1911. HUPP nt · Vpsrifl fsW Dttpatt 'i Tnr sex PaSIS. Sept I. Leopold Kiameng,. the noted engraver...

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2 THE SUN. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER o. 1911. of the hriettsn Srian.ee f'hurrh in Fnplo-wiio- He OWlttH InrRe fruit farm in I HlifnrniH child" sister, Marlon O,, It 'hn tf t lisrles Hurl lltntir, Jr., nn elertrlest i engineer wno is imnmnn wiw hw itnn- - ersl Klpftrir L'otnpflfljf Hi St'linfiirtnilv Hp mifi hi" if areapendlni the Mifliirrar wiih hi" father ni ihn lattar'a summer home. Weatharnptoti Beach, near Quoftiie Mr. Browar, Mr who i a lawyer at i ii Broadway ami live at Hi 4 Wesi KliMtjr.flral street, eairi last night thai he c oulrln t aOCOUflt for t'ritlils's action "ti any other therrv than that h mind ti.ib teinpnrHrily affected and Hint lie didn't ki'fm vhm ha doinit Mr Browar sn rl thHi Ml lOTI knew nothing nhoni Ins bratharlnlaw'a rrlandahlp with Mies Van Wyi'k that i otild account for Ihe tra aerly M do noi undantand thai ho was In love with the young nnmnn," Mid Mr Krowrr. Wither Willinm A. fhiMe. .lr.. nor hll broth"! A. find have leen ohlieeii 1,0 work, icii rutvinji unpr.ii iiiowanoa from thpir father, Th rrnrri.igp of Mlat fluids and Mr. Brower attraoted attention when i 00" cnr'pd on Decatnbar si. ibut. baoauaa of tip circuit! stances, Mr Brower tu graduated from Princeton in IPnt and had heern pngngpil to Miss Child" for some The law requiring a marriage license In this State went into effect on .tnnuary IMBi and th day previous Mr Hrower asked his fianeee why they couldn't n' niarried tha' day and save all the fuss and publicity attainting tba obtaining of a marnagf license. Miss fluids agreed and thev got thpir near relative in an automobile and wpnt to Hiverhend. I I where they were niarned rn- - the llev William a Wasson at Qraoe Epiaoopal Church. The parents of both parlies approved of i heir plans POSTi Ann HAIMS0 LONE. Picked I ft sod Pnt on the l omenllonsl I. Tracks nl nrrmmla. Passengers on the Royal Mail Steam Packet steamship Tagus. In yesterday from Bermuda brought a story of a minia- ture mail boat set afl iat by tha skipper of a Korwegiatl bark on its way from Montevideo to Maiane. New Brunswck Th" mail a itieie poet card picked up and sent on it way through more regular channels, thus proving the worth Of the skipper' scheme V A Newson one of the TagUS'l pas- senger was the first to sight the tiny mail boat He was mil rowing off the Barmudian coast on the afternoon of August 21 when he saw it. but the minia- ture boat slid over coral reefs which would not admit the passing even of Mr Newson 's rowboat, so he oai it He only noted that the boat was perhaps IWo feet long and had th'ee uils Ihe hindmost of which seemed to be of cardboard A day later the boat was picked up by Reginald Svlvpster in St tieorge's har- bor. I' was on ii- - beam ends in a lied of seaweed. Mr Sylvester found that whOe the foresail and matfisatl were of canvas, the inizzen was n single postcard fastened i o he mast with bitemwire. The postcard bore on one side a plot lire ot agcene in Montevideo and on the other a mes- sage and the address "Miss K A. Rive, Porl Stanley. Falkland Island". S. A." The message was dated July 12, mil. and read. "W rit" to Hark Romanoff, I apt. .Hanser?. Maiane, Saw Brunswick, Can- ada " ard was signet "8. 0, Hansen." On the roughiv hollowed out hull of the emill "hip were pencilled ihe words, "Aug im 2a, inn. Tredestrand, Na-ge- ." On the morning of August 23 a bark wns seen passing to ine aaatward of Bermuda northbound The Maritime Register shows that tne bsrk Romanoff, ( apt Hansen, hailing from Tredeatrand. Nor- way, left Philade'ihia on April -' of this year for Montevideo and mJuly 12 cleared frotn Montevideo for Maliiue. Among the pasaengera on the Tagui was the chief .lostice of Trinidad, H. c. Collan. Justice Collan is nn his way in Halifax H" is accompanied by Major Whitmarsh of th" British tirmy, who i stationel in Trinidad The Tagus brought passengers. . t f Hir.it IX hUFtAST WOOD. Premier Will Hun for P. riia nu-i- In to I'onatltuencleii Ottawa, sept i sn Wilfrid Laurier sprang a surprise on his opponents to- day and made two impassioned speeches of denunciation and defiance full of vigor while mi Mi of the other leaders and speak- ers wese more or less incapacitated by Ihe stress of th" campaign. Sir Wilfrid Spoke eailv in the morning "t Coteau Junction, end there, to tne surprise and consterna- tion of his opponent, announced that accept the nomination for member of Parliament Irom ihe constituency of Boulanges. in which. Iiecause of dissen- sions in the Liberal ranks, no candidate had been agreed upon to run again"! Mr T.ortie a Conservative, who represented the conatitliency in the last Parliament, fio now Sir Wilfrid is a candidate in two consi ii i. e1.- -. in" o 11 1 i living wm Ras- - Which he has represented for many Hi nomination la. of couree. equivalent nr, l tl U .. .Wu.r.it nlii uaed only in deeperate fnscH After the lr'tiori c will have to decide i" it for one "V t it Iwo roiiHtituonriPK mid he will do a ii hn done before in similar oaKp.s lert nil f r Qu',to(,, Kant and have a writ. for a by lection in Boulanges, !. . '.."-.T- Ji ,. ?'x 7" .'.7;. of Sir Wilfrid's choosing. He spoke also at a big meeting it Alex iuidri. Ontario in the Olengarry where liiere is a big right on tagamet the return of .Johnnie Angus facMillan his onponent being Donald MacMsrtin the i rialt millionaire i. RF A r WNO RAVER OKA Lienpnlil .loseph Plameng Mss a lilfleri Heprnsliirer of I's lutings. Vpsrifl fsW Dttpatt 'i Tnr sex PaSIS. Sept I. Leopold Kiameng,. the noted engraver is dead Leopold Joseph Klan.enc was born in Brussels November 'J2. IM1 Me was R pupil of Calamatta and vent to Paris in IN) where he started his artist ' as a worker in water oolors I rotri this I work he drifted Into engraving and ins artistic abiiitv in this line rn on i place on the staff of the Qaielti rfrs Rttiuj s remarkable feature of Plamsng's aocording to critics, ws the raeii-it- y with which Ic interpret sd art :i - h was able to ndnpi himself to every style and many periods He renewed ihe gold medal a' Brussels in isflB and th medal of honor ui lUBf. He was also in i 'ti, r of the Legion of Honor Some of his hetler known plate nr "The Death of ti e Virgin," alter M.trtir, Schoorj; "Pliryne. ' after lieronte"; "Miss Drsbr.m" and the "Bins Roy " after Oainsh orough'. 'The Hundred Plorin Piece." after Rembrandt, and 'The' Tieath of Halnta Uenevisve," aftei Lai-ren- s He was a great illustrator of books liy the etching process lie illustrated the Tierameron " "(ill Bias." lon OuixotS" and mrnv other works of the older i sndiitate's Tipsarlter Rtnien. Ouatav K. Pflngstan, the Progressive lUpublioan candidate f.r th" nomination f Burrogste of Hudson unty, nntiflei po.ioe headquarters ii, Jersey i'ity yeater. dsy that early in me morning iomebody jimmied open a rear windov of his re-i'- 1 estate offics at i;s Congress street and .earned off ni fin'i lypawriting machine He eipected to wrrk his msehine ays time du-ii- ig the pnmarv campaign HUPP FLUY jSrS EQUIPPED $750 ai It p. Bunsbo-jt- Mldlnj Hears. Ilusrti Magneto H (j&)EHLER.f. 1TM BMIAnWAVi 'or Mih st X. V. BROOKLYN, N V.: 130 l.itnitno it Nervsrk, Rest Orsnfe. Mon"Ualr Host, in I BEATTIE ENTRAPPED IN PROSECUTOR'S NET ( nnUnvul ,rom rVs' I'ngr rummaging Seattle wiped his forehead with a handkerchief that was rolled up into a hard ball He reached eagerly for a glass of water Then when the hrown jacket was handed to him he stood up, di rested himaelf of hla blue serie ja ke and pill ui t he ot her Now. hok on the left breast and the left shoulder of that jacket " Wenden- burg commanded "and point out to the jury the blood spots that, were mad" w hen your wife s head fall against you as vou have Indicated." Reattie craned Ins neck to look at the shoulder and sieerp. There were no dark "tains there, although one could be seen in the middle of his back and another near the tail of the coal at the back The croaa-q- u eat toner than wanted to have Heaitie show the jury just how he had disposed his wife's body in the car after he had returned from grappling with the highwayman and had started n I.n r tfm.m BOW BODY LAI "1 found my wife's body lying over the lefi seat with hei head in my seat to the 'right " Heal Me said "l lad her body so that her feel were hanging out over the left running board. The middle of her body was on the left seat ami my left arm was around her " Heie the pris- oner bent himself double in illustrating "Her head was hanging .ner in her lap like thit ." h" "aid. "You're sltra her head was hanging over in her lap' Wendenburg was get ting ready to clinch this point "Yes. sure, and my left arm was around her waist as I drove with mr right." If it should appear In evidence in this rase that there was not one bit of blood on the iron i ot your wire areas would yon still say lhat her head was hanging ' over her lap'" ..if ,o i, ., . .. chairs, Mr Wendenburg, I will show o wnat I mean.' HeatMe answered Tu- - prosecutor said that he would not. Another difficult tack for Beattie to follow was that a'eercd by Wendenburg when he qucetioned the young man mill u'elv upon the relative diatinces between the car and Ihe bearded assailant who' had stepped so suddenly from the side j of the road First he wanted lo know how brightly the lanips were shining on the car that night Seattle thought not brightly enough to revival any object in the road more than H few yards ahead MIX IT ok DIBTANCBa, Heattie said that he had not seen the man with the gun until he was within six feet in front of the car lo the right "From the ditch to the middle of the load which you were travelling is over eleven feel Now floes it happen iiihi you did not see the man step to the mid-al- e of ihe road'" th" prosecutor asked "I doti t know. I guess I was not ex - pecting him." "When did vou first see ihe gun in lh" man s handV" "After the car stopped I stopped be- cause I thought was going to run over him." And so you didn t not ice t he gun until after the car atoppad? Where did h" g"t th" gun Reatlie said that he Ididn'i know It was not until the man raised the gun und pointed it a him that he saw i The witness could not answer satis-- i factorily why it was iluti wilh a good margin ol th" roan sun ten to him he ha i not run pas' the Intruder, Neither could he explain why when ho stopped suddenly over to release his dutch and siart the machine the gun. which he says naa been covering Dim, o i mi i ki nav swung up and to rh- - right o thai hl Will rcreivd thf oharg irt.icnci for him 4rirthpr noinT VIM urnrod hvthn I'mso- - outor rikjht hM' H rtikd lRpatti wha h;n wife liH-- i hHi'i whtn h uw the gun pointed at hun Mad fh So. Mrn batti liad jiisi sat ititl, tiTr Seattle wai asked how much he weighed . i,.,,. t, . I..., ii, , , Jj; W(.,K,HM, an"d wa, s f,.,., ,(, lJiniJSliJllln """S " ,r" " ' cl J l"' ". you nay that after you wreitted the trnn V". away from hitn vou tound youreelf n the ground nnd he wan running away Huol wai tlif ciroumetanoe. Beattie aunwei'd i t t Ltf fnl not begun to run uwny until Hfur you had jumped out of the maenwe, wreeiea tne gun rroni hint nnn wen. lying on the ground " 'i he did not begin to run until then." AS TH HKn.AH HINKOBP 'Ihe PrOSeCUtOf whs merciless m un- - ivering Beattie a relations with thci girl whom he nan nrsi seen when Site was just one month past IS and in short dresses After mnking the witness tell how he had been forced into a settlement by a lawyer hired by lieiilah Binford'a mother after the birth of ihe girl .s child lie wanted in know if Baattle had not written a letter to Mrs Binfonl conoem mg the signing by her of papers of arlop-- ' Moil for th" nnTld after a woman had been found t" take ihe infant in Beattie refused to admii having written such a letter until Wendenburg handed to him for identification a letter in which 'the writer insisted thai Beulah Hinford s mother sign the necessary documents and swore that "this is the last time will ever monkey with ihis business " directly into a narration of his relations Then Beatlie .id'initted he author ship With Heulah Hinford of the letter. Seattle ".'id ha had first seen the girl "In th" last few month" before your in August. i907 when he was riding in an wife died were not your iiighu witi Buulali automobile with friends she had nailed Blnford Mondays, Tnnrsaays and Hat-- 1 fnm tna aldwwalk and aakad to M takan urdayaf the froMcutor demandad. for tide one i ins companions had Heuttie tried to evade by sivina that told him at the tune that the twelve-year-thos- e were the night" ha w.i" not with his old girl h id H bad reputation wife, but Wendenbuigg.it hint 10 Confirm "Mow long did voiii relations with Ihis the fact thai on the Thursday ami th" nirl continue n thai lime?" Monday baforeMre. Beat tin waamurderod "t'nti; eh" went to Washington with lie had pent the night v ith Ida mistress. "Isn't it a fad that V'"U were in love w nn tins woman '" "DecldorUy not." Baallle returned "Hll you admit that she was in love With yOU, don' I you; that she told you constantly thai "he was?" 