The evening world. Newspaper, February 24, 1903, Page 3

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Febout and talking to himselt. —— ADE UPROAR HOLLAND HOUSE jan Caused a Panic by Stand- f: ing Outside Apartment of a ¥ Society Woman and Demand- ‘ing Door Key. OULDN’T GIVE HIS NAME. tranger Turns Out to Be William A. Schneider, Employed by the Bor- , den Company, Who Has Acted Queerly Since Wife Died. fe zr guests of the Holland House were RhFown into a panic early to-day by the mysterious conduct of a tall, finely- man, who was found prowling the door to the apartment of a poolety woman on the elghth floor and Ing for the key, The house de- tive and several porters had to drag man to the elevator, He created an uprvar in resisting their efforts \ehat many of the guests ran out in the ways in night clothes and screaming ‘with fright. The man, who ts tall, smooth shaven @nd dark skinned, entered the hotel fenortly after midnight, walked up to the /desk and asked permission to look at the register. About a half hour tater the etevator jboy rushed out to the clerk and sald jthat a man was on the eighth floor de- imanding a key to room No. 60. He [waid that ne had never seen the man be- ifore and did not think he was a guest of (the hotel. The clerk called House De- ttecfive Curry and ordered him to inves- (tigate. Curry got several porters and Iment up to the eighth floor, where he found the man striding back and forth 'before room 505, swinging his arms When De- fective Curry approached him, he shout- hed out; “I want a key to this room, You have {mo right to keep me out of it. I demand Wut straightway. 1 wish to retfre.” The clerk identifiad him as the man {Who had asked to look at the register a tehort time before. He refused to 51 {his name or tell anything about himsi Mbut continued to rave about the key to troom No. 85. He still continued to t (ite an insane person when he taken to the Tenderloin police station He reviled the sergeant and the police- fai but used no profane language, nor was he say anything that would in’ any y suggest his identity. } At the hotel the clerks refused to give any information to the oc- fgupant of room No, 505, but it was Searned that the person ‘registered as ene occupant: of that room is a woman lof considerable prominence in New York ety. When the man was arraigned in the Jefferson Market Police Court to-day he declared that his name was William A hneider and that he was a driver for HBorden's Milk Company. At’ the offices of the Borden Company, jat/No. 29 East Thirty-fourtd street, it ras learned that Schneider had been an ployee there for many years and had plendid record, but has recently been ‘mentally unbalanced through brooding fover the death of his wife. {Magistrate Mayo, in the Jefferson ket Court, held Schneider for ex- amination on ‘Thursday on a charge of ul entry COOK GhARCED WITH “FIZZ.” {Black Boss of the McKenzie Larder Loaded Herself with || Champagne and Diamonds in thé Family’s Absence. +} Im converting herself into a human mmoving van Annie Williams forgot to {take out a lcense, She was in Yorkville ourt to-day as a result of her neglect tand was held for larceny. Bhe worked as a servant in the home wr H. LD. MeKenzie, a wine agent, at 1BVo. 135 Hast Eighteenth street, She is Jextremely black and an extremely good ‘eouk, Mrs. McKenzie went to the theatre t night, leaving Annie in charge of ithe house, Mr, McKenzie got home at \10 o'clock. As he opened the door he heaw something in the hall that remind- ‘ed him of a haystack. 1 was Annie, land whe was “low ; She had on Mrs, nzle’s coat and \hat avd when she started to walk she Bounded like a wagon load of scrap tron on @ rough 1 Mr, MoKenale ealled janitor and @ poli building and Mg what she developed: Five ailk skirts, tho «Three ilk walats, y of Mra, McKenzie, the property of Mra, Me- MeKenale's coat Mra McKenale's Four diamond rings, belonging to Mra. rware, which Annie person and in ber 014. 