The evening world. Newspaper, June 27, 1902, Page 5

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F v t ‘The gil wax removi ra Rehan ‘Hoaoltel, RAREST NOW FOR DISBROW? Missing Man’s Lawyer Leaves on a Mys- terious Trip — Re- ports of Action. FAMILY STILL RETICENT. Southampton Magistrates, It Is Said, Appear Unwilling to Mix Up Officially In the Case. GOOD GROUND, June 27.—Seem- ing verification of the report, cur- rent here, that a warrant is about to be issued for Louls Disbrow, was found to-day in the mysterious trips of Rowland Miles, lawyer for the missing man, to Port Jefferson, where, it is declared, the companion of Clarence Foster and “Dimple” Lawrence, who lost their lives in Tianna Bay, was last seen. Immediately after reading in the morn- ing papers of impending official action toward getting at the facts of the trag- edy, Mr. Miles left his ‘home in tlme to catch tho 890 train for Bridgeport, Conn Young Disbrow, according to an !m- pression in cortain quarters, is in hid- ing In Bridgeport, having got there by way of the Port Jefferson route after an interview with his lawyer at Northport two weeks ago. ‘At the Disbrow home, at Richmond Hill, the usual reticence was observed to-day. There 1s an apparent distinclination ‘on the part of the five committing m gistrates of Southampton to mix up officially with the case. The District-Attorney has been unable to pre of the five Justices of the Peace to to Good Ground to take testimon There are a number w swhose testimony “nuat be taken, is hinted that sae long and carefully hidden skeletons are Ukely to be ex posed, involving p of influence. ‘The story of young Foster's widow that she has been made the victim of the unwelcome attentions of one of Di brow’s friends since hi ppearance and the certainty that his { must come out in the examination conducted by the Distrit-Atturney has arouse? the curiosity of the tow + The statement of Dr. ( je that the wound over Hoster's eye went dep to it 1s declared, ail upon elther come the bone. the bone Itself being injured by the force of the blow, and the story which secms to Indicate that the boat found drifting was led by Foster and ‘D! on the fatal night, ‘blind, Incl! trict-Attor dence to warrant pected one on an lief" warrant. JF TIMMMERMAN FEARS BLINDNESS, Theatrical Manager, Promi- nent in Syndicate, Goes to Thousand Islands to Return for Operation. J. Frea Zimmerman, of the theatrical firm of Nixon & Zimmerman, left New York to-day with his family for the Thousand Isla from where he will return in Octover to undergo an opera- tlon for a cataract which Is obscuring been troubled @bout five yei his eyes and sev- eral, of the lead pecialists of the country have decided that he tun- fon in the fall, father grandfa dav become blind from cataract, At present it Is aifficult for Mr, Zimmer-| man (to see anything. : WOMAN'S STRANGE DEATH. After Quar- orted. of Newark, . J. are ine of an unidentified body was found in a room on third floor of a tene- mem, No. Bank stree that city. Bhe, with another wom claimed ty ve Der d rented two rooms is the day and tfok Immediate 5 Late Wednesday night ¢ two women went out ascending the stairs @tumbled when half Found Dead on F rel, and Di The police the dea whose the vestigatt woman way to the bott E . & BON ‘of the landlord, he r Upstairs to her room. Later ‘gi night or early this morn- ing a auarrel occurred In the room and @ sound of a fall was 1, ‘Then some one Was heard*to | he room, Tt was Mrs, Chaslea 5, Walthouse, w lives on the floor below, who mM this. When Bradle the new tenants found the old woman ¢ The police were notified the couple, suppor daughter, | couid Jandlord ‘does not any of the three. NO DOCTOR FOR SICK GIRL. Police Compel Father to Permit Medical Attendance, Margaret Burke, seven years old, daughter of George Burke, a watehman living at No, 033 ‘Third avenue, has been trace of son and n the ne of kn ill for a week from dropsy. Her father refused her medical