Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
1 1 q * § 2 that something de tn the way of vidence may ' up de Mr. Hennessy went lito conaultation with Assistant Districts ) dc arge of t . ueht about s by William Sulzer's for mer rig ma re were ti men with Mr. Hennessy, but whether they were acting x bodymuard were in posit nish corrobors tye testity er to ' sald he we jack A new charge made b snessy 1 that ever ince Charles F. Murphy hae ader of Tatninany i “e eme Court bench, ¢ Whitman te particular! at the Mr forma PARTS OF STILWELL'S CONFES- SION MADE PUBLIC. andidates for t thie » anxious to get Hennessy's source of public par f the last tight Ihe explained that he could not um tn full because he had Notified by Stilweil's counsel tha wel) 4 ed ain in confidence One of the passages he read to the, Diggest Fusion audience of the cam} Pager was th cr ted to Stilwell | “E will give yon an afldavit; I will go the limit. I will prevent | \ f his statements as | | rade | them (the Senators) from voting agai Ana 1 will eena In effect the excerpts read by Mr Hennessy were that Stilwell would ve in @ position to intimidate «ia, possibly #even, Senators and prevent their vot | Ing against Sulzer in the Court of Lm- peachment. Stilwell ia quoted as saying that Murphy, in Deunonico’s, threat ened to kill Stuwell politically and financially unless he did Murphy's bid ding ta the Senate; that Stiwell re fused to allow his secret knowledge to | be used by District-Attorney Whitman because he was afraid Mr. Whitman would send hin back to Sing Sing pond: | ing trial of the men he exposed, and | that if he was taken back to prison after “equealing” he would be mur- dered. Stiiwoll is quoted as having declared he would rather etay in prison for twenty-five years than go back th for a day after telling all he knew. He Wanted an unconditional pardon before t Mr! THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBFR 29, 1913. i“ 109), WARDEN OF SING CONFAB AT “DEL'S”| “ae ees | BE FREE TO PICK A MAYOR DETAILED BY METZ ; | ‘Congressman Who Is a Candi- date for Comptroller Gives Inside Story. CHIEF WANTED GAYNOR, Meiz Says MeCall Was at the Meeting tor Only a | Short Time. | NG ED TO 2%, MRS, EATON ASE ~NEARSTHE UR ~LANYERS SUM UP ‘Counsel for Prisoner Tells the Jury She Is a Victim of Circumstances. EXPECTS FRE SHI DOM. Prosecutor Talks of His “Dis tasteful, Task” — Judge's Charge This Evening. | YMOUTH, Mase, Oct. 2—The Wha allewed to he eo) le facts closing argument in behalf of Mra. About ¢ ier et vat Te oe Jennie May Eaton, charged with the on he night \ 1 when Mayor murder of her husband, Rear-Admira! Gaynor's bac . co Joneph Giles Laton, waa made to-day w ‘ t afte » by William A. Morse. He talked three Krewe ALM I and a half hours in his effort to con- ‘orat Comptralier, When vince the jury that the evidence had M wi uitiet —— = shown that Rear-Admiral ¥ him- HUATERGNGaL ea SHRI VENA tha facet wif administered the poison which | Charles BoM John H. MeCone AIR FULL OF CHARGES suse his death Thomas Arthue Murphy, htt AND DENIAL a atte a re Skids tollowad Feud, tie Brcenisn. canaomena aia FINISH OF CAMPAIGN. | (ye prosecution Laila! John in, Me did net ntion the - It was thought he would conclude name of Mr. Metz. Menvessy goes to the Dis*rict-At- early we to enable Chief Justice HUES wre thee ald Mr. dete to. torney with @ second batch of | Alken to charge the jury and give the! dn And Bo Wan “Tom! Brith, the information looking to the indict- ose into thelr hands by to-night, | mis mation uit othat on ment of Tammany grafters, , i Mrs, Eaton sat quietly with hands | ebialhagi Mar matte. folded during Lawyer Morse's argu: Ferstivet hadi heat Heil oaa petted the ment. She had entered the court put Murphy in jail, all eyes. As her attorney opened A LOT OF NONSENSE, SAYS HAS she scrutinized the face of each jury- BEEN TALKED. Stilwell says m iy Mee in quot- |) man, then turned her attention to the “There has been @ lot of nonsense and having uttered certain | argument Mrs, Baton confidently