Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FAMILY HISTORY GAUTIONED RILEY BASIS OF $50,000 NOT TO GIVE OUT SUITFORSLANDER OFFICIAL LETTERS | Brother of Banker On Stand the Sister-in-Law’s Action Against Him. WAS SE TO Tells of Setting Aside Big In- come for Wife From Whom He Was Separated. ASYLUM. ‘WMtem Morris Hotline, brother of Henry B. Hollins, a Wall treet oar Who is being sued by his eiste Mra Sarah 0. G. Pickman, for @amages for slander, told witness stand before Justice | the Supreme Court « fly history, of wirich he has ber feler, and produced the ponders er bound vohwe tn court Tt was in this book, Mre. 1 leges, Hollins, as family sorbed an objectionable account of his marital woes following his separation from his wife, Mre, Adeline Grundy Hollins, whom he married in Christ Church, Elizabeth, in 18%. Hollins, who wae formerly connected with the fh of H. B. Hollins & Co, tn sists th in | | scan Commissioner Lane Authorize Sale of Sug Trust Evidence. ‘MUST OBEY THI Office Mate Says \gent Helped in Preparation of Prosecution Unived Wise an States ne the ¢ cross-exa |, calling n Interstate Commerce Which employed Riley. Riley had testified that after he fur-| nished the Department of Justice with, Did Not ar LAW.” Accused Commission, THE EV YOUNG LEADER WHO ENTERTAINS BIG CROWD TO-NIGHT. LYONS In charge of an United States Depu Marshal witnesses, and Assistant United § Kach of the five counts in the tméic Attorney G, 1. Dorr called in rebuttal ment is punishable by amt more ti |iranklin K, Lane, a member of the, one year and $0 fi WALL STREET ST | ENING WORLD, FRIDAY, FEBRUAR HAS TWO WIVES PLEADS INNOCENCE | 0 WORK FOR HIM, ' AS HE GETS LONG |“potice Fuk Tt on It on Me,” Says} McLaughlin, Convicted of Killing Friend. But While They Ei They Earn the Liv- ing Charles Holz Does the Housework. 'S THE PLACE Sing Sing by se se lise Seabury in t iminal E But One Wife Finally Rebels) t»+ supreme Court to-day, Joi " = Laughlin, convicted of the sh and Has Him Taken jJZames Shieids at | Forty-eighth street to Court. ® tearful protest of ment ¢ Second av 1. his The court room was crowded = friends of MecLaughtin, n whom were friends of Shields, At Charles Holz of No. 1247 Fourth | avenue, & noatly attired, nandy-haired young man, qualified to-day as @ mem- the back of the court room his aged widowed mother murmu tions of her son's Innocence with tea: | ber of the Put Your Wives to Work streaming down her furrowed face. Club when he was arraigned before McLaughlin, who {s a consumptive, Magistrate Fitch in the Long Island Very thin and bent, straightened up Clip allow Clann wt en heard the wentence and looked | nto Justice Senbury's eyes. | Seno ee ree CAMeenne 210) Lain tnnoce he sald huskily, “1 jwho had her busband dragged from did not fire the shot that Killed Jim home when he was right in the midst Shields, You have sentenced an inno- of peeling potatoes and tending ba-|cent man, Judge. 1 would like two ity 4 bles, the young man pats not only one, t- but two wives to work for him, | Both in Same Flat. “And the other one,” said Mra. Holz, |*has to live with us in the samo fi I work and she works, I have a boy and she has one, and both onr chil- dren are living images of this man, Weoks' tine to say good-by to my fam- y and my frie prison; I know after I go away, “I am to suffer for a erlme I did not do, You see I was sent to Elmira—and I was innocent.of that charge too—and got out a few days before Jim an 1 shall not tive long entry 1s true, but contends it was acts and data against the American ‘The other one has been living there Was shot. I had a Job and was working scribed for famfly perusal and not for | Svenr Refinery Com for montis, I couldn't stand tt any," living honest, “But the police seen promiscuous cireutetion. ployed by tb Inte: jonger and quit." BORE to put this thing on me and As ‘historian Hollins has led | mission. ‘Then, he sald, Cha é ‘tow abe hte” che Co eq | they done it. Achievements of the tio mwly, | cross, to Whom he had furnished some|,.4 Tsing tendency was