The evening world. Newspaper, October 28, 1901, Page 5

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IRENE BRUSH, CHAMPION ‘WOMAN CYCLIST, MISSING, Disappears Strangely from Her Home and Husband Can Find} No Trace of Her. Meg. Irene Brush. the champton long- Aistance bicyclist, is mysteriously miss- Ing from her home. Sho went away last Saturday morning | and since that time no trace of her has been found. . Mrs. Brash, who !s well-known to all Dieycle riders tn Brooklyn and on the roads on Long Island, lived at No. 1065 Dean street with her husband, George Brush. He ja a hatr-dresser employed in Manhattan. He ts forty-two yeara old, hia wife fs twenty-six. They have no chiléren At breakfast Saturday morning Mra, Brush and her husband had a sharo argument about mi matters. Mr. Brueh told her that she would have to he more saving, so that he might be able to pay some debts. Mrs. Rrush resented the inference that she Was extravagant. The' husband sald to-day chat the quarrel was not serious and that after Waving the house he forgot all atout ft. He went home at noon for | ani found the flat deserted. on Brush had sald that she was goine +7 Gress the hair of a Mrs. Wentwort', at Mo. 88 Hancock etreet, and Mr. Brush went to that address. Mrs. Wentworth sald that Mra, Brush MSS STONE. WAY BE DEAD Belief Held by the Bul- garian Prefect of * Police, SOFIA, Bulgaria, Oct. %.—Six young Bulgarians have banded themselyes to search for Miss E M. Stone, the American missio and her com- panion, Mme. K. 8. Tsilka, and with the consent of the Bulgarian authorities have left Samakov for Mehomia with this object in view. ‘The absence of news about Miss Stone has led to a revival of the report that she has already been killed and that the brigands have dispersed. Col. Kantcheff, the Buigarian Prefect of Police, Jntimates that he believes that ‘Miss Stone Is dead, though he will not say so directly, Me usid to-day: “If Miss Stono is living she will be found within ten days, Four different parties are now en route to establish communication with the brigands. Dick- | inson has sent two young men from Gofla. They are Macedonians and know the country well. A party of five has gone from Samakow with the same ob- Ject. They are former pupils of Miss Btono and volunteered for the trip. Mr, Dickinson pays all expenses. 5 “The third party consists of one vent by the Russian Minister, and the fourth ig the band of Bulgarian students who etarted out to-day, “While the Government deciines to parley with the brigands, it facilitates every effor: to find Miss Stone. Tho brigands doubtless are now in some Turkish house. Tho Turks invariab.y protect them for backsheesh. The brig- ands will kill Miss Stone If they do not et the ransom. They have xaid so, and y always keep thelr word, This is the brigand code of honor. Other bands ‘ecoft at them if they let her go jout_ money. “If we find them we will hang them all. They are sure to be caught within a year.” PRETTY GIRL MISSING. Alice Jurge m Wandered. Away from Home and Police Seek Her. h een there and had left at 9 o'clock. She appeared to be greatly agitated and id Mra, Wentworth that sh might as be dead as living the way she had deen. From that time all trace of her was lost. She has a brother in South Breok- jyn and a sister at Cypregas Hills, but has not called on either of them. Mr. Brush thinks she Istrying to secure em- ployment. “When she went away Saturday mom- ing she had between $35 end $20, and this wag about all the money we had,” said Mr. Brush this morning. “My opinion Is that ehe lost this money and is afraid to come home. She should not be afrald, because I have never treated her unkindly. “She may have dropped the money on the street or she may have loat {t at the race track. She eccasionally would go to the track with a friend and meke a little bet. Maybe she tried to make a wigning with the money and lost tt. An