expected ac- told anything, and Mr. Hennessy | There have been a tot of storton quittal. It was plain she had the sym- could not comply with his terms. Arinking and that sort of thin his position so that he may be] pathy of most of those im the court. fact is that only two men who w free to refute Mennessy's state- | room. a 1 . Present took adrink ments about the Stilwell confes- |) Morse turned to his client and ex- THIEVES TRIED TO GET Hone of them was John MeCovey and | atom. | tolled her couraue in Hutening day after e ow or wi McCovey drank Ca | any e 4 n HOLD OF SULZER' W ALLET ei athe ‘ia sti hight it At Menneesy mcations the oe ladasanie sane SSR head ON EAST SIDE TOUR, | tho reat ot tye drank w TE eeee eee ee ie corres ta || ‘in great cases lke this, which have ———_— as Murphy goes, E don't think the dispute between Iudge Mo- || attain notoriety throughout the The following sta was piven|took a drink in his life, tn Call and Inspector McLaughlin ta || cour are sometimes influenced out this afternoon at the Sulaer head-| that he did) Anybody who looks at the reference to a campaign coutribu- |! py opinions and sympathies, but the quarters Hat of names k that they not tion, law is not. The law is stern and un- “When Mr. Sulzer #ald ‘good night’ to Central had, his escort at the Mroadway Hotel at 1 o'clock this morning, hi according to Police Capt. Burr to 200,000 people in eleven mee between 8.30 and the time the date for the Awesmbly returned th ‘The police captain sald “oThIN wan the greatest demonstra. tion of the kind, 1 will bet, ever held in America, On the third night of the Governor's tour I threw up my hands, but last night I was speechless, Fully 10,000 persons followed the Sulzer car from point to point. The police of New York never had to deal with such a Jam of humanity. This Sulzer dem- anatration has got it on anything in my Dolice experience.’ “Sulzcr followers know that Tammany | Mall han sent out a tip to the ‘under world.’ Pickpockets swarm in the dis- trict and the police are so busy with | the crowds that the thieves have it all thelr own way. Twice last night men who pressed around the Governor in spite of the police tried to get his wal- let, On Monday night Rev. Mr. Leven- rabbi of the Albany Synagogue, who has been speaking with the candl- date, was ‘touched’ for %#, and Emil Kovarik, the faithful atte.dant, lost TH, | ‘Mr. Sulzer smiled broadly when he | was arked about the outlook. ‘It seems to me,’ he sald, ‘that Murphylsm is doomed, Nobody who saw last night's crowd doubted that ba is di stroyed, The Murphy tcket in beaten by an overwhelming majority, We have won the fight, but we must keep it up until the votes are counted on election night. Tammany {s desperate and wil! resort to any fraud and any depreda- tion on the ballot box to elect its ticket. Every honest citisen should guard the polls and every voter should See that his ballot ie put in the tox. Watch the inspectors.’ “Mr. Sulzer’s campaign managers have seked the authorities to investigate the Authorship of @ scurrilous pampniet that has been circulated anonymously in the Sixth Assembiy District, Sulzer and somebody may Ko (o prison for the outrage. ‘This ought to arous the indignation of every honest man in the district, remarked the Governor this morning, Mr. Sulzer sil ‘Mr, Murphy's scamps are not con-! tent with blackguarding me, but they | must attack my wife.” —— ECONOMY LEAGUE QUITS M’CALL IN ROW OVER $50,000, Robert Adamson, the manager of the Fusion campaign, gave out a statemen: to-day to the effect that the City Econ- omy League, which indorsel MoCall has withdrawn its support and has de- * elded not to send out $5,000 appeals to taxpayers w)' had been prepared, Mr. Adampon's statement does not make clear .hether the City Economy drinking men “And another thing, Mayor Gaynor War not turned down at that confer- notwithstanding all the reports of such an ident mo preference to party. tickets organization man. 1 told them that 1 was in favor of nominating an organiaatton man who would