attendance, acvord- ing to the girl's mother. Mrs. Burke ed in a doctor from Lebanon Hox: tal, but the father refused to permit him to.attend the girl, Last night Mra. Bur ‘ke went to the One Hundred and dixueth Btreet Police Sia- ton and told Bergt, O'Toole her stoi He called an ambulance, placed two po- jigemen aboard. it and went it to the Burke home with Sapir ceaM to the surko poMarromt the father if he made & ed to Lee An angry man 48 expected to arrive in | this city to-day from Winsted, Conn. | Also a forty-five Colt's, The man's name Is Michael J. Coffee, and he is | ng for the man who stole his bride. | What he will do to the lucky man the| of the day may bring forth. But | ‘offee is mad clear through and he, wants his presents back. Mrs. Vincent Barton, who was to been married on Wednesday to ffee, but who instead wedded Barton a week ago Jast Monday without taking the (rouble to notify her flance of her change in plans, ts not anxious to see the trate man from Winsted. Mrs, Bar- ton’s name before her marriage was Mary Brandon. While in Winsted the young woman Went to « circus with Coffee. talked| JILTED MAN COMES TO GET HIS PRESENTS BACK, Coffee Anxious to See Mrs. Barton, Who Made Quick Change of Sweethearts. made final arrangements for the event. It was not until after she retumed to this city the following day that she mustered up courage enough to write that she had married Barton. When Coffee was seen a World cor- respondent at Winsted yesterday he ad- mitted that he had been Jilted, and sald he would come to New York to-day to get from Mrs. Barton the presents he had given her. Miss Loretta McKenna. of No. 948 First aver'ie, who is a relative of Bai ton, said last night that the young couple were married at St. John's Church, Pitty-ffth street and First ave- nue, after an exce ngly brief ship. Mrs. Barton had then gone to Winsted to get her things. She intended to confess to Coffer, but could not bring herself to do 8 therefore waited Until she returned and wrote to him. Miss McKenna’s mother summed up the situation by declaring that “the best over the plans for the wedding and horse won. Father Has Been Ill Is No Money Max Cohen, his wife and eight chil- | dren, are one of twenty-four families living in the six-story double tenement at Monroe street. The head of the family is a taflor, but he has been unable to work for several weeks be- cause he 1s suffering from blood-poison- ing. The youngest chiid fs deformed and hind. he oldest is a bright lad of thir- teen, Who attends the public school and | ells newspapers. | The famfly is threatened with starva- tion, The rent is long overdue, and the landiord, after giving them five weeks’ grace, has served them with disposse papers. If they do not pay him to-day they, with their few belongings, will be | moved to the sidewalk before nightfall, | I don't know what we shall do.” said Mrs. Cohen, sorrowfully. ‘We never had to ask for charity when my STARVING FAMILY WILL BE EVICTED THIS EVENING. for Weeks and There in the House. was able to work. A friend who could not afford it gave us 5 cents to-day, with which I bought two loaves of bread. all we have. I have had no milk for my poor baby. I gave my the Jast 2 cents at noon to buy He brought it home after he didn't need to eat and gO and buy some news- nts by selling his school, sa) ne, that he would papers with it and get 4 them. “P could work myself, leave my children alone, and it takes all dinner. but I cannot my time to look after them. T have pawned everything I could, 1 got $1 on my wedding ring and $4 on another ring. On my shawl, that I made myself, T got $1. I have even pawned sont of the children's dresses for a few cents, I was |being jreated at Mount Sinai asonpltal myself and was to g0 there three times a week. till I was cured, but I can't afford the carfare any more.” ‘The neighbors of the Cohens, who have helped t keep them from starving, husband | speak well of them, CRIPPLED BOY HIS. CLASS LEADER } August Wachlin Delivered the Valedictory Address at the Graduation Exercises of St. Michael’s Parochial Schools —_——_ ‘A one-legged boy, who approached to \the front of the platform on crutches, | was the valedictorian at the graduating exercises of St, Michael's parochial |schools connected with 6t, Michael's Monastery, in West Hoboken. The ex- ereises were held in St, Michael's Hall, at Clinton avenue and High street. The lad was August L. Wachlin, About three years ago, while playing with some other boys on a new builld- ing near his home, he fell from an upper story and broke both of his legs, one s0 badly that st had to be amputated. His afMfiction did not prevent him from be- coming the brightest member of his class, and through hard work he earned the right to deliver the valedictory ad- dress. Tie was warmly applauded by’, large audience. Young Wachiin delivered an excellently prepared essay on ‘The True Ship Is the Shipbullder,”” DOWNTOWN FIRE. Cloak Manufacturer Suffers a Loas of $2,000 in Lispenard Street. A fire was discovered on the thind floor of the five-story bullding, Nos, 13 and’ 15 Lispenard street, shortly before 6 o'clock this morning, fou The firemen nd a fierce blaze 4 the establish- ‘CASTORIA For Infants and Children, | The Kind You Have Always Bought ment of L, Wilson. a cloak manufactu- rer. Before the flames were subdued they ascended to the fourth floor, oc- cupied by the M. & M. Shirt Co, The loss is estimated at $2,000. $15 up to only 6,8and |Oofa an breasted sack suits, Broadway, Bears the Signature of THE WOR THE ting youa suit o sent what was originally a stor wide choice you are offered, Even thus far in the season mer before us—there are possibl that have been sold down kind areleft. We have gone through our stock collected these various small lots—single breasted and double made from cassimeres, worsteds and they are all on sale to-day and to-morrow at So you had better get here early. LD: FRIDAY EVENING, JUNE 27, 1902. MOTHER'S FIGHT |BESSIE ONS BT imine SON TO ote Mrs, Celeste Ousset to Ap- peal from the Decision Put- ting Them in the Custody of Their Father. Lawyer Douglas Story, In Jersey City, said this morning that Mrs. Celeste Ousset, mothe three children, three weeks ago, were awarded by Stevenson to the cus- of their £ mile C, Buvra a wealthy manu r of artificial flowers in West H 1, would appen the case and cyatinue her fight in the upper courts, ‘A peculiar phase of this case was the fact that M Euvrard, wife of the father of the chili midd nd, her hus’ loved the little one for them. She rejc plan of adopt youngsters ar s. Mrs, Buvrard has never had any of her own. Mrs, Ousset was Celeste Mae until about six months ago, when she was married to Ousset, who came from France to win her hand. For a year or more when she first came to this country she was employed as a domestic in Buvrard's was only seventeen yea the first of the three chi six years old, was born. WEATHER MAN HAS A NEW RANK NOW, The Bureau in This City Will Hereafter Be Known as a ‘National Station’? — More Pay for Emery. making them hi ‘An order of Secretary of Agriculture Wilson has raised the New York] don. A cablegram announcing the news | Weather Bureau to the rank of a na-|was received by the actress's two tional forecast station. It also pro-| daughters at Sayville. They are sum-t motes Local Forecast Official Eben H. Emery to the new rank and increases his salary. The local weather bureau has hitherto been only a local forecast station. This action was taken, according to ‘The World's Washington correspondent, because the number of people served by the local forecasts from this city is as large as the population in some of the present forecast districts embracing large areas. His promotion and the elevation of his weather station was altogether a sur- prise to Mr. Emery, when informed by ‘a Wotld reporter last nght. He said that he had no information on the subject, and was cognizant of neither the new duties nor the salary