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WEiTHKR-ll"r to-night ihoncti Saturday P EDITION. PRICE ONE CENT. CASHIER SHORT $250,000 CONFESSES ON DEATH BED HOW HE WRECKED BANK Collapse of the Berlin National Discloses Scheme of Black mail Trust. URNOL'D FORCED TO PAY .Man Who Held Him Up Dis appeared After Giving $5,000 in Cash Bail. NMW BERLIN. N T.i April It-Thai ank T. Arnold. former caihler of MM yire National Hank of the villa, al- j leged to be a defaulter to the extent of IO.Oun, may never live to stand trial, was the declaration to-day of the physl- ana In attendance on him. He hua 'an In a atate of total collapse ever ince the dlai'overy that the affulrs of the bank were Involved. National Bank Examiner lidwin F. llorebcck of Now York took charge of IB bank's hooka to-d.iy and l itivcstl- "Former Caehlcr Frank Arnold, who ' ,. tinned a week ago and is a phyalcal w regal ana reported lu a dying eondl 1im, bus. made u confession to the dl ,S .." teletraphed Mr. Uorebcck to " oghllg'"" to-da GANG OF BLACKMAILERS LEVIES TOLL ON CROOKED CASHIERS FOR SILENCE That a band of ehrewd criminals, headed by a New York builneai man u' undoubted etandlng. has been levying blackmail upon crooked hank rushleni i t ,1,,. country, has been re- eeled by the arreit of a man giving loo wnic of Charles K. Holland, thgrged with biackmalUn. l-'runls V. Ar nold, cashier of the defunil First Na tioual Bank of New Berlin. Chenango I'ounty. N. Y. Holland was released on bond and disappeared. BO Flret National Ha )k of New Uer lln suspended yesterday, facing a ertortag." of llSO.ouO. Frank l. Arnold, trusted cashier of tilt Institution and cgofor years in sole chant" of its opera tions, Is in hli hoi In New Berlin, buffering from a ncrvuus hreakdnwii which may cause hli death. Ho has .aid he does not wish to live. Detectives from the Hums DotOOtWo Agency to-day arc learchln g lor Hol land, who U said to have preyed uimjii Arnold for a large sum of money, hold ing over his head the constuut ihveut to make public letters Arnold Is said to tiava written. The Burns operatives be lieve that behind Holland, who con fessed, they will find men high In buil neie circles who Inspired the plan to tiiackmall Arnold, and who have bucked si nllar plots to blackmail numerous other defaulting bank olllclals. BLACKMAILER FORCED ARNOLD TO GIVE UP $825. A man who gave tlio name of ' laurlee II. Holland," and New York, i'lilludel p.na and Iloiton as his home, culled on Arnold in Marc i and told him ho was Jr. possession of certain letteri Will h Arnold had written to New York boot neas nun. These letter.: If published. Ha said would ruin Arnold, lie said If Arnold would buy twenty-lit" shun s of took in a company lu which he was in tereeted at (bare, the ennpany would agree to prevent the pu iltcgtlon of the letters. Arnold paid over the lii-'i. A few days Inter 'Holland" calloj Ar i, ild up on the telephone from New York an.l asked Arnold to meet him 111 tar- Hotel Ten Ky i; In Al'oan.v. to talk ..vtr the damaging letters. Arnold re : ised und Holland vowed vengeance, Arnold wa so disturbed over tUa viroiti I not he laid the matter before big attorney. Arthur J- Moree, who re valued the Hums Ageu -y lo protect till caghler. A detective was ion) to New Herlln. More messages from "Holland" followed, to which Arnold paid no at tention. Then "Holland" appeared In New Iterl'n an, I demanded HO,000 for .ly return oT ll.U lettOM "HOllatld" ai,;;( grre-t. I n.l I- .I to -uve nude a eomi'lete infvillon o' till attempt a: mull. IAVE CASH BAIL AND THEN HE DISAPPEARED. Burns dotretlves were completely tillMled as to Ills I lentil) . lie daoilned In NOW York. As give ills Home a o.r, tv tell who vyaA behind hlui. He du- Contrnjcd on Seond raff.) n Til. 1. sao EST POINT GRAVE Crooked CeorrieM. 