The evening world. Newspaper, November 4, 1903, Page 5

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CALLS FOR HER SLAIN HUSBAND Mrs. ja Lupo; in Cot in Belle-| on Ward, a Mystery to Police, Who Suspeot Man Was Murdered. SPENT WHOLE NIGHT IN ROOM WITH DEAD BODY. éarried It, Police Allege, from Floor of Apartment to Bed, Where She Attempted to Stanch Flowing Blood, Lying on a cot in the prison ward in Bellevue Hospital, Mrs, Della Lupo, held for attempting suicide after her hus- band had been shot to death in their apartments at No. 270 West Fourth street, declared to-day that she was not Tesponsible for his death, “I woulda't have killed him,” she de- clared. ‘I loved him better than I did my own life.’” The woman was in suffering and Iittle could be got from her by Detectives McKenzie and Carmody. who went to the hospital to question her. Outside the hospital, in the morgue, lay the body of the husband. No one \has come to claim it and it is not ex- ‘pected that any one will, unless some relative in Clarkstown does. If there {8 no claimant in tho next few days it ‘wiil bé buried in Potter's Field, While oniy a chargé of attempted sutclde. has been made against Mrs. Lupo the police suspect that she shot her husband to death and when there were no more bulléts in the pistol that she tried to die by taking poison, That she’ moved the body after the shots "THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY MISS CLARA COFFIN, WHO BAS MYSTERIOUSLY DISAPPEARED. were fired they are certain. The blooa on the floor of the apartment shows that the man was shot while standing bed, When Be ees at the foot of the found his head rap tempts had been® Ddlood as it flowed the head and the wound in the breast. ‘Phe police believe that the woman shot s/ASKED SEPARATION, ee THOUGH OWORCED woman: that she spent the entire night Mrs. ees nt Kreiss,’ Who Pro- in the room with 'the corpse and in the cured Decree in’ Germany, morning, nalf crazed becayse of her doed, syailowed the polson and lay down to dle. Calls for the Dead Her condition to-day is very nervous. Bhe calls constantly for the dead man, begeing him to Span, back tortite, ra rs. Lupo yatery to the pellee. “Who is she?” they ask. That she iz a woman of education and refinement is not doubted. The police have learned that her home wes forme ly in Clarkstown, Ga.. and that she has two clilldren there who are sald to be the children Of a first husband. All questioning regarding thege children and the first husband has failed-to solve the Becrst. Lupe was a dashin, fellow who js known to have neglected ‘her and who treated her in a most self- Against Her Former Husband Justice ‘Truax, altting th the divorce court to-day, received a mental jar in iMlustration of the caprices of one woman when the first case was called. In behalf of Mrs. Man Krelss, August P. Wagener asked for permission to withdraw her sult for a separatjon and maintenance from John Henry Krtelss, the millionaire {ce-mashine manufac- turer, and it came out that she procured wa : ine Lupos firat came to this part of/"n absolute divorce from him in Ger- the country two years ago. They lived! many a dozen years ago. at Hackensack, N. J., and their hand- some appearance and tasteful attire made them _ favorites. Both spent money freely for a time, but then they began to draw in expenses and Jeter Lupo opened a fashionable mill- Inery store. She courted the best trade n Hackensack nd to get it she dressed Aandsomely. It is. not. known what Jusiness Lupo was in, He represented that he wax an agent for w sewing ma-|divorce chine concern, but he spent most of his|the court ordering him to pay her large fme in Hackensack and the wife seemed alimony. to do most of the supporting of the two. Pat 1804 sho heard that, John Henry Two lon Ago. reiss had “struck it rich" In America. Became coe vi 50! she followed and found him a year @g0 Mrs. Lupo first became Jealous of herthoariing with one Jeanette Peterman, husband's attentions to other women with whom he etl lives, at No. 200 Kasi two months ago. He had neglected h Eighty-first street, and and finally sued Tre aoe dmuslly during the summer [int Yor y fifenis Me gunner