in progress at! aa” SR eee eee ee eenee | ietha Jury WORIMnIt tales wl Erieat'd Coles and Morries famities 1 material for Sugar Trust artictes, wanted | t"* f trading this morning, AN) vies made it a ttle atrong Judge, | Vd for my Innocence. It was no use the first Hollyns in 1320. He has been| more, and he asked Commissioner Li eee a ak Lapa be ve ee eles rapt the Han, GUO TART me to go on the stand, What Heary “A Thompson of Raltinore in| phoned to Norcross that he was wel-] was fortienning fee ual support erican war and can't], Mclaughiin's b dropped on } compiting atatistics of the American] come to all the help we could get from] nid stoche we aun the ard Inbor. 1 do a lot of work |Orenet and his k under Hollinees and searched the archives| Riley alnae nate He had to be carried out of the co of the College of Arms and Stafford- room. whire Reasearches in England to com- plete the record of English ancestry. Uncomplimentary Record. Under the retord of name he wrote a two-page narrative attacking his wife, her sister, Mrs, Pickman, and | his father-in-law. Much of it ts sever- | ly uncomplimentary, The record which | Mrs, Shipman holds is libelous, is writ ten in Hollins's handwriting and he has underscored and emphasized cer- tain charges which Mrs. Shipman at- tacks. t Beginning his attack on his wife's family he asserts that her fathor was a “man of most limited capacity, of a) most quarrelsome disposition and of no business influence whatever.” Speaking of himeelf in the third person he wrote thag he had made the “mistake of his Ife” in marrying Miss Gry whe had shown a “singularly! fatse pride in ser family. The statements in the receny Mrs. Pickman er miata? forcing Hollins to agreement by whic hares of United States § and consented ,to er & of his income is th Piskman charges as libel “Did Mrs, Hollins ever stock and this allowance?” s tice Dugro. | “I told my brother, Henry B., to set] aside fifty shares for her,’ ed Hol- ling, “It was a trust fund. She receives the dividends during life and it was that on my death she was to re Gave Wife Large Allowance. | MIs dt true, in th! connection, that after weeks of insistence on part and protest and entreaties on you finally consented to « ber cent, of your tt steel stock In an agreement dr by your wife's lawyers under } tions on Dec. 28, 19%, whieh sh You to sign?” asked his lawyer Hollins said that was correct. He alse asserted that hi # taken in a wagon from his home at No. 119 Harnison aves | nue, Montclair, N. J., before a Master fn Chancery, and thta he was 1 resented by a lawyer w the papers. The waxon, he. onged to Mra, Pick nan er signing the » Which was ente evidence, Oaks Sanitarium, some time. “Who removed you there?" Hollins wa » the Fair remained taken where he he was | exked. My ther Henry. @o there and stay ther near his office any more, He told me to 1 not come mu see thought I was sick.” he humiita- 1. caused He for promiscu t for the informat who wanted to know the ences between himsek’ and wife. Mre, Pickman, it 1 stated, p other sutt in ber sister's behalf a Hollins for the re ery of $9.00, wht fhe states, represenis the woounuiatio af monthly allowance Hise Ile Ying and no! WIDOW OF WRITER WEDDED, 1s dis rib th of differ Mrs. Root Be wood Aldr Mra. Jeannette Thomas widow of Wallstein a widely newspaper man, and Sherwood the millionaire he company, were the Alwyn Co Went Fifty-elghth mony was pronoun Allen W. pper yeste ma ingside Pr rian Attended by only a few relatives, Mrs. Aldrich and first husband, Mr. Root, met while on a vessel bound for Cuba. He was a brother of Ore lent of the Metropoiita aiiway Company, and uewspapers tn this city and Beveral years ago he beca die@ in 8 Chicago ho from & sein caution written by Lane's Version of Story. Commissioner Lane te: ernment as @ spe Lane said he cautioned Riley that this ata might come into his hands as a special not apply to information , 1 expected Richard T, Greene, counsel for Riley, failed to shake this statement, but he mimissioner Lane dj- ble to Investigate