191 a. fcr Co. (Too Maw DO AS SHE WANTED, SAYS MANHE SUES Cornell Student Replies toj Wadleigh's $50,000 Action tor Actress's Love Thai John Krnest ValleIgh condoned the alleged Iniproprletlea of his beau tiful chorus girl wife, formerly Vara Black, with Luring s. Tonkin, a senior In Cornell I'nlverslty and son of a wealthy official ot the Natural das Company of oil City, Pa., wn the ehajngja made by Tonkin to-day in bis answer to a salt Wadlelgh has brought In the Supreme Court agalnit him for loO.OOu (or alleged alienation ot Mrs. Wadtobjh'l atTectloni. Wadiolgb Hied Ml suit against the Cornell student Maroh i March a he followed It witu a ault agalnit Mri. Wadlelgh for absolute divorce. He al leged tl.-ut his pretty cburua girl wife and Tonkin were together at Green'i Hotel, in Philadelphia, Nov. 'J3 last; at MumuYi Hotel, In this city, Dec. 2, and at other places since. Tonkin was arrested on an order se cured by WaJlelgh lost month In Ithaca. We was brought to New York and later released In ball of fl.000. Young Tonkin retorts to-day in the following amazing lanxuuge: "For u complete defense to the al leged case of action stated In the com plaint, the defendant alleges on Infor mation and belief: "Tnat at all times mentioned In the complaint and from, on or before the first day of January. If, down to th commencement of this action the said John Krnest Wadlejgh consented to, ac quiesced in, importuned the. said Vera Wadlelgh and guve her license to con duct herself as she pleased with men generally." Tonkin asks that Wadleigh's suit against him he dNmltsed, und that the costs of thu action be Imposed upon W.i. Heigh. WadleleTh married the chorus girl In Winnipeg, Canada, June U'7. He declares that while she was playing in Ithaca last October In a vaudeville ketch she met Tonkin aiai they becume very frlendlj. This friendship contin ued, he declared, und young Tonkin later met Mrs. Wadlelgh In this city and In Philadelphia. WadlelgH said he found twenty-five burning love letters and many tele grama signed by Tonkin In his wife's trunk. One of these wan addressed to "My Darling Vera," and contained tihts passage: "l.lttle girl, I am afraid 1 will hug you so tight when I see you that I will have to be careful that : don't hurt you." FOUR BOYS DROWN IN RIVER. One (I l he i- iBTOd When lloat Cap size on the Ohio KAST I.IVKRPOOL. O.. April 12. Tour lioyh were drowned early to-day when a boni In which they were crois ing the Ohio River from the West Vir ginia side eupnlie.1 twelve inllea south of here. A fifth buy was saved. The drowned buya were Henry Brandt, twenty years old; Karl Brandt, eighteen, and Hugh Hproul, eighteen, ot Port Homer, O.. anj Clifford How ard, seventeen, of Kalrview, W Vg. jamestowTresults. PHWT BACWiifUftd ao, for two. year-olds; four and one. half furlongs. First Blight, llu (Martini, 4 to 1, 6 to 6 and 1 to t, first; Floral Park, 110 (Burna)i n to io, i to - and out. second I L. Hi lit. I"l i Ambrose), lu to 1, 3 to 1 gild even, third. Time, H 1-e. Jack of li,, hi-, RoaeburVi Sexton, Hand also ran. KHOOND It.Vi'K -I'm se 30, for foui -a. ,.ii.ol'ls and upward: six und onc-hulf luiionj.-..lollle . 