Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
nce nm asaalenerpanamemanaamst em “tee nae ee mete sage tee a gp THE EVENING WORLD, F! FRIDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1918. x c {SIX HURT BY CRASH 'DELAYED MAIL DROVE ver MASKED MENELL_ SCHMIDT IS ASAE, RUNAWAY HORSES" mrs a "ANDBIND THEATRE CLEVER CRIMINAL DOES SOME TRICKS ss nyeoss-osoar GUAR, GETS2,000 SAYSOR DONALD, INTRAFICTANLE om Tango Dancer Who Captivated Rich Student on Ocean L HINT HAN WHOSE FIRE CR CAUSED LOSS OF 75 NES s¢_Mictie Hardly Coit When Expected Letter From Sweetheart e ‘ Arrives, Doc. %—During + that Albert Spiwinger, a ry “heavy snowstorm which raged here fi fittin optician, Stor | eatly to-day there was a reat-end co’. toda 1 tne fons Calumet, Scene of Panic Disas- ‘Four Armed Bandits Strike: Alienist Declares salen: nueie| Knocks Out {wo Policemen, ln the ae ‘ So. 41 Wuteil stseat is ter, Mourning Victims While Down Orpheum Watchman | Slayer Is Putting Up Bluff at Runs Over Driver, and ince tn |anine ‘ows Peat CRGR WG PRE: GRA? | pa . . . ; ‘ . teehgd from when pis lit Wontd not have happened had a letier Police Search | | and Tie and Gag Him. Being Mentally Unsound. Dodges Automobiles. Seine tial MG, 1S" WeURs ee cath Ived at the lodging hous | | | ione with etka ry ned there seatanday cape oteses along and crashed into them | freight cate « ame from Hanover ONE FUNERAL FOR ALL. Four masked men rose from the) Dr. Carios F. Manbonald, «paviaiis! Two new world's champione Were iN hein contents were airown alone tae Cott tke or a quariel { |madows of the baloony seats as John! mental ami nervous disenses, rotsinel covered to-day awa result Of a PURAWAY | tracks ee aig! Meree | Ttind, night watchman tn the Orphowm | ny the State to prove the sanity of Hans In Lafayette street, Oesae Wiles Vaatieee At END SaMbEngOY | HHOPL Une nee Tate re peal Fifty Children Among Those | Theatre, No. 10 East Kiehty-2th lscnmiat, the confessed murderer of; Conrad Bresier, No, 30 Palisade ave train, war the most seriously injured arite and Street, made his rounds about 2.9 o'clock | ari, Aumueller, today gave it as his) nue. Neat Hoboken, N. sl. ts awarded | the alk, He could see but a litle was attew Killed—Wilson Not to Order this morning, ‘The light of Mind's 1an-| opinion that Schmidt war anne, wan the tile of firet “rubberneck’ of ail the aliead because of tie snow. fF and latin tern showed revoivers in their hands. A|shamming inganity and was “the clev-, known and unknown earth snowstorm was one of the moat) ed Federal Inquiry Asked. | eruft voles commanded: great and most cunning crimine saemise, Honco, the delivery horwe of gevore thas has struck Syracine in many 4 roads ap mind he wait Sohn “If you emake @ eound I'l) shoot.” phyeician had observed. The anawer | John cot in, painters, No, iyeahe, Nine inches covered the ground Det aas) Sue PeerE tee ey wey ete Rind halted, while one of the men| ‘As not in reeporse to the weual hypo- | street, qualifies as the prize trick | at daysigit and the feathers were ati) Qu ine Mint In Gor Mg Ie CALUMET, Mioh., Dec. 2h-dimte de- stepped behing him, ‘Then there came a|thetical question but closed Dr, Mac-| funaway, : faling. A “gould: kiawe Bho. Wedd tectivee and local pelies are making # aatind Gan oa Pkg head and he} onaid's direct examination by Amsiat-| | Hoaco (or whatever, his name W#) took | Trains on the New York Central and . Niletee ha rere alent eotaien ste. , y int NY -head to run away x er atl. gotten me je letetr didn’t come.” wide nearch today for the man who dropped senseless to the Moor. in heuka Hte Wee ate chi at 190 ovtock thie afternoon, when Delaware, Lackawanna aml Western peiventall tried to enliven Bchw Inger iia? ‘Chrfetmas festival at ; found him tnumually inte a ; e H behind time and there was con- , , cried ‘fire’ at the A terrific pain in his head, an ache in| gaig pr. MacDonald, “well educated and Hresier removed the feud bag from the igi) ie to (UACHIO oe thre toont (att nanis: detivkn sumed in the Italian Hall on Chrstimas Wve, sterting | hin wrists and ankien and a senwation of | well read. At firet he bungled, in my) *tuine muzzle. ievettey fan ‘ikbes She bee When Schwinger retired he I a panic that caused the lows of seventy- fatense cold Woke him up, Rind weal opinion, bie effort to preve himeclt in-| ‘Shenceforward Ronco’s prodigion were: / i 214 Lower system alto autfered to | rreues (2 be alinoat cheerful, But he f five lives, fifty of the victims being lying im a ilttie store room on the tep|eane; but te rapidly learned the ensen-| fle ran three-quarters of a mile. certain extent. eax sound dead fh t noon to-day children. ; foor of the th, about 200 t tials of insanity and adapted himself to} through the conjested traMfc of Laf. at — with a pist in his band and a bullet ‘The man te Gescrived as of heavy bli theatre, feet trom he ground. Thr tnd them.” otto street in direct violation of all laws Jin hus tend, Li ough an epen window, : 1 and wearing « beard. In a sid tenent issued this forencon President Moyer of the Western Federation of Miners _Genied that he had stated that hia man waa a member ef the Citisene’ Alliance, an anti-strike emganization in ths city. “1 do net blame any member of the | organisation named for what his hap- | pened,” Moyer said. “If such & CataR wives of the strikers, and that prac trophe had occurred among the wives will prevail. and obildren of members of the Citizens’ rn Alliance, there would have been mob CALUMET DISASTER INEZ BOR! aaa RERO GIVES DANCER RING A cold wind was whipping drops of rain Into hie face. His hends were bound tightly behind his back, anether rope held Ais ankles tightly and his mouth was @tuffed with a handkerchief. ‘The watchman was almost helpless, but he found he could wiggle his lege. He lay tealde a steampipe which bind | through the Meor. By rubving his ageinet tt he finally frayed the pone} that held bis ankles until he was able 1uLe and possibly lyachings in the rests) of Calumet.” Moyer said he would bring five wit-| nesses before the Coroner's Jury who} would swear that the man who s¥outed | : wore @ Oltizens' Altanve badge, but that he would make no direct acou- mations. The viewims of the pamie will be buried together, and the entire West-/ ern Federation will mareh with (ho hearses. The funcsnl will be held oun. Gay afvernces. CALUMET WARTS NO AID FROM OUTSIDE SOURCES. “With the kindest feelings tor to comfort @e ving.” ‘This was the message ghat vais cont out to the world from Calumet, to-day as the final preparations were” Belng made for the burial of the victimg the families ef the victims. To-day the Mantification of all ex- cepting three of the bodies that throuyh- out Christmas Day lay In long rows of the linprovised morgue in the Towa Hall Red Jacket was completed. The supply of caskets im Calumet was cx- ha@usted early last night and more were ordered from Milwaukes, Twenty-five of them arrived early to<iay end the bodies at the morgue were taken to the homes of relatives. ‘A denpates teem Washington says that the requeat to President Wilson by Pres- ident Moyer fer a Federal investigation of circumstances surrounding the horror was forwarded to-day to the President at Pans Christian, Mies, @y Seoretary ‘Tumulty. Secretary af Labor Wilson at Wash- ington to-day ordered John B. Dens- more, Solicitor of the Department, to Calumet, to render any assistance pos- sible in settling the copper atrike situa- tion, The Christmas Eve tragedy, ihe Secretary said, he thought was a matter for State in HOPE DISASTER MAV END THE COPPER MINE STRIKE While four separate investigations of the disaster were being made to-day waged as to dead, peacemakers ‘Were at work in @ supreme effort to wring about an end to the copper mine atrike in this region. Over tho befics of the Mttle ones, tho leaters of tho pense movement hoped to e0e an ond ‘o the laber otrife whieh has term the Catamet copper diswict for months. United in their grief over the snufflag NOT