0 powder (white) One copy of "Napoleon's Dream Book," Afver Annie had been forced to de- Miver her booty and put on her own od she was escorted to the East cond street police station. Mndignation at Mr, MoKenslo. for jgetting home unexpectedly was yolced Pith # fervor and warmth that cracked the whitewash In the station-houss cell m0, Mr. aokenaie learned tater thet Annie ad ordered a cab anc nitor to help her carr: Cane ywnstalrs. In addition to the wine she fwas carrying away In bottles, she had wed about three quarts where a uid do the most aod. A ‘bottle of ‘was missing also jen azraigned in court to-day Annie mat Je,,known Jy Rif it apparent trace Sof ‘the arrival of r PHOTOGRAPH OF THE BOWEN FAMILY, WHICH WAS SENT TO THE PRESIDENT, AND HIS LETTER IN R° PI, SKELETON OF A Have a Murder Mystery to Solve. UNDER A FOOT OF EARTH. What the police belleve to be a mumMer m: ery is based on the finding of the skeleton of woman In a swamp at Casanova, Oak Point, In the Bronx A man digging hark of the discovery noticed the toes of a pair Ing out of the grou them up, he was horrified to bring to the surface whitened bones. One of these broke and left in his hand water-soaked shoe containing a fleshless foot Starting back the man dropped the gruesome object and called to an em- ployee of the Rock Plaster Company who was at work a short distance away. The two men at once began to dis- inter the skeleton. This was compara- tively easy, as the frame was only about a toot underground. ‘There was not a vestige of clothing, and the bones broke and fell apart in the hands of the men. There was a small quantity of auburn hair. To-day the shoes and the disintegrat- ed skeleton were taken possession of a. > ‘by the police, who are now attempting to unravel the mystery. ‘the skeleton found by a Ger- fore his identity man who di appeared be! ned. He w near the north sid in, when uding above the $ The bones, hair and s taken to tne Morrisania police an] Coroner O'Gorman has been noti- flea, Acting Capt, Magan and other officers of the M ‘ania station, worked until} he tide came In to-day, recovering (he mud-embedded bones, ‘On the sk which hardly held together, was been noes have r_ effort to find velry or othe Identification may portions of the sk wrrisania staitl morrow to the Mc where thi COURT CALLS MAN will be made articles possible. n now Kept at the t Fordham Hos- tors will put them be if 1 Magistrate Zeller Bitterly De- rested for Beating His Wife. On wile, complaint made reluctantly by his Patrick T. Ryan, dasa an in the eubway and lying at 381 Bast One Hundred and Seven: teenth street, was to-day held on 4 of assault in $1,000 ball by Magis- Zeller in the Harlem Court Ryan thad a quarrel with his yesterday afternoon on front of their hom employ wife the wife down and kicked hi in the He was arrest spot n was taken to the Ha lem Hi “and later she She was not in count ® against her husband, Magis- Magistrate Zeller sald to the prisoner; “You miserable dog, 1 will send you where you won't strike her again for some time, I hold you In $1,000 for trial In all my expertence this is one of the Most brufal assaults T have ever seen,” WERE BARRED FROM CHURCH Priest Ke) Out facane of Eagles Because of a Prize-Fight, (Special to Tho Bvening World.) ob. U.—Be- cause the Mahanoy City Fraternal Order ton to chureh to attend req the body of a charter m ganization, Keven the six pall-bearers were com- pelled to remove their badges before en- Yering the church with the vasket. The membership of the Eagles is composed T of the gi i | all denominations. and the action of the meni WOMAN IN SWAMP Man Discovers It in the Bronx. and the Police Think They} station | which | The} A MISERABLE DOG. nounces Patrick T. Ryan, Ar-| THE WORLD: TUESDAY BV WINING, FEBRUARY 24, ‘1900. DP941SDOHHODDOOS WHITE HOUSE, WASHINGTON February 14, 1903. 