The evening world. Newspaper, February 10, 1912, Page 2

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ere ae the brain, He wan taxen to ti Jumped fer the car. The chauffeur hed thrown on his speed and the auto- Mobile was moving rapidly as the mon Clambed into the tonnes’ With a sharp swing to the left the cheeeut headed his car across the Bowery to tie entrance Into Third street which ia diagonally opposite Great Jones street. With the horn shrieking a warning the bie car went fight (hroug! the siream of trolley cars an@ other traffic, narrowly missing these collisions, dashing into Third sieet at twenty miles an hour, A dozen witnesses had actually wit essed the assun A hundred others saw the two dighwaymen leap Into tO abtomodile, Teo men, who recovered More quickly ‘han the others, bounded after the auto novile, shduting “Stop uMefr” ‘A crowd (railed after the two who Were closely pursuing the car The chauffeur kept pressing the bulb of Nis hérm, and in that way attracted th attention of everybody within hearing Aletance, As the car appromche! See- | GRA avenne, a truck, moving slowly. Blocked the way ROBBERS THREATENED AND CROWD WAS FORCED TO HALT. The ehavffeur had to slow T crowd swarmed up to the SAY, WILL YOU RUN TOM EDISON Alik HE FE — At Sixty-Fifth Anniversary He Challenges Old and Young ¢ to Meat in Contest. Takes Cnly Four Hours’ Sleep So He Can Spend More at Work. | Time from the aide curtains popped the heads and shoulders of the two highwayine They did not disp any weapons, but mas A at five they looked as thougi they had revol- bunk vanes At ia tae + yoy Aga ed purmult wud" Gienmont, Llewellyn Park, Wert Or- halted. The truck swinging out |” ~ i % way ihe chauffeur pat on epecd one, a dy ni ber sol day elout ub ; Phot Into Becond avenue and | *elf and puoite affatry Managed to lose hit pursuers | "I don't feel any older than twenty- fe suppored that he wax heading Ava" he deciared. 1 never tn bet- for the Williamsburg Bridge, For that ter health or sptrl My sixty-five reason particular attention has been years sit but lightly on me, and Ul to Brooklyn in the search for the although the description may prove to be misiending. Doubdtiess the highwaymen, If they were resourceful enough to prepare @ falee number for the car, were prepared with another number to replace it as poon as they were fafe from pursuit Likewise {t would have been an easy matter for them to lower or remove the top. In the excitement attending the chase of the automobile Beckerman was al- lowed to ile Jona on the sidewalk wat) a policeman came along and ragged bim into a cigar store on the comer. Dr. Walsh of St. Vincent's H pital bandaged up his wounds and he Waa taken to the Mercer atreet station Beckerman did not see the men who struck him. He remembers that rome- thing landed on the back of his head ané he knew no more until he opened hie eyos in the cigar store and found Bg Money package nvissing. Qoed descriptions of the highwaymen and the chauffeur were given the police by the witnes of the robhe Beckerman says he does not recognise the descriptions as fiting anybody knows. With the real license number, 9128 for | WZ, out of the way, the police looked | up the license of that number for 11! ‘They found it was issued to William West of Mamburs, N. Y., and reps Were taken to get tno -communteation vith him. While the detectiven in the cane were examining him Beckerman, the vict! hold-up wan suddenly nolze y convulsions sand collapsed. An ‘was summohed from St V's Hospital, The surgeon said he was suffering from concussion of AND DAUGHTER AT WAR BY BEDSIDE | He replied with a quizsical amile Why should 12) Why should any- | body congratvlate a man for getting ol Hut oll as To oam b have no thought of retiring, Hard work keep me young in spite of y burden of y r. Edison's wife has arranged for Ja birthday eption at the Edison | home to-n Mr. Edison will then ‘be congratulated, not for growing old, but for keeping woung, by many dis- (Continued from First Pa: ) had heard that one of her side, Cushing Haskins of No. 86. wa avenue, Glen Ridue, « nephew of Mr. Allen, had called and had been denied an opportunity to Oheak privately with his uncle. omy object In going to the } was to eee that the young wits w. properly cared for, was ripping mad, Kuarantes to run up six Mmghts of wairs with apy man of ahy age and be either 4 at the top or pretty close to the other fellow. "You