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ese ees eee Absolutely no frict and that there wool! tlona over the divie did not mention Mis “B do know that Mis A Position of resect family. She is a young ween thirty an she has aisoluiy tate, Bho has mad name has not ber manner, She n which to file a clais Miss iny home to-d Mra, Walter & ed oavoral ether mieenbors "| First Shaft of Mf Adeline Crandett, wite of Fret-| From Park Place to Wall erick Crande)| h hele to t 4 Mfteenth of the ilanley extate, was re Street, to Be Sunk. peday | ~ n among the hetre be no = SUBWAY DIGGING | As | «| ONBROADWAY T0 WO wae BREWIN TODAYS ‘ameron was @till at the ction No, 2, Workhouss on Isiand at 7 o'clock nding alinost convicted and ron weeks ay 4 | FIND HISTORIC | ——a RELIC. sentence srigoner digorderly © hte." The Crandeiis had taken ro and malicious me with | ‘8! First Underground Car Ever Mra, Margaret Blanche at Righth avenue, and a strenuoun row Mrs, Crandell }ad with a daughter of Mrs. Blanche led to her arre pon her arrival at the foot of Bast Sev tteGh street in the Correction Depart ment boat to-day @he refured to als Run Here Rotting in Old Tube at Murray Street. @uoe the case which hud ied to ner} Within ten daya-the time dawmenated imprisonment. She was, met et tieiin the contract bel y days muy pler by her «inter, Mins Mary Me-| way diewing will begin on the Hroadwa Manne of No. 271 Wort One Hundred | geotion patwoen Park Pace and Walke and Forty-fourth street. ; atreot. Liefore that ume the Pu MFO. Crandell anid she hed not heard | vicg Com:nixsion will have authorized aword from her husband She bad Pee conteuciy for other apctiona. The Dex taformed, though, that he had tv ed | $100 to buy @ sult of clothes iminediately | he had learned of hia inheriance and wes etill out eoinewhere trying to find fm eutht to meot his fancy. > of Mra. Crandell’s people had been a trace him beyond the point where he Gt the $10. Their opinion was that he Company, which wil on of the Broadway route, known as so tion No. 2 is assembling Ite equipm The contracting company, throug! Mr, Sandford, to-day sald «inking th firet ehaft might be begun before ten non Contractin budid the first « Lexington avenue | days, if preliminary work had sot to ‘Was celebrating his Kood fortune 4/0 considered. While the strect aur Asvived at the home of hor sister and) 1. i. ty be diaturbed this will be| Mother, Mre Crandell said of her ua) woe at night, and each morning will, band’s sudden transition from poverty te riches: “Tt te going to be a splendid thing for our ohtidren. That ia ail I care edeut. They oan all have every advan- tage mow and a splendid education. ‘That 'e enough to make eny mother find the openings planked over, #o that! street traMe will be uninterrupted When the whole force af the Degno Company is at work the job will be pushed night and day. Aa soon ateel ts ready it will be put in poi hagey. tion, | @HZ DOESN'T WANT THE FRivV- FIND FIRST id td CAR AS IN) OLITIES OF LIFE. A TOMB. | OMctals of the Public Service Com- “After all I've beon through money means much, tnt it will not mean for me the buying of automobiles and all things that are not necessary. given that @ thought. My as in my change of fortune be what I can do for othera, We ciroumstances that in need of belp and mission and membera of the oontract- ing company yenterday entered the old tunnel at Murray street, which w bullt forty years ago—the firet subway on Manhattan Island. Tradition had it that when the old eubway wae explored would be found the first experimental car, placed In the tube to demonstrate jenat, the practicability of operating an under- Un cgiteregh gil aiabalmad navel round. railroad by meana of com- “My bueband's break with his uncle | Pressed air. The car was found by tho ‘came before our marriage. It was away | explorers, but age had reduced it prac- back tn 11, when 1 was working in the | tloally to splinters. Southern Pacific offices ee @ telegrapi| This pioneer underground railroad, uperator, My husband was also em-| which was never used, was bullt about ployed there. When I got my vaoation | 199.1670 under a franchite granted in went up to the Catakilia” Mr. Cran-| im to. the Tioach Pheumatio. Transit Sede te Geol ete oe ity ne fol: | Company “to provide for the tranamis- wishes "When he got back he was fired, |#ion of letters, packages and merchan “1 kept eight on working, and Mr.