The evening world. Newspaper, December 12, 1903, Page 4

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ARS CONVICTION Little Box-Like Cell. Retain the Color In Her Cheeks by a System of Regular Breