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nf &y 7 I at pit i : He iE ie HI 7 i rf il fi] it £ q sF | i { i €¢ FE atl a 3 ti, E i 2 i ig } E 4 z E if } ¥ fi ii et ° Fr ———————— iS Lil ait é ENT ef Eg iF | g & i i! ii - | 3 sf F i E ' if i ek i if ! ff i | i [ sk H k z 2 F Pe Ss lal yF i i ! fF et & } g 5 z 3 i | z gf Es Es B a ie - i ~ fl F g ft é f i & j E SEARCH CITY FOR SENDER OF BOMB § a $ g ite i ! | = 2 & g Ld i & ‘ it £ < g F ! 8 $F : io tt i re a f z| 8 g HIGHER UP BAGMIEN LIKELY TO MAKE FULL CONFESSIONS Two Who Know All Inner} Workings of Grafters Show Signs of Weakening. AFTER BREWERS ALSO. Prosecutor Gets a List Those Who Contributed to Campaign Funds. of GOHDDIGDWO'DOISGGOSGOHAS A confession to District-Attorney ‘Whitman t* imminent from a man whore position ‘on the inside” enables him to disclose the workings of the “shaking down" of contractors engaged ia up-State road buliding and barge canal work. This man has made over- tures to Mr, Whitman and intimated that he “wanted to see" the District- Attorney about the matters which have Giready been brought to light in the John Doe proceedings. ‘The knowledge of this man is scarcely to De questioned; he is @o situated that he can tell just where all the colected campaign funds went—even the funds that were not recorded in the office of the Gecretary of Gtate. And the tracing of these sums ts Mr. Whitman's most eager intention, BELIEVES THE PROSECUTOR (8 DANGEROUSLY GLOSE. Through the hands of the men in question several of the checks collected wp-time have passed, ami he knows whet became of the money. Until air. ‘Whitman's questtoning of witnesses be- gan to bring matters “close to home,” this man preserved « stolid silence. Now that he appreciates the depth of the Dintrict-Attorney's digging he has lost Httle time in trying to get into touch | Threw with the prosecutor, He has ewakened to the fact that Mir. Whitman ie dan- @erously cloae to him in the matter of the investigation. Gti another man, hin name, tov, tre qently heard tn the John Doe inquiry, has been in conference wih Mr. Whit- man. He is practically of equal im- portance wth the one first mentioned, and te deeply involved tn the caflection of campaign funds for the Democratic | State Committee. He may be saki to be | undergoing @ change of heart. Ilia at- |tornaya have teen in communication with the District-Attorney. It has been hinted that he might ve willing @ teil | to him, And ft’s an carl he'll be some; might have been driving ye:, bi all he knowa, THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 13, 1913. NRS, PANKRURST BAK, 1S INLD ON HOGER STE UNDER THE Once |’ e | Once ve | Real Irish Lord | 7 COMES TO UPLIFT AMERICAN STAGE SO OOOO OUD OOOO = GOQOQOOODHHDOOOIHOODOIDOSOOOSIO Arthur Wellesley, Loall count Dangan, Willing to Work, Bare Title from Programmes and Hopes to ‘‘Make Good”’ Without Any Favors from Any One. * Up Army Com mission to “Earn a Liv- ing,” and Has Been a Cab Driver, Baggage man, Scene Painter and Music Hall Singer—Now With Gaiety Company. A real Mve lord im light comedy, girls! He's here, An Irish lord he ts, too, more power day. But, whiabt, girls, don't be sctting Gir. Whitman's attitude towerd these] your caps for him. He's not looking two men is that if either is sincere in| for em heiress. But, then, he’s heart the matter of confemsion there is no/|free, ¢or the matter of that, and who time like the present—that perhaps | knows what might h: appen? He arrived within & short time a confession | ners yesterday on the Mauretania, and * [he's in love with New York already. from one or the other might be no: wary. Neither of these men knows of the attitude of the other, and the ques- tion would seem to be which will get |‘M¢Y bad him on the passenger Nat. to the District-Attorney fret. And when |4rthur Wellesley i# his family name, one or the other does “come across” [nd that's the name he is known by on | there will be no phase of the business |the play dille and the programmes. He with which he will not be entirely fa-|i# more than six feet tall and straight millar, Hoth have requested to see Mr. jan an Indian of the old days. Whitman at