people who got up late this morning=at # or 1 o'clock perhops think It was cold. What do you think about the weather when I got up at 4.307 And I didn't go to bed unul mid- night “That te my aystem—to bed at mid- night and up at 4.30, It gives mo plenty of sleep and a lot more thine for my work “My chief Interest uow tn perfect- ing and elaborating my talking pictures and perfecting my plan for manufac- turing concrete furniture, The toyking picture idea Is well worked out and 1 have the actors working every day under a tent In West Orange putting on fe and talking performances, While the scheme appears to be preity clone to py fect 1 want to keep at it iw nothing further for me furniture ts going to Mh be able to gly $10 x artiatlc a piece of furnis the Fifth avenue mill fonatre pays $60 for mine will be more serviceable. “While Tan busy here with my work, I have time, too, to look Into public affairs, and 1 think 1 can gatige the sentiment of the people of the country fatrly well, In my judgment, then, “Theodore Roosevelt, if he is nominated and will ac the nomi- nation, Will nweep the country, pie) is a man who docs thing! the American peo- ple have in nim. He pers forms what fscs, 1 think the forms ¢ ~Mr. | tingulsned men BHC evelt SHOW GIRL BROE tiring » office with 0 be we: rry 0 ‘As between f Row t thet is witt win by a great ma diwon We mee the of publle men who go many promises of re- hed and then fail dikes, rp touvevelt and Wilson, Diggert man. ven teve Rove: rity.” * asked if he had re of congratulation, affairs, en CHARLESTON RESULTS, IRST RACE—Purae, 1400; Two: three furlonga,—Cedi 1 e 110 to Tave Brook, M1 to 2 and out, fire (McTaggart), 8 to 1, 5, second; Ella Crane, to 1, to Land 6 to} sie6. Benator Jam Luts, Clortta Burn Cream also ran, year-olds and 1) “| supose they thought IT wanted to | UP) Pura £900; welling, flye and one-half ‘waleper something tn his he de- cleared. “Well, 1 did! I wanted to tel! him to be real sure “hat his wife was well cared for, but I didn’t even have a chance to do that!" furlongae=KMotency, 10d (Mop: 2 ot (Forehand); 40 to 1 and out lia 102 and 6 to *) Hearthatone, tot won socon@! VWolaloha, #7 (Conover), stot | Nera 1 and @ to 5, Gi 1 Fa third. wn, I ‘Thine + DAUGHTER RESENTS PUBLICITY | Avernus, Capitan Bravo, Arany, stelclift GIVEN 7O THE WEDDING. Mrs. Cook was equally Jeaving the hospital. ement on “Phe whole thing ts utterly objection- to me!” she declared, "Tho very of the second marriage of my td@ier being heralded this one BAA of the Country to the other Mr. Haskins says that the explan of the heart-burning is anger ove Allen's recent marriage and anxtety Over the probable beneficiaries unde way will, He sald he was sure his uno could write a check for more th 91,000,000. Afier his exit from the room Mr. Husking wntertook to ex; his attitude in the family affair “L pretty near in" he declared. 1 Very, well wince the wedd 1 sent Uncle EM a teite him because he &¢ married 1 suppose they think I want some of tat money Welk 1 don't want one penny of Ido want his ittie girl io be taken eare of. I don't know whether there 8 will or not and 1 want to see that tie Uttle girl is provided for ME WAS NOT ABLE TO GET MUCH INFORMATION. “Why, 1 couldn't even find out to what his real co jon te, 1 tet to, but I} wasn't 4 to get any enewers, Ob, 1 suppose the rest of the family will be pieliy fore at me! But Tm going to take the part of the litte wife and see that she is well cared for because | believe \t is my duty to do it nt “You know the whoie farr vas up i arms when Uncle li go! married a wecond tie. 1 eupp it nly natu rai for daughters to mike a fuss on Occasions like tai, but I {rr one cant see why he didn't have a p te eet married if he wanted Raa et right CLRED IN 6 10 14 DAYS. ease fie eas PH Re wenn and Heinock also ran THIRD RACKET iree-year-glds Jupward; purse, $100, cond! | furlongs O'Ryan, 10 (Turner), 2to1, 1 to nd out, won; Dona (Dugan), 1 fo 2 and out, second bole, 108 (Goose), 1h to 1, Ste 1d and 8 to io, 1 5. Knlwthts Differ, \ ghi and Bon rar re u RACK Charleston Hoy Hand purse $1900 guar eed; thr year and ope mile. “High Privat Wt (Koerner) o1 9 to ° fret, Meridfan, 19 (Dugan), W to, 7 to Sand d to 5, second; Hert sup. 10? CPitverina, tol 2 to land d to third. Time=L4. Prince Aly hile IMiewelss and Font a ran, - CHARLESTOWN ENTRIES. CHARLESTOWN 8 6. Be nilny'e BA ee are let wePTH TAOk track ~~ Wee