The evening world. Newspaper, September 30, 1911, Page 5

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AGED NEW YORKER —_.-— ” ‘dl Lost a Day of Business, @urance, that he w. les of the city yy in Belle or physical decay ences of Injuries dent. teen years vid n in Thompson 114 he moved never left St lence. He was ool and em insuran paratively in its infancy. Decades pased and Daniel along on hsi way, ari fery morning, walk 1 day Mooney to luc ming | e died ma th only loss and ea M. is w i ho 1 his Mooney arth street did not take upea Mooney machine—Mr. k fire comp: never lost 3 whi Daniel Mooney bs y in DIES IN BELLEVUE PF FROM CAR MISHAP Daniel Mooney Saw Green- wich Village Grow and Never Tt was the belief of Daniel Mooney, who was, up to last Thursday, busily engaged {n the line of soliciting fire in- the oldest native of New York living within the bound Mr. Mooney died to- "@ Hospital, not from old but from the con- ined two days He was ninety-two When the nineteenth century was only Mr. was When still a Greenwich Village as a place of ted in a private abarked in the business of e agent when that line was Mooney betimes and riding on ng flights § prospective cus- old patrons about re- collecting bls and looking up yeaws son, imself an old man teh time n jonged to a nwich Village. 3 interest In the exempt firemen's organization, attended all the Meetings and turned out in ail the parades. —_ ind time to a in the $ deat bor relts me of | lor in the h t, of er from boy ested in the pro in 1889, ity among the Chi- rat Chinese Sun- ne was the oldest Presbytertan | Mooney never took « drink of aloo- fo Mquor In his life, day long and enjoyed his ht before he went to bed. the friends of his da: Althou But he smoked pipe at n | of the prime manhood had passed away, he had a ‘Kable acqy Village section, intance !n the Gree: ‘The lively old man attempted to Jump & moving northbound No. 174 Broadway, Thursda, ar in front after. He fell and was picked up uncon- and taken to Hudson Street Hos- lal. The surgeons found him with a ured leg, interna! injuries and a ‘poalp wound. His condition was so ser!- that he was transferred yesterday to ee Employers’ Assoolation in ts decided to call the workers in thirteen Hotel Vanderbilt The emp @ecided on a general lockout M fy unless this was done even notified C. G t of the Employers’ action of the board irike of m ranged. rble workers cannot on b EACE IN BUILDING TRADES. considering the ultimatum of the ing trades, the Board of Business off the strike trades at | oyers | A committee Norman, Prest- | Association, of meeting will be held next Tues-| to see if some settiement of ths ities of. =. Old Manhattan Ie Gay Until Midnight, and Then — Good Night l’’ Says Henry B. Harrie, Who Qught to Know. — His Folies Bergere Ahead of the Times for This City, and Is Compelled to Close Because the People Won’t Stay Up. By Charles Darnton T HIS {sn’t necessarily a sad story, though the sad fact remains that New York goes to bed with the taxicabs. New York by night and Paris in a similar light are not the same. The Follies Bergere may spell the same in both places, but ft doesn’t follow that {it epells success. Ama- teur students of the French way of spending a giddy evening and aie | morning still have a great deal to learn. They might as well compare Montclair with Montmartre, So drink to the short life of our Folles Bergere as you listen to the toast of Manager Henry B. Harriet “Gay New York is gay until mid~ night, ang then—good night!” Tn 1 have it! And there, ose, you have a good loser, Mr. Harrie smiled broadly in the face of defeat when I asked him why he had decided to haul down the flag of the Folies Bergere @ week from to-night. Why keep it up when New York refused to stay up? This, in effect, was the an- | swer that he put in the rorm of @ ques- tlon. I could only conclude that New York isn’t as gay as it's orecked up to be. “I don't know about that,” reflected Mr. Harris, “It's gay enough up to @ certain hour and then”— It begins to yawn. That's what Mr. Harris stopped himself from sayin, Indeed, he had nothing at all to say against New York. He had banked on it and found It wanting sseep—that was all. “Most of New York is tn ded at 12 o'clock, all