Evening World. (New York, N.Y.) 1903-02-13 [p ].€¦ · 1-T T 4 i- rON I I fee t I l J < L t t >...
Transcript of Evening World. (New York, N.Y.) 1903-02-13 [p ].€¦ · 1-T T 4 i- rON I I fee t I l J < L t t >...
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I fee t I l J < L t t > n-J
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l 1hA INr SpARTS i lt tJ 1 rrHr i I tP 1fIp j HI
I GENIR fJt E0-
SP0 r
N rOt D IRTINO NEWS 1
l III
W EDITlONt
=PAGE I 2 a BEOks 01en to All I ItChculation Books Open to Alt J
JPRICE ONE CENT NEW YORK FRIDAY FEBRUARY 13 1903 PRICE ONE CENT i +
YOUNG TN
I SING SING
I
CELL 613p
He Rages at Photographers-on His Way to Prisonand Attempts to Hit OneVvith Stone I
I
KEEPERS SUPPRESS HIM
His Hair Clipped and Beard
haved Off Prison Physician
Will Deojde ToMorrow if theMurderer Is Able to Work
V
VIIllam HoT per Toung the slayer ofAnna Pulitzer Is In Sing Sing prisonHe was assigned cell No 613 In gal-
lery¬
13 on the top tier of the main blockIn the prison Dr Irvine the prisonphystClan will examine him tomor-row
¬
ind If he Is able to work ha willt be Hastened to one of the shops
After ettlng on the train at theGrand Central station Young borroweda slouch Jiat from one of the negroprisoners Wd shielded his face with Italt the Wny to Ossinlng As the train
t approached Che prison he pretended tocollapse but no attention was paid tohim and lie biaced up when the sta-
tion¬
was reachedA big crowd fallon < l him down the
rtllroad track to the prison Jeering himlie cursed and reveled the photogra-phers
¬
lined uj along the track and en-
deavored¬
to hit one of them with astone Once Inside the prison walls hequieted down flfq bean and hair wereclipped he was put In a prison suit andhHreaftcr he will be known byva number
racked a Cnmera ManHe was taken to the Grand Central
Depot tnthe Black Maria A greatcrowd had gathered there to see himThe wag Jn drove lo the Vanderbiltavenue tilde arid a big crowd watchedhim descend from tile van In the front
i of It were several photographers withIhelr emer rafued pn him
Young recognlzedone of them at tilerepresentative j of an afternoon news ¬
paper Thov camera man waa shovedjlght up close to tho prisoner by tieforce of tile crowd iMMnd and aaVoting started to step out of the vanlio let fly wlCh tdn right foot and kickedthe photographer In the neck
D you take thatl he shoutedTho crowd tell back and the deputies
queuing Youngs violence rushed himinto the depot
Young went from tho Tombs a llttte-atter 12 oclock handcuffed betweentwo negro highwaymen Ho lookedbright and dean comparatively speak
F lngand did not seem downcast thethought of what the future has In Storefor hlmHals buoyed up by gratitude-for hl5 escape from the death chair apdthe hope that by book or crook hislawyers may yet get trim ibis liberty
He Und Good jOonpsrarThere were six prisoners In the party
which left the Grand Central station onthe LIO oclock train They were Incharge of Deputy Sheriffs Kelley VanDeesten and Foley VIle two negroesbetween whom Young was handcuffedwere Bunker Hill and AraerlousWashington sentenced eaah to tour anda half years In Bine Sing by JusticeXewburger today The other threeprisoners were Gaetano Pucarlno whois to serve a life term for murder An-
thony¬
Boraba who got on Indeterminate-term for burglary and George Brownwho got three for burgia
As Young was brought down tromhillcell In the Tombs ho smiled at the Jlneof keepers who stood at the loot at thestelrs to tee him and his fellowcon¬
vIet nafely ortI hope I live to see you ill again
he said as he passed oatNo echoed his wish U vemthe
Tombs attaches were glad to txi ofa pr oner It was when this disgustingand degrading wretch went out of thedoor between two who Beamedto the keeper like fascinating ohar-aotoro by comparison with the degen-erate
