The evening world. Newspaper, November 21, 1901, Page 3

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THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, LAST OF 7 HUSBANDS TELLS HOW HIS WIFE WINS MEN. pre Hypnotism Sweetly Fascinating Before Marriage Gives Place to “Passes” with a Beer Glass After the Knot Is Tied. Infolntetalntntolalntelnintelnicieleieiniefeinineinbinielelateieeieieieieieieleliebeieb betel eieieieieieieicieiel inieiniceiet: selete-i-l vinii- ie eickicb ici rebel! et 2 Solellt simrinieinte’ t tel 3 Mini! 3 feinielnicielniebeicieicielninieleleteieiteleinteieteteh too, Why, on Oct. 28, with a fit of rage: a hypnotism—and hurled the “T don't: know she sand Prosperous sal Mivorced from three others, Tt stand her. And I'm the seventh, at could {| me—and Ti she wra [maybe tt more, does," T on-keepe Thirty-Ntth street, to-day, speaking of | “How does she do ity Well, [ don't) beer glass at me. [t cut my nose open, who ts suing him for alimony | know, 1 don't e any of the and then to cap the climax, she took and counsel fee. otier six could ve told haw atthe 40 In jewelry and money, which “It may be she's a hypnotist, or just eet and fascinating way ri was not tatty a owinner, Dm her seventh | oh, m anything but sweet oid tive hageall Lean pn : fe Ad, and I've no doubt she'll win | fascinating then rs. Crowther's seven hua- oishe!siurough “The only hypnotic ‘ n by Crowther's lawyer, em are ded, poor fellows!) made at me after Edward Wakeman, of Danbury, Conn.| 4 » muecn for them, She ix] with a be Henry Saunders, of New York. sarkinsinoa Joseph Power, of Danbury. i aie 3 frey. of Jerney City, 1 “Now she wants $9 a w of Tirldgeport, Conn. Vror her law: Jcan't pay tt, th ry. of Connecticut, World Want |! don't know where she got th eter, N OLN Ee eat | S 1 was a millionaire. helm, in behalf of Mra, “1 was so ‘under the influence’ that 1 said her previous matrimon- ° was just ,waiting for ner divorce from ar ntures hid nothing todo with the Befriend the lucky No. 6 to marry her, which I did ation Leventrittcaliowed ($$ al week ast June. Six months is enough for and $70 counsel fee POCKETS RIFLED BY BOWERY THUGS | FRANKLIN COUNTY MAN WAN- | DERED INTO BAD LANDS. | LA SAVOIE'S FAST EASTWARD VOYAGE, NEW SHIP REACHES HAVRE IN REMARKABLY QUICK TIME. Workingman! 89 BUT 42 Paid Help Wants in this morning's World, \ i Paid Help Wants in the thirteen other N. Y. papers comkined, Ananiinnt Arrested. bat the Other Had Gone with Hall's Money. Cats Two Hours fram Her Own| One Record to the French Port. JANITORS ., KITCHED RK LADIPS' TAILORS... 5| Mac HINISTS i 4] A cablegram was recetved hero this | George N. Hall, of Frankiin County, EOKWEAR ., 3] morning by the agents of the Com-|N. was arsaulted and robbed of $0 RSES s}pigniec Generale Transatlantique an-|early this morning while passing §) OPERATORS rouneing the arrival of the new steamer [through Bayard street, near the Bow- PAINTEI 'PrAaNo 4 6| PORTE ery. He was set upon dy two men, who had n In hiding in the doorway of No, ind badly beaten before 4 Pollceman Gessele, of La Savole, Poirot, at Hayre att o'clock this morning from New York, and the breaking of her eastward record by nearly two hours, La Bavole cleared Sanity Hook lHsht Thursday, are s Si ship at 11.56 o'clock A. M. street station, Co! ore 3 ov. HW, aml her time of passage was | As the latter shed the scene the COMPOSITORS ..... 9 SIL 7 +} about 6 eM hours 5 minutes. Her] two higawaymen took to their heels. COOKS ... 118) SKIRT HANDS 1 Di pastward record was 6] One of them was c: described DEN’ 3) BTENOGRAPHERS , 4 {¢ 1 utes, made on ber [yin ae s . 7M DISHWASHERS .... 6) TAILORS , og | ralden” voy De Ho IAR oll lS real atria tte Seal eehiali Da meeoua eabneetal Unni 26) Savole holds the He record) both | berry street, He wax identified by Hall plata * MELLA HANDS 3] oastward and westward, and locked up. DRIVERS’... . 9| UPHOLSTER: wt — ere teal DRUG CLERKS.. .. 7) VARNISHERS 3 oF . nr EMDROIDENERS |, 5| WAIST WANDS... jg] ORCTAMOM OM George C. Molle, Jr, show Burneadtout EMP. AGENCIES .., 3] WAITERS 9 atten N. Y., Nov, 21. — George C. dnd, Nov, 2.