'She probably lold Brer Other fellow ili vimo tliiig Her siving s meant nothing to lite , llkt'l 4 11 ItlMllllll A OMP'. wendenburg produced a little yellow I . overed diary and Beatlie if h" liad lever read ii It WBi Heulah Hinford a! dian .,f net affair with Beatlie and the last entrv in it waa on the nigin before Mrs Reatlie was muidereii '111 u said that ha raght hve glanced through II cmralaaaly but thai remembered nothing of its contents Wendenburg ,1 ,,,, nnltf tr .it I t.' ,ll.-ir- lilt,) evidence but the court ruled khgl II was lonh In- nutting th" Hinford girl on the stand to Identify ii iim' he could do an Now lsn'1 it a fact, Henry Baattle, that while your wife was mothering your child you were prepadna in furnish I Hal for tliis girl''" Wendenburg asked after he had hajd Real Me identify a letter in which he told Heulah Bltlfnrd alwavs to get a receipt from the furniture man foi th" monthly paytneit wntl Ii Meat tie himself would meet "So one could furnish a flat on 110," Beattie answu-e- spunkilv, mentioning the instalment sum uuoied in the lettei ' Hut Wendenburg was insistent V'lnallv Heat tie sa'd that he was helping, but others were doing ii loo He did not Specify eXoapl to sav "other friends" orkABa or unit "What did vou mean by signing tins letter. 'Oceana of love brimming With kiaaae'? w as that a way a man would addtvs" a woman if he did not love her''" "tlh that meant iiothmp. at all neat tie alkawered with an airy wave 'if his hand "I've said that to other girl" a thousand times I Uuriii all these details of I !"irtt li ill" with Hie Hinford g!il Keatti whs per' feclly al ease, ready to teuce with the attorney who questioned him Kven in discussing other circumstances that are unprintable he diii not lose his air of nonchalance Ihe prisoner s father sat with his head hidden by a palm leaf fan - In one serious issue bruttie laid himself open to remittal i ai least six witnesses w benever during the course of i he exam- ination w'endenberg mentioned the name of Paul 'I, alt." the cousin who has given the incs damaging testimony against Henry, ihe wiln.ss went out of his Way' to volunteer somi-thiti- discreditable to Paul 'I hough hi began by saving that he had never had anything to d when h" came , beg the Beattie store, Heat 1" admitted later thai threetimeah had delivered meaaagea u. Heulah Hit ford through Paul and once two lavs after the murder had asked Paul to And out if Heulah hud been a treated 11" annulled ua.ou; iimrii utm USUI i'aul ride wuh him on ihe Baturday n gin preceding the murder, which, ac- cording to Paul s testimony, was the night he delivered the gun to Henry, but he I I I I . ...IImI I, ... Iieilieil o.iiiv lie T lH IWIW IW im-.-- i in-o- i by appointment on the Thursday night preceding, upon which occaelon, Paul lias testified. Henry him to buy the gun Though Woo lenl urg mentii nl tl enanies of six people who would come to siipfort Paul " testimony in this respect, Heattie mii maintained that he bad not seen ins cousin on that night BBATTtB PRAtvs A mown The definite report thai Beattie would lake the stand y brought a great jam to Ihe court house By farm wngons. automobiles and on foot fu:ly son came Uj th" httl" green in the midst of the Wilderness and before s o, clock the tiny court rooni was Jammed from wall 'o wall People built scaffolds of benches out- - alde ot every window, climbed Mfore more vantage points Of murder never have se" and sinned one Paul to get banked about Beattie lie admit that Wataon arrived he had he taken the cousin his the Sherifl cut into with him Saturday room lor mm. r.vcn wnen n" nan sea 'en himself daring spectators crammed ti the bench and squeezed themselves u at hi" feet The witness chair was I little blank space solid wall of hn inanity. Reatlie s two lawyers locked Iho.nisolx-o- s in Ins narrow with him and coached him lor an hour before court opened. A few mlnUtea before .bulge W ale ip rapped th" prisoner followed hia counsel of th" jail Heattie irai vary pale The jailer had stood by him while he shaved He wore a blue serge carefully creased and a white necKlie ptnneci a pearl 71,6 lwyr,J tried r" Pr for " fV !P1P utei nmrt tunf at tne "rnirifcr pimrt They wanted to rraH Katplhorg, th butcher, to tn1 stand for n qMrMton He wan not to be found 1 hen Hmrv ( lav He.iiiie, Sr t'.o'ri the stand t,i sav that on the Thursday night following the murder he had not receiyad an intimation of his son's imp.n btig arrest a Richmond reporter told hirn it by telephoti Pill SON KR CALLED i" KTAN'D. ' lav Beattie, .lr , Hmlth then announced, and the pushed his wav to Htiitid lie took a nf that Sheriff fiill i, Mere, him befor e the first Queatlon was ;i lud a liandkerchief crushed into ball, he continually dabbled at his m.si l'he muscles of his cheeks t witched i regularly as a pulse He constantly nervous strain was written large over his face, Preliminary questions drew the spouse that he was I'll, a clerk in his father's store in South Richmond. H.ivh vnii ever hud n t iniit I o a..nni... ion or relations with your cousin Beattie' Smith, driving ,,n-c- i Iv ,. refutation of the most Himulns evidence that has been introduced positively none. the prisoner an- swered "'ihe mil tunes 1 have ever hid anv dealings with him hive heen he cam" to th" store to get money " to beg money "You never told him a secret neve, trusted htm with anv close mtion of vonr affairs' "I should say not Fven whn he was in th" store li was cloaely ' Ihe young man a eyes when he said this He took another f water Smith then launched his wot s ALFRED BENJAMIN & CosTailor-mad- e clothes Visitors to the City invited to inspect our early showing Fall Clothes and Haberdashery. More style than you'll he likely to elsewhere; prices as low as anywhere for similar qualities. her iMott.ei. Iteattie anawerea What wis her action toward you in reference to the child thai wa bom?'' a MftRI m t r a ni MONBT. "Why, "he sniil I was lh" fa'her of it." Ren' ii" "iok- - ti jauntily. 'She thought "he could get inor" money from Ilia than anybody els- - 1 refused to Py up and she got a lawyer after me Then I raid Atlei inai was in" iiukiimii li,,'k of the wlifiio town lime mote Reatlie alluded to the blaek- - ne nart unoergonv m hw was -o soft he just forked II UP when demanda were made upon him Then he exhibited the flrat Indlcatlona ftlMM voue uesii" w nvip ninjpvii j .,,,, , st.iteuients "She testified al the I'oro-- i nerp inqum ma, "" ....... he aald His counsel frowned and wit another queatlon qulokiy "rM ""Mm r.j i Smith then had the witness say ttvit It had ben eighteen months before his1 MBBaaiBaBaBaHaHHBaH marriage to liOtliae that he had made his settlement and broken rela-- ' lions Ihe Hinford girl Then he t.it2ftli.H lli'it tin ltu.1 i""li III liivn Wlln trees lo Whence I I would could the witness chair such a as it." themselves the doOrs snapped. Rip did When Judge had despised in have a wav the conn machine on the nigh; in r cell doors suit, until "Henry prisoner th" drink With haul wallowed, Paul asked .1 when infoi watched drink are of find a k linos' mailing n father." Owen with oommis-the- v narrowed hi" wife a year or fourteen months before he married her The two women s names wore mentioned almost in the same breath What wet" th" relation, between yourself and our wife up to the time of her death'' "She never si oke a ci oss word to me lot to her." Beattie answered "W'e 'were both of an affectionate nature, defy anybody lo sav We were not com- - pietplv happy 'Old ye ir wife know of the relations that had previously egiated between you ami Beulan Bitiford?" 'She certainly did I made a clean brea' of it about the child and all " "Did she know of your trip to Norfolk last April, wlieie vou met Heulah Hin- ford?" BttB HIP NOT KNOW A 1.1. Beattie was silent for an inslani I hen replied in a low voice: "She knew I was going to Nortolk but "hi ma not know I met Hont-i- there H. imckiy volun-- 1 teered that he had not gi ne to Norfolk vsiih ih" exfiresa purpose of seeing the i Incidental, girl His meeting had been purely Did your mend Riiiv Batnpeon tell the whole truth about thai trip?" Bmith iii"iied. leterring lo lie neta.ls ot two lavs in ihe red light district lhat had been testified to on Saturday Beattie said lhat Sampson's lestimonv had been completely comprehensive. He then said that when he left the girl in Norfojlkhe expressly forbade her to make any fur her efforts to see him The witness said that short h- - after that V.bI.11 lals D....I..1 I , I ..... .... ,., ,,, p, ',, . ,,nrl ...... ,,,., .. wisned her to give up her il life and her married sister would not give li.M lodging I he girl had pleaded with him to do this Heattie added that he had done the same for another gin onoe Juai because he wjiu'ed to sec her out of the mire Bmith had him lead the letter ha had written to the girl telling her he woukl pay for furniture and clothing with she words 'oceans of love, brimming with kisses " "ith thai whs t net taffv. or gush, such as you would write to any girl." Baattle answered when his counsel asked him to explain the "exiravagart expressions Did you have nnv real love for this girl?" Smith then nsk"d How could I ovea g.ri I did not re- - speot ' Heattie spswered in a self-righ- t- pous tone. Rut he confessed that he hsd been in the company of ihe girl after his baby was horn. ntMFs rsn. s storv The lawyer then led Beattie lo a com- - .rehepsixe denial of every detail given bv his cousin P.iul of the alleged purchase of the shotgun at Henry's itistam-- e and -- f the ride together to she pawnshop to get in" gun on me ounaay nigni neioro the murder "If 1 ht"i vrar.fed a gun for th" purpose m uiimviuii where did vou g afl vou left Paul at his horn" that night' Smith asked "I went to mm Beulah the witneaa answered Wt.rp Iron ruliliff Willi Wcnlrth : M m of. XI l A. -- v.. k.f. ,i !.., u tic admit ted that he was H" a'so saiiil1 .n nnawer to Smith that h had taken hie I wile nut in ii, e aulORIODlie tnree times I "' "" ' " "1 KTS ErSSlL1! . , . in iiikiiik ills in, in iiun.i ii, iii iiiiii the murder, nmith referred to the testi-mon- jf given by Mrs. Robert ' Owen, mother of Mrs. flenttie. as lo having fmind her daughter in tears on the day she was murdered, Baattle denied tnat there had been anything in his private life "the' rnv wife knew which COUld hfive oaused her to weep " DBTA1U "K ihk MDHOtn lie told of how he and his w ife had ' I driven the en- out to Midlothian turn- - pike ' Three cars passed til"." lie said I They were nil going very fasi " This j statement accounted tor the two oara brought int. i evidence by the prosecution and Ihe oar driven by Kaatcllierg, the defence's witness Beattie approached 111" detail of ihe muiui'i witnoui anompi ,11 urumain elTet-t- . I! Id of how the beirded higli- ' waymatl had shot his wife while he was bending over to release ti lutoh his cir He did not add anything lo the tale already lold by witnesses wini had quoted him on the stand. H did dispute ihe deteolivos who had Quoted hun in one minor matter in reference in his no- - git ion relative to thai of the highwayman i .lust oni-- e Ihe witness allowed himself I to become dramatic al this point. That! w ,l n n. Ill s. i; ll ll- will- in after the shooting, he bent almost double With his head near bin knees "She lay Ihis way." he explained t this Junotlire again he attempted lo make hia taatimony argumentative, "Any body might see." he cried out. "how if, I got. a cut on my tioee I might havewiiwsd some of my own blood on the gun when wrenched it away from the highway' I ' man I he ( ourt hart to warn him to do noth- - ing more than answer the ouestions pot to him. tlfTI CIPATF.B I'Hosv-- i TTfiR As the examination proceeded the voung man gre.v nore and more fidge His eyes shifted nervously Iron) face to face of the Jurymen before him He could not see his counsel without turning his head painfully, but more and more often he sought lo catch Smith's eye before answering. i he prisoner's counsel hurried through to Ihe end from this hue of nuesfioning Anticipating the atia'k of the Common- wealth's prosecutor JSnnth hid his client say that on ihe night following ihe mur- der, when his cousin Paul was ai the Owen home, he (Beattiel had instructed Paul to carry a message to tha Hinford sir I'aul told me Beuhh was sorry for me,' Heattie said, "and 1 told him to tell her tun in bother me, nt leave nn1 alone Did you tell I'aul lo warn Beulah ihat if she told what she. knew you would kill her if d tool, inn years''' Smith Waaquot-- I mg Paul s evidence "I surety did not " Beattie also was led to sav lhat on the second nigh I after lb" murder, after he had received an Intimation thai hiearreel ws Imminent, he had telephoned to his lonijsln Taul to learn if th" police had arrested her as a witness I nn bi s Htrai Railed ' Angelo Pg tei, 27 yenrs old, of 44 Long atreot. Jersey City, was gouged in the left side by a bullet early sateraay he was ' crossing a lot at Armstrong and et Hide avenues, that city. Ho said lie didn't ses tha person who pulled the trigger and couldn't imagine any reason why he should be a target for anybodv. Datei