sine, dds Joe Mon MACE f Maller Mrorite au aw "n tol Vo8, la an and 10 Him Hen Profile Veale iiven, iycnnt mk “Hy 108 val Captive 113, THE EVENING WORLD, BRANOT'S COUNSEL BARRED FROM Hill = UPTHESTARS?. BY PRISON WARDEN — ee Not Permitted to Get Affidavit for Use in Proceeding LAWY 3efore Court. aR TOWNS IRATE. Scores Goy. Dix’s Action a Death Blow to Future of Democracy. lawyer Mirabeau L. Towns, meeking tu test the validity KK. Brandt's sentence of thirty for bura@lury in the first degr most wrath ful to-day becwuse of the 1e- fusal of the warden at Clinton pri my Dannemora, to allow his representative to eee the prisoner. After Mr. Towns hy A obtained a writ of habeas corpus from Jusiee Gerart yeatorday he ymmunicated with As vomblyman Charles J. Vert of Platts: burg, who te Mr. nentative Brandt and get telling who amMdavit thi Town's legal repre- asking him to see he prisoner to sign an urged or cor pelled him to plead gullty. Assemblyma niswon, despite the fact that he showed Deputy Warden Filkins, char Lavgisla ty enter n Vert was refused ad- who was in 4 & member of the State . he was allowed by law to prisons and talk to all prisonora, “TOWNS SCORES DIX AS INJUR- ING DEMOCRATIC HOPES. ™ Gov ne Dix retary, Towns and talked He recetved no satisfactty attempted to with appeal to Gov. Dix's and to-day Instructed Vert to eet an ex parte order Justices from loge at Plattsburg compelling the warden to al- low vel, the prisoner to be visited by coun- ‘The action of Gov Dix In this Brandt case haw ad to be elected Governo: for a Demo- in this State His attempt at con- it imposelbl up the Brandt papers and his general attitude In the case is not only remark: able, but 1s uneAm inmonly accepted ideas of all oft erican and in defiance Persons being equai vefore the mw.’ “What Is the Idea uf the Governor tn making this an administration question and fnvolving State officials in what ts pure a legal question celve,’ continued Mr, Towns. 1 cannot con- “Being a good Democrat, It fils me with sorrow and pain to live to see the day when a Democratic Governor of this great com- monwealth takes such a atand, vit served f hut tt dos matters years of an tlegal sentence; matter a Kreat deal Whether, after the attention of the itles have been brought tions extating, ttle that Brandt has ‘oper wuthor- to the condl- it is treated with that fippaney and almost blatant disregard of order and Jui CALLS COL, Joa. DE KAY COMBINA. TION OF MARS AND AJAX. Atte utlve’s his arraignment of Gov. owns turned secretary talked over t Dix, Mr his attention to the ex- to whom he had phone in his efforts |to have Assemblyman Vert admitted to | mee Brandt “T apke | Towni who Mr. | what I wa were @ 0 that ft couldn't wait. ‘and id he was the Governor's secre xplained | fo rat © the Governor,” sald Mr, nan answered the phone Kay. When I dhe Wanted to of such great ow if it moment 1 told him thar it wax a matter of some importance and | faction. ow, Kay. 1 ernor' Indian, Ajax armed capw-ple, Dempankled soldier brave who has neve powder except Never did I behold such a gilt- clad vision of war personitied an this «tine De Kay he Wearn at these affairs of the Gov- | ernor were never before worn by mor- | Mars thunderstruck to beh a is, teringl tal man that I wanted action 1 think Tre hav reception: He I got’ no satis ember Mr, De him at the Gov dressed up ike an is w Vision of Mars and He ts a gilded, Kee on his lady's Such raiment as and Ajax would be a him, Mr, one Her three ham York, offic Mrs. en o ke married Mr, for y Your your father, George, 1s prostrated with Srief at your old home in No, 18 Weat Sixty-seventh street. earance n tuikod of Little else. & word from you and now that there is no one left but your littie sister Gertrude and brother Willie, Wants you to vome back, In fact, the doctors himself to death over your long allence. Even if you are unable to come home Just now a letter 1 toward saving your father's lite, doctors say. YOUR FATHER WANTS YOU T0 COME HOME SOON, MAY MA DAN. oe) / gf 44 Dan, where are you? sinter Irene died last week and th HAWLEY HEIRS TO PROVIDE FOR “NCE” CAMERON (Continued from First Page.) child Walter and Fred Crandell of New There were no charitable be- Hanor, ping jing and quests or relations. een turned to New York from he up visited and of Sh ready this simple ltt In the social atmosphere. the Hawley fanily have begun “miater- emissusing neighbors who have