The evening world. Newspaper, December 19, 1901, Page 3

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i * BIRL FOUND ous Josephine McCarthy Over- come by Gas in a Furnished Room. HELD AS A PRISONER. Physicians Who Were Summoned Suspect Poison- ings Jorephine McCarthy, a pretty girl, twenty-two years old, ‘6 u patient In the prison ward at Bellevue Hospital, charged with aitempted sutcide. She was found unconscious last night in a furnished room at No. 35 Stuy- vesant street. She had engaged the room earlier in the day, and, taking Powsession at once, asked that she be called at 6 o'clock, An attempt was made to arouse her @t that hour, but there sponse to repeated raps on t her room. 1 arle Vioff, a friend. living at No, 153 Second avenue, called at the house to see her. When she also falled to aro: thing was wrong The door was forced and Miss Mc- Carthy was found unconse v was gas in the room. This was found to come from a leak in the Kas stove. A physiciay was and he sald that he believed the young woman had taken some poison. The police made her a prisoner, and the ambulan who came In re- sponse to ac: sald he believed the young n had taken poison. Miss McC: “s friend sald there must be some mi rl, she gad, had no although she had been out of work for a few days she had money. WIFE MAKES Elf LIFE PRISONER, FEINBERG MUST STAY PRISON INDEFINITELY. was no re- door of IN SMOKE KILLS her she said that some- |" THE WORLD: ‘YHURSVDAY BViENING, DECEMBER 19, 190i. | New Publ’cations New Publications. | New Publications. New Publications. | ~ LITTLE GIRL Mother Fought to Save Her! Child, Who Lay Dead in Burning Flat. HAD WOOD UNDER RANGE! Five-Year-Old Was Found Suffo- cated When Parent Finally E Reached Her. When Mrs. Mary Peterson, No. 739 Henry street, Brooklyn, returned from market this morning she found her flat on fire and the bdullding filled with fire- men. “My baby is In there,"’ she screamed. TT Into the flat firemen ain her, but sh. Qoran through 1h . There sne eareold girl—dead, suffoc, » smoke rson flat Is on the first floor of and sta fought to d their grasp e from dense neighbor, saw from within e, but too hate to save e hospital, if to the apart. OF PRESIDENTS. PETER MORRIS, FAMOUS DE-|f TECTIVE. PASSES AWAY. Unicas His Wife Application for Allmony He Caunot Secure Hin Release. Nahme Feinberg has spent six months an a prisoner In Ludlow Street Jal, al- though not accused of any crime or even charged with debt. He may he- come a life prisoner unless his wife, with whom he had heen quarreling, re- lents and permits his release, Feinberg 1s a tailor, twenty-four years old. He was married In October, 1:0, to Bertha Solonsky, but did not live with his bride long. After the couple separated the wife had Felnborg ar rested on charges of assault and rob- Dery. Sho afterward applied for a dl- vorce, and on the allegation that her husband was about to leave the State secured an order for his incarceration, “pending an application for counsel foe and alimony." Mrs. Felnberg has made no such ap- Plication, and In the meantime Feinberg remains a prisoner. ‘T! Legal Ald So- erally passed through. Long Stationed at the Pennsylvania . Jersey City, Throngh Which He Guarded Preatients, Peter Morris, for years the guardian of ni way through the Pennsylvania Rallrond station, Jersey Clty, died this morning . 11 Montgomery street, after a long IlIness that many tables on thelr Detective in his home, Jersey City, included Iver troubles and consump- tion, ‘Morris. war one of the best known attaches of the Pennsylvanta Rallroad Me was one of the most ac- complished members of Jersey City's secret service, He kegt watchful guard over the nation’s wotables in Jersey City during the Dewey celebration, and he was gen- hand when the President Presidents Cleveland, '@rrison and ys have made e his release, but with- nberg’s attorney t ia no use making the as Feinberg could not pay at BIGELOW'S. END “ACCIDENTAL THEORY OF FRIENDS AS TO YOUNG LAWYER’S DEATH. saya that Heation, He Was Found Suffoent: Chloroform Fumes Chicago Hotel. from non The many friends here of Hiram Digelow. the young lawyer who was found dead in his rooma in the Vin- cennes, Chicaga, suffocated by chloro- form fumes, join with the Chicago po- Uce in believing that {t was not a case of sutelde. They say that he used the drug often to relleve both neural nia and understood h His cousin in Sit and insom. to handle it, 60, Di. Frank Big. ave falnted 8 not 1 whose pleture case, Relle Shiebdly, of Harrisburg, to whom) @ letter was left which sald in part: | “Tals is the first time that 4 have written you two letters In one day. 1 know you would not be offended If 1 wrote ‘three, or even four." Dr. Bi id ths t nna, but he would ever eom- ee Marx's Third Victim Dying. RICHMOND, Va., Dec. 19.