|‘lse in the cities of New York and Hawley was very kind to mp, Fred and | Brooklyn and the North and Bast riv- 1 were married, but the real trouble|era by means of pneumatic tuber to bo! started when he tried to eee me at the| constructed beneath the surface of the ollice, | Mr. Hawley wouldn't have him |gtreets and public plaves."” The charter around. It was because he insisted on | way amonded in 1873 to permit the com- coming that Mr, Hawley bad mu " ferred pany “to construct, maintain and oper. By he Western Union people. ate an undergroynd railway for tho ‘My husband hae been too busy to come and see me since the death of Mr. | transportation of passengers and prop- sotshge fe but 1 ere. &@ visit from him | erty.” some time to-day. ur children are all In Chatham with relatives and will re- | #1000000 SUBWAY WAS BUILT main there until money matters are net- FOR ONE BLOCK. Ued. What we will do then 1 cannot The capital stock of the corporation say.” was fixed at $10,001,000, Its route was + Mes. Crandell told tater that she|to be trom the Battery, under Hroad- ha@ not heard from her husband since | way, to ite junction with Central Park her arrest. She intimated that he was Eighth avenue, with @ branch un- involved in her fight with Mina |.nd Pie . Blanche, and that he had neglected to | #F Madison square and ‘Medison ave support her in we nue to and uw wr the Harlem river, . entonce,” ‘This atte, |. Work waa begun on the elght-foot Beach pneumatic tunnel at adway and Warren street and a section was faced @ prison sentence, Thig after- Reem Mra Crandell telerhonet to all built to the eoutherly ede of Murray etreet husband's relatives «he could Litigation devaloped and by a decision reach, the lawyern of tho Hawley heirs, Mis place of employment and of the Court of Appeals in 1889 in the case of John Jacob Astor, et al, against several of his friends, but could get no trace of him. Until yesterday afternoon Mra. Cri Gel) wae in ignorance of the am: the Arcade Raflway Company, which auc- ceeded the Reach Pneumatic Company, | the Act of 1873, authorizing the pany | to use its tubes for railway purposes | and all subsequent Aote relating to It} Were declared unconstitutional, on the | ground that the Act of 1873 did not con- ing change in her husband's fortunes and had no Inkling of the fact that she wae the wife of @ millionaire. @erogate Cohalan aywroved this afte noos the bong of Frank HH. Wiliam P. Hawiey and Day Walter & Crandell as executors of the ertate of | tain Uitte, equate deacrtp- | Béwin R. Hawley, A ond for $2,000,000, | Hon of tts purpomes In decision @igned by the International Surety © the Court said that no pneum: tubes pany, the Empire State Burety ( had been constructed, “and tt in a fulr paay, the Tiinote Burety Company, the | inference from the tted facts that | ‘American Gurety Company and the New |{he® system for the pneumatic trans: | proporty was before the year to be impractical been tried in vartous but England Casualty Company, was ap proved. The formal order naming the three exeoutors was slsned by the Sur. te of had proved @ failure, amd e. for (he general transmission ef ‘prop: “Tnder the new arrangement the os: [arty or pusenwers wan in the pea in tate WIN de hold tntact during the!) y where in uae” | lives of two of the heirs, and the! ‘phe original grant, however, was up whete estate will be directed by the | held | exeoutore. ey —_— MISS ELSS, WHO STOLE TO WOMAN OUTWITT TO OY LiDUOA Tineuse| GET FINERY, IS RELEASED, Hotel Normandie Cafe Still Going | Comiential "Clerk, Who Took | 35 i $2,000 Frony Employers, Freed During Fight in the yet held f reed Court From Tombs on Probation, badaed Miss Ada M. Elsa, twenty-two year How the ingenulty of a woman he a nfdential clark for the | Jotely outwitted the State Ex ieeul aalatc nearer LA minsioner was revealed tn | eet pea pine wt No, 40 We wonty-thir tourt to-day, It all came abo: litreatcatcie'® ane eM a at Me ayy say: ee i” ston 4 by Jude A Heense to trate in } at th ‘ } k fotel Normandie was ¢ Ato TAN OF f (ou he ™ | tuehl The cert ate deserthe t | 1 isos an) No, Lind La i aiwa 1 a u ‘ ee an order of the Appellate Divis areeny ae bow the 1 the Supreme 8 revoke the Nquor ghth # Vhalen, Then the ix yan Mer granted a certificate f Since then the bx has that the he pre Nom, 1884-136 a8 Geseribed in the Hue’ the “west si Je" of No. 1 eighth — stree Whalen license Justi problem an. Whalen from carryin Another motion was ina reargument of the case, but de n | W i was reserved. Mavvudh probation aiflcer, ai Goth » Almanac now wn sale for 60c, by the New Yc , York City, \ dey mal k World, New ‘ ve asic the oan of. We Oko | over to Cure © Cold bo Que iy X ONIN tome ta wei the Word i, THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, | “TED” MARKS, BROADWAY ({ ” ; BEAU BRUMMEL, WHO DIED | Y ARKS ¢ ON GUARD AT THE HOTEL METROPOLE | MORSE SEEKSNO REVENGE ON HIS FINANCIAL FOES (Continued from Firat Page.) resigned his office. After that Dr. Weaver was in charge of the case. Upon Mr. Morae's removal to the hospital at Fort McPherson he was under the care of Dr. Baker and three physicians sent there by the Government at Washing- ton—-Dra, Birmingham, Rusaell and Fauntleroy. In Atianta, when his con- dition became very serious, Dr. Davis and Dr. Bikina of that city were called in, also by the Government, “In the matter of future plans of Mr. Moree, that reste with the phyalctan: It may! be that he will not be able to #0 to Europe for the paths, as he hopes, If the doctora advise against it, of course, he will not undertake the Journey.” The morning mail brought Mr. Mor many letters of congratulation and 00d wishes from his friends, and sev- eral visitora called at the house, To the latter he was invisible. The fame seclusion in which he wrapped himaelf during the trip from the South he le maintaining now, and it te un- Mkely that any one except members of his immediate family will be permit- ted to see him before he starts for Europe. It Ja natural that @ man of Mr. Moraes years—enpectally one who hi undergone enforced confinement, how- ever that may have been ameliorated— should be fatigued by ao long @ rall- way journey, but beyond fatigue Mr. Mo was quite as well to-day as when ho alighted from the Birming- ham mpectul last evening, MANY MESSAGES CENSORED BE. FORE DELIVERY. In addition to the letters sent to Mr. and Mrs. Morse, several telegrams were delivered at the apartment. Numerous inquiries also came by telephone, but these wore not transmitted to the Morse apartment unless Mra, Morse was well assured of the identity and Inten€ of the caller, But to all inquirers word was sent briefly to the effect that Mr. Morse was passing « comfortable day and reat ing. ‘There ix muoh interest in Mr. Morse's exact status, #o far as the law and his ciUzenahip are concerned. What he re ceived from President Taft was a com- mutation of sentence, His conviction was for a misds nor, which does not de prive him of any rights of eltzenship. His status at present is Just what It was | fore canvieted and sent to Prison, However, had Morse been oon- vietod after Jun, 1, 1910, when the offence | of misapplying the funds of a national he was bank was 1 a felony, he would have been deprived of the right to vote and also of certain other elvil rights, Mr “8 status Was made quite cloar by United States Dist Attorney Henry A. Wise, Who sald that, as Morse | was convicted of only a misdemeanor, | an absolute pardon, carrying with it «| of all hus rights of | essary. So Morse | aa thay ver man jaw plete res citizenship, Was not ne may now Who hast The ee thee and | een the grant Atlanta 1 Mor ker to ud Dr rom words of the years old “oman of oved, but there emcee OWES MILLION, NO ASSETS. | Stemtetea Win hardening Krom Pile tary Pert fo Hanken 1 Bi nkr of No Rv » wesa at No. ty vet. fled tyeday wy vbankruptey, He {abilities of $1,08,070,88, with no sn 6 rel the the Hi Mon Cha NAN) are un ured &. 