Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
> DY GANDITS PLANNED TO. BLOW UP POLICE STATION THE WORLD : AN ARMY OF PURSUERS AT BAY, AND MARX, THEIR HARVEY VA “SOT E TE SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 28, 1903. NDiNE. VANDINE AND NEIDERMEIER, BOY BANDITS WRO HELD CHIEF. GUSTAVE MARX. AGED MAN PLEADS TO HAVE EVE OUT Almost Blind and Penniless, He Asks the Magistrate to Send! Experience of a Well- © known Public Man. — How He Bought Six Bottles on a Neighbor's Advice, : one is ready on, James G, Taggart, of Manchester, N. H., was ad- Advice is free, so ever: to give it. When the Original (Ida. Was to” Rescue’ Their Seton iene ae ' Operation. | was inclined to regard it as worth. as 4 Chief, but When They Learned He Had Betrayed Them, Motive Changed to Revenge and They Wanted to Kill Him, : ’ CHICAGO, Nov. 28.—To asi to the horror caused by the bloody deeds wf’Harvey Vandine, Peter Neidermeier and Emil Roeski, the boy bandits, who terrorized this community Sor months past, they confessed to the police to-day that they had planned to blow up the Sheffield avenue station, where their former leader, Gustave Marx, is imprisonef and rescue him. They then proposed to kill Detective Blaut, who had arrested Marx and who was the only witness to the mufder of Detective Quinn, for whose killing Marx They had procured ten sticks of dynamite with which to tear down the oors of the jail, and they would have undoubtedly carried out their qene had Marz not confessed and betrayed them. DYNAMITE HIDDEN IN BARREL. ‘The dynamite was hidden in a garbage barrel in the rear of No. 1819 Wodey street, and but a few hours separated Marx from liberty when he weakened and confessed to the police. The plan of his companions, who fwere then at large, was to place the explosive against the door of the sta- téon-house and set it off. They figured that the keepers would rush out, ‘and then they proposed fo\kili them and thus clear the way to their chief's cell. Neldermeier, his companion, agreed, too, that they ought to have clean facés, and Chief of Police O'Neil himself took a damp towel and mopped the stains of powder and dirt from them. This was before Roeski, the fourth boy of the gang, whbd escaped at the time Vandine and Neidermeier twere captured, had been brought in. ‘ : In all history of crime in the West there is recalled but one paralle) to the fight that Vandine, Neidermeier and Roeski put up against the police in @ sand but near Pine, Ind., when they killed one detective and seriously nwounded another, and that was the battle between the sleriffs and Sonntag and Evans, the noted train robbers in‘California. The Jatter were cornered in a cabin in the mountains, but with all their knowlédge of shooting, their gameness and recklessness, they did not come out of the experience skin ‘whole, as these boys did. 5 FARMER LOCATED THEM. murderous fighting that finally brought Vandine, Neidermeier and Roeski to the cells they occupy in the City Hall began at this sand hut, ‘They had lain in hiding there since Thanksgiving Eve and had been recog- mized by a farmer, who hed telegraphed the police of their whereabouts. He telegraphed three times before any heed was given to his information and then for the first time yesterday morning the police sent out a squad of detectives, armed with Winchesters and revolvers, The boys had maga- gine revolyers and pistols of ordinary pattern, but*they made them by their daring better weapons than the rifles, > "The detectives surrounded the hut and called upon the inmates of the hovel, one of whom they had seen dart inside as they approached, to come out and surrender, The answer they got was a volley of bullets. They lay, fiat and returned the fire without cessation. The bandits, however, were PETER NEIDERMEIER. GIRL ASKED LIFE TO SAVE ANOTHER At Last Moment Little Annie, KIDNAPPED GIRL BOY SHOT, WOMAN FOUND BY MOTHER) MAY BE INVOLVED ee Long Quest Finally Re- TWO DEAD FROM GAS IN SAME ROOM Victims, Evidently from Mining Section of Pennsylvania, Met Death by Queer Accident in Lodging-House. ‘Two men who registered as Francis Kenoski