the earliest possible mo-|fine looking and not more than twenty- ment and each Is to have his oppor-|three years old. He is out to make his own way in the world, obliged to do #0. That's why he left tunity. . WOULD CLEAR WAY FOR CON. SPIRACY INDICTMENT. @uch @ confession substantiate a great deal of the e dence now in the hands of the District-|of honorable work to make both ends Attorney and clear tife way fora blan- | meet. ket indictment for conspiracy which is | lie has been a music hall singer, @ cab @oon to be shaped in the county prose- |driver, a baggageman, a scene painter, outor’s office, This will be against a | And none of those he worked with knew coterie of politicians who have operated |for @ long time that he was a lord. to their own profit by illegally using | He wouldn't tell anybody. Not that he official power over contractors engaged | cared who kn in State work. the brewers of thin city who have from time to time contributed to Si ‘and county campaign funds, and would suffice to} eutenant in the Fifth Lancers, an even chance, And then he was a In Mr. Whitman’s office ts a lat of | Wand in chan (him. He had never driven a cab before, Dut he made merry with his box and | Right Honorable the Viscount Dangan Ho is He says he ls the army, giving up his commisaion as He has done everything In the way All work with him is honorable. but he nted only 'y, do you see, and the Lord High Chancellor wa siooking for @uiject has much tnterested him, al- | MS end laumhed at fate in a good old though he bas not as yet taken it up for tnvemtigution. It has been inti- Irish way. He had never painted any- thing before, but he brushed right in Metiah tet ite Wiitinkas tt and helped to paint the woods and the or ws the’ wrenore oA Misael mountains, the rivers and valleys, the stuff there.” In this matter « repitter for ‘The Bvening Work’ went ey to wee Jacob Ruppert jr. at hin office at Third avenue and Ninetieth street. “Why, I've been a contributor to the |The Evening World. jeampaign fund every yeur,” Mr. Rup- pert sald. “I'm a Tammany Hall and 1 give 81,000 every your, It Personal contribution, just as my father’s is. He gives a thousand dol- | said. an jas pleasing. a | and free in his speech, castles and palaces for thirteen operas. WHY HE FAILED AS CABBY AND PAINTER. Ils greeting was pleasant thin morn- Ing when he met @ reprenentative from His smile was as warm as the sunshine, his personality He was easy in manner “New York is @ beautiful place,” he “I love it already. I loved it tare, too, But the idea that there la a | when I saw it yesterday morning from bagman’ collecting money from the the deck of the steamer, Whon I looked brewers of this city or State is ridicu-|up at akyscrapers I thought the city fous, ‘There has never been any con- certed action on the part of the vrew- era. Those who give do #0 personally and the contributions ere matters of record at Albany, I know that I see mine-in the list every year, “There ere, approximately, seventy brewers in thie city, and I know several who have never given @ penny for cam- paign purposes. Any number of them could not afford to give $1,000 George Bhret contributes §2,(00."" NO PRESSURE ON THE BREW. ERS, HE SAYS. “Have you ever beard that $1,000 was the sum that each brewer was ex- Peried to contribute tu the Democratic State campaign fund?’ Mr, Ruppert was asked. “No, 1 never have, and I'en sure that bo one has ever contributed under pres- sure of any kind. There are breweries tm this city for gale, so it doesn't seem that the owners of them could give $1,000, They coukin't afford to, No, you can ay With truthfulness that the brewers have never been ‘shaken down’ for any- thing,” From the list of brewers In the Di trist-Attorney's office it appears thi Jacob Ruppert gave $1,000 to the New was bullt on @ hill, But they tell me it's on the level, (Not intended as a joke.) The sunshine and the crisp morn- ing sent the bicod bubbling through one's vein. It was glorious, “What can I tell you of mysell? Thero'’s nothing much to tell. Yea, { wae with the Fifth Lancers, I was a second ieutenant, 1 had to ® bur tee $3,600 in 1910 and 1911 and in 1912 