of {t, 60 to speak, at 1," he said, speaking from ais own experl- ence. AN ALL-NIGHT LIFE, BUT NOT THE THEATRE SORT. “By thi he esplained, ‘IT mean.the reneral amusement-seexing class. New York, of course, has its night lfe—its all-night life if you care to go that far —but experience has taught me that the theatres, after thelr bour or two, are out of ft. The time will come, no doubt, when a theatre that goes not close its doors until 1 o'clock in the morning will find {t worth while to keep them open, I haven't changed my mind on of cal bri co! on were no sour grapes on Mr. Harris's plate. In fact, there wasn't oven a plate in sight He merely ew lowed his loss and smiled at his own ex. pense. “ “New York ts gay enough,” he er." pli ou ca © @ Popyright, 1610, by Is OPsis OF PRECE ney ore bleday, NG INSTAL rot an oll bs ) Family has ruled ror OREE'S eye the room, T stood, “1 some, here was a p fil, sald np in A Blackjack @ @ Bargainer. The Romance of a Feud : hat Was for Saie. By O. Henry. ENT. dered about onel under- and I'l bring you ne yard at the » and Goree closed his eyes, lsten- with rapture to the click of its and the bubbling of the falling Sham. Coltrane brought pitcher of soo) water and held ft forshim to Ink. Presently Goree sat up—a most Jorn object, his summer sult of flax fled and crumpled, his discredita Phead tousled and unsteady, He tried t Wave one of his hands toward th onel. ‘Bx-excuse—everything, wi! rank too bed you?" ho much 2 World’s Lopi—60,604 Ads, yer ani ove iat thi the tab His brows knitted into a od frown. Out with the boys @ while? asked . 1 went nowhere. 1 haven't had ollar to spend in the last two nt ruck the demijohn too often, as usual.” Col, Coltrane touched him on th shoulder, Uttle while ago, Yancey," he began, a asked me if T had brought Stella and Lucy over to play. You weren't o¢ quite awake then, and must have been 2.) jdreaming you were a boy again, You ) fa awake now, and I want you to Iisten | i} to me. I have come from Stella and Lucy to their old playmate, and to my | old friend's son. They know that I am going to bring you home with me, and | lyou will find them as ready with al some as they were in the old days. want you to come to my house and, unt!l you are yourself again, and much tonger ag you will. We heard being down In the world, and in co! ft, he sued, “but in tte own wa: was trying to the Folles Bergere I lost a good deal his prodigal heart toward the mountains, brain one by ; nd a Goree rode amicably rode, gaping townspeop! creek bridge and up toward the moun- ta! The prodigal had brushed and washed and combed himeelf to a more decent figure, but he was die, and he seemec had to dismount and fused it almost with violei By went quictly enough for a milo or two. and sai play! that money THE EVENI New York Not Like Paris at Night; It Goes to Bed It Goes to Bed With the Taxicabs ‘When T t a Nquor license fo> sleep studying the night life of w York. I went from place to place one night watching the people and amusement they were getting, and I the ed @ halt at 6 o'clock in the morn- ing only hecause I was too tired to go any further, was jammed. Peopli ing and drinking and watching per- formamees that cost Some of ther than cellar: Every place that I visited it at tables eat- them nothing, places were nothing more cheerless except for their ‘ight Nghts, badly ventilated and un- mfortable, yet crowded with people | who were intent upon having a good time, These rathskell der reguiar license, while we were hav- ing all sorts of trouble trying to get ‘s flourts! un- e. However, I'm not complaining, The point I wish to make ts that New that polnt, The only evnclusion I have|York has its night life, and it's a reached {s that the,Folles Bergere got |Pretty gay life, us you may see for ere anead of its time. I've broken |Yourself If you care to go the rounds ; of the Tenderloin. es Sorereia Ny pom, Mons | Tt was iny business to stick to the at eclaior GAY Apd Benet. By Ie Folles Bergere and to lead Mr. Harris t of the cellars of the Tenderloin. me up smiling. PLAYED TO $21,000 A WEEK AT THE START. "Yes," he agreed, “I saw in those aces @ cheaper crowd than I hoped turning again Tis mind was! t strangely clogged and his thoughts! id memories