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“BOY LURED AWAY BY FRENCHMEN, /“Runaway Reggie” Berkeley \\: Tells Strange Tale of His Kid- ¢ Napping and Imprisonment in House He Cannot Locate. OTHER LAD CAPTIVE, TOO. English Child Says Foreigners Took | _ Away His Clothes, Saying They | Would Not Do to Wear While | Cleaning the Streets of Paris. Reginald Barkeley 1s in evidence again. This time he says he was lured away by two Frenchmen and held as @ prisoner in a house, which he cannot now locate. Barkeley is the eight-year-old boy who ran away from his home, st No. 463 Central Park West, on Oct, 13 and was found next morning slecping on the door mat in the vestibule of his home. This time he was found at Fifty- ninth street and Eighth avenue by Po- Mceman John Curry. ‘The policeman says that he was standing on the cor- ner when the lad rushed up to him and exclaimed: fave me, sir! Please take me home.” Recognixed the Boy. A description of young Barkeley had been given to the policeman by the boy's mother, and from it he recognized the wanderer. He asked a few ques- tions and heard so strange a story that he sent at once for his superior officer and took the boy to his mother's home. Young Barkeley to-day told his story. He said: “When I left home on the 1th I sold my gold cuff-buttons to a boy for % cents. They cost 21 shillings in Eng- land. I walked up the street to buy some candy, and while standing on the corner eating it two men offered to buy me some cocoa. I went with them, and while we were drinking the older of the men, who was called Andre and who was about fifty-eight, sald they would take me”home with them. He said they had a roulette wheel there and a lot of other things of that kind, and after we had seen them we would gu for a boat ride in Central Park, “I went with the men to a house— where, I do not know—but there was «0 Foulet‘e wheel there. We found another boy about sixteen, whe looked like a bootbiack, tied to a bed-post. “The house was beautifully furnished. There were green carpets and pictures on the wall, but there were a lot of packing boxes standing about, as if the men were getting ready to move. “When night came the men came into my room, where they had tied me to a@ bed-post. One of them said that the gray English suit I had on would not do to wipe the streets with in Paris, and that they would get me another the next day, This they did. It was a brown sult, but I didn’t like {t as well as my old one. Tried to Smother Him, “The next day when I awoke I could gee a big grecn lawn out of the rear window and later 1 found that the house faced on a big avenue. That is all I ‘mow about it. The men let me alone for several days, and finally one fight while I was asleep one of them came {nto the room and putting a pillowcase over my head, nearly smothered me. “Every day the other boy would be brought in, but I wasn't allowed to speak to him Then a_ well-dressed woman, wearing diamonds, camo to the house, The men called her Louise and whe seemed very friendly with the younger man. “Thursday night I was in the dihira room with the older man, who dranw a@ lot of whiskey out of a bottle and lay down on a soft and went to sleep. | ‘Then I took tue keys out of his pocket, S iy opened the door and ran, with my shoes In my hand. Just as ‘I went Aut the young man heard me and tried to stop me, but ot away. Finally T went up’ to # policeman and told bim who L was. He brought me, home after taking me to the station.” Mrs. Barkeley is sald to be the widow of a wealtl has made a pet id. oy the nel spoiled. SAID HUSBAND WAS DEAD. Weberficlds Girl Refused, Hows ever, to Go Into Particulars. > Eugenle Bashford, a chorus girl at Weber & Fields's Music Hall,ghas ob- tained a leave of absence to go to Cin- oinnati, where she declared her hus- band had committed suicide. She was greatly agitated and refused to go into particulars. Miss Bashford was married June 7, 1890, to Harold Tonkin. son of a steel magnate of Oswego, N. Y. The young man's parents triel to prevent. thelr fon from living with his wife, and in 4901, 1¢ is alleged, they separated them. Last January young Toukin brought a suit in ada for dlyoree on the @rounds of cruelty, but bet Grgued the couple ‘became reco "A despatch to ‘Tue World f cinnatl stated that no one had commit- tet suicide In that clty yesterday. _—<———_$—— SUICIDE IN ROOM 13. Davie Expressed Pleasure When Assigned to the Apartment. W. C, Davie, « maker of fountain pens, at No. 4 Delancey street, killed himself In a Jersey City hotel Inst night after being assigned to Room 13. His body was found this afternoon. By his