continue to be for the organization after he was elected Ma- yor, I sald it would be better to hay an organization, even If we got beaten, man—a | Pwel peech accepting an independemt nomie bern any concealment about it! of New York tinue the fight againat | it and make it clean, ¢ | phy’s political days are will not reat out of public life.” Mr. Mitchel also said lon he would forget all « Call in his specches bee Purroy Mitchel, the Furton candiatde, said this afternoon: “Mayor Gaynor did not know that Mr, Meta was at the dinner, When he w preparing his #p Accepting a cit zens’ nomination he asked us to get him an . ho were there. We went through the newspapers and did Ty members of the has done a Cohen, Job Hedges, Charies 8 Whitman ON MITCHEL TO-NIGHT. George W, P The widely advertised Tammany at- tack on John Purroy Mitchel tn to be made at the MoCall meetings to-night. It was wald at MoCal! headquarters to- day that charges of « serious nature are hopes “that everything League deserted Judge McCall becaus the officers of the league think he ts ‘already beaten or because they didn't t $50,000. in connection with the City Reon- omy League's indorsenent of Judge McCall," raid Mr. Adamson, “it would he interesting to learn what became of @ fund of $,00 which I am told the league was offere’. My information is that tho money was not forthcoming. “I am told that at the meoting of the Executive Committee at which the Indersement was adopted mention was made of the $0,000 fund, Some of the members objected to taking the money from Tammany Hall, but @ member of the committee, according to my tn- formation, sald it would como from per- sonal friends of Judge McCall, And it @dn't come at ail, An appeal to every enrdiad Repub- Mane voter in the city to sapport Joun| chased, They bave also taken to be made against Mr, Mitchel in con-|dacy of Mayor Kilne," ‘Warden Fallon denies all know! some other Fallon must that he was, No decision was reached | MeCall again mak that night, The matter was not decided on The World for ite exposure of until a day or two later, The quest hie record on the bench. discussed Was Whether we should nom | inate Mayor Gaynor or nominate an Sf 'olectes he will give | im the field in the Bronz, and the leaders each are en sy nervously awal So was Tom Sinith, secretary 0)! stitenel haw b organization, No decision was wt-| will to forthcoming to-nieh nd at what night Commissioner Joseph Johns 150,000 PLURALITY y a plurality of between until 1 hav nd will do if given w chance,” Repul n y The signers of the 6 Fusion ne appeal are Klthu Root, Louia Marahall, |" Me Fusion nominee Henry A. Wine, William M. K. Olcott, |, ‘ ot Samuel W. Fairchild, “Charlag A [eH 0m the part of Tammany Mall to Willlam Berri, seth Low, <i Murray Butler, William No], cere 18 nothing in that | am ashamed to have revealed to ALDERMAN AGAIN, ie has sent @ letter to Robert Adamson, chairman of the Fu- sion campaign, in which that can be done to further the candi- nection with the part he played as a| ate for Alderman in the Fifty-frst dia- yielding, but it is just and she has the protection of the law. Attorney Morse told the jurors that, leven if they might ‘Mrs. Eaton guilty, they had no right to convict her | Unless the evidence in the case waa | lusive, and he added: “There {8 no evidence upon which you can find that this woman committed the act charged, or that she is #0 in jthat he could commit crime and not | |e responaible for it." He reviewed the Incidents of Eaton's lif any political are. | that besause she was the victim of | virementa of the distance of the than not to have an organization, 1] raeethtdad k fisllave ih ‘die Taioerarte’ oragniaas| Parke MH tue railroad and trolley | murder charge. | tien ines and ha pputed the eiiaa Admiral Eaton was intemperate and! at will cost the y » Of diferent | yo ad ind that wae vile, but he | METZ SAYS THAT MURPHY WAS Possessed a mind that waa Vv * Aes MAVAOR, of thattan, Hrooklyn and) had a polished exterior, Attorney Morse | : 5 | Queens to reach the