Were returning to his one, Ike carrier pigeons er a stormy sea. But Coltrane was satisfied with the progress he had made. Bethel recelved the surprise of Its ex- ence that afternoon when a Coltrane together Side by side dusty streets and down across th rough the town. out from the [FERR6. nanaia) NG WORLD, to attract. This may h the failure of the Folles Berge begin with, we were obliged to ask @ good price for seats, because the open- ing production was a costly affair. It cost no less, in fact, than $82,000, For the first month or more we played to $21,000 a week. After that we lost about $5,000 a week. As soon as the novelty wore off business dropped off. I think people were afraid of the place, they probably suspected that it would cost them more than they could afford to spend. As a matter of fact, they w not obliged to order anything to eat or drink. For the aret show we depended on people who were at the other theatres. Ther were always enough of them to pas for the mid- [night show, but not enough to offset the losses of the earlier performance.” Vulgar curiosity urged me to ask whether they were or “pikers.” “On the whole, they were good spenders," answered Mr. Harris, “From the beginning, the restaurant was a success, and the prices were no higher than those charged at any high-class restaurant. Peop’ tables spent money freely. For two, the checks ranged from $10 to $12, and often a box party of five or six would spend $100 in the course of an evening, that ts, counting dinner and the two perform- ances, Checks of $8 and $80 were quite common. “For the first few weeks we had from Every rock he passed, every tree, every foot of the roadway was familiar to him. Though he had forgotten the REFUSE 10 AID DIXBY REPEAL OF BOXING LAW Democrats Suporting Frawley —Newcomb to Try to Force Action. ALBANY, N. Y., Sept. 90.-The demand made by Gov. Dix yesterday for the re- peal of the Frawley Boxing law was treated with scant courtesy by the rep- resentatives of his party tn the Ben: Not @ Democratic Senator made a mov to Imtroduce the bill to accomplish the purpose recommended in his message. Senator Newoomb, a Republican, came to the resoue of the Executive and pre- sented @ measure providing for the re- peal of the Frawiey law. An effort made by him to have the ‘DM advanced to third reading was not ted, but the Governor's mi age was referred to the Senate Finance | Committes, of author of the bill, is chairman. Finding that none of the Democratic Senators intended to give him assiat- ‘ance in bringing about the passage of | ating Celia h the repeal bill, Newcomb filed with the ings threaten to become worn at the Senate clerk last night notice that he | tos, would to-day move to suspend oh only rules and 4) on final pi Republicans to direct the law, of $75,000 a y of ticketa too draw. could, and thi g0: "How did only two cai Mr. Harrie. with patrons. anybody. ail of it by 1 | woods, they thrilled him lke the music of “Home, Sweet Home." the horses drink and plash in the swift water, On the right was a rail road and stream. the old apple orchard of the home the house was yet concealed by the brow of the steep hill. Inside and along the fence, pokeberries, elders, sas- a- 6 steady tn the to be deep in ntemplation of some vexing problem, | Coltrane left him tn his mood, relying upon the {influence of changed surround- ings to restore hii Once Goree was seized with a equilibrium, aking and almost came to a collapse, rest at the e the road, The Colonel, foreseeing ch a condition, had provided a small sk of whiskey for the Journey, bu non it was offered to him Gores re would naver touch |t again. and by he was recovered, and yen he pulled up his horse suddenly "I lost two hundred dolla ig poker. Now, last night where did I get nce, declaring | safras, and sumac grew high and denso. At n rustle of thetr branches, both Goree and Coltrane glanced up and saw a long, yellow, fen winking eves, ‘The head quickly’ di appeared; there was & violent swaying Gfethe bushes, and an ungainly figure fan up through the apple orchard @ the direction of the house, siszaga among the tree: be Garve! mantwae gold out to. There's no doudt but he's considerably cracked. T had to ‘d_him tp for moonshinin . ROY wend ime