side were two empty bottles. One of them had contained chloroform and the other faudanum, ‘The man went into the Pennsylvania Hotel, Greon ayd Montgomery streets, m Cin- THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 24, 1902, APPLAUSE SCARCE FOR HENGLER SISTERS; THEY CUT ENGAGEMENT WITH MRS. OSBORN, AELICION GRAZE SHE HUNG I AR, a NS RS Mrs. Monlow Swung Thirty Feet from the Ground from the Gir- der of a High Bridge in Brooklyn. HER RESCUERS. | FOUGHT Escaped from the House While Her Nurse Sought Rest and Was Re- moved from Perilous Position by Policeman and Several Men. hin 1 ow Loplers for th was startled m man cling new “MERCY, NO; IT WASN'T ENVY.” Hengler Sisters Use Fine Scorn in Denial of Mrs. Osborn’s Charge that They Were Jeal- ous of Miss Ring. BUT MRS. OSBORN SAYS YES. Sniffs of contempt from the tilted noses of the Hengler sisters met Mrs. Osborn’s charge to-day that they re- signed from her company because of Jealousy of Blanche Ring. “Who Je she to be jealous of?" de- manded Flora. “Yes, is she anybody?" echoed May. “She 1s simply being or trying to be made.” “And we are already made,” responded Flora. “We resigned,” she exclaimed, “because wo didn’t want to be identified with a pleteyand a Y has ‘become a We guye” * “Yes, 1t has been openly guyed by the audiences for the past two nights,” de- clared May. ‘The dancers went on to say that Mrs. Osborn’s assertion that they were jeal- ous of Miss Ring was too silly for them to notice “Why,” exclaimed Flora, “we do not consider Miss Ring in the light of a competitor."* “No,"" added May. ‘She never did anything to win a reputation, and she isn't doing anything now that we would want to do.” “Then why did you leave the com- pany?" was asked “Simply because we did not want to play in a company of noboddies," an- swered Flom. “We signed our contract on the representation that Jimmy Pow- ers was to be leading comedian and that the company would include a number of well-known performers.”” ire. Hingler went on to say that she had made no professional arrangements for her daughters for the remainder of the season. Mrs. Osborn insists that the Hengler sisters left Snr company for no other reason than \ consuming jealousy of Miss Ring, “hey are furkous because Miss Ring makes a iit every time she opens her mouth and because they failed to get hardly any applause. I patd then a big salary, mote than they earned, and 1 am not sorry they are gone. Mrs. Os- born explained that the Hengicr sisters’ places in “Tommy Rut” would be taken by Claudine Sharp and a Miss Stone afternoon, however, Mrs, Os- porn sald she would go to see: Bonnie Magin, who will leave the Weber & Fields’ company, and offer Miss Magin company. iz." sald Mra, Osborn, give Mies Magin the chance that she ts looking for, and will jet her do some- thing besides dancing if she wiil become a member of my co Frederick McKa: ® representative ft ‘Osborn, sates that the reason lett. the company “to t r sisters was because he and Freddie Gebhard sat down In front and applauded Miss Rin: ME ae Kay maya that because of this the Miwon o0m ler referred to Mr. Geb- hard and himsel ait as ‘a hired claque.”’ The Conta Stay was carried behind the scenes, with the final result that the resignation of the two dancers was ten- dered and promptly accepted aapstelheee $10,000 FOR BROKEN HIP. Against Manhattan Rallw-wy. Because of injuries received by sudden starting of @ Third avenue trolley-car, verdict for $10,000 damages was awarded to Miss Caroline B. Hud- ler, of No, 32 East Fifth street, Wind- sor Terrace, Brooklyn, by a jury be- foro Justice Nash in the Brooklyn Su- preme Court to-day. Miss Hudler was thrown from the car platform at Seventeenth street and Third avenue, on June 14, 1901, Her left hip was fractured. she sued for $25,000 damages. FUERST BISMARCK DELAYED. Liner Reaches mouth Twenty- four Hours Late and Crippled, PLYMOUTH, England, Oct. t¢—The Hamburg -Amertcan ine steamstip Fuerst Bismarck, Capt. Barendsy whic left New York on Oct, 16, for Hamburg, has arrived here. @t 10 o'clock and registered. The clerk the key to Room 13, marines a he 8 g00d," remarked. Davie, ; aud he went on upstairs, ante he Rot come down by noon inte soraibly, ‘ te! He Two! of In his pocket a addr N The Fuerst Bismarck was delayed | $o! about twenty-four hours in the passage between New York and Plymouth, ow-| ‘ih ped nD) the een of of ane crank batt sears on finn got ony. one a Bos oert port ‘of tho voyage. Brooklyn Woman Secures Verdict | F Pat the “TLL GOA-FISHING,” SAID CARELESS BOY. Little Andrew Leonard, Missing for a Day, Turns Up at Rye Beach, ie dA Andrew