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Sixty Employees of Factory on Staten:Island Fright- «ened by Explosion. ONE MAY LOSE SIGHT. Flying Glass Struck One Worker’s Eyes, and She May Become Blind as Result. Sixty girls employed in the underwear factory of Rosennolz & Co., at Brooks avenue and Richmond turnpike, in Tompkinsville, 6. were thrown Into ke this morning by the explosion of a diest. Bessia Hilderbrandt, of No. 27 Brook ‘avente, a machine operator, sat facing @ window. A shower of glass struck her full in the eyes. She may lose her aight. Joseph Walker & Co., contractors, are pullding a sewer from Arrietta strect across Brook avenue and along the Richmond Turnpike. At Brook avenue “the trench diggers struck a streak of “)ymtratum of soapstone. Drills were used this morning and a blast ‘xed. ‘An unusual charge must have been ‘peed, Cor when it was set off the explo- sion was terrific. The stone was sent flying in all directions. It fell In show- era about the strect, and great manses of It were hurled aguinat the underwear factory, rot twenty feet away. Stairways. while others sprawled over ‘and trampled on them. : Miss Hildendrandt wa found to be the > -only one seriously Injured. Many of the others took a sad inventory after the accident of torn skirts and orulsed Umbs. LITTLE GAL Dora Murken Dies from In- juries Received in Hal- lowe’en Frolic. Elght-year-old Dora Murken died tn Roosevelt Hospital this morning from hurts she got in a Hallowe'en frolic at public school No. 17 yesterday after- noon. When the news of the child's death Rrades, numbering nearly 10, wei most broken up. Dora was the prize pupil in the third grade, and was a great pet. Her sweet face und dainty manners so |mpress- tle short of a queen. It was seldom @he was allowed to carry her own Books to or from achool even, so many willing hands wanted to serve her After school was @ay the boys promptu Hallow and street. Dora on her way home, surrounded by bf a} band of devotees, when a small boy rushed in the crowd and began beating in the yard with four. & men. She staggered truck that was passing tit her he ‘Teachers rushed out, frightened by childrens’ cries. They found Dora un- maid's own teacher, tried In vain to Te- Btore consciousness to Leonard sat in the street with Dorn’s ead in her lap unti| from Roosevelt Hoxpital Meartime a hundred boys and &: had run after the youngster wh struck little Dora. He disap nearby tenement-house and No one recognized him. At the hospital the girl partial consclo but f ually, Th yer death, OLD DAUGHTER A SUICIDE. Misfortune, and In Now Misving, ce, wi Serine it: SENe renee cif-i-t ae 1-1 Iftar eee! Ww In their panic many rolled down the, CS Sc ; $ In a cell In Hoboken clty prison ay as im: H pretty little Spanish woman sits sob- | Loved Him; | Did i bing aa 4f her heart would break. Not Kill Him,” Moans She is Mrs. John Chartrand.} Mirs, Chartrand’ in charged with murdering her hus- tana: Her Cell; ‘Judas His dend body was found in the! Never Had a Woman |!" curling rink he conducted at Twelfth W and Grand streets, Hoboken, a bul- let wound in the right side of his head above the ear. Ahericantwar = oman ee een wren tea Yesterday my husband had planned to | <7 SS retu fo the place with a doctor. | go hunting with Owen Smith, who lives | | Shoe declared that her husband had a my mother's Tome They werelta ASPERFEL | handed her a revolver for protection F while he was on a hunting trip. She took It and embraced him. With her lips to his In a farewell embrace, the weapon was discharged | nel of dogs. The dogs were very dear and he fell from her arms, dying. to him. The poltce do not belleve her story. They say they found two exploded cfrtridges and that, from the nature! to took his revolver from his pocket of the wound, Chartrand was shot] and said he would leave it with me ments, Also to compare them with from behind as he was walking Into the street When arraigned tn the Secend Dis-| supper, and triet Court and charged with murder) bad characters in the streets, >> reached the school the pupiin of all the | affected that the day's session wax al-| ed her companions that she wan tit-| tssed yester-| tt had an im-| © BY MRS. CHARTRAND. 