ago, in apito of the fact that \t belleved him ter eaponall Why, nat's the matter, Ya | “Gorse was wining is forehead and Py c d lost tts color Ia face had lov oer, toot” he asked, Jerying to smile. "I'm Juat remembering Ja few more things Some of the alcoho! had evaporated |trom his brain, "I recollect now where said Coltrani wolllsh face above the! ‘staring at them with pale, un- out of sight b it @ foolish p probable to rescind the Hoent club now operating under the Fraw! law. Another fs to remove from oi fice the Boxing Commissioners appoin: ea by him, 00 as to render Ineffecti the machinery provided by the Frawley which re not kee! Commit ear. high. en decide ing further experiments. right kind of people, but we didn’t get enough of them.” ONLY TWO CASES OF EJECTION IN FIVE MONTHS. It was @ blunt question, but I let It they bel 1s of eject It's not Uk jeyond. rid home. Frawley, the Finance Com-| mittee from the further consideration |fance, @ Col. Amith, Just off to India of his bill in order that tt might be put with his regiment. The result of such a move 1s problematical. One way will be toners of Boxing of every boxing ee 180 to 200 diners, and f the performance had drawn a full house every night the Festaurant would have made a profit) But I sce now that | the house was ¢oo email and the price | It wasn't the price | of the food that hurt the place, it was | the price of tickets. Wo were obliged to charge what we did because of the size of the house and ¢he cost of the original production. tion cost only $15,000, but jt, falled to I stood the loss as long as I to give up try- The second produc- We got ‘During the five months there were ton," People generally came for a good time and enjoyed theinselves qui ly. But these same people, to belleve, are more tne! restaurants where they get free enter- tainment with their supper, they're ready to go New York ts In bed by 12 o'clock, nearly Most 0 Paris,"" So endeth the first lesson! ey Sar ce and a beggar, Col. Coltrane, I'm ushamed to do it. T want you to let me wear your coat and hat until Now, what does this mean?" Coltrane to him: that cornered there, and followed the|companion’sa san hat nati m al ‘ow, reins, * | ride about ten fe go by, Colonel, good look at back number guess I'll sho! ones more, He set out u the requested, temperate liver, Colonel following, five years were between appearance they wmigh' brothers, da Goree, t HM oright, I m yot, w up pretty anyhow. up the bh answered i “We had very little trouble A fellow threw a bun on) the stage one night, to go to And then we are T know you think but I want to make They rounded the cliff, descended tnto|as good a showing as I can when I pass Plder Branch, and paused there to let | the old place.” sald Nf as ho compared hie ooks and quiet de- Close by It waa! meanor with his strange request. But he was already unbuttoning the coat, assenting readily, as if t were {n no wise to be considored strange. The coat and hat fitted He buttoned the former about him with a look of satisfaction and dignity. and Coltrane were nearly the same sizo ather tall, portly and ere: fancy Goree well. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 80, 1911, |Gertrude Elliott Begins Career as a Star Next Week ee He ler New Play is Called “Re- bellion’—Margaret Anglin to Appear in “Green Stock- ings’—Henry Kolker Will Be Seen in “The Great Name” — “The Never Homes” Due on Thursday Night. ARGARDET ANGLIN comes to the Thirty-ninth Street Theatre on 1 Monday night tn “Green Stock- | Ings, a comedy by A. BD. W. Mason. The | play takes {te name from an old Irish custom whioh prescribes green stock- Inge for the unmarried elder sister who | dances at @ younger sister's wedding. It will reveal Miss Anglin as a comedienne for the first time since sho became a star, The comedy diacioses a sad state | of affaira tn the Faraday family, Woo- ere have come and wooers have gone, the| but it has always been one of Celia Faraday's younger sisters that has been led off in wedlock. No one haa flown ao | high as to attempt to snare the faacin- ‘self. Colla’ yn etook- In a moment of pique, as the the | youngest of the Faradaye announces her lengagement, Cella herself invents a In time it becomes necessary to end