gave the county fund $2,500 and the State fund $1,000, Peter Doelxer contributed to the county fund $0 in 1910 and 1911, Bern- heimer and Schwarts gave the county sund $300 an 1910 and in the same yout David Mayer gave the couyty fund $02, In Wt Georgo Ringler contributed $20 to the county fund and J.C, G, Mupfel fave $100 to the county in 1910, 111 and 1912 The John Doe proceedings brought forward Sorty-thre ore for interrogation. w h the ex ception of two or three all of thene have contributed and a very small centage of their gontributions were ever recorded. The amount they gave to the have ‘ontract- Democratic State fund was about!” Well: | gaged & stateroom, but could not be $30,000, Haven ‘ound, He showed up when the steamer this month and then come to New wus of Sandy Hook and was put on | all equal in the show business should TITLE OF PLAIN “BILL” OOO HHOOA GOOG GHOOGTGS)/E 16015610 GTGESTDHING CCC 20) i co ® Dover. 8% © : | tion. leased. 9OQHOGDHHOIODHHHOHAOHGODOOHDOD. cause I colljpn't afford to stay. I hadn't the money, so 1 had to get out ond make some, Bo he drove @ cab tn Swlfast. He nad been with tHe ere in Dublin, Many a man he drove, and many the pretty girl, who didn't know the nonur being vone them by the man on the box. li return mann, 0 protect Mrs. Harner. Harner fired two —_———e 4, Hil and Ryan were considered the Bee estar Got oe Blin Whee oe thote, killing the proprietor and his! CHARLESTON WINNERS, —|uars horses or the field. ‘The early sag Sotaied to Wurdion Ut ha’ oven tia lio> wife, and then turned the weapon on Bbachh dtd somers of the evening crowd steadily tenes Ghd Gut tor Sie lordahip, 11 his wife, fatally wounding her in the} mtrsT RACE—Three-year-olis and| began to fill the garden, At five o'clock Hie} them over here, you know." tried his hand at house painting, He es, I know how beautiful the aceidentally overturned the paint American girls are. But I'm not one into the upturned face of his boss, The | °f those looking for paint was green, and they prefer orange |® ™lllionairess. I'm not a society man, in Belfast. either. No, I don't keep up any society “T had good fares and bad fares in|lgations on the other side. I don't the cabby days,” eaid his lordship. “1|*now that I have any, I don't care for have more sympathy with tho cabbies|#0clety. I have no time for it. I'm too since then. No, I never had a scrap, | >¥#Y." but many @ near one.” ‘You're &n Irishman?" “You restrained yourself?” was aug-| “Ob, sure. I was born in London, but ted. we're all Irish, I spent much of my boy- 0. 1 think it was the other fellow! hood in Ireland, so when I went cab ‘who restrained himself.” driving, they didn't have much on me, “Do they address you by your ‘itle tn | I could talk Irish as well as any cabby, the company?” and swear as well, I dare say. I wasn't AND THEY ALL CALL HIM| educated to it. The languaxe Is easily Py _ picked up, I don't mean Gaelic, 1 BILL. kind of freak Engitsh. “No, 1 don't let them. ‘They call “You don't mean to remain on the ‘Bill’ more than anything else. We're | stage?” “I do, if they let me," responded hie way the profession. I was macene paint- | lordship, “My ambition is to get into er when the public found me out. My straight comedy. I don't t any identity was first discovered when I| tragedy, nor deep melodrama, 1 want was on ¢he road with # music hall com-|to mak@ people laugh and enjoy good pany. I had hung my coat in my|Comedy, I want to work up on my own dressing room and one of the company | Merits, if I have any. My ambition ts saw my name and my tailors name in|t© be Arthur Wellcaloy, the comedian, the pocket," not Viscount Dengan, the actor. “Was dt @ London tailor?’ BARS HIS TITLE FROM PLAY 'No, it was @ Dublin tailor. ‘There Bi was a groat row. They went mad, and! |, Le. the company all crowded around me,| ‘"! stipulated, especially, on coming The manager wanted to feature me, |°V@r on this trip that I should not be but I ¢old him the Chancellor would be/ billed as Viscount Dangan, There is nothing in Mt reaily, but, then, it’s one of after me, He rated me five ahilll Sa pam | the things which docs matter, after all. & week anyhow. I was firet In & pan- f want to bo ¢ es By igl tomime company. I dida't know 2 reated the same as any- Leap’ body else in the company, I prefer to thiag about pantomtming, but I went at It like I did everything else, and, as|%® plain ‘Mr.’ while I'm in the work.” you Americana say, got away with it,| ‘Do your people object to the pro-| mont, I'm not @ vooalist, but I used to be a| fesston you have chosen?” “There's nobody to object, realiy. choir boy and sang soprano. T ang at college a little and a whole lot tn the | other is dead. She divorced my fi anny many years ago, and I've only seen bim “You haven't lost your heart on the| three or four times in my life. Oh, yes, stage?” I've seen him since I went on the stage. We've talked together as you and I are| S We're all right. We're friends.” “Some day you will be Earl Cowley, what?” arl Cowley, the actor, won't sound half bad, mow that you have said it," hia lordship reaponded with a merry laugh. “My father is not an old fellow at all. He's not fifty, eo there's a good chance of his remaining Earl for « long ume yet. Th bit of estate which te bound to come to me some day. But we're not worrying about that, For the present I'm an actor, end I'm working to get to the top. J am under contract with the Galety company, and am look- ing forward to the day when I may get to the top in straight enmeny, T¢ ambl- en aa ck to| ton and work will do it 1 will get there, ey ee ee deat 1 Itke the life very much. They're @ jolly Dut 1 didn't want to be | lot In the jrofession, and T prefer bel , George Grossmith, with | Bil to being Burl Cowley. And that's the Gaiety Company, lias done more for "0t Musical comedy talk.” than anybody else on the stage It Was he who got me into the Quiety vofapany, I was firet in the chorus, Then I got a small part in ‘The Messen-| Lieut ger From Ma @ musical comedy. | joarded nen followed ‘The Sunshine Giri,’ and| 01, now I'm with “The Girl on the Film,’ | *A@l At noon to-day, looking for John still with the Gaiety, which hasn't been |W: Kine of Chicago, eal to be de- e before for thirty years. I play| ented and missing from the Windy part, | City. The man had registered and en- parcel to the lomt my temper sometimes, but that's as far as it went. No, I'm serl- ous in the profession I wanted to get on the stage all the time, 1 thought {t woyld be a atep up the ladder when 1 got to be baggageman for a company. Then 1 was sure of it when I bceame a| scene painter, I¢ was then tr wan discovered in London. The papers got hold of my identity. I went to the Lord Chancellor and told bim all about tt, He agreed with me that T had done the wisest thing tn Jeaving the army ti the circumstances, DION'T WANT TO BE “FEA- TURED” THEN, “Then I began to get offers and pubd- Catch Man Moody of Police Headquarters the Cunarder Caronia, which York. We'll etay here as long as they | board the pilot boat New York. The fot we." poilce boat Patrol went dGewn te the “an agirees' maz ateal you, Wh navy Hook t bring Rim beck tp the ity: ~" Again Arrested on Her Return Indicate It Will Be ‘From Paris, and Militants : Record-Breaker. Angry, Make Protest. i With the finish almost in sight, tem GAT H > pe in attempts to Jump the fleld be Leader, Hurried- From Train to SeaL Luh Denies oe ee ocleck tosnignut Goullet, MoNamara. Halloway, Refuses to Te 2 at akneck pace. They took turns Take Any Food. ‘ Jat puotny and thousksds of Fane Ware 4 in an uproar while the sensational iacsites eorinte were on. Realizing that lap- LOIDON, Dee. 13.—Mre, Emmeline feather atealing wan out of onler with the dit. Pankhurs:, the militant suffragette is making f nute leader, waa rearrested to-day on the i y thie pacemakers left track te train on which she was travelling trom 5 : Welce Ine Yasaeace Dover Ww kaahék,. bie tacried ts dna 4 Seeing the leaders going over the Jand from France this morning after a ~ flash of xpeed. The young Australian ean ip daye _ ekg bike Miss at one time was three-quarters of a 2 tate: Sg urat, her daughter, Wl 70 PUNISH Jap to the good when Goullet, McNam- who accompa ype are oe ara and Verr! were hastily summoned ag achiev JEERING FIREMEN and the rooters had