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WHFE WILL NOT. o="k “don't go to court," SWAP HUSBANDS Mrs. Selzer Sizzles with Rage! When She Denies Mrs. Engel- hardt’s Charge that She! Would Exchange Spouses. WITH LONG STRAP, SHE | SEEKS HER ACCUSER. | Declares that She Doesn’t Wish | to Part with Her Man—Telis | Her Story to the Magistrate— Neighbors Greatly Excited. Picklevillo doesn't appear ofMcially on the Brooklyn map, | ident of tho Greenpoint section knows It, be- cause of the queer things that happen there. To-day persons living in Grattan street and Morgan avenue crowded into the Ewen Street Court to see the ¢ eome of the trouble between Mrs. Bertha | Seltzer and Mrs, Mamfe [ngelhardt. Mrs. Seltzer accuses Mrs. Engelhardt of trying (0 induce her to swap husbands. While the neighbors of Pickleville were waiting for the two women to appear In | court, there was a hot time between the two women, each of whom declared the other to be a trouble-maker Finally as neighbor after neighbor went to Mrs. Seltzer and told her what was Mrs. Englehardt’s latest opinion of her, the former took a leather strap two feet long with a buckle on the end, doubled tt up and went lookin Englehardt. But Mrs, Engle gone to the Ewen Street Court to deny 10 Magigtrate O'Reilly that she had asked Mrs, Seltzer to trade husband with her rs, Engelhardt Keeps Busy Mrs, Epgelhardt lives gan avenue and Mrs Grattan street, two blocks away. Seltzer's thusdand works for a brewer; Engelhardt ts a hackman. His wife goes out washing. “fT used to be an undertaker’s assist- ant,” she sald to-day, ‘but my man don’t want me to be out day and night, and 50 [ only Kors out washing. “Adl these awful lies Mrs. Seltzer tolls @re—Oh! they are awful yet, { don't | hear most of them because I ain deat, ‘Yaat is why { don't go to court yester- day when the police tell me to, { nave to have my sister to listen to the Judge and then tell me what he says yet. I know Mrs. Seltzer all my life. She came here last Thursday night when my husband was away. 1 hear her knock and knock, but L keep the wooden bolt on and just pull it out a litte so 3 can sce; ‘Mrs, Englenardy,’ she says, ‘& need mon { ain't got a cent.’ “I give her $1.6. 1 work twice for her washing and she don't pay me nothing. Go. tell her that. 1 ain't secu her hus- band, I never asked her to trade hus- bands—well, maybe 1 did in a joke, Anyway, she owes me $1.6 and two days’ washing pay. 1 go by the Judge @ng tell him ali. “Ank the Neighbors," She Sayn, “Bhe says rhe Is twenty-o years old, She Is only twenty years old. That shows she ain't telling the truth. Ask the nelgnbors If | made love to her hus- band.” She lives in the d has a good repu- tation amdng the neighbors. She never lacks for a subject of conversation, Her husband is older than she is. They baven't any children. Mrs. Seltzer has one child, a little boy. She stood at the kitchen stove to-day and as each neighbor came with fresh news of the sayings of Mra, Englehardt, she wot more and more anxious to got at Mrs. Englehurdt with cither the poker or the heavy strap that she had handy. “That woman,” she said, “wants me to trade husbands with her, She told me so by her own mouth. All I want 's for her to keep away from my husband, Ghe stops bim from his. work, I seen her by my own eyes talk to him on the atrect., Then she comes to me and say ‘E like your husband better than mine. I trade you.’ I says ‘No, My man, he @ults me. You go by your own husband 1 go by imine. Yngelhardt says you owe her one of the nelghoors sald, h! Oh! Oh!" Mrs, Seltzer cried with the poker in one hand and the strap in the other, “She comes here and says, ‘Why don’t you get your hushand’s dinner? and 1 says, ‘I get him no dinner.’ “Amd the she says, ‘You ought to get your knees to be forgived,’ and must get down by his knees rt. Gives Her the Price of a Loat. “She asks for money, and I have $2, decause l didn't yer pay the insurance, f&nd I give her the price of a loaf of bread, “Her husband don't want her. sald by his own mouth ¢hat if he could find a man to take her he would give hor $5. Yes, sir, $5! Any wonder ‘she Uke to trade husbands?" At this junoture Mrs, Seltzer slipped sald, ‘Mr, Mr which {8 on the second floor, gone they Simpson Kitchen door and proceeded through the house, bedroom, but one shouted for the police caught by Mrs. Gordon and held. took her by the throat with one hand and with the other