The evening world. Newspaper, September 28, 1900, Page 9

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HOT FIGHT HIGH IN AIR. — Policeman Caught Bur- glar on Seventh-Story Fire-Escape. After Dodging a Kick He Fought the Thief to a Standstill. The story of a polleeman’s fight with @ desperate burglar on the seventh story fire-onony howe wir told in the Harlem Court thir mer ‘oe, when George Keis, twen- ty-one + old, of 18 Bowery, wan ar- ralkned ire Magistrate Hogan on a charge of burglary Jamew Keenan, manager of the Avon, Qn exolusive apartment house at One Hundred and Bixteonth street and Madt fon avenue, wan awakened at dawn this morning by a nolse on the fire-eroape. Laoking out he saw a man climbing the ledder Drewalng hurriedly, he ran to the street and called Policeman Moret won of the Haat One Mundred and Mwenty-teth street station Morrison climbed over a high stone ance on he One Hundred and Sixteenth Bireet aide Into the rear court and ther Olltobed up the athne trimmings Dullding Afteen feet to the fire-escape Tt wan a perilous “eat The man op thy coming and made for the roof, ‘Tho bullding 1s seven stories high and | towers above thone adjoining, The fugt tive saw that the roof afforted him no oi, chance to got away and he determined » He lay tn walt on the unttl Morttaon’s Then to fight flor It. top floor fire-tacape head showed above the ladder he Kicked vigorously at him Morrison, anticipating such a move, feted ihe fellow's loge, and then the ght began. The platform at the fire esoape Is only & by 4 feat, and on this the men clinched and struggled, and it looké’ to Keenan, down below, as if both would fall either down through the openings or over the railing into the court. ‘The thief fought viciously for tem minutes, but Morrison, getting a grip on hie throat, forced him to his kness ‘and then clubbed tim until he gave fn. Kelas in court sald he was out of work and wanted money, BP Se ee $1,000 ball. FATHER SHOT GIRL’S LOVER ——— Miss Burns Tried to Shield | Sweetheart from Bullet. Just aa Lip Burns stepped between her father and her eweetheart, Charies Collinson, who were in an altercation, her father shot and mostaily wounded the young man. ‘Tho girl fell fainting aoress the body of the wounded man, ‘The shooting osousred at West Orange, J, eaxty this morning, after the father had returned from this city and found Colingon in the house, Coftingon fe farmer and lives a mile from the Burne homestead. He has bean courting eighteen-year-ad Lacy Burne for some time in face of her father’s ‘epposition, Burm repeatediy told him to keep away from the house, He dd #0, but met the girl clandestinely, Last night, however, when the father left on a visit ‘to this city, Collinson called on the «ir, Getermined to make @ last appeal to the returned at midnight and in the he ordered him tried to argue, but with. eee ne a ere 8 howse agnin, and hustied a Fr : it Pas the young man, who all expoatuleting, lost his Ja come to blows ‘between them with Was (00 Jate, how: drawn hia re- as her hand was ex- lie ti; i ! i pli; nil i, ; i Coltiavon in the to the ground. With a to the hospital, BAVARIAN NOT AFRAID _—o Ready to Face Charge of Murdering His Father. a > = 5 zk H e i i United States Commtssioner femple thia morning hold a further examina- tion {n the onge of Johann Bauer, of 299 Kast Noety-fourth street, who is charawd with (he morder of his father in Munehamunster, Bavaria, in Novem. ber, 1996, The man waa arrested Inat week on information recetved from i ePpart- ment of Forelmm Affaire of UW varia by the German Consul in thin city and ro. manded until he could seours counsel To-day Mauer sald that he did not desire a hearing as he wished to return to Bavaria voluntarily, He was asked it he knew that he would be extradited and trled on a charge of murder and anewered and | am not afraid.” Th amination was then adjourned for four weeks, Bauer's extradition will follow. of 0 fasitonable apartment f the fire-esoape vaw him THE WORLD; FRIDAY ead SEPTEMBER 28, ISHE ELOPED |g DRUG CURSED HER i i ‘ i {. ' i ' i + FANNY RUSSELL, Phe leleteleleleleleleltoleleloleteloleleivink When Ray Russell, secretary to the Wall street operator, Gen, John Bohults, ame from Jersey (ity this morning, he Went, as was his daily custom, to the Magnolia Hotel, at 30 Chambers street, to vielt his invalid wife, He carrted a basket of fruit intended for her, |v an Evening World reporter met him at tho door of his wife's room and told him she was dead The than broke down and wept pitifully Entering, he ia ‘himself aorons her body and kissed her. | Meeped for seven years in a constant optum stupor, the woman died gud denly at midnight in her squalid litte room on the