Gaeaors are cbeiualy peed te the thie fiction, a0 the Colonel's death no- tore are ol me pepeai of the boxing law, matnly on the | {0S Sepears in the London Ties, ground of friendship for Frawley. The have the Doxing law repealed, because they pur- | pose to make valuable use of it during calle upon | the coming campaign, When the Governor was tnformed that no move hod been made carry out his recommendation and that e intimated ti he thought he could find a way to a complish his purpos one, probably, 1s as much affected by the notice as the Colonel himeelt, who Bp Under an asewmed name and Faradaya to investigate. | Mise Anglin’s supporting company will include H. Reeves-Smith, Ruth Holt Boucicault, Maude Granger, Crosby Little, Stanley Dark and Henry Hull, oe o Gertrude Elliott beging her stellar career jaxine Elliott's Theatre on ‘Tuesday evening in “Rebellion,” @ play by Joseph Medill Pattereon, The rebel- Hon tn question matures, without the beating of drums or the fanfare of trumpets, in a simple Chicago flat. It ts the rebellion of a woman's soul against the restrictions her church would place upon the conduct of her private life. Miss Elliott will have an English lead- ing man, A, Scott Gatty, and others in the cast will be Muller Mellish, George Farren, George LeGuere, James E. Wilson and Eva Vincent, cee Henry Kolker will be brought forward as a atar at the Lyric Theatre on Wed- nesday night in “The Great Name,” an adaptation bt James Clarence Harvey to Feld. ‘The play deals with the eocen- the | ‘Ticities of a young composer of oper- temporarily to @ greater musiclan tn order that the latter may gain @ hear- ing he needs for his masterpiece, and tho results of this move constitute the main Incklents of the story, Among othera in Mr. Kolker's support will be Whytall, Edward Langton, Sam wards, Lizzie Hudson Collier and Louse Woods, but it didn't hit $: The pein opening of Lew latest production, “The Never * will occur at the Broadway Theatre on Thursday night, ‘The Irving Piaco ‘Theatre opens tts on to-night with the first American appearance of Henry Bender, @ Berlin comedian, In “Der Loppelmensch,” of Blanche Bates comes to the Grand Opera House with "Nobody's Widow.’ “The Chocolate Soldier” will be the attraction at the Manhattan Opera House. Sardou's “La Tosca” will be pre- sented by the stock company at the Academy of Musi Leah Kleschna” will be given by the stock company at the Prospect Theatre “The Golden Crook” will be secn at the Columbia. “The Majestice” Hill Theatre. At Hurtig & Beamon's “The Big Gatety Company” will be the attraction. “Miss New York Jr." comes to Miner's come to the Murray nth Avenue Theatre. At Miner's He| Bronx Theatre ‘The Tiger Lilies’ will be the attraction. Twenty-| ‘Thy Olymple will have “The Giris them, but In| from Happyland.” the been) VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS. At Hammerstein's will te William Goree looked older than his age; his face was puffy and lined; had the smooth, fresh complexion of a He put on Goree's dis- reputable old flax coat and faded slouch aking up want see I'm the Colonei the you to * in the rear as we o that they can get a They’ by Any means, well to them Let's ride on,’ at a smart trot, he had been ne I n mpt “Take | rane ot th ) hundred d Goree sat straight !n the saddio, with mi pow should come ever end slag et |atr wit acon lear it up We [1 got that two nunare “gald Coltrane | head erect, but his eyes were turned to e@ once more, Will you come, | Ing, first thing, at the Pinnac cheerful water on we'll figure it all the right, sharply scanning every shrub | 5 Will you drop oui “ly ‘The trout are jumping there Ike out toxet nd fence and ‘hiding piace in the o! t 1d COA A ae eee, nee ee AE SADE Biers ee A out of, the ‘branch, and stead yard. Once he muttered to t said Goreo, opening his}and have a pl on Lagle " ey reached the foot of the hill) hr eyes There was never’ any |Have you forgotten how a h Goree stopped again. | “Will the crazy fool try It or aia £ ro ) us that T know of, I'm |cured-ham sandwich tastes, Yancey, to| "Did you ever suspect I wae @ very )dream half of it ‘ sure We've always been the best friends. /a hungry fisherman [vain kind of a fellow, Colonel?” he| It was when he came