Leonard, the twelve-year-old son of W. H, Leonard, President of the Continental Hygeia Ice Company, No 189 East Ninety-third street, who mys- tertously disappeared yesterday, found to-day at the Rye Beach Hotel, which {s owned by his father and Is located in Connecticut, thirty-five miles up the Sound. He wanted to go Ashing and went without the forma aby of tell ing his fother or changing his best clothes. ‘The boy lived with his uncle, Wiillam ©. Poster, No. 772 Park avenue. Yes- terday afternoon he went to the mat- {nee at Proctor’s Fifth Avenue Theatre. and when he didn’t come home his father and uncle natifled the police. It was after all his friends had been communicated with and every place the father and uncle could think of In the city had been searched in vain, that Mr. Porter got the Rye Beach Hotel on: thes long distance telephone, “Have you geen Andrew?” he asked the manager. “Why, y fishing now. | ‘Andrew was called away from his fishing—a thing he didn’t like—and ex-| plained that he never thought of send- ing word to his father. He decided he wanted to fish and, leaving his friend after the matinee, he took a train for the country. * was the reply, “he's out! tives In Danbury, Conn, and he came pack to the city to enter school only a few days ago. It is thought that he revolted at the idea of months of study and determined to have one more good fish before starting his winter work her and unele forgot thelr night th welcomed home “BOSS” S rt SHEPHERD'S ESTATE. Its Total Value Estimated at More than $10,000,000, GHIHUATUA, Mexico, Oct. 21—The estate of the late Alexander R. Shep- Ihera, better known as “Soss'’ Shepherd, formerly of Washington, D. C., far ex ceeds the estimate of $0,000,000 orlg- 'inally made. It amounts to more than 10,000,000, and consists almost exvlu- sively of rich mines in the Batopilas | District. —EEE—E ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY. Sun rises,, 6.19|/Sum sets.. 5.09/Moon rises. AX THE TIDES, High Water, Low Water AM. PM AM PM Sandy Hook . 1.13 i R04 Governor's Island. Pal 20 Toy kay Hell Gate Ferry. Sa T6891 WIE PORT OR NEW YORK. ARRIVED, Cam soateess Bremen Thordis . aith Bana Rioamond cherokee Weetover 5 INCOMIN Due TO-DAY, La Savole, Havre. & wo wit! tell you after foal This service and advice of our expert 0 are free. If agian and mowt effectiv kind, and charge moderately Spectacles and Ey 4, from, are correctly Atied and adj and Repairing “Depart el LEN OWTES su ave, ede ‘Phe boy spends the summers with relaz! Al » nt Wythe avenue, Willlams She was feet above the ground | ind hanging on with hands and f the lattice work. Ho ehouted to ler to yme dow nd get m ¥ Diplomatic. an tried to coax the t she stil clung to defiant) Vding that both threats and per sion wer no avail McLaughl sent to the Bedford avenue police sta Vand o pen responded to Hmbed ned with the ed to di Had to Overpower om woman BLINDING STEAM) . The woman took violent e¢ ption to Valve Bursts While They Are] «sins t te police station it was F , as much as the th powerful men Cleaning a Boiler—TwWo Are] eit co to overpower her 7 - At the jon it was found that the} Taken to Hospital. - Woman was Mra, Mary Monlow, wife of ‘ John Monlow, a carp er, of No, North Sixth street, Williamsburg, ller} John Callery, an engineer, of No. [husband who had by ie 46 West O1 Hundred aged Fourth street; Thomas Reilly, of No, 184 Spring street. and John H. Foley, No. 2%1 Pine street, Jer are employed by a steam hi a helper, of City, who ting com- Broadway, were badly Insane Asylum for Valley. the bursting of a steam Six com- 8 morning, while | panies of je basement of n relieved from ey, who Ww went home. only slightly hurt, Lost—a lame back Continuous desk work, exposure to cold, overstraining of the muscles, are almost sure to result in backache. To relieve the pain, restore the sup- pleness to the muscles—in fact, to cure promptly and effectively with- out necessitating cessation of labor— USE POROUS the standard pain-destroyer for over fifty years, and more popular to-day than ever. Just put one on the spot that hurts. Very simple, but if does the work. No rubbing till your arm is sore, no dripping of greasy oil or linimenf on clothes or carpet. The plaster will gently open the pores of your skin and permit the healing and strengthening vegetable gums with which it is impregnated to act upon the affected part, NEVER ACCEPT A SUBSTITUTE. ~ One or two BRANDRETH PILLS taken every — night is a sure cure for CONSTIPATIO! LATEST & BEST-OF FOODS You Dissedtalions on LY MMMECESSA Ys wank Foc. sabe apctics 3 'Shot-Gun Prescrip- tions. We suppose we are