53 Three. cheere for Ur.:and yrs. Bower and thetr really eatisfactory American family of twelve childrent} °That is what I call being a good citizen, i With regaras, Ig Very sincerely yours, Skater flor veel ~ CO ae ecg, Fé PIU, /) Vemies Os bt EM; ‘ur. and Mrs. R. T. Bower, $75 Greenwood Avenue Detroit, Mich. «NO RACE SUICIDE )GETS AUTCGRAPH LETTER. IN BOWER FAMILY Detroit Father Sends Photo-| graphs of His Twelve Chil- | dren to President Roosevelt | Indorsed “Not Guilty.” The Bowers Are Proud of Thelr Off: spring and Think that All Ameri- cans Should Go and Do Like: wise. DETROIT, Feb, M.—President Roose- velt has replied in characteristic tone to the letter he received from Reuben v who, having read the Chief Executive's ap- peal to the American people to obey the biblical Injunction “increase and mul | tiply and therepy prevent race sulctde, sent to the White House photographs of his twelve children, bearing on the back the legend, ot guilty.” Mr. Bower declared that he agreed entirely with Mr. Roosevelt's views and was exceedingly proud of his large fam- Nye and regretted only that ft was not larger. “It struck me," sald Mr, Bower, “that what the Administration needed was elther moral or physiea) support, and it was up to me to act T am naturally proud of my large family. every mem- ber of which Is a source of great pleas- ure to me, So T just gut ont the family Photographs and wrote the words ¥Not and matled them to the White I was surprised to get a letter |rom the President's own hand." Sevea Boys and Five Girln, ‘Phe Bower family is composed of seven boys and five girls, ranging in age from twenty-six to six, and with the excep- tion of one daughter all the children are now in Detroit. Bower, of Greenwood avenue, LEFT HER CELL IN SILK AND FURS \“Is This for Me?” Asked Mary Bonner, Pointing to a Cab; “It Is,” Answered . Deputy Marshal, Arresting Her. ~ PASSENCER LIT ELITE DIRECTORY Kronprinz Wilhelm’s Saloons Might Be Described This Trip as Nobility Row and Million- aires’ Row. When Mary Bonner, a handsome bru- nette, with complexion of peaches and cream, dressed luxuriously in furs and silk and laces, and spangled with dia- staterooms called “Millionaire Row" and ™Onds, stepped out of the Kings County ovillty Row" because of the persons | oe ee day, abe ie amazed © will occupy them on this voyage. {2 find a cab waiting for her. nd thelr servants had reserved rooms | had ordered. an expensive wardrobe, and 9 Mrs. William Astor and a | make her debut from the prison, |mafd occupied room 8 Mrs, Roert | ,, (18 this for mer” she ie cate asked Goelet and a maid occupied room 10. t “replied the Unit Other Americans were assigned to Deputy Marshal, stepping up. noms stringing along from these, but ! On the steamship Kronprinz Wilhelm, which sailed this afternoon with a re- markably large passenger Ist for this time of year, there are two rows of w 1 @ warrant for you ¢ churge of CHiN ing the postal law: |the best room on the boat had been as- | "Phe youn ‘ acutely dis- signed to F a shipbuilder. | appointed, ‘Hut went Commis- Nobility ts of the state-'stoner Marle and bravely waived ex- The marshal ‘said that the 8 humbered from 187. to. 191, They | amination. who also goes under the Count and Countess ce, young woman, rs and Baron and Baroness! name of Mary Cleveland, for conven- lence sake, had violated’ the laws in the large mumber of February one zo by writing a cer- willing to brave the expected; tain letter which he declined to de- mforts of a voyage at this time or scribe, E sti persons disc ———— the year the amount of & = — sc Betts 2 ¢ NO EIGHT-HOUR DAY ON “L.” to do for a This ‘a large fore a spell of hustling At the office of Gener: of the used the om Manager Skit, of extra he 3 é Cheeaintete road, No. 19% neen seen preceding the desl Manhattan official denial was made to- a steamship from this port ¢ ongineers and firemen would ‘ port) vereafter work only elght aours a day anderhlt party consisted of tr, | otal ce Abie Cornellus “Vanderbilt, their] “The men, as motormen, are working ren, a maid, @ nurse and Mr. r of hours that. they “Tam quite In accord with Mr, Re velt on the matter of parenthood,” wont on Mr. Bower. “With my twelve active and girls about me I have no chil- dren to give away. Thero was them unwelcome, and I am j them. “The President hit the mark when he rebuked the American pople for shirk- Ing the duties of parenthood and re- proached them for looking upon chil- dren as a burden to be avoided. It 1s MAS. KIP DEAD OF CONSUMPTION — oo Widow of the Noted Horse Owner Succumbs to Disease After an Illness ot About Six Weeks. RELATIVES WERE WITH HER. Dead Woman, Who Was a Miss Loril- lard, Waa One of the Belles of Her Day anc Inherited a Large Fortune. Arrangements have not yet been made | for the funeral of Mrs, Eva Lorillard Kip, widow of Col. Lawrence Kip, who died yesterday in her apartments at the Lenox, No, 2 West Thirty-sixth street. Mrs, Kip, who wan fifty-eight years old, had been ill for about six weeks and as a consequence her death wan not entirely a surprise. She had suffered from a complication of disens but the Immediate cause was consump- tien. With Mra Kip at the time of her death were her daughter, Mrs, Richard McCreery, and her two sisters, Mfs. Henry I. Barbey and Mrs. James P. Kernochan. Mrs, Kip had beer living In the Lenox for about two years, She epent last winter in Atken, 8. C., In search of health, and last summer she was in the Adirondacks, Mrs, McCreery, Mra, Kip's only remaining child, left her home in England about six months ago and came to this country on account of er mother's Il health, Mrs. McCreery had been constantly at her mother's bedside, and Mrs, Barbey and Mrs, Kernochan visited their sister daily, Mrs, Kip, who was Miss Eva Lorll- lard, was one of the hetresses of the day when she was married to Col. Lawrence Kip, soldier, horseman and social leader. Mrs. Kip oceupled a prominent position in New York soc! rue et when her hus- band died, on N 17, 1899, she soon gave up her family residence at No, 452 Fifth avenue. The old home was sold and torn down, rs, Kip's daughter, Mrs. MoCreery, was married in April, i804. Mrs. M Creery and her husband have been liv. Ing abroad, spending most of their time in England and on the Continent, ‘The only other child of Col. and Mrs, Icy @ son, Lorillard Kip, dled In Juni 2 proper to appeal to manhood and womanhood. ‘The man {s made of poor stuff who does not take delight In h ing a healthy, happy family,” “The President is right," Interposed Mrs. Bower, “too many women shirk motherhood, My children are a pride to me, But Mr. Bower sent those photo- graphs to the President without my knowing anything about tt." —————_— MRS. PADELFORD A BRIDE. Former Baltimore Belle Married to Ernest Cunard in London, LONDON, Feb. 2.—Mrs, Padelford, who was a Miss McPheeter, of Ba'tl- more, Md., was married to Ernest Cunard at St, Andrew's Church, West- minstter. to-day. Ambassador Choate gave away the bride. ‘The bridegroom ts a cousin of Sir Bache Cunard. Many Americans were present at the ceremony. —————— NEW YORK MAN KILLED. August Fredericks, of King Street, Had His Leg Cut Off at Newark. (Special to The Brening World.) NEWARK, N. J, Feb. %4.