ars wan \ ich of e orted 1 Hawley he came thetr two children, Since your disap- ly two years ago he has He has not heard ince you went away e old man more than ever he ts grieving isht nom long way the a the raflroad interests and the securities themaeclves. harmony and the plan also sanction of Fred Crandell of New York, the caatoff nephew. The provisions of the will made by Hawley are known, It provides for the division of the estate into five parts, one o for his two brothers af@ three sisters, er, Chatham, having died about a year ago. part ‘The heirs are working in has the in 1909 but not executed h Mrs. Homer Crandell of will be divided among hi . Mrs, J. H. Page of Chat- bequests to any one in his Meither aid he will anything to ‘Miss Comeros, or a million dollars to Mrs. Frederick Haviland of New York, ‘Manor of Chatham, to whom he is reported to have been engaged while she wae « schoolgirl. HAVILAND NOTHING, RELATIVES SAY. formerly Miss Florence ENTITLED TO viland is not entitled to a cent tn the opinion of any of the Haws ley ve When Mr. Hawley was Haviland, then Flor- en, When he-re- the West She had grown attractive. ‘They other, and It was hey w ngaged. As M ecame engrossed In thusiness Chatham less often, Manor married Elijah Payn, Lou Payn, the Republican afterward divorced him, and later Mrs, was se her oftea, Haviland. is to be observed in town a distinct change Members of there been known to them by nick- DIBLIKES GOLD LACE WILL | nas os. The ia 8 curtain fe ft at maintain that privacy which je the ., _ APPLY TO JUSTICE, right of millionaires. 1 am a Democrat, and 1 believe in| Mrs. Page, the grocers wife, who democracy tn all thing# but never tn|euriier in the Week was eager to have the history of New York State has al every outside gatherer of information Go: vy survounded himself with come In and set a while and tell all ittering retinue a% Gov. DIX. ghe knew, fs now sending « gaunt maid Wherever be goes he is followed by 44 the door to sf ‘Mrs, Page's compl- these iniiitary aldes in glittering gold nd s!% has no eommunteation and platted Ince rs and does not wish to Mr, ‘Towns sequestered himself to-day mptle s whieh he will pre ouse in which dw ent Just eran’ following lie — at enh Rr rptete eps oral py on Anite Brandt} Under the pronoun Rosalsky by the Seymours now is regarded with profound new re- : set spect by the villagers, Hut mombers Writ of habeas corpus of the family who sit at the windows i‘ Brandt will be xno longerswave thelr hands and shout Puestay morning, Mr. greetings, ‘They are as blase and. re- argue that the plea of) mote aw the « mn in the windows of I by Brandt five years ago| iitth avenue. nee Linposed be set ast i Sy ES 1 Mrandt wit be re- rs) sant will be tn the! MISS CAMERON SAY was when frst in y y fe Mr Morimer Soul's, SHE HAS FOUND WILL bing la ret een GIVING HER MILLIONS. . awyer ve Crim 5 Mt should thts. by 7 Z ay, Whiinian wil vm a Statt Comrsvondent of ‘The Brewing 4 the indictment a by Krandt has been) BABYLON, L. 1, Feb, 10.—Miss Mar xaret Cameron, the protegee of the late ftman left Edwin R, Hawley, ratiroad bullder and to soe millionaire, alleges that she Is the helr, Mrandt dur by a will executed shortly before his * By {2 death Thursday, Feb. 1, to an immense the iMteent Suatre of hix many militon dollar estate, ar lachie g His relatives—of whom Mise Cameron re Towns, stioe Kel sburg, x wn ty will W vielt not, and she call "They rest of her life on che scale which . early tn Hand that she wu ai tiny clings. aren Mayor Gaynor has ned to attend) though the banquet of the Brooklyn s9 ON Hawley Magen 8 at, wh DrNCIDAL MpEAKe! Cold. by will be Gov. Woodgow Wilson of New ° Jorwey. A previous engagement! is she had {wastes Minne ve pode caine; | VGH tm aban or ase -remon tor though he called her “nlec him “Uncle. Ned” without leaving jave applied for a letters of administration to partition his estate, legal iss Cameron made a irried ais Kreut “country: plate tere | vats saw very deep into Mfe at the ep, that she and her children would be the Present Wwoek she reported | Hall, well taken care of, no matter what her ad found will Which was} “In the vears I was there,’ he said, | humband’s attitude, All that the fani Wy her fayor Before that | "Miss Cameron, whose real name !