went home after a City Hospital ' sueeeon fixed him us. Generoua alzoe from lOc up. UNITED CIGAR STORES m m mmtmrnm flin DAOfntrO AIIT 1U rAfllI) liftlt Ml II I IVt III R runun nrno JVMPEKS, INSVLTKHSl An PARK TOVttHS, Mailt rrests hi one Island, l ong Island CK and In The llrnn Work, house Sentences for iecrsl In one Island sitone Hits a Woman. Several members of the strong arm j , .. . .. squaa wno nai.nen iwi rowa.es t ins Culver depot in Coney Island on Sunday evening, were stationed there again last i.ori.i i,, ., , real r.,..n un,i t.nvs hii Inmiwl h ugn me par window- - The detec- - I'vee ware at the elation a few minutes after 8 o clock, and aavan prieonera wara taken from the first express that came in from Manhattan number of others ! grabbed later in the evening, andall will be arraigned in the ( unev island court this morning Magistrate Dooley yesterday sentenced the prisoner, who were brought before him from ihe Bunday roundup. About fifty of them got sentences lo the work- - house ranging from Ihree to five daws and others were fined, none of ihern more ' than Several of the prisoners ware I mere youngsters and these the Magistrate paroled in Ihe custody of their parents. "Il ls possible to be lenient with persons who come from out of the city," said Mag- istrate Dooley. "Thev cannot be ex- - pected lo know the conditions here and perhaps some of them jump through Ihe car windows m ignorance of its being a violation of ihe law. But with residents of Ihe city who have read in the papers of the crusade being made Hgainst rowdy ism it is impossible to be lenient." It was fl o'clock last night before the prisoners sentenced to the workhouse were tak"ii away Most of them hadn't anything to eat since their arrest in some than twenty-fou- r hours ( nre- - ViOUgly. Many of the prisoners arrested within the last few days for jumping through cHr windows are foreigners and some of them cannot rend Knglish When Magistrate Voorheee waa aitting in tha Coney bland r,"lrt wtml ears ago and a crusade was started against window jumpers he nan tne n it i put up placards printed in other languages besides English warn- ing the would-b- window jumpers not to jump Six car rowdies were arrested on the Westchester avenue line in The Bronx last night by members of the strong arm T'nd The lirsl group, of four, gol on a laouthbound "nr at Purdy street Thev stood on the back platform refused to pay their fares and pulled t h" trolley off the wire The car made slow progress and otiductor .lames Hn-- sighed With relief when Detectives MoOnwan and Breihof hnarriari thenar At.Rimnsnn treei 'l h- - bovs continued their intics until other policemen me' the car at IWtth (street Then thev were arrested and taken to Ihe Morrisama police station. The prisoners said they wore Valentine Banner, 'l vears old, of 317 Last moth streei Freder. h ahrenberger. IS years old. of MS h ast l&Mh street .lames Hogan. in years old. of nr, Cast n.ith st reel and Raymond l ane'!. IS years old. of 1 Qou vorneuer plaoe, The Bronx, Thev were charged with disorderly conduct and taken In night court Meanwntie two hoodlums had boarded a Westchester avenue rar oominsi Inward town l'hey refused to pay their farea and annoyed ihe passengers with vile language At ISOth street Detectives la. is-- and Bluglier got ,,n and tried I arnsst the boys Una they caught. Tht oilier got away When the pulicemei wim meir prisoner reached the street 11 crowd had collected and the hov shouted to i hose present that h" wanted lo be rescued Several half grown boys came nearer ami heading these the detectives saw lh" fellow who had escaped them be fore lie was ouu klv nabbed and added lus pleas lor rescue. Some in Ihe crowd showed a disposition lo My a rescue and the pohoemPti had a busv leu minutes sceoinff the crowd back w ith their nightsticks Then a Third avenue pay as vou enter car came along and the prisoners were put aboard it for Ihe Morrisama police station There they '"ohl as Kllaworth fiold li years old. of 417 Kast I42d at reel and fieorge O'Brien, 1 vears old. of 417 Kast ISfth street. I'hey were also taken lo night Court. The summer nark season in Long Islanfl ' "' w"" ri""''l "a olose last nigin ; whonelaln clothaa men of tha atrong arm i aau.d rom the Fourth street siation bagged twenty-fou- r students, clerks and laborers in general who were returning from the festivities of the day and who, it is charged, were making ihemselves objectionable on trolley cars. Policeman Josenh Craig headed ft small squad of plain clothes men who nabbed fourteen youths, all around 1" or I T. who fence r T'jffSf tHF?,IVS: Four V.l said ,hw wre ,,,, ano -- nve their names as Beuben Rurg of ?; East Seventeenth street. Anthonv I'lnvton of lt;2 Third a enue. Kxiward Rvan of It k Kast Thir- - "T"ln s, ree, ami ..osrpt, ncs,,r. l'he of the rusi uv .111111 nit-- i nil rest fourteen were clerks, accorduig to their statements All were charged disorderly conduct Policeman John l O'Connor and three others induced seven beiinngers who were inclined to sit in the laps of women on a cat al the Long Island City pla.a of ihe yueensboro Bridge lo stop their fun and go to the station house Ml of the prisoners said thev were laborers Three arrests were made on a Jackson avenue car by Policemen .lohn I Barry and C'hriatian Mohen. The prisoners had been spending the day at a dollar I park near Corona stone was thrown into r. Bmith street tar as it was crossing the Ninth street bridge over Ihe Oowanus Canal m Brook Ivn vest errSi-- .'.4:!eTWOMr,T,Vi ru-- Wrl Frank Tobey of i T 4 Twelfth street, Brook- lyn, in the head, inflicting a bad Pcalp wound After beine attended by lr James Downey of Ml Clinton street aha wasable to go home The stone throwers got away before thev were seen by he car loseph Monloxerdi of 7S Kuig street wa." sent to the workhouse foi Hve days yesterdav by Magi-tra'- e O'Connor in the Tombs court for rowdyism on the Sta'.en Island ferryboat Queen- - Mon-lover- waa a late homecomer on Sundav night There were a number of women aboard and the defendant mad" himself objectionable to one of them. He was throwing aampetoola about the deck when Detective (Oakley of the Central Office, who was detailed to ihe boat to suppress rowdyism, arrested him Ml S MBS llOHHI lt HER. Puller MsUe rrel Mler lilrl Tells of ttsek In Tenement. Annie Olivia of 21." Third street ran into the Union Market police station yosierdav and told the lieutenant on the desk a story of having been robbed by five men in a tenement at 321 Third street She said the men Knocked her down and took $:tss and two gold watches from her She said that she went to the tenement to arrange for the sale of some furniture. While she was looking through the halls for the furniture dealer the Ave men. she savs rushed out. ciraggen tier into nn eniptv room and ripped out the pocket in her sltiti into which the money and the watches had been sewn Detectives Liehers. Beering and Pflaster went out and piesently returned with William Kosterdien of fit; Fifth street and Max Shalar and Adam lui iuan of ?:t Third street, whom thev locked up on suspicion The detectives say that Miss Olivia identified the men as ihree of those who attacked her All of the pris- oners denied, however that thev had any- thing to do with the affair, and thev hud no money or jewelry on them when they were searched at 34th St. Initial Displays of Saks Fall Clothes for Men 9 This is a regulation announcement in that it is seasonable. But, bless you, there is nothing regulation in this Autumn as- semblage of Saks-mad- e clothes, except insofar that Saks clothes habitually strike the predominant note in every season's styles. That, however, is another story. J Just now we want to advise you that our Fall displays of men's suits, overcoats, tuxedo and full dress garments, are rapidly approaching completion. Every day wit- nesses new accessions; and surveying the offerings calmly and critically, we cannot do otherwise than commend them to you as a highly creditable performance. 3 New fabrics new patterns new colo- ringsnew models new touches in style-treatme- nt workmanship that has no peer and few equals and ALWAYS, prices that show the advantage to you of buying clothes direct from the makers. Broadway 'nof nt: rs ran IA rourrrr. line. Out s Ktslemenl Telling Wh the Wisconsin Candidate. Wasiii.no ion, Hepl 4. Senator .tens. than Roip-ti- of Oregon, founder of th. National Republican Progressive Uaggus gave out a statement y indorsin Senator I, a r'olletie lor President in Ifl St tiaior Bourne aald Why ha e I fur month! been so lAstateni for Senator I. a Kollette for President ' ranse he has innny nf ihe qiiallflcatl which i believe me absolutely naeaaaarj a man to fiop.esn in order to proper'- the high nfTlce of the nation's chief p i..rvnn' He helievai in nopul ir. Ml il- gated, t'oiernment. irnlizes that genets welfare, not netflsh inierest. must li t iih Me power of all successful and permS' nent gnvarnmani He is honest, coiirsgs oijs. able, dynamic, with twenty-fiv- e ySf experience m legislative snd egeCtll pnhhc l.fe. Though radical In m.inne- - ho is extremely conservative in thought and action, with high ideals, hrosd idem niif itttiiu COBVlCtlOBS liefieral welfare h's goal end selfish interest his ahommniion. I lirga the big business interests of tljs OOlintry to sludv Ihe laws of Wisronsi-- t enacted since he was first Cm-erro- of thv state; hold him. as the dynamic personnln-o- f that electorate) responsible for nil the- - law. if Investigation shows them to tv protective of personal liberty and property rights, than support him for President I' (destructive of pergonal lihargy or propert' rights bitterly oppose his cendldacv Such an Investigation Will show Wisconsin Intvs ui he const motive, not destructive, pro gressive, not reactionary: intelligent! v non- - servatlve, not blindly radical senator La is a statesman, not a politician; a deep thinker, not, a im gneue His i andidaev presents ao oppor tunity 10 nominate and elect a man Preei dent on Ills record and not on another man s indorsement or promises to follow in an other's footsteps. He can and In will be nominated, and if norm- tiateu will unu'isstionsbly be elected. BSWWJ Rules and mis too many, area nui- sance. You need onlyToneJof each to handle Dorian Remountable Rims- - The one rule: Loosen f4 nuts. j The one tool: TA trace, wrench. " And you canTrel?lcce a punctured tire in: a : minute.'" ' Fod tirftSSMisI troubles. Ensip jour csr with Uonini We raado ii for you In three deys. JMHSai sre in. Je in sll tizee. and say Cliscber. g.D.et No Rim Cut" Tire will tt them. Whea too hsr new car insist hard eaoaffc os Dniient end reu'll set fhem. no n.allcr whsl tha rriular rim equipment may he. Cocse and arc tha Dorian dsmonetrstsd. mi REMOUNTABLE R I MS 18M Broadway (assrSMSi.) New York Telephone : Cortland! 1183 NORTH BEACH Boats East 99th & 184th St. brldfe rroii" s i,0 inrr-- t C4RHinL"sFREi:: MARRIED. FRANKLIN .IRNNINOg On September !. si Norm BsnnlagtaBi Vt Rllsabsthi asujr.ier t Mr ami Mrs, prsdsrto b. Jenala ft, te nsorifr s Prsnkttn DIED. RRB8LIN.- - Carrie Brsslla. atedllysars, Punersi st "Tws Ki-- ssai i srnrs Ml srd MS West 0.VI st. Thivk I' I'AMSaBM, RrttOWO) nt rtKH WIliT On srti-mh- i It, 1911, Bsrbsrs Polls, h'levrit wilt "f Relsr HurVbsrdt t"'jnrral from lisr Isle resldsncr. 2i Norn Hlfh t Me nu Vsrnon, N. v . TussdA' Ssptsmher StlAA M .InSi. Mary s rhirfc whrts n ri iMirm mss llt he cttsbrSted BUKRII t 'tn srpirmhcr t. mil. at Lllefctsldi onn lis: r UrsrtOD B'irrlll. sldesl son of ihr late John R, ami LouIm m. Burrlll. Fuasral prtvats, f.vn - Ttas f unrraassrvlees far the latt ''isren ar-- - will a' rhi 1st ('hMrrh. Mr.va.nr Ii VS., OS V rdlirsria gSPISBlbSr S, 1UI1 a o rlor', A M Inlrrmrnl In vj Hill CSfllS, trr Aitsandrla, umbki.. -- on Saturday, srririnher km 1. fnrse 1. , brlovsu husband ofrillit gsmb.l, in tils Viln yrsi Funrrsl from hl In te resldsscs, hi RutKdfK in 'oi. 11. Tusidar, "I 8 A M KiMi -- suddtaly, on ttendty. Bspismaei 1. 11 S husband nf I'iliui VVhlltaksr MiC Fuasrsl sen .res at hlslats rssldsnrs, lh tl'sllt mnir. :JR liroadna' (HI WednetdS) MP I'mbrr S. lit 311 p RBVI On lalurdtl .Sspirmhsr : al hr; '." lie. US rl .list si Ilos- - H if lies Kev brlovs rlfs of Joseph W Revl snd sis-r- nt uie vsry Rsv, Joftn .1 Huihss, I'aullti Soieron renulrm nt PaullSI KathSti Cburehi " " ti and Columbus av . en Tussds), sspistrs.-- . at lOo'rlors. SIMPSON On Srplember 111 I Besie dauahtsr of the lata Oeorf W sad Cut - 11 RiaipioB, Pineral from hsr la'e residenre, l1 S oifnid si Brooklin, Of uhlrh nottir will later YRAW t Kntlsaaadi s 1., an Rundaf lr Ismber B Of pasumSBtS, l.rlltla simllh ra' nt Piiiibui lattraisBt ai ladovrri Mas. PisaM 001' fl.inirs I MM KI tkl llN. FUAk K, t'4M fit .1.1 . 1141.941 W. 7Sd Cbaptii AnibulsBfs asr'cs Tel. 1114 chrTttt . s -- at Ttie Mall Ntrrsl edition of Jar I'vi.viso Ar roBISlBS all IhS ItBSBrial news find the SIOCs 0 bond qnolatloQI to tne clots of the mai-Ue- ' Tb clnslnr iiii'iatli'n IttitUfllBf the bid and aksj prlr.'s i. lih a.ldHlonal neat nisttft. are sea talne nisn In tr-- nlshi edition nl Tn "tss-iT- s !,IN. .Ui