—The winter 5 $ bes bik dr, son of the proprietor of thi uarters of Wallace's show, where the 2 lorf-Astoria, of New, York, -hac 4 been upersted upon. tor sspeneie ai animals are kept, burned to-day. The ent firmary. Dr. Roswell ver ate started! {n) the) elephant, house,” a. Ne 8 an sapecialy fe structure and srrgee rapidly. fe animals wern wll pase) it the entire structure was a Yacatray eas 1 WEE HEROINE Little Gertie Fitzgerald, Not a Big Policeman, Kept Katie Collins from Drowning. Gertrude Fitzgerald, be it known, 1s a vine, She tx nine years old and realize the nv of the act that mace her a heroine, which fact renders her all tae more et 1 to the honos ade so modestly bears Katle Collinge A oveare old, of No, Lowes the fa r lessons tn the ay to this: same Fitzgerald. Had it not been tude of Katle Collins, fer- and outspoken, the credit. for of beroixm would reat: where this ar jt from the shoulders of eman, There was a hollday tn the Cathedral School laet Tuerday, Kittle Collins, Gar- trude Fitzgerald and Gertrude's mater Mary, a tiny child, were allowed by thetr parents to go and play in Central Park. It need not be that they w particularly to keep away from the “nut Don’ Gertrude for the gra vent ‘ deed story will a large p o Near the Water.'* Nor need It be maid that the fret pla In the Park to whioh the wir dl rected their dancing steps was the lake. They had ¢ fun running along this coping, watching the ttle boys ail thelr boats, Between Gertru Fitzgerald and Katte Collina there was iquite n contest as to which could go cloneat the water without falling In. trude gy very close, so clone in fact that the edge of her ttle shoe hung over the lapping waves. Katte Collins closer—and fell in r thinking of the eon- Msi { lay down r harde e wr a straly sempanton, and a wg and Was free of he mid. Another tug, and she got her rins over the edge of the coping, Ger- trude satu Wher feet, ant with nd alivering, to mafety noall the excitement had sub- Policeman Steinkamp came along. In his report made at the Arsenal that night hee: fact that Th rence between the big policeman, who did not even wet his hands, and Gertrude Fitzgerald, whose shoulders ached until she almost cried. Gertrude did not tell her parents A word about tt, The first they heard of ft was from an Evening World re- porter to-day When trude was questioned at her home, No. 324 East Fiftleth street, to- day, she sald that Policeman Steinkamp abused her and her «ster when he came Around because they were crying. He them in jail, Gertrude’s father, John, who is em- toyed in the Deck Department, and Ix in ponies: 1 indignant at this, and '@ highiy probable that he wil Policeman Steinkamp oce: to re member his fake rescue of Katle ( ara for_a_long, long time. MODEL TENEMENTS. OF NEW FURNISHINGS. Now the Original Owner Doesn't Know Whether to Prosecate Civily or Criminally. Brooklyn lawyers are watching with interest a cause which threatened to tle them all Into mental bow knots. Lewis A. Detrer, Jr. a plumber, of No. 388 Broadway, Brooklyn, was summoned to the Adamw Street Court this morning to explain why he had torn from a row of model tenements, Nos. 18 to 126 Bainbridge street, all the expensive plumbing he had install- ed jast summer. The complainants were Edward Schultz, of No. 101 Harmon atrect, and the Kings County Trust Co. Detser ts a well-known business man of Brooklyn, Park Commissloner George V. Brower acted as counsel for the complainant. Prof. Isaac Franklin Rusrell, a noted lecturer on law ana an equily eapert, was Detser’s lawyer. It aeems that Sc on speculation bought last spring the Bainbridge street tenements. Six of them were uncom- pleted and he gave out contracts for the Delner got the plumbing In beautiful modern finishing work. contract and put work. Schultz, becoming pressed for money, borrowed $43,000 In different sume and gave mortgages on paris of the prop- erty. To secure the contractors who had finished the houses for him he exe- cuted a mortgage to Delaer an trustee, and on Sept, 7 conveyed to Delser five of the houses, Schultz, it !s alleged, fatled the interest on hin mortguges, and the