¬
MormonOwing to the misinformation passed
out that Young would not leave theTombs this afternoon abig crowd gathered about the prison to
Vms him when he should come out Thepolice tried to drive them away Theyrefused to go and declared they werebeing deceived when told that Youngwa already In Sing Slug They hungaround for an hour or more before final-ly
¬
disappearing
FOR SELLING PULLS
Beralsch Sentenced for TaldugMoney for Pollen AppointmentSMax C Bemisch who ran a physlca4
I culture school for the benefit of firemenand policemen who wanted to get pro-
motion¬
was convicted In the Court ofSpecial Sessions today of taking 100
from Thomas Gavin of No 03 Bedfordstreet to get him on the police forceHe was lined IM and sentenced totwenty ap In the City Prison
One of the witnesses against him wasHurry Hoffman n mlmeographer Int 10 lvn Service Bureau who nworethat at the Instigation of one Barnardanother clerk In the bureau togone with Barnard to Bojnischo Housewith duplicate sots of the qyil Servicelamination papers tot canaldates for ho was to Ret 120-
0Barnard went In the house while Mremained outside When Barnard cameout he told Hoffman that Bemlsch wasnot at homo The witness did not knowwhether Uemisch ever got the paperH uevw cot the money
OlrtrletAttoroey Jerome expaJn thenlll OO Barasjrd on theIII that be WM CblM o
b
i
> O
THREE CORONERS
ALLIN A RACE
Comptroller Grout Tells Them
He Is Tired of Them and
May Help to Abolish Their
Offices
GOLDKRINTZ HE ISS MAD-
Wo Would Like to Inquest Your
Political Corpse He Replies andMayor Laughs While the Tearsof Mirth Flow Down His Cheeks
Our three doughty Coroners GoldenUranr Scholer and Brown invaded theBoard of Estimate and Apportionmentthis l1otlIIOOn and had a runIn withComptrollor Grout They wanted totrim down the salaries of four old em ¬
ployees for the benefit offour new em ¬
ployees their own appointeesThe Comptroller was fretful He does
not think much of the Coroners mis-sion
¬
on this earth antI he told them soThis started a ruction which ended Inthe fervent wish of the Coroners thatthey might hold an Inquest over thepolitical corpse of the Comptroller
Coroner Goldenkranz noted as thespokesman for the vermiform appendixof the city administration Ho ex-plained
¬
at length what too wantedOh Im sick and tired of this busi-
ness J exclaimed the Comptroller Ityou keep It up I shall feet Inclined torecommend to the Legislature the abol-ishing
¬
of your officeWhatl gasped Coroner Brown Jump-
ing¬
to Ms oati You appeal to theLegislature You are In a class with theothers who snake a ffnajidstand play bystriking at tile Coroners office TheCoroners ate tired of being made thebutt for jokes In public and we gettired too of men who make n grand-stand
¬
play by attacking our boardCoroner Brown was LividIt would be a good thing tor the city
If your board were abolished said theComptroller
That ujvfair and unwise exclaimedCoroner Qoldenkranz Jumping to hlifeet as Coroner Kmwcr exhaustednapped into his Chair aaaA coming toofrom a man we helped to elect
wd are not here courtesy or oompDlment no yeled the eoroil1rWcera here on our statutory rights lUotfleers fcf this count-yWtlli1th1flkAtlOUl4bS a
X yu were abolished InsjstedGrit trio fairly sputtered Englishwords failed fGerman escaped him i
That Is one unmanly statement hefinally said In as the threepicked up their hats and prepareddepart
Oh co back and hold an Inquest onyourselves jeered the Comptroller
Wed lire to hold an Inquest onretorted Goldonkmnz vim andIt may be a political corpsettVelr affordus the opportunity In the near future
With tine Shot they escapedwhile even Mayor Low louched until thotears rolled down his cheeto
CRUSHED DEATH
IN THE ANSONIA
Women Guests in Terror as They
See a Workman Caught Be ¬
tween Floor and Elevator
Edward Sexton a glazier of No i 67