another chance « with ttle show of opposition excepting test thelr cheering powers ua these were present, and all acocmpanie! the militant leader to the Victoria Station Took Part in Yesterday's | RACE A RECORD BREAKER IN tm London, and thence to Holloway jail, 7 MANY WAYS. where Mra, Pankhurst immediately be. Disturbance. After things cooled down the pinch @an a hunger strike, Suffragette followers, highly incensed because Mra, Pankhurst's ticket of leave did not expire until Monday, formed about Holloway for They declared they will picket the jatl until Mrs. Pankhurst again is re- KILLS TWO IN STORE, SHOOTS WIFE AND SELF Resents Protection Given Woman in Quarrel, Which Ends With Three Dead and One Dying. CHICAGO, Dec. 13.-—-Three persons are 4 and a fourth dying an the remult of a quarrel between manuel Harner and his divorced wife, crowded “With Christmas shoppers this afternoon. Angered because his wife would not the millinery store of Louls F. abdomen. When a crowd pursued him he fired a bullet through hia own ‘brain, dying inst ntly. hospital. ee Sees COLLECTS BY PARCEL POsT. Leultstana “Merchai . cotpt NEW ORLFANS, Dec, 12—Using the debts ls a novel method adopted by a merchant of Napoleonvilie, La. The merchant forwarded a C. 0. D. parcel to @ creditor at Thibodeauz, La, with $1.90 the creditor @ receipt for/$1.90, the amount he owed the merchant. The matter was reported ‘The Juares entries for to-morrow are Beda, 106; Bou Ton, dinkand, 105; Dom FOURTH RAC Handicap; five and a hal Redpath, “Apprentice allowance claimed, ‘Track fast, we BKERS TIED FOR LEAD TRY TO “UMP” BUNCH -DEFUREFINAL ILE Last Hours of Garden Grind AMERICAN ADMIRAL WHO PROTECTS FOREIGNERS IN TAMPICO PORT. bb A GO014 8444646 14906508 BE OOS BGBETE He = teama of weary six-day riders In Mad- json Square Garden late this afternoon , | eleatrifed a big crowd with wild spurte HER AT THE PRISO 5-2 8 he os Verri and Hill, the speediest men of the leading pairs, tore around the oval 6 4840 1-606-0-46-004.46499 | tTACk Induced Corry to let lowe with a nkhurst and her personal Doveratown, @ suburb of A donen Scotland Yard detectives stare set sail after the flying Corry. The daredevil rider was caught only after seven laps of top speed work, Calls for Names of Those Who yelists again retired to thelr quarters. The afternoon furtous riding put the bunch five miles ahead of the world « record at the th hour, and it ¥ a certainty that all long distance marks Wold be shattered at the finish, Not only will a new #Ix-day race record be estabiiehed but many hourly scores that have been unbdeatable for years have been wiped out during the week's grind. For speed and the scarcity of serious accidents the twenty-first annual six day race has been the greatest long dia- tance cycling event ever held in this or any other country, During the long Journey Jackie Clark, Bobby Walthour, aloner. do not believe that all of | Eimer Collins and other prominent stare the men there yesterday were on leave. | have been forced out of the contest for and therefore I believe that many of | one reason or another. them were absent from duty without; Tie original seventeen teams were proper permission. 1 shall proceed | so evenly matched that it was not unt! against these men under the rules of|the Inet few hours that a probi the Department. winner of the annual classic could be | The Commissioner said be would algo} correctly guesse! at. Many of the race ask District-Attorney Waitman to pro- | sharps predicted that the Fogier-Goulles ceed against the firemen who hooted | combination would cross the fintsh line and Jeered at him. This will be done/ first. The Root-McNamara and Verri- under the provision of the charter whiah| Brocco teams were picked. for place forbids members of the department to] and show positions, aa horse indges empt in any way to influence Hie | would dope the renult, ation, Among the other six pairs tied for the Fire Commissioner Joseph Johnaon announced to-day that he had already taken steps toward disciplining the members of the department, in and out of uniform, who made a disturb- ance yesterday in the City Hall, when he and Chief Kenton appeared to op- pone the proposed two-platoon bill to cut down the working hours of fire- ment. The Commissioner has called on quickty demonstra- Chief Kenlon to supply him with the names of firemen who attended the! hearl “The men are allowed an hour for lunch in rotation,” said the Commis. Lena, on a atreet to him, Harner pursued her into Nie- Niemann and his wife sought to: <x thousand fans were in their and they were coming through the entran long ines, Every little spurt of the bikers was spiritedly al plauded and shouts pointed to an © citing evening, (oo on PRINCETON AND CORNELL WILL ROW AT ITHAC ITHACA, N. ¥, Dee. 13.