Itiley's drew out t reoted Mr. conduct whe publication of matt t¢ bie art magazine be whieh 11 Felix Frankfurter, Assistant Attorney-« District-Attorney Henry in the Sugar ‘Trust invest! ed that tain information tn t Riley t ay lng and th jit by the boys for held." Office Mate Didn't Know. J An assistant United led w. Stat that ever t HW ¢ Attorn , wh 1 him he azine articles on the revating “L never heard of Mr. never told him, as he says, might take what he wanted im, y in off paring Sugar Tru frauds, do what he liked with them." crim Riley assisted searching the books ny other purposs Absolutely not, It was merely ¢ he might help me in preparing — th tr.” Crim » protested to Riley about an led part ly » Wickersham ir, Wise, him Mr. Wise as the leak of au don us," said Crim. Riley told me he talked magazine people, but he ther the Wickersham lett never seen that 1 z This completed tl fides, pleas to the he jury homat wi jury. was sent out at 2% called upon Ril ified in oppo- sition to this and in line with a letter of John 8, Marble, coun- that his permis- as to such in- Mected himaelt of the Gov- wh him concluded Commissioner an nelud who was a special al assigned to Stimso atl mak written coples of the documents he m Norcross and I that ut of the | N big letter files of the Sugar Trust and |§ vin of the Sugar Truat. | 1 you submit the books to Rul wae much in- ters ith did not give and had evidence on both and the lawyers began their final y for his possession, 1 him he vould hav and t sition, a that the United Btates ie strong. Further from up to 2114, a n buying Canadian Pacific high record Subsequent trading ruled steady. Stocks fel! after © to the lowest of the d ting continuou: non period. nost all prominent features mbout 1 point down at the close, {9 sales of , and bonds, stocks were 498, ples art with the Ls s Ing ors in} hat vse in (Ww the the Houston Post.) do that Curtiss, 4 game lex. 1 og un ator, has heart, too." EST. TH tea lover the choicest Ru in. Caravar Mixed, etc, Mz & 1b. packages Celtic Tea: pound pac 180 Ch LY West AuOOKIAS SPORES: are Bt. 0 Acker, Merrall & Gondit Company = Teas of Rare Excellence may p Feat Celtic, Formosa, India and Ceylon, E 124 Belfast blend, popular in the Englist drawing room, \ges—-60e, per pound. “*Table & Home’’ Household Magazine sent free on request. Brin Tad mi obtain Orient's here conveniently roductions of the most noted tea gardens. Peria_ Wattee, English Breakfast, range | Pekon, according 30° to 84,00 00 per Ib. to grade. In one-half and ne & ith Ay sterdan n the day, would | Steel stocks were London sent during Jow figures of the day were established ‘otal Net the avt- ® got two game legs and a game r the In the course of McLaughlin's triai It isn’t true that I've two wives, toh tate sud ac tie 1 (Ve saves nlareleds te cath * the shooting, Which occurred in an| fie, for Ive never married the other ApH Fasoua tan one, She was an oid sweetheart of | ¢ i adlek W Btbek mine, long before I married this one of St. Lith street was He told of administering ex- ields on the side- cred candles, given absolution to Leahy said he asked, She has a good job ina «a when #ie wanted @ place to board 1| took her into my flat. She and Cather- | ine got along very well at first, but 1{ | guess they've quarrelle dren, J try and treat both kids e But Holz Denies It. “Are you the father of both children?’ asked the Court. “Oh, no,” replied Holz, “that's a mis- tarlum and] c), ew ay of the policemen,” “I couldn't see which Shields answer one.” An effort was made to bar this out because there was no evidence that It was a dying declaration. Justice Sea- bury ruled that the giving of absolution and the pr © of the candlés on the sidewalk enovgh to — convince But lds was ra) Ey = | “L'M Teave tt to the court ofMcer here, who arrested him,” cried Mrs, Holz, , “omcer, tel! the Judge ff both those! yew | children aren't living images of this | man. “That's right, Your Honor,” responitea »|@ourt Attendant Walter Conlon. , | never saw a closer resemblan il 1 arrested this