Morton street employed by the PJttsJburg Plate Glass Company of BQdc nstreet was killed today by being ti ian an elevator shaft In theApartmentHouse at Seirstreet and Broadway T iSexton was fortyone years old andhad been sent to the apartment Jxruie tomake some repairs in the basementAccording to Brittatn Webb the eleva-tor
¬
boy who lives at Na 243 West FMfty
third street he bad just taken Into thebasement the engineer of the buildingwho had been on OM of the upper floors
After letting the engineer oft the oarWebb started up again to the first floor-
to take some guests upstairs Beatenhe says ran toward the elevator andcaught it but stumbled and tell andhis body was lifted to the basement cell ¬
ing and crushed between the side ofthe shaft and the elevator floor
The 1> lost his wits and In-stead of reversing the lever he sent thecar upward at full speed The victimwas caught between first floor andthe bottom of the car and held as In a-huge vise
Within two feet of him half a dozenwomen were waiting on the first floorto UII carried up to their apartmentsSextons wild screams sent them scurry ¬
ing way In a panic Two of them werea fainting condition
For nearly fifteen minutes the victimwas held there while his life was beingcrushed out Clerks bellboys andseemed to be with terrorFinally one of toe clerks and an eleva-tor
¬
oar conductor succeeded In backingthe car so aS to free Sexton and wascarried Into a bseonent room
By that time Dr po For st Potterthe house physician had been sum-moned
¬B verI of the women guests
who had retainedtheir presence of mindturned In and rendered what assistanceOne ties pettlcoat up to snake bandages for Dr Poto-teiiut it was too late Sexton had diedwithin a few minutes Meantime anambulance Jiad Uensiumxpwed fromIlooseveH hull ar-rived
¬with the ambulance he found the
man The body wa removed tothe West 8txtyl street police sta-tion i
immTo Ca t a OoU U Ot DV
Q MWIL 11r q fana t
SURROUND
MURDERER
WOODS
Police Draw CordonAround Eastern Portion-
of Bronx Seeking Mur¬
derer Fink in Wild West
Fashion
RESERVES JOIN THE HUNT
Fink Resented Freeses Inter-
ference
¬
When He Beat His
Wife and Stabbed Him to
Death and Fled to the East-
ern
¬
Shore
A mam hunt such a s Is common Inthj Wet and South Is in progress In
Greater New York today Policemenleitives and citizens by the score arebeating the woods In the eastern partof the Borough of the Bronx and closIng In around George Fink the mur-derer
¬
All night and through the day thesearch has progressed but no trace hasbeen found of the fugitive thus farThe belief IB growing that he shot him-
self¬
and that his body will bo foundIn seme hollow or swamp to which hecrawled t ofore he died
Only once so far as the police knowhas Fink peen seen since he stabbedand beat Henry Freese to death lastnight at 8 oclock Frees Ii a youngblacksmith and he was killed because-he attempted to prevent Fink fromabusing his wife
Fink went Into a Port Morris saloonabout an hour after the murder his hairdishevelled and his whole appearancedenoting that of a man laboring underreatOiciUraent-
He Had Xo lintHe wan without a tint and his clothes
were muddy He called loudly r a drinkand Ibid the bartender tohurry up-
w1th 1tAfI r tie dlnk had beengiven to him ho called for another oneand ended by Inviting about a half dozenmen who were In the saloon at the timeto join him When the drinks had beenserved Fink the detectives say askedthe proprietor If he could give him ahat
Whats the matter with you thesaloonkeeper asked him Why are youso nervous and excited Dont be ex-
cited¬
calm4 yourselfThe proprietor went away to look for-
a hat for Fink Before he returnedhowever one of the men In the saloonoffered Fink a bicycle cap an offerwhich was quickly accepted by the manThen he went out of the saloon and fledto the woods