Kings County Trust Company started foreclosure proceedings. While it was pending Delser went up and stripped of all plumbing the five houses he had had convexed to Mim Delser claims he cannot be held crim- inally as he owned the houses and no criminal charge has been made, But next Tuesday Magistrate Dooley will hear arguments in the case, aud tf the tangle can_be unwound to the ratiatac- Tion of the trust company they say charge of larceny will be made against Delser, to pay WANT WOMEN IN OFFICE. Mayo. et Low Qt quest from Brook! A petition urging th women on the Public the extent of one-third the ful, repre. sentation, and also tive women on the Board of Education, wil) shortly reach Mayor-elect. Low from the Brooklyn Woman's Suffrage Association. t Fave Ree Suffragiats. appointment of Library Board to SAVES A LIF tle Colling, drip. | sald If they didn’t shut up he would put | W give | NOVEM BE R at, Is DOL. WEALTHY MERCHANT CHARGED Herman Soin ith Three Others, al rested on Story Told by Annie Filleis—Im-|$ portant Disclosures | + Expected. | j | The crusade of District-Attorney Phils Din against the unspeakable “oad who make a shameless living by ing young girls and then forcing th to sell themselves, is beginning to bear fruit Four men were one of whom has obit ieleinteleinintetntete -leletelminiets yesterday borne an arrested hitherto is ‘lerman at No. 41 the moat at No. & excellent reputation, ‘This Pings, a glove merchant Greene atreet. He lives in fashionable part of the city t Sixty-seventh street Pings, together with Vincent Fazto, of No. 48 Spfing str was arratgned in the Ersex Market Pollce Court this morning charged with abduction of An- nie Filliels, seventeen, of No, 151 Allen street The gitl was an employe In the glove factory In which Pings was Interested She appeared against two other men, Samuel! Goldstein and Max Schmidt, on the same charze two weeks ago. Cc The complaint Al- bertson, of the police station, who made the arrests, at the reauest. of District-Attorn Philbin. men were arrested first as “st slous persons,” but In court this charge was changed to abduction There was no hearing in court. The girl did not appear. She was kept In {the back room white Capt. Albertson ‘asked for a postponement of the ca until to-morrow in order that further idence might be obtained. Magistrate Th LEGAL ROW OVER MINE VICTIMS | MAY NU aster and Lis TELLURIDE, Col., Nov, 21.—One hun-) the burning buildings directly into the @red mon were probably suffocated tn] tunnel, and the mile of drifts, upratses tffe Smuggler-Union mine, in Marshall connecting with It, began to Basin, ad the result of a fire which con- with the smoke. sumed the bulldings at the mouth of the} In the excitement of trying to control | , Bullion tunnel. Twenty-two miners are fire the out bulldings the known to be dead, and scores of others! mine was forgotten, and before the sit are in the mine workings either dead| uation wax realized the workings were | or secking safety in remote parts of] ated with d Ry this Ume the mine until the place in cleared of} the bulldings about the mouth of the | foul gases and smoke. tunnel Were all ablaze and nothing | Fire broke out In the tramway bunk | could be done to stop the smoke from | house at the mouth of the Hulllon tun-| going in | nel, the principal opening from which As svon as {ft was possible, great | the property ls worked, and spread rap-| podies of rocks were blown down {nto fly to the botler and engine houv.;the tunnel mouth and the opening blacksmith shop, the tramway terminal] «topped up, but not until the workings with fta great ore bins and several) were tilled nd othe smoke had smaller buildings, which were all soon! through the shafts to the surface, wrapped In flames, » A strong draugat drew the smoke from WITH ABDUCTING GIRL EMPLOYEE. Police and _ District. + rz Mayo consented to t Ajournment The bat! of both prisoners was first fixed ut $ but the Magistrate, after with Mr. Sanford tn his “the amount to $3,- of Pings's brother George, | love business with him, mds of both prisoners the superintendent of the stablishment run by the Ping who