spot said, He took drugs to the end of his Murpliy was for Gaynor at that din- | » anticipated exposure which Mr. life. His wife had been faithful, and the letters written by her are! offered ax exhibits had been prompted by pity for her miserable husband. far as Jud MeCall ts concerned, er of Judge McCall's campaign. t yo he was tiot ut the dinner itself. He was| trust Mr. Mitchel'a anxiety wilt be |, TH Prosecution, the attorney said, had vedhiten tn teeta i eo , been unable to find a -motive for the | ne fo i » | wpeedily relieved. crime, and so had suggested several , nm ont SAK Heart tn ths wenere Sue fenton from which the jury might choone, — | Know that Mayor Gaynor ait not | MECHEL CLAIS When Attorney-Morse closed his areu- Gee Eater emmer alt mob | HIS ELECTION BY ment District-Attorney Barker arose and AO RAs ater estes tut shook his hand warmly, Many women in courtroom wiped tears from thelr Raton, who the eyes and glanced at Mri nat Why he did une it 1 don't “ know, dhe fast was alrondy. putill ‘hn Purroy Mitchel to-day asserted (at with bowed head, that Thad been there. There has never | that he would be elected the next Mayor! District-Attorney Barker began hie argument for the prot ution by com- rin an 5neet a0 ss plimenting Morse on his able address. side ei . ven to the faci “Lam confident tha am e entire of Metz'« p Yat the Delonie Foy ‘gt aes Ma ty that [/ Shall present my case on the evidence, her of Aug. 21, Robert 4 bs Re CRS SS vf he said to the jurors. Mr, Barke waa Mayor Gay plurality,” said Mr. Mitchel ‘ammany | jaunched forth in a brilliant speech ex- 4a now managing the campaign of John |All is doomed, and 1 intend to con-| piaining the “distasteful affair he had it until 1 purge ‘harles FF. Mur- numbered, for I driven him been called upon to conduct. “E pray God I @hall never again be called upon for such an ordeal,” he sald. —_—_—— BULL MOOSE SAYS A DEAL IS ON TO that from now bout Judge Me- cause there was not find Mr, Mevs name. 1 did not | 10 use talking about # dead issue, DEFEAT SULZER Wuw Ne waa) there "T shall talk of the work of the Fusion . eee Se ee | Board of Hatimate, and the record it Purroy Mitchel was fenued to-day by a |2%* Made, and what it can accomplish, | ‘The Bull Moose thrives on trounle eammutien af Yeanine onlay BY ® lax compared to what Tammany Hall | and we're out to make 1t,” sald Franc W. Bird, County Chairman of the Pro- 5 Kreanive party to-day. “I've got pretty eleomed any at-| strong susptetons that there is a deal on between Republicans and Tammany to defeat Sulzer in the Sixth Assembly Dis- trict, The Tammanyites are to vote for Kopp, the Republican candidate for As- my whole life | able in connection with his work up Jilted Man Who Died for Love; Who Though Girl t Him Too cant VICTIMS OF TRAINS GIRL AND WORKMAN STLNELL LETER WASNT DOCTORED, TOMINUTES APART. OU AMORY DECLe%E / 11 Saw Him Write Part of 1,” Says Friend of Convicted Poor| | Long Island Railroad at Bush- wick Juaction Scene of Senacor. Double Tragedy. PSE ay Under copyright the New ¥ Ry ning Mail th flerioon py ‘Two persons Jon the tracks were Ki what purports t ten minutes ap at the Buehwiek | ee - | ment of the negotiations fur a conte Junction station of the Long tela ion ob ih ms . i | ion of Tammany legislative corruptty: Railmad in Queens today, Tho victims y » ma n behalf of William were Emilie Gaugenmater, lghteen ex-Senator Stilwell, The by Col, William N, Am Stilwell's written ation for par don to Sulzer, He makes tt plain that Stilwell has never forinaily confessed, years old, of No. 20 Grove str wood, and Serpis Chofero, employed by the railroad and living at No. 105 Chichester aver rt, Bi lavorer wae ye, darmal Chefero was the first to mect his The Mall says death, He was at work on the track ( mory declares t saw when @ const nobacked down | Stilwell write a part of tie applica on him. The noving Stowlss tion for pardon ta which he Informed but Chefero could not out of ‘a prt y and w. neath a loaded dominant my early car. The accident was rep telo- ore