1U5 irtliuttingeri. II lo ... 7 to In und out. first; l.oulae Welles. 107 ( Forehand I. 30 to 1, 10 to 1 and 3 to 1, second: Agnar, IU (Mot'ahey), ., lo L u to I und 1 to 3, third. Time, i.E 14. Joe Gallons. MoLeoU f Caeiie wood, Una Major alio ram. HUSBAND LET GIRL Cashiers " Circulation Book Open to AIL" Tho hw FaMUala Verb. World I. HEIRESS ELOPES WITH YALE YOUTH AFTERSEA TRIP Miss Dorothy Waters Recalled From Paris Because Benja min Gatins Was There. IS JUST SEVENTEEN. Notifies Parents From Manhat tan Hotel That She Is Southerner's Bride. Mr. slid Mn. O. Jason Watere ot No. IN Madison avenue admit that their pretty leventeen-year-old daughter, Dorothy, outwitted them. Despite all precautloni and effort! to prevent her romance, etie evaded their vigilance, and eloped, end- It now Mrs. Benjamin Qatlni. The parenta know that tbe young helr eae la married. They received a note from her telling them that Hit night. To-duy thty are wondering where the bride Is spending her honeymoon and whether, when they bear, they will lend. her their bleeslng. Mill Dorothy returned from Europe with her ilitei Ruth only laat Tueaday after a visit to Nielr married alitor, the Baroness Jacquei de St. Marc, at Parti, he eloped the next day. Several tlmei during the last year, since Mils Waters, who la a tall and beautiful brunette, made her debut la society here and at Philadelphia, there were rumora that she wai engaged to Benjamin datlna. On each occasion the rumors were denied by Mri. Watere, who was opposed to the match. COLLEGE SUITOR FOLLOWS HIS SWEETHEART TO PARIS. But as the sweetheart! continued to see one another, Mrs. Wateri took the definite itep about three months ago of lending Dorothy to Paris, so that she might to out of the way of any moru lovemaklng. She went with her fdstur Ruth on a visit to her titled sister In the French- capital. Shortly afterward Clatlm. who Is twenty-two yeurs old and the son of Joseph F. (latins, a wealthy atock ipec ulator, waa injssed from his usual haunt In this city. Only his family arid closes: : i lends knew ihe wai In Europe, recuperating from a dlelocutesl knee, suffered while playing on the frertimgn team at Yule last fall. lie must have followed Miss Wateri from London to Nice, for presently the news ealiles he gun to curry mexsugei uixiut hli string Ol' polo ponies ut Nice and elsewhere. What the news cablei did not tell wui that he was also often In Parts umi was frequently seen in company with Ulsi Dorothy. But Mri. Waters heard, and .mmedlately the report reached her ears she cabled, for her two daughter! to re turn borne at once. When the two girls landed from the Kronprlnx Wllhelm on Tueaday tbey were met by Andrew I', de Foreit-All-good. Both of them denied that Miss Dorothy was engaged to Qatlni. Kor-eit-Allgood denied It, too. Dorothy, who wai all smiles, admitted that ahe had enjoyed her stay In Parti and bad seen Qatlni well, perhaps a few times but not many. Next inorn'ng when alM left home in did not inform any member of the fam ily that the was going. She had no baggage ut nil, and no clothes except thoso she was wearing. When she did not return ut night no great anxiety was felt. It waa supposed she bad gone to call upon girl friends und was re maining over night. But yeaterdey morning it wai found that she had taken with her all her Jewelry and then tbe ramtly mad inquiries and be came alarmed when they loarned that (latins was back In the city. NOTIFIED HER PARENTS SHE HAD BECOME BRIDE. The