The evening world. Newspaper, May 6, 1902, Page 3

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N} Ue building, pulled her back. He had to DREADING MODEL’S FATE, Pretty Nineteen-Year- Old Lillie Arnow Makes Two Desper- ate Attempts at Sui- cide—Onlookers in a Panic. “T have not been able to earn enough honestly to pay my board; 80 I decided to end it all. 1 didn’t want to suffer Hattie La Roque's fate.” That was the explanation pretty nineteen-year-old Lillie Arnow gave for two attempts at suicide that threw the office building at No, 721 Broadway !nto an uproar this morn- ing. Her first effort to kill herself caused & panic among twenty women employ- ees on the upper Moor, and her second resulted in a life and death strugele on a stairway in which half a dozen men were finally engaged In opposition to the girl. Miss Arnow lives alone at No. 117 Norfolk street, and is considered the prettiest giri in the block. Many young, men have sought her acquaintance only to be rebuffed. Working for Leen Wechsler, a cloth- | ing manufacturer at No, 721 Broadway, she was able until three or four weeks go to make @ humble living. Then il- LILLIE ing signs of consumption and his were failing—all this from pouring over his books until way info the night reading incessantly. Rena) cnte and ee es Oe to dol His sister took him to a relative In more than halt as much work as ordl- | tna, N. J., and there expected that he narily, She was employed on plecework, | woujd at least recuperate t was onc and, although Mr, Wechsler’s foreman The si y Inst week, nr returned to ARNOW. man's wound wi bali had passed trely thi ‘Atal as ugh the — => PREFERS DEATH "GIRL FIGHTS FOR DEATH. the ins TO PEST HOUSE. gave her every opportunity, she could! Now york immediate! James Sewell, twenty years old, of only work a portion of the time, Hee | ‘This morning she was Varick street, Jersey City, a earnings fell to less than $2 a week, and | Domlnick come staggerin taliroad employee, became iM of sr Ke © hope of being able to earn | Qo0r to her home. He seemed wee, becam| of small- she saw No hop is roken In spirit, and before he pox jast evening, The ¢: was more, stopped he had swallowed the ported to the Health Department an In the elghth floor workrooms of Mr, | (re shit thpyanen aes Guarana i Wechsler’s factory Miss Arnow to-day eae Sowoll’s prre y s ells paren and other occupants worked a short time with her fellow em-| WIFE-BEATER oo ielnouge, wars uolitied! (Ha the ployees, ‘Then she sprang to her feet, ‘ranting would be removed when pulled a bottle from her dress and lifted SHOOTS HIMSELF oes) was taken to the Itolation Hos. {t to drain Its carbolic acid draught. pital early this mornin| ul early this morning. Other girls who knew that she was! tn a cell in the West Twentieth street} At midnight Sewell went to a cioset, @espondent had been watching her.| police station, John Mykins, a wife- ‘They grabbed her arm before she could) beater, attempted suicide at 1.30 o'clock | and w drink the acid. this morning by shooting Mmself| his fath She struggled with them and was get-|through the side with a 4i-calibre re-| Dr. ting the bottle close to her lips whenj volver. He is dying at the New York| pump on David Lewis, the foreman, seized her’ Hospital. wrist, She struggled desperately with| His wife, who was nursing a three- weeks-old infant when he last attacked her, refuses to go to him. The Mykins family live at No. 217 West Nineteenth street, where Mrs. Mykins is Janitress. Her sixteen-year-old daugh- him ant the girls ran screaming away from her, Two of the women employees fainted, In the struggle for the bottle the girl and Lewis were severely burned about the arms by the spilling of the) ‘acld, When Lewis saw that the bottle/ter Florence, and Charles, two years ‘was empty he Jet go the girl and turned] younger, ald in the support of their to attend to his burns, mother and five brothers and_ sisters Their baby sister, weeks old. Miss Arnow dashed away and es- Alice, is six caped down tne stairs in the confusion. o. No Ignoring the elevator, she ran to the Baath eens n . ambere on | i Pre ee erate ree ener eacie to], Meking 13.0 worthless and brutal fei-jtance of mhaut the marble flagging two stories below, ewe Meso rt nestmger, cauee: ae ara ae mepundl @ Benjamin Silverstein, who works in the} ® ved off the earnings of his wife) 4”! hs and