A MATTER FOR FEDERAL INQUIRY. | WASHINGTON, ral inventigation into | Often) panic horror ‘night will be instituted, according to a telegram went by Secretary of Labor Wileon to President Charles H. Mo: of the Western Federation of Minera to-day, in which the Cabinet oMetal | jon ed the opinion that the disaster with the No fam ‘alumet { Dee, the of Wednesday Sirtke situat jon, Secretary Wilson's telegram to Mover was an follows: “L was shocked by your telegram and the accounts in the press of the terrible disaster which occurred in Cal- umet. My sympathies go out to the families of the men, women and chil- d@ren who were sacrificed in the crush. It ds almoat inconceivable that any one could be fo inhuman ae to plan such @ catastrophe, but whether it aan murmed or the result of maticioun mis- chi@, 1 Rupe the facts will be promptiy brpught to light. the meagre information as yet in my possession, it would appear to be purely @ statutory crime, solely within the jurisdiction of the police powers of the State and not in any way connected with the strike situation, I cannot con- ceive of such u connection extating. “Lam, however, sending the Solicitor of this Department, Mr. John B, Dens- more, to Calumet for! the purpose of rendering any asnistance possible in clearing up the situation,” —o— SAYS CHRISTMAS TREE FIRE CAUSED PANIC. CHICAGO, Dec, M—Mise Grace M>- Arron of Calumet, Mich, arrived in Chicago from her home to-day and | sald whe knew positively that the slury of the man in Italian nty-tWo persons wore trampled to death, was not true “The alarm was given right in the hall,” said Miss McArron. “A little blase started on tae Christmas tree nr some one in the hall cried ‘Fire!’ there was @ mid rush for the men Miss McArron was a former proof- the Grand Jury work. CHUM DEAD BESIDE HER WHEN SHE AWAKES Schoo! Girl Visiting for Christmas Makes Discovery When She Calls Her Friend. UNLIMITED FUNDS PLEDGED FOR STRICKEN FAMILIES, ‘ Bho feeling of hostility was not ev marked to-day, when it wae seen thar the citisens of Calumet and other cittes in the mine district were in earnest in their efforts to raise fundy for the etrieken families, Almost un- limited emounte of money were _ pledged by mine owners and mer- * orante who have bees opposing the 3} strikers. The committecs representing : the operatoss went from house to » house to-dey, comforting the surviving ] members of families whose dear ones » were taken from them in the unnec- essary pante. Following these committess went others, and suggestions that peace be declared between the forces represeat- ing capitel aa@ lator were éiplomati- When Jennie Gorton, an eighteen- yeut-old high school girl of Patchogue, L. 1, awakened this morning and turned to awaken her chum, Grace Baker, with whom she had been sleoping, she found the other girl dead, The two girls, who were of the sane age, were staying in the Baker home with little Maurice I ke er, thirteen years old. The father of the dead girl, Maurice Haker, had returned to the Blue Point Life Baving Station. of which he is second officer, the pre- ceding afternoon. Mrs. Huker is visilng in Iretand. On Christmas night the two girls and Miss Baker's little brother attended a moving picture show, Later they had « party in the Baker home. Then, at 11 o'clock they went to bed, the two gins in one bed and the little boy In another room, When Miss Gordon awakened thts morning she shook her friend, and, . |having A man on the seat with him, worked loose in his mouth and by work- | | img his tongue and contorting his face | he finally spet it out. He crewled toward the open window and cried for | help. | Again and again he yelled, his voles ON SHIP, BUT LETS HER PAY THE DUN, Rich Brazilian Gets an Gite ht Fare-| he wos tov eahaustad to ralee himaalf and peer out ¢the window. Finally he well After Inez Borrero Faces | tatntea. Customs Charges. In the street below Policeman Coz of | oe Eest Eighty-elghth street sation, a Whether the rude customs men