# had learned from him was that he had told a friend that even! not Camero: Whore first name ts. Visited the offices of John B, Stanch- e1 Wil and the! Anna and not Margarei, was absolute | Held. counsel for the eg te 4 Wvect Nelrs dgnoved her, she! mistress of the house, She went to the | * . i seg oe selling her sowels, Ive for | house some time before 1900, Hawiey antaie tn 9 trust tor Bve veers, | maintained as Mr, Hawley’ SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10, lection of Jewelry in FOR & Mise Cameron t# n Park. vistt fr jder and to build up dead ratiroad king, who have asked f tration of the estate. Afriving at tho & in the middio of his m just over the Babyton line Mina Cameron, Mrs. other Woman went at once to Mr. Hav ley’s apartroonts, at © house from Ran a systematic # | book shelves and el Nervous and exct leame downstairs after about hour, and when M Erevent sald to a i employees and an o) je all right. loy's will. tam anything about it now. i halt an af Democracy” by Representative Mar- | hortly before noon to-day. | rez, opposite El Paso, 1* reported to be Sas kaee ite : 4 HB. Dies of Texas, who spoke in ree | Swept by a high wind, the flames for a| ugly, the Insurrectos being much dis- id friend whe Weal ce to the Commonce's latest attack | thie threatersd to destroy the entire | turbed over the threatened entry of in ea, Democratic membership of | pega Ouly by the greatest effort was aes : ede ne that place by way | the House the home of Adjt-Gen. Verbeck saved, | American territory. an bane Ge es | Demucrats and Reprdlicang allke | The building destroyed wax a main | ecrhe State Department nas consleded = Tam nop | (hered Mr. dies's deciaration that he structure, 999 feet tong, of four stories. | government for permission for Mexics! going to say @ word untii those | nolther feared the power nor respect-| A Wing, XO feet long, of three stories) troops tu cross Texas. aid all they want to, j{! the Judgement” of the Nebraskan; adJolned it. The two comprined the| “The Elghteanth I:tfantry -atealton, f are all through rar |i" is further anouncement that | *choolrooms, dormitories and infirmary.| With @ machine gun detachmeng, :will | Democracy, under the leadership of | Forty-five students were quartered in Télleve Col. Steever's cavalry: on j [Champ Clare ond Oncar W. Under. |the building, Most of there were tn the /#ua™ duty at El Paso and enalte the wood, headed toward complete euc- | classrooms when the fire was discov. | ‘tt? to patrol the order, Mra, Alice MoAless, the aged cure- taker who lived in the house during the | winter months when Mr. Hawley and | #00 in hin desire to find some decent hin “niece” were at his city home or travelling, prepared Cameron and ner served tt. During was nothing said in ot There was, on tho expression of disappointment, assumed | teen Democrats who voted against a on both sides—for different reasons—that | recent amendment In the House to re- no such document had been found, But when the word went forth by the back door to oF more persons place even im winter, there was no Goubt among them that Miss Cam- eron had the whip hand. Because John Williams, the superinten Gardener, Peterson, the head chauffeur, as and head everybody in the ters knew, hed p as witnesses too they believed to be the millonaire’s will not very many weeks ago. | power,” sald Mr. Die “In this situa- afternoon to oper. | tion ft is a calamity, if not @ crime, for the north. Mr. Bry to sow s is of discord in Tyrone Power and When Miss Cameron hurried back to! the ranks of the party. Whatever we the Houne” Compa jew York after her brief visit, word|do here displeases him. The prospect | bound tor Os is reported to have rattlesnake bit you would die") that she had faijed to find a will and had been left out of any hope of sharing In hi factor’s legacy. with few exceptions her and as fond as might be of Mr. Hawley with his grim, kopt silence until to-day. loyal to Miss Cameron's desire to keep her secret until they were stirred uy the predictions that she had enjoyed for to be hera hereafter, Cameron returned to Ni Before Ml York last Tuesday, superintendent and upon her. garding his own con some alterations which are being made in the house and on “THIS 18 MY P.ACE NOW,” SHE TOLD SUPER “Shall I stop the eron?” he said, “Mot at all,” cron, ‘This is my place now, and & want you to carry it om just as it was planned.” There is « story told in Babylon that Mr. Hawley prepared a will a year ago by which the prope: house at No. 19 East Sixtieth street, Manhattan, all