Transcript of 1911. HUPP nt · Vpsrifl fsW Dttpatt 'i Tnr sex PaSIS. Sept I. Leopold Kiameng,. the noted engraver...

Page 1: 1911. HUPP nt · Vpsrifl fsW Dttpatt 'i Tnr sex PaSIS. Sept I. Leopold Kiameng,. the noted engraver is dead Leopold Joseph Klan.enc was born in Brussels November 'J2. IM1 Me was R

2 THE SUN. TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER o. 1911.

of the hriettsn Srian.ee f'hurrh in Fnplo-wiio-

He OWlttH InrRe fruit farm inI HlifnrniH

child" sister, Marlon O,, It 'hn tft lisrles Hurl lltntir, Jr., nn elertrlest i

engineer wno is imnmnn wiw hw itnn- -

ersl Klpftrir L'otnpflfljf Hi St'linfiirtnilvHp mifi hi" if areapendlni the Mifliirrarwiih hi" father ni ihn lattar'a summerhome. Weatharnptoti Beach, near Quoftiie

Mr. Browar, Mr who i a lawyer ati ii Broadway ami live at Hi 4 WesiKliMtjr.flral street, eairi last night thai hec oulrln t aOCOUflt for t'ritlils's action "tiany other therrv than that h mind ti.ibteinpnrHrily affected and Hint lie didn'tki'fm vhm ha doinit Mr Browarsn rl thHi Ml lOTI knew nothing nhoni Insbratharlnlaw'a rrlandahlp with MiesVan Wyi'k that i otild account for Ihetra aerly

M do noi undantand thai ho was In

love with the young nnmnn," Mid MrKrowrr.