—August redericks, about forty years old, ly- ing at No, 40 King street, New York, had his right leg cut Central Railroad at 11.20 o'clock last night, He was about to board a train for New York when he slipped and fell on the traeks. He died in the City Hos- pital to-day. ESTABLISHED OVER 25 YEAI N.S.BRANN, MANUFACTURING JEWELLER, 231 Eighth Ave, aft. 2#st & 22d Sts. OPEN EVENINGS. ng elled eo vemenus, 14 and 18 kt. solid! gold Wedding Rings | 5 up. off below the | Knee at the Broad street station of the | | Ping ‘Cave WATGH. veautitulty | v nor Elgin Je $40.00; our price ‘Avery handsome 14-kt, Solid Gold Beal RING, with monogram engraved fre value $10, It will pay you way for cheno i Mail Orders F Stumpy. "Attended To. cams, milen ost ot your lerbilt's ‘valet, Since his convales- ooomotives—nine hours ine Mr. Vanderbilt has grown statement made, . and many of his frien w i) with him failed to recognize | he got aboard this afternoon, fore the sitles his frst re td his y In the Mediterra- that he expected to hin yacht antl he. fale from: his last Mines, Wilhelm sailed with 386 in pansenaera,. 186 wecond cAsiN M Inthe steerage, an unprece= number for this’ time of the said about « ne crutse fully XB dented i, SHE TRIED T0 KILL HIM FROM TRANSOM Mary Burke Attempted to Shoot at the Officer Who Had Come to Serve a Warrant. and Chicago. lated by the patient’s income. charge for consultation. COR. BROADWAY AND 26TH ST. Suncays, 10 to MERCURIAL POISONING, In common with all physicians who value their name and reputa- tion, the medical department of the International Serum Toxin Co,, have been unceasing in their denunciation of mercury, potash and other Hot Springs trectment as evon a pallia- tive for blood poison, let alone a cure, What would be said of the man who took aconite because he was poi- Mary Burke, Mving on the fourth floor | of No, 1612 Third avenue, was a prisoner ‘n Harlem Court to-day on a warrant tanued by Mugistrate Zeller, ‘The complainant was Kate Nehrbass, who lives ‘ows the hall in the same house, Mrs, Nehroass @lleged that Mrs. Burke had threatened her life with « revolver. Mrs. Burke told a rambling story, She said that her husband and children had heen murdered, that Mrs, Nehrbass wae one of the murderers and that the police And “Pinkertop agente” were allled with her. A summons was served yesterday, but Mrs, Burke threw # out of the window. Pollcuman Varron, af the Court quad, Was sent to-day wih a warrant. He stopped in hy Ke 40 Sr, 1s a most dangerous mineral polson, nd should never ‘be elther taken or ubbed” as a cure for blood poison. It NEVER cures; it ALWAYS pol- sons, There is one cure for conta- glous blood poison, and ONLY oue— the Sieber serum, as administered by its owners, the International Serum Toxin Co, with offices in all the big. ities, Their New York office is on) ‘he 7th floor of the St. James Build- ing, Broadway and 26th st, and their Prenident is F. H. founder of Otlice Hours—Daily, 9 A. M, to 4 P. M.; 6.30 to 7,30 P, M. soned with arsenic? Mereury in itself | Tel, 774 Madison, 12 M. al jnent merchants and philanthropists. DON'T WRITE—COME. If you have blood poison, or wish to inquire for a friend, don't waste precious Ume in writing. Come to 722-723 St, James Building, corner 26th st. and Broadway, and see the | doctor face to face, who administers the only cure for this dreadfy! dis- |ease, No charge for consultgtion. A YOUNG FoGy, We learn that a young physician connected with the medical depar |ment of a New York life insurance |company declined to recommend an | applicant whom he was examining to come to the International Serum Toxin Company for treatment for Jeontagious blood poison because “I don't belleve Dr, Sieber has discov- ered a serum which will cure blood | | poison.” Although the man who was trying to get insurance didn’t have @ bad case, one which we will soon cure, his young medical friend + take the trouble to uine sclentitte dis; THERE’S ONLY ONE CURE FOR