s as to j Proprietor of the Glen Island i forUmbrii1 DAY,Says No Other Couple Entered with Them.'S—Re-of ait.1.—Mrs,oremostIty, has tree ting•hearse e to be 'aIs are horses, louneedwill ax week d Tom. receive ing old s cat is ec repit.*oposedfuneral Worn-ion. of terday.’ is in possi-ts thatmany cranks writ?-to FLORENCE BURNS.Has Not Seen Her Family, for Some Days—Devoutly Attentive at Religious Services.ZonecenRECEIVFDn saidng be-nister-todo:ru elty ner in aerals.d ands longle for and I If my ie 1st April e and tables [ have ust be ort of?s. Ifwant . clearAugusts Quick, proprietor of the Glen island Hotel, was indignant yesterday at statements «made by Dlstrict-Attorney Jerome that the employees of the place had been backward about furnishing in* formation facilitating the prosecution of the case against Florence Burns.charged with killing Waiter T. Brooks.'“I have been willing at all times to throw any light I could on the mystery surrounding the death of Brooks.” said Mr. Quick last night to a reporter for The World. “I have made an investigation on my own account, entirely independent of any work that Mr. Jerome has done, and i find that iMr. Jerome’s assertions that my porters and clerks have withheld information are incorrect. They have withheld nothing. They told all they knew. U Js possible that their statements on the witness-stand may not agree in every detail with what they told the Dlstrict-Attorney’s representatives previous to the time they testified, because a man on the witness-stand naturally is not going to swear to anything he does not know positively.But I am as much interested as any one in clearing up the mystery of the young man’s death, and anything I could do to help the authorities has been done and will be done, not alone by me, but by all my employees.Xo One With Them.. *T see that the Dlstrict-Attorney claims to have knowledge -that two other couples entered the hotel at the same time that Brooks and his womanInventor ize HisCacompanion came in, and that they registered as ‘H. Johnson and wife’ and ‘F. Dean and wife.' The District-At-torney says he has information to lead him to believe that Brooks, ’Johnson’ and ‘Dean’ were acquainted, and that they conversed together while they wereThat In-his sweep! tics to “tf out by the crossing ttDaniel C on that lifrom the i during the ord any sisin Cornwai“The Ur eeivlng zorway ecrosonly tihat,the LizardI had the Iway aeros:why I sh*Poldhu mebeen attunBut I didthough I c tanee wit!England, aCampania. It is Maisyntonic sy of tuning-1 third spatioi In other wlt; messages sc eepted, or, would say.The sympi tween onlying a.ppara tadjusting tlC. A. a rod ested.d fishbirdsit, is -e myed.. D.t tureh. One threegetting rooms. Presumably the Dis-250 tunes.Signor M quiet, and his secretar;One of th the Umbria for Dr. Oha geon, inforr sailed on t had expeete York.MORGANWIFEDcclarfitsudingbeen i, andIt. rs on stmascoatcruel-ma-1ST.trict-Attorney thinks that ‘Johnson’ and 'Dean' wero a couple of Brooks’s companions from Brooklyn.Now, I want to say that there isn't a scintilla of truth, in this assertion bythe Dlstrict-Attorney. Follows HThe couples did not enter the hotel ■together, much less speak to each other.They did not see each other. It was at least twenty minutes after Brooks had entered that ‘Johnson’ arrived, and-at least five minutes later that ’Dean' came m,Brooks and the woman he was »with were assigned to room 12, .which Is in the old part of the hotel, and the other Uvq couples were assigned to rooms 32 and 33, in the new wing. I am willing to swear to this on the witness-stand.Florence Burns spent her second Sunday in the Tombs yesterday. It was just two weeks ago. that she began ther residence there.