chittren, Last August he waylaid | had sre his daughter Florence in the street and} Shiras promptly ys ion Hospital. He for well is removal in used took from it a bottle of carbojle acid, drinking from the bottle when knocked it from his hand. a stomach s morning the phy- sicinn said Sewell had small chances of 2 too precarious a to the Isolation —_s—_ FIGHTS WIFE FOR DEATH IN MIDAIR, exciting tried to jump from the twenty His wife was in the room, John Meaghan, thirty-elght years old, while in a fit of delirium at his home, 61 Pennsylvania avenue, Rosebank, ndow, a dis- five feet from could clear the sash, she ed him by the anki struggle folle a. The felt almoat for his own life then *2| (red to take her week's wages from ler,| man) hung for a moment sumpeniad by hereelt over the balusters and carry-| Ste éscaped him and he followed her his foot, but doubling up tried in his ing him with her. Both were in immi-|!nto the house and thrashed the entire| frenay to fight his’ wife. With the Rent danger of falling until other men| family. He was sent to the Island for/ strength f affection she clung to him. came to Bilverstein’s ald, It took six |#!x months but got off after four months At last, human muscles ld _stand the of them to hold the girl. on his promise to reform. strain no longer and Mrs han was Policeman Dehn, of the Mercer atreet | Last night Myking met his son Charles forced tot v her hold @tation. came In, attract by. the up-]on Seventh avenue, The boy would not] Sh and 8 brulses resulting roan and at alight ent ee gues speak to his father, but the latter hailed from the fall made it advisable that the Wagon to the police station. There, to | sim man be sent to the hospital, and he he sergeant, whe made the pathetic Vil be around there to-night and I'll was trea at the Smit Infirmary Relesation which appeara In the Begin: |anish the whole pack of you," sald the | Atte ahi Ae wee tei nd ning of this story Meaghan had tured his skull and _—_— father would proba lie Phe boy saw his father was In liquor —_—_— BOY DIES, PREY and fearing he might TOOK POISON; threat, notified the polic TO AMBITION. | oeiock Policeman Stanley caught ul LAY HOURS ALONE. with Mykins in Seventh aven al —— Dominick Abrasini, yor boy seven-| placed him under « ie fevaulngworkel) teen years old, who came to New York Work o! Moun YN May 6—John from Itnly three years ago, killed h ‘i ; rater itl 1 felt ln the home of Hin bistor, (at No. 77] 28 (MO Soorman wae leaving thet ie opps ts ee (ocr incbietaceen Thompson atreet, thie morning by drink. | PTaeo eae RAG the. FEDORE ft swallowed the polson and 1a Der ca chatio. anid Jvevoiver and running back found man swallowed the pols a shirt afire found iin Be ecice mh hed Itok with mie] Dunes Bie COUR b the mans apap Cierondan nd . no hd Shy in| ae a ; , ox We naking an Inve Books and had studied until his sight | tae Under Sea Hy marr aur termine whether the parks qa Hilned and hie hesith gone. ‘Then [Ne revolver: A New York Ji freen Was taken with wuicidal bat d from sohvol and sent to | Hah tnaincg desi Mrbina - ained lable’ ip mp) alg SHOT AND KEL HEMSIEA, at tie eawe ines ma ignegues tne, tonasbO. He was) ofered & drink ‘ N. J. May 6-—-fd Piacteunmeenaheoad RIL TT aa dit, saying he pee BART ORANGE ‘ . aod thie morning came fepred Ha He pointed oitted tw ot bie ‘ Mapedring back 10 hie winter's hon ner lew waked how \ wy QwAllowed the contents of » vette of | *MuaHled the yovatver Inte hy ‘ hs % @arbvolle acid end then fell in bis distera. - r - arma, crying 5 hv a dead ynaws sve no use to sont FISHERMEN HOOK A CORPSE, HERLIHY’S FORMAL PLEA for the doetar | 5 pe dvvtol 7" 4 ° i se Bate aan ween ihe 4 r ame be . " umaaein ifikbih ids Laka vaconasen | MesuMiene am “ns ee “on the new 4 kno vial te throusnaut the italian pettionent in| PMerke White Malme Aum 1D Merithy wae 4 Which hie home was, vad the grief was ° e Rveniug , ive + Gut A deep. Dominick, verause of hin amine | WHITH PLAINS NY. May 6 ' tment charghig Hone afd hie brigniuens, Was 4 favorite. | While Kugeue Melpin and Li dhuph f dui, Whew 1 He wae the clerk of the woignborte White Plains were Reavine ‘ bteeen ally rote the iehiere # ' le ‘ ' ab hs = By Se wi tor Merling fh wider, nad Het beer ue ant The Hhaherw P mr ‘ Heute Mivuld tone “ia " r i . @lariod the elit oe! on eourese ‘ f 1@ ere Weed predueiod amas one . ‘ a he Mt j P TT