4 ) notes and Dis Which the bankrupt says ought to | be paid by other parties, MAKES FINAL EXIT» WHILE MILL STRIKE AT METROPOLE LEADERS ARE TRIED Broadway's Beau Brummel Crowd Besieges Court at Law- | Dies Atter Picturesque Ca- reer in Theatrical Life. | rence Eager to Hear Case of Ettor and Giovannitti. | WELL KNOWN ABROAD. HAYWOOD IS CALLED. | FEBRUARY 9, 1912. CHAUFFEUR WHO RAN DOWN BROOKLYN WOMAN HELD. Charles Burton Admits Striking Mrs. Hawthorne When He Is Ar- rested in Home, The Brooklyn police to-day ar the chauffeur of the taxicab whid down and fatally injured Mrs, M. Hawthorne of No, 190 state Brooklyn, a probation officer in the brooklyn Court of Spectal Seasions, in Flatbush avenue on Wednesday tng. The man ts Charles Burton, tw ty-one yea old of No. Kourth ave- nue, Brooklyn, His arrest was browsht about by the fact that the motorman of @ passing car took down the number of the taxicab when he «aw that an acetdent had happened. The number Was 062 and the taxt belonged to Roass ler & Brennan, owners of the Mohawk [Garage, No, 185 South Portland avenue, Brooltiyn. Burton was arrested at his ome | Promoter of Vaudeville Sun- Labor Chief Summoned by day Night Concerts Too Sick to Say Good-by.” Prosecution as First Witness Refuses to Answer. LAWRENCE, Broadway loet one of ite most pie- tureeque fizures to-day when Theodor D. Marke, known to the theatre world to-day, Strike taader Joseph J. Ettor as “Ted” Macks, rang down the final and hia Houtenant, Arturo Gtovanitts, curtain at the Hotel Matropols, where both of New York, were called for a he had lain fi] with etrrhoste of the continuance of thelr hearing on the nee for four wean cs ¢ you | CRATES of belnk accersorten to the kill: ‘ou all know svarka, even if you, A a! day night “‘concerts”—virtually vaude- |? CONE ven pete aeons | ville showe—held at the Brosdway have been in jati since thelr arrest, hav- ‘Theatre and later at the Amerioan !"# been dented bail. ‘Theatre senson after sonson? Remem- There was a big throng at the court ber the curious, wiry, ite figure in 400r4, many Velng mill strikers, but all frock coat, clamorous vest, horeeahoo Persons excepting those having busines: Aiamond pin, beating eustache, allk it the trial were turned away. hat and white carnation in his button-| HAYWOOD, CALLED AS WITNE hole? ‘That was Ted Marks, And save | REFUSES TO ANSWER, in summer, when he wou jossom out in the sauctest of straw sailors, 6 | acreeannts bbe her a See drawer ek ta day Oa » Distriot-Attorney Henry C never was coswume. | Atwill made a preliminary statement as ‘Ted Marke was more than Afty years) to ie Commonwealth's can old. He had deen in the theatrical) re. prosecutor sald that the bullet business more than half his life, Ho! that killed Anna Lopizgo was fired by a had done everything an old time show- | tay) Italian at Policoman Oscar Benoit. man hag ever Gone—except, perhaps. | r)6 pullet mised the officer, but In- @ot. And no one ever caught him act-| micted a fatal wound on the woman, ing, though Broadway shook tte sid Abuot thirty witnesses were sworn for once over the rumor that he was 80ins| tne Government. William D, Haywood to appear in @ vaudeville sketch written | was the firs: witness called, He «ave around himeelf. hia home as Denver, Col, Axked If he For the past ten years or more Marks | krw anything about an orsanization has been @ vaiddeville agent. Every | known as he Industrial Workers of the} epring, regularly as clock work, he| world, he refused to answer on the would gail for Europe to look over the} ground that he mixht incriminate him- | fold of vaudeville and variety acts Of self, He was excused. sensational character and import the TWO MORE WITNESSES SHOW pick of them for American vaudeville HOSTILITY To COURT. | managers. While abroad he usually! Aneeio Rocco, a high school student, epent several weeks in London, at the wi said he was financial secretary of | Adelphi, a little theatrical hotel back the jocad branches of the Industrial of the Cecil, where he foregathered with Workers, proved to be a hostile wit- the Amerioan actors and managers and /nese, in the opinion of the prosecution. prisefighters and racing men and all the /Attempta to have him may that Ettor | i wan sent for, or that Ettor had ever Rodse-pedee OF the pone ae eer wan [ead that he was an official of the which he was %o prominent and