top floor of the Chambers treet lodging-nouse, Hor death revealed the life sorrow of her husband, who had clung to her when the fatal fascination of the drug had wrecked his happiness and her lif, HIS LIFE’S SORROW. ‘Trembling with grief, Russell told his pathetic story. He is a man of forty, but years of sorrow have drawn his foatures, fronted his hair and furrowed hia brow until his spare, stooped fram: sooma that of m man of (three score Tpirteen years ago he married All the, ‘after years of utter dissipation could not wholly mar the wonderful beauly of the woman that he took to wife A year after their marriage their infant died, and doctors soothed the mother's ariet and physical tliness with opium. he fell « victim to the drug, With all her hustand's love to help her Mgnt It, whe was powerless against {te tral Sanitariums and experts were tried and proved useless, The habit erew on her | until the periods of resistance were ob- IIterated and she Dacame a hapless vie- tim to the drug, GUARDING THE SECRET. Rupeell wae lett with the care of an invalid mother, and to prolong her life | and spare all of them from the dingrace | of exposure, he put his unfortunate wife wway from Nis house, He moved with his mother (o @ modest house in Grove otreet, Jersey CHy, and took his wife to the Magnolia Hotel, Ur | not bie to provide better quart he said this morning. The presence of wtrangers had recailed to him the smatiness and the squalor of the little room. ‘Henides,” added, “ehe waa then past caring for anyehing tout the drug,” Lower and tower (he woman eank fn her narcotic pasion, until all trace of the ereature he once loved bad been oraiterated and she became a besotted phyateal wreck, Rue he clung v4 her, safeguarded her form want and saw that ahe wan supplied with the drug that was more to her than hie love or her own life. WONDERFUL DEVOTION. Yor fitteen years he wrought for the woman and his invalid mother, Thar {ils consumed him earnings ae thelr care ate up his leisure. There were no fre moments for him and his days were filled with labor, hopelem ax it was ead Beparation from hin wite Inoreased hin devotion. For seven years he eltmbed the long, dark stairs to the fitth floor rear room every morning on hit way to work, At junch hour he brought his scanty store to her roam and they ate to gether, Again at night, his labor done, he went to her again and spent an hour before he went back to Jersey (ty to spend the night pertiaps at hie sick and aged mother's bedside Mo had lived (hie life hiding his sorrow, WORLD KEPT IGNORANT, | Tn a way ft stupid alm. To hide it from hia world he bad placed the woman in! a lower weet side lodging-ioure, She | had grown Indifferent to (he refinement? for seven years of Iife in which whe had been re: Her ole ting wax coaree, he inga 7 sap and seanty, As time we 4)" o the aqualor of hey room grew apace six months she had not risen from her bed, The piace beeame an accumula tion of fith, The hed was al) bul tumbi ing apart from age aad rottenness, Ti was barren of inen, The floor was carpetiens. ‘The wall paper hung in pirips from the damp walla, Two ltile windows opening on a tenement court let alr Nant inte the compartment, which waa noi over atx by ton feet, 1 have seen @ good Bit of Ifo," maid Harney, proprietor of the q years ago Mr, Rui | brought hia wife here, Much of beauty then r Matned, but phe was a hopeless slave to the drug, He arranged to pay Ha month for her keep and he gave nome thing extra to my clerk to look aftor her, Three times a day he came here | Without Mall In all kinds of weather. He climbed those stairs early in the morn Ing and late at night, and never a day id ho mins pending part of his dinner hour in her room. “It was pitiful to wee how fond he was of her through all her wretchedness, Sho did not give us trouble. Bhe wanted Aothing but morphine, and my clerk with money to keep out seldom, and a human or six monte past she has not left her bed, and her craving for the drug Waa *o enormous (hat it look a great deal of money to keep her supplied. Mr Hawnell was here as usual jist night She began to feel bad after he Jett she dled beemuse her body waa worn out by the poison, The wonder (o me har been how she tived ao jong,” ‘The doctor's dagnonia is that she took an overdone of the narcotic OLD MAN'S GRIEF, Frederick Taylor, an old man who combines the duties of clerk and wateh- man at the Magnolia Hotel, wept almost ae bitterly over the dead woman an did her husband, He had been her caretaker tince she went to the hotel, i “L had grown to love her aw if whe were my own daughter,” he sald. ‘Bho Wan a beautiful woman and a noble, | food creature, too, but for the curve of the drug. She