The evening world. Newspaper, January 11, 1912, Page 18

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GET YOUR ADS. FOR THIS, ae "4 ae Se nT RECTOR V RECTOR SAYS | aa, HE TRIED 10 KISS ansaannaite Mrs. Wetmore Declares She Made Charges Against Dr. Butler for “Getting Fresh.” ROW AT CHURCH DOOR Pastor Says She Threatened Him With Hatpin and She Shows Bruises. | | | Uely allegations against the Rev, w ton Butler, rector of @, a pal Mir Chureh tn &, near Yonkers, were ade to-day by Mra. George 1. Wet- more of Crescent place, who lett the durch bullding javt night after « tormy struggle in which whe declares that Dr the vestibule, In tore nie * ga her head against the | (re J “L heard that Dr. Butler had catied | bs @ Mase Meeting last night,” Mra Wet- more saig to-day, “and I went to the church with my husband, Mra Wolf} —— __ MAS. WETMORE. - and her daughter of No. 22 Sherwood ni ‘hurch door i avenue, to hear w he had to may Metis age rac Shade about me, With mo"—and Mra, Wet-lgavg More looked significant—"I had some CLERGYMAN GRABUJED very important letters and papers that} HER AT DOOR OF CHURCH. = aniked by Congressman feall, “Yes, bore on the subject.” "1 knocked at the door,” air” Mre. Wetmore declares that the whole| “and Dr. Hutier opened tt. He “You found it at the beginning a amalt trouble began three years ago when|™* by the troat and arma aor business?” “Yen, very «mall. that he tore through my wtirt-watet and scratched me here on my cheat with his natls, Then he banged my head against the wall and gave me this braite be hind my eur t fell off and my hatpin carne out at 1 did not try to attack him with It, as he says, After that 1 went home.” Mrs. ore threatened to have the Dr. Butler dismissed Mine Grace War- rem, thén organist of the mission church. The whole town ts apilt wide over the row. “Ht started,” said Mra. day, “when Dr, Mies Warren wa Wetmore to Butler told me that ying things about Naturally 1 cham- Was about to be I then lived on the second Goor with a Mrs. Behoenfals, at Cron Mre. his ments Sho wan just a Mra. Schoenfala made a general denial of Mrs, Wetmore's atory, “That 18 not tri told what Mrs, and did his washing regular slave for him. PASTOR CALLED BEING ANNOU Me T am @ Roman but | Dei my husbaad fe an Ppiscopalian, and mn “Don't you dare to strike my wife wanted our boy brought up in that /again' shouted Mr. Wetmore. “Bhe WITHOUT | t. a tte br . holding The Ruasian steamer the coal and other bien 2am - — —- | 2o8 BV hss WURLY, sAUBBVDAY, JANUARY 11, 1812. seed te Wetenlnn evan Sue. fara |A aoe” nO’ Dries eRie’ mate” Sem WALL STREET SHOT FROM ACROSS TABLE ; spigot, and no corporation can com. mgner. . 172 LOST AT SEA IN THE WRECK OF RUSSIAN STEAMER | All the Passengers and Crew of the Russ Drowned When Vessel Founders. Roumanta, Jan. We a hae found. Biack Bea BUCHARKET, during @ gale in the with all of her passengers and crew, | totatiing 172 The Huss, which was under the com- mand of Capt, Pahomoft and belongs to| the Russian Steam Navigation Company of the Biiak Se steaming from Ga! her passengers were Carl Anuseft, perkons nd the Danube, was 4 to Odeana, Among pointed Rumsian C and his family. — NO COMPETITION W STEEL TRADE SAYS CARNE (Continued from First Page) a busines f the world? early years you found the Awintegrated?” TRUSTS CANNOT MANAGE L'KE Janie price PARTNERS. “And you left it a isiness greatly improved, greatly extended with ail ite! unreason: attributes, the ore, the transportation, |# "Mr. Cat clitler assembled | nation of t and practically dominated by one great | Gardner corporation?’ Tam unr “Admirably stated,” suid Mr. car. | PONT, ~ | neate. “Has there been the sume grade of progress In the steel buniness @ince the United Btates Stee! Corpuration got owe neeeemrpeieneeneaseqeceeneiem scene pete with such an organisation in any business. ae Verkina came to me one day for instance,” he clone frlenda ad business 1 remember Jonce the Union Paciny had asked for bids for 70,009 tons of ratix, and the 6 rails, 1 had bids were to be opened at Omaha, All iny competitors re out there, Tt) walked over ti ney Dillon of the Union Pacific in New York. 1 had done the Union Pacific a fa ones, got them a loan of something lke $600,000 tn Philadelphia, and they elected ine and George M. Pullman directors. “LE told Dillon about the bide and asked him if the Carnegie ralin were satisfactory, He said they were, E said, ‘I want the Union Pacific to do business with me, and Til give you the lowest price.’ He al ‘ib cl@ht, Care “Tnegie,” and f got the ton contract, ‘Now, what's the us a corporas [ton fixhting agalust «uch an influence | ¢ jas that? | Mr, Carnegie also related how he had jaiven a it ‘ollie Pitington, | | presi of the Union Pasifie, at a hard up. sald Carnegie. a pald agent to| jtime when Huntiigton was He wax my friend, | What « compete tons?" teed. Mr, Carneg! atlength) speaking directly of the com- not below b mittee Keeking to ‘Mish ff posstble| nell, tt cot singer jabout the pri i} whether $24 a ton for sails was @ fatr| choir, who perhaps belleved hi ‘or unfair price, or the price for which} lwful wife. H [ they have sold since the organization | Spread ruin hist ing from bis unt the Steel Trust HIS SUCCESSORS. | Representative wets and 3 1a tilt, Mr. agitated and] | Gardner Mr. Carnegie refusing | {tink 4 , “1 don't as 328 leounsel @ question,” M Carnegie | piled. “T think your questions are a bit to tell | you could tell ux hook value of your propert when we ask you about what you ohurob, I consented. He went to Mt. |has told me that you struck her be-| hold of the industry?” thought # Pulp peice tok you turn |W Mary's, and sometines 1 would go, too. |fore this, but I doubted It. Now 1] +1 don't belleve that any corporation | (0,YOUr counsel for a¢ ‘Then Dr. Butler started coming up-|know what you are capable of. Atrike| 1 manage w business ike u eatin | PUG ety couneel kecauen “af wiairs to eee me. He would run up| het again at your j id that time e Kit have been eft Dr. Butler He declared After the visitors called the meeting off. }that he had only tr Without being announced, and | was afrald people would talk, He was a Wrie@ man, anyway, and had a wife | tl) Wetmore to leave and that two daughters in Mount Vernon. ine omy after she hit him an he ut he kept coming and began to stooped to plok up her vell, which had wet very fresh, Last May he came fallen, Ho repented that Mra. Wot- into my bedroom and tried to kine me, more had tried to stab him with her 1 didn't tell any one, not even my hug | hatpin. baad. “Mra, W. ore the results | “Then I moved to our present home | °F Fs ar oe And told Dr, utier not to oall any | fendl Oi ie aad more, but he Aid. Once he bought me | mr ald," wayne @ ticket to go on an excursion. 1| pr, Ww ismtased our didn't want to go, but Mrs, Ryce, my | organist then Mra, Wetmore led a move- neighbor, said her little boy was going | ment to oust me. Later she preferred and ‘she couldn't go, and wouldn't I ren of assault against me, although please fo and take care of the boy, |#lie herself had attacked me publicly te I went, last July 93 a steamboat returning from ‘ an excursion. 1t fied at that affair that Towa ee received a y a friend of mine. 1 asked |). jxned by fictitious names that jetiers sikned by 8 her why and she said Dr, Butler told} Know she wrote, The comminsion ex- her horrid things I had said about her. | onerated me of her charges, now I 1 told her tt wasn't true at all. m certainly wolng to take steps to “Well, when I brought my charges fhe ia hurting the chureh, against Dr. Butler they appointed « Hy commission. That commiasion exoner- ated him, of course. A Dr. McLenin, his iifelong friend, was on It So when J Beard that he was going to have that) Mmase-meeting last night and talk about me of course I went.” Mrz, Wetmore's story of what hap- ia letters and ~~~ NEW VANDERBILT HOT! 1S OPENED TO PUBLIC. Crowd in Cold Outside Peers in at Brilliant Gem-Lit Scene Within, With every available room taken, and | both dining rooms crowded by the rich and fashionable people of New York, headed by Reginald Vanderbilt, whore brother, Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, 19 | the owner, the now Vanderbilt Hote} at the corner of Park avenue) and Thirty-fourth street, swung open. ite | doors to the genefal public at 7 o'clock | lart eventog ‘The first man to register was George | | 11. Jones of Detroit. He slipped in Tues- | day night pleading he could get a room nowhere else in New York, \ Among the le dining in the garden | | rertaurant upstairs, or amid the Flor- | lentine decorations of the large De Ja! Robbia dining-room below, were Edmubd | |L. Baylies and party, Mr, and) Mrs, | Wiliam Astor Chanier, Mr, and Mrs. Whitney Warren, Gov, and Mrs, BE. ©. Bimith, K. W. Coggeshall, Peter Cooper Hewitt and W. H. Newman, Crowds in the cold outside peered in at the gowns and jewels of tho smartly | Ured” women. Prom the mesaantne | floors opportunity was afforded Inter- overseeing a scene of And well served dinner | Big Kennel Event Dog fanciers are taking a great and! arly interest in the Westminster Kennel Club Show to be held at the New Grand Centra) Palace Feb. 20th, 21st, 22d & 23d ‘m the interim there could be no better time to buy or sell Dogs, or other household pets, through Sunday World Ads, twisu Am unusually large display of Dog, | buch a ‘y etc., advertising will be published in the) SUNDAY WORLD | wen OF vend, bar : Near-Tragedy. | FEBRUARY 25TH you're ‘billed to. play ce [ested peop brilliant toile! parties > (Prom the Londan Otranicte,) | For many years the miraculous cross (which was alleged to have saved King David's life by Anterposing itwelf be- tween him and an Infurtated white stax) Was preserved in the abbey. Its virtue, however, Wax tented In 1346 at the Battie of Dunbar, ‘Phe test proved teo much for the crass, wale’. fell into the hands | Croan et oly Rood. | \ of the enefty, who patd It the epapect of t in the cathedral near the Je, Tt im mutd that the tex. | Crom of Holy Rood was “I see you're billed to play | mister.” “AWe are,” admitted Yorick “Is that a tragedy? “Nearly always, my friend. I've ever seen over 140 te the box offen” Hamm. EDITION IN EARLY it, bese ’ whip. that we could run around corporations, When we wore partners I felt |noom in rails and the price had | negie, “I du not NERAL VI money and wanted the perten« you : — RICHESON CALLED TRAITOR BY COLLEGE PRESIDENT Denounced in Address to Students wre |DOESN’T WANT TO ed la ef Nate | ft Massachu-| TROOPS FOR CHINA DELAYED. “T) regiment to Chi 2 was im the business of making — — ‘provement was tn prox: Frac | advances was the limit of the trend, Toward midday plan of eal company to need to react. A partial recovery was tn evide: {the finish, but net losses was thi at the end. The ‘Today's storks and yesterday's final by Head of lastitution Amal. Copper. He Attended. Am Gar Van NEWTON * . President | Am orge KS ewton Theo- | 4 '. Rev, Clar-|Am. 8. & | Mef. Richeson attended, to-day | 4M f & Ret it the student body on Tob. Co, pt. ase President was ase }and man, a the young sl Horr scoundre! ast 1 he = MANILA battalion ly not lay w ACTIVE A Liberal Education in the Use of Industrial Gas Appliances is now within the reach of every manufacturer or other business man or woman of New York, at the INDUSTRIAL GAS APPLIANCE LABORATORY, Nos. 374-380 Second Avenue (southeast corner of East 22nd Street). The Laboratory—convenient to the business heart of the city—is really 4 permanent exposition of the most practical nature, of gas machinery of every kind adaptable to modern industrial operations, © Any one interested in the industrial possibilities of g: cordially invited to visit the LABORATORY and there to inepect, study in detail, and subject to the most exacting tests any—-or as many dred or more as he may desire—of the hun- appliances inchided in the display. { Each appliance is completely set up and is connected with its appropriate gas supply. In each case, the exact amount of gas used during a test is accurately regis- tered on a meter alongside the device, so that the con- sumption of gas can be carefully noted at each step of the demonstration work. ’ € So entirely is this INDUSTRIAL GAS APPLIANCE LABORATORY devoted to aiding the business man solve his industrial problems that he may, if he chooses, take his own employees there at any time and try out any device under conditions similar to those existing in his own shop or factory. € Gas experts are always on hand to explain every detail of the workings of the varjous appliances and to answer every possible question as to their capacity, cost of operation, consumption of gas, etc., etc. Laboratory open daily from 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. Consolidated Gas Company of New York