eR ae Go ww mw THE WORLD: TUESDAY EVENING, MAY 6, 1902. DOCTORS INDORSE SWAMP-ROOT. To Prove What Swamp-Root, the Great Kidney, Liver or Bladder Remedy, Will Do for YOU, Every Reader of The World May Have a Sample} TESTIMONY IN THE FOODY CASE CLOSED Both Sides Rest and Lawyers Are Given Until Next Tues- day to File Their Briefs with Commissioner. ‘Testimony in the trial of Police Can tain Michael Foody was conchided this afternoon Ex-Judge Olcott, counsel for Foody asked for two weeks in which to pre pare the brief whtch fe to be aub mitted to the Commissioner, “T think two weeks Is a long tim’ sald the Commissioner, ‘The Distr Attorney thought two weeks Was aoou fa week too long “We have two other captains to try, aiid Jerome After hearing ex-Judge Olcott's ar gument. Commissioner Partridge gay both sides until next Tuesday to sub it thelr priets, ‘The captains Mr. Jerome referred to are Churchill and to-day When the trial was resumed Martin Scurry, Foody's Wardman, was put on the stand, He told how he had collected evidence In excise career. Scurry was put through a figid cross- examination by Mr. Jerome, who want- ed the poticeman to produce his memo- nandum book, Scurry said he could not rememt what he had done with the} book. Scurry shifted nervously in his! chair while being cross-examined, Capt. Foody took Scurry into the precinct from the Delancey street station. Tit with District-Attorney, You heant that Christianson testi- fled that the liquor-d prs would keep on paying biackmallt’ Mr. asked Sour Christianson | is | President of the Liquor Dealers’ ation in Foody's precinct. Mr. ected to the question. 4 “Did you tell your Captain t Christianson had Accused him of ac ing blackmail?’ didn’ tell shim) anything | | that Jerome was trying to spring other fake sensation,” A number of citisens, inchuding ao> tors, lawyers and tradesmen, of Capt Foody’s precinct, gave testimony fayor- able to the accused captain. All agreed that the moral standard of the precinct is much better now than under his pre- decessor, Capt. Cooney Detective Sherwood testified that he and Scurry had tried to obtain evidence of excise Violation Do you know a Mrs, Wallser District-Attorney 0. sir.” “You visited her flat before election.” The witness could not remember, Patrick Timoney, another detective, ‘was called. “You are the ward man?’ * asked the TO GURE HIS LOVE, Francesco Made Only $9 a Week and Mamie Really Couldn’t Marry that Munifi- cent Salary, Don’t You Know seems as if I should me Root. My experience, so far as [ have tested ft in my practice, fore the conclusion that it is a remedy of the greatest vi bladder and other inflammator now take pleasnre in prescribing ing of assurance that my path shail continue to preseribe it in other cases in m tion of good results curative properties, Ms. Bartow Irish, M.D) 276 9th St Bopt 24 recommeuded by physicians in their pi tors themael Bottle Sent Free by Mail. East Atlanta, Ga., March 1, 1901 DR. KILMER & €O., Binghamton, N.Y. GENTLEMEN While it has never been my habit or inclination to recommend remedies the Ingredients of which are not all known to me, It ean excep) find it, in an eecepted school or ont of It. complaint under mer's Swamp-Root treatment with Truly yours Borough wiyn NOY 1901 rp-Root Bw 5 pleasant to take and ailments r ki » who have ssful remedy f kidney ‘on in the ¢: conditions of Swamp-Root in will derive g Very truly yours unsatisfactory with most flattering results, scribe it, and from persona! observation state that Swamp-Root has a is vate se of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp- me to Jue In all kidney, Hv the genito-urinary tract. 1 All such cases With a feel- t benefit from its use. 1] practice with the expecta- 0, 4 Gon't mean the collector,” eaid the| “7 Mal e i GA Pac cette ant comiusiner| eee @ bz a y) Partridge reproved the Distri eeAttorney, —__— GENTLEMEN:—I have prescribed that wonderful remedy for kidney | complaint. Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, wita most beneficial effect and know | of many cures by its use. ‘These patients had kidney trouble, diagnosed | by other physicians, and treated without benefit. Dr Kilmer's wamp- | Hoot effected a cure. I ain a liberal man and accept a specitic wherever I For desperate cases of kidne results 1 turn to Dr. Kil-| 1 shall continue to pre-| used in the leading hospitals, | practice and 4s taken by doc- | they recognize In it the rv and bladder troubles because y. liv grentos nd most su Ree St {, NOTE—If you b the slightest symptoms of kidney or | ve-sick south | yigader trouble, or if there is a trace of it in your family history, send at) spe pear once to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y.. who will gladly send you by mali, immediately, without cost to you, a sample bottle of Swamp-Root an weeks be faverari fl chic ja book felling all about Swamp-Koot cont‘ining many of the thou-| to your menace, perhaps,” suid the {sande upon thousands of testimonial letters received from men and women | Court Jeured, In writing to Dr, Kilmer & Co to say tha Francisco twenty ye ou read this generous offer in the New Y ployed oy the new Eas If vou aye already convinced that S what you ned, you { Compa it $9 a Week an purchase the regular fifty-cent and one bottles at the drugl Beside him in rt fay » the | stores everywhere. Don't mike any mist ) remem me young woman to whom Ralph Swamp-Root. Dr K Swamp-Koot he ad Binghamton | heart. She told the Court all about | ————— = ey Tam Mamie ter she said 1 xhieen years old and live at No Main street, Astoria \ | ftalph made love to me, and 1 ike, im. Hew J to marry me, but when | m= Work myaelt What could we bath do} ‘The crutch is a poor substitute for 1 | | inconvetiont and tiresome mode « not | ab bh ond 1 if WA) pathetic sight than a person slow pat y i” Wi the street supported by these artifical bial ’ ; brie a When Kheumatian settles in the bones and muscles of th 4 a aah j logs, the vietin eventually become cx and oruteh-bound sow Wh foive, Initating matter that is ited im the joints and wom ” Vk inuscles causes the most intense pain, the knees and ankles swel | faiher 4 mother nd when the tfatural oils and fluids t ricate these # ute wut down on my k r destroyed the nits beoosn ke the muscles draw: | He went awey satiel at and crutches @ necessity Nhat eat w ‘ The acid poisons that produce rheumatic pains form in the bl nd Ran. | Meughi” eAded N are distributed through the system, and | » the anne. oh he Magisire hand \ feet. of other parts of the oy seaulting olten int aby ' dis ' A pormanent cure af Rheumat wn be eflect wa as plete cleanning af add | & Ff it it WAR STILL GOES ON j ; show thee \ wid Uw y \ “i toe wd by hemes o tem Hed Had dae Made Hrinuneee wow ‘ dae A i “ o # « mt ews eeu bu, AlLaBtaA 6 a cm ce ees ee mca . at ONE HALF | sales, {could handle. on, we ask your indulgence—we did our best. will tind we life, jlor & Co., Hathaway, Soule & Harrington, F. M. Hobbs, the Lorsch’s Sons; also the well-known WALK-OVER shoes, these to our customers in our Sixth Ave. store at exactly half price, Adier's Prices, 2.00 /3.00 AN Misia OUTFITTERS TO MEN AND BOYS, Are Now Selling the Stock of | JOHN M. ADLER, SHOES, 1381 BROADWAY, Petween 37th and 38th Sts - —- New York. Be Reta (16) OFF roti Sale Now on at Our Zit and 219 SIXTH Ave. Aegan Sixth Ave, Store O 14th $i The biggest shoe sale in our history—and ours is a history of big Whit crowds we had! More people kept pouring in than we Ii you are one of those who came and couldn't be w: ee y If you come NOW in serve you—and give you the best shoe bargain of ock includes the shoes of such first-class makers as Hugh We MEN’S SHOES AND OXFORDS, Our Adler's Prices. Prices 6.00 Black \ alt, Vici Kid and Patent Leather Shoes. Tan and Black Viei Kid, Black Calf, Patent Leather, Handstitched Shoes and Oxfords, all shape fasts, all leathers...0scoe sees MEN’S SLIPPERS. ax 3.00 Black Catt Vatent Leather, [.5() 2,00. Htand-made Slippers... 00 2 £7) WALK-OVER Shoes and 1.50 Men's Slippers....00... “750 3.50 5 sn i £ (et gee ytarees fe 7 9) ODDS AND ENDS —f, ict f 088 ame, | Hand-sewed Shoes and Black Calf Shoes, some of them worth /4.00 Oxfords, in all. leathers, 2 00 as high as $2.50. To close out 5 all shape toes.. . quickly we've marked them. SALE NOW ON AT OUR SIXTH AVE, STORE ONLY, a Outfitters To Men and Boys, & 2Il and 2!I9 Sixth Ave., iNfth. Two CREMO'Bands are of same value as one ‘SWEET CAPORAL” Cigarette Box Front. peveemenar | 2° fase aia a 29°37] WE WRYORK. eerr a7. : KOCH & Co. A SALE OF UMBRELLAS. Meguierly $3.50) UMBRELLAS nandies of Part MEN SiLK ape “ nmed ¥ ste ye Zl 125th Street, Wert, st. /enenl ith Aves, 1 d eve

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