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——————EEE WHATHEN_Nain provable to-night; Tharsaay tate. , Fi EDITION. / SENATOR STILWELL GETS 4- . PRICE ONE CENT. J 1 STATE SENATOR STILWELL SENTENCED TO PRISON FOR FROM FUR ‘Justice Seabury Grants Stay of Ten Days Before Sending Him to Sing Sing. | FIGHTS FOR NEW TRIAL. | Certificate of Reasonable} to Be Asked at Once by Counsel. ‘D Ps ~ Doubt * Stephen J. Stilwell, who represented | tie Twenty-first District, in the Bronx, | Jn the State Senate and who was con- of bribery Inst Saturday nignt, lay sentenced by Justice Seas bury to serve a term of ‘not less than} four years and not more than eight Years tn Sing Sing prison, At the request of Stilwall's counsel, Robert M, Moore, a stay of execution of ten days was granted to permit of an @ppiication to the Supreme Court, In! Sillwell's behalf, for a certificate of rea- ponable doubt, With unerring instinct for the lime- Nght, Sheriff Jullus Harourger was eaily in the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court to-day, He was armod | with @ revolvor and a deep sense of Tesponsibility, It was his intention to} sh Stilwell to Sing Sing as soon as ntence Was pronounced, STILWELL BROUGHT TO COURT BY ARMED DEPUTIES. Stilwell was brought into court by three Deputy Sheriffs all armed sim- Marly to the Sheriff. The convicted | State Senator carried his head high and | ‘Showed no emotion as hoe faced many | his friends from the Bronx who had | Chuwded into the courtroom, Axsistant Dwtrict Attorney Nott moved that sen tence be pronounced, Clerk Penny azked the prisoner if he hud anything to say. Mr, Moore re- vied that he could see no profit for li» client in any remarks, Justice Sea- Dury therespon pronounced sentence Without comment and immediately Mr. Moore offered his successful motion for vio & stay. Stilwell was taken back to the Tombs, If his counsel is successful in getting a certificate of re@sonable dwubt Stilwell may be released on bail. Moore will apply for a certificate as soon a6 possible, He has four groands upon which he bases his popes for the right to 9 e that his tient was unjustly convicted. These ounda have to do with the admission of improper evidence, with improper 2ros# examination of the defendant and with errore committed by the charging of the Jur; all these charges being al- lomations on the part of Mr. Moore. Lo! FRANCHISE AND 8E! ATORSHIP AUTOMATICALLY. In giving his pedigree, after sente wns pronounced, Stilwell sald he dress a» No, 211 Olinville avenue, Bgowx. | No member of hile family was in court to hear him sentenced, conviction took away tas » his ellgibiuty to hold the office of State Senator, it also automatically disbarred him from the practice of law. ‘He was convicted of demanding $3,500 from George H. Kendall, President of e New York Bank Note Company, as & bribe to be paid to certain unnamed embers of the Codes Committee of che Benate and the Assembly for reporting out « bill in which Mr, Kendall in- terested. The Senate tried Stilwell on the same charge in April and acquitted him py a vote @f 28 to 21, Gov, Sulzer then re- quested District-Attorney Whitman to take action, and indictment, conviction and sentence swiftly follow 5 se a ANOTHER AVIATOR KILLED. Making Over- MIANOVER, Gorma Horn, a Germa: , fustantly today by a fall from a bh Df OW feet Wille making ® overiand dight in his monoplane. ‘The cause of the accident could not be ascertained, ax the machine was shattered, Horn had t's certificate since Jan. 2,! en expert aviator, | the flaxen halred, on |end to day's end. The kindness o: Jeelled its lcenwe TO EIGHT YEARS ONE STOLENKISS COST THELIFE OF PRETTY BRIE Girl Kills Herself After Telling Husband About Love Affair on Ship. Elsa Stoyer, blue eyed, flaxen haired and daintss—a bride of five weeks— died by her own hand to-day In the home her husband Heinrich had pro- vided at