him for a we aration Jn this country. and was so attentive to a wo! in behalf of Kreiss. wi snot oppose Hackensack that the wife decided to|the lication, William 8, Katsenstein| sell her store and move to New York. stated that Krélss was married to Mag- he came to New York on Sept. 1 and| dalene Marie Krels: she alleges, and obtained a position In a Broadway de- In her complaint Mrs. Kreiss stated that she and Mr, Kretss were humble folk in Germ: 187 at Fraakfort-on-the-Rhine; that they had a dai Clara, now twenty- four years old; that John Henry crueily desterted her on the Rhtne in 188 and came to rica. She | obt a she obtained a decree of divorce ‘while ‘tment store on Sept. 9. She worked/he was away struggling to make a fo: Pay four days in the millinery, depart: | tune, ha che gave her $8,000 for the ment when she ared for two|support of thelr child. When that was When she returned her place spent she de led more and on his re- tad sd been filled. Two weeks ago she re- fuse s she Inst auted this sult for a sepa- ration, turned to work in the store, but she seemed greatly worried, £24, est Bat- tt was gontended jn pehadt of Kreis ‘unde: as in|t jene Marle Kreiss was bouni . evident that tbe tt by the divorce she got in Germany en wident that the trouble Fag ect shed a crisis.| could not maintain & sult for a meparan ened Truax granted ission to) had reac! Quarrel Over “Other Wom: jas to withdraw her sult. Tae Wrong Mrs. Goldman. Mrs, Lupo told her Jandlady on Sat- urday night that she had a settlement to. make with her husband, as been neg: lecting me horribly. Sadie Goldman, of No. 20 Delancey “He is now attentive to ‘a who works in the a this neglect any When Lupo returned to his home there ere biah words In thelr apartments, The uarrel, was Fe On Monday thee couple ic teen years old, charged to live with another woman two years Ey Wy ‘Spetta Brand identified the picture or the recreant husband, and Frank and ‘Aghes Wandruska, janitors of No. 169 East Fourth street, testified that the . rite his Heine ta take Mine otter out on ba y. It was « holl- Election Day. and she him to take her out. fo be remtitrounle ate told Mrs. MeWilli y, “want You to stay i the rear of the houge so that you can't hear what come soft.’ Tt was learned to-day that were heard by obher “boarde house Monday night, Instead of two, frat reported. ‘These “shots lived in an apartment there for "ue ant two yeat Pavhen Mrs. Sedie Goldman stood up in court the Janitor’ and his wife declared she was not, thelr Mrs, Goldman af all, from far Hungary came Frank Zelay with the wife of his youtn, Elizabeth Kiss, to whom he was wedded in 18Ts. ‘They have three children, all grown up and’ married off, but Mary ‘Toth, of a ates om’ friend of the family, | testiied to such untoward behavior on {the part of this mother and grand- mother that Justice Truax turned his ze OWA: x |Decision’ was reserved. ———__— HAT ADORNS COFFIN. . There is one woman in Chivago, the wife of a, youns minister, who has always had a Itking for hats of the flower-bed variety. At present ehe/owns sky» plece’’ that is The pretty young o a.funeral ina ssardeF wae committ le husband aie A he woman swalidwed fNaden ot gay that ‘the wi fren Hest vastly ee the room whiet contained cn | tie comin, vss. removed, tie ‘bat. and e{ placed {ton a stand. The sad-faa Sleek-hatred undertaker came 4 oat ene. ait fran recently later to arrange the attle. of No. 8] tokens" on the coffin After Mr. Kattte| the bouquets, wreaths. pillows, wrvgeig, an nee, he nicked up. the vid- pat and tendsrly placed, it Several of the fimmied, and the. ministers Pa her bat and: run, pons however, until ny. ihows Tittle va Hy tae POWERS WARN TURKEY. uermany, Fra: a Italy to port Austro-Russian Policy. ‘ ey ocean phe oh bler she lu CONSTANTINOPLE, Nov. 4—The| tho hat and successfully made British, German, French ent, ftallan cape,+Chicago Inter-Ocean, Ambassadors vidited the Kish, omelet notified the Typ: they were in eee instruction: vernments to ay. o—————______¢ Feo tele $100 for Those Who Read reform Ki Austro-Maaatan The Girl in Black, ‘i Porte Paphos ects to. ngs con~ Fh a iit re ot eee See First Chapter in Next