opposite the good Lord, Colonel, how could I| Eyidently the Colonel 414 not beiteve| asked. ‘Sort of foolish proud about ape {litte family burying round that ho your home as { am—a drunken |the story of his lost wealth; so Gores ances?"" saw what ho had been looking for—a , & mi degraded spend | retired again into brooding silence, ‘The Colonel's eyes refused to wander | puff of white smoke ming. from the and § jer —= By late afternoon they had t tea |to the soiled sagging gult of flax and | thick cedars in One prner, He toppled lurched from the table into his] ten of the twelve miles between Bethel | the faded slouch hat. » slowly to the left that Coltrane had ud bevan to weep maudlin | and Lau Half a mile this side of| "It seems he ventied, myyt- | time. to Urge hie horse to that side! ingled with genuine drops of; Laurel lay the old Goree place; mile fied, but humoring him, “I remember a |en¢ eateh hi " with, one arm. i | Femorse and shame, or two beyond the village lived the| young buck about twenty, with the| Tie sauirrel hunter had not over: | Coltrane talked to him peratatently | Coltranes. tightest cost, the sleekest hatr and the | Praised grit Sad see the Bullet | jand reasonably, reminding him of the] Tne road was now steep and labori-|prancingest saddle horso In the Blue) *here & ded, and where Gores | | AAT) had exp that would pase— | simple mountain pleasures of which he] ous, but the compensations were many, | Kidge wat na had once been so fon and insisting he tilted sles \of the forest were| “Right you are,” sald Goree a $e popotd ° Col Abner Col- genuineness of the Invitation. | opulent wi f and bird and bloom, |‘‘And it's in me yet, though 1 8 bla rook cos al ly he landed Goree by telling him |The tonic air put to shame the phar-| show. Oh, I'm as vain asa turkey gob-| Goree leaned heavily inst Col- a8 counting upon his help in the macopacia, The glades were dark with | bier and as ud as Lucifer, I'm going | tfane, but he d not fall horses r ve ering and transportation of &/mossy shade, and bright with shy rivu-|to ask you to indulge this weakness of | kep: pace, side by side, and the Colonel's e a amount of felled Umber from a] jets winking from the ferns and laurels, | mine in a little matter,” arm kept steady, Tho little white high mountain-side to a waterway. On the lower side they viewed, framed | ‘Speak out, Yancey, We'll create you |iouses of Laurel shone through the | new that Goree had once invented | tn the near follage, exquisite sketches|Duke of Laurel and Baron of Blue | trees, half a mtlo away, ice for this purpose--a series of|of the far valley swooning in its opal | itidge, If you choose; and you shall have | Goreo reached out one hand ana nd chutes—upon which he had | nage, a feather out of Stella's peacock's tall| groped until it rested upon Coltrane's prided himself. In an instant the | Coltrane was pleased to see that his | to wear in your hat fingers, which held his bridle, ow, delighted at the tdea of his in earnest, In a few minutes| “Good friend,” he sald, and that was of us any one, had paper spread upon the table and was drawing bu companion was yielding to the sj | the hills and woods. ell of had curt For now the ut to akirt the base of Painter rapid but pitifully shaky Ines In dem-jto cross Elder Branch and mount the onstration of what he could and would] hin beyond, and Gorea would have to do. face the squandered home of his The man was sickened of the husks; fathers, ry | ‘I'm. we'll pass the house up there on the hill | re I was born and where my p b itran- there now—and look at me! I ve lived for nearly a century. eat lv am about to show myself to them ragged and poverty-stricken, @ wastrel 121st St. ius did Yancey Goree, as he rode | his old h » make, considering | all things, the best showing that was in his power, ‘The End. | of g gomedy by Victor Leon and Leo etta who has won special fame with his waltzes, He lenda the glory of his name in “Two Worrell, ti Among the featul Music Hau will be Manteure,”"Virgint ll, Harry Von whey, ont the Bran, James The Feast of St | celebrated by Italiana on Michael. the rin sons in Manhattan, P Jask the cause, Two Stores Acres of Floor Space DE BLL, tiort rue Rock ana Maud Fulton, Kelly, Arthur Dunn and