stake and Fill Walking, Talking Figure of Christ in a Play, First Time in the History of New York City YALESENIORHURT, DUCK | HUNTER DROWNS. f Rubber Company Omclal | Another | Son | tora lB. | When Police Sergeant Buckley learned | thee Peabody had been driving the car FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, “rere, WOMAN 1S KILLED, ARS Sms January Prices Now! ASCARHITS AUTO. ( $20-§25 Coats Student — Arrested While Trying to Escape With Girl Survivor. | | SMASH AT poor Miilionaire Peabody Declares Trolley Ran Into Machine From Behind. of RRIDGEPORT, Jessica Saunders Dec. 9 Chesro, a dressmaker of Mystic, Conn., tan Foster, tne daughter of the proprietor Inn, narrowly missed ‘Thompson of St, Paul had his artf and two ribs to-day in a collision betw mobile in which «ney Conn, -Mra young was killed, sixteen-year-old of the Mil death and ay broken nm the wore riding ford, | another Yale millionaire, 4rove Ho was arrested in a garage hore after he had raced from the scene of the accident with Miss Foster. The po: he dostroyed the Hcense sontor, early he car of hig car befe garage in Peabody which he trolley car. Tho dressmaker was pitched out of the automobile under the wheels of the trolley car and decapitated, Arrested tt.. Survivor, he made the rounds of nearby garages and found the young man preparin, to enter another car and drive Mi Foster to her home. She had swooned directly after the accident and was in @ hysterical condition. Peabody told Sergeant Buckley that | he and Thompson had called at Mise | Foster's home to take her out for a| ride. They found her busy with wre, |chesbro, who was preparing to make her Kome now gowns. Miss Foster sug- wested that they dri Chesbro to her home in Mystic, Pgabocy explained to Sergeant Buck- ley that he was going in the me direc- | tlon as the car when it came up be- \find him and «mashed into the auto. | At the place the collision occurred tha ‘ Three Others Held. presented. He was not an actor to be! |tracks take up ® part of the highway. ‘The men still under arrest and held] reverenced for his acting. Ite wea only BRISTOL, R. 1, Dec. —William De-| TH¢ Automodlie was running lose to : an ordinary actor in an extraordinary 3 Weak Ory zad ne tracks to keep free from the snow. Without "belt Are ‘ pedir Sketched from Characters in the Play. forest Brown, secretary and treasurer | ‘phe maehing Garried tall lights, accord- Kleimann, Charles, twenty years old, | “ma iP. ——— of N “ “s ve nat hea: come: to. | —— < a ==:_|of the National india Rubber Company, | ing to Peabody, When the trolley car . 153 Thin avenue; express wagon} But the autence that Il of Bristol, was drowne’ in the harbor | struck the machine Mrs, Chesbto was Der. worship Sarah paused to contemplate | Finatiy, as a prophetess, she led the Sea bang) ng thrown out and fell across th ok ‘ulligan, James F., nineteen, No, @98|this Christ-actor. Only the afternoon | crowd through the gates. Once more NIGHT PATROLMEN STUNG, |nere earty to-day. Rrown nad been out) aon had nik arm and. wels rd avenue: express wagon helper, | Defore I had heard @ Voice at ine ae We saw Bernhardt triumphant--und this | 69 ‘They, Asxcrt In “tn Causing Arreat jones hin = gretiger e Rypetatehirs-| twoken, while Peabody and Mias Foster O'Connor made a statement in whtoh| Theatre and waited to see the Call age ey hos gil for the gods See. Gaanieenke Set tented ttectt | Were, uninsured. , M ‘of | lean on His way to the cross. Rut now act showed ter stl] of Head of Red ¢ Service. r bed pa Mre. Chesbro was a éresemeker in he declared Mulliban was the leader of at seated at the well, where the crowd it. The boat rapidly filled with| Mystic. She w: ‘divorced Ne gang which attacked Warner, think- | Macteriinck’s carefully considered “@Us | )aa'h) phat i Walter R. S. McE No, #17 East ; Peter ebe.) Woe ovens gene Or ner, thinks | Quelty’” faded into the artifola: ght eel unen Poatins gadhered about btm, He | Q 0 MG a aid Geventycolgnin | Wher ond Brown, sioumberedsby Wel from Resstue | Oheshro: ‘and. resumed ng he was an express guard ¢ rike . y tol him tenderly one of th undre¢ ad Seventy-elghth | navy t unting suit an: | her maiden nam Sau breaker, the theatre before the simple, unaf-|swectest little children that ever won |street, organizer and owner of the Red | Mier hdesivte y pecrine jae rl pines Teast Story of the Murder fected realism of Rostand. For bad heart of a New York audience. |Cross Night Patrol, was arralg ha ciey. cast Gen, Tremain Dead, ty thing—and that was the main thing!