Mrs Fink whose husband Is head ma-
chinist¬
for the Delavergno IlefrlgeratI-njK Machine Copipany lives at No 1012
Edt One IIu44s1tnd Thirtyslxthstreet Freeso and4da Fink accompanlaq Mrs Henry Thacke withw bot41ed on a househunt ¬Millog and In their searchthey at tho home of Mrs LLdshlntftr afforest avenue and One11u Fortyfourth street for andredtnd
IlnU Annulled WlfraFink arrived at the house while Incparty was there and It was evident ho
hud been drinking heavily He swore-
at his wife and when she asked himwhy he did not atop drinking he struckher in the face with his flat His bloviwere so fast and well delivered thatboth of Mrs Finks eyes were blackenoland as she rolled under the table herhusband kicked her
Freese jumped In then and tried topush Fink back That Increased themans fury and he attacked the black-smith
¬
Oct out of hers be shrieked at theblacksmith drawing a knife from hispadre
Freeso ran for the door and Fink fol-lowed
¬
On the street Fink continued thepursuit and Thacke followed themThacke says he saw Fink overtakeFreese at One Hundred aol Fortyfourthstreet and the Southern Boulevard andattack him with the knife plUnKing ItInto his neck
Fink Fled lo WoodsAH Freese dropped to the ground two
men suddenly appeared from the oppo ¬
site lie of the road and Fink disap-peared
¬
Into the woods the strangers fol-
lowing him evidently pursuing him asthey called on him to stop
reese was sent to the Lincoln Hos-
pital¬
In an ambulance and died thereearly this morning never regaining conIIclousneas
Policeman Creamer called for assist-ance sod the reserve from the policestations In the Bronx started on a man-
hunt through the woods adjacent to theSouthern Boulevardfrs sink told the police that her
husband had been in the habit of beatfrequently always when he was
drunk Bhe the hope that uid and she cud
work torbeneff and two brUnt e
nTh reysrelya Asstoan
taI xu If II IIMII tilta ClI C-
afL =ii i i i
MRS GEORGE FINK HER FUGITIVE HUSBAND ANDHENRY FREESE WHOM HE KILLED FOR PROTECTING HER
MxM x N Yo M4XN > M M Mx 0 <
CHIEF INSURANCE
DUMMYCAUGHTB-
arber at Work in a Harlem
Shop Identified as One of
the Principal Aids in the
Huge Swindle
DOCTOR IDENTIFIES HIM-
A
j
man who tilt police think Is thechief dummy in the Immense In ¬
surance frauds which have recentlybeen unearthed was arrested this ufternoon in the barber sljop No 2007 Sec-
ond¬
avenue where the gang Is allegedto have had their headquarters
Accompanied by Dr Bruce examiningsurgeon of the rrovldont Ufo DrHahn of the John llnwcook Ufc DrBak r of the Washington Life and IAT
Moore of the Urn > n Central LIe AsHlstont DJsLrJctAttorney Ptul Krotnland tocUveHcrseanls Petrosinl andIlllrfi went to the barber MOp to ace Ifthey could find uny one of the men wholied been used as dummies In the prelim-inary
¬
phjeioal cxomlnationsThey had no eoonet got Inside the door
than ono of too physicians pointed to awihttecoated bartxtr who was shavlnff aman
Why thai the follow wOio wasdummy to ny oxclulmwl Twoof tho other phyklans also lUnntlncdthe man and ne was Ho saidho was llmlllo Cirrino twentyone year<yd and a son of Uartolonieofor whom the police are looking Afterbeing taken to the Centre Street Couri-ha was remanded 4o 1oilca tiieadiiuartars without ball
The four moo who arc prisoners In theswindles wore not aniil inthe Harlem Court lucy were In courtbut before the time set tot arraignmentAssistant District Attorney 1uul Krotelasked for an adjournment until nextFriday The riquctH was agreed to Dythe for the defense and Magis-trate Zeller granted It
Ot the four prisoners Dr frondlluc cl and Dr Albert LoewUt are outon 11540 ball ench Joseph Trcfanl IsImprisoned under 6000 ball and FabladAleslo In HGOO ball The lawyers forthe defense requested that the twoprisoners not at liberty be locked upn prison Instead of the