well ° In New York hie headquarters in- | 0T*. sa Peat (a comeniites |he admitted that a committee of the variably were In the Metropole. When | eat union requested Ettor to conte the old Metropole was torn down and \here and assume control of the situa- while Considine was rebuilding, Ted/tion, Rocco sald that Ettor came to Marks wandered from hotel to hotel. | Lawrence to keep the strikers peacoful He told every ono he had no home, and to do organization work. | But the new Metropole came up on| William 7. Trautmann, formerty an) vi + loffictal in the Industrial Workers, prac- Forty-third etreet and Ted was one of Se oe cunt wan er | the first to take possession of a room. | Mealy declined to y There he was always to be found until | CURed noon, when he usually arose and went ‘The rote on Jan. 2, the most serious | day of the strike, were described by | out for a stroll, When asked about this lttle walk Ted once remarked: Capt. John J. Sullivan of the local po- lice, ‘Through questions of the Matnict: “I find these early morning walks| Attorney, the Captain tokl of secing Et- good for my health.” Since he took to his bed four weeks tor during the early morning at the head of a crowd of strikers near where ago Marks has been visited every day by @ number of his old friends. Yes! the trouble accurred. Capt. Sullivan eald that Miss Lopiszo day his condition became so grave that hia physician, Dr. Hetnrich Stern, or- was kill ed by a tall Italian who shot | at Police Officer Oscar Benoit. After dered that no one be allowed to see the patient, so Marks passed out without the shot missed the policeman and | struck the woman, inflicting a fatal saying good-by. Some of the leading managers had planned a big benefit for wound, the same Italian stabbed Benoit nim, with a knife, —_»—__—. IN COURT, JUSTICE gation from a Western State to the |colonel. The tourist was W. W, Rich U of St, Paul, and the delegation he de- livered was that of Minnesota, By what authority Mr, Rich made the poe Mass, Feb. 9.—With | troops guarding the police court here — ONE MORE DELEGATION FOR COL. ROOSEVELT. | Ww. W. Rich Hands Over the One From Minnesota, but— Another tourist from the West called on Col, Roosevelt at the office of the Outlook to-day and delivered the dele- delivery was not stated. He Is not the National Committeeman from Minne- nor fs he Chairman of the Repub. Committee of that State, In fact Ir, Rich's political activities are a mat- ter of mystery down In this part of the country. Nevertheless he delivered the Minne- vota delegation to Col, Roosevelt, Tt must be understood, however, that thie in a February delivery. When it comes to making the July delivery in Chicago Mr, Rich may not de #o confident as he was to-day. sot (Continued from First Page.) | | noon aummoned Di ridge, who ma Brandt's record tive Lieut, Wool Investiwation of the tndietment | an after and reported to Judge Rosalsky that the ex-valet had been In various troubles, Woolridge ts under suspension from the Department because it ts claimed t was false, Ma re All the persons mentioned in Woole| “1 tok the Colonel," sald Mr. Rich, Hdge's report have been Interviewed," | iuat he would have the eupport of sal District Attorne + and with | stinnesota for the nomination, We on toon they deny having dis: ‘ 7 y becaus charged Brandt ns Wooltidge stated, [ort Want Taft out our way because Wooirldge's report had it that c._p, | he tried to force reciprocity on us and Williams of Stonington, Conn., aise! tius hurt the farmers, We have aly Jinged Hrandt for dishonesty. We! Ways Hked Roosevelt and while we are Mr fams at the | so tor La Follette's health have jJast found ause he is physically and any servant for dis. vie to lead the fight) and so-s te Wich did net say what the Cojonel SUSPENDED AFTER ARREST. ;: ortara ie declined 40 talk, > ntified as TOF NEW YORK, rper of Allene y Houne eto ys : 0 urea of Licenses | Oeeanie 9 + Palermo f Wallace of the Bureau of Licenses! Oreanle oo co suspended from duty Michael ki siglo 7 1 mari, an inspector of complaint ™ vi a charge that the Inspector hay been | he keeper of a disorderly house. ce he Manhattan League Club in West wonty-elghth street