Wither Willinm A. fhiMe. .lr.. nor hllbroth"! A. find have leen ohlieeii 1,0

work, icii rutvinji unpr.ii iiiowanoafrom thpir father,

Th rrnrri.igp of Mlat fluids and Mr.Brower attraoted attention when i 00"cnr'pd on Decatnbar si. ibut. baoauaa oftip circuit! stances, Mr Brower tugraduated from Princeton in IPnt andhad heern pngngpil to Miss Child" forsome

The law requiring a marriage licenseIn this State went into effect on .tnnuaryIMBi and th day previous Mr Hrowerasked his fianeee why they couldn't n'niarried tha' day and save all the fussand publicity attainting tba obtainingof a marnagf license. Miss fluids agreedand thev got thpir near relative in anautomobile and wpnt to Hiverhend. I I

where they were niarned rn- - the llevWilliam a Wasson at Qraoe EpiaoopalChurch. The parents of both parliesapproved of i heir plans

POSTi Ann HAIMS0 LONE.

Picked I ft sod Pnt on the l omenllonslI.

Tracks nl nrrmmla.Passengers on the Royal Mail Steam

Packet steamship Tagus. In yesterdayfrom Bermuda brought a story of a minia-ture mail boat set afl iat by tha skipperof a Korwegiatl bark on its way fromMontevideo to Maiane. New BrunswckTh" mail a itieie poetcard pickedup and sent on it way through moreregular channels, thus proving the worthOf the skipper' scheme

V A Newson one of the TagUS'l pas-senger was the first to sight the tinymail boat He was mil rowing off theBarmudian coast on the afternoon ofAugust 21 when he saw it. but the minia-ture boat slid over coral reefs whichwould not admit the passing even of MrNewson 's rowboat, so he oai it He onlynoted that the boat was perhaps IWo feetlong and had th'ee uils Ihe hindmost ofwhich seemed to be of cardboard

A day later the boat was picked up byReginald Svlvpster in St tieorge's har-bor. I' was on ii- - beam ends in a liedof seaweed. Mr Sylvester found thatwhOe the foresail and matfisatl were ofcanvas, the inizzen was n single postcardfastened i o he mast with bitemwire. Thepostcard bore on one side a plot lire ot agcenein Montevideo and on the other a mes-sage and the address "Miss K A. Rive,Porl Stanley. Falkland Island". S. A."The message was dated July 12, mil. andread. "W rit" to Hark Romanoff, I apt.

.Hanser?. Maiane, Saw Brunswick, Can-ada " ard was signet "8. 0, Hansen."On the roughiv hollowed out hull of theemill "hip were pencilled ihe words,"Aug im 2a, inn. Tredestrand, Na-ge- ."

On the morning of August 23 a bark wnsseen passing to ine aaatward of Bermudanorthbound The Maritime Registershows that tne bsrk Romanoff, ( aptHansen, hailing from Tredeatrand. Nor-way, left Philade'ihia on April -' of thisyear for Montevideo and mJuly 12 clearedfrotn Montevideo for Maliiue.

Among the pasaengera on the Taguiwas the chief .lostice of Trinidad, H. c.Collan. Justice Collan is nn his way inHalifax H" is accompanied by MajorWhitmarsh of th" British tirmy, who i

stationel in TrinidadThe Tagus brought passengers.

. t f Hir.it IX hUFtAST WOOD.

Premier Will Hun for P. riia nu-i- In

to I'onatltuencleiiOttawa, sept i sn Wilfrid Laurier

sprang a surprise on his opponents to-

day and made two impassioned speechesof denunciation and defiance full of vigorwhile mi Mi of the other leaders and speak-ers wese more or less incapacitated by Ihestress of th" campaign. Sir Wilfrid Spokeeailv in the morning "t Coteau Junction,end there, to tne surprise and consterna-tion of his opponent, announced that

accept the nomination for memberof Parliament Irom ihe constituency ofBoulanges. in which. Iiecause of dissen-sions in the Liberal ranks, no candidatehad been agreed upon to run again"! MrT.ortie a Conservative, who representedthe conatitliency in the last Parliament,fio now Sir Wilfrid is a candidate in twoconsi ii i. e1.--. in" o 1 1 1 i living wmRas- - Which he has represented for many

Hi nomination la. of couree. equivalentnr, l tl U .. .Wu.r.it nlii

uaed only in deeperate fnscH After thelr'tiori c will have to decide i" it for

one "V t it Iwo roiiHtituonriPK mid he willdo a ii hn done before in similar oaKp.s

lert nil f r Qu',to(,, Kant and have awrit. for a by lection in Boulanges,

!. . '.."-.T-Ji ,. ?'x 7" .'.7;.

of Sir Wilfrid's choosing.He spoke also at a big meeting it Alex

iuidri. Ontario in the Olengarrywhere liiere is a big right on

tagamet the return of .Johnnie AngusfacMillan his onponent being Donald

MacMsrtin the i rialt millionaire

i. RF A r WNO RAVER OKA

Lienpnlil .loseph Plameng Mss a lilfleriHeprnsliirer of I's lutings.

Vpsrifl fsW Dttpatt 'i Tnr sexPaSIS. Sept I. Leopold Kiameng,. the

noted engraver is dead

Leopold Joseph Klan.enc was born inBrussels November 'J2. IM1 Me was R

pupil of Calamatta and vent to Paris inIN) where he started his artist '

as a worker in water oolors I rotri this I

work he drifted Into engraving and insartistic abiiitv in this line rn on i placeon the staff of the Qaielti rfrs Rttiuj

s remarkable feature of Plamsng'saocording to critics, ws the raeii-it- y

with which Ic interpret sd art :i - hwas able to ndnpi himself to every styleand many periods He renewed ihe goldmedal a' Brussels in isflB and th medalof honor ui lUBf. He was also in i 'ti, rof the Legion of Honor

Some of his hetler known plate nr"The Death of ti e Virgin," alter M.trtir,Schoorj; "Pliryne. ' after lieronte"; "MissDrsbr.m" and the "Bins Roy " afterOainshorough'. 'The Hundred PlorinPiece." after Rembrandt, and 'The'Tieath of Halnta Uenevisve," aftei Lai-ren- s

He was a great illustrator of books liythe etching process lie illustrated theTierameron " "(ill Bias." lon OuixotS"and mrnv other works of the older

i sndiitate's Tipsarlter Rtnien.Ouatav K. Pflngstan, the Progressive

lUpublioan candidate f.r th" nominationf Burrogste of Hudson unty, nntifleipo.ioe headquarters ii, Jersey i'ity yeater.dsy that early in me morning iomebodyjimmied open a rear windov of his re-i'-

1 estate offics at i;s Congress street and.earned off ni fin'i lypawriting machineHe eipected to wrrk his msehine aystime du-ii- ig the pnmarv campaign

HUPPFLUY jSrSEQUIPPED $750

ai It p. Bunsbo-jt-Mldlnj Hears. Ilusrti Magneto

H (j&)EHLER.f.

1TM BMIAnWAVi 'or Mih st X. V.BROOKLYN, N V.: 130 l.itnitno itNervsrk, Rest Orsnfe. Mon"Ualr Host, in

I

BEATTIE ENTRAPPED

IN PROSECUTOR'S NET

( nnUnvul ,rom rVs' I'ngr

rummaging Seattle wiped his foreheadwith a handkerchief that was rolled upinto a hard ball He reached eagerly fora glass of water Then when the hrownjacket was handed to him he stood up,dirested himaelf of hla blue serie ja keand pill ui t he ot her

Now. hok on the left breast and theleft shoulder of that jacket " Wenden-burg commanded "and point out to thejury the blood spots that, were mad"w hen your wife s head fall against youas vou have Indicated."

Reattie craned Ins neck to look at theshoulder and sieerp. There were no dark"tains there, although one could be seenin the middle of his back and anothernear the tail of the coal at the back

The croaa-q- u eat toner than wanted tohave Heaitie show the jury just how hehad disposed his wife's body in the carafter he had returned from grapplingwith the highwayman and had started

n I.n r

tfm.m BOW BODY LAI"1 found my wife's body lying over the

lefi seat with hei head in my seat to the'right " Heal Me said "l lad her body

so that her feel were hanging out overthe left running board. The middleof her body was on the left seat ami myleft arm was around her " Heie the pris-oner bent himself double in illustrating"Her head was hanging .ner in her laplike thit ." h" "aid.

"You're sltra her head was hangingover in her lap' Wendenburg was getting ready to clinch this point

"Yes. sure, and my left arm was aroundher waist as I drove with mr right."

If it should appear In evidence in thisrase that there was not one bit of bloodon the iron i ot your wire areas wouldyon still say lhat her head was hanging

'over her lap'"..if ,o i, ., . ..

chairs, Mr Wendenburg, I will show ownat I mean.' HeatMe answered Tu- -prosecutor said that he would not.

Another difficult tack for Beattie tofollow was that a'eercd by Wendenburgwhen he qucetioned the young man millu'elv upon the relative diatinces betweenthe car and Ihe bearded assailant who'had stepped so suddenly from the side j

of the road First he wanted lo knowhow brightly the lanips were shining onthe car that night Seattle thought notbrightly enough to revival any object inthe road more than H few yards ahead

MIX IT ok DIBTANCBa,

Heattie said that he had not seen theman with the gun until he was withinsix feet in front of the car lo the right

"From the ditch to the middle of theload which you were travelling is overeleven feel Now floes it happen iiihiyou did not see the man step to the mid-al- e

of ihe road'" th" prosecutor asked"I doti t know. I guess I was not ex -

pecting him.""When did vou first see ihe gun in lh"

man s handV""After the car stopped I stopped be-

cause I thought was going to run overhim."