not re- vealing any trade secret when we say that many medicines are made up on the principle | of the so-called “‘shot-gun pre- | scriptions,” which were form- erly somewhat in vogue. The idea of the shot-gun pre- scription was to putin a large number of different drugs, each useful for different purposes, in the hope that some of them might hit the case. Vinol, the medicine we sell over our name and guarantee, is not a scattering “* shot-gun prescription,” but goes straight to the mark. It is the best thing we know for a run-down condition, for a | listless feeling, nerve troubles, | for lung troubles—in fact, it is asafe, pleasant, reliable tonic and reconstructor. elt has cured so many people right here in town we o! money back if it fails to benefit. RIKER’S DRUG STORE, 6th Ave. & 23d St. IN LINE with the best clothing judges and buy your Fall Suit and Topcoat here. You can’t go wrong in quality, you'll get a suit in every way becoming and you'll get it at a price that, qual- ity considered, will be lower than elsewhere. Then, again, you don't have to pay cash for it. You get it ata CASH price on Men’s Black Thibet Suits, two-button double-breast- ed Sack, the swagger coat for fall and winter wear, made to sell for $18.00; special, 14.00 Boys’ Suits. Boys’ I;wo-Piece Suits in handsome fancy mixtures, strictly all wool; a suitmade to sell for $4.00; special at 2.95 Shoes. Exceptional values are offered in Men's Shoes, These are patent leather, velour, wax calf and box Of lime. Orotein-Stauch-Heatunity Gah/— | elt, the Leak i Southem White Gov 44 bed to onake KORN-KRISP™ One taste convinces ee calf at 3.50 203 Sixth Ave, 7h, Entrance Through Furniture Store, Bklyn., 464 to 470 Fulton St. SETTLE ALL ARGUMENTS BY CONSULTING THE World Almanac. 1,000 Topics Tecsoly Treated in the 1902 World | Aiman Well printed ‘and. tro bound. "$ © we all newsdealers, ay Baal, whe: i Wail Orders Supplied, $1 per Bottle, Express Paid, | Pian RA en Dil EASY WEEKLY PAYMENTS, Visit the store or postal a request to Imenpatars, panies dential And it’s all on account tow trl Ss ly Confiden eg 1. of. the ei Ata: 3 —_—__—_— The better the “fit,” the | My Tibetter the shoe Wi ears) | x Meyer & Postley Jewelry Uo jibostes tre he 50 WEST TWENTY-SECOND ST, WESTERVELT & DEMAREST | ‘Bleecker Street, ats Barrow = oO Doing Thi g Things © Harlem people say ‘Bernheim & Co, always have Famous Bargains.”’ That is right. We get bargains oursel 5 because retailers short of funds manufacturers overloaded with sto know we are always ready for thet and they come straight to us with thein cash offers. If it is GOOD Clothin it comes into this store CHEAP, goes out accordingly. Just now it’s S. M. Jackson Clothing Stock at Half (%) Price. Considering Jackson's known high standard of quality, these are the best bargains in the city. OVERCOATS. Kerseys and nd serviceable. rd, * 7.50 ad Worsted imported a ccaig “aid Oren latitl ae tee Eesha L200 helgearaes i k Be 16.50 For Boys. | Pak ee Hered Site weaticcrares L9G |e lone: Ostend lorerecate cereal tem Wpiah Sailors Gr Notfotie..c; 9948 | Sate immed ec ae No Transaction Complete Till Satisfaction Is Gtven, | BERNTEIM es CLOTHING, FURNISHINGS, HATS, SHOES. 2338 & 2340 Third Ave., Downtown Corner 127th St. Harvest TIME In Our SHIRT Dept. The men that get in here to-morrow willreaparich reward. . Here's the choicest lot of shirts—’bout 8,000 of ’em—it’s ever been our good for- tune to get hold of, and we're pretty big shirt consumers. Please bear in ming that taking 8,000 shirts off the maker’s hands—particularly when “he needs the money”—helped con-~ siderably to make the price as low as it is. 66c the Shirt. And not a one’ in the lot that isn’t a good $1.50 of $2.00 shirt’s worth—all the new, fashionable colorings in neat dots, figures and stripes—made with all the new improvements—open back and front, with extension opening at bosom band—new square corner cuffs, attached or detached —shirts hand laundered. Sizes 13'4 to 17. Sowing seeds for surprises all the time. Keep both your eyes open. WM. VOGEL @ SON Broadway. Houston St. YOUR CREDIT IS AS _GooD AS YOUR CASH | | ‘Diamonds — Watches Jewelry For Everybody. Something worth meme-* rizing about shoes:— 4 |* That the name Coward jon a shoe means the a On Prices the Lowest. Earth, for man, woman? ; or child. have our representative call. our say-8¢—3 : and we'll Don't take only. Come, prove it. SOLD NoWH JAMES S. COW ARD,» | 268-274 Greenwich St., near Warren St, NM |p 292 and 294 20 pe 81.00 30, BS Made Toe Ali/Linen’ Napkins, dor Open Until 11 P, M, infer aa bart ra eam RAS ia csc ails te achilles RDO aiiak