Tombs so that the hearings might bemore expedlUous This was granted
v
WRECK INQUEST ENDS
Testimony All In anal Jury Ad-
Journs Until llondnyP-IjAlTNWEljD N J Feb LLThe
Coroners Jury this afternoon completed-Its Investigation of the wreck at Westfield on Jan 27 which has already coattwentythree lives
The principal witness Will Road Fore ¬
man Joseph Tames of he Philadelphiaand Heading road station at Port RoadIng who was a passenger on the Phila-delphia
¬
flyerThe real point to tits testimony was
that It to some extent upiet that ntMaster Mochahta Chambers who sworethat he found the brake valve andthrottle wide open
Tb own conditions of throttle andair brake lever he saM can be accounted ttor very vaatty aa the Knock ofvudh a collision would throw them froma dose to a free position
Robert M Wilkinson a Phllodelptilaand Reading passenger Hl fortwentythree years who ran engine II-
lon the evening of Jan M and theins ot ttas the day of tns wreeKtesUfled that the engine was In flrM >
class conditionProieoutor N C J EnglIsh ubmttt a
the case to theJuJY wnloh annoUM6Iforeman Fliikii that It wits
satisfied to proan to the fnrmuUUoaof vard ot evldenot
The jury adjourned until MoodkMwin Its vwalot will bs ijii 1
4I
jif t ilM 1t1 Mi
FANNIE KING LEAPS1
fROM A FERRY BOAT
Attempts Suicide from theNevada llls Rescued oy
I
I Crew from School Ship
I A aelltlresxd woman lenped from heferryboat Jfovada nt thin dock at thefoot of Bast Twentythird street this af-
tnrnooii and would have drowned had not-a crew of cadcis on board the schoolhIp flt lilarys lylnjr at the foot ofUast Twentyfourth street gone to herrescue
TJxi ferryboat had Just reached herdock from Grcenpoliit The woman whohad been u passenger1ncroai the Hverremained In Uib rear end of the boatintll tho boatmen and the other paascn-
Kora had cone to the front and thenleaped overboard
Capt JUliUS of the schoolshlp wasstundlnir on his VCPC when ho saw thowoman leap lUte the water lie at oncedespatched a crew of the cadets In arowboat They pulled her into thu boatShe was taken to the scbooliliip DrOttrien the ships physician attended-her I
A message was sent to Bellevue Hos-pital and Dr Donald responded withan ambulance The woman was thentaken to the hospital whore she was ruvlvod
After regaining contidoutners thewoman guve ler name 4sl1Vnnle KingSho rcrfuw her address dlie wore anexpensive tailormade Bullr
ROASTED IN TRAIN WRECK
Kilgitsee On n if lit In Grail Saucedliy a Landslide
WHEELING W Vn Feb 13Onewas klllol and two fatally injureij In
a wreck on the Plh burg WesternRailway today Engineer GeorgeCowan of Huzelwood Pn wa roast ¬
ed to death by the steam andFireman Boll of Hazelwood and
Brakemtn Wright of Hacelwood werescalded
The cause of tilt wreck was a land-slide
¬
In Raffertys Cut
MAN AND WIFE
DEAD FoROM CAS
Life Had Gone from Joseph
pBrien When HoW Found
and Mrs OBrien Died in Hos-
pital
¬
LEFT THE GAS TURNED ON
Joseph OBrien proprietor of a hotel-on Busclimnns Walk near the floweryConey Island was found dead In hisbed this afternoon and his wife Annawas removed to the Kings County Hos-pital
¬
where she died of gas InhalationThe couple last night attended a hillglen In honor of Lincolns birthdayund returned to their home late afterpartaking freely of liquor
Adolph IxGroft la employed in a n i<rhboring hostelry He noticed that UwOJIricns did not rise today and he In-
formed¬
his omptoynr He waLLed untila oclock before he was Instructed to In
tlGulco After tnlng the front andside doors nnd finding both locked andno response earning from either door ¬
bell he decklnd to lnvi UgatuOBrlen was found In his bid dead
Ills wife waa wife breathing feeblyBPoth were clasped In each othersarms anti It Is supposed that in theirsleep that they realized the presencenf danger and drew nearer to aoh otherPhi small gas stove In tho roomound to bo omitting gas while the jetsof the Illuminating gas were turned otc