A by wh hone to Coroner Schaoffe dered that the body sh turbed unt!l his arrival At is coms Jaccident created cone are going to impe tment und many pers move him from office, and the right of way of the railroad com, ehlef says Wil be pardoned, pany. He suid that he had talked with t Just ten minutes after Chefero was t Tammany men ately and knew where: ay iennmative. bound t of he spoke. They had encouraged Stil anid thecmuanien Fa f wai ‘i Ht Ae iat ob hse all passed the Bushwick Junction station s Ne a ey |The engineer, John Kenny, slowed gala ; down while passing through the crow! nity, Aum i, Mr HE Sei ee creartee te and then put on speed after he Wad (a friend of stoweut ated | we a ne 2 assurat PLEICHY AND ROSIE | passed about 200 feet along the tro Sing and it was on this day that Stliwell poesia FUCHSMAN As he rounded ac he saw ed ne is application for p Ae LA ate hot to su _ the track 4 of him Miss Gaugen- spmlication ts dated Aug. 16, but it ligatien wit ” mailer and her father, who were taking was actually written on Sunday, the lth, ee ane publi “hart Wk “BELT LINE LITIGATION |« shortcut to @ nearby cemetery to much tin my pre and it was bs ne ted to Sul y Stilwell from visit the grave of the girl's moth rence, ‘The ng Sing prison, UASHED BY DECISION Kenny sounded his whist back hand* a i slapped on the airbrakes. letter and i WARDEN CLANCY | mater leaped from the track, but the {he 4 n by - . girl was caught under the wheels of nan hand? Belmont, Ryan and Shonts Not De} the 1ocomotive. | -——.- — anda ia Gina ane? | | State Job for New York Man, ’ ESORHDESHEY Sioextialders CHURCH APPEALS TO WILSON) atanaxy, oct, 2 —Announcenent of i Suit. | the nt of Chorles Lo Chute KANSAS CITY, Oct. 24—The Na-| of New York as Secretary of the State The lithe: yn by which stockholders | tlonal Counetl of Congregational Probation Commission at a salary uf the defunct Central Churches to-day in a resolution $500 was made to-day by Homer Folks, st River Railway pealed ty President Wilson and mem: 1 dent of the con mv Mr. Chute wise the "Belt Line,” sought t hers of Congress to call the) aueceeds Arthur We Towne, feagned aaa cat an accounting for the alleged misman-| “swelling expenditures for case te dba aegrhcld lis Guth eeavets awement and wrecking of the concer, | phernaiia of war’ The resolution, how- T olland, (Continued from First Page.) Was to-day dealt a death blow pr, Was not adopted without opposi- TMA, as his & ary Al a salary Supreme Court Justice Page when he | to: " handed down an ion eliminating While my resignation is in his hands I} August Belmont, Thomas F. Ryan, cannot say much of my opinion of him, | ‘Theodore Shonts and their associates but I wonder if while he Is giving undue credit to me the people of this State know that seventy-five per cent of th suggestions for humane prison reform made by Thomas Mott Osborne have | in been put in fect by Supt. Riley. a No, I think Lam out, [am eck of act. thing which I wrong.” RILEY PRAISES CLANCY; GRETS HIS RESIGNATION, ALBANY, Oct. 2.—Warden Clancy may be retained as the head of sing Bing Prison, His resignation had not felt was unfair ven recelved by John B. Riley, Super. | Orly, Joined causes of action against Intendent of the State Prison Depart | eo ment, to-day, and there was @ persis: | tent rumor that it would not be ac- | cepted. Mr, Riley issued a statemeni | indorsin, Clancy's administration atronely | “I regret that Mr. Clancy has ten- dered his resignation as Warden of Sing Sing Prison,” he said, “I infer from his atatement in the papers that he does 80 for political reasons. Such considera: | tlons will have no weight with me, | “Mr. Clancy was not appointed for political reasons. He was highly recom- mended by prominent men as being hon- | cat and capable and also as having had special experience in an Important offi- cial position which would be most valu- nt and Warden, ‘At the time of his appointment tne situation at Sing Sing was most dif. cult, He has in the short time he has acted as Warden demonstrated his