note that came to t.iem last night was written on Hotel Manhattan atatlon ery. It gave tho bare, simple fact that Dorothy and her eweetheart were mar ried on Wednesday. It iii soon found that the young couple obtained a marriage license at the City Hull, and It'll lupposed that they were afterward married by a prleit, Qatlni being a Cuthollc. Their friends believe that they had their plans al! fixed before leaving Europe and that they havo gone to Atlanta for their honeymoon. When Qatlns returned he surprised his fi lends by having his auto mobiles and polo ponies ihlpped to At lanta. Now they think they understind. (i. Jason Waters Is well known In Wall street and sporting circles. Recently hi purchased a sumptuous country home at Cedarhurst. Mrs. Waters had plinned (Continued on Second Page.) Prey of NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 12, 1912. SEARCH IN PARK FOR INSANE GIRL WHO STOLEA BABY Annie Boyarsky Vanished After Taking Child From Door of Mount Siti'ii Hncnitol lWVlfc W.1,1,1 . VlJ'l lllll HAD STOLEN ANOTHER She Cultivated a Delusion' That She Was the Mother of Twins. A iquad of fMllcemen and workmen made a ayitematle sruroh of thickets and bypathi In Central Tarlc to-day for oeventecn-year-old Annie Boyariky, the demented girl who yesterday kid napped Ruth Fletichman, ten-monthi- uia, ot is o. lis, javu.'iin aveuuu, iron a perambulator In front Of Mt. Sinai Hospital. The girl and tbe baby were traced to the park yesterday evening, but no Information regarding tho aub eequent movement! of tho demented kidnapper has been found. The Boy arsky girl, cccause of her condition and dress, in noticeable. She la five feet, three Inobee tall, welgbi about ISO pounda, hai brown hair and gray eyes, tehe wore no hat and her hair la parted in the mlddlt and made In a roll boblnd. She had on a three-quarter length black cloth coat, a gray owoater and brown and Mack mixed elotii dren. DETECTIVES ON THE WATCH ALL NIQHT AT HER HOME. Annie Boyareky'a homo li at No. 357 Wyona atreet, Mast New York, where be has been living with her mother, Queele, a vtdow and tier brother Iildor. Detoctlvee wa toned t) house and neighborhood .all night but Annie felled to appear. She waa nevar away from home all night before unlets her mother knew where she wur. In the last two years Annie Boyarrky has undergone five operations. The Kil l's Illness and rhc effect of the operations contributed to oak down a men tall tv that was noun too strong. Since her iast dlaeharKe from the hos pltal Ann1.,, Uoyaraky hut cultivated a delusion that she Ma 'he mother of twins which had been mo.en from her. LEFT HOME 8AYINQ SHE WAS GOING FOR A BABY. The Boyariky girl left her mother's home yesterday morning itAtlng that she wis going to Mt. Sinn 1 Hospital to get a baby. Mrs. Boyarsky is a busy woman and Very poor." She ald little attention to the Ineoheieut conversa tions of her daughter. lien Annie BoyaiHky left home sue had only cents, enough to psy her car tare on way to the hospltul. it happened that Anme Boyariky waa at Mt. stn.il HogplUI when little Rut Flelsohman reachud there '.tith her grandmother, her aunt and u nurse, Ruth Is the only child of Mr, and, Mrs. Abraham Kleliuhman of the Madison avenue address. The baby, with hir giandmother, Mn. Rebecca Rappaport, her levcnteen-year- old aunt. Rose Rappaport, and a small nurse girl, Annie Meyer, who llvei at I No. 101 Fast One Hundred and Fifth itreet, left the Fleleclimin home aHiortly after noon