No, 27% Morton street. Yhen Hoinrich, the slender young German who had saved from his wages tor-nve-yéats a monthly dole of love im order that hin’ Blea might cothe [here and be his bride, caine home to the Morton atreet ‘apartment at noon to-day he found Elea siretched upon’ the white bed with « tiny blue hole through thé fair skin of her forehead and in her hand, stl warm, a wicked Uttle French automatic. Heinrich threw himself upon the floor before the plano and hin hopeless hande atruck jarring disconts on the keys, “Now—now," he cried in the patois of his native Schleswig Holstein, “thou wis play no more on thy plano, my Hina. Ila came from Germany on April 17. On the day after her arrival she went to {he State street Lutheran mission and there Pastor Restin made her Hein- rich’s wife. Heinrich then took his bride to the little home he had pre- pared for her. In the dark, that wedding night, Etsa, her head on the knees of her husband made her confession of frailty, old as th» world and tragic as the fall of Rvo. ‘There had been a young German on the bout, she said, a farmer returning to his farm near Portland, Ore, after a visit to his people in Germany; he had courted her madly and, though she had kept the troth for five years and was coming to be wed, she gave to this man the kiss Hetnrich's mother had given to her for Heinrich, In the greatness of his heart the hi band had found piace for forgiveness. He even offered to secure her legal re- lease from him so that she could go to the man In the Far West. But Bisa, wept from di husband but added to the burden of 8 | aries To divert her the young husband bought a piano. When the instrument was installed in the apartment Elsa seemed to find easement for her heart at the keyboard and night after night she sat before the keys, working a magic of wondrous melody. The neigh. bors used to throw open thelr windows and git lstening. Heinrich thought the piano had brought consolation and surceaso froin sorrow. He did not know until to-day when he looked upon that round, blue hole In Elsa's forehead that it was a breaking heart that had cried out through the strings of the Instrument, ano al COMMISSION REVOKES FIGHT CLUB’S LICENSE. ‘The Boxing Con meeting this afternoon eente of the Paddock for Sts failure to compl: partment regulations, W cense granted th the > Club with Fire De= held bouts, the #t Fourth street, uns for large therings and ordered sever changes, ‘The Boxing Commission, lieviim that the cid officials nad. «ut. flclent time to make the alterations, can club's —-<—-—_— Wham van dag't navertion wosac Covrriaht, 1913, by The Prove Patlishing Ce, (The Now York World). ” “ KIDNAPPED CHILD | DESERTED BY GIRL |: IS BACK AT HOME Little Freda Liebowitz, Her! Curls Cut Off, Found Cry- ing on Doorstep. | TELLS OF ADVENTURES.) | Believe Man Persuaded Annie| | Boyarsky to Desert Child and Go With Him. | Four-year-old Freda Liebowitz was quite the heroine of Brownayille to-day Attended by two of her slaters and an} admiring throng ef néighborhood chii-| ‘ Gren, she travelled from tenement to! > tenement, collecting pennies from sym- Pathetic mothers, and from candy store to candy store spending the pennies, Bhe told the atory of her adventure with Annie Boyarsky, who kidnapped her Sunday afternoon and deserted her in the Brenx yesterday evening, #0 often and with such a varlety of detafl that, atter many repetitions, it became @ tale. of the Arablan Nights variety, “bid you swim a river?’ Freda wat ahe repited; “wp awimmed a “Did you climb @ mountain?’ ve climbed ever so many moun- Annie Boyarsky {s still missing, Be- fore Freda got all mixed up under the Influence of questions she sald that when Annie Boyarsky took her away from her home af No. 413 Wyona street last Sunday afternoon they went first to & hospital or a doctor's office, Where they spent the night the child could not recall, THEY RODE ON CARS AND LOOKED IN AT STORES. The next day they rode on cars and looked in many store windows and mingled with great crowds of people. That night they slept in a bed and yes- terday they walked and rode ia cars, “When it was getting dark,” said Freda, “and it wan cold, Annie said to me to wait and she would go buy me a dress, 1 ed and waited and began | to cry and a lady took me home and gave me some supper and wrapped me In @ warm jacket and gave me to a police- nan," way up In the Bronx at No. 48 East One Hundred and Highty-sixtn street, Mfteen miles from Bast New York. The officer, Policeman While took the girl to Tremont statlon-hou, Possibly because she was frightencd, possibly because Annie had told her not to tell her name, Freda was not com-! munteative to the pe‘lee, or a couple | of hours at Tremont she was taken to| the Morrisanta station where there ia a matron, about 9 o'clock last night Mra, Barah Sulliva: tron recognized her Just was going to be taken to the Children's Soctety as| an ordinary lost child C ilip Lebowitz, hysterical abed and le to rise; but two sisters of her hu band, Freda and Lebowita, of No, The mecting with the mother was pathetic. Several hundred 1 bors tried to nto roo) had to be held back by the police. | Frieda had apparently been well “i for and that he was under a short time of her appearance on the! apartment house steps pa Sl Two Vetoes by Su ALBANY, May 25, f vetoed the Capito | morning. Jo! Dw fairly ts no doubt | over up to within eh Th | Wife of Millionaire Banker, Whom She Is Suing for Divorce EEOOTESR SHE GHHF4 94 1F3 HOTT DOSTOOOGD DE OOD S9OOEF908OFO comfortable when packed when pa bill and a! ne i Jvale corporat water! Ne | power In the #8 | vince — a DINECT PRIMARY NGS} th aT: Preapect i Lid Ne, | be enue Mar Theatre, Wane | 5) undred aed sew street |") even ats parece, br ctresG, “Wendharet. ‘Cens auicee |! ehvells Biateiot= At tern i geet, will Wad- |; ee WJZ "RS_A_BISHOP J 964 0006 TIGHT-PACKED CAR | INSURES SAFETY. IS COURT OPINION Lawyer Wins Against Charge of Cruelty to Crowded Calves by Novel Argument. ‘wives and Brooklyn st Lieut, McGarry showed Freda a pic-/are in the same class, avcordiig to {Trolley Cars. nen Ot the Miller avenue station, Meo]! to-day, Futuernore, calves and OR. FRIEDMANN SERUM Keon found the ttle girl's mother, Mrs.) Brooklyn street car patrons are more I$ FAILURE, SAYS MAYOR. tigh 2% Vermont street, Brooklyn, hurried to] TH calves ward th this compartse the Morrisanta station, became defunct several days » Littie Freda recognized her aunts at) the Brooklyn str patrone are st once and held out her aria to thom.| alive, It will probably interest Hoping to learn something of Annie,| oxceedingly to learn that tk the police retained the child til nearly! joen legally clussiiied, midnight, but got no sclue, ee dn ns ‘The child arrived home ubout 1299 tas! apa an agent of tiat so hn Lohman him an toa Int urged him with were thirty vn and Evan y were painful sonny wal oc here: “When w ve Moard alve 1, “you kn rowded str ave" “Bub” haverpo: ar patrons y than it ye ved tbe Court “suppoa- NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 1913. 2 SPE EASES OSES IGSS9 28S SO OCE e2s-o4 aoe SOSESESS 9282S OTT6 a my | SO 8-2 dOSS2 89 SO968: bb dOG 8H Ing the car 1s so packed that there ts more room for passengers?” ‘Even then," persisted the lawyer, there is less danger of hurt or injury. 