Diasted a romance on the arrival of the Majestic was stil! in doubt to-day, but this much is knewn. Mins Ines Borrero of Barcelona, whe before Gassied London with her tango, was @ tiptep tiptoe artist in Lew Fields's company, was the star ta the costume dancing en the ehip after the Christmas Eve dinner, Pampilio Xavier, a wealthy young Brasilian and a student at Georgetown University at Washington, fell an im- mediate victim to the dancer's charms. On one of her shapely fingers he placed @ diamond and ruby ring worth $502, a family heirloom, Later in the evening “Pampy’, an she called him, gave her a $0 bill and a check for an unrevealed amount, and by that time everybody aboard was talking about the Christmas romance. It was understood that the twenty-year- old millionaire had fallen on his knees in truly conventional style and poured the torrent of his love into her willing ear. When asked if he had been ac- cepted he said, noa-comimittally: be ape." Mise Borrero was more positive, eape- clally when the customs men stopped her after the ship's arrival yeaterday and asked to wee the ring, which they valued at $500, They made her take it off, too, First, ahe protested, then she argued, jollied, smiled and finally re- ported to woman's most powerful weapon, tears. The custome men were unrelenting, however, even after being assured It ‘an engaxement ring. ner joined him. They finally located the ertes in the upper window of the theatre datiding. ‘They tried the Bighty-sizth etreet entrance and found it locked. There ts another entrance in Third avenue sad they went there, The door was open. ‘With matches they searched out e way upstairs and entered the little room where Rind lay senseless, They un- bound bis hands and chafed and rubbed worked over him till his senses re- turned. Then they heard the story of the four masked bandits, Hind led the way back downstairs and switched on the lights, In the prem- enade behind the orchestra chairs lay the safe of Aaron Bernstein, the house manager. It was on ite side and it had been ripped open with a “oan opener.” Ite contents lay ecattered about the floor, but a deg In which Mr. Bernstein had put about $2,000 before he left the theatre, was gone. Lieut. Ticho, in charge of the detec- tives of the Mast Bighty-eighth atrest station, examined the safe without finding a single Anger print. He de- cihied the burglars must have used gloves, ————— COUNTESS NURSES DOGS. Had Briet Success as “Cabby,” Thea Ran Barber Shop. PARIS, Deo, %,—The Countess de la Gueriviere, whe in 1997 appeared as ¢! first woman cab driver in the etrests of Paris, has eince then twice changed her “protesston."’ ‘After @ brief success as a “cabby, the Countess, who at one time was very wealthy, but ts now forced to earn a lving, became a barber’a assistant. She then opened a barber's shop on her own account, but this venture did not last long. A few months ago a third change took place and the Countess be- came a nurse in a Parts hospital for dogs, cate and birds. i AGED 109, ATTENDS FEAST. Engh fo then she went to where “Pampy” stood beside his baggage and sald render in the Mioaigan Senate, and n]pomething to him in Spanish. Next she now stenographer for the Houghton |pinched his cheek, but he still shook his County Grand Jury investigating the |head copper miners’ strike. She le on her |+# way to Lansing to #ee the Michigar Attorney-eGn in connection with Finally he said something your ring now; the duty Is up to Refore leaving for the Prince Geo Hotel Mr. Xavier wae asked again !¢ he were en “Perhaps,” he replied with leee assure ance than before. Miss Borrero was otllt certain, but intmated she was having too good @ time jut now to Usten to wedding bella When she left the pier eho waves | _&f Son's Wed a goodby to “Pampy,” and, departing | LONDON, Dec. #.