hit her full in the face, made a dash for street, with a small army of Mrs. Gor- don's’ melgnbors at his heels 0) Gordon, though bi ly nervous as the result of her ex; fence, was able to appear aguins( assaliant, than 100) him, bestdes a jimmy and a pair of pin- cers, into “the burglin’ business,” but "got pinched” on his first job, WILL BANQUET WHOLE TOWN Gov. Foraker’s Clerk Returning to WOMAN AND NEIGHBOR WHO SHE SWAP HUSBANDS, AND THEIR RESPECTIVE SPOUSES. ae BURGLAR KNOCKS DOWN AGED WOMAN Vicious Youth Enters Mrs. Gor- don’s Apartment and Seizes Her by the Tnroat—Pursued, He Falls Into Arms of. Police. A bolder’ plece of crookedness has not been tried in many months by a burg- tar than th attempted robbery of the home of aged Mrs. Gordon, of No. 235 Monroe street, by Abraham Simpson, an eghteen-year-old Phiiadelphian, who toached here on Monday last to start Upon a career of crime. Simpson was in the hallway of the ree street house when Mrs. Gordon ssed him to get to lier apartment She had half the distance un the stains when he caught her by the neck of her dress and told her to keep her mouth Mor he would brain her, Too scared for the moment to call for help Mra, Gorgon permitted herself to be dragged to the door st her kitchen, At that point her self-porsession was regained «nd she began to cry. “Fire, fire!"' ‘This alarm brought all the other oc- cvpants of the tenement out of their places into the hallways, but Simpson told whom that they had better not in- terfere, and none of theth di. While looked on amazed at the scene pushed open Mrs, Gonion's to go He had reached the tried to flee when some He was He her down, the stairé knocking Then he and the crying when he Simpson got a block away, ran into the arms of Probation Officer Graves of 8 cial Sessions and to-day he was arraigned in that court. Mrs, and exceeding- ‘When ‘Simpson was arrested more keloton Keys were found on He said he had come here to go Ohlo « Millonaire. CINCINNATI, Nov. Senator For- aker has just recelved an invitation to & banquet at which the other guests expected constitute the entire popula- tion, men, women and chiliren, of a town, Fiftcen or twenty years ago, when Foraker was Governor of Ohio, George ‘A. Beaton was a clerk in the Governor's office mn Columbus, was in Athens, 0, has removed to New York and become a millionaire. old home next June, in the week of the commencement exercises of the Ohio Universit: Beaton's home then Since then Beaton He intends to return to his end he will celebrate his with a mammoth banquet, living within the city's homecoming All, perwone on a wrap and, with the big. st doubled up, started out to look for Mra imlehardt, bul e ler had gon Bnaie 1 BONE tO nntil They send tor mec’ Setter Seltzer was in court yesterday, * said Mrs, Seltzer, “that elhardt all the time wants to mwa. husands by nie, and I am satis led yet with the one I have, I wane |h you to stop her asking me all the time 0 trade.” Judge O'Reilly takes Up, Waat's this?” ‘asked Judge O'Reilly, “Bwap husbands! Who ever henrd of sueh a thing?’ “Judge, J chav yet for many, the time heard of nothing cleo many Weeks, I am. all pestered, by thls "woman, aud ff I don't swap she will’ take My husband works by the bi y 8 6 brewer; and she al the the is wating for him when he comes Wong home Come ‘by “election ‘time she comes to mo and says, sy sho, if Il don't swap MHL takg my ‘husband ‘from “me: yes." te {thought It wan Joking she was, but ain’ eady, and Twi . 6 ain't alncauy ant my” hus Well, wnt does your husband say wked the judge, . my husband is a quiet man and says we women must settle this thing between ts yet. All he wants to De quiet by his home and let Cook Teck priest and spiritual adviser excuse offerod by Thomas. Rogers, cook, thirty-five years old, of Astor': to Magistrate Flammer in the ‘Tem * | Court to-day when he was arratgned charged with intoxication, An apparently into: Broadway and Vesoy street by Patrol- fan Connor, of the Chureh street sta tion, some blackberry brandy trouble, ts are to be his quests, and ho wants Hinttbener chief to’be one of the party ooo PLEDGE SUSPENDED HE SAYS Too Much Blackberry Brandy and Ip Arr “My pledge wa: Rogers Was arrested late yerterday in| intoxicated condition at] He told tho Magistrate he had taker for stomach “How fmuch did you take?” asked ¢he On the ‘strength of Mrs, Seltzer's | Magistrate ry Fate O'Relliy iatued the |~Aveil ft may have