Jan. The alleged proprietor of the resort who d, kave his name as ac h fF body and the ttohina | at night, Was arrest is com sometines Michael Hoseo, From court @ spectator gimost intolerable, sent Wont to Chief Walace that the In the treatment of Salt Rheum, which prisoner was really Gaimart, Bosco was depends on impure blood. a wonderfully ased on be successful medicine W@ the great blood 15. Later 1 Ms trial set for aN Steinert was purifier r He summoned to the bureau, and he identities Eas summoned to the bureau, eid he identified Hood’s S ill Derren net ihe eaaesn afferda: Freeh ino nari as Bow ainan's shied was FIQOR'S Sarsapariila dtrawberries, Mulaga Banham OR INTEREST & DIVIDEND NOTICE taken and he was notified to appear Ra te etch Gherriek. sanie & WaSSAU iin, ADAMS PAPKEAS Couraa TO before Chief Wallace for trial Feb. 15, hae miven entire satisfaction inj gf Pineapple, Wrenn One 4z NAS: au st Noid broad vas me veh 6 BB Gaimart was ap, ° Py Py re Poa 39c Tho specified weight in each instance P cdoacd frm o'clock BM bee te tag cot petitive Het July 22, 1910, Hits sly ts ‘Hood's Sareaparilia to-day. te POUND BOX includes the contalier, tng of Maren 1 red ne Gam, {$1.00 @ your. TF \weuld oF tablets called Sersatebe. | 4 | WALTER H, ALDERT, Treasurer, eR tt LT CT NEEL LLL LE LEAD AAAI eveung to | Do while at luncheon by Detectives Mar- key and Mu of the Bergen Street Station. He rail he had been called to the Flatbuel avenue terminal of the Long Island Ratiroad on Wednestay tuke four passengera to a aurant jn New York, He war on iy Way there when he struck Mrs Hawthorne, Thereupon his four fares left itm and he took the taxt «to the garage, Burton wan arraigned this afternoon before Mugiatrate Reynolds in the Butler Street Court. cation CHARLESTON WINNERS. ft); onald- ota and ven fur- merall Isle, 120 (Mfopkins), 13 7 to, 7 to 10, flrvt; Country Roy, (Turner), 12 to 1, 5 to 1, nd; Wood D. 99 (8 FIRST RACK.—Helling welblg) 4 to & 2 to 5, third. Time 1 of Pleasu Jay PB. Art Fathorela, Achmet, Sculpture, Carlisie ubs, Fiddle, Pierre Dumas, RACK.Selling; purse ade and up: six furl ury, 199 (Gould), 9 to 1, & tod 6 to 2% first: Salvolatile, 98 (Ambrose) 2 to 1, f to» f to Hilly Barnes, 10 (Cthappell), 50 to 1, 20 to 1, 19 to J, third, Time—1,182-5, Bodkin. Aviator, (i Emperor Will- West second —Purse $350; three-year- olds and up; selling; s!x furlongs— ‘Thrifty, 100 (Ambrose), 9 to 2 7 @nd 7 to 10, first; Lady Ort (Pickens), 10 to 1, 4 1 and second; Unele Jimmy Gray, 119 (L 1 to % 8 to 5 and 4 to 5, third. Time, 145. Mies Stannel, Christmas Datsy Reine Margot, Chilton Squaw, Lapelle, |“ Lord Wells, Abrasion, Blun- o ran and finished as named FOURTH RACE.—Purse $500; thi year-olds and up; selling handicap; one Judge Monck, 96; (Hopkins) 2 to 1, 4 to 6 and 1 to 3, first. Ozana, 107, (Loftus) 6 to 5, 1 to 2 and out, we ond. Cheer Up, 92, (Goose) 20 to 1, 1 and 8 to 5, third. Time 1.41 Golden Butterily, Ross Hampton, G. M. Miller also ran and finished as named. dhe ace CHARLESTON ENTRIES. RAGE TRACK, CHARLESTON, §. ¢,,/in. the sec Senator Lorimer’s| durable and worthy but the player Feb, 9—The enries for to-morrow’s| Secretary (alice! with ti action is so simple that it don’t races are as follow Loli tg FIRST. RAC $400 ‘ Bien arent 107, Man. Fred 110; Selling a, Tha 102; "Hilly stone, Stolelilf) 100: ” (avian Krave.” 102," bffleen eligible: Menock. 103, THIRD CE—-Thiree.vear-olts and ; Conditions, seven firlonds Y Star Oman. “it sin iglit, ive. Capa 108. u RACE—Charleston For Hotel Handicap, $1,800 Guaranteed j, treeyearolds. and upward que mile High Bivate, AS vauie chia! 111 Any Port, 10%; Kormak, 106: (b)dack Denman OF? Meridan.. 110) Chester” Krum. 112) uy Fisher, 100: “Star (ryan, 100; ia)Prince Ahmed 116; Beauconp, 107: Sager, 105: Ideweiss, 0, (y)Commoners ‘Touch, 80. ‘)Foit, 0, Va) Heswell entry." (b)Tennemee Stable entry FIRE RACH thres-searclde and ‘upward Purse 8250: ine.six. furiongs.-*Thoifty. 