—Fagland's oldest woman, Mra. Rebecca Clarke, aged 109, of Woodgreen, near London, presided yesterday at the wedding breakfast of her baby gon, Harry, aged sixty-seven. on the arms of two young men who hadn't even been Introduced to him, she promised to telephone him as soon us she got to her mother's home, didn't give her addreas to the re-/Cold weather prevented her from at- porte jtending the wedding. Poet En Ds akfast she proposed the ewly married coi the first slice of wedding cake and cited @ few verses of her own composts fon about her pet dog, that she held nher arms. She concluded the eventful day with a Christmas dinner party in the evenin, See EXHIBIT FANCY FOWL, Cate to Come to the Poultry Show Nest Week. The twenty-fifth annual Poultry Show began to-day at Madiron Square Garden with phenomenal attendance. Eight thousand chick: pigeons, waterfowl and cage birds occupt:d all the exhibi- tion mpace in the Garden, G. D, Tilley, the Connecticut naturalist, wanted to send two ostriches, but the offer was dectined because when it was received y inch of space had already been TAX! KNOCKS POLICEMAN OFF HIS FIXED POST Thompson Tries to Escape, but Is Captured After a Chase. James Thompson, twenty-six years oid, @ chauffeur of No, Wi West One Hundred and Fortieth street, was ar- rested early to-day after bis taxicad had = knocked = Poli: an = Abraham Cohen from hia “fixed” post at Thirty- ninth atreet and Broadway. He ts charged with reckless driving and with According to Policeman Cohen the taxi came south at ® good rate of ed and one of the mud guards ven's $2,000,(00 court bouse and who hod Just started work on the $1,500,000 post-office here, died in his sleep early tovday. He spent Christmas with his children and had apparently never in better heal ohne er npeten ausigned: ‘The Cat Show will be made a part of the Poultry Show next week on Tue day and Wednesday, with tho largest asaortinent of felines which has ever eon gathered under one roof in this country. knocked bim to the atreet. When the chauffeur saw the policeman bowl over he tried to get away, according to Cohen Police whistles were sounded and nightsticks beat a tattoo on the asphalt, | and at Thirty-elghth street and Beventh avenue Thompson was captured. The them, slapped him on the ohest and] “ ‘The defense had prepared » 9,000 word hypothetical question which to te! tead to all the alieniats together at tne) conclusion of Dr, MacDonald's cross. examination. JOY RIDERS WHO KILLED WOMAN (Continued from Firat Page.) —_——_ when they reached Sixty-sizth street and etarted across to the eubway kiosk on the west side of Broadway. kak Col. Harvey, being Lope grey! ried into the kiosk ahead of the othera. He thought they were close bebind, and @ train being ready to pull on ae jumped in, thinking they were follow. ing. He returned to the Lee apartment ignorant of the tragedy that had eo curred only a few feet over hie head. ‘The maroon limousine was coming Gown Broadway at good speed, some ‘That part of the street has been known for some Right when motorcycle po! not supposed to be as busy as at other | wheels of POLE HUNT of physics, particularly the one relatin lto the presence of two bodies in one spot at the same time. He knocked out one policeman with deft kick on the ankle He knocked Bresler down and ran tw the wagon over Bresler' through the tangle of ca’ reet cars, subw: heck, thereby effectually allencing @ One Terrier Kills Over 2,000 in stations, s Two hours iater o letter arrived from , Mina cHrzel asking him to come hom and marry her ‘FEDERAL LEAGUE OFFERS hae TAILS TURNED IN AFTER BIG RAT HUN 0 a) ; on Pests. Reported in Chica e in Chicago FINDLAY, 0, Dec. %—A five weens’ } Be Hat Ex-Mage automobiles, delivery vans and shop-jrat hunt in Union Township endea tas: | 48¢r of Reds Will Sign With pers wherewith Antor place is tortured | night, when the 213 men and boys en Outl , and finally brought up against a Jam! gaged in the contest produced 10,018 utlaws, of wagons at Tenth street, winded but tails, which were counted b se. ’ y ‘ ¢ by the) CHICAGO, Dee, 26.