had been well reared “When she frat came here she brooted | y over her misfortune, but of late years Fanny Russell a Bank Clerk's Wife, Dies of! Opium in a Chambers Street Lodging House, Where Her Husband! Had Tenderly Cared for Her During Years. Seven | she had thought of nothing but the drug. For six months she kept her bed and was never away from Ate ine fluvnee ° world has heen a blank to Jt Woe a pitifel thing to Keo on God's creatures 40 vesotted, and pif) tome Wa Jovotion of man He wincere in his sorrow for her death, where most men would fee! | Mi thal « great ton had been taken from lives, } a THIEVING PORTER, Mack Dandy Stole Knowsh to Ovtit © Smt Haber. | dnshery. Joreph Garland, of 46 Wert Mitty. seventh reet) has been the fashion plate of colored rote ' | the it wit now he te in x and realigos that vanity ts a bad thing for a porter in a habertashery Hie was employed at 47 Cortlandt! atreet Untll yesterday, when the police found | his room Reventy-eight pairs of stockinas, forty-aleht faney ablety, two aweators airs of trousers, #ix Uiree hats, thirt on handkerohiets two aliver hand (wo wate ar and ple a qua Mines, all the property of moloyers. and valued at $09, Mout today hell him in fant fe and maeriod Ker ‘on her doors: ‘BROTHERS’ FEUD | AIRED. Again Told in Police | Court. A big crowd gathered tn the laland police and mir abuse and siande at one another by Tunis G. a@l Joho Berge je wealthy reat ve the Shore Road May Nite, came ap for a hearing ar Airing of the family feud be expect r 1 ne bein weeks ago when Mr { mmoned me cat M | f ve home and | fier that al vwed, Warrante were ® and today’s proceedings were the re Mra John Bergen war Miss leabelie Loveland, of Hartford, Conn. wie jusband met her a doe yea A young doctor whe dewperately in love with fo wed her to Mrovkiyn and shot Wounded, he war into the house of Martin Hennett uncle of the Hergens, and later Hennett was \told Tunls a story that he eald came from the doeto Mre. John Bergen Tunte and hie wie eak to Mrs, Bergen rewarding the past of The rewult wae that Porised even The matter was kept secret for @ while but at lengt \¢ pagan to (alk When John dem 1 explanations from bie brother and got them he etart ung physte Then Job and Bennett d to find ad disappeared. Hennett's veracity went after nim with @ shotgun and was pul inder bonds A fleree family feud followed | nally hushed wp for some time, but has It was! now started again, and the breach be tween the families |» hel than ever 'NEGRO RAN FOR LIFE. Ailtidaipaicne Kissed a White Woman and Beat Her Escort. @wift running alone saved a neers from being mobbed by men at Twenty third street and Madison @quare baat night. He had kissed a while woman and then beaten her escort before the crowd gathered Hugh Arnold, an employer of an office | hullding at 9 roadway a car at Twenty third street an attractive young woman, ‘The was negro, tall, powerful and evidently un the influence of Hquor, came acrome the street, threw hin arms around the woman and Kimed her twioe on the tp fhe shrieked, and Mr. Arnold attacked the negro. In this he was worsted, for the negro threw him to the ground and proceeded to pound him with all hie might ‘The sheteks of the woman brought « nen to the rescue the black man ind he beewme & run away, but wan me ¥ and blows ring his jiead he Srushed thro’ wrtived, took hie away tn and » wan hyaterion nV ornpanton a cab eee IRON MOULDER A SUICIDE. James Clark, thirtystwo youre old, of Greenville, Nod. whe cut hie th last Priday and wae taken to #, Vin ape Va Soap! tal ‘ ie ID Holley i" Ha ale al ¢ For Infants and Children, tho Kind You Have Always Bought Boars tho Signature of 4 7 was awaltiog | wonderful; it heals up the se , | mucus. 1900, WITH NEGRO. BUT HE LOVED OWN. resis ous sons cunme Heleiirieloleloiot: mtelotelolmintoboioiotwinteintatoloivtointolobtelatolotointeistelotolotetetelols Nineteen Shocks Nor- folk Society. A) to The Keening W NORFOLK Hey s Moree, a negro coachman, and Mie nie \ fie a hanidaome arr \ ‘ n New York and as been onnlived bs a Koverness Jat the residence of Mra Harrison. tn ut f the Wost Kad. have e Hit Acolety Is shocked Moy . 