er Monday's. a, " Bes ing World Now Withdraws ‘Suit Here | Dorothy. B. Qooers 1s twenty-three and were married in at El Paso, Tex., March 1, 1800, {in which they VALET TESTIFIES Edwin D. Mooers’s Former Ser- vant Reveals Some. Secrets of His Master's Life--No De- ‘fense Offered by Plaintiff. Ewin D. Mooera ia in Hurope with his mother, she widow of a Western multi- millionaire mine operator, who allows him $10,000 a year for.spending money, and who will Own the Yellow Aster mine meet his slight and pretty little wife in the divorce court to-day when she asked for absolute divorce and $3,000 a year ailmony, years old. He is twenty-five. She told Justice Truax that she Was married to young Mooers by ¢he Rev, Dr. Clements After a honeymoon of thirty months. travelled all over the country, she mays ‘he left her. That wae tn October, 1902, She had him arrested last June, just as ho was about to sal! with his mother and |Joseph Sylvester Moore, testifi original of the picture wife | ee ms for Europe, and he was lodged in Lud- low Street Jail as a defendant in her suit for alimony. As goon as he was berated he joined his mothers in Europe, Mooers has been paying her $180 °a month since he was released, July 16. Meantime, Mrs, Mooers was arrested in Mount Vernon for removing her IW DNORCE SUT 3 when his mother dies, 80 he did not |ing of OIL MAGNATE’S DAUGHTER LOST Ciara Cotfin Mysteriously Dis- appears from: Hep. In East Orange:and Police Are Asked to Se WENT OUF OSTENSIBLY TO VISIT A FRIEND, ImpressioniMas Been Conveyed That the Girl's’ Mind Was Temporarily Unbalanced, but There Is Mystery in Case, Clara CoMh, seventeen years olf and denutiful, the deughter of E. W. Coffin, Standerd OM magnate and a dealer in ¢ecurities at No. 23 Broadway, is missing from her hoqee, at No, & Burnett street, East Orange, and-her parents have en- Usted the police in a search for hi The last senn of the girl was early y; terday eyéning, when she kissed her mother good-by and sald she was going to @ girl friend's house to study. The case is involved in mystery, and the police are not certain that all the te have beon put in thelr hands that would help toward a solution of it. The theory that has offered to the Orange police, and upon which they are working, is that Miss Coffin's mind is temporarily deranged by overetudy and s ¢ has wauderetl off in a helpless con- dition, Friend Did Not See Her. Mies Jessie Houston, who lives next door to the.Coffin, is the person whom Mise Coffin told her mother she intended pe Fae to visit. “Pfiat joung indy -sayp ihe hae seen nothigg of her friend since . at .' who 18 orostrated by eho absence of her child, says thet Clara ap- be ill at ease All /¥enterday. i Séhe signified her intention of tin) venting mother 1 itéeling that tt Not until the daughter failed to return at a seasonable hour and it was learned that she had not been to t! Houston home did the, mother disagver, that Clara had taken with her two “DEAD” MAN GOES Ine Bursés ing to her. parents, can- taining §10 or $12. of 1904 of the East Ofange High School, at Bryn Mawr, where her eister is @ student. wae alive, ‘Teek Twe Sateh ‘The police say that Miss Coffin took two satohels with her, but what. thetr contents were they have not yet learned. ‘The miss] 1 is said to have t fe ery, seriouaty ad to ave had nah the romat in her. tohstant attendant at aervien in (athe Us tarlan Ohureh in Grange and io the best social cireles. ‘apent tho summer with relatives at Newcustle, Ind., anu the suggestion that ehe might have gone there iy not believed to be worthy of consideration, for she did not have sufficient money gray eyer. brown he wae alive, P|we alt hie ife he has th Trish. end now he has a houses of Porliament. No, 04 West Fifty-fifth street call on @ few barkeoper friends. bert to-day, nd kept it bright white pompoms and wore a gray mack- Tatoah. in Bp neeht eae Re she is medium MARGARITA GRACE WEDS IN ENGLAND atreet.’ Relieved Body Wan Siebert’s. Isnown trunk, a golf set and a travelling bag pinta rae Taian we! mevpeall weeks: Fz Bennett Valet Testifies, A young colored man who said proudly that his full name was Henry valeted for Mr. Mooors for several years. -On Oct. 18, 190%, Mr. Movers went with a lady to the Brevoort House and Tegistered ag “Edwin D. Movers and wife.’ They spent three days at the hotel. The lady was not Mra, Mocers.’ Honry R. Gogay, clork in the Hotel Gerard, testified thet Mr. Movers wae also a guest at that hotel for » time and that his room bill averaged $400 a month. was offered. but Justice No’ defen Truax reserved decision. Bloped yith Professor's wite, Bawin D. Movers was the youth who set the Uttle village of Ithaca in a plage And scandalised Cornell University 18%, when he was a student there, by logy wita the “wite of one or the MM. Movers, his fathe then afd gave $400 :; mronth toh his eon” land his’ wine suppers. ‘were taviah always by They were Presided over the pe vole and beautiful wite Mrs. Kay, of Prof. haat the. tate” town ‘and one Btn FY fhe university way ‘atlon in fresh- It was pened peg ihc 9 cy iy sneare cept tl yard a a eal and lope, wt? "thott to bate § Ppp fester ht received much the ee, te Home, was broken up and Mooers | of, rey wie y you Moog Fea er akong a ll —— TAMING AN ARCHITECT. The architect 1s & delightful. feflow, often without a single grain of busines Ifadility, In most respects. it, bas seemed to us that archi are like others with wri the artistic temperament, For inetance, when an architect tells you thet he will have the plans and specifications ready for your Soe ination ‘on ‘Thursday, ae FOU. are-an ordinary Peis ny Ye eae {WAL he means th atts fay ot the Now, any one. onelena ae hi pores With’ architects knows a ‘ie ‘Thursday after, or two weeks ‘neat i hurada, if he is an ly Tour woel 3 rom the ‘ollowisa ursday, Salat from ‘the aerday or posal An azonitent's J ater nok wi rite and Tee |ot No, 14 Main street, Flushing, was ¥ the | the ieisberm Nieoe of the Former Mayor of] "xfs, New York Becomes the Wife) xs of J..$, Phipps at Battle Abbey. zante. afternoon,” eaid Siebe: a) "Wake up, John, you're dead.” for a drink.’ ‘Well, house,’ says me brother. in @ box and they've paid the under- LONDON, . 4S. 8. Ph and le nag taker $2 for the rent of m black sult. Miss Mnrgarita Grace, daughter of M. P. Grace, of New York and London, and niece of ex-Mayor Grace, of New York, | when they et you out to Calvary.” Sussex. best mar was the bridegroom's brother, Abbey, near Hastings, H. A. l, Phipps. There were four bridesneaids. A large partv from Lon- don attended the ceremony. Rattle Abbey, the historic mile mark- tng the spot whete King Herold and hie Saxon host were dofeated by Will- fam the Conqueror, was purchased ‘in August, 1802, by Michael P. Grace, who has had, the Abbey brought up to twen- tieth century standards of living, with electric “Mghts, modern plumbing, ete., though, #0 far as possible, the marks of age were allowed t6 remain, ns @ floater, They sald floaters and corpses couldn't vote there. Jerry Dontin, the judge ot election tells me to go back to my coffin and not disturd good elect Mr, MoClellen, “Bo I went on up to Josie’s hou ert wed to Know when I was alive, and ke I was a banshee, There OPENS SAFE, BURNS PAPERS. | Yar ine witie Cox aici, and Rosie Stein hue and’Mickte Purcetl. Sweetie ories: “Why, Ive pop.’ But Johnny Riley says, ‘No, pop’s dead; it's a ghost they all ran like mad, scream! the street, “Thinkin' I aurely must, be dead, I g0eu into Joste’s house—she's me sister- in-lewsand there was 4 great buneh in the front room, ‘i'hi was black cur- talné at thé’ windows and big candles at Police Charge Clerk with Burglar and Arson. Helmer Duncan, twenty-one years old, down arrested to-day on ehataes of bureia and erton. He 1s accuved of opening & safe m the office of his employers, the Fouptal ons Co. nurserymen, and burning up the books and papers Kept No motive is as The nolice charge t Fanart Daun-| ec ¢nd.oF the st. ‘cu opdied the wate by the combination Ls a peat indd he Grilled two hoies in the dopr to throw} | “When mabe women se me thay #hiek off suspicion, He was held by Magis-|\oud enough to take the roof off: They trate Connorton for examination to-| seid & waa ® ghost and {0 please go morrow. way. Duncan with arrested.’ 