abil- ity and efficiency, having instituted and | carried into effect many reforms in the management of the prison, ‘.a the firet place, he has cleaned the prison and has made it sanitary, f far as that ie possible, He hat with the assistance of this department, | stopped the practice, which has pre- Valled at Sing Sing for many years, of lin. Sai and Henry ©, _Tobnton “ the public,” @ald Mr, Mitchel, baie Cg ea Byhlig biel Mealy TAMMANY MAKES PERKINS URGES aera Wis eat kde baliese ines ADVERTISED ATTACK KLINE’S ELECTION AS |can bent Sulton, Aw for. the municipal ticket Mitchel in surely elected and s9 is the Fusion county tleket in Manhat- tan, What Bull Moosers interested in now Is the Assembly, We're going to hold the balance of power there, so watch out for trouble from the start.” ie MILLER BACKS UP STILWELL STORY. he saya he ip being done who is a candi- member of the Board of Estimate in| tiict, Brooklyn. Purchasing certain property for park| "It seems to me," Writes Mr. Perkins, | ay a tetter written by ©. R. Miller, purposes, | that in view of the experience Mr | state superintendent of the New York Inasmuch ws Judge MoCall has per-| Kline has had in the governmental af- | Civic League, made public to-day, Mil- Metently referred to the acquinition by, fairs of the city and the excellent record | jer gaye Stilwell had told him he had | the city of a seaside park at Rockaway,| ¢ has made as Mayor, it would be a] omuch to tell on other Tammany men,” jena the Dreamland Park alte at/#ieat pity to lose his services in con | nye added: "They are going to im- Coney Ialand has not been acquired by| nection with the Board of Aldermen. 1 peach them and remove them from [the city, it 1s assumed that the Rock. | take it that there ts very tittle doubt o: | smrice and then resoat them." ‘The let- y Park matter je the one that will, lie election, but everything that can be | ior was addressed to Sulser and dated | be made the subject of the attack. | done should be done to remove even the | aAinany, Oct. %. Judge MoeCall, it was said, would not) slightest doubt,” "One day the latter part of last father the attack on Mr. Mitchel, but eerenprecesae June,” the letter aald, “I called on Sen- | would allow it to be made by other| Heading Him on. ator Stilwell in the *Tombs, We dis- speakers. (Prom the Houston Pont.) cussed various topics, He wanted me Tammany 1: vestigatora have been| ‘Heaven lies about ua in our in-|yo help nin. 1 gave him no encour very busy with the Rockaway Park |faneys' Now" — agement, “Bo doen our father, 1} me omething a boy had said?” I have to may to purchase, They have been looking up to ir. Mitchel's associations with the per- | rit ns from whom the site wag p ee 9 | day!" Were you going mart that your| “He inslated that he knew much to tell on other Tammany men, Before you, alr, is good | 1 left Senator Stilwell he said to me: ‘Om 3 eham's equsal—not yet, They alle; the | played again, body in authority had persuaded thi | tellectual giants aforesaid to remoy name of States from its position on the banner between the names of Col. Roosevilt and as defendants, The suit was filed a year Ryan, H, Vreeland and other leading spirits Metropolitan Street dl the New York Ratlwayw by the use of dummy director# absolutely con- as related by the defend. | this whole disgraceful affair, What 1 | trolled the Central Park lit ant on the witness stand, and declared | {eel most keenly 1s my own cowardly | from Fifty-ninth street to the Battery, Nobody, not even the Governor, | and permitted the property of the con- circumstances she was forced to face a {had the right to compel me to do alcern to go to waste, neglecting as well and | to renew or repay the bonds and mort- {wages of the concern, this alleged neg- Ngence finally resulting tn the filing a sult States Court. Justice Page holds is fatally defective in that it improp- d that Belmont, to foreclose in nat th BRAINS OF TAMMANY CALL WILSON | Intellectual Giants of Wigwam Also Put the President Between Republicans, The tntellectual