100 *Double 107) Hetvens, 100, km Kiva Hon Hack Edwin Ty, 113; *Geivescs nat 109, Carroll, Sir 114: Hack m Warner Griswell, Nona rt; e101! Naya ngresstnan ‘James, 100; Charley Brown, 114. jax Rex 4! Wild Weed, Cite "Ton. debs tele J Tas i SNSRVESTH HAC ‘Three yearolds nt Dvrse £400.) Selling, ne And one ie —Cvagnian sitetie “Mawr, {eth Measure wT: APck it; Mast 100; Khiait Deeby fim! Rortak, 101. Sant Quaver Ig) palais Kattehts elce five nounds clalmed, p ROL REL INCOMING STEAMSHIPS, Cristobal, Special for Friday, b COVE PRULIES AS CHOCOLATE ge eh M icin our ta fed figedy worth aie I 10c lat ‘Gur prices OUND BOX Kiddies a ni CAN r Cort Fark Row ati cur stores oem Milk Chocolate Covered Assorted Fresh Fruits— 2 to 1s In one room where Liree persons hold a conversation was hung the delicate | telephonic apparatus. Wires led to the ablo in the next room. The Bible was ) permit Sl a Welght for he cord ak, while he | OFFERINGS 1OR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY graph operator In a local hotel, to show him a message Detective Batley hid sent H. KB. Kerr. Hines said on the day fn question upon going to Miss Seavers’ to withdraw a me he had r to send, he mesvage ley to Kerr about “a hearing pox: poned.” “She looked up and asked me if T was Interesved In it,” sald the witness, “I sald a little, Then she turned it face STAGE SETTING ATLORIMER PROBE. TO TEST WITNESS Hotel Rooms Reproduced and | Detective Takes Stenographic Notes by Dictograph. offer her money to see the Attorney Hanecy asked. I had already read practically en PERE HYACINTHE DEAD AFTER BRIEF SICKNESS. PARIS, Feb. %—Abbe Charles Loyson, Known throughout the world as Pere Hyacinthe, died to-day in bis elghty- fifth year after a few days’ Sliness, WASHINGTON, Feb. 9.—The § ate , Pere Wy © was one of the Lorimer Committeo to-day, In execus| most prominent pulpit oratore of the tive session, put J. 1. Sheridan, the| Catholic Church in France until 186) detoctivesstenographer, who has fig-| When he renounced the Roman Catholiv ed an American wor Jane Butterfield § London in 1872, and afterward became curate of the Congregation of Libera Catholics at 4, later founding a “Gall congregation at Paris, He ured {1 the charges of alleged perjury if Charles McGowan, a Hines-Lortmer witness, tom test of his ability to rec- rd conversations over the dictagraph, electrical os i apparatus, while con) visited America in 1869 and was ac- ealed from the epeakers, The test} corded a warm welcome by the Protes- was a long one and the result may |tants of tie United States, * announced Inter, paces Sekt see There Was a regular s| je setting for LouPlie Ce pnetions, JOY, NOSE BLEED, SUICIDE. little table in open book and le upon It (Spe ready, with the ph and} NEWA other eswentials when the hearing was | twenty-thr resumed and the opportunity given the | former Gove tective to demonstrate his abilities at he Evening World. unk ‘Thieme, ‘sold, a keeper for nor Franklin Murphy, who Was promoted a fow days azo to a road recording far away conversations 1: ition, committed suicide at his home aventie, to-day by fn- recently swore before the | haling er Committee that he had| He had been so enthusfastic over his nade a @horthand report of a conver-| Promotion that he suffered a severe nose sation in a hotel In Toronto on Ja: bleed yesterday, but was belleved to be when Charles sede Wau alleged to | #!! right to-day. He lived with his two ’ breathed batter sy trom | Sisters, Who Were absont when he kitled 1 admitted receiving money from | insole Fh. Wiehe for “perjuring himself” | xiving testimony for Senator Lorimer fore the committee. The claim was made that Sheridan's notes were “fake and that | not make such a shorthand report as | he claimed he had made at Toronto. Conditions in the hotel rooms at To: ronto {In which McGowan met the de- tectives Were reproduced as n possible in Senator Dilling' he could sed his I Md a telephonic ratus to his. ear, lately a the test ri was put in the w ch seemed to have difficulty In read- his ex, There Ww equent | Different 3 from most player-piahos, and that in a measure accounts for its success. The piano itself is not only aks, it was said yo repre sented parts of sentences whieh he did not record, because he had been in- structed to'take only conversation r lating to the Lorimer case Detective Balley and HH, BE. 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