'He was’ are migned, defore Maglatrate Connorton in Bs berg Cour, charged with bur- lary and arkon and wi wittiout bait. Dunean ts avout twenty: one years old, He comes trom a nights Feepeotabin ferns. “Hin fatter, the fate Capt.. Duncan, was one of ters “tn Mark (Twain's nnocents Hotlist Young Duncan had an auto- aire. No, siys I. ‘| want to ace how I ‘But you're dead,’ says Josie. T thought may be I might be dead, but 1 wanted to be at the wake, anyhow. “Bo, I tip-tuen over and takes a peep at the corpse, As a corpse I certainly Gia admire myself. [ made a good corpse.. They had And fine sult of lothes, jure’ saye 1, me, all right. I didn’t know the undertaker could fix me Up like that. He must be a good nd sper money lke a miltion- . Parsons, the exevative head of ‘ine Nursery Company, is ua invatid Rent to the office, veaeries |p tl ‘Aneet, ornamented jontal trees and shrubs is the ‘indeed! anys Josie. ‘We gave him TAS My WAKE After, attending his own wake, being} was | refused the privilege of voting on the grougid that he wes a corpse and after being celebrated ax a dead man, it was ‘Mies Com: maiy Hot, uatil Joka ‘@lebert, fitty years old, No Haat Orenue High school’ | had feturned te work t6r Joha Nodine, | OF and had been preparing to.matriculate |!" in Pedy Fish Market, in Bleventh fo her. ola avenue, to-day that he was certein he “Bure, John Modine wouldh’t have any | and deed ones working for him," sald Gie-~ Dert, by way of confirming the news that | “®! morgu Biebart was born of German parents in the upper section of Hell’a Kitchen, with the brogue, marches in the St, Patrick's Day parade oy, AnD and advocates the desiruction of the He boards with Mrs. Josie Baker ¢ an started from there Saturday night to “I gathered a five branigan,” aid ee new until Monday, when I went to sleep in the stable back of my cousin's house Eleventh avenue and Forty-seventh ‘While Stebete, who was popularly Deonuse of his fond- ness for ones, was missing with his “pranigan,” the body of a man closely resembling him was brought ashore at the foot of West Fifty-fourth street. Mrs, Baker and others of the nelghbor- hood were certain & was the body of “Me brother woke me up In the stable ‘and “I'm not dead,’ says 1, ‘but I'm dyin’ they‘re wakin’ you up at the ‘They think|!s you're ‘dead. ‘They've got, your corpse Hut they're goin’ to take it off you “AN that Wee news t ome, and I says IN go wp end take @ look at myselt to see haw I look when I'm dead. On the way we passed the election booth’ where 1 registered, and 1 went in to But they picked me off right Riay Ta floated ashore dead Monday night and that No, alr; they wouldn't let me vote, and good people what was trying to Near the houwe I meets a lot of kids 1 and the two Riley boys, Sweetie. Dano- and}? me a new shave] h' 4, 1903. BUSTA DEAD MAN, WHO WENT TO AND SCARED MO URN ERS, lidedet BELIEVED HIM A GHOST, HIS OWN WAKE 89999099-39-290-99>> ROSS pPODT~ af 5 “Aa tO tok recor dle e"ak of beer dn tap and some other things to help the wake along. I says I wanted to be pe pao bg on everything; “ang a time I took a fall out of the, can: dant Before It passed. nie “No Decent Corpse Would Do It.” “While we wi wakin’ mesclf the Sern ten yards ich he had GA, riled a it and gays no gus up, @ Bit and gays no that the orpee weet ‘io ine Koeyel ait he got picks Lea oy onda LF ad to cdilect my life ine the he a “4 to Sey to pink f i in rbot \y or watch out for him. wae ae et enptner. branigan at me night, and when “0D, at Paddy's fi market wasn't certain if I was alive or dead until Nodine put me back to work, be- cause Nodine abwa: & said that dead ones couldn't petit eed ll wr him."” FALLS TO DEATH FROM GUN TURRET Lieut. Beecher Was Inspecting Guns on Battle-Ship Maine, When He Slipped and Plunged 40 Feet Through a Hatch. NEWPORT, R. I., Nov. 4.