—James Q, ff, the third man who was shot by Bi lerbert Murx in the Westm. rel: fiseeas, la at bis Lome and sinking rape security while t the Governor of 1 served elght ye {to Know What You Are Taking When Using 7 jcatarrh are little short of remarkable, and Importance when it is remembered that the |. cocaine or morphine habit has been fre. dfal approval trom physicians, because thelr | cure for all forms of catarrhal troubl periery McKinley were among th @» for whose y pass A through the depot Morris was largely responsible, He knew sneak thleves, burglars and confidence men by the hundreds. Morris also made many clever arrests, Among those whom he landed in prison vard Stoddard, noted forger, fraud from and who. prison for swindles perpetrated In Jersey. Stoddard i# now serving time In Sing 6ing Prison. IT 1S IMPORTANT a 1 Catareh Medic! Catarrh Is the short route to consump: Yon. and the importance of early and fu diclous treatment of catarrh, whether lo- cated in the head, throat or bronchial tubes, cannot be too strongly emphasized The Mat of catarrh cures Is as long nx the moral law and the forms in which they aro administered numerous and confusing from sprays. Inhalers, washes, ointments and walves to powders, Nauldx and tables. The tablet form {8 undoubtedly the invat conventent and the most effective, but with nearly all advertised catarrh remedies it is alniost entirely a matter of guesswork ws to what you are taking into your system, as the proprictors, while making all sorts of claims as to what thelr medicines will do, always keep tt a close secret as to what they are, ‘The success and popularity of the new catarrh cure, Stuart's Catarth Tablets, ts largely becaune it not only cures catarrh, but because catarrh sufferers who use these tablets. know what they are taking -tnto their systems, Stuart's Catarrh Tablets are composed of ited Gum, Blood Root and similar valuable antiseptic Ingredients, and are pleasant to the taste, and, heing dissolved In the mouth, they take Immedi- ate effect upon the mucous Hning of the throat, nasal passages and whole respira- tory trnet. The cures that Stuart's Catarrh Tablets | haye accomnpished in old chronte cases of | 9 ai vi the advantage of knowing what you are putting Into your stomach In of paramount y contracted ax the result of using catarrh remedies, Stuart's Catarrh Tablets meet with cor- | B anuseptle character renders them perfectly safe for the ceueral public to use, and thelr composition makes. them a common-sense All drugglata tell thom at 60 cts, 1061 principal aim (after making it accurate yours as well as to yourself. homes, and that is why we are sending grandeur and Assyria’s magnificence; of every day scores of sets into city, town Babylonia’s wealth and power; of the rise verture, and hamlet all over the United States to 2nd fall of Greece of Roman splendor; people who have seen the books in the homes of their friends and are taking ad- ment Club offer to secure sets for them- can war; the story is complete and satis- selves, ' ig path's History of the World, m 9 volumes, halt Faymerts of $2, from dete. Shall not pass to me until full amount is paid, Sen. JOS. B. FORAKER, GEN. LEW WALLACE, WILLIAM McKINLEY. HON. CHAS. FOSTER, Ex-Secretary of the Treasury. BENJAMIN HARRISON. Store Will Be Open Evenings Until Christmas Store Will Be Open Evenings Until Chri BISHOP J. H. VINCENT. BISHOP THOS. BOWMAN A REV. THEODORE Lo CUYLER, D. D. BISHOP J. P. NEWMAN Books are Royal Octawo, 11 inches tall, bound in Halt Russia. Only $1 before Christmas balance in little monthly sums AFTER the holidays. Full set sent when you join the club and pay the first dollar. Where will you go to look for a finer Christmas present? Or one that’s easier paid for and at HALF PRICE. Buy it for your Boy If you’d had aset of books when you were a lad (we’re talking to the AVERAGE man now)— if you’d had a set of books that told all the wonder- ful stories of the past and told them so they FAS- CINATED you; that was full of true tales of adven- tures that vied with Gulliver’s in strangeness and interest; that told of the marvellous voyages of Raleigh and Magellan—the desperate sea-battles of Drake and Frobisher and Nelson and Paul Jones; that told of all the kingdoms of old and the fierce, stern old fighters that ruled them; that was crowded to overflowing with stirring pictures that brought the scenes HOME to you and made them REAL;—if you’d had such a set of books (we say), don’t you think you’d have spent hours—yes, days and weeks—in poring over them instead of over