The evening world. Newspaper, June 10, 1901, Page 3

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3 The Hero, Stunned by the Falsity of Wife and Brother, Sees Hi Duty and Bravely Sets Out to Do It. It seomed so awful, so horribie. looked into the face of this woman whom T loved, It was so pale and 80 With the confession of his wife full of sorro still ringing in his care, with the| vision of her pale face before him, John Collyer told the tragedy of his|1 ke omy wife went Into th he blood rushel to For a head. i . bedroom, my My brother was at the sink washing lis ) life to-day. It was the story of an}iands. T! was tho man who had honest man who loved his home. It} ine sand )imy far With isa effort 1 controll ynelt. was the story of an erring woman bowed down with grief. It told of the unnatural pérfidy of a brother; pf suspicions, accusations, denials, chen admissions, forgiveness, tender- cess, bitter remorse—and death. To areporter of The Byening World The Brother Goes, Asa,’ I sald, ‘Joe wants to see you tn th 1 followed him. sewing macht I came betwe Ami was hy he: n them aad T said: sald Joe. Then tured to my brother and sald: ‘e related every deti y 1 e relate i every detall, slowly, pain: are a contemptible dog to a ! Uy. His voice was choked with my sand ruin my famil Stone Thar tears flowalldcwninis ite Haine nia head ane wad, "Ter -eeks. But throughout the entire rm male Lee Onl ys wee ree ee this. Want to seo your fi but i rou ever breathe a sing! will put a ball throu 0 follow you to hell to again, word ‘of this I you if I have do it? «ital there was naught but words nf love for the woman who had bo- rayed him. “If she could only come back to}+ ne,” he cried; ‘if I could only hear 1 things from my houne sut he did not leave we inorning. TE t a lew my story. ch atin of secrecy and he sas Ce Re a et alt RN COLLYER TELLS STORY OF HIS LIFE’S TRAGEDY. tyr L swor vinpathized Ww! and eet her votce again; !f I could only feel her arms around my neck once more —I would forgive all, 1 would forget me and promised to ty leave the oo ie the ot 1 helped tor i ~ iy. wife was a I loved her—yes, I pees her! for, her that t ol y Ife. on y drive to Law- etter than my life. But Joe, my We' sat side. “ty aide in the She poor Joe, is dead.” In the little house at Hammel's, Rockaway Beach, that he had worked so hard to maintain, John Collyer} reviewed the events@ that have | “% wrecked his home and his happiness, | ‘to her. And st : ni nade} ‘The End. He and his, brother had Just been! “ater Uroakfax: Friday’ morning it paroled by Judge Moore, of the Queens County Court. They had | when [came t Deen arrested on suspicion after the woman was found with two deep | razor wounds in her throat. The) Judge and the Coroner bellove the |" woman took her own life, and the brothers were given their Hberty till the examination next Wednesday. The body of the woman lies at the Morgue in ¢ Rockaway. On her br Mh ure and white, John Collyer sent it there, and he asked that it might remain upon her bosom ull he lald her to rest in the Ittle|— village cemetery next Tuesday, = AISLE D000. 10 “been xo sud that morning, in tell her that 1 forgave apd ‘lo There was no ankwer, and 1 won middle bedroom, Or wife with the bloo aud 1 1 oman ‘samp in a doe w and hurry for eut her thru Heat and tried picked th omy ha o} Mr: my wife w had been sad and met Ii was the grief that was her soul. ‘Tuesday Tw ked. y 1 came hon 1 threw my arma round ‘het her. ‘Joe,’ sald I, ‘I must “ck; yon can talk to me to-night.” Prted to cheer her wp. 1 Just thought the was melancholy because of not fecl- ing Well. I did not know what was on her mind. | My brother Asa lived nero Picked Up in the River. That of a Little Girl] tn tho howe with us and the children Thad suspeoted threo yearn ago t that saul as not right. Once I acct wi as BOL LIBRE. | Once