man he was singit of them tosleep and peeling potatoes at | the same time, He has certainly a neat "| iittle place there, well furnished and an as # whistle, He's a good house- per, Judge. Mrs, Hol was Shields that his death was at hand. the jury apparently thought Shie! eet land and the lberty hut why sweet . we have our forest preserves, also mitted this, but demanded a i$} hat her husband be held for abandon- |= = it) ment. She had been compelled to leave , [his complex establishment, she {| mitted, but ft amounted to the same tj thing. Hola was: held for a further 4 | hearing under $300 ball The 1 000,000 acres of forest, n 3 cent. Y ‘8 to the state. German for- | GULDEN’S MUSTARD It’s good on Steaks and Chops, — a Fine Balad Dressing by adding vinegar, tessen and Grocery Stores, ¥ Speen with each bottle, estry on scientific Hnes has resulted in raising the average yleld of wood per acre from twenty cubte feet in 18% to sixty-five cubic feet in 194. During the ame period it has trebled the proportion of tie saw timber secured from the} erage cut. In fifty-four years it tn- creased the money returns from an! average acre of forest sevenfold, yet to- day the foresis are in better conditi ian | than ever before, ; Sp emretee 1856 W. H. HALL Manufacturing Furrier 30 WEST 22D ST. Half Block East of Sixth Avenue (FORMERLY OF SIXTH AVENUE) | FURS 50% Reduction Toeffect aquick clearance, weoffer the following Specials for TO-MORROW, SATURDAY Bisam (Dyed Musk Rat) Coats Persian Lamb Coats 52 inches long; $125 $125 30 BAIL Persian Lamb Coats Ts 1) 830; Moire Caracul Coats : sid ss 45 $0 Pony Coats... «4 330 86 Pony Coats “ “ $3) $10, Marmot Coats “ sf $10, Marmot Coats,, ud ‘ $30 $6; Previous Price ' W. iH. HALL, 30 West 22d Street + BOTHIN ONE FLAT TERM FOR MURDER | After he had been sentenced to not | i: # before I go to the) Boniface's| ‘ pas ST oy Russian Sable Searfs O00 Russian Sable Mufls $500 al ve | Dark Mink Scarfs., .8100 0} Dark Mink Muffs... $70 Black Lynx Searfs... 870 $85] Black Lynx Muffs.. 870 $3! | Black Fox S¢ #30 $25] Black Fox Muffs..., 820 HY Pointed Fox » 850 $25) Pointed Fox Muffs,. 950 §! Brown Fox Scarfs... 820 $10) Brown Fox Mutfs.... 820 $10 Black Wolf Scarfs... 830 $45) Black Wolf Mutis... 830 $15 atural Raccoon,,,. 850 $25] Natural Raccoon... $25 ‘ap. Mink Scarfs... 880 $45) Jap. Mink Muffs.... Half Block EAST of Sixth Av.,N.Y. Telephone 4236 Gramercy. ¥_1¢, 1911, : POLITICIANS WILL WOMEN'S CLUBS ALL BE ON THE JOB’ WORKED REFORM WITH JACK LYONS Albany Will Be Broken in Palm Garden To-Night. Improvements Within Three Years. 1a Sen, atorship may n Garden t Lex 6 assem: nat epot the bulk of the polltt- of the ct an and . with a sprinkling of polit State. ‘The occasion will entertainment and ball Helen Varick Boswell, years ago organized tion of Women's Clubs, r on the Advance from Col who the Pa 1 street, for there will Miss Ro: Repubii IN CANAL ZONE And Maybe the Deadlock at Helen Varick Boswell Tells of three the Canal Federa- med to-day well has heen paying a short vialt to the zone to se how the clubs she was tn- strumental in forming have progressed, She attended the annual meeting of the Federation held at Anoon, and spoke in several towns during her stay. ‘The federation is connected with dhe president. Mr. and Mrs. Taft and William Jennings Bryan has @t- tended the meetings when they were én the Canal Zone. Miss Boswell declared that the wem- en's clubs had done a great deal for he zone. “At first,” she eatd, “the maajerity of workers on the canal were without wives, inany of them mere adventurers. The mon lived in bachelor quarters and ate at mess, which is aptly named. Even when families came and things bettered a Ittle there was atill seme thing wanting. “Gradually, through the Influence of the men's clubs, the women of the zone attempted to bring something of home life into the lots of the unmar- ried men there, by inviting them to #-| dinner and welcoming them to the ‘ly olrcle, This not only gave young men there @ reason for decedt living, ‘but gave to th