taken f summons for irs, Kngelhardt, but when for six sind maybe more, Any was, Lv morh- |roken my pledere. jng hie adjouspea thp cee until Priaay, Rogers was dismissed trom custody. $3,000 IN BANK, WIE SEES: Money Is in Name of Mrs. Cath- erine Boland’s Husbakd, Who Disappeared After Being Ar rested for Perjury. With more than $3,000 in the Tmmi- grant Industrial Savings Bank in the name of her husband, Mrs. Catherine Boland, of No. 371 West One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street, and her four LAW POWERLESSTO children are suffering all the pangs of poverty, In Judge Cowing’s court to- aay, Part I., General Sessions, the wom- an told her story and begged for rellef | before she and ber children should be forced to appeal to the county for sup- port. Luring the month of May of the pres- ent year Mrs, Catherine Boland’s hus- band was arrested on a charge of per- jury. He deposited 31,00 bail and was released. At the time when he should have appeared for examination he was not to be found and his bond was for- felted. Since that time nothing has been seen or heard of him by friends or fam- ily. Herman Steissel, Assistant Corpora- tion Counsel, made the application for the woman to-day. He asked Judge Cowing to turn over the money in the benk to the Commissioner of Charities to hold and provide for the living of Mrs, Boland and family. There are two accounts in the bank in the hus- band's name, one for $2,906 and the other tor $1,054 Mrs, Boland declared in her affidavit | that she was entirely without means; that the support of herself has been thrown upon friends, and that she and her children were suffering great want on account of her inability to get at the funds which her husband had left when he, dinpppenred. All the hildren are under éleven years. Judge Cowing took the matter under consideration - AID A OVING MAN Judge Leventritt Says He Can- not Push Ahead Case of Man Who Is Suing Railroad for Damages in Wreck. “T would grant ex-Judgs Steckler's motion but for lack of power," suid Justice Leventritt, of the Supreme Court, as he reluctantly indorsed lis denial of the application of Alfred and Charles Steckler to place on the pi ferred calendar for immedinte trial the case of Alfred N. Newton against the New York Central and New York, New Haven and Hartford railway companies for $25,000 damages for making blm a complete physical wreck, Mkcly to die at any moment, and Jeave his wife and four children penniless. “The extreme of the Inw ts the ox- ¢reme of injustice,” Is an anctent ax- fom, and in this case, if.the physicians correct in thelr opinion, dhe unt: tunute viotim will be in his grave long before his sult, begun a year ago, can reach trial. His widow will then be obliged to sue and a walt of two or three years for a trial will follow. But Justice Leventritt ts forced to suy that under the law he !s powerless to some to the rellef of this family whose head, a §,00 f at toted 7 Mf Shoabaas $1,000,000 FOR 2-EAR-OLD SON Alfred G. Vanderbilt Celebrates’ His Child’s Second Birthday, by Giving Him a Notable Present. | i 25.—The traditional | wealthy born ts dis) William H, Vanderbilt, whe! hee the mature age of two! His father, Alfved G. Vanderoilt, | commemorate th t, it Is said, ! ing $1,000,000 to t edit of his NEWPORT, No’ golden spoon of counted h to-day years, will rei The young mililonaire's birthday will be celebrated at Oakland Farm, South Portsmouth, L, I, by Mr. and Mrs. Al- fred Vanderbilt and a party of friends who have been Invited to form a house Party for the occasion, Although he 4s too young to appreciate; the honor, William H. Vanderbilt will be toasted by all the ‘tenants and ser-| vants on Oakland m to-day. and a! general feast will be participated in in his honor vy all the Vanderbilt de- pendents, ! Even should so unlikely a catastr as the loss of thin father’s entire tune occur young Willlam H. Vander- le.will have no occasion to worry over the direction from which lity meals will come, as by the time he is twenty-one the million which he receives to-day will have grown to the comfortable stim of $2,106,860, nat the low rate of in- terest of 4 per cont, Mr. Roginald Vanderbiit have arrived here and will participate in the anniv festivities. They will also aln a house party at Sandy Point Farm, South Portsmouth, Both the Alfred and Reginald Vander- bilte will attend the wedding. of Mre. Arth: Kemp and Hollis Hunnewell