singe T believed My God. whit ts 2 aa to do with Leuarhnlesewn man should] peared with her mother on Memorial ftuat ls, osm, Creiior, He was #0 much been ao close together, THe was so much| Day from thelr home at No, 101 West ike . one Ase a twent nine and I Ono Hundred and Bighteenth street, was an ty Poor Jou was five, And 90 t forgot jus munpicions. ¥;| round to-day In the river at the foot of Waa ha with the thoughe y a Wite Tovel ! an maa happy mith our Forty-fifth atreet, Brooklyn, The body ur children, patented in the | of the mother, Catherine:Dodd, had been b tiwas’ making for. th hig blesnome, ‘or them | round a few days after her disappear- ance at the foot of Atlanttc avenue. ‘oped. He| Tne body of the child was taken to the wen te neated Rrooklyn Morguo and Walter Dodd, Ro- fesday night, I can| salle's father, was notified that he might o the &i5 train | go over and-identity tt, What i belleved to be the body of four-year-old Rosalle Dodd, who disap- The Confession. For a moment the man. walked ycross the Noor it ‘by tho wind That night —Wed ver forget jt—! R Long isiand™ Cl pin, Long) Taland ory myoee Efe] Mrs. Dodd was subject to fits of Insan- if fittie rocking chair by the window, | Ity, and she acted queerly on the day 7 pair in| that whe left the house, saying that sho 7 fame and sat In this i Bhetlooked | Into my face | was geing to take her little gict for n j, and an I|walk. She had frequently threntened 10 kill-herself, and & Is belleved that she ite wa a what you ac-| vont at once to the river and threw ; don't say| herself and her child tn mao pre" fe ‘The description of the botty found to- -!aay enowers that of little Rosalle. Tho child had light hair and blue two of her front teeth were mt: ———_ ae ine Country boarding-house keepers, if you want to fill your houses quick- nero " wibne. nr, "Ob, i telly, advertise in The World. Don't caking within me Walt any ponests Jot’ 1 said, ‘ea she dropp: 0 wald bt upg im oon- re 2 Ly 8ST ETP INTE aye 7 THE WORLD: MONDAY eee JUNE 10, 190%. LOST ALL NICHT =~ INCENTRAL PARK Young Woman, Insane from Overwork, Left} Mother's Home. | Fimma Jane Daweon, a stenographer, twenty six years old, ving at No. 188 West One Hundred and) ‘Thirty-ninth | | street, wan found wandering aimlessly [about in McGown's Pass in Y} back by Policoman Dolan at 6.40 this morning Ovorwork brought on the nerveus col- which resulted In Miss Dawson'« She wan employed sent condition. by the Mohuwk Condensed Mik Com: pany, of No. 59 Hudson street, and waa highly regarded by her employers, ar [ahe wan a steregrapher of unusual abil Recently 3! has been suffering her tty. from week and last 1 ind told her to take @ vacation for th ) | aummor. Before gong home she spent the entirc amount the firm had given her in var- fous fantaatle purchas Saturday aight she went to a theatre with Mr. and Mrs, Yolte, neighbors, and while there she talked wildly telling her friends that she intended to marry soon and go on an extensiy wedding She refused to return to her mot some, in One Hundred and ‘Thirty-ninth Street, and would not go home with th Volte so they took her to the home a Joint friend, Mrs. McGill, in One Mun and Seventeenth street. here she paced the floor all niahi and left early in the morning. Mrs i} immediately notified her mother -in-law, Adolph Heffner, of No. t One Hundred al ‘Thirty-ninth street, who noitifled the po- Hee. When Mien Dawaon wns found this morning her hatand clothing w 30! and @ She had a brutse on hi cheek left arm and at inn ear ee plained thae a wife died s00n | had been sut however, and her tn- Posepae Wouwien Dr. Ding c Harned My urs ‘t his head In his hands, Is of dizziness, ved that she received ated tetatecratates S0SSSS8SS SFHNSOEOSD pueactrieiateneciesey | 2 Doors |wet ot Save | of 3d Ave. ig oak, tinely carved and polished,glass doors, shelves and large drawer, ac- tual value $14.00; special, $8. 