—~ 25, Tad ae te take y the e The $23,000 INJURED TWO MEN AT THE SAME TIME. The discomfiture of Bresler and the first policeman, George 1. (Connor, o¢- curred at practically the same moment in front of No. 36 Lafay were trying to stop the horse bowled Bresier over and the right side wheels tracked directly over the hapless man's throat. At the same moment the policeman received a kick on the ankle that knocked him prostrate) and left him there, writhing in-pain. Brester owes his life to the fact that) he hae @ flexible neok and that he was| wearing three coats, each with the col- lar turned up. A horse attached to an empty dirt cart which Thomas Maher was driving is morning to hie ast Fortieth street | & dinner for the winners. owned by J, M. Hartman, two thousand talls. were taken fro: \rodents killed by the terrier, whic |made a record of thirty shack of corn? Another township hunt is on, and ts believed that when the serie: contests has ended 60,000 rate will hi been killed in Hancock County. —__—_ day. Justice Smith posted his window offering to unite couples for thirty-eight cents. street. The cart tumped egainat an Judges, The losers in the contest gave One of the most remarkable ngurcs | in the slaughter was a small rat terrier More than | rate in one) DROP IN MARRIAGE RATES. CHAMPAIGN, IM., Dec. 9.~—Christmas marriages are cheap in Champaign to- & notice in| “es OSBORNE BACK AT WORK Justice Coffman glimpsed at the notice | and posted another, Offering to oMictate | transfer of Joe Tinker from the Cin- jcinnatt Baseball Club to the Dodgers is In imminent danger of going up in smoke, ‘The famous shortstop, after he had threatened to back out of the deal for several days, met President more of the Federal League in this late this afternoon, and it war unofficially announced that Tin! would sign with the outlaw organtsa- tion. President Gilmore, after an in- terview with the former Cub, said that jhe had met Tinker's demands, If Tinker signs with the Federals, ,it ts understood here that he wil re- {ceive $12,000 4 year to manage one ef the clubs in the new circuit as we as getting a big piece of stock im th organization. n | nt jolty. it ei eee AS AW INVESTIGATOR mes. elevated railroad pillar and Maher was| for nothing. Not to be outione, Jumtice Harry Cohen of No. 8% West Beven-| thrown out. His head was cut and, Armstrong announced that he would; - tleth street and Joesph Jacods of No./he got internal injuries, perform the ceremony free and give a “ + M1 West Sixty-ninth street were etand-| The horse kept on, afd at Seventy-| present to each bride. {James K. McGuire Put on Stand— tng a few fect away and caw the Mg {ninth street struck er pillar 80 See Refuses to Waive | car hit the couple behind the umbrella | nard that he threw himself off nie et! REBELS DYNAMITE TRAIN: ta) m- and knock then many feet. They ais0/ana the cart was overturned. It fell! is munity. saw the women In the Umousine rise | on Mrs, Mary Chandler of No. 200 Fast | KILL 34 FEDERALS. yr up, but the car was gone in @ fiech Seventy-minth street, who had alighted | é ALBANY, Deo, James K. MeGaire ‘and they could not say whether 25: |¢rom a car and could not get out of the, WASHINGTON, = Dec, — %.—Word (ot New Hochele took. the witness stan! thing was eald to the chauffeur or not. | way, reached the State Department to-da: the Carl highws» At any rete he seemed to speed UP} pr, Moorehouse came from the Re- je force of revolutionists fore Commisiones James W end was scon Garkness. ception Hospital and dressed a cut on/the National Ratlway, sixty miles n | ven Coming ®/ xara, Chandler's head. She was other-/of San Luis Poton!, dynamited a Fed-! aduire refused to sign an immunity taxtead wise unhurt. He took Maher to the, er! convoy train yesterday, killing thir-| watver, ao it wan decided to questen of No hospital. ty-four Federals, Trae north of San him only regarding his asphatt deals te each Luis Potosl is suspended. It is report- | with Carligie. De Forrest ed that the situation at Tampico 's| poke <er ee dred and AFT ESS! unchanged, e man NEW 6R