Saturday, Mrs, 1p ie a sister of Mrs, Reginald C. Vanderbilt. THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 25, 1993, SAYS WANTS TO TROLLEY NLS FIRM WOM Mrs. Anita Dassori, of Brooklyn,’ Tells How Her Mother Was; Crushed to Death Beneath the! Wheels of a Car. DRAGGED SIXTY FEET, BOY AT HER SIDE. Residents on Street Declare, that Cars Are Run at Ex-! traordinary Speed Constantly | Menacing Lives, The story of the kiliing of Mrs. Cath- erine Daseori, forty-eight years old, by a trolley car, at Third avenue and Nineteenth street, Brookiyn, was told to-day by her daughter, Mrs. Anita Dasson, of No. 288 Nineteenth street, whose home she hd left a few mo- ments before the accklent occurred. “Mother is infirm and slow-footed,” fald the daughter to an Evening World reporter, "She has been spending her winters of late in Italy, and the recent cold weather crippled her greatly. “With my twelve-year-old brother) Salvatore she left the house at 7 o'clock last night, Mother and I married broth- ers, which accounts for the sameness of our family name. “For months T have noticed that the| trolley ears have been raced along] ‘Third avenue toward the Hamilton aye- nue ferry, and I warned mother to wateh out in crossing the tracks to| where she took the car for her home, No, 42 Van Brunt streot. “Joseph Pellens, a painter, walked down the street with the two, but left them at Fourth avenue. Salvatore did not the approaching along ‘Third | avenue at lightning speed, and mother was struck and knocked down before he could pull her out of its path, “While there was @ fender on the car my poor mother was dragged for sixty feet before the motorman ehut off the electric current. She was killed almost Instantly, as the car was crowded with passengers bound for the ferry, and vherefore heavy and uncontrollable. ‘The speeding of cars along Third ave- nue {s a common practices, according to residents along that thoroughfa’ There have been numerous accidents As a result, mostly children, and the resi- f the vicinity look upon the: with almost superstitious dread. The excuse of the company has) been that the patrons of the line de- mand erompt ferry connections. It is stated by passengers on the car which Killed Mrs. Dasson! that the mo- torman, George Ward, in his excite- ment, turned on the current to a_gront- instead of shutting it off. The heels of the car completely over the body of the aged woman. The motormun Was arrested, but released on bail, A searching investigation will be made at the inquest to-morrow. MRS. DASSORI, KILLED BY A TROLLEY, AND HER DAUGHTER. ‘Thousands Have Weak Kidneys and Don't Even Suspe STRONG KIDNEYS — MAKE STRONG ME & year ago I was suffering from) {uppored was rheumatism T became | at = Hoedred and Forivesita pounds fered. Git madred and fary-fivs. pound, freer king Of jnedicine, but’ reesived 4 Ue or po hep. Thad. no Iden my kidne weep aficate owen, a thought {wou : imer’a Awan and. nee | the ‘htect wind be T took it mt | that it was herp * hougnt tivo, mo ne mn Jere bot 1] rl I bought two m Boat’ sincerely have complet yours. ‘ constant sufferer for a nt years with back-ache and feequent % urinate day and night, and. eometimes with smarting and burning sensation, but . ing Dr. Kilmer’ ssi t Tam entirely ured and cheerfully recommend tt to any who suffer fom these common complaints, Most truly yo W. COBAILY, 20’ Lieut, of Pottes, ‘Columbus, I. cheerfully reat Remedy, Dr. idney trouble az And derived great ben: It has cured me entirel ‘whic! oe a HRSOE SREP ou 1 have Root. the tamoup kid- oct ce tat Saga Relies fae ih the most favorable results, and. can cheerfully recommend It to the public as a Fellable medicine, lespecttully. yours, 1. C. GUILFORD, Policeman, Dothan, Ala JAqtaye,uted Dy, Kilmer's Swamo Root tor Kidney trouble. with very gratifying remulta. i \y ‘recom: 0 id from any derangement of the Kidneys, liver and bladder, Truly yours, PERRY. a) Sergeont of Polles, Columbus, Ga. Dr. Kilmer's Bwamp-Root, the great kid- Diadder reinedy. “has been ney, liver and Usdd py my. Family cand they have foun 1 a eines We Mellover fen aatt fa ai “itis recommended ‘to ia ‘eh fay recommend ft to any ope iehcted with e Diadder troubles. fh) Sa. ents tat Serxeant of Police, ‘Columbus, Ga. ~ Weak and unhealthy kidneys are responsible for) to learn of their severo {lness, or sudden death, caused more sickness and suffering than any other ‘tae that fatal type of