75 highly polished, drawers with brass} handles; hat box; tinely carved topand French plate swing na fall during one of these Logan, the farmily ph; for and took ehar is thought that Miss Dawson's nly temporarily’ affected. She wne re- moved to ictan, eae Want #10,000 for Circus Accident. ELIZABETH, N, J. June 10.—The pa rents of Thomas Carberry, thirteen years old, have sued a showman fo vs») for riding over the boy during wants to make up with) that he 1 to see him him or I will omy actions, He took my Joe, mh LITTLE DEAF AND DUMB RUNAWAY AGAIN MISSING. want T must n|Police Make Another Search for Five- Year-Old Minnie Saltzman. 13234 For the twentieth ttme in a month the police on the east stde are looking fur Mirnfe Saltzman, Minnle ts five yeare old and Js dear und dumb, When the police find her they keep her until an inquiry ts made, unlems a bluecont who knows her happens into the station- house, in which case she js returned to her grandmother, at No, 23 Stanton street. Minnte’s parents Itve at No. 25 Pitt street, but there aro three other babies In the family, and so Minnte In loft with her grandmother, who has no babies, and therefore has more time to watch Minnte, Yestorday afternoon the grand- mother took the Htle one for a walk, While the grandmother was talking to a neighbor Minnie ran away, as she usually does under tho elrcumatances, She was acen half an hour later nev- eral blocks from her home toddling eats BABY’S BODY IN LAKE. ——_— Was Wraped in stl Handkerchtet’ and a Newapap: Tho body of a malo infant about four months old was discovered In the Iake in Hutton Park, J., near the Essex County Country Club, early this morn- pcos by James Flynn, the park gate- £4 Frits Monickle, of West cheerfully along and enjoying her Iib- erty, “I really don’t know what to do with the child,” says Minnie's mother. "I sent her to Randall's Island a year ago Yeonuso she wns running away all the time. I had to take her back three montha ago because she was #0 weak she could not run at all. She was very badly treated there, “Then my mother said thet she would take care of the unfortunate lttie one, Dut the task has proved to de a hard one. The ohild has a mania for running away and she seldom finds her way back home. Indeed she does not try. Boing unable to speak, she 1s absolutely helplens when she ts lost. Minnie has Maght hair, cut short, blue eyes and red cheeks. = Whe ran away she was wearing a hind a “ares with neediowork on tt anf /e blue pott- mut ing been in the water for at least daya. ‘The county physician was not- fied. OLD MAN A SUICIDE. Alfred Turns Cut Took Parle Green, Alfred Burns, of No, 1% Shemeld avenue, Brooklyn, committed aulcide to- 4 . in Wrist and Grange, Nr lay. ‘bod: rapped ine silk hand-/ He first cut hie erahieds ad sony sean italian news: then to make ayrege bgt Seat Ye took's lly decomposed, hay- large quantity of paris Od wirror actual value 2.00; special, $6.99 ooo Feslmates given for the complete or @ ante furnishing of Summer @ Hotels, Cottages and Country @ Homes. $ Small ordem filled on specials Me erisso a EAA A A Ad @tS8OO8seet pee ai PEACEMAKER KILLED BY BOY. John Cleary Received Fatal Stab Intended for Another. John Cleary, a Harlem youth, in dead tn d. Hood Wright Hospital aa a remit of acting ax peacemaker tn x quarrel between two brothers. One of the broth- ers, Walter Lestrange, titteen years old, buried in Cleary's sido a knife- blade that he had Intended to depostt tn the person of Joseph Lestrange, thirteen years old Walter will be arraigned in Martem Court to-morrow, Cleary waa nineteen years old, tnoften- sive, hard-working, the support and only child of a widowed mother, living at > 79 West One Hundred and Twenty-fourth street. He was walking near his home on June 7 when he saw the Lestrange