Mr. Haw! estate, his jewelry and art collections, including his wonderful jatherings of costly antiques and slan rugs and suMicient capital to main- tain the two establishments, were left to Miss Cameroun. Miss Cameron, it the provisions of this document, when Mr. Hawley tt several months not to. “Please don't ing sald to him. to dle for years and years, and it is gruesome and frightening to think of your signing a will which they belleved addressed by Mr, Cameron, except in called her “Dolly, Park when sho was with her hair braid ADOPTED for so long, she sa really his niece. sliqhtest rea! relatto: Not all the storte ham Hall suggest things which the jthe place {natst sion from what he telligent fellow, and “Bhe had a mothe frequently America has one more SHE 1€ RESTING BEFORE FIGHT It ts understood she has gone to} nds in the country to the nervous excitement she has been un- fight for the Hawley catati Lest Tuesday she automobile, accompanied hy Mrs, W ter @. Crande}i, wife of a nephew where Miss ad her boudo'r and bedroom, and be: | of the discovery of any will. ent through the village (where Edwin | of Democr R, Hawley was aimost as unpopular as he was with the nephew from whom he was estranged, Frederick Crandall, who The serva: He wanted instructions re- ‘and let these men go, now that Mr. Hawley is dead?” " she ts quoted as hav- Later, when she was not present, the chauffeur and gardener were called in to witness the execution of the paper Margaret Cameron, most intimate friends, before whom he CALLED HERSELF “A SORT OF To the friends of Mr, Hawley and her- self who were entertained in the big house, and who knew them both well, Mise Cameron dropped a being the raliroad man's nlece, and /4enienced and sent fo Blackwell's Isl called if “sort of an adopted | and. ‘ niece.” M F The row that led to Mrs, Crandell's ‘Uncle Ned has been so good to me 20 much that I feet But there isn't upon, had the run of the house for several bered that very few people except ner-| walter 8. Crandell, her husband's broth- 1912. say that no woman uaple. STATE. jot now in ngham | rest from her strength for her came here in an ¢ the! is one of thone 8 of adminis« wha t te eat ram) re place ‘est Islip, and a as “an Evil Genius Sowing Seeds of Discord in Party.” WASHINGTON, Feb. 10.—Williain J. Bryan was held up to the House ai the “evil gents hovering on the flanks by Fire at . Crandell the furthi ameron | of SYBACUSE, desics, | jonet ted, Miss Cameron | | cexs swept the Democratic aide of the | House into storms of “appliuse. “Tam almost ready to join Gov, Wil- all of the boy:, elght to twelve, and orderly manner of knocking Mr a lunch for Miss Hryan into a cocked hat,” said Mr companions and Pies amid a roar of Democrattle the luncheon there | iaughter and applause | the presence of the| Mr. Dies's attack upon Mr. Bryan fol- | owed the latter's declaration In the Inat other hand, a sad| tssue of the Commoner that the thir- HERE; quire puplictty of all recommendations to the President on judgeship appoint- j ments were “unworthy to represent a | Democratic conotituenc: Mr. Dies declared that if Mr. Bryan had spent as much time reading law as he had attacking Democrats in public life he would have known that the pros | posed law Would be unconstitutional jand an infringement of the Presiden rights, 19 people are ready to give us more the half hundre employed om the is ana Meary servants’ quar- their signatures @ocament which practically all in a drift at ic success seems to anger | his very soul.” : Both | entirely dependent upon mother and sister v! her. ited her frequently | when Mr, Hawiey was away. Tne sister said to him “If a the poor snake experience the train due here o'clock last nig! lost. It was at hi ing thi tion. A bilszard is all ‘about here | hes eince married a man at Huntington, |HAD BIG BANK ACCOUNT AND | USED IT. “Miss Cameron had a bank account of Iherul proportions at the Riverside Bank in New York und I Know sae used it Uberally because one or the other of us was frequently sent there to cagh chec! jfor large amounts. Sho had cnarge wc counta at all the best shops in New York and used them without limit. Only the other day I saw her on Fifth avenue in New York in an outfit of furs whioh could not have been made better for any price. ‘Phere were very: few of Mr. Hawley’s men friends who ever saw Miss Cam in my day. It seemed to me that she had no particular education, that