kidney trouble—Bright’s Disease, \ ‘Therefose, when ‘through neglect or other causes kidney) The mild and extraordinary effect of the wo! trouble Is permitted to continue, fatal results are aure) kidney, liver and bladder remedy, Dr. Kilmi rey to follow. tae 1s soon realized. It stands the highest for ite. — We often see a relative, a friend or an acquaintance wonderful cures of the most distres8ing cases. A trials apparently well, but in a few days we may be grieved | will convince any one. oe SPECIAL NOTICH—Swamp-Rooct has been tested In so many ways, and has proven so successful in every.) case, that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of Tho World who have not already tried . it may have a sample bottle sent absolutely free by mail. Also a book telling all about Swamp-Root and conteim=s. _ ing many of the thousands upon thousands of testimonial letters received from men and women who owe their _ good health, in fact their very lives, to the wonderufl ourative properties of Swamp-Root. In writing to ‘ Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and mention that you read this generous offer in the New e Evening Worl PRG ar anf Swamp-Root is pleasant to take, and is for sale at all drug stores, in bottles of two sizes and two prices, fitty yy cents and one dollar. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root—Dr. Kilmer's Swamp->, Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle, Lew FOUR BABES SAVED MAD CAT'S BITE FHOM THE FLAMES; PROVES FT Policeman Strasser in Burning, Samuel Dykstra, of Paterson, Tenement Carries Children to} Succumbs to Effect of Wound the Roof, Where Firemen| of the Infuriated Animal at Take Care of Them. Which He Had Fired. eed et day should not pass with? * out out attention i a called to The World Ws f et Columns. there are more adverti making their wants than all other New York mediums combined - had iter give We Wants a trial. You wi surely use no other here>’ after. | This for You PATERSON, N. J., Nov. %.—Samuel Dykstra was buried to-day from his home at No. 159 Franklin street and the body was interred in Fairlawn Ceme tery, Nr. Dykstra, some days ago shot a cat in his yard. ‘The feline had deen bother- ing for some time, He fired a shot from rifle at the cat and the animal lay a8 it dead. To make sure, er, he Wahked over to It and gave it a kick. or! ae THERE ARE ooo 829 Paid Help Wants in this? morning’s World. ante BUT 368 ie mes Sate Four babies were saved from a fire in the tenement-house at No. 68 Mott street early to-day by Policeman Strasser, of the Elizabeth street station. Rushing through nerrow halls filled with smoke, he sought out the infants the parents had forgotten in their panic-stricken haste to get out of the butiding. He car- ried all to the roof, where they were He was astounded to see it jump up cared for by the firemen. and then bury ite teeth in the fleshy ‘Tho building is @ five-story structure.| part of his lee. Anothor from charge the rifle, however, ended its existence, He applied home remedies to the wound. Sunday he became Il and he Pe ore rots Hine! Bommel, He’ died in tal Monday night. He was thirty-four years old and leaves a widow and four childre: PROF. KOCH'S LYMPH INHALATION ! cuRES tho first floor being oceupled by Morris) Gudberg, He had a wall paper store in front and living rooms for himself and his three children in the rear, His okt est child, a boy of eleven, was awnlcened by the smell of emoke. He gave the alarm to the others. About the same time Policeman Stras- ser saw smoke coming from the building] and ran into the hall awaking the ten- 884 66 OLOMAN FORETOLD. DEATH AT FEAST “I Shall Die To-Morrow,” Said Frank Winter to Friends—| Went Home and Ended Life with Carbolic Acid. “My friends, said Frank Winter, seventy-nine years I shall die to-morrow," Winter's friends laughed at the Idea of sudde ath as he wax in no danger of immediate dissolution, although he had been in il) health for some time, with a surely fatal heart trouble and A Nervous wreck, @s the result of bh rearvent collision in the Park avenu: tunnel Jan, 8, 190, and over whom the sword of fate hangs by but a slen- der thread, Winter left hls old cronles without fare- wells and seomed in . dee kplte his xper¢ ppear sings and Fifey- @ general ‘alarm to-day for James Hob- ty-sixth street. attemp bY taking oll of heml» I When Jacob McCoy, the landiont of tg Lingeln Hospital a prison: the house