— js toddiing infant seemed to renew |the Morrivania Pollce Court to-d Lo ih A ee Gen, Henry Edwin 7 idely O'Connor further stated that on the! Rostand had dared to call the charac-| Sarah's motherly—or grandmotheriy—|onanged by five of ht ‘ : Brown was about forty-eight years . ty Rowis: remain, widely night of the stabbing he was with 4 hi fe. And why not? | affects ent to it and ran {> ° men with and was well known in the} known as a lawyer and authopity on M x by its right name. A : limeflamming the: ach, 4 : | military affairs and whi otiv ‘gan and 2 other men in Washington| prugent dramatists who reach der ugh its curly halr as |" 4 One to th cage hae trade, The National India| military an ak was active in . cisesane ae | i as she ‘@ spare mom o to s to the t of Henry Nominal te tkib Of tie mals | ODUDLIDA! tics In this clty for for Hallicwheh a. tlaphone: message 88) ang tet cor dleguises fool BOBOMY. | Davee ied to te dale ae ene oe Wetncka of No. BE Twenty-ffth Lecter Met eipiaigs oe ‘ re pilot) tolloning the Divi’ Was. ied ie pepicea” thats picket. had 16 ated &! Moreover, nobody wants to be fooled. |” n on the whole! street, McFivoy hired h Z ‘yar oe sae nahh Pegs a day at his home, No, 87 Madison avenue. | Boe gener a Deere tats nt ati i¢ a play contains @ character that Js | Bernh sr in adoration|man Noy. %. He demar pe nye ‘ sees ; — Gen Tremain was born in this city on parece avenue Oise mtroet supposed to be Christ you may be about t . wot the t | Welncke and assigned him to @ rot f alt of J nm # presi: | Nov. 14, 1840. He of "The pe geeasase vec mated Hae ie SNe" | footy sure. that the playwright stage ( at has come to lilt lnaecustianey pple: Brown wea at one time secre |Last Hours of ridan's Cavalry,” pect had a gun lag ois ha | York in His’ows a ‘vada 0 collect f Colonel Colt, and at the time) “Two ys of W nd treatise O'Connor declares that immediately | taken no one Say Het ae hel fi R mieisd on the route Dec. 1. The ath was auditor of the whole-| military. and political Giaisaa tent: ie Mulligan led a band of seven or elgnt | may twist ita bit, but watch Ai collections were to constitute Weinck eo atores of the United States Rub-| favor of a protective tariff and munt- men, including himself, out of the hall| you will see that he is twisting THAWING PIPES, FIRE HOTEL. | |Pay, and whenever ne decided to give| ee arena’ ‘A widow and daughter | Cipal ownership. Mra. ‘Tremain sur- and found Warner just leaving t the shape of a frame for the adve |up the route McEvoy promised to buy per . | vives him. restaurant. Hoe was dressed in khaki | tisement upon which he has set his| Caretakers at Sea Cum Start Blaze ie ack trom him for the $1 he had survive. ree agi RM aR ely be Wn Un | hopes of financial salvation, ‘That Threatens Village. deposited. e Hean'e gang attacked “him, — Warner | Not Thriliingly Dramatic. Caretakers in charge of the Sea ci] Welncke waited untfl Dec, t and then HONG Beate TOP Ane made @ brave fight, according to O'Con-| ‘There was no smell of printer's tnk Im | ryote! at Sea Clim, L. set fire to the {S0usht to collect. He learned that Mc- Justice Amend in the Supreme Court nor, but he was so kicked and buffeted | tye air yesterday afternoon, Rostand's | pullding to-day in the effort to thaw | Evoy had been ahead of him, He hu to-day denied a motion on behalf of that he fell. Then, according to Mul- | srenkness cleared the religious atmos-| out frozen water pipes. ‘The fire spread | ed for Mclvoy, but could not find him, | Mrs. Augusta Spirent for @ commission Mgan's confession, “Chuck Mule 4rove| piece at once. But lke most, religious | through the south wing of the three: | A warrailt wag eworn out, and Detec.| to take testimony of her husband, John | his long navy knife twice kan oe plays, “La Samaritaine’ did not prove /story | frame building and made great | tive Doy el the M, Spargur, at one time concert leader | | Warner's neck. Warner lingered three|PMt etic, Seeing Sarah in it| Headway before the village fire depart: | jammer. to sour for Victor Herbert, and now tn Seattle, days and died in Flower Hospital. |2 : h ta religious | ment ° uid puil its apparatus into place | to} tories similar to as to his income. Mrs, Spargur asks Mulligan and O' nor said the gun| Was like meeting her & ve through the snow, | McEvoy was held in $2, bail for fur-| for aMmony pending the trial of @ sult) was taken to Washington Hall and put) atternoon tes, After tatking with the For time the business center of the | ther examination, pki cpeo ts in Murphy's locker. | Messiah at the well she was © eT | village, Which is near the hotel, seemed | PRINCESS LOUISE SUES FOR LEOPOLD'S $8,000,000 ate Belgian King! Daughter of Wants Money Held by a Foun- dation—Also Seeks Securi BRUSSELS, Dec. 9%—Attorneys To Princess tered @ formal sult for $8,000,000 which had belonged father, the late King to nt also claims to at it came frou re Belgian Governm money on the ground the Belgian Congo and belongs to the a Jercsatens . b the pon whi he also summoned Leo- | Messiah entered, calling down the bless- members of his) ings of God on San Many q tou recounting of the | tions were answered | efore he was | yntents 0 s which were mys | aione, The still "golddn voice” nous, \ Le ike Palace hardt was heard singing Haran an, the morganatle | yofore she arrived at the well ‘e of Li » has since married happily sinful Phati manue Frenchman, Lou- | oniy sinners are ha e allege trunks were filled | Py “oonine eve: ther valuables. [sue aman sae at the 1 SHE IS HELD AS SHOPLIFTER; | SAYS SHE’S DOCTOR'S WIFE. A young woman who told the pollc she was Vera Gibson nue, Brook) but acknowledged, the | police say, that Uae name was fictitious, | ‘ked up in tite West Thirtleth | street station last night /accused of GOOD NEWS grand larceny She nad been arrested | Jol Larkin, a detective in a represent reai dollar tor dollar value, Fifth avenue department store, who | for the We can prove conclusively to you sald had taken gcods Valued at| coffe wreck $1 sald 8.9 was t 5, The prisoner wife of @ prominent Brooklyn phys! \ built pianos in existence, but not Mase where name she would not dis- the highest priced, which in con- ‘Later nthe evening Dr. William, HH, junction with their superb mus Biggtm, No. MW Dean street, Brooklyn, | qualities makes them the choice of siled her out. Magistrate Appleton of | . al nig surcl aaa Brooklyn went to the station house to “There's a Reason’ far-seeing piano purchasers, stan the bond At D: Huseam house Send Postal for Catalogue. as, Co ea at oult nace fg) Read “The Road to Wellville,” tn pkgs. WISSNER WAREROOM no siatement about the young wom who was fashionably dressed. Louise of Belgium to-day en- the recovery of her Leopold, and is now eld by the Nieder Fullbach Foundatton. ot Nostrand ave- A fireman, was overcome by smok To Grow Hair ona Bald Head @ Spoocialiet. we like her best when she isn't. But she probably felt she deserved an after- noon off—and so she appeared in “La Samaritaine."* It was well along toward 3 o'clock before she made her way to} Jacob's well with # pitcher upon her shoulder, Meanwhile, In the starry night had gone before, we had seen the shad- T} owy outlines of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. These patriarchs were conspicu- ous only by their voic There was fone voice that might have oarried ti gospel into long Acre Square. Thea the spirits of others who had drunk at the well passed in ghostlike procession. With a light in the east came a crowd naritans, icing thelr hatred of! that Thousands of peop! ffer from batane: ing tried near and hair & signed the nt disco and lisiened to his W: . Transfigured by Faith. ‘The drama of curiosity ended with | the first act, and Bernhardt’s first hour e| came in the market place, where, in ac oF where hair is mot “WISSNER | that they are the most expensively 96 Sth Ave., cor. 15th St., N. 538540 Fulton St., Brooklyn ¥. Patented Aug. 24, '0 tucked 1 a loose " there is ni 86 Stores Something ney v i So Thin, So Light, So HANDY second—no troubl Dept Stores and the Leading St. _ HANDY ‘What Nicer Gift than This? —to Always Have Money Handy | Bills Slip In or | Out — Quickly — Easily —Without | Fumbling! Give him a Handy Bill Fold for Christrnas—and get one for yourself, The nicest thing you ever saw —and the HANDIEST POSSIBLE way to carry your bills, Patented Aug. 24, '09 BILL FOLD Men who used to carry their bills in a clumsy wallet mall cardcase-—ar ving the Handy ing to simple, so HANDY ! no fussing, no fumblin ter Ni ina in Grr wi WH : 0c t d for Deve OL ot hers who ! men who simply cartied Bill Fold. They all say Bills go in or out in a sill Foldy—ALL the Big {Leather Goods Dealers 83 | Genuine Diamonds | * ' (No Chips) | al ‘Waltham Movement | Solid 14 kt. Gold, Waltham or Elgin Movernents Genuine Diamond (No Chip) Waltham Movement, eop Solid 14 kt, Gold. Waltham or Elgin Movement. Solid Gold, Imported Movement y r num- | m Ci e@ he drove to the | a e Was found. " y and Thompson had the two young women out for a ride and: they | had IMundered onto ie wrong road whon they got in front of the flying Solid 14 kt. 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