1 have ridden all the way downtown on @ packed street car and hav® not been harmed. On the other hand, I have been thrown into the laps of sented passengers, to thelr discomfort and my own." ‘The argument that you are more com- fortavle when you stand among #0 many persons that you have no room to ul down appeared to have an effect on he Court, Then Lohman produced evi dence that au faspector In Jersey City had passed his load of thirty-seven calves before ho started for Brooklyn and the Court discharged him, No agent ever held up a Brooklya Hoy car aud arrested the driver or iductor for stuffing the car with pag sengers, There is no Soclety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Persons Who Ride o3 | |Declares Dr. Lederle Is About to Report Adversely Upon Tubercu- losis Treatment Tested Here. Gaynor, after talking with mmissioner Lederle to-day re- the Friedmann tuberculosia sald that he understands the ethod "is an absolute fail- or Health € garding serum, edman. “When Dr. Friedmann camo her d the Mayor, “I gave directions tha, ‘the be given a fair show, When aman jcomes along with anything new he ts usually howled down, I do not Wee that. Je has had a fatr show and T etund t his method t# an ab- ute fallure, He cannot so away fom aying that he has not had a fair | O'Connell's! followed the + net understand Dr Thad supposgt t from tho beginning and there: | w that Dr. Lederle was about Hoard of Health the to report to th tran don't you are doing be long before wh yoursell, When you advertise ng bus you | \ 5 notroady | YEAR SENTENCE > Circulation Books Open to All. 24 PAGES BISHOP ADMITS MOTOR RES WITH NAS. GHATHNEY Banker, Sued for Divorce, . Tells on Stand of Strolls in Central Park. HE ‘LUNCHED WITH HER. All| Their Meetings Were Proper and Conventional, He Declares. James Cunningham Bishop, the inill- jonatre banker, on the stand in his own defense this afternoon in the trial of the sult for divorce instituted by hin wife, Abigail Hancock Bishop, who names Mrs. J. Temple Gwathmey, wite of the former Preakient of the Stock Exchange, ag coreapondent, dented any acta of infidelity with Mra, Gwathmey, but admitted lunching with her and mo- toring with her on many occasions. ‘Mere, Qwathmey, ha gald, wan es- tranged from her Musband when met her in 1967. He nage and sach fn the mey. Th at hotels, “Do you thimk that your frequent aa- soctation with Mra, <iwathiney tended to lessen the friction which you say you knew existed between her and her husband?". adked Willlam Travers Jer- ome of couns@ for Mrs, dishop. “1 don't suppone it did, I realined that she was unhappy with her hus band, But that was nothing extea dinary, Lot of persons who unhappily married continue to live to- gether.” “I regret to say that that statement in too trus sald Mr, Jerome, Mr. Jerome handed Bishop @ photo- graph of Mra. Gwathmey and Bishop's hands shook as he accepted the photo ‘and in a low voice sald, in response to @ question: “Yen, that Is Mra, Gwathmey.” ‘The lawyer next won the admission that much of Mr. Bishop's luggage was marked "J. C. Bae “Did you take any step to see if there were a Dr. J. C. Daer of Philadelphia, an you are accused of having regia: tered?” ‘Yes, we nent to Philadelphia.” Did you find a Dr. “Yes, but not a J. C. yr. Mr, Bishop then told at length of various meetings with Mre, Gwatbney, all of which, ed, had been un: der perfectly proper and conventional circumstances. Mr. Bishop wan asked if he had corres- ponded with Mra, Gwathmey at various times, He admitvedt huving written and received # few letters, which he de- clared were ‘“unlmportant." Mr. Bishop also admitted that on several occasions he had met Mrs. Bishop and gone with her for @ ride in Central Park in her @uto:nebile and afterward for @ walk, At last Mr. Jerome got down to the inDany of Mrs, Gweth- (Continued on Becond Page.) Baseball Games To-Day — NATIONAL LEAGUE. AT PITTSBURGH, FIRST CAME, CINCINNATI o1001010 PITTSBURGH— oooo0o0010 AT CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS— 010100 CHICAGO— 002102 —— AMERICAN LEAGUE. AT CLEVELAND. FIRST GAME, UNILAGU— 100000000 AND. r10dg000000 FOR RAGING SBE PAGE 19. re Nerentit-@ane.