and Michael Lynd, without giving any address, were found dead early to-day in the Glenmore lodging- house, No. 13 Montgomery street, Jer- sey City, from gas asphyxiation. A stop cock on a gas pipe large enough for a gas stove wae turned on. The pipe is fn the wall near the entrance door, but the police belleve one of the men brushed against it and accient- ally turned on the «as. ‘The room has no gas fixtures with burners. In Kenosrki's pockets were $66.92 and a second class ticket showing a ride on train between, Blairs- and Edri station on the Pennsyl- Railroad in Western Pennsyl- a Pennsylvania ville and only elght cents, A miner's Haale Youthful Son of a St. Louis Po-| itt, nd Worn ‘in thestrone ot the hat when at work, was found in the room. The men registered at the ea! rt} come f led me nal "Retura of the ywn all over this om my atany sizat t sarees fch was that he was struck at play in the at achool in lanhattan Hoa- a B. R. T. PERMITS SMOKING. Kear Miatforms Will Be Free to Pipes and ¢ Hereafter the Brookly Company is 6 to smoke on the its clos . derwo y sent out ni e different 8 of the system revoking the rule which forbadedt and which had practically become a dead letter, Smoking was prohibited in the first Place because it was thought that it might lead to the overcrowding of the rear end of the cars, but as the plat- forms cannot be overcrowded more than they are the general manager came to the conclusion that those who rode there might as well smoke in peace and without fear of “call downs,” arn, Rapid Transit mit passengers forms of all Ma) eases BOWEN SAILS FOR HOME. LIVERPOOL, Nov. 2%—The Cunard Line steamer Campania, wiich satled to-day for New York, takes among her passengers Herbert N. Howen, United States Minister to Venezuela, who rep- resented Venesuela at The Hague Ar- bitration Court; Léonel Carden, British Minister to Cuba, and Mrs. Carden and Gen. Viljoen, representing the syn- aicate formed to exhibit at the Bt. Louis Exposition picturesque features of the Boer war. Are You Fagged? That run-down feeling is caused by your over-worked digestive organs not doing their work properly. Set them right, re- invigorate your system and restore sound and lasting health by using Beecham’s much as such advice usually is. How- ever, the result proved it to be a very luable piece of advice indeed. i The Hon. James G, Taggart served nis State in the Legislature, and is or® known as an energetic, spirited man, At the close of his last term of service he found his health very much impaired. i) It was then that he was advised to try Dr. Greene's Nervura, The result was an entire success. The Hon. Mr. Tag: gart says: fei UTNE thie senulon of the Lewisiature if a Nervura blood and nerve shite Thad no tale tn iae'in’ patent medicines, 1 determin the, cenvedy “the to ty most satisfactory, and half a dozen bottles suffieed to put my eet again. My wetite ret my. é reault, was “8 Dr. Greene's Nervura is the world’s greatest tonic and reconstructor. Ree~ ommended and sold by druggists every. where. Dr. Greene's advice is free, Write to 101 Fifth Ave., N. Y. City. ; FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN, © Our Combination Shoe, for Men and Women. ~ The only shoe of its kind. — not wasting ammunition and shot with accuracy and a purpose to make] Silverman Got Seven-Year-| warded—Man Accused of En-) lice Captain Found Myster-':he room. The, men resistere Hat Pills The shoe which fits so every bullet tell. ; tici from Home Is Un-| iously Dying in the Street in) the’same rooms) 7 “Warate cots “a snugly up into the arch of Old Child from in Front of On-| ticing Her from Home Is Un- ne tiailes are at Hughes's Morgue, | Sold Everywhere. In boxes 10c, and 2Se. WASTED NO AMMUNITION. The police were cowed by the show of determination until Detective Jo- seph Driscoll and Detective Matthew Zimmer, angered by a taunt of “Why don’t you come and get, us?” shouted from a window of the hut, left their companions and started forword. rushing Express Train. LAKEWOOD, N. J., Nov, %.—Little der Arrest on Serious Charge. The long search for Eva Buchbinder, who disappeared from her home at No. Chicago. CHICAGO, Nov. 28.