And so you didn t not ice t he gun untilafter the car atoppad? Where did h"g"t th" gun Reatlie said that he

Ididn'i know It was not until the manraised the gun und pointed it a him thathe saw i

The witness could not answer satis-- i

factorily why it was iluti wilh a goodmargin ol th" roan sun ten to him heha i not run pas' the Intruder, Neithercould he explain why when ho stoppedsuddenly over to release his dutch andsiart the machine the gun. which he saysnaa been covering Dim, o i mi i ki navswung up and to rh- - right o thai hlWill rcreivd thf oharg irt.icnci forhim

4rirthpr noinT VIM urnrod hvthn I'mso- -outor rikjht hM' H rtikd lRpatti whah;n wife liH-- i hHi'i whtn h uw the gunpointed at hun Mad fhSo. Mrn batti liad jiisi sat ititl, tiTr

Seattle wai asked how much he weighed. i,.,,. t, . I..., ii, , ,

Jj; W(.,K,HM, an"d wa, s f,.,., ,(,

lJiniJSliJllln"""S " ,r" " ' cl J l"' ".you nay that after you wreitted the trnnV".

away from hitn vou tound youreelf n theground nnd he wan running away Huolwai tlif ciroumetanoe. Beattie aunwei'd i

t t Ltf fnl not begun to run uwnyuntil Hfur you had jumped out of themaenwe, wreeiea tne gun rroni hint nnnwen. lying on the ground

" 'i he did not begin to run until then."AS TH HKn.AH HINKOBP

'Ihe PrOSeCUtOf whs merciless m un- -

ivering Beattie a relations with thcigirl whom he nan nrsi seen when Sitewas just one month past IS and in shortdresses After mnking the witness tellhow he had been forced into a settlementby a lawyer hired by lieiilah Binford'amother after the birth of ihe girl .s childlie wanted in know if Baattle had notwritten a letter to Mrs Binfonl conoemmg the signing by her of papers of arlop-- 'Moil for th" nnTld after a woman had beenfound t" take ihe infant in Beattierefused to admii having written sucha letter until Wendenburg handed tohim for identification a letter in which

'the writer insisted thai Beulah Hinford smother sign the necessary documentsand swore that "this is the last time

will ever monkey with ihis business " directly into a narration of his relationsThen Beatlie .id'initted he author ship With Heulah Hinfordof the letter. Seattle ".'id ha had first seen the girl

"In th" last few month" before your in August. i907 when he was riding in anwife died were not your iiighu witi Buulali automobile with friends she had nailedBlnford Mondays, Tnnrsaays and Hat-- 1 fnm tna aldwwalk and aakad to M takanurdayaf the froMcutor demandad. for tide one i ins companions had

Heuttie tried to evade by sivina that told him at the tune that the twelve-year-thos- e

were the night" ha w.i" not with his old girl h id H bad reputationwife, but Wendenbuigg.it hint 10 Confirm "Mow long did voiii relations with Ihisthe fact thai on the Thursday ami th" nirl continue n thai lime?"Monday baforeMre. Beat tin waamurderod "t'nti; eh" went to Washington withlie had pent the night v ith Ida mistress.

"Isn't it a fad that V'"U were in lovew nn tins woman '"

"DecldorUy not." Baallle returned

"Hll you admit that she was in loveWith yOU, don' I you; that she told youconstantly thai "he was?"

'She probably lold Brer Other fellowili vimo tliiig Her siving s meantnothing to lite ,

llkt'l 4 11 ItlMllllll A OMP'.wendenburg produced a little yellow I

. overed diary and Beatlie if h" liadlever read ii It WBi Heulah Hinford a!dian .,f net affair with Beatlie and thelast entrv in it waa on the nigin beforeMrs Reatlie was muidereii '111 usaid that ha raght hve glanced throughII cmralaaaly but thai rememberednothing of its contents Wendenburg

,1 ,,,, nnltf tr .it I t.' ,ll.-ir- lilt,)evidence but the court ruled khgl II was

lonh In- nutting th" Hinford girl on thestand to Identify ii iim' he could do an

Now lsn'1 it a fact, Henry Baattle,that while your wife was mothering yourchild you were prepadna in furnish I Hal

for tliis girl''" Wendenburg asked afterhe had hajd Real Me identify a letter inwhich he told Heulah Bltlfnrd alwavs toget a receipt from the furniture man foith" monthly paytneit wntl Ii Meat tiehimself would meet

"So one could furnish a flat on 110,"Beattie answu-e- spunkilv, mentioningthe instalment sum uuoied in the lettei '

Hut Wendenburg was insistent V'lnallvHeat tie sa'd that he was helping, butothers were doing ii loo He did notSpecify eXoapl to sav "other friends"

orkABa or unit"What did vou mean by signing tins

letter. 'Oceana of love brimming Withkiaaae'? w as that a way a man wouldaddtvs" a woman if he did not love her''"

"tlh that meant iiothmp. at all neat tiealkawered with an airy wave 'if his hand"I've said that to other girl" a thousandtimes I

Uuriii all these details of I !"irtt li ill"with Hie Hinford g!il Keatti whs per'feclly al ease, ready to teuce with theattorney who questioned him Kven indiscussing other circumstances that areunprintable he diii not lose his air ofnonchalance

Ihe prisoner s father sat with his headhidden by a palm leaf fan- In one serious issue bruttie laid himselfopen to remittal i ai least six witnessesw benever during the course of i he exam-ination w'endenberg mentioned the nameof Paul 'I, alt." the cousin who has giventhe incs damaging testimony againstHenry, ihe wiln.ss went out of his Way'to volunteer somi-thiti- discreditable toPaul 'I hough hi began by saving thathe had never had anything to d

when h" came , beg the Beattie store,Heat 1" admitted later thai threetimeahhad delivered meaaagea u. Heulah Hitford through Paul and once two lavsafter the murder had asked Paul to Andout if Heulah hud been atreated

11" annulled ua.ou; iimrii utm USUIi'aul ride wuh him on ihe Baturdayn gin preceding the murder, which, ac-cording to Paul s testimony, was the nighthe delivered the gun to Henry, but heI I I I . ...IImI I, ...

Iieilieil o.iiiv lie T lH IWIW IW im-.-- i in-o- i

by appointment on the Thursday nightpreceding, upon which occaelon, Paul liastestified. Henry him to buy the gunThough Woo lenl urg mentii nl tl enaniesof six people who would come to siipfortPaul " testimony in this respect, Heattie

mii maintained that he bad not seen inscousin on that night

BBATTtB PRAtvs A mownThe definite report thai Beattie would

lake the stand y brought a greatjam to Ihe court house

By farm wngons. automobiles and onfoot fu:ly son came Uj th" httl" green inthe midst of the Wilderness and befores o, clock the tiny court rooni was Jammedfrom wall 'o wall

People built scaffolds of benches out- -

alde ot every window, climbed

Mfore

more vantage points Of murder never havese" and sinned one Paul to get

banked about Beattie lie admit thatWataon arrived he had he taken the cousin his

the Sherifl cut into with him Saturdayroom lor mm. r.vcn wnen n" nan sea 'enhimself daring spectators crammed ti

the bench and squeezed themselves uat hi" feet The witness chair was I

little blank space solid wall of hninanity.

Reatlie s two lawyers locked Iho.nisolx-o- s

in Ins narrow with him and coachedhim lor an hour before court opened. A

few mlnUtea before .bulge W ale ip rappedth" prisoner followed hia counsel ofth" jail

Heattie irai vary pale The jailer hadstood by him while he shaved He worea blue serge carefully creased anda white necKlie ptnneci a pearl71,6 lwyr,J tried r" Pr for " fV !P1Putei nmrt tunf at tne "rnirifcr pimrtThey wanted to rraH Katplhorg, thbutcher, to tn1 stand for n qMrMton Hewan not to be found 1 hen Hmrv ( lavHe.iiiie, Sr t'.o'ri the stand t,i sav that onthe Thursday night following the murderhe had not receiyad an intimation of hisson's imp.n btig arrest a Richmondreporter told hirn it by telephoti

Pill SON KR CALLED i" KTAN'D.

' lav Beattie, .lr , Hmlth thenannounced, and the pushed hiswav to Htiitid

lie took a nf that Sherifffiill i, Mere, him befor e the first Queatlonwas ;i lud a liandkerchief crushedinto ball, he continually dabbledat his m.si l'he muscles of his cheekst witched i regularly as a pulse Heconstantly nervous strainwas written large over his face,

Preliminary questions drew thespouse that he was I'll, a clerk in hisfather's store in South Richmond.

H.ivh vnii ever hud n t iniit I o a..nni...ion or relations with your cousin

Beattie' Smith, driving ,,n-c- i Iv,. refutation of the most Himulns

evidence that has been introducedpositively none. the prisoner an-

swered "'ihe mil tunes 1 have everhid anv dealings with him hive heen

he cam" to th" store to get money"to beg money

"You never told him a secret neve,trusted htm with anv close mtionof vonr affairs'

"I should say not Fven whn he was inth" store li was cloaely '

Ihe young man a eyes whenhe said this He took another fwater Smith then launched his wot s

ALFRED BENJAMIN & CosTailor-mad- e clothes

Visitors to the Cityinvited to inspect our early showing Fall

Clothes and Haberdashery.

More style than you'll he likely to elsewhere;prices as low as anywhere for similar qualities.

her iMott.ei. Iteattie anawereaWhat wis her action toward you in

reference to the child thai wa bom?''a MftRI m t r a ni MONBT.

"Why, "he sniil I was lh" fa'her of it."Ren' ii" "iok- - ti jauntily. 'Shethought "he could get inor" money fromIlia than anybody els- - 1 refused to Pyup and she got a lawyer after me ThenI raid Atlei inai was in" iiukiimiili,,'k of the wlifiio town

lime mote Reatlie alluded to the blaek- -

ne nart unoergonv m hwwas -o soft he just forked II UP whendemanda were made upon him Then heexhibited the flrat Indlcatlona ftlMMvoue uesii" w nvip ninjpvii j .,,,, ,

st.iteuients "She testified al the I'oro-- inerp inqum ma, "" .......

he aald His counsel frownedand wit another queatlon qulokiy"rM ""Mm r.j i

Smith then had the witness say ttvitIt had ben eighteen months before his1 MBBaaiBaBaBaHaHHBaHmarriage to liOtliae that he hadmade his settlement and broken rela-- '

lions Ihe Hinford girl Then het.it2ftli.H lli'it tin ltu.1 i""li III liivn Wlln

trees lo Whence I I wouldcould the witness chair such a as it."

themselves the doOrs snapped. Rip didWhen Judge had despised in

have a wav the conn machine on the nigh;

in r

cell

doors

suit,

until

"Henryprisoner

th"drink

Withhaul

wallowed,

Paulasked

.1

when

infoi

watched

drink

are of

find

a k

linos'

mailing

nfather."