States # re not quite outcasts.” tral Republican Club of the District. | | a J. Lyons, the Republican teader | | ct, 19 the youngest lead one of the most popu! ne two districts In New | that produced a plurality | for As rs, State and men who play s tho year round, word to Mr. Lyons that they | vand to meet his people to- s not unusual for big affatrs ed up at gatherings of this . and for that reason deve! the Senatorial situation a | to chara ments exp Bes! 27 INCHES WIDE, 36 INCHES WIDE , - DRINK HABIT CURED THREE DAYS CONVERTS: | HARDEST DRINKERS INTO 42 INCHES WIDE 36 INCHES WIDE , | TOTAL ABSTAINERS | New York has been the scene du ing the past year of some really marvellous cures of excessive drink- ers, who, seemingly headed for ruin, | jeame back quickly to sobriety and happiness. The desire for drink {s the natural result of the accumulated alcoholic | {poison which lurks in the system of | | every excessive drinker. This poison | |is responsible for the craving desire which is always stronger than resolu- tions to quit. To stop drinking with- | out the right sort of medica! help ts to invite physical and mental torture. | It {8 possible for any excessive | drinker, no matter how many years he has been drinking, to get rid of all desire and craving for liquor and b come master of himself in three da The Neal Treatment consists ot a | perfectly harmless vegetable remedy, taken Internally and with no hypo- dermic Infections. It eradicates and neutralizes all alcoholic potson and |with the loss of only three days the excessive drinker can at once return | » business, restored to the condition he was in before he began to drink, and with all desire for alcoholic | drink entirely gone. Hundreds of testimonials are avatl- able, voluntarily given by business men, clergymen and other profes- sional men. Investigation is not only |{nvited, but urged. If you have a relative or friend who ought to rid himself of the drink | MADRAS ' ’ habit, enll, write or ‘phone the phy-| lan at the NEAL INSTITUTE, 20 East 92d street, New York City, where the Neal Treatment is being ‘admin- istered by him daily to his patients, ’Phone 3386 Madison Square. Open | day and night.—Advt. USUALLY $20.00 EACH ‘Open Lincoln's & Washington’ Open Evenings Until 9 10% allowed on all cash sal We pay freight and R. R. fare, USUALLY $1.45 PER PAIR WOOLEN MOTOR COATS reli Terns 5 850 worlli®",” Toe. weekly $1.00# $1.50 MICHIGAN FURNITURE CO Watch for our FREE OFFER inthe Fetning Sunday Newspaper High-Gra de furniture |} liberal Credit Terms | taee Down on #5029) v - iC al + 100% OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL 9. Aladdin tired of being idle Quoth he: “Joy as well as money Comes to workers tried and tru ‘The World shows more opporty on the face of the earth— B. Altman & Cx. 6,000 YARDS OF BLACK DRESS SILKS WILL BE OFFERED TO-MORROW (SATURDAY), AT THE FOLLOWING SPECIAL PRICES; BLACK INDIA SILK, BLACK TAFFETA SILK BLACK SILK MARQUISETTE BLACK DRESS SATIN ALSO FOR TO-MORROW (SATURDAY), A SPECIAL SALE OF 8,000 YARDS OF WHITE DRESS GOODS CONSISTING OF MERCERIZED BATISTE, 38 INCHES WIDE PER YARD, | Ze, ENGLISH REPP, PERSIAN LAWN AND FIGURED B. Altman & Cn: A SALE OF MEN'S FURNISHINGS FOR TO-MORROW (SATURDAY), MEN'S IMPORTED RAINCOATS, MEN'S FOLDED FOUR-IN-HAND SCARFS OF IMPORTED SILKS, USUALLY $1.30 TO $1.75 EACH AT 65¢, MEN'S SILK SUSPENDERS THE ‘REMAINDER OF THIS SEASON'S STOCK OF MEN'S GREATLY REDUCED PRICES. Fifth Avenue, 34th and 35th Streets, New York. He Finds the Secret of Happiness And longed for some work to do; ‘The World last year amneriy BOUBLIS Tne 965,973 published in All the Bix Other New York Morning and Gundey Newspapers Combined, PER YARD, 60e, PER YARD, 80c, + «PER YARD, 90¢, PER YARD, $], 50 PER YARD, 14c. WILL CONSIST OF THE FOLLOWING: at $12.00 AT 55e, HAVE BEEN MARKED AT WITT ity, t| in Ui} + he asked his World Ad.“Lamp" to Conjure up, without delay, An assortment of positions— And tt did—that very day, rtun tes to work than any other 0a ‘Help Wanted" Ads. ore wrinted te | 8 a RL EE PAE aS