—George Reynolds, sixteen years old, son of Capt. Peter the foot and is still always comfortably easy across the toes, because it is especially made two sizes-smaller over 5 ; Annie 6ilverman {s the heroine of this Reynolds, of the St. Louis Police De- the instep than any other few steps when they were both brought down, LAs es Bein LOUIS he ef eanded etal ar iy endlainneee ramet tice in the forehead and| C°™munity to-day. Although only twelve/% De Kalb avenue, Brooklyn, three | partment, was murdered on a street shoe. is @riscoll woun: years of age, she risked her life to save| months ag, ended to-day when the|near the business district of the olty| LARGEST RETAIL CIGAR DEALERS vibe t ight arm. Neldermeter and Van Dine had come out of the hut to meet detectives. The former admits shooting Zimmer and Vandine says eau Driscoll. They say they shot to save themselves. *" “@he dropping of the two. detectives put the rest of the police to rout, jand they made their way to Pine, where a telegram was sent here for fifty These were quickly put on a special train,| icemen with Winchesters. Fin he mat tne bandits had left the hut and were on the road to| where, after another flerce fight, they were captured. (@LANNED TO MURDER \ ANOTHER. That another murder was planned by the car-barn murderers appears ident from the confession of Roeski, none dther than himself being se- poe as the victim, In his confession to the police, Roesk!, who was captured in a etation mat ‘Actua, Ind., while jwaiting for a train to Chicago, and after his com- anions had already been taken into custody, says ‘he was the,drudge of the men. He felt that he was not at any time in the confidence of his ‘ ions, and during the last few weeks believed that Neidermeier or QWandine was ready to “get rid ef him,” as he e&pressed it. + “I never got much,” he said. “They used to buy me something to eat mnd give me a few nickels once in a while, moe because they thought I might give them away. ‘dermeler and Vandine were going tq ‘do me up.’” ' They afterward got ‘sore’ on Marx told me -hat Nel- \ READY FOR THE “RED BALL.” Fly To-Morrow ‘Hurrah for the ‘red bail!’ Another Way of freezing temperature and the wlgnal will fly from, the skaters’ house @t the ‘Centtal Park Lake, ‘Niere. ts fow a fine coating of ice over the lake, bur it is not thick enough to bear the weight of the ers. Tne Hoboken and Jersey City and in MYSTERY IN LOSS OF WOMAN'S GEMS Society Woman Who Missed the Bronx the venturesome were on thelr runners yesterday, The temperature at present is below the average for cold- hess during the last twenty-five years. Them on. Fifth Avenue Keeps Her Name Secret and Offers that of little Nellie Smith, seven years old, Both children escaped death by the narrowest margin. Nellie was walking over the River avenue crossing of the New Jersey Railroad when her foot became caught between two planks. She was unable to get it out, and while she was strug- sling she heard the Whistle of the Phil- adelphia' express. ‘The sight of the train bearing down upon her'drove her frantic and she was utterly unable to help herself. Annie Silverman was returning from @chool and heard the cries. With a glagce at the onrushing train, but with- out a thought of her own danger, she Tushed forward and tried to pull the smaller girl's {Oot from vetween the planks. ‘The engineer of the express whisticd again and again, but it was not unul the train was almost upon them that Annle got Nellie’s foot free and they ‘oth rolled into.the ditch alongside the tyack as the train thundered by. WOMAN DEFIES BiG EAPRESS COMPANY Refuses to Give Up Her Lease’ and Permit the Corporation, child was found in a tenement at No. 248 Mott street. Salvator Collina was arrested and charged with her abduc- tion, Later in the day he was arraigned be- fore Magistrate Flammer in the Centre Street Court and held for examination next Tuesday in $500 bail. For many weeks after the girl disop- peared from her home no trace of her could be found, The police were notified and a general alarm was sent out both in Brooklyn