Gxtraordinary Sale of Blankets / Prices Specrally Reduced sor COuesday. There is every reason why the Blanket Store on the Third Floor should be a scene of unpr ented activity to-morrow. : | An enormous purchase comprising thousands of choice new and hygienic Blankets has just arrived and will be offered At Prices Ghat Yake Chem Wonder/ul Bargains. | The advent of sharply cold weather keenly emphasizes the need of |Blankets, and the time is ripe for vigorous buying. It is just such a sale as ‘thousands of housekeepers, boarding-house, hotel proprietors and others have been eagerly awaiting. i Fine California Blankets. These bape Rei, large oth a mary sg } special 3.50 ADO aaNet : Cotton Blankets. Extra Fine California Blankets. 11-4 size; white or gray Blankets; worth $1.39; 19 | Best California Wool; large 11-4 sizes for double beds; pair cholce pink, blue or red borders; genuine 8 95 11-4 size; white or gray Blankets; worth $1.25 95 worth 95c. 79 11-4 size; Tuesday, 114 size; gray; worth $5.00 pair price Tuesday, worth $4.00 pair; special price 2, 65 fe $12.00 a pair Blankets; special price, pair, Part Wool Blankets. |peie size; white or gray Blankets; day, ‘pair, 50,000 Yards of Ribbon Remnants! AT HALF THE REGULAR PRICES. A ctorm of remarkable values. The tremendous success of our great Ribbon Sale of last week resulted in the accumulation of many thousand yards of choice all ailk Ribbon Remnants. These we offer to-morrow at the ted prices per yard of . Se., /0c., 14c., 19c. and Upward. Such inducements should crowd the Ribbon sections to-morrow as never before. Every Ribbon is brand the ecme of prevailing fashion. at ang cquisitely beautiful combinations. Iishment. ALL SILK FANCY RIBBONS, SATIN AND GROS GRAIN RIBBONS, SATIN LIBERTY RIBBONS, PLAIN TAFFETA RIBBONS, ETC. ALL WIDTHS AND COLORS IN LENGTHS FROM 1 TO 3 YARDS. Emphatically, the Ribbon Remnant event of the year. | Ribbons for every possible use, from personal adornment to artistic rif - If ahe did ehe ts probably resolved to | woman. covering the w miles Ina trite remain away until she can carn eome| (eMeit ae ule of a century each f At che time of her Mra. uring wo Say eare and slept les@ Brush wore a black velvet hat, a Mlae sheet fee {Rear Bae physically Important to ollk shirtwatst, a black skirt and a tan cloth jacket, The police of Greater New York have been asked to look out for her and the husband is making a per- sonal search of the hoepitals and public | the ‘iret cent institutions on the chance that hie wife| Just after may have been injured and. has bee: unable to communicate with him. a . Brush has for several years breaking records for long-d| eycle riding on the roada at On July 1 and 2, 1899, ahe rode the first quadruple century ‘ever done by & DEAF AND 80, BUT | DESERTED BY SON, MES. MARY MURPHY TAKEN BEFORE COURT AS VAGRANT. Magistrate Zeller Indignantly Ore ders that Unmarried Son Ap- pear Before Him. i Mary Murphy, elghty years old, wag | taken to Morrisania Court this morning | by Policeman Magne® of the Kings- | bridge station, to be dealt with as a Vagrant. She had been taken to the station by a Mrs, Mary Oades, who lives on Ptor street, Spuyten Duyvil. Sho ts deaf and almost bind and very feeble. Mrs. Qades told the police that the 01d woman had two acna and a daughter lving. One son is married and his ad- dresa is not known. The other son, John, she sald, is a laborer and lives in Spuygen Duyvil. Since the death of Mrs. Murphy's husband, two years ago, the old woman haa been looked after by friends and neighbors. When Magistrate Zeller heard that the old woman had a son living, who ts not married, he reused to commit her and issued ‘a summons requiring the son's appearance in court to-morrow morning. / TRYING TO NURSE DEGEIVER 10 LIFE. WIFE AND FIANCEE OF THOS. SMITH MEET AT BEDSIDE: Fatally Shot Himself When Miss Lee Confronted Him with Story of Deception. (Special to The Evening World.) CAMDEN, N. J., Oct. 2.