hoya, who had besn shooting craps. ‘There was a dispute about three cents asa remult of the game and Walter wos ‘ating his youngor brother. ‘The aympathy of Uleary was natural ly with te amaller boy. He rushed tn » | and neparnted the brothers, holding them apart until he learned what the quarrel wan about. After admoniehing them to drop the dispute he let them go, and Walter again atarted for his younger brother, this time with an open knife in his hand. He made a awing at Joneph and would have killed nim had not Cleary aprang in the way and taken the full force of the blow. He waa taken to J. Hood Wright Hospital and the Lestrange boye were locked up, Joseph was aub- sequently released, and Walter, beink unable to furnten $1,000 ball, was com- mitted to the care of the Gerry Society to await the result of Cleary’s injuries. When young Cleary died this morn- ing Water Ceatrange’s ball wan with- drawn and the charge 1 Remco aaasult against him changed to one of homo! Bookcases: in} JORDAN Mi Jreresvive| 155,157 and 159 East 23d St. Reductions in Every Department. A Cut of From 25 to 30 Per Cenl. Thousands of specialties selected from our vast stock, and prices cut indiscrimi- nately, just to boom things along and make this a banner week. Wish we had the e| space to advertise every item, but will have to content ‘ourselves with quoting a few @ of the many specially good things. : Very Neat 5-Piece Mahogany Frame Parlor Suits, piano polish finish, covered in silk tapestry, sesorted colors, well uphol- stored, best steel springs, never in dee to sell for less than 310,00. $ All closely GAL Golden Ork Table 3 feet 6 inches long, panel sides back, drawera and actual value #12.00 cinl.. to var tlokligyinone artwo § parts; value $1.00; special. 4.99 Double Weave Woven Springs, all sizes, regular pr © $1.C0; special..e. New Jersey Baggage-| man Made the Dis-) |! covery Just in Time MORRISTOWN, N. Daggageman of the train arriving from Hoboken at 11.10 Inat night about to hurl a amall black satchel from the car to the plmform with all the pow- West of 3d sclaw Our Usual Prices. COs | “———? China Cl : of solid golde highly "pol bent glass min bi ery 1800. $26.75 Dressing Ta- ote T Sy in oak, 5 Hikgolden. finish, large drawe Hair Mie full 40 Ibs, French plate; tufted, well’ stitched, beat A. awing mirrors, qeally worth $ ire $4.45 Desks, Tables, elegantly polished, massive, styliah round legs and somely cart workmanship, really worth: $12.00; special price only compartment: "°° $6.99 A LIVELY PICKANINNY _FOUND IN A SCN PICKANINNY IN A SATCHEL. DE ODDOBS therein a plckaninny elistayed Ris arm. ung, considering Ita mae, Prevent a Tragedy. | | tts delivery to 3 J., June 10—The| n ano would 4 ean Tbatny wa | 9 Ste min fal Howp 2 Doors "$10. ds centre pieces, $7.99 $ EVTSSOSVSVOSOOS SSSTSS VSSSSSTSFF0SSSSSSSSSSSSSS8S8889 —<———————— $$ ——— TY&@ ave ong Credit [ 75c. Weekly Opens an Account| Long cet ue noak, ishe sides, kines doora, carved trim actua! 3 ape: 89 Massive Solid Oak Extension with hand best coat his comman? when a sound from the plece of DagKage and 1 few di 4 of great muscular energy and power A cand attached to the satchel advised . TL Ridgedale avenue, at “shelters a colony of be found In the 5 any Information which waa sent ve and vigorous fo~tay, Tne at total owas suippel trom Hoboken, HEADLESS WOMAN } INTHE WOODS. Body Found in Lonely Spot Visited Only by Wood Choppers. (Spectal to The Rrentag World,) LOWELL, Masa, June 10.