and Manhattan, When the police gawe up the hunt Mrs. Buchbinder continued to spend the day and the greater part of the night In searching for her lost daughter, Found in Mott Street. The many abduction cases that have been reported from the Mulberry street Aistrict led Mrs. Buchbinder to centre her search there, and for many days nd nights she has watched the neigh- hood. y to-day her patience was rewarded. She saw the girl, go into the tenement in Mott street, A younger oniid was with Mrs. Buch- binder, and together they min after the lost girl and entreated her to @o home, Eva ran up the stairs, hiding her face in shame from her mother and sister. She ran into a room and locked the door, refusing to open it when she was followed. The woman went to the Mulberry street station-house and Detectives Myer and Dunn were sent with her to the house in Mott street. They broke down the door and found th etty German tirl with the Italian, Both were taken to ¢he station-house, Colina Said to Have Confessed, to-day, Followin, shots he was picked up none the, up near the walk in an unconscious condition driver of a newpaper delivery w: Reynolds revived and been shot in the mouth.” consciousness again and was carried to where he died as he waa being lifted to a hospital ambu-| lance. Detectives are working on the, theory that a woman is concerned in the | young man's death. It was-sald Rey- nolds was with a young woman shortly before ‘his death, Reynolds came to Ohteago. from” St. Louls a few weeks ago to take a posi- tlon at the Matestic Hotel. He resigned, however. ‘Thankaglving Day. and the hotel management know nothing of him since that time. FEED HER RIGHT, The Sure Way to Rear a Healthy Girl. & police station, The relation of food to comfort and health impressed an Iowa teacher, who says: “After teaching school for several years I became a victim of insomnia, and night after night it was 3 or 4 o'clock in the morning before I would fall asleep, completely worn out. Of course I lost strength and brain power and became terribly nervous, until I was on the verge of nervous prostration. “About that time I read an article about Grape-Nuts that convinced me that my trouble was due to indiges-| tion, something I had never thought of before. I got two boxes of Grape- Nuts and began to use them for breakfast and supper with good, rich cream, Well, the change was some thing wonderful and my health came back in bounds. “Grape-Nuts took the place of non-| nourishing food, and I am now better n, : “T have! He then lost| INTHE a} Because a ci does like it, and if it costs For instance: clear Havana doesn’t tic. at the clear Havana. After tha Havena?”’ the three for 25c. k ‘Now here,’’ we left the plantation. hundred at the price cigar ever made for you. *t mean that you are going to please, it is not the cigar you want. The man who smokes a By the same token the smoker of the fine domestic or seed Havana often rebels Hence the initial question of our sales- men: ‘*Do you prefer domestic or clear Suppose the question had been asked of you and you fancied a mild domestic cigar GEN. BRADDOCK. tobacco of which the cigar is made since it Worzp, f ¢ gar is clear Havana it 25 cents and it fails to care for a mild domes- t it’s easy. ind. would 5 “is the | We have seen the We will sell you one | we can assure you the The shoe whose shape al+ | — ways gives perfect freedom in walking on account of its out-of-the-ordinary good fit. SOLD NOWNERE ELSE. ION Ee s COWARTE 274 Greenwich St., near Warren 8t,.8.) Mall Orders Filled. SEND FOR CATALOGUE, pon Foner pipes, etc, end making th New Publications. rat offéred amon: sample b> of Mention shade preferred, ‘She was told her mother about Grape-Nuts food she followed my advice, and its > to Erect the New Stables It ASR rete He ial serail toned sell CaP jobber would be glad to pay—that’s $4.00. | = 22 Se Reward. Has Planned. lin ‘he street, She was seeking employ-| harder, and never feel nervous or A sample box of twenty-five for $1.00, or * : ‘ né and he got her a position, She) worried. When I have finished my ie ee a ttesd avert the OUR CHILDREN 1 