she knew It and was embarrassed. Or maybe there was some other reason for her shyness. But when such close frien of Mr. Hawley as Harry Black of the INTENDENT. Fuller Construction Company or Sidney work, Miss Cam-|McKaye, the broker, dropped in, as they often did, she would jump up and run out of the room. If she was at table she would take up her plate and knife and fork and run with them. “I always understood she was born in Virginia and was introduced to Mr, Hawley when she was quite a young rl by an intimate friend of his, who suggested to Mr. Hawley that his lonely bachelor life could be 1 -de pleasanter if he undertook to bring up @ girl who would be as devoted as a daughter to hia comfort. Out of the love which the working people about the place had for Miss Cameron came a story yesterday, meant naively enough to. protect her from slander, that she and Mr. Hawley were to have been married this spring. Brought face to face with this report, none of them would stand by it or ad- mit having made it. They “guessed somebody thought that such a report would be the best way to stop gossip.” ——- WIFE CAN’T FIND jer friend and bene- » who were very fond of cold nature, Trey werd none of the luxury several years was John, Williams, hem no trains rde' calied [ since ye dack points to- duct and regarding the grounds. below. eaid Miss Cam- rty her’, the town ROCHESTER, other real wave. zero. Several Turkish and Per- ‘Thirty-seven «| knew of but was about to sign ago begged him ts said, “You are not goin ‘RAN. UT Two lives, imperilied by fire in a) fe DELL, BUT SHELL | tcc. tory tenement bullding at 1009 BE TAKEN CARE OF. | mathusi avenue, Fiatoush, were saved | now." to-day by: firemen who braved flame The wife who shared his poverty for twenty years and became the mother of his five children is nothing to Fred- ertck Crandell, now that he has Inher- and smoke to ves were dogs belonging In whose rooms the fire ofiginated. | fp be'e Ee {ted millions from his uncle's estate. |. whole block of tenement buildings | who was always |He had not communicated with her up threatened. H to the time of her release from the Workhouse yeater: and she hai since been unable to get in touch with him or learn of his whereabouts. The breach between them dat several weeks prior to the 4 Edwin Hawley. Mrs. Crandell said to- day her husband was actively concerned in her arrest Jan. 20 last and at that | time declared ie never wanted to ect her again. He did not testify in her behalf when she was arraigned in the jolice court and appeared absolutely | indifferent to her fate after she was Hawley as Mise the presence of his came to EMngham @ shortekirted girl ed down her back. NIECE:’ Pretense of arrest occurred at No, 251 Eighth a) nue, Where Crandell Was boarding with a family named Blanks. Mrs, Crane dell was living with her mother in West One Hundred and Forty: * | She had called at the Blanche flat aev- eral times to seo her husband, but was invariably turned away, wheu she called ang heard her ted on seeing opposéd her {d, “and { love him | 3 though T was| nship between us, 8 of life In Effing- the Meal state of | resent employees of One man, who Mise Lillian Blan him, 4 sald something that énraged Mrs. years, ul he left to take a higher | Crandell, Healde herself, she kicked in pald position elsewhere and who ts the door and the fight started, in the 7 " sti on friendliest terms with the| midst of which Crandell slipped out. | sam" depending upon household, Kot # very different Impres- | Hie wife has not seen tim since. | He fsent word to her that he never wished buil to see her again, Mra, Crandell saw. He 1# an tn- it must be remem- learned to-day from Ho borrowed $100 to buy x and sister to whom! wear at his uncle's funeral, but he aid t checks for large) pot go to the funeral, nor did he vie't! \erotegee, ‘Those who know her col 4 amnounte, and who were, we understand, [any of bie relatives. ; \ tan ie een he oe eee ent te ave school of the Mantius Mtl t Manttus, was destre ered. The fire was slow in etartini The damage approximate 2 BELOW ZER UP THE STATE (Continued from First Page.) storm has been raging’ north of tempt has been made since the company was forced to camp all night In the train, ie: A train load of passengers on the way from Oswego to this city had not been heard from since leav- below was reported from points In the northern section of the State. ( UTICA, N. ¥. Feb, 10.