It Is Bjppoawl that the COUple turned-on the is etop and then lit the jetnf thrt II I umo nil tllIQ gM forgetting ViraLthe stove hid boon turned on Thenhaving undressed thny wont to bed iincon >cloup or their belny In the pres-ence
¬
of danKor fnxn the rangeThe OUrlen are familiar Conay Island
pfr onBgi s The have been there forthree years coming tram Manhattanwhere they formerly run n hotel on thaeast Mo They were both middle usedand hail no children
wl1yot Visit Florldatri-iinalraiila Killroad tears Sib 17 asl Uirok-
S UO for rouiyltllp ticket aptelil trainApplr to Tourlit Agot 26 Mb it V TS
GEN GREENE NAMES TWO
r NEW CAPTAINS OF POLICE
Commissioner Greene promoted Sergts Edward Gallagher-
of the Bedford avenue stalcn Brooklyn and William Hodgins-
of the Steamboat Patro to the rank of captain this afternoonThis is the second promotion out of the Steamboat Patrol to ¬
day Capt Elbert 0 Smith having been made an inspector ear-
lier
¬
in the afternoon Cap Creamer was sent to Fort Hamilton+
LATE RESULTS AT NEW ORLEANS
Fourth Race Scorpio 1 Bummer 2 Imp LEtrenne 3
Fifth RaceBenson Caldwell 1 Chickadee 2 Willard 3t
VENEZUELAN PROTOCOLS TO BE SIGNED TONIGHTWASHINGTON Feb 13Mr Bowen expects to sign tho
British German and Italian protocols between 7 and B oclocktonight at the British Embassy Italy has waived her requestfor an Increased cash payment
5I5
C
<
ww wb jroi tS± ji j JI
CROWDH CLAMOR
AT DOORS or TWO lf-
ft
CLOSEDBANK8Com-
ptroller
r-r
8J
if-
I
of the Currency Puts an Exam-
ineriF
I
in Charge of the First NationalfiitAsbury Park and the Monmouth Trfit 2Company at Once Suspends v
tri <i
Streets About the Suspended Institution
Filled with People Among Them MSWomen in TearsTrust Company Likelyj f
to Resume Business Next Week fr
5IDctt Ill Cvcnlni World
ASDURY PARK N J Feb 11 TheFirst National flank of Asbury Parkone nf the largest tunking institutionsIn this section ot the State was closedtoday by order of the Comptroller otthe Currency and National Bank Exam-
iner
¬
John W Schofleld ban been placedIn charge It Is feared that the entirecapital of the bank lies been wiped outIn unfortunate speculations which fIrstoGiHorfaed the surplus and then ate upthe capital
The Monmouth Trust Company wasclosed but it Is announced that businesswill be resumed Monday or Tuesday
An examination of the First NationalBank of Feb t showed the bqok valueof lis resources and liabilities on thatdate to be as followsnrjotitrLou and dUeount-tinlt
I32tIsc4 Btiln baad t 7000
aloes curtl <i elitne Ao Jneat o tlt U4Du Iran ttnki and t ak <n roM
tub aDd Mii Itrai-Uurrwt
1073UPMIM 6060
Total K3791UJ1JrLtrIcS
CapItal sleek i 806000Surplus nd undile4 ptoOU C20SSSpecial drfidlt 301CIODu to backs and daoktr 1212s-ndlrldual depo alto 3175
clreulatton-Dorrowtil
7 5000mOOt y TO-
TOUI teamExcited Crowd at Dank
It woe some time before the news ofthe failure spread through the townThen an excited crowd of depositorsgathered In front of the bank and clam ¬
ored for Information Mr Schofieldturned away all inquiries stating thatIt was not yet possible to determinethe exact status of the banks financesim the hooks had not been thoroughlyexamined
Because of Ma refusal to give anyicflnlte statement a rumor rapidly
spread throughout the town that theblink had been wrecked by unwise specu-
lation¬
The depositors of the bank aremostly small tradesmen sod residents-
The sign was hung out on the doorsat a few minutes before noon whentho majority of the townspeople wereat their midday mew so that it wasnearly an hour later before news of thefailure got abroad Then the depositorspoured ou of their stores and noosesand rushed in an excited crowd to thebank and demanded Immediate paymentOf their deposIts