is in went nz | atov he MBER 100. PLUMBER STRIPPED HousEs| }wenty-two Men Dead in Telluride (Col.) Dis- t Is Growing. mile or mo tunnel house, up the mountain from the MRS, OTTO'S WILL FAVORS BARONESS, WIFE OF BARON ERNST VON) MEYSENBUG GETS 812,000. Leqatee Was Adopted Daughter of Testatrix, and Her Bequest Must He Paid First, The will of Catherine Francoise Is belle Otoo, widow of Jacob A. Ot Med this afternoc It appoints her oted and very dear friend," Reinhard W. Strassberger, 4% sole executor, and leavers $12,000 to her adop daughter, We Loutae Quentell, wife of Baron F st von Mey sendug ‘There Is $200) for Mr, Strasaberger and about $4 to a dozen le hequests of $170 and $30, TH that the $ senbug m etsy bequests what GIRL REFUSES TO BE VACCINATED, ASSISTANT IN NEWARK LI- | BRARY DEFIES AUTHORITIES. if Meal Board Considering Her Case uuhter of on Wealthy Ida Roberta, ark Public order insu t Institution to undergo va bare trustees sought to induce her to} lancet he her arm to they 4 the on in the abil Inter safety, but remained: « and does not realth and her | among them charged with “the dut testatrix's mothe e hequent Is Mother 8 West rty-niotn and i Matlery Stinilar suggestions will also be made to President of the Borough Swanstrom for appointment of women on the local school committees, Potitlons of this king ware to forw: Lo ME ‘Low befor ments were made nur, Mayor. or Behrens The tre vrarians Inta” contact with cause they are andiing Schoenfeld, kets $20. books that circulate among homes The will was drawn March 12, 1892,] Mies Roberts, who {8 a particularly and was witnessed by Robert J, Smack, | pretty young girl, is independent of No. 4 South Second street, Brooklyn,| her salary, her mother being wealthy. and Daniel J. Holden, No. 57 West Nine-|She saya she will nover submit to a tleth atreet. doctor, dlefguring hey arma, t winlelnininieleininivininininieleieleieieieleieininke | what Attorney's Office In- timate that Cases Have a Bearing on the Cadet Business. the other side and 1 tremendous business. Firm Once World Famona, late ‘Ss, the founders of the and the sons took over the Th 1894 they falled for $300,000. r dropped out of the firm and an employee. The two Pings large factories on Met In the firm died Leo Pinn vecame kept the name of Pinner in the firm for business reasons, James Stern & Co. Are their agents at No. 41 Greene atreet. Sale of Ribbons, Double-Faced Liberty Satin, 3%-inch, 25 cts. 4%-inch, 29 cts. 5%-inch, 39 cts, Colors: white, cream, light blue, pink, mais, reine, tur- quoise, Hlerman Pings, when he was asked he had to say about the charge inst him, declared that It was i shel by the father an Pings, who now comprine t ny, and the father of Leo Pinney house was kaown time all over the wor! Also |250 yards Assorted Styles of Fancy and Plain Ribbons, 4 to 8 inches wide, Rives resigns as a the Rapld Transit Commis- ‘ome Corporation Counsel, it | “that Bird 8. Coler will be el ed 39 cts. per yard, to fll the vacaney. i Mr is familiar with all the de- formerly 55c. to $1.25. Lord & Taylor, rapid transit work now in lus with the plans for! » iy the author of a pam- ority of tunnels over talls of phlet on th lbridges a ns of communication boroughs: Broadway & 20th St. Coier nor the members id confirm th Mr t that his selection and received with fave PROTECT YOURSELF from the many inferior plasters now on the market by |purchasing Allcock’s Porous Plaster—'‘ The World’s Best a | Plaster.” It was the first porous plaster ever made and it was its success and popularity that has caused these imitations to appear, which are not only lacking in the best elements which have made Allcock’s so efficient, but are often harmful in their effects. THAT THIS TRADE-MARK 1S ON EVERY PLASTER YOU BUY. No matter what you may wish to use a plaster for, Allcock’s is the safest, the surest, the best. We guarantee Allcock’s Plasters to be mate of the very best and purest materials we can buy. Allcock’s cure where substitutes fail even to relieve, attribute their suc- cess to advertising in THE WORLD'S AUCTION COLUMNS.

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