—With his wife and the woman to whom he was to haye been married last night watching Frederick Jurgensen, of, No. 521 East |@t his bedside, Thomas Smith Hes at Twelfth street, to-day asked the police Cooper Hospital hovering between life at Headquarters to send out a general and death. alarm for his sister, Alice Jurgensen, | Smith is twenty-five years old avd eighteen years old, who has been mias- ‘ives in this city. He Is married and bas from her home sines Oct. sali ieee etrlis Swedish and 1%. Tho She 0 wore a, gray ratty, She two children, ie 5 feet 4 inches in het ht and has been paylng court to Sadie Lee, a wolghe as DING pretty young woman of Gloucester City res and light complexion. Sho wor Sucket, whit ia Shee and ‘waite otraw hat. 4, apent his money freely, For several months he He posed as an unmarried man and He proposed Tong tetand, | fF, ths | senile pinnae reenact ots stead Pra eed suite’ 0 Sort ead Onentat Rug tue your by starting : Years Buyers. 200 Turkish and Persian Carpets, $75 to $200, Sizes, 9x12 ft. to 12.6x17 ft. A rare collection of lvans, peasy to be sold at Sty'e A—Waters Upright Piano, only $27, 837 & $47, © $225 The opportunity of a day or so only, the greatest value being in the earliest selection. Lord Taylor, Broadway & 20th St. PIANOS on New completing the hundre | fifaSa Sey oat \e n 3. established a road record 000 miles a few years which ined the record for some time. She is ridden more than 100 centuries and «a member of several bicycle clubs. WHISKEY CLS LAD Boy of Ten Drank Pint of It and Died in Mid- Ocean. orculd weat ‘Mra. Bi and are warranted to be durable, down and $7 per month, Also A boy of ten died tn midocean of acute alcoholism on the steamship Furnessia on Oct. 2. He wae Gustav Marks, one of five children of Mrs. Sophie Marks, who was & second cabin passenger and wan coming to America from Germany for the first time. ‘The mother end fre children were on thelr way to join the husband and father in Peorta, M1, He had been tn America only two years, and had saved up enough to es- tadiish a home for his family and Dring them over. It wan on the night of Oct. 19 that the Gamay in some we: it Int ask of whiskey on bea‘d the slip, a cabin and became $180 only $5 monthly. e Send postal for catalogue. HORACE WATERS & CO., 134 Fifth Ave., near 18th St. YOUNG GIRL IS STRANGELY MISSING SEARCH FOR PRETTY MAY RENSENBECK: OF HOBOKEN. took it to hia mother’ ite SSntenta, ‘Then h found several hours later b; hin mother dead The. this, feo naia be had died of acute alcohollam. OLD WATCHES WANTED. and was accepted. The wedding was to have taken place lest night. Late on Saturday night @mith cal!- ed om his flancee for the last time before he was to meet her at the altar. That afternoon s young woman who ney eopecially for rare olf tmepteces and ol. toned jewelry; articles received hy mail Dress will te apprateed and a casi the same days if (ha Tiseont She Disappeared at Noon Yeater- day and Foul Play Ie was to have been her bridesmald call- Feared. toersams art aN ef and tearfully told her of Smith's sements a, KEE dyplicity. Mies Lee confronted her lover with the story, which. he ad- matted. She angrily ordered him tom the house, whereupon Smith sald he could not Jive without her, and. draw- ing a reve hot mimself through the left lung. Upon regaining consclousness at the hospital he sent for Miss Lee. She regponded. and there met Mrs. Smith. Strangely enough. the women, though atrangern, greeted each other affection- ately. They shdre each othgy's sore row, know! that death fonetnin ing at a will probably RAM. 4PM WATCHES AND LOOK FOR THE MIG WaTcIt fa Tad ed JEWELRY REPAIRED, ‘The police of New Jersey and New York wero asked to-day to help find pretty May Rensenbeck, sixteen years old, of No. 133 Citff street, Wost Hoboken. Bho has been ailering since yesterday noon, when she left the