Marion Murray et From Happiness,” Three Keatons and othe ‘The bill at the Fifth Avenue Theatre will Include Houdini, the Handeuft King: 0 Old - ——-— residenta of Hoboken and Jersey City} Hoights to believe that @ battle was in progress between rioters and the polloe, explosions were in honor ng of who Everything for Hodsekeep EAR Walter C. Frank of the which was being bombs by the hills between 4. ‘The reports were heard by many excitedly telephoned to the newspaper ollicers to | the two! PAID OWN SALARY, BRIDE IS HELD ON LARCENY CHARGE Young Mrs, London Says She Only Filled Out Signed Check According to Custom. Juat because she paid herself her own salary by filling in a blank check that the president had algned, Mrs. Estella London, twenty, and only few monthe @ bride, declared in the Adame Street Court, Brooklyn, today that it was simply outrageous she had been arrested. Mrs. London wae met last night Detectives Gomeringer and Downs, o! Brooklyn Headquarters, as she was entering her home at No. 96 Rodney street, Brooklyn. “You are under arrest,” tives said. “r amr’ said Mrs. London, “What for?” “For grand larceny,” Downe replied. “The warrant for your arrest was sworn out by Thomas &. Clouse, President and neral manager of the Union Soap Company, No, 119 Fourtn place. When she was arraigned before Magi- strate Harris the bride appeared almost childish in @ big white hat and @ elose- fitting gray dress. Samuel Goldberg ap- peared for her and asked for an ad- journment which was granted. He also aaked that she be paroied in his cus- tody, but the Magistrate refused and fixed bail at $1,000 which Mr, Goldberg he would try to furnish before je Geter Sept. 5 Mrs. Lonfen was con fidential secretary to the soap com- pany’s President. Then she decided to stop work and she and her husband, John London, planned to establish « home of their own, At Police Head- quarters Mrs, London sata: 1 was in Mr. Clouse’s employ for a Jong time and had his confidence. It was his custom to sign blank checks which I filled out to pay bills, These checks I also filled out when my salary was there never wae @ question about It. “When I quit my place with Mr. Clouse I told him $7% in salary was coming to me, He seemed not to hear me and I repeated !t. Then he walked out of the office, I presumed, of course, that he meant for me to fill out one of igned checks and pay myself. 1 cashed the check at the Kin County Trust Company and that aft noon my husband and I went to Bos- ton to visit friends, We got home this afternoon. It 1s ridiculous to think I would stea! $7 in t''s way, convict myself by af- fixing my name to the check." Mra. London was locked up tm the Adams street police station, SEES GIRL ON TROLLEY, HUNTS HER AS HEIRESS. Woman Gets First Glimpse of Miss Kershaw, as Cars Pass, in Thirteen Years. Advertisements in Brooklyn news- papers to-day ask for news of Mi: Mary Frances Kershaw, wanted to effect the settlement of an estate, and in “Ph Nelghbor- v0) yArme lix | seen yesterday, according to Mrs, Jami Jaubolle D'Armond and Felix) (eugilin of No. 82 Georgia avenue, The Colonial will have another O14| Brooklyn, for the first time in thirteen Timers’ Festival with MeIntyre and | years when two street care fashed past Heath, Mra. Annie Yeamans, Jeach other in Jamaica, Bonnle Thornton, Maggie Mrs, Coughlin once thought that Miss and Curran and others. Kershaw had run away with Rev, Mr, Lillian Russell will head the bill at|Stringfeld, Mrs, Coughiin's first bus- the Alhambra. Other features will be|band. The girl disappeared after de ‘Pho Police Inspector,” rank Fogerty, |claring her innocence in court, Them Ryan and Richileld, Smith and Camp- | Mrs. Coughlin's mother died and mage bell and the Big City Four. Kershaw one of The bill at the Bronx Theatre will clude oO ‘ou Morte » Jack re" cena taging i fous: [DYSENTERY Howy and Lee, Dooley and: Balee, and DIARRHOEA, CHOLERA cepa A muccession of loud reports at tnters| ay ofen as th dacharges contin) ry vals for several hours last night ted | stuctal wt et a wit ae = Nef and @oR OLD BY DRUGOISTA, RMASR: | soLD BY DRUGGIATS, Oven This Ebening Cowperthwait @ Sons Cash or Liberal Credit Park Row Qa Chatham Sq.

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