attached to them. “There have formerly been only six national forecast stations, Chicago, Denver, New Orleans, Boston, Portland, Ore. and San Franvisco,” sald Fore- caster Emery. “This does not necessarily mean that the country is divided into six districts, but that each city, named is In the ¢ tre of a district. The Washington Bi reau forecasts for the remainder of the y, not covered by the national ations. St shington has also been making one forecast a day for New York, while the local forecaster at New York has been making for :he local district. a forecast for morning and ano : evening, The additional for: pished by the Washington B for evening. yi a Hi of w o' a GIRL SAVED BOY’S LIFE. She Climbed Through His Window and Shat Off the Ga w David H, Mitchell, twenty years old, atPayid Xt Mitchell. twany %Sarraing: | _Hofistadt in the station tried to apolo- house. No. tis) West Seventeenth | &ize to Edelman, but the latter would Street’ by inhaling gas, Kate Thomp-) not accept the excuses. Hoffstadt sald 1, who lives the house, de- a : ana A Me gue out; | one of the women smiled at him and a window und found the | he foliowed, and when stopped by Edel- ung Mm In order !man, tried to impersonate an officer. tid | He sent for hts father to ball him out. had ¢ man's neck which place. Hi. $25. The suits included with practical y 40 or 5O dif to but a few of a kind cut in the regular and m Open Saturca, Til P, Me WM. VOGEL @@ SON, Houston St. SAYVILLE, trary to recent reports Bessie Bonehit, | the actress, 1s dying of cancer In Lon- SAYS HE POSED A young man of athletic build, who described himself as Lester Hoffstadt, | twenty-one years old, a No. 20 West woolen merchant, was arraigned in the | charge of impersonating an officer: ‘The complainant was Henry E ‘The man said he and two young women, on One Hundred and Ninth street at 2 followed and told him he had a warrant for his ar- rest but not getting a satisfactory answer, he Hoffatadt told Magistrate GREAT Purchasing POWER of Eleven Dollars @® seventy-five cents at this Greatest of Men’s SUIT SALES! EAGRE as the price may seem, it has the f clothes here now, worth allthe way from eful—this to hint at the , cheviots, homespuns and serges, Mr. Seeley. BESSIE BON (Specta! to The Evening World.) L. 1, June 27.—Con- lu EHILL. and will sail on the “4 to London daughter of H. T. who will accompany arrival atthe marry Jack wish of actress to e united before her death, with the hk AS A POLICEMAN, | ish peace bond fi» at liberty,” | thought the young women were flirting n-him, and that the only way to get man with them away was to arrest Vell, young man, If you give a $00 six months you may go said the Magist —— FLEETS DISPERSE, ST. JOH and Fren: F., June 21.—The Brit- n squadrons which were here for the coronation festivities will outh, Who Declares He IS) separate next saturday and return to Millionaire’s Son, Placed] their several stations on the French shore. Commodore Montferrand, of the Under Arrest—Sent for Father to Get Bail. rench squadron, and Capt, Mon erie ,of the ‘British cruiser Chary will Keep in close touch with Gov. Boy! and, with thelr warships, will revisit 81 | John's promptly should ‘any subsequent i changes in the coronation plans render tils step necessary |iemmett Baxt ACTRESS TO BE MARRIED UNG BROOKLYNITE,} or TO YO Miss Jane Eleanor Corcoran Will Become Mrs. J. Emmett Baxter on Monday Evening. et Miss J nor Corcoran will on ne El Monday evening, at the Church of the | Holy beo of J. ra Nam the bride me Brooklyn, ness man of the Rev. Ba erney officiating After the wedding supper at Delmon- the Baxters will go to Atlantic for a few days, after which they will take a trip to Hurope, returning / in three months. The bride is the daughter of # ms Alston, the star of the Old Cross Roads’ Compan herself an aciress of no om Her histrionic career in her life, wus stage by the 1 rank Mayo in San Francisco. ated In the Convent of the Holy at Fort Lee, N. @., she stepped age in 