-1982, tn June, Idle ceeding months in 1912 he was often took lunch together ,|excess. O'Loughlin declared the story was false, | ROOSEVELT WINS FIGHT TO BAR EVIDENCE. en’ ‘WEATHUA Rain probable to-night; Thareéay tals. INA EDITION. PRICE ONE OENT. COURT HITS DEFENSE, RULES FOR ROOSEVELT AT LIBEL SUT TRIAL Judge Flannigan Refuses to Permit . Editor Newett to Introduce Evi-. denc That Other Papers Printed Stories of Alleged Drinking. LAWYERS WRANGLE OVER POINT FOR HOURS Close Friend of the Ex-President, Testifies To-Day Strongly Denying Charge of Excessive Drinking. aes a MARQUETTE, Mich., May2B—-A new,eement was introcachs to day in the trial of. the suit for $10,000 damages in an action charging libel brought by Theodore Roosevelt against George A. Newelt, editor: of the Irom Ore of Ishpeming, Mich., who published an editorial aséerting that Roosevelt often drank to excess, at John Callan O'Laughlin, a Washington newspaper correspondent and close friend of Roosevelt, had testified as to the Colonel’s sobriety. He was asked by Lawyer Belden for the defense whether there ‘had. not been rumors of a general character that Roosevelt occasionally’ drafikito FP _ Tho answer aid not sult either side Then the PINCKNEY’S RECIPE nounced bis’ Intention “tsar ee prove that rumors about Roosevelt's use of Nquor had gained wide cifeuls- tlon, and that thia had been published by Newett in good faith and witheut malice, The jury was excluded while the lawyers argued before Judge Flan nigan the question of admisibinty of much testimony. Lawyer Belden said it could not be contended that the” pubiication of such a rumor in @ gmail. country weekly had materially dsam- aed the Colonel, and that. ui plainti¢e imited his demand peg ages to six cents he would go that line of defense. on FOR MINT JULEPS Beary Pinckney, & negro wise acted ne general factotam with the Reose- welts, used to miz the fow 3? * iF et | i i : WHITE HOUSE MINT BED STARTED BY M’KINLEY AND IS USED BY WILSON. it i E45 Ma 3 FF i New President's Chef Garnishes Spring Lamb With Sprigs— Taft Served Juleps to Friends, WASHINGTON, May 3. —The Whi! House mint patch, referred to by Cai Roosevelt in hia testimony tn tho Mbel sult at Marquette, M'ch., promises to be- come as much an object of interest to apital visitors as the Washington Monu- ment or the Library of Congress. Already tourists are asking the White House police to puint out the bed that gave up ite fragrant leaves for Col, Roosevelt's occasional juleps, ‘The bed, Afteen feet long by four foet wide, In situated alongside a latticowork house used by the White House laun- dreas In which to dry clothes. Althouga mint always has been within easy reach of the White House porch, tho present “patch was established by President McKinley, President Taft seldom used it, although it furnished its part to many a refreshing julep served to Mr, MANY WOMEN ATTEND THE LIBEL SUIT TRIAL. A crowd that packed the courtroom found its greatest amusement tn wateh- ing the restless plaintif?. Col, Roosevelt enterea court with George Shiras, his Gost here, took his accustomed seat with a spectators inside the railing. turned upon-the jury and then. O'Laughiin as the latter counsel, Ho ts very iN, out countenance hid this from all who know him well. He was an exesp ton to those whose appetites are affect: ing the keen, clear atmosphere of this region, for his food ts regulated by ¢ orders of his physicians, OLaughin besan his testi@eny by giving bis age as 40 years, His employ: ‘ment, he getd, is with & Chicage sewe er, met the Colonel in Washington. tn 1993," he #aid, “when ha Wes connected with the Civil Service Commission, 1 knew him wi he was. Aw President Wilson also uses It~for nishing sprin mb, ime ted in What Reose- Drinks. LONDON, May 28.--The British nawapapers to-day devoted much space to accounts of Col, Roosevelt's Itbel Jeult, Several of the morning nowapar pers printed “boxes ehowing what Col, | Roosevelt drinks and what he does not drink, and for the beneft of their Brit a they carried “glossaries” of defining the alcoholic