482 tM only a short time, he 8s Geveatigeasion’ atilligeal tava’ iors six for a quarter over : | u The loss of $7,000 worth of Jewels bY! One iene woman, With plenty of deter-|then aecepted his offer to go wi of reserve force and energy left, and counter. This is the nub of | CHANCES TO DO @ well-known society woman, who was] mination, is arrayed against the Ameri- | He says she tuld aim she was elgateen| when I go to bed at night T get sound the one-profit-principle of our IN PERIL f ¢ carrying them in a small handbag while ; can iixpress Company and is holding the |years old and refreshing sleep and get up early, Sere ° INESS IN Walking down Fitth avenue last Batur- | fort in jer shop of antiquities at No. The girl wept at house and | happy as a lark, stores. BUS «day, wax revealed to-day In an ndver-| past Forty-second street. All around | deolared she was rs old and] “T have had numbers of my schol- ae Ra peak |] The Most Startling Book of THIS MORNING’S Useimeat offering $1,000 reward an¥ “'no} hep the engines and drilis are excavat- | did not want to go home, Her mother/ars try the food, and I must tell Why, man, you're paying the Year? 4 auiestions asked" for the return of the| ing for the ew stables of the expross| lold the police she would bring birth} about one case. She was a puny, aA, ‘ 25 cents for three cigars— | ; goms. 5 ceeisany pul nisideun uae nite: lee Hnoatenite alton: cha (he enidhwasi nervmMaltUerElt and here mother OE ee ms ere J Shae An Arraignment of the Public WORLD. READ The’ advertisement referred the Ander tne Lge ovrielnheealy ook eyes | nly fifteen ¥ bla. told me she did not eat enough to Building, wv these very goods — ee Schools! of the Jewels to room 51 at No. 29 | {he pre: ciy tort yest mas Bought by ieee keep a bid alive. All she wanted Yor’, foro — ynder other labels in other in Cae ~ THE PEOPLE'S WANTS, Fourth avenue, which Is the office of] tho express company she refused (0, WM, BRUNING GETS DIVORCE.| Was candy end other trash, When 1 Saupe beove, — stores, and they are good at ill wArouse the Falters the Acme Security Company. An officer 4 of the company tok! an Evening World Wanted ‘to Pur- reporter to-day that the woman who lost Mothers of tbe Land. BRO BLISHING €0. nd then $9), but ehe fixe iy rice at $2,500 and refused to take a cent a Suen Italian Orche: that price. ' ra Leader Cor} ofect upon this child, shown in the jens, Buildings all around her were torn “11b| sunantor esr thaJewels Gid not wish her ane tO Oe a ag ee eee ec tabacee mmanutace (AWaxened energy of the body and \: Tod VANctiod Conia she {oer Punt, Beneute (of; the, repreeches,|4Ry to| instal new, plumoeK in ber litter, whe to-day grante? an interlocu,; nea aor} became’ entirely vaariee e \ ~ ‘oTv} Amusements...) 44 hate ch meernee ey ee een e tne canitane conditions, mera| tory.,decrée/of divoros by" Justice, Boot factory and she gained in’ bodily|i CONTRACT : This advertisemen: is a contract MAS situa + $21 “When she iomt the Handbag: contains) Ma: ane hed, In’ the rear leaked: and jin ithe Supreme Court | strength, lost all br nervousness, absolutely guaranteeing this cigar The CHRIST: Inetroction. 22772 At | ce. tai horseshoe ard alae Bureau of Encumbrances is notitied | TN Brunings | have | been married) and soon became a rosy, ehubby to be as represented, and carries the positive obligation on cur METROPOLIT. 145 | Walia Hee Unt OF TNE MORE eee [amventeen Youth OF Beer nN | young miss.” Naine siven by Postum part to please you or return your maney. cots | wpace in front of the store, 160 Pages of Text—32 in Color Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Mrs. Bi i if ih ig SO ee eee eee ana The Go-reepondert uated. In| ‘Chere’s @ reasoD. Vt, ; h 160 itestratlons—12 hes | cowtly }Long ago she got the hobby for collect- | the sult is Gabriel D'Binunglo, leader of} Pook in each package fora copy of onws hasty | ne TE a ee er ee eae nied ate aiee:” Sat. Lisuning ‘has iiied’ a sult for Fiogoo the famous little book, “The Road fovstare' a ators, 0 deter Samaagen ta Wellville,” r 4 eis WARE iS. i cA Daa illeeaelesat Ss s saclinblia 2 aS en. okinawa