1 did not murder my har lustily with an old stocking Med The gttl was struck in the abdo-|")° and a bdis|, room therd conscious. Miss Mary Leonard, the little | Herrow eri Mies | of was born In ambulance came OWES DEATH TO DRINK. Hx-Pollceman Asphystated Sleeping Of Effects of Liq NEW YORK KILLED HERSELF. WATHER BELIEVES 17-YRAR- | BROOKLYN: Ghe Wae Aheamed to Tell of Her 3 a salesgir! in a Third avenue tore on Saturday, and alnce day she has been missing frome t No, &% East One Hundred )Fourteenth street. Her father, ins Levy, 18 a coffee broker, He ts piwell-to-do, but Irma Insisted on and he gave his permission| pho she wan discharged satur-| did not tell her family. She @leaving home as usual to the| <Feturning for lunch at noon! nls back In the evening about aan iy she went away but aid for Junch and none of Rininoen Wer ‘wince ate ‘ores Her TELLS HOW HUSBAND WAS) | | SHOT AS HE EMBRACED HER. | Imitator.” the rebellion that preceded the Spantsh- leave at 10.90 o'clock, and half an hour eariter I went to the rink to aay good-by His Trust in Her W. We talked a little while and he gave me directions about caring for hia ken- Would he want to leave them tn my us? for protection. 1 would have to walk |B would-be when the dogs had been given thelr ad to be carried from | f told him T did not know how to use J he raised the trigger to show mo T did not notice 1f 1 only know 1 took Wo were stand- | usband whith to he said. and he Kiss me. 1 threw my his neek, 1 Kiswed ttn. tt 3 ho wemans 4 his arms pistol was biting, pu Dimond, lees i i tropped from my hand, [ huaband. We had been |¢ from my arms, Only by misfortune. We ch fit ks scaped him setting, every day, He had to sleep at tle Have Killed Herself. dekh, There) was ents e sank to the floor together, 1 only and “ iw ning Klwsinnge hin would kitted my Rut rth ating Quir My husband family, Hew Spaniah pare id of him. Me was Was a chance for nto the atreet and ty yea of thelr estates during room inv Raines jaw to his home at No. ng. He had t was drinkin lant night, and retired : Of the effects of hia potato: MAN. noe turn of the gas entirely was found dead) went to bed Fok S32 HOW DO YOU LIKE THIS? v $2.30 w retired pe s of axe, MEN'S STORES, 115 Nassau Bt., bet.Ann & Beekman cor. Reade St, opp. Herald Didg. h Ave. < 3211 Broadway, bet 29th & goth Ste, pp. City Hall, ar Bedford Ave, int Broadway, To-day you buy a pair of shoes for $5.00. To-morrow you pass the same store and the price of the same shoe is $3.50. xina catr Where’s your $1.50? Buy Regals! Always and only $3.50 — no deviation from one end of the country to another. No ‘‘bargain’’ sales, no cut prices. Sold direct from Tannery to Consumer for $3.50 all the time. You are never sure of fit at ‘‘ bargain counters’’—if you value your comfort buy Regals -—-all sizes, all widths -— you are sure of complete shoe satisfaction. 5 No better shoe at any price —no other shoe nearly so good at anythihg like the price. The Regal is the only shoe sold at $3.50 direct from Tannery to Consumer in its own stsres from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Regal Dressing gives the most lustrous and lasting polish, makes the shoes soft and easy, and preserves the leather indefinitely. All stores open evenings except 115 Nassau St. and 291 Broadway, St ne Just After the me Ko $9 the hos-| It was not fair to me. 1! jeen besile him when he cruel thing to aay I meant to Ki him would rather be than fa Woman—the lowest woman Kill a man with her kisses any eee vn | UW LEVELAN 144 BOWERY, jj —— “Bowery Savings Bank Block.” th of ie I @ SUCCES CEDARS It pays to watch our advertise- care if there had been trouble between | if Het. Grand Grand st. 3 from the wink to our home atter dark |i tenis, ‘This week, Tor instance, we . advertise diamon and wedding sald there were many | Mot exactly half the peices charged by uptown jewellers. brillant, Tittany fi extra ckarge for IMtering. Open Evenings Till 7; Saturdays Till 10. WOMEN'S STORES, NEW YORK: 166 Vs MW. 125th St., cor. 7h Ave. 13zp'3"way, 0} MEN'S STORES. NEWARK, N. J.: 841 Broad 8t. JERSEY CITY: 5 Newark Ave, | John had not! He called the} cannot bel This is the new 5cent Cigarette rir Special Size : English Blend Ready next week and will be sold everywhere io eek, for Instance, we 263 Sixth Ave.---104-106 W. 17th St. ENTRANCE THROUGH FURNITURE STORE. There Is No Reason Why you should not be well dressed ; and, since your good appear- ance has a great deal to do with your success in business, you should Come here and take advantage of Our Part Payment System. |Pay One Dollar a Week| P=" MEN’S OVERCOATS— Saturday all wool Irish Frieze and Kersey Over- They are in all lengths and are lined and finished like a $15.00 10 KATMeNt oo 0. ee eee eee ecw renee. MEN’S SUITS wari Herald Bldg, H not wear shabby clothes. We are offering as a special for in cheviots and mixtures, styl- ishly cut, coats with chasing palate. On the plate for Frid: the military shape, exceptionally well $10 made. Regular $14,816,818 suits; special —Derbies and Alpines, reg- ularly sold at $2.50, spe- SILK HATS—Newest shapes. SHOES— Men’s Fine Wax Calf Shoes, heavy Melions, Kerseys and Oxto extension soles, rope ' stitched, regular price $3.50; special for.... the prevailing length, to a SUITES, that were moet fastidious, from, and $90.0), 19". $2.50 CLOTHING DEPARTMENT AT SMITH STREET STORE. W oNLY EMIRANCE 10 THIS DEPARTMENT 1S THROUGH FURNITURE STORE. OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS. Brooklyn Store: 470 Fulton St., Upstairs. 169, 175, 173. and 175 Smith Street. ) ’ 82, 84, 86 and 88 Wyckoff Street, - BROOKLYN. : 773,775 Broadway,cor.Sumner Av. 5 EYE-OPENERS, | every one of them—are our new Fall, 1901, selections, At our stores you will be agreeably surprised to note the wonderful results that Fave crowned our buyers’ efforts. Positively unrivalled for variety, up-to-dateness and mones- } saving values, Is our comrlste line of Furniture, Carpets and Bedding and Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s Clothing. offer you at prises © at the t Some room, som: nook or corner in your home requires an addition or preferable st: te to make it more complete and comtortable, Som: member of the family, or mayhap the children, may find something lacking in lily or her Fall wardrobe. We supply all these wants, for which you need but piy us i f i ure he CREDIT. | 75c. per Week. Below are a few of our many recent “special” successes to coax y wun pl ind Saturday Only. CLOTHING, MEN’S SUITS. FURNITURE, &c. Cooking Stoves & Ranges, 5.75 fine cookers and bakers, froin. Sinele and double Lreasted suits, oe 7.98 Parlor Si i" arloris roves & Heaters, 2.90) requisites, from $20.00 kinds, now MEN'S & VOUTHS' 5-PIECE PARLOR » $2.98 + $6.00 re to rane tT AD Sldeboarda; the 118.00; pal ' Now $3.50. ‘These are Boys’ and Children’s Suits that were $5.00, $6.00 and $7.00, and worth every cent of it, They are All the Leading Auctioneers Now Advertise All Thoir Sales in the Sunday World. Vestee and 2-picece Double-Breasted Suits, ages 4 to 14 years, If you have the dry goods store notion about children’s clothing these suits will pleasantly surprise you. They're well made and of good materials. Browning-King-§-G Cooper Square W. (nearlz opposite Cooprr Union), New York. Brooklyn Store, De Kalb Ave. and Eulton St. : ‘A GREAT MANY PEOPLE ARE looking for second-hand man- dolins and guitars. If you have one to sell advertise it 4n the Sunday World, ms)