to go to thu hospital, where Roae Rappaport was to undergo treat ment. Leaving the nurse gnl to wetoli the baby, which was asleep in its carrluge. Mrs. Usppupurt and her daughter en tered tho hoipitul. In tho recept.o.1 room Mrs. Rappaport law u young gtr) come from the office ot one of the do. ton. The irlrl seemed Kreatlv ex Itel and lingered a bundle alio carried until j the paper broke and a pair uf corsets dropped out. HER RAMBLING TALK WAS ABOUT BABIES. Taking a seat by .Mil. RaMapert girl talked Irratlonallj . sine said: "I have u twin baby la iirooklyn I lost ono ba.b. "I do love babies sol" Thinking the ajeepinS baoy was p. . -feutly lafe, Annie Meyer left her ani entered the hospital. Al sue approaolied Mrs. Kappaport the girl who bad been talking with her arusu to go. Mri. Hap paport saw that alio wore no hat. Bin had on a checked sltlrt end a black viola coat. Five mlnutei later Annie Meyer hur ried back to her charge. The babv was gone. The nurse screamed. Mrs. Hup paport ran to tier and, discovering her grandchild missing, tell Insensible. The person who had taken the ohlld alao had takeia Iti blankets, and In the carriage were the coraets the strange girl had been seen carrying when she left the doctor'! otllce. Heeld BtalMlog Turfctsa Ustaa, aloirs epp. Bith with prlvats reems. SL WKie'rir B F FOR GRANT Blackmailers " Demented Girl Kidnapper and Little Baby She Stole VJii -Biiiiiiigxi"" WOMAN BYlSPHlH STORM CENTRE IN CONGRESS i Mann Accuses Fellow Mem bers of Allowing Her to Shape Legislation. WASHINGTON. April 1 '2. A scath ing denunciation of member! of the House Committee on Bxpemllturea In the Interior Dopat tl lent to-day. was de livered on the Rouge floor ly C'ongress- i ,., Mann of nhnoil, the minority lead er. Ho oharged thut Mr. Graham of Illinois. Chairmen of the Committee, had permitted a woman lobbyist, known by him to be In the employ of petsens pre-slng claims before the committee, to eh nine, legislation. Mrs. Helen pierce Gray or Minnesota was the woman named by Mr. Mann. Aid OhaCgOd that for three month ho had occluded u deak In the office of the 'o:nmli"lon of Indian Affairs on the strength of her relations with the House Committee. Inning that time, aald Mr. Mann. Mrs. Gray had eoHottad ami hud received fe jn ' amounting to see era hundred dollars tn in Indian cla.inunts before InO UOV eminent, Mr. Mann said that u dli'Mtlafled In dian had filed a protOOl with Oralrman arahatS and that he had told the woman to "ket; the money." Baseball Scores To-Day NATIONAL LEAGUE. AT BROOKLYN. GIANTS 0 0 BROOKLYN 1 0 Battiijeo TieraoM and Meyere; Knit-a,-r and Frwln. AT BOSTON. PIIILADLLPH1A 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 BOSTON 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 Itatterloe Dreniian snd Kllllfei , und K ing. Tyler AMERICAN LEAGUE. AT NEW YORK. BOSTON- - 3 0 NbW YORK I 0 Uatierlea-O Prim and ' airlgan. Fvni and Htreet. AT PHILADELPHIA WASH1NGTON- 0 0 0 1 PHILAUtLPHIA 0 0 0 3 Battsrtee Walk an., Henrj Uor- nan ami Thomas POSTPONED GAMES. National League. 1 ..lals-Plrteburgh, ne aan.e, raUt, Circulation Books Open 28 PAGES -RUTH PLEI5CHMW JUMPS 10 DEATH IN THE SUBWAY Philip Joseph, Engaged to Wed in June, Meets a Tragic Doom I'.illip losepli. thirty years old, who only a few weeks ago start, d In bus!