Soon a crowd of several hundred col
ITALY DEMAND-
SHIGHERTERMSUI
Minister Bowen Meets It with
Declaration that Agreement-
Is Violated by Venezuelan
Settlement Now Asked
WASHINGTON Feb lTh ItalianAmbassador called on Mr Bow n this
afternoon and Informed him that he felt
that hi Government vhould receive an
Increased cash payment In view of
Oenaanrs demands for JMOOOO
Mr Bowen stated that Italy if she in-
sisted¬
on this payment would be viola-ting
¬
previous agrament-
sWEATHERFORECAST
Vo eMt tat Ibo thirtrstxhoer sadiStS M 8 P M 1s-tU57 tor feev York city ans-itMsdtyOnrUY fair to
taIbe and latnrdari sliarbtlr-ooldev nrdaiy light to h-
tI1II4WMI
I J
dJWL 4i1
ilected shout the bank and In th4elloment started all sorts of slid ruifmore about absconding officers aitdeisZ 4j
bezzlement There were many wssscIn the crowd and when they 1Mrisd I
that they would not be able to drkwtheir deposits and would i probably neT l tihave any of their money returnedW 7them they wept hystericai1ynndiojall sorts of accusations on the headefithe officers of thtlbaDk-
JAUureZ3 y>
Was BrpeoteO < tThe First National has been la abutway for nearly a year most ot Its rail JC-
coSUb Mftoculationa proving unfortunateLast December this stock went dean 1
from pan to 76 and a Netiozia1ekE-xaminer gave the bank until 1Ito bring the stockuptotts eiLth-Value
Fsuet atilt tho assets in sooaabOn Jan 1 the officers the b ICLra-
erted4
that they had snide an rrifisimont onthosttockholdenvana BJ i wKg
fsnare time within which Co nwetjtSdemands of the Examiner Staoethough the depositors 1suKtd that then was S IfWalarm pcaotlcoJIy nothing W
Improve the finances of lCIeJnaU oOf Scott said the beltoved-
depositor Jwould be In toil < r <
The lUonmoufih Trust Companywas closed shortly after buatne0istopped at Uie Urst Notional TlieInstitutions are Intimately sbut tt la believed that the treat mIs tnaInda1lyBOImIJ r-
AC Twining af theCompany stated that this bankreopen on Monday or Tuesday ntulIt was dosed merely to ascertainstood with the First National sagprevent a TOIl on tile befit r < t
The officers of the First NsJSMuUGeorge P Kroehl President Dr i
Johnson Vicepresident HCashier and J B Davis sisCashier P
There Is every reason to benvthe Trust Company Is not aerlomJror crippled Itis regarded as one at i
soundest Institutions in the countythe last statement publishedflattering character Daniel SBOil magnate Is onerectors In the ilonroouthother wellknown financierS arebead of this institution
The National Bank of ss1Mlvfthe New York correspondentNational Bank where It has abalance to Its credit here ff 1
Women Were s n lsrsWomen who cameto the
ranyo offices read the nottoedoor nd burst Into tease J C-
It is understood that an athi fits otnoers of the 1 feet
al Bank to save the InstituttM-lssng shareholders 150 ecchout
share of stook Some of thewere willing to pay but otbusuitedsot and the tflosing of thebsp i
ADDICKS REISlA PARTY UPRR-
f fI
1MRegular Republicans Pri
that Leaders Faction J
One Senator but thJ5Must Not Be Addicks jjP
LL
DOVER JVel Fob lThRepublicans held a caucus this n-
and framed a proposition which wseented to tho Addicks factionto the election of one regular 01
can Senator and ono Addtckv HeSenator The proposition statesUnion lltpublloan Senator must tJ Edward Mjcks a
C Ulllson Pre Meot PMof the Senate said We vast rthll matter We dont wane °
ponslblllty to rest on us IfI i <1notare
The offer was not agreed to w Itwntynrst ballot for U0IU4Senator was taken this af
follow p
LongUrmAddickJi 1i 1-
III
lUnlnsWIUlam ii Stevens CD u I-
terrnA4uidrL lT II A Dill
0 IlIlkie lep-ardson
1II John It tJioholoi 0I
Toll meant no election i
Tb fIrst break In titcratlo ranks occurred toresontalive Allen Qt 1esregarded as one of tilemen vo for BUy r-
Ie
4