- Nqne of her family called on her. Sh,p appears thoroughly resigned. She eats the same fare that Is served to other prisoners and takes her regular dally exercise with them.Devout at Oliurcli Service.EtD.She attended both the morning and afternoon services conducted by Chaplain lied I Munroe, and ’followed the proceedingswith interest, giving marked attention to the prayers and sermon. -Her attitude was -devout. During the prayers she kept her head bowfd. She joined in the singing vigorously.She wore a rainy-day skirt .and ■ a black waist. She said to the matron, that she greatly missed her friend, Mrs, Foster, the Tombs Angel, who lost her life in the Park Avenue Hotel fire. She said she had not heard from her parents for several days. Letters addressed to her In writing she does not recognize she turns over to Warden Flynn. Several of these missives , arrived yesterday. They were from cranks, some offering sympathy and declaring the -belief of the writers in her innocence; others asserting that she was guilty and should confess hercrime.CHICAGO, Morgan andCushman, u morrow to :eated. Mprjentered his House, New dpen - his trt and • letters, on the roac Intense parts disconcerts 1 work. He d Hlsie Leslie, she fears for him' up by says, and he himself. MrsMy lawyeyers' have ag pay me a ee of which I a mony at stat that I have ance. He haooti-MINSTBILfterDeanyrce,aretenthenaridrest,indsthe.NO JURY WOULDCONVICT BURNS GIRL.”ftAn-;ers,in-up.)uldjeptandith,ras3ped■theforsed.ay:day;rdssht.vho;htsMi-ory . ofSleeps In Cllug; Den.. Neil Bryan istrels who- w! and Billylaughter the£ago. Js slowlj pital, Brookl since April u in a chair.He 1s seven brothers, equ days, are de from 1857 to Neil Bryant 1 many Ball v carried a. hot bow to the v$10 FOR p:exceptional lies in theit, re r ace 1 it buyl it: tod aIlccorrt Prllt;WouldJohn Wash!tor’s One HStreet Theatrlt;•terday agains65 West One street, before (Harlem Court theatre Sa.turlt; admission tick 'He found thlt;to the box-offl he got his mor and fined $10 wanted a law: journed until IBetrayed Woman's Only Recourse Is Marriage or Murder/' Says Henry Frank.Henry Frank delivered a lecture in Carnegie Hail yesterday on “Anarchism, or the Philosophy .of Libertarian, and incidentally he discussed the case of Florence Burns. Of the Burns case he said:A young woman of beauty, grace and charm Tombs, the fallen and degraded model of somo divine artist, her innocence blighted, her name ruined and’ she charged with the awful crime of I murder. .•Whether Florence Burns be innocent or guilty, she has already-passed through seven hells and lived a • life replete with warnings to the age. Here ■was a girl whose vanity, pride and beauty were her evil guides. Untrained, undisciplined, unrestrained, she- livedout her natural impulses, . suffering them to carry her wnere they. would.When the blight Iliad •blotched her soul and her white robes of innocence were tarnished by a traitorous arid re* lanibellibus lover-7-banfshed from: home, mu 1 spurned by her parents, she had nowhere to turn but to him who had ’been the murderer of- her Innocence,She asks at such a moment that the man; who had been made the confidant of her hopes, her confessions,-, her destruction, to protect her- against the condemnation of the world by marrying her. I say unqualifiedly that if a confiding woman be betrayed by her lover, her only recourse for the rescue of her honor is to demand that he cover the crime by marrying her, and If he refuses ne receives but his deserts 1f she shoots him dead*.„ I know, these are hard words and perhaps should not be uttered, but I think the age demands them. TJme was when, masculine chivalry sufficiently protected womankind so that she herself/; need not redden her hands with deed’s :uf' seif-protection But that age of chivalry has: almost vanished.Woman's - ascent to,./ social Independ-, ience has entailed ,on :her, serious Vre-. spon’S’ibiUtiesV I; insist that so long as the.: standards , are as : thciy : are now,when a'..woman deceived by; her lover slays hlmj-she'Js,;actdpg'irt, self-defense; . . ... ....and . under - the broad akies. no jury: or j p^ry time ;VMr twelve - men could: rbe' - irripariell.ed who both^woula punff2k-be in 1 a447WOtesir-M,1 aithid-TUe Cl-The. prett'y ,lights of thehold their anrmorrow rilffht gives promise night's .fun th calcium, light Each member, sociation has imifersr to be c Is promised. ,JAMES !heoyty;Was Ilrotlier0- ' - . r• mid Ej. ..James Mayh law ' Of ( Ben at 1 iyesterday rriorirytowr.; /Mr.';!sixth year, an cause of v death mouth,- Mum. he wenf Jtto-lGa: for four:,years. North Tarrytoi was appointed ' Mr, v:swift’ a friends; They.Owego/varid tr*wbuld)./ /cori y j c t - her ) ot the.: crime ofmurder.’!r.K! '.ir Wlnw Cnriieiflc^^MplaterThe fuheral* wl.♦‘ - ’ .* -1 1 . ■ 2. 'j 'O-. ; »•.Irvlnifion/