—Intensely cold weather has tied up all the railroads in northern New York, and upon some of report J, the mercury in several places sinking to % below zero. this morning the mercury was from 15 to 20 below, and at noon was about 5 WATERTOWN, Watertown, the oMfcial mercury regis tering 23 below. to this was 18 below. Thermometers in various parts of the city and surround- ; ing sections registe: low early this morning. Train schedules | are more or less demoralized on account of inability to maintain steam pressure and by the snow which was sifted on to | the tracks by the ing to a special despatch from Hornell, isteo on account of the failure of | the gas supply, The te day. MIDDLETOWN, N. Y., Feb. 10.— This was in the hill country, whe several farmers Firemen Save Two Lives—Do, those of two fox terrier WHY COLDS LEAD | TO PNEUMONIA Weakening drugs, but « food tedicipe | INHOUSE CHEERED . SCHOOL BURNED; BY THE DEMOCRATS STUDENTS ESCAPE: IN MEXIGANPERIL Manlius, N. Y.— | His Home Saved. } Fob, 10. -Verveck Hail, and averaging in years from , were taken out safely. $60,000, 22 BELOW of the week. No at- yesterday trains to or trom | hig “Servant in y were on a train wo which became stalled Ww Haven last night and imilar night before | Tre from Watertown at "9.40 ht appears to have b2cn Richland at 11 o'cloci, raging In this ctty a and the thermomes below zero. —Eight below zero | mark at the local u to-day, Twenty-t have been put through morning. At Adiron- | day bitter eather wa: In this city The coldest previous 4 as low at 82 be- | trong wind, | . N. ¥., Feb, 10.—Accora- | suffering there and in caused by the cold erature is 19 below factories are closed to- jegrees below sero wa: reported in eit! had narrow escapes reach the top floor, The to Mrs, Bertha Mackle, | When a cold is neglected it ‘tacks the lin- ing of the lungs | —thenit’s pneu- | moni: Father | John's Medicine | cures colds and | prevents pneu- | monia because it nourishes the eystem and drives out the poisonous waste | matter—a ny! other way of | treating a cold is likely to lead to pneumoni: Not 9 “cough | That FUN" book given rere, ees with the Sunday World just makes me laugh. jof the Eighteenth Infantry hi dered from Whipple Barracks, Arit., to 1/1 Paro, Texa Socleties ‘of St. Thons of St. Thomas Aquinas, in the Bronx, of which the Rev. Denis x. Coyle is pastor, will hold th | tainment and reception at Nibl lden, One Hundred, and. Seventieth street and Third avenue, on the eve- ning of Feb. 1% | novelty rection ¢ Bronx ¢ by ainong Jonn Clark, Peter J c sing, John P. Caffrey, Edward A. Lynch, Edwin V. C Edward Doughe rick. ‘The proceeds of the affair will 6 to- ward the reduction of the debt chureh and school Manu Appearing. Funny Side. make you laugt MITCHELL THE Gentle andSure You, also, should give: ap- ‘proval to this efficient family remedy—your bowels will be regulated so surely and safely ; your liver stimulated; your digestion so improved ~by BEECHAM'S ws AR ALLS ATTACK ON BRYAN. VERBECK MILITARY TROOPS ORDERED T0 EL PASO NOW » nouse | Held Up by Congressman Dies Adjutant-General Heavy Loser Infantry From Arizona’ Will Prevent Madero’s Men and Rebels Crossing Border. WASHINGTON, Feb. 10.—A battalion been or- ‘The situation at Jua- CHURCH. Aa Wilt Entertain Feb. 10. ‘Tho united socleties of the ‘Church MINSTRELS FOR The entertainment will consist of a niinstrel show under the di- Mr. Frank Bryan of the holle « tub, committee has been the pasior to ‘handle the members 07 A appointed the -aftair, which are Breen, Dr, Edgar Pierre M. Clear, Peter Wir- Joyce, M Byrne, Glennon, W. Fftzpat- on the A new Comic Series, by George Mc- author of the Newlyweds, now in the Sunday World’ ‘ou Want some et George Do It.’ FROM BOSTON 40TH ST. AND BROADWAY in. ooo RELIGIOUS NOTICES. tala ereed ARB LUAU BBS mi te Eo The Diary OF A Conjurer-Poet STANDS for Everything Of value that’s lost, Which may be recovered At but a slight cost— Providing, of course, You make your request Through a World “Lost” Ad, Which will do the rest, The World's “Lost & Found” advertising column is growing for the good reason that World “Lost & Found” ads, bring re. sults, i E They get a circulation in New York City, Mornings and Sun- days, greater than the Herald, Times, Sun and Tribune COM. BINED. To Telephone Your ‘‘Logt and Found” Ad. to World Cali 4000 Beekman,

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