GEO. B. CORTELYOU, President @ persistent relling | but from this te Sleeper Awakes and Fires Revolver ; | | WHILE FONDLING BABY. | Mr, Car tuy at that price, that wouldnt be! Stock market trading to-day was rea at Stranger Sitting Opposite | me about your partnersiip organiea-|antate, would 10?" Honary throughout, A steady deciine in a Saloon tion and I thought it was foolieh. Now he name of P, C, Koox, present] culminated at cloaing time, wien nearly atts i IT know you were rigit Secret f State, former Attorney-| iow prices for the day were established, | Henry Pickhardt, a of No. Wwe < , I. Ponnayl- | Nears etropo ; HIM GOOD RETURNS, ng this when Mr. Carnegie, ane oft point. Reading, Union Pa- joon tl A peg Hy van! & Se Mr gave the following a ros-examination by + Heel and Copper yielded the easi- ; 1 ter atrent aoe 3 Representa (Dem, (at to selling pressure, | Manhattan, thie afternoon, He played veral iilustrations of his power to] sien The tist was strongest at the outset, | WIth the year-and. old of We fuive made a thorough pore wersae Wee. 18 SE arom | ene oe | when @ continuation of {| Schwadron, Hida, who lay ina cradle! study of the imporiant details of near the stove ; Afbert “Ha lilting glasses so that the ma) oth comforatie and t He woke wi Selec ardt had | | Albert Kaviter of No. GF jatreet was in a drunken « | chair across hig 9 vane ater ie and shape of the lenses and the * selling prensiire for a time, most becoming mounting—the because of a re the dire one which best jits the particular Ve ‘ould ta nel’ contour of your faceis an portant elemer fiiting of glas in and arrested Pic Kayffer was ts pital and Pick station, 7 TRAIN KILLS WEALTHY M (\Max Schalman Trice to Noard tt=| ! Falls Under Wheels, | | NYACK, N. Y., Jan. U.—Max Sehut- | |man, @ wealthy embroidery manufac. | ver of Bpring Valley and New York, | ., 3 as killed here to-day. In attempting | 64 Kast 24rd St to b @ moving train for New York | &¢ West oith® he fell under the wheels | 64 West 125th & to Gouverneur He rdt 10 Delancey street | baby cried. Ses, nee at e rule the lenses. Oculists and 76 Nassau St., near Joho 1009 Broadway, near Willo’by, 489 Fulton opp. A. & S., 4 GAMES MCCREFRY & GO 23rd Street 34th Street On Friday, January the 12th —__ JUNIORS’ SUIT DEP’rS. In Both Stores, _. Juniors’ Coats of Chinchilla, finished with collar and cuffs of broadcloth. Sizes 5 14 and 16 years 13.50 nh value 18.50 Girls’ Wool School Dresses models. Size 6 to 14 years, in various 3-95 to 7.50 value 6.75 t.. 2.00 Remaining stock of Girls’ Fancy Coats of Velvet, Broadcloth and Zibeline, at greatly reduced prices. Size 6 to 14 years. WOMEN’S COAT DEP’TS. im Both Stores, or Velveteen, Suitable for 19.50 and 22.50 value 29,50 to 35.00 Long Coats of Broadcloth in a variety or models. 25.00 value 39.50 Coats.. <8 and 18.50 ¢ 19.50 to 32.50 Long Coats of Velour lincd with satin or broadcloth. street or evening wear. ‘Traveling 10.50, I; ~ va Motoring and DRESSMAKERS’ SUPPLIES. Iu Both Stores, Shields, nainsook covered. Sizes Se pair, goc doz. Dress 2, 3 and 4. Shields, silk covered. Sizes 2, 16c pair, 1.85 doz. Dress 3 and 4. Sewing Silk. 100 yard spools. Ze spool, Large Spools of Silk. . .40c spool, 4.50 doz. Featherbone, silk covered... ze yard, Dressmakers’ Pins. Ss 4, 5 and 6, >» pound box, ty4¢ Seam Binding......... ze picec, Soe doz, Hooks and Eyes with spriug....10¢ box o MPDELAY JAMES MeGREERY & C2. 23rd Street 34'h Street JAMES McCREFRY & C3, / 23rd Street 34th Street © MEN’S HALF HOSE. in Both stores. On Friday, January the rath Fine Silk Plated Lisle Thread, with | spliced hecls, soles and toes. Black Lisle Thread, spliced heels, soles and toes. 25¢ per pair six thread 35¢ per pair usual price So Pure Thread Silk, two-toned royal ribbed. Various color combinations. 50c per pair \ Pure Thread Silk with cotton or silk soles, heels and toes, 1.00 per pair usual price 1.35 with | | 23rd Street 34th Street will be coming. ing both the proper size the correct Harris Glasses cost $2.00 of more, depending upon the quality , of the frame and character of near Fourth Ave, et. Sthand6th Avea, , bear Lenox Ave. 442 Columbus Ave., 81st and 82nd Vy Bi ‘ Buipe 697 Broad St.. near Habne’s. Newark M* — a =<

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