houso to go for a short walk. Her parents are franc with grief. Searching parties aro scouring West Hoboken and the mead- ows back of that town. Minn Htensendeck, besides being attractive, was well developed for her age. She was extremely popular. Her father te 4 highly respected | business man. The girl had no love affair as far as (he parents know, and some fear foul | sp AND SPECTACLES, EYEGLASSE Very ee Old Cathedral Reception. The sale of boxes for the reception and entertainment of the Lyceum of ut. Patrick's old Cathedral. in Mott atreet, will be held to-night at the club-house, Np (7 eet. tonal falent will he ox hand to amuse those that will attend the sale. a Prevention is better than cure. and ‘She bas brown hair and blue eye ina di an was lark gown wit Eton Jacket. —— SULTAN ADDS ANOTHER MITE CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct, 2A fur- ther instalment has been oald on No piace ae Nome: No place te Sunday World Wants prevent. Busl- | SoUDL oC the, contract with the Cramps! get one like the Sunday World's beagles Sarat MO Pg atbeaat a Hows and Home Wante & , THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING; OCTUBER 28, 1901. 10-4 eize; worth $2.35 pair; ¢pecial price Tues- A 951° size; white or gray Blankets; worth 55c. 44 | é, { represent the highest ideal of anart ‘piano, Theyare famous for finetone, | Very cash, or $250 on instalments; $10 Style 90—Chester Piano, largest size, cash, or $200, payable $10 down and Harlem Branch (Open Evenings), 254 West 125th St., near 8th Ave. ; ! THE WORLD'S BEST SEPTEMBER. Geta bee KH CG Total Advertisements, 93,253 | Total Columns, . 2,342%4° Miaka iA la dt A i ti tae aes Saae o OST YEAR Cowseettivay & SONS Chatham Square: J2\st Street: . 193 to 205 Park Row, 2226 to 2234 Third Ave., Chatham Square. Corner 12st St. EVERYTHING RELIABLE. 4 EVERYTHING FOR HOUSEKEEPING. EVERYTHING REASONABLE. ae > J) <f] All Styles, All Prices, Vie es a FD | errr CARPETS. . 75c,} Tapestry Brussels... . « 45c,} Body Brussels... . 98c.} Axminsters .. All Wool Ingrains Other Ingrains. Velvets...... Wiltons ... BLANKET Parlor Heater. | Heavy castings, BARGAINS. : z 4 nickel trim, direct Comfortable draught. We have closed out “| a.inch size, $3,509 Odd lots of Blankets of a fOr 9.75 large New England manufac-| covered in three-tone veloun 14.09 \turer; these blankets cost | spring head and spring seat; 1250|75c. to $1.50 to make; we | tufted,very large size and bes| loffer them all at | workmanship throughout, 69c. | $41.75. so of quartered $14.90 iis One armchair and four side chairs, in quartered oak, $22.75 highly polished; cane seats. CASH or LIBERAL CREDIT. Customers may add to their accounts in either store or make payments at eftheny suiting their own convenience. No extra charges of any hind | Figure out how much money you can spare a Week or a month, and we alll da the rest. Let us show you how nicely we can furnish a home and how little it costs, — COWPERT AWAIT. | Advertising Gain in Numbers over September of last year, 9,336 The Nest highest New York Newspaper Galaed but 3,95), THE WORLD'S SEPTEMBER ADVERTISING IN Gain in Columns Over sen Neckwear. af Last Vener soa Frenen Chiffon Coljarcites, velvet, trimnmed with Lace and Hand-Mate Silk and Velvet Collars COLUMNS FOR 19 YEARS. Plack and White Net Ruffs, 1882... 390 | 1892 2 «6 « 1883. 6 STU | mee Banco 7 = 1884... 7873 | sieres Crepe Stocks 1985 eee LOB 18952 occas ; «1886... 18163 | 1898 Real lace Fichus and Scarfs, 1887 . . . 1622 | 1897 , ; Nipaaiser a Nea 1888... 168% «=| | 1898 2 we Oatrich eather noes 1889 . . . 16293 | 1899 . oe Face and Linen Handkerci ‘ets 1990... 199234 | 1900 ste ele glover 1891 . . . 1816 | 1901 j The best place to advertise lis WHY WORLD ADVERTISING | GROWS—A proved supremacy by tens of thousands in New York City |” [ Galty ctoontation talla the tala, = >

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