LOOD POISON but itis a cure that is scientific—that is guaranteed by the founder of Siegel-Cooper Co. Big Stores in New York Since the discovery of the Sieber Serum, owned and admi choice remaining to a person suffering with specific Blood Poison is between these two questions: { remain at home to suffer until death relieves me ; On, 2d—Shall | take advantage of the on/y treatment that drives Blood Poison from my system, never to return ? Offices in all the leading cities, stered by this Company, the onl 1st—Shall Our charges and terms are moderate and are regu- Separate rooms for ladies and gentlemen, No INTERNATIONAL SERUM TOXIN COMPANY, SUITE 722-723 ST. JAMES BUILDING, At covery of a brother doctor—would rather permit suffering mankind te | rot and suffer than to “be bothered.” Its lucky the medical profession aren't all like our mole-eyed young | friend, else neither the Roux serum ‘for diphtheria nor the Sleber serum for blood poisoning would be recog- nized as the only cures for these ma- Ngnant and terrible diseases, WHAT'S IN A NAMEF One of the most direct and straight- forward medical books we ever saw has just been issued, AND IT HAS NO NAME, To be sure the appro- priate and helpful legend of “Hope” 1a used as a sub-title, but otherwise there's no outside evidence of the inside truth and advice. We learn that any person sending a name and address to “Dept. A,” International Serum Toxin Co., St. James Build- ing, Broadway and 26th st, New York City, will receive free in a plain envelope @ valuable treatise on the poly cure for specific blood CAMMEYER 6TH AVE,, COR. 20TH ST. Sixth Anniversary Sale| of the Opening of Our | BASEMENT. We Celebrate the Event with the ~ | } Greatest Shoe Sale| This City Has Ever Seen, -and 2 | Surpass Even Ourselbes. i We Were the First to Create a Popular-Price Shoe Store ‘Il for All the People and Revolutionized the Shoe Trade, NOW WE OFFER 150, 000 Pairs of the Finest Shoes at prices that will be the talk of the town and make new shoe history. The grandest values and the least prices that New | York City has ever known. Winter and Spring Footwear For Men, Women and Children. 25,000 pairs of Women’s $6.00, $5.00, $4.00 and $3.00 Button and Lace Shoes, in black kid, patent leather and patent hid, all style heels, $7 90 a, 35,000 pairs of Women’s $2.50 Button and Lace Shoes, black kid, heavy and light sdJes, with military heels, : fh 7,000 pairs of Women’s $6.00, $5.00 and $4.00 Slippers, assorted styles, high and low heels, $7 50 @ Per * Pair 5,000 pairs of Men’s $3.00 Oxfords, patent 780 Rassia calf cab By ils Gk brown kid, as- sorted styles, 18,000 pairs of Men’s $3.50 and $4.00 Oxfords, heavy winter and medium Weight, in ve- four calf or) box calf, welt- ry 00 ed soles, Pair. 25,000 pairs of Men's $4.00, $3.50 and $3.00 Lace Shoes, patent leather, black kid, box calf, wax calf, velour calf and enamel leather; light and heavy soles, alsowax calf Congress with tips and 90. toes, at ey Pair. 5,000 pairs of Women’s $1.50 Black Kid*Ox- | fords, with patent leather and hid tips, $ I 00 od 50 also patent leather vamp Oxfords, 4,000 pairs of Women’s $1.50 One- Strap ‘Sondals, with French heels, vs ‘Sc 5,000 pairs of Women’s $2.50 Black Kid and Box Calf Spring Heel Button and $ I 50 Lace, sizes 2% to 7, ° } We 6, 008 pain of Misses’ é2. og Shoes in black }} id, patent leather an tips, Q sizes 1! to 2, . $1.25] 2,000 pains of Children’s $1.50 Shoes in black hid, patent leather and enamel leather, sizes $ i 00) | 834 to 10%, 2,000 pairs of Children’s $1.00 Button and Lace Shoes, black kid with patent leather tips, 75: sizes 8% to 11, Ci 7,000 pairs of Boys’ and Youths’ Satin f. Lace Shoes, sizes 11 to 2 and 2% $f to 5%, 3,000 pairs of Boys’ Lace hosts sizes 2% to 5%,

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