Owen

with

oommis-the- v

narrowed

hi" wife a year or fourteen months beforehe married her The two women s nameswore mentioned almost in the same breath

What wet" th" relation, betweenyourself and our wife up to the timeof her death''

"She never si oke a ci oss word to melot to her." Beattie answered "W'e'were both of an affectionate nature,

defy anybody lo sav We were not com- -

pietplv happy'Old ye ir wife know of the relations

that had previously egiated between youami Beulan Bitiford?"

'She certainly did I made a cleanbrea' of it about the child and all "

"Did she know of your trip to Norfolklast April, wlieie vou met Heulah Hin-

ford?"BttB HIP NOT KNOW A 1.1.

Beattie was silent for an inslani I henreplied in a low voice: "She knew I wasgoing to Nortolk but "hi ma not knowI met Hont-i- there H. imckiy volun-- 1

teered that he had not gi ne to Norfolkvsiih ih" exfiresa purpose of seeing the i

Incidental,girl His meeting had been purely

Did your mend Riiiv Batnpeon tellthe whole truth about thai trip?" Bmithiii"iied. leterring lo lie neta.ls ot twolavs in ihe red light district lhat hadbeen testified to on Saturday Beattiesaid lhat Sampson's lestimonv had beencompletely comprehensive. He then saidthat when he left the girl in Norfojlkheexpressly forbade her to make any fur herefforts to see him

The witness said that short h-- after thatV.bI.11 lals D....I..1 I , I ..... ....,., ,,, p, ',, . ,,nrl...... ,,,.,..wisned her to give up her il life andher married sister would not give li.M

lodging I he girl had pleaded with himto do this Heattie added that he haddone the same for another gin onoe Juaibecause he wjiu'ed to sec her out of themire

Bmith had him lead the letter ha hadwritten to the girl telling her he wouklpay for furniture and clothing with shewords 'oceans of love, brimming withkisses "

"ith thai whs t net taffv. or gush, suchas you would write to any girl." Baattleanswered when his counsel asked him toexplain the "exiravagart expressions

Did you have nnv real love for thisgirl?" Smith then nsk"d

How could I ovea g.ri I did not re- -speot ' Heattie spswered in a self-righ- t-

pous tone. Rut he confessed that he hsdbeen in the company of ihe girl after hisbaby was horn.

ntMFs rsn. s storvThe lawyer then led Beattie lo a com- -

.rehepsixe denial of every detail givenbv his cousin P.iul of the alleged purchaseof the shotgun at Henry's itistam-- e and-- f the ride together to she pawnshop toget in" gun on me ounaay nigni neiorothe murder

"If 1 ht"i vrar.fed a gun for th" purpose

m uiimviuiiwhere did vou g afl vou left Paul

at his horn" that night' Smith asked"I went to mm Beulah the witneaaanswered

Wt.rp Iron ruliliff Willi Wcnlrth : M m of.XI l A. -- v.. k.f. ,i !.., utic admit ted that he was H" a'so saiiil1.n nnawer to Smith that h had taken hie I

wile nut in ii, e aulORIODlie tnree times I

"' "" ' ""1 KTS ErSSlL1! . , .in iiikiiik ills in, in iiun.i ii, iii iiiiii

the murder, nmith referred to the testi-mon- jf

given by Mrs. Robert ' Owen,mother of Mrs. flenttie. as lo having fmindher daughter in tears on the day she wasmurdered, Baattle denied tnat therehad been anything in his private life"the' rnv wife knew which COUld hfiveoaused her to weep "

DBTA1U "K ihk MDHOtnlie told of how he and his w ife had '

I driven the en- out to Midlothian turn- -pike ' Three cars passed til"." lie said

I They were nil going very fasi " This j

statement accounted tor the two oarabrought int. i evidence by the prosecutionand Ihe oar driven by Kaatcllierg, thedefence's witness

Beattie approached 111" detail of ihemuiui'i witnoui anompi ,11 urumainelTet-t- . I! Id of how the beirded higli-

' waymatl had shot his wife while he wasbending over to release ti lutoh hiscir He did not add anything lo thetale already lold by witnesses wini hadquoted him on the stand. H did disputeihe deteolivos who had Quoted hun inone minor matter in reference in his no- -

git ion relative to thai of the highwaymani .lust oni-- e Ihe witness allowed himselfI to become dramatic al this point. That!

w ,l n n. Ill s. i; ll ll- will- inafter the shooting, he bent almost doubleWith his head near bin knees "She layIhis way." he explained

t this Junotlire again he attempted lomake hia taatimony argumentative, "Anybody might see." he cried out. "how if,I got. a cut on my tioee I might havewiiwsdsome of my own blood on the gun when

wrenched it away from the highway' I

' manI he ( ourt hart to warn him to do noth- -

ing more than answer the ouestions potto him.

tlfTI CIPATF.B I'Hosv-- i TTfiRAs the examination proceeded the

voung man gre.v nore and more fidgeHis eyes shifted nervously Iron) face toface of the Jurymen before him Hecould not see his counsel without turninghis head painfully, but more and moreoften he sought lo catch Smith's eyebefore answering.

i he prisoner's counsel hurried throughto Ihe end from this hue of nuesfioningAnticipating the atia'k of the Common-wealth's prosecutor JSnnth hid his clientsay that on ihe night following ihe mur-der, when his cousin Paul was ai theOwen home, he (Beattiel had instructedPaul to carry a message to tha Hinfordsir

I'aul told me Beuhh was sorry forme,' Heattie said, "and 1 told him to tellher tun in bother me, nt leave nn1 alone

Did you tell I'aul lo warn Beulah ihatif she told what she. knew you would killher if d tool, inn years''' Smith Waaquot-- Img Paul s evidence "I surety did not "

Beattie also was led to sav lhat on thesecond nigh I after lb" murder, after hehad received an Intimation thai hiearreelws Imminent, he had telephoned to his

lonijsln Taul to learn if th" police hadarrested her as a witness

I nn bi s Htrai Railed' Angelo Pg tei, 27 yenrs old, of 44 Longatreot. Jersey City, was gouged in the leftside by a bullet early sateraay he was

' crossing a lot at Armstrong and etHide avenues, that city. Ho said liedidn't ses tha person who pulled thetrigger and couldn't imagine any reasonwhy he should be a target for anybodv.Datei went home after a City Hospital

' sueeeon fixed him us.

Generoua alzoe from lOc up.

UNITEDCIGARSTORES

m m mmtmrnm

flin DAOfntrO AIIT 1U rAfllI)liftlt Ml II I IVt III R runun

nrno JVMPEKS, INSVLTKHSlAn PARK TOVttHS,

Mailt rrests hi one Island, l ongIsland CK and In The llrnn Work,house Sentences for iecrsl In

one Island sitone Hits a Woman.

Several members of the strong armj , .. . ..squaa wno nai.nen iwi rowa.es t ins

Culver depot in Coney Island on Sundayevening, were stationed there again lasti.ori.i i,, ., , real r.,..n un,i t.nvs hii Inmiwl

h ugn me par window- - The detec- -

I'vee ware at the elation a few minutesafter 8 o clock, and aavan prieonera warataken from the first express that came infrom Manhattan number of others

!grabbed later in the evening, andall

will be arraigned in the ( unev islandcourt this morning

Magistrate Dooley yesterday sentencedthe prisoner, who were brought beforehim from ihe Bunday roundup. Aboutfifty of them got sentences lo the work- -

house ranging from Ihree to five dawsand others were fined, none of ihern more '

than Several of the prisoners ware I

mere youngsters and these the Magistrateparoled in Ihe custody of their parents.

"Il ls possible to be lenient with personswho come from out of the city," said Mag-

istrate Dooley. "Thev cannot be ex- -

pected lo know the conditions here andperhaps some of them jump through Ihecar windows m ignorance of its being aviolation of ihe law. But with residentsof Ihe city who have read in the papersof the crusade being made Hgainst rowdyism it is impossible to be lenient."

It was fl o'clock last night before theprisoners sentenced to the workhousewere tak"ii away Most of them hadn'tanything to eat since their arrest in some

than twenty-fou- r hours (nre- -

ViOUgly.Many of the prisoners arrested within

the last few days for jumping through cHrwindows are foreigners and some of themcannot rend Knglish When MagistrateVoorheee waa aitting in tha Coney blandr,"lrt wtml ears ago and a crusadewas started against window jumpers henan tne n it i put up placards printedin other languages besides English warn-ing the would-b- window jumpers not tojump

Six car rowdies were arrested on theWestchester avenue line in The Bronxlast night by members of the strong armT'nd The lirsl group, of four, gol on a

laouthbound "nr at Purdy street Thevstood on the back platform refused to paytheir fares and pulled t h" trolley off thewire The car made slow progress and

otiductor .lames Hn-- sighed With reliefwhen Detectives MoOnwan and Breihofhnarriari thenar At.Rimnsnn treei

'l h- - bovs continued their intics untilother policemen me' the car at IWtth

(street Then thev were arrested andtaken to Ihe Morrisama police station.The prisoners said they wore ValentineBanner, 'l vears old, of 317 Last mothstreei Freder. h ahrenberger. IS yearsold. of MS h ast l&Mh street .lames Hogan.in years old. of nr, Cast n.ith st reel andRaymond l ane'!. IS years old. of 1 Qouvorneuer plaoe, The Bronx, Thev werecharged with disorderly conduct andtaken In night court

Meanwntie two hoodlums had boardeda Westchester avenue rar oominsi Inwardtown l'hey refused to pay their fareaand annoyed ihe passengers with vilelanguage At ISOth street Detectives

la. is-- and Bluglier got ,,n and tried I

arnsst the boys Una they caught. Thtoilier got away When the pulicemeiwim meir prisoner reached the street 11

crowd had collected and the hov shoutedto i hose present that h" wanted lo berescued Several half grown boys camenearer ami heading these the detectivessaw lh" fellow who had escaped them before lie was ouu klv nabbed and addedlus pleas lor rescue.

Some in Ihe crowd showed a dispositionlo My a rescue and the pohoemPti had abusv leu minutes sceoinff the crowd backw ith their nightsticks Then a Thirdavenue pay as vou enter car came alongand the prisoners were put aboard it forIhe Morrisama police station There they

'"ohl as Kllaworth fiold li yearsold. of 417 Kast I42d at reel and fieorgeO'Brien, 1 vears old. of 417 Kast ISfthstreet. I'hey were also taken lo nightCourt.