in which Winter lived, left his room to-day he was aroused by the wailing of a dog. The uolse came from Winter's room, where the dog lay guard- ing the body of his master, ¢rightfully burned from carbolic acid, Since the death of his wife a ew years ago Wipter had been despondent. No work and fll health followed, and rather than reach the stage where he woukl become dependent upon friends and public charity, the killed himse)f. AGED MAN MISSING. Harlem Police Send Out a General Alarm for James Hobbin ‘The police of the West One Hundred econd streat etation sent out bins, sixty years old, who disappeared DRANK OIL OF HEMLOCK. ng Sulcide a Prisoner Moap . sixty-four years Old, 42 Kast One Hundred and Dhir- pt No. war takeb | « again made his way Into the structure nd brought out the fourth hid, dled at her home tn the House of Merey, huyband about a vear employed at private ned putcide tonday | Wewcrurity nll from ber ants. Men and women rushed from the rooms. They wanted to have their goods, and #0 many trunks were carried into) 1] Asthraa, Bronchitis, Consumption, Bushelmen, Butchers . SE uSaweemnanse SeRfeawPog the halls that the stairways were chok- It matters pot how the ed and many were forced to get out! germs were absorbed int0] Buttonhole makers 2 Canvassers Carpenters Cashiers . Chambermaids . by way of the fire-escapes or to take! refuge on the roof. ‘An Itallan woman came to ¢he police- r by the stomach—t Fact 'remninn the. ames that the cerms must be destroyed In the lungs by inhalation. and by intemal medication the man and told him her baby had been | inhalation. and by mtomal metication ine forgotten in the hurry of the family | Bleod" and infect’ every Cobar ot ithe body: | clerks... escape. The child was in bed on the| chev ,krow and mainly, ver tment ike) Coachman fourth floor, she said, Strasser ran into that sven! at Gi) Went a4 st, that the xerms| Coat Maker the building and found the baby, but roved the dit ia ed and the pa-| Collectors it recovers. lr and change of cli- upon coming out into the hall again he saw that the jam of trunks had cut off means of escape by the stairs, He run to the roof with the baby in his arms. fremen called to him that two more ehildren were imprisoned in a room on the third floor, He made his way to the Dod for every ome, but they. will hot kill the merma of disease that are in your Wats, feed, om the catarrh, in” th tRire females noted Yor no food oF t cwnt, (2,900, the Doctor at 118 jent 384 ate my Ri PoSuab holt attne Tatah Fe SE St was of it KoIng to fo easily that Dentists Designer . Dishwashers. Draughisman . room, and found them almost overcome | 2, iS aeanaar eae aie bicankabice |, with smoke. ‘They were carried to the} throat: wes ‘im Sore, a. kreat, pat | pet roof, They were Pisces. in the arms of ‘OW can breathe. Ares! * firemen, ‘who cartled them to the sirext Buh Bo Solda—save Wilbort | Drug Clerks Sleeve Hands, to be revived in the homes of neighbors, n a ‘e Electricians ‘sisi tees jeeman te h ret dail. 8 ian Rot come with sie joiners their Py KOqHs SAN aR Pee Ho West | Rmbrolderers fooms on the top oor, The policeman | ead, et, between ai and 7th avi.’ next 0] mp. Agencies Engineers Engravers Examiner . Farm Han¢ . phone | 1228—18th. NUNS PRAY AT SUICIDE’S BED old, of Sixth street, Guttenbung, at a] suddendy from his home last night, He feast in Goehring’s saloon last night.|{s described as being about 6 foat § be Misayeab find . nehes in heigat, weurhing 135 pounds, | young Mre. Myrtle Weed Ends Life Figure | Winter was found dead in bed to-fay.| ind has smooth face and eray halr. Ho Finishers 2) Wagon 1 Wore at Kray sack coal, dark trousers |X Sith REDE: Fi | Waist Ffamde.socs He spade tls predietion Koad by swallow: | ard” peak cap. His home iat Ogden | ywniie nuns surroiuded her bed, pray- KNOCKS 2 ov 3] Waiters svrsgisat JBBY SHON CAT belo. ROR: ie: Jill: a fem: |} VSONG ie ccaieres Ing that her life might be spared, Mrs. | B)— w-§ - P-EB-P-§-§-A} rorvins ————— ; ; lly. Myrtle Weed, twenty-seven years old, PR oie U6 West One Hundred and Sixth RIKER'S DRUG STORE, | ee Clete. No. connie street, from the effects of morphine, 6th Ave. & 23d St. Sees ot which «he had swailowed. WW YORK AGENTS [patos Mra, Weed was separated from her | 1 Breidway 20 Iasi See | Emprovers . ago. She was sh aye. and Toth m.; 48th et | tromery Hee age 320th wt. and | Janitore q 10) 34 ave; Oo house in this c! the ume about a