4 chocolatecolored and nt was ‘ { ' ‘ rber MM Nuah, ane N ' 1 " ire Mins W Mf Whe proe ed tod preity. athe met I hear w tor Was anwwerlng A profemstonal ail Bho became infatuated with him and | they mot clandeatine ‘The palr weat from here Philadel. | phia, where all crmee of then was lat Morse in about thirty -t urn old while Mise Wiillama by nineteen The Koch Consumption and Asthma Cure, is 4 Dr Bdward Koch, the inventor of the new Koch inhalation, is aon visiting the American offices the Koch Ling Cure at 48 W. e at,, New York, which Is the only of. | flee in New York City, He will be here text month and will see all patients, The doctor has for yours atudied meat and day perfecting his wonder- ful treatment for the cure of these diseases, ‘I'he old method of Dr. Koch, of {njooting the tubereuline medicine, is now Itttle used, but by the use of the wonderful Inialation Apparatus the healing oils, combined with the tuberculine, which kill the germs, are thrown into olly vapors so they can be breathed into the alr tubes of the lungs, and the effect ts With him |and gives new Ife to patients hay ink ling diseases, The New York OMves are al 48 W. 22d at. It stands alone aa the best cure for that fatal scourge, consumption, which sends ite thousands wpon thousands to un timely graves, especially in such changeable climates as New York. It steals upon tts vietim like the thief in the night, and before he is aware of his trne condition his catarrhal discharge has so polsoned the alr thbes of the Jungs that they begin to break away and deeay, and he be comes an unwilling slave to ite ruin OB consequences, Consumption gen erally begins as an ordinary catarrh in the nose or throat, the discharge of which drops down into the air passages, especially at night while! asleep, \intil they, too, are infected. | when the following symptoma are present: ‘There ls a constant hawk: | ‘ng and spitting, tekling in the throat, causing Went attempts to cloar jt; raising tough or sometimes yellow prevaure acroas the chest, a languid, tired feeling, headache, (isziness, and in later stages a lows of flesh. Indeed, catarrh is Well known to be a certain fore runner of not only consumption, bat asthna, bronchitis and deafness Continuance of the al _| Great Advance Fall Sale IN OUR BASEMENT. Fine Shoes, Good Shoes, Comfortable Shoes, Reliable Shoes For Men, Women and Children. Of the 50,000 pairs with which this sale started there are 15,000 Pairs Left. All New, Fresh Goods, Marvellous Bargains, Supremest Values, 1,000 Pairs Wo-(3,000 Pairs men's $2.50, $3 Men's $2.50 and $3.50 Black Black, Double Kid, Button and 4" Single Sole Lace Shoes, Welt| he ae Soles, Date Toes, $f,50 $175 Per Per Pair, Pair. 5,000 Pairs Misses'|2,000 Pairs ‘Boys’ ana and Child's Black Kid| Youths’ Satin Calf, Double Patent Leather Tip| Sole Lace Shoes, Button and Lace|Sises 11 to 2, Shoes, Sives6to| $f,00 104, 75; Sises 11 to|Sises 2% 2, $1,00;| to 5%, Sises 2% to|$ J 25. 6, $1.25, 1,000 Pairs Little Gent's Satin Calf Lace Shoes, sises 8 to 13!%., .80 Store Open Saturday Evening Until 10 O'Clock. ALFRED J, CAMMEYER, 6th Ave,, cor. 20th St T. KELLY. 263 SIXTH AVE. (Entrance through Furniture Store.) 104-106 West 17th St. If you have been paylog cash for your Clothing with the Idea that f(t 1 cheaper, you have been making a mistake. It would be worth your while to compare our garments as to quality and price You will find everything marked in plain figures, and in every Instance as low aa aimilar qualities can be had for in cash stores, and you have the advantage of lita ‘CREDIT, MEN'S SACK SUITS. In fanoy cassimeres, cheviote and worsteds, made in the newest styles, strictly all wool and well tatlored, 10,50 to 27.00 MEN'S SPRING OVERCOATS, in fine coverts, whipoords, viounas and cheviots, made in the latest style ined with good Idalian cloth yatin 10,00 to 35.00 LADIBS' SUITS, male of all wool cheviote, venetians and broadcloths double-breasted and tMouse jackets lined with taffeta; new shaped skirts from, 9,98 to 32.50 Consultation, examination and one treatment free, 760 333 Paid Help Wants in this mornin g’s World, »& ws Paid Help Wants in the thieteen other New York papers combined, MOPNTS 16) JW RAN TRNDE Ne 4) KITCHEN otk mn WONNAR 10] LARIR® TVLone NOOKMTY DEY 5] WBN WANTED i WOKKERR EG! 1) MILLINeRY 7) wore.oene 7 vues \ 13] OPERATORS { s) AINTroR viens AL mA ft ‘ MASHER 4 15 | Poeromene WORLD WANTR , th and 1 their attention for a little while—just y long enough to sult the purpose of the advertiser They get Help for the Help Gockers and they get jobs for y the ditwation Beck- ony . MILLINERY, SHOES, MACHINES, FURNITURE AND CARPETS, Open Saturday Evenings Until 9.30. 470 Falton St,, Brooklyn. : Cigar Dealers Like $ 2 to have their regular customers smoke SOld Virginia Cheroots s because they know that once a man g starts smoking them he ts “fixed,” eolery wr @ and that he will have no more trouble ® @ different kinds of Five Cent cigars, val Three hundred million Old Virginia Chetoots smoked this a year, Ask your own dealer, Price, 3 for 4 cents, ae 2 The World Almauae, No political peaker can be foreeful without a knowledge of facts All news: | dealers. ’ “or Angen frome The World,

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