trashy story books —Mr. Average Man? Don’t you think the knowledge gained from such a set of books would have been pretty useful and valuable to YOU ? And do you think your BOY is any different from you in those respects ? Around the border of this advertisement are the faces of a few out of the hundreds of men of substance who have advised YOU to own RID- PATH’S HISTORY OF THE WORLD. Look at them. However you may question their creeds or their politics, is there ONE among them whose recom- mendation and advice you hold lightly in an affair of this sort? E. G. HIRSCH, Ph. D., LL. D, ELMER H. CAPEN, D. 0, President of Tufts College. JAMES B. ANGELL, LL. D., President of University of Michigan, L. CLARK SEELYE, D. D., LL. D., President. of Smith College. IR. RIDPATH SPENT 17 years) Ridpath’s History tells the) Every race. every nition, of his life in writing his His- complete story of man on this earth, It every time is covered, and it is nota the World; and\ his begins with human beings of the very work you read from a sense of duty for lowest scaie and traces their rise through ‘‘improving” yourself, but because it ng brutism to savagery, through savagery to ENTERTAINS you. nd truthful) was to make itinterest- barbarism, and through barbarism to civ- It's not dull, dreary, crowded with a ng to just such readers as that boy of ilization. d mass of hard-to-remember names of men From the dawn of history—long be- and places. It’s a straightforward, charm- fore the pyramids of Egypt were built or ingly-written, warmly colored narrative even thought of—down through the ro- thatdraws the reader on from page to page mantic, troubled times of Chaldea’s and chapter to chapter like a well-told story of adventure, It IS a story of ad- It throws the mantle of person- ality about the old heroes of history. [t of Mohammedan culture and refinement: makes them real people, instead of mere o’ French elegance and British power; of dummies labelled with names and strung the rise of the Western World; and even ona barren outline of rusty, dusty, his- antage of our half-price-and-little-pay. down to the story of the Span’sh-Ameri- toric facts. ; Talleyrand is there, sauve, smiling, a ‘human devil. Alexander is there, patriot, warrior, statesman, diplomat, crowning the glory of Grecian history. Bismarck is there, gruff, overbearing, a giant pugilist in the diplomatic ring, Ww. laughing with grim disdain at Francs, who says ‘*You shall not.’" Washington is there, ‘four square to all the winds,’’ grave, thoughtful, proof against the wiles of British strategy and the poisoned darts of false friends; clear- secing over the heads of his fellow-coun- trymen, and on into another century; the greatest world figure of his time. and they're all real men, When you read what Ridpath tells, you believe they actually lived. Honestly, can you say that any HISTORY ever convinced you that there was really such a MAN as Ju- lius Caesar? Would he have been one-, A Wanamaker Half Price Offer ‘That triangular coupon in the left-hand cor= ner (if promptly and properly filled in and sent to us with a dollar) tenth as real to you as Robinson Crusoe it it hada’t been for William Shake- speare ? Ridpath’s History of the orld comprises nine massive Royal Octavo volumes, the equivalent of 36 ‘ordinary volumes. The books are ele- gantly and substantially bound in half Russia leather, They contain over 4,000 f engravings, 35 historical maps in colors, 10 chronolozical charts in colors, 9 race charts in colors, 14 colored plates depict- ing types of the races, 33 genealogical } diagrams, 8 colored reproductions of etch. ings on tint blocks. The complete set, boxed, weighs 62 pounds. We're selling it at HAL¥ PRICE with only $1.00 to b full set ist sent, the balance payments of A $2.00, tory of That is why 70,000 sets of the History re in use today in 70,000 American bef fying. If you must have further information, speci men pages, etc, before joining the club, use that triangular coupon in the 01 WANAMAKER, New York. cost to me d 1210. Cut This Corner Off—Fiil it Out —Mail it Today, ZV, JOHN WANAMAKER, New York Enciosed is $1 club fee. PROMFTNESS may save yeu a DISAPFOINTMENT. We provided sufficient Club Sets for liberal Holiday selling; NOT for the avalanche of orders that is Pouring in upon us. For the present we promise Frompt shipment to all members who join at once. After next week—doubtful, tration box On my azcept- ance as a ciub member send me one set Rid- Russia binding. n send (0 ass ogres to pay to your order 17 monthly Re er or not it will sutt me to itis agreed that title to books of ‘oth Name Address ,.....

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