With ES {Philip McGaughtin and his mother, STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. / UNDER EXAMINATION for whom inquiry was made by the eared | State Department, are reported to be Ourityba . Muevites man Cringie, who was on Axed post a block away, to carry the man and woman Into the shelter of the subway kiosk, where Dr. De Passe of Poly- clint Hospital made a hasty examina. tion, then hurried them to that ineti- Mre. Lee's two bracelets were found tn the street, but ber pearls were otill around her neck. A gold mesh bag she carried was seen in the street after the accident, but when the polloeman went to look for it it had disappeared. Both Mr. Lee and his wife were un- conscious and she died before she coukl be placed on the operating table He became conecious long enough to tell his name and address and ask If als wife was hurt. Col. Harvey was notified and almost collapsed, He said he saW as soon as the train he, had taken started that his daughter and her husband had missed {t, but thought the beat way to rejoin them was to go to their apartinent in the Fanwood in East Seventeenth street | and wait for them. Mrs. Lee's first husband s Conville Arnold, who died in 190%, There aré two children, Conville Arnold jr. thirteen years old, and Frances, seven. Three years after Arnoli's death his widow married Mr. Lee They were devoted to each other, and the children love their stepfather almost ae much es they did their own fath OTHERS KILLED AT THE SAME ‘CROSBING. After the accident De Forrest went to the West Sixty-elghth street station and toid his story to Lieut. Quinn. He said he tried to get the number of the limousine, but could not make it out) = because of the way the tall light was arrange’, He was not arrested. ‘On Thankagiving Day Joe McKittrick, ‘a Diind newsdealer, was struck at Sixty- siath street and Broadway by an aute- mobile ang died from hie injuries, A 00d Gamaritan who was leading him treet at the time was eo in- dured \s@ died. Philip Clark, a rea- taurant per at Bixty-eixth street and Columbus avenue, saw the accident and ft made him nervous, Two nights later an automobile missed him at the same pot hy only a few inches, and the neat y he wes found dead in bed. The ctor waid the ahock had probably killed him, The way kiosk Is so situated on of the t that cor: policeman suffered from cuts and | Fut ener me ST ose bruises, but remained om duty. a wd < r that many persons step from b hina it ‘directly in front of rapidly mov- Se | ins automobiles, | @=SUPPER wafe at Chihuahua, Later They Are to Be Called to Tes! tify on Campaign Con- tributions, District-Attorney Whitman said to- | day he was examining a number of wit- eases on campaign contributions who fare to appear later in the John Doe proceedings, He wi asked whether he would have before him Charles F. | Dition, formor Secretary of the Stat Highway Commission. “No,” he replied, “because as I un- Gerstand it Mr. Dillon is not in @ con- ition to talk to-day.” Dillon collapsed on Tuesday last od testifying before the Grand Jury. had deen giving teatimony in Tlarene to the $1,609 contribution to the De: ign fund tn 1912 “4 Poughkeepsie con- tractor, contribution followed | @ talk outside ot ee door of State En- gineer Bensel's ice. —| Glorious Good Specials te Welcome in the New Year ratio State camp parr LUNCHEON —DINNER ‘Special for Friday, Dec. 26 CHOCOLATE COVERED EN-#UR- PRISE—A collection of cheeetate a Houce by adding vinegar. DY TO Usk. wel year. fifty AMPH, beloved ‘hues of Meud &. Howarth. Interment Greenwood. mp. 3 Remains at Thomas O'Reilly's funera! parlors, N: v4 Tth av, Notice of hereatte 1a 25, SISTER MARY ¥ 2 REWAROS, LP ei our ene | in SOME CANDY preskstlen, “Wes ‘We precert Cinle as a fitting tribute te the which we trust has been ene nam, nam ‘Moro Castle tng New Year, we desi < ‘ing Now Yer, det'e to these VOU S| and each ef our patrons fer the the twelve tS knew that tigen ue on ney tes 2 elaced it, 125th ew Code Bd Brephiie Ba tH OP