—Princeton will race the Cornel! Varsity etght Cayuga Lake May 3%, 1914, Spring Day. It i» not definitely decided yet whether the Tigers wM send their Freshmen eight for the regatta. Efforts are being made to make the race a triangular af- fair. Yale had been invited to send her *, but no word of acceptance has y-* been received from the Ell manage- ment, No race was heid with Princeton dast year, as the only date on which the Varsity could journey to Carnegie Lake conflicted with the Princeton commence- ment exercises. Cornell defeated th Tigers and Yale at Princeton In1911, and again in 1912 showed the way to the Nassau men and Harvard over the Charles River course. some sei upward; purse $90; six furlongs.—I’u- vious, 19 (Ward), 6 to 1, 2 to 1 and even, first; Gerrard, 108 (Nathan), 12 to 1, & to Land & to 2, second; Sherlock Holmes, 114 (Rightmiro), 3 to 1, 6 to 5 and 3 to 6, third. Time, 1.16. Chilton Queen, Kinder Lou, Pike's Peak, Mira Deli, Schuri, Rulsaeau, Beverstein, Dr. Jackson, Gagnant also ran, Mrs. Harner is dying at a Sends Re- ©. D. Packages. six furlongs.—« 2 to 6, 1 to 6 and out, first: Pre- inier, 106 (McTaggart), 6 to 1, 7 to 5 and 3 to 6, second; Servicence, 114 (Buxton), 16 to 1, 5 to # and 4 . third. Time, 1143-6, Veneta Stron ‘olthorpe, Denran, Hearthstone, Accord, Our Nug- gett also ran. MURD RACE—Three-year-olls and upward; purse $90); five and a halt fur- post for @ collector of overdue ed the parcel and found post-office inspectors, gibi Lk JUAREZ ENTRIES. slgbtning, 105 (Deronde), 4 to 5, 1 to 5 and out, second; Robert Bradley, 1 ‘Catlahan), 12 to 1, 8 to S and 2 to 6. third. Time— 1,08 2-5, Golliwog, Fred Levy and Cyno- three-year-oble and vp. *Marle Cogsnill, 100; No *Compton, Stanley &., 106; + Joe Woods, 105; Frank Wooden, 108; 105; + 108; Rie wick Trip, 103; Weary Willi Judae Wal The Jamper Handi- olds; #ix furlongs, ‘Tarta, 114 (Burlingame), 1 to 1, 6 to 1, t to 1, first; Charlestontan, 111 (M: Caney), 9 to 6, 1 to BT to Xt, secon Brave Cungrder, 111 (Deronde), 13 to even, 1 to %, third. Time, 1143-5, Briar Path, Grosvener also ran. Masallcts'. fae PROTEST SEAMAN’S BILL. Men Say Q 108: 104; sither, 106 Jere » LOT; ‘Titan, ‘Pao: Safety Razor Five Million Men use the Gillette, ~ "Hasson, Genera! Mi AW, va Crus] WASHINGTON, De: owners and mana: turned out | force to<lay to protest to the Hou Merchant Marine Committee against the La Follette Heamen’s bill. Key Comp- ton, President of the Chesapeake Steam- ship Company, declared vessels on Ches- apeake Bay would find it impossible to meet the lifeboat and able seaman re- quirements, John R, Sherwood of the Baltimore Steam Packet Company made the same argument, year oka 18.—Steamahip if furlongs. Rint Man, 108; Manganese, Bmeraid ey, 118, Selling; all ages; five furton, Hewan, 90; Ida" Lavinia 0D; 107, Thames, 138, R 18, —Helling: three-year-olds and eighth.—*Melts, 100: Lord Super Lim 3 108; Nannie "MeDee, NOTICE ToCustomers purchasing our Bottled Beer, Ales or Porter, either directly or through a Distributor, between December 15th, and December 20th, 1913, both dates: inclusive, we will present a pack of fine playing cards LEMBECK @ BETZ, Eagle Brewing Company Jersey City, N. J. OUR POPULAR BRANDS American Club Beer Jersey Cream Ale Half and Half A he late . Deloved som of Mar: Ww. : yo and ¢ Thomas Boy! Fune: m bis late resid Abs W, 46th ot., Sunday, Dec, o'clock STRINBOCK.—On ROHERT bel °o No. iday. Dec. 12. od om his late Brooklyn, 1918, husband of Anna Pr Lov iter Arcade, Tark Row; Uptows Office, north: ner