—The body of Lieut. Albert M. Beecher, who was necidefitally killed on the battle-ship Maine, was brought ashore to-day. It likely that it will be sent to his former home at Dodge City, Kan., for burial. The accident ocurred off Gay Head while the crew was preparing for target practice. Lieut. Beecher, the ordnance officer of the ship. was in the forward turret Inspecting the 32-Inch guns and the machinery. a distance of forty feet thtough the haten to the nendling room. He struck Nis-hend of the steel Noor and was un- conscious when other oMcérs and the ship's surgeons reached his side. ‘The mangled body was picked up and carried to the sick bay, where 'for two: hours the doctors worked: over him. Heil died «without regaining! eonsclousnes: His skull wa» fractured and he was in- ternally injured, The Maine made at once for Newport and communicated the news of the lieu- tenant's, death. by wireless tolegraphy. ¢ came into, port, with her enalga at Word waa.sent at.once to iis brother, Paymaster on boand the training ship Monongahets;/tt Poftsmouth. and to ‘Bin parents in Kan: The body was laced on the Kun deck of the veasel covered with the Stars and Stripes. Lieut, er was looked upon as one of the ordinance experts in the service. Before his duty on the Main attached to the Bureau of Or Washington. He was up- One of tha peculiarities of .Constan- tinoplo 1s the inyolent demeanor of the horsemen to those on foot. Many times dally you will see some cabman trying to drive down a weill-dressed man on the street. ‘The drivers rarely take the trouble to shout as the ap proach pedestrians. “I was often filed with wonder af ooserving the meekness with which well-dressed Turks on foot eadmitted to such shaboy Turk writes a traveler. ‘en jury was done to ai ch pedestian he ften bespattered with mud, One Say tse ur ‘Turk picking 1 saw a uniformed way across the street, using his mibre as a walking stick, “A carriage sudden! y dashed down on him and its Losiiig his balance, he shot downward | pnt 12,000 TROOPS TO PROTECT THE CM Sic sraiiees Wace Precautions Are|=". Taken by German Emperor to Guard Russian Ruler During His Visit at Wiesbaden. WIESBADEN, Prussia, Nov. 4—About 12,000 troops occupied the princinal thoroughfares of Wiesbaden to-day while awaiting the arrival of the Czar and some hundreds of volice mingiod with the rather small crowds behind the military Lines. tions for the safety of imperial are always extensive, but on this occasion they seem to be extra: ie The ioe forbade hou: to sta on their balconies or nd hoge te Mindews abave the WEALTH FROM THE SOIL. Main ipo Rich Potate Farmers Still Roll Up Bank Accoum ‘The regulatién farm lot here, as else- where in Matne, ts 160 acres, but the ease with which large areas of this smooth land can be cultivated by means of modern, improved machinery tends to a habit of expansion. Within reason- able limite, the bigger the farm the more economically and profitably It ean operated. Hence find in Presque Isle the average acreage approximating 0, and & largo percentage of farms tanging from this figure to 400 and even WO acres. Potatoes, Aroostook’s staple, are found here {n flelds ranging from 20 to 100 aci tten yielding over 100 bar- rels to the acre; and since he has caught on to the knack of rotating clover with potatoes the Presque Isle farmer is able to alternate great fields between hay jand potatoes, so 4s to raise and sell an immense volume of both staple: nd at the pame time actually to increase the strength and fertility of his farm. For the past three years it is a very unpre- ious Presque Inle farm that has not Yielded profits. totalling $8,000, while many have ran as high as $10,000 and 912,000. Making all due allowances for Operating expenses, there ty a margin left that has made there farms a verita- ble, gold mine, and it is no wonder that after providing himself and family with imple comforts and such luxuries as are indicated by pianos, elegant furniture, yubber-tired. carriages, fine driving horses, &c,, these farmers still have good (at vank accounts to their credit. National M oo “CAN NOT” I8 POPULAR. “Haye you ever noticed,” said the man who finds fault, “how many people avoid the contraction ‘can't! make use of t have been 80 much struck by the lence of the latter expression that paine to ingulre into the cause of It. “T'find that many people have adopted the double term ‘because, baving been brougat up in a locality where the short sound of ‘a’ prevailed, they find it im. possible to twist their tongues around foahn't,’ amd alnce they believe th: plain, everyday ‘can't’ stamps them ing of, inferior ofigin, they. cultiva’ ‘can not.’ ‘Phat requires no short ‘a,’ and al: though its persistent use may, savor of affectation, It strikes th sha cnot get around “eann't improvement on the —— HOW AN ACTOR TRAINS, One of the English actors who visits the United States lost confidence in his ability to hold his audience if he grew fey stouter, hid renee last month thine ti und he ha been’ "6 retain: ” eee ‘al ‘opor- tlons no jockey ever went t more ni taker ing han he ielsh ath Fatty, and then there found in the aa “eval took ter URDERE ss AM Timothy Shea, Sup of Park & Tilford’s St, Found Dead in an Eighth nue Hallway. 4 HAD LEFT HIS HOME. 70 Carried Between $20 and $25, but When Found Money ; Gone and Even Goat, Vest and Hat Were Missing. > Timothy Shea, superintendent of & Tilford's stables, was mui day by thugs. He was fount hallway at No. 978 Eighth avenue ‘ his skull fractured and died an howe later on the operating table at Roame- velt ‘Hospital. Shortly after dinner last night thés left his home at No. 390 West. ond ‘street, where he had lt since he was a boy with Mr. James Porter. He said he was watch the election returns, He waa man, the fhmily say, who did and who had never kept Be ‘nou they became greatly alarmed when they awoke to-day to find that’ he-had ‘ot returned to the house. They pared to go to the police to find \ anything was known about Shea " 3 the news reached them that the ‘ man was dead. A man ‘named,,, Morgenthaler, keeps a restaurant, at, No. 38 avenue, which is néar and only « block awiy*from the home, fovad Shea in his doorway called a policeman, believing him to Intoxicated, The young man's cost vest and hat we: wag nothing to ind nt gh that the young man mes i “a Roose which had seen been summoned by n ne Seawee howe ho! - be safer 7 Several fei ke; Aas was ati 3 old! Swalve years. eam ST.LOUIS SHAKEN BY EARTHOUAR —_—__-—-. nace pe Three Several Diath’ bok Which Caused the’ Skydé ers in the Downtowit’ Bi ness Section to Trenibie.:° ey \ pid ess acre 8T. LOUIS, Nov. 4—This city vicinity experienced a series of, quake shocks at 12.18 o'clock this after” . There is a difference of oj as to how many. The earthquake perceptivie all over the city and mostly felt in the high business. in the downtown section of the One occupant of a high building ‘his chandeller swung three inches: / ™movement was from east to went. long-distance telephone from Loulslana, Mo., says thats ceptible shocks was fe!t there aboiit” same time, FLAMMER’S ANNIVERSARY, res Bench Thirty Years Ag@, Ifearty congratulations were t City Magistrate Charles 0. in the West Side Court to-day on: thirtieth anniversary of his a5 Ment to the Sench. te When he took his seat he was, pletely surrounded by palms and decorations, most of them him by court attaches, Magistrate Flammer was fet pointed in 1873 by Mayor Haver ie 5 LIKED HIS “NIP.” Not @ Whiskey but « Coffee Tobie» » Give coffee half a chance and, some people it sets its grip hard e fast. “Up to a couple of yea: ago, says a business man of BrookiyayJ Ny f Y., “I was as constant a coffee di “ as it was possible to be; ery Bee craving for coffee was equal to a drunkard for his regular EA. the effect of the coffee drug upon em was indeed deplorable, My skin lack" its natural color, my featvves were pinched and nerves were shattered’ to such an tent as to render»me very T also suffered from palpitation ort heart. t was while in this cote read an article about Postam Coffee and concluded to try it. Tt not long before Postum had ent! destroyed my raging passion for . fee, and in a short time I had entigs given up coffee for deli 0 “The change that followed extraordizary I am unable to dg it, Suffice it to say, howayera) my troubles have my original happy. the whole the effects produced ne cup make me feel as ‘anded e not raion! “Not long ich | may, friends to Postum, and, ing many after nearly runding over him, ed at him a vo! und- ered choice Turkish abuse, The unt. ed ‘Turk retorted not: the mud his unifors, saber his. arm emhore ounger when years you nef pene fae Joug in ta praise ae T

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