1896, le in “Tennessee's n playing one ‘At the Old Crose convent to ng the leading er,” and last se of the leading parts in Roads “HOPE YOU'LL WED AND BE HAPPY, PA.” Note Left by Missing Girl, Who Says That She Is Mar- ried Herself—Boy Also Missing. Sixteen-year-old Lizzie May Sweezy js missing from Speonk, and young Jim Reeve has not been seen around since about the Ume Lizale May went away. That's how it happened that “Squire’’ Smith came down from Speonk to-day and {s in Brooklyn inquiring around for the “children.”” ‘The Squire sald Lizzie May kept house for her father, Isaac Sweezy, after her mother died, and seemed happy. But last Wednesday night when he got home he found a note from her saying he needn't worry, as she was married, and she hoped he would marry again soon and be ‘happy, as she was. Inquirles at the station reveale/ that the girl had bought a ticket to East- port, where she had met Jim Reeve, and the two started for Brooklyn. ‘The Squire had not “run acrost” Lizzie May at last accounts, Of course, as she is only sixteen, she isn't old enough to get lawful consent to marry. ‘ — SEVENTH REGIMENT FIRE SCARE As several employees were engi some unaccountable wa: molten lead and an explosion followed. The lead spattered about the place, but none of the men was injured, ninent young busl- | red in | 2. melting lead for bullets in the cellar of the Seventh Regiment armory water in ot Into the MISS JANE CORCORAN, Who is to Marry J. Emmett cf BAR HARBOR LIVELY. Many Sammer Residents Are, for the Season. BAR HARBOR, June 21.—Mra, ie Abbe, of New York, has arrived Brookend, Visiting her are Mrt. Stanton, Miss Palmer and Miss Hyeil Palmer. Dr. Abbe 1s expected later, © Mr. and Mrs. William Wileott Pie mann, of New York, are again at Ul Moorings. 2 tee The Misses Patterson, ters. Judge Patterson, came otto ‘Whe dates for the Bar Harbor ho show have been set for Aug..19, 20 Mrs. James A. Garland, James A. Garland, formerl: the First National Bank, .| Barna for. the summer. land has not been here since her band's death. salesman, of | Elghty-fifth street, and | son of Oscar Hoffstadt, the militonalre | farlem police court this morning on & jeiman, No, 158 Hast Elghty-second street. ho went to the station with him, were this morning when Hoffstadt them and between Lexington ‘Third avenue stopped him and clock Exlelman asked him to serve It, then called Policeman Thompson, ‘ho arrested Hoffetadt, lott, in the arlem Court this morning that he ower of get- in this sale repre- ly the whole sum- ferent lots of suits ; In some instances ilitary sack styles, ty $11.75. A Great June Clothing Sal We commence to-morrow the greatest Suit Sale ever held -in.June. offer values such as you might expect in late August—but never before to be The stock consists of this season’s newest, this early in the Summer. suits—bought underprice, sold underprice; it includes every man’s - siz especially desirable for vacation or business wear. You can choose from: Blue Serge Suits, Black Serge Suits, Black Cheviot Suits, Black Thibet Suits, 3-Piece Flannel Suits, 2-Piece Flannel Suits, Fancy Mixed Suits, Wool Crash Suits, Summer Tweed Suits, Cut in 3 or 4 button sacks, Regulars, Stouts and Slims. Men's $3.50 and $4.00 Shoes and Oxfords,, .. 2.49 All leathers, all shapes, all sizes. on. gone. $10.00. Four Convenient Stores. Outfitters Men’s $1.50 Negligee Shirts, Woven Madras, good pat- 08c terns, at » Men's 35c. Hosiery, Black and fancy, a slight im- 1 Ic perfection makes them.eeee Our sale of Genuine Panamas is still Buy before they are all Elsewhere $8.00 to Here . n A { 279 Broadway, near Chambers St. | 47 Cortlandt St., bet. Church and Greenwich Sts, { Ss ‘ “ 7 aturda: ) 211 and 219 Sixth Ayve., bet, l4th and 15th Sts. | t iy | 125th St., Cor. Third Ave, We 3.00 Brothers to Men and Boys. Men's Broad-brimmed Split or Sennit Straw Hats at ...... 08c Finer grades $1.40, $1.80 and $2.80. Open Evening, |

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