glante who compose jthe campaign banners for Tammany, | Hall strung one in Broadway to-day, front “Who said bo: ? What about W. R, Hearst? What about Theodore Roosevelt? What about Woodrow Wilson? What about Sam Koenig? bout Norman Hapxood? Poor Mitchel After one hour the banner was drawn, ‘What Boeses All! In about half an hour In the mean the President of nuel Koenig. The banner read; AVA RS aa ago. It Herbert Rallways . operating $1.00 $1.50 $2.00 Guaranteed Garter-Proof—the Gold Stripe makes them so, Black, white, colors, or dyed to sam- plein 24 hours, quicker if necessary. GOTHAM HOSIERY SHOP 27 West 34th Street New York the United e complaint A BOSS Novelties for Hallow-e’en 9IS the hour of Midnight from yor REULart nit stut es Giese 768, rin a, is that almost chill thi ree—even his Satanic Majesty himself, ia is scarlet, is represonted oe, Oo repress in our novelty Jack of 170 0, Special for Thursday CHOCOLATE COVERED seeoRTEn collection of les in apletic it was di time som in: the she United Suggestion for Wednesday ASSORTED MARD CANDIES— A see |putting two Inmates in a cell, But) Causes Hin took sotery PB ALE ae quite as important as thes reforms, John M, Helony, a Syrian, who lives at | a Tahiete, Pillows, Blowome, he has stopped the distribution of No, Im Clinton street, Brooklyn, ap- Buttercups and | maoy 25 oplum and other drugs among the con- | eared in the Adams Street Court to-day tbe Me ON ROX, ic | viet, which haw been carried on injayainst hia. former a Street. Zid Nirect ai | Sing Sing for y |Victoria Leach, who 4 Our stores open Satur “He has discovered and removed who lives at No. 20 Fast Fourteenth STREET 200 BROADW several of the guardx who were en-|street, Manhattan. The — ex-wwain bs roudway Corner Ru RAY, efarious charged that his flance—for so he said 2” CORTLANDT #7, 147 NAY . t aged in the nefarious business of # CORTLANDT | x pal besides, shown himself to pe an effi- ? AL Chy Hall Parl duet k room when she vinited him there ri 4 cient sdministrator of tho manufactur- [00m Sit) ane eee a euilty, Bho 400 BROOME STREET (ol it atte Ing department of the prison. was lield in $1,00 ball for further ex- TREET 10 have “The question of the political | affillations of prison officers does not) | appeal to me as being important. Aside | = from the Wardens and chaplains and \a few other positions, all officers and | | employe are appointed from eligible lists prepared by the State Civil Ser- vice Commission as the result of com- petition.” a Foley Opponent In Held. John Rappuai, steward of the Home Rule Democratic Club at No, 45 Madi- aon street, an organization used by. Bugene Driscoll in opponition to the| adherents of former Sheriff Tom Foley, |war held in 600 Dall by Magistrate! | How in the Yorkville Court charged with violation of the |law. Deputy Superintendent of Elec: | tions Lester Fisonberg said that Rap- pusi had refui to unswer questions about six men registered a» voters from | the club roome. Be he ce Sunday World Wants | Work Monday Wonders! amination. Everything Tastes Better When the coffee is good. The hostess who serves this | coffee will never lack company. COFFEE fae 0} Fourth Ave, STRE: Brookiyn, ¢ WHERE THERE'S A WILL. Where there's a will there's a way—to get into trouble or out of je ae it, as the dice Perhaps no other will, since the birt | of Time, has caused so many weird heb | plications as did “the old boctor's" Who was he? He was he man whose [{ast testament started all the excitement in the funniest story of the decade, | The story is “WHE ERE’! Ce | wits Ky is WHERE THERES a) | “WHERE THERE'S A WILL” | Mary Roberts Rinchart, eh hg | Mary Roberts Rinehart js America’s Breatest woman hi umorist, She wrote "Seven Days," the story / roar, that set two continents in’ a And “WHERE THERE'S A WILL” Ip even funnier than "Seven Days ‘ “WHERE THER SA WILL” is to rin | Ser in ie re) SEEMAN BROS, Ew YORK | Mond 1 The Evenlag Worid, beginning WHITE ROSE Ceylon Tea n't forget the date, Monday, Nov, 10; Pregricters That's the day you will begin liugblag*