—The dis- covery of the headless body of a woman in the woods near Chelmsford has given the loca! police officials a hant tank. ‘There ts every evidence that a murder has deen committed, but few clues are left on which the detectives can work. ‘The apot whore the body was found 1s about one and @ half miles from Chelmsford Center and near a wood medfe an turned brought to this found of the head, were searched closely. been reported missing In Though women are kn¢wn to hav Sted the wood camp, it 14 ts that of reared. ing for camp. It 1s near a lonety road seXtom travelled except by men going to or from the wood camp. After Medical Examiner Meige Bed that the dead body workmanship, and and welghed about 140 pou Tae BLACKLISTING LEGAL. pimployed by Stock ¥ CHICAGO, June 10.- sitting in the Ctroutt nounced n decision that tho biackils of @ number of girls by a stock yards = KILLED BY - UNKNOWN investigation the body was over to an undertaxer and was No trace was though the woods No woman init: Mania. a young wor She was 1, ody was found 0. ner Hildreth, men emp Perham, @ astray calf. ———- yea who were search> . dat at the insane as: n tho Case of Girls rdw F Waterman, day, ane Jud, pr at th frm wus logal. 4 th "The gitle struck tagt February und the Was ate asoaitant of Sitve fires affected refused nev recove! ‘The case wit be appealed. to take them back, she identify Lerne. AN MAN. e's eye was cut out by her ant, who Fan against her and with- ax (“Young colored man, Charles Lerue, slice thought is ugbee, eeaecenesesseees te June 11th, Sale of Muslin Underwear, Silk Skirts and Shirt Waists. Night Gowns, Skirts and Chemises, gSc., $1.25, $1.95. Drawers, 50c., 75C-, 98c., $1.25. Corset Covers, 75c.. 98c., $125. Odd pieces in Night Gowns and Skirts at reduced prices. Negligées, in colored and white lawn and dimity, in various styles, $3.95 to $5.50. Dressing Sacques, in same material trimmed with lace, $3.95- Silk Skirts, in colored, black and white and black taffeta, , $5.85, value $8.75, Odd skirts (in a variety of styles and colors) at very much reduced, Shirt Waists, in fancy white material and white lawn, trimmed with Hamburg insertions or Hem- stitching, $1.25 & $1.50. In black and white and blue and white striped madras, 98c. Lord & Taylor, Broadway & 20th St ; SOCSTSSSSSVTSSSSSSESSSSSSSSSSSESSSSSEVSESes } Help Wanted—Maie. TE UL AT “DIRTY RAC." Social Function to Raise Defense Fund tor Man in Tombse “pi Murray is happy fn his cell te the Tombs to-day over the “homicide ball” given for his beneflt in the “Dirty Tax’? dance hall, East Broadway and Catherine street, Inst night. ‘Tae $100 made at the ball ts to be used in Murray's defense for the murder of, “Jerry” Moore. Moore was killed in the “Dirty Rag® on May §. Jealous of Murray's attem- tfon to Katle Driscoll, he and hie friends assaulted the young mem. Murray shot Moore and his friends say, he was justified. This was why they fot up last night's benefit. Kat coll was prominent in Jast nignt’s affatr, and so was a young woman to whem: Murray ts engaged. Mrs, Mary O'Brien, who owna che hall, ave {t free for the entertainment, am@ nae Larry-the-Bartender" took the tekets, ‘hen Prot. George Duncan et the © struck up the grand march Jerry van led off with Katie Driscoll as . followed by ‘Bis * and Of one of the wood ch p Sesoneliors tte nice Neil and “Auburn. Lizal itor cagtuele) eaeePs it pe ! ; otuer belles of the neighborhood were outer garments wore micwing Miss Bugbee's Death ) nope lennemey wan master derclothea are of Koo! Due to Murderous of ceremonies, In the Interlud tween two-stopa and waltzes “Kid Foy and Martin Brady sang. May Leary, Katie O'Brien and Martha red a diversion by dancing a thelg own Invention durlag car precipitating a the Bartender" got tr and shouted: “Remember, ladies and gentlemen, we want u0 more murdera In thie Rall.” ———=—- ON TIME AS USUAL The World has just tsaued a mew dition of The World Almanac—the Pan-American Exposition Bdition, it contains a bird's-eye view of di Exposition and a plan of the erounde, together with several pages of ia- formation for intending | visiters. |; Price 25 cents, All ni ; up ona ¢ wumiclendy to hese

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