-' pess at No. ftl Crosby struct, as head of the J. A H. Novelty Company, and wain t making u go of It. committed outride to-day by leaping In front of a north-bound local subway u..ln from j the piatxomi or tne worm siren na tion. He wai killed lmtintly, two can paiilng over Ms body. Evidence of hie Identity wai obtained from letter! and ardi lu hli p ickets, and later ne was Identified by his part ner, Jacob Mchl. Jurat, of No tin Daw on street, the Dronx. Most uf the letters weie of a dunning character and one contained a check thai hud been returned from tiu Jefter- 1011 Uni'k n arked "short." It was a few inlnuica after lu that un man appeared at the ticket window ot thu Worth strut t station and bought a ticket with what was evidently ..! last nickel. A train hud Juil left tho at. ..on in) I (lie man began pacing the plul .or.11 elm 11I1 naudi clapped ocnuid ins Liagki OoorSe A. HmlUi and join, w. IsllllOi employees of the Itemlnglun rypowrltor company at .So. a;, truad Aay, watcuod mm In hie nervous pacing a. id tiad uegun to foiloiv DIM aa ttie tioard the iiimolc of a (rain a apprnu -ii fllu (wo joung men wore on, a few felt behind Joseph when ho JJiupud. The train wai so near that the body truck the buffers before it fell to (he track. The suicide's partner Mentllied the body at the elation. lie saJd that Jo seph wai engaged to marry a Miss Ida Hohlft of Urownivilio in Juuu. lie had been very despondent business af- 1 fairs, and this mornt'i h I madu a vain effort to get money 1 pay thu rent of lits iiftlces. He lived With his mother at the Henry street address. s 1 cmvn sduitbo. 1 uot,udio,ja.3o PinUaafs.P..UsI.TaiMla SPE AP lllll "givgl" tnothlng orner. Ilioad way, cor. Itarclay Ht . onp. Poat-OSloe, will sell to-dayand Haturduy a.uuii men Murine Hulls and Toucoatg lo tine M.-. Uiibet. fancy blue strliies. In ow tia. era, . . and dark mined worsteds, all sliea II t? MrewP Jje.in mar 3,"Sl!Ej itore, urdey. w. fg.eo. upoo Mturaay ening uil 1 UNDER A TRAIN to All." I GEN. GRANT'S DEATH IN A CHOKING SPASM IS MADE In St. Luke's Hospital for Weeks With Identity Hidden, While He Went Under Knife in Effort to Remedy Throat Trouble. , . "BLOOD CLOT ON HEART" 1 IN DOCTOR'S CERTIFICATE! Funeral Will Await Arrival of Daughter From Russia Burial at West Point. MajoMjtui. Wederick Dent Grant's sudden death near midnight list night at the Hotel Buckingham was caused by a blood clot on the heart cardiac trombosis, in medical terminology according to the death ctt tificate signed to-day by Dr. Robert Abbe, a specialist of No. It West Hftieth street, who was in the bedchamber when Gen. Grant passed away. Neither Dr. Abbe, Lieu!. Marion Howzc, Gen. Grant's akle, who was also present when he died, nor any spokesman tor the family would, admit to-day that the General had recently undergone .111 npcialion ajj St. Luke's Hospital for a cancerous affection of the throat such as tuj 1 brought long illness and death to his father, President U. S. Grant. That Gen. Grant was in St. Luke's Hospital for more than tout weeks during the time his aide announced publicly that he was in tbj South was established from independent sources, an.l that Gen. Ca had been operated on for a throat disease also became known to-day. in .1 ri.. I",. 1 -. 