The summer nark season in Long Islanfl' "' w"" ri""''l "a olose last nigin

; whonelaln clothaa men of tha atrong armi aau.d rom the Fourth street siation

bagged twenty-fou- r students, clerks andlaborers in general who were returningfrom the festivities of the day and who,it is charged, were making ihemselvesobjectionable on trolley cars.

Policeman Josenh Craig headed ft smallsquad of plain clothes men who nabbedfourteen youths, all around 1" or I T. who

fencer T'jffSf tHF?,IVS:Four V.l said

,hw wre ,,,, ano --nve their namesas Beuben Rurg of ?; East Seventeenthstreet. Anthonv I'lnvton of lt;2 Thirda enue. Kxiward Rvan of It k Kast Thir- -

"T"ln s, ree, ami ..osrpt, ncs,,r.l'he of therusi uv .111111 nit-- i nil rest

fourteen were clerks, accorduig to theirstatements All were chargeddisorderly conduct

Policeman John l O'Connor and threeothers induced seven beiinngers whowere inclined to sit in the laps of womenon a cat al the Long Island City pla.aof ihe yueensboro Bridge lo stop theirfun and go to the station house Ml ofthe prisoners said thev were laborers

Three arrests were made on a Jacksonavenue car by Policemen .lohn I Barryand C'hriatian Mohen. The prisonershad been spending the day at a dollar

I park near Coronastone was thrown into r. Bmith street

tar as it was crossing the Ninth streetbridge over Ihe Oowanus Canal m BrookIvn vest errSi-- .'.4:!eTWOMr,T,Vi ru-- WrlFrank Tobey of i T 4 Twelfth street, Brook-lyn, in the head, inflicting a bad Pcalpwound After beine attended by lrJames Downey of Ml Clinton street ahawasable to go home The stone throwersgot away before thev were seen by

he carloseph Monloxerdi of 7S Kuig street

wa." sent to the workhouse foi Hve daysyesterdav by Magi-tra'- e O'Connor inthe Tombs court for rowdyism on theSta'.en Island ferryboat Queen- - Mon-lover-

waa a late homecomer on Sundavnight There were a number of womenaboard and the defendant mad" himselfobjectionable to one of them. He wasthrowing aampetoola about the deckwhen Detective (Oakley of the CentralOffice, who was detailed to ihe boat tosuppress rowdyism, arrested him

Ml S MBS llOHHI lt HER.

Puller MsUe rrel Mler lilrl Tells ofttsek In Tenement.

Annie Olivia of 21." Third street raninto the Union Market police stationyosierdav and told the lieutenant on thedesk a story of having been robbed byfive men in a tenement at 321 Thirdstreet She said the men Knocked herdown and took $:tss and two gold watchesfrom her

She said that she went to the tenementto arrange for the sale of some furniture.While she was looking through the hallsfor the furniture dealer the Ave men. shesavs rushed out. ciraggen tier into nneniptv room and ripped out the pocket inher sltiti into which the money and thewatches had been sewn

Detectives Liehers. Beering and Pflasterwent out and piesently returned withWilliam Kosterdien of fit; Fifth streetand Max Shalar and Adam lui iuan of?:t Third street, whom thev lockedup on suspicion The detectives say thatMiss Olivia identified the men as ihree ofthose who attacked her All of the pris-oners denied, however that thev had any-thing to do with the affair, and thev hudno money or jewelry on them when theywere searched

at 34th St.

Initial Displays of SaksFall Clothes for Men

9 This is a regulation announcement inthat it is seasonable. But, bless you, thereis nothing regulation in this Autumn as-semblage of Saks-mad- e clothes, exceptinsofar that Saks clothes habitually strikethe predominant note in every season'sstyles. That, however, is another story.

J Just now we want to advise you thatour Fall displays of men's suits, overcoats,tuxedo and full dress garments, are rapidlyapproaching completion. Every day wit-nesses new accessions; and surveying theofferings calmly and critically, we cannotdo otherwise than commend them to youas a highly creditable performance.

3 New fabrics new patterns new colo-ringsnew models new touches in style-treatme- nt

workmanship that has no peerand few equals and ALWAYS, pricesthat show the advantage to you of buyingclothes direct from the makers.

Broadway

'nof nt: rs ran IA rourrrr.line. Out s Ktslemenl Telling Wh

the Wisconsin Candidate.Wasiii.no ion, Hepl 4. Senator .tens.

than Roip-ti- of Oregon, founder of th.National Republican Progressive Uaggusgave out a statement y indorsinSenator I, a r'olletie lor President in Ifl

St tiaior Bourne aaldWhy ha e I fur month! been so lAstateni

for Senator I. a Kollette for President 'ranse he has innny nf ihe qiiallflcatlwhich i believe me absolutely naeaaaarja man to fiop.esn in order to proper'-the high nfTlce of the nation's chief p

i..rvnn' He helievai in nopul ir. Ml il-

gated, t'oiernment. irnlizes that genetswelfare, not netflsh inierest. must li t

iih Me power of all successful and permS'nent gnvarnmani He is honest, coiirsgsoijs. able, dynamic, with twenty-fiv- e ySfexperience m legislative snd egeCtllpnhhc l.fe. Though radical In m.inne- - ho

is extremely conservative in thought andaction, with high ideals, hrosd idem niifitttiiu COBVlCtlOBS liefieral welfare h'sgoal end selfish interest his ahommniion.

I lirga the big business interests of tljsOOlintry to sludv Ihe laws of Wisronsi-- t

enacted since he was first Cm-erro- of thvstate; hold him. as the dynamic personnln-o- f

that electorate) responsible for nil the- -

law. if Investigation shows them to tvprotective of personal liberty and propertyrights, than support him for President I'

(destructive of pergonal lihargy or propert'rights bitterly oppose his cendldacv Suchan Investigation Will show Wisconsin Intvs

ui he const motive, not destructive, progressive, not reactionary: intelligent! v non- -

servatlve, not blindly radicalsenator La is a statesman, not

a politician; a deep thinker, not, a imgneue His i andidaev presents ao opportunity 10 nominate and elect a man Preeident on Ills record and not on another man sindorsement or promises to follow in another's footsteps. He can and In

will be nominated, and if norm-

tiateu will unu'isstionsbly be elected.

BSWWJ

Rulesand mis

too many, area nui-sance.You need onlyToneJofeach to handle DorianRemountable Rims- -

The one rule: Loosenf4 nuts.j The one tool: TA trace,wrench. "

And you canTrel?lccea punctured tire in: a

: minute.'" '

Fod tirftSSMisI troubles. Ensip jour csr withUonini We raado ii for you In three deys.JMHSai sre in. Je in sll tizee. and say Cliscber.g.D.et No Rim Cut" Tire will tt them.Whea too hsr new car insist hard eaoaffc osDniient end reu'll set fhem. no n.allcr whsl tharriular rim equipment may he.Cocse and arc tha Dorian dsmonetrstsd.miREMOUNTABLE

R I MS18M Broadway (assrSMSi.) New YorkTelephone : Cortland! 1183

NORTH BEACHBoats East 99th & 184th St.

brldfe rroii" s i,0 inrr-- t

C4RHinL"sFREi::MARRIED.

FRANKLIN .IRNNINOg On September !. siNorm BsnnlagtaBi Vt Rllsabsthi asujr.ier

t Mr ami Mrs, prsdsrto b. Jenalaft, tensorifr s Prsnkttn

DIED.RRB8LIN.- - Carrie Brsslla. atedllysars, Punersi

st "Tws Ki-- ssai i srnrs Ml srd MS West0.VI st. Thivk I' I'AMSaBM, RrttOWO)

nt rtKH WIliT On srti-mh- i It, 1911, BsrbsrsPolls, h'levrit wilt "f Relsr HurVbsrdt

t"'jnrral from lisr Isle resldsncr. 2i NornHlfh t Me nu Vsrnon, N. v . TussdA'Ssptsmher StlAA M .InSi. Mary s rhirfcwhrts n ri iMirm mss llt he cttsbrSted

BUKRII t 'tn srpirmhcr t. mil. at Lllefctsldionn lis: r UrsrtOD B'irrlll. sldesl son of

ihr late John R, ami LouIm m. Burrlll.Fuasral prtvats,

f.vn - Ttas funrraassrvlees far the latt ''isrenar-- - will a' rhi 1st ('hMrrh. Mr.va.nr Ii

VS., OS V rdlirsria gSPISBlbSr S, 1UI1 ao rlor', A M Inlrrmrnl In vj Hill CSfllS,trr Aitsandrla,

umbki.. --on Saturday, srririnher km1. fnrse 1. , brlovsu husband ofrillit gsmb.l,in tils Viln yrsi

Funrrsl from hl In te resldsscs, hi RutKdfKin 'oi. 11. Tusidar, "I 8 A M

KiMi -- suddtaly, on ttendty. Bspismaei 1. 11

S husband nf I'iliui VVhlltaksr MiCFuasrsl sen .res at hlslats rssldsnrs, lh tl'sllt

mnir. :JR liroadna' (HI WednetdS) MPI'mbrr S. lit 311 p

RBVI On lalurdtl .Sspirmhsr : al hr;'." lie. US rl .list si Ilos- - H if lies Kevbrlovs rlfs of Joseph W Revl snd sis-r- ntuie vsry Rsv, Joftn .1 Huihss, I'aullti

Soieron renulrm nt PaullSI KathSti Cburehi ""ti and Columbus av . en Tussds), sspistrs.-- .

at lOo'rlors.SIMPSON On Srplember 111 I Besie

dauahtsr of the lata Oeorf W sad Cut -11 RiaipioB,

Pineral from hsr la'e residenre, l1 Soifnid si Brooklin, Of uhlrh nottir will

laterYRAW t Kntlsaaadi s 1., an Rundaf lrIsmber B Of pasumSBtS, l.rlltla simllh ra'

nt PiiiibuilattraisBt ai ladovrri Mas. PisaM 001'

fl.inirs

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FUAk K, t'4M fit .1.1 . 1141.941 W. 7SdCbaptii AnibulsBfs asr'cs Tel. 1114 chrTttt

.s --atTtie Mall Ntrrsl edition of Jar I'vi.viso Ar

roBISlBS all IhS ItBSBrial news find the SIOCs 0

bond qnolatloQI to tne clots of the mai-Ue- ' Tbclnslnr iiii'iatli'n IttitUfllBf the bid and aksjprlr.'s i. lih a.ldHlonal neat nisttft. are seatalne nisn In tr-- nlshi edition nl Tn "tss-iT- s

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