1 , ., POLICE BULLETS FLY AFTER THIEF AMIDST CROWD Hxctting Chase Through Har lem's Busiest Streets Fails to Get Fugitive. A powerful young man robbed the flat of Mrg. Samuel Ellsworth at No. 71 West One Hundred and Twenty-ninth itreet thli afternoon. i captured In front of the building, broke from the PoUoegMfi luccesr fullj dodged Sl bullets sent after him and. aftei run ning several blocks through , l ow.led tieeti, dodged Into No. :Tt West One Muudred and Twent) -eighth. Itreet, where he dliuppeare.l West One PolloeagM Devlin of h Ilundrtxl and Tweno -nfi'.i itpaal ItevUon collared Ihe thief as he wis battling 1 with a man In front, of the upartmrnt I house. The clvlllun. Wtlllam Brown, a former detective. I Id Devlin he had! seen the prlioner enter ttbi bottie and lanu out loaded with suits of clulhei and other article" Devlin took the lilgjatelv hi N.-a i-li. I: u Mr. Oriwt's thief by the Dollar and started him for , wleh that the funeral ull not be Mid I the station, with a pack "f seenl hun. dred iiersons at his herls. lie had reachel n Hundred Twenty-Mfth Itroet and Seienth avenue when the prisoner brok, away and started on a eprlnt back through the crowd. Several peraoni tried to stop him, but weer knocked duwn by tile man's brawny flits. Devlin drew his re volver und emptied It after tne II) lug tbiefi with no restill lie followed the fugitive Into the- hie Hundred and Tw .-tin -eighth street hou.-e. bur no 1 . . ," 111 IM il le Ii linU FOR BASEBALL GAMES AND RACINO RESULTS SEE PACE . "run,' tlif weekly Joke Book given ttt with ffh Sumhy World, it Hammer PRIOE ONE CENT. A MYSTERY 1 tea get uon, j. aiii s rnoromobts rr, t fca Ible' obtalne.i leave of absence from his command over the I lepa 1 (meat Off fee ! Kait down to the vcond of nji death j a few mlnutea after midnight, too I Phyilclam and the military bide oer reeched themaelvei and caueed eucb roiifuelou and veiled aiyitery aa to 1 leud to absurd rumors. Tin- retnitery ,,' the National ll.-sor- vatlnn ill Weot Point alii be the ttagj rest I ilk- place ,if (leu. Ir.ttil'sj lK)dy. The funeral servh... ami ttu.il interinew will nut ii'iiir, however, for Ini di ut tin. Ient. until .lull.,. 1 ia I'vlnro Mb la el 1 'am u iii-.eiie. 11 . 1 ilaiighter ' ' 111' 111 l.i'.- . Mt. can reach New York. Tins . ', -tin It- staten" of the arrangements was maJ late tble fter noon after Ilrig.-i :,,u. Tasker H. BllgO. col. Ueorg.i Andrtwi and Capt. C. W, Kentnn. representing the War Depert nient. had come oivr from vvcrnor'o Island and VlllteJ Mrs. 1 Irani at the liiH'klngiiaiii MRS. ORANT WANTS BURIAL At WEST POINT. "Mis til ant feels that the moet appro ! iut" place for t Inm.iand'a body lo 't i 1 " ,-, in i, at r rotin. win:. nini n. .ilngiii- .eil graduates ''..' .1. lit. 1 11 a le 1 1;, . said (Ion. nils. "There will 11 nilllturv funaeai I hero in New York In wliicn the troops tram Oovernor's Island ani irtioos tuners will tak- nan after whleh l wll lak, t.i i , tolnt eV lain n -m - fa "A cabli unno iuung Ihe dcuth of (Jen. Oram wis m, a ,, daughter in Itaelu to-uaj s.ul stn re pi it gj iho was leaving Mt V iberg 1 unrtl me 1 mice. 1 antacugene and OOP itlrant's brother. I , M. lira it. who Irv.- .III Man Diego, can .ilTHc.'' a. it I M Hi-ant, III., only ion ol Jen. Oram, w ho hurried up from Woah- lllgtoll oil l'e ftp!, ilf the news Of ffll father death, a. rlv.-d at the hotel gt S o'cljck. Ocu. Uraiit ta.ik ap his lesldenee with his lfe und a trained nurse at Sbe llolel Uucklnghain Wednesday night. Y. . Hurrlngtou, who 1 ad been a- torne.v both for Hen. K. i (Irinf and lor his Illustrious fattier. President C H. Grant, when asked If the Uenvrul did 1 L l-1'"' to tbe hotel. relUsed t ansae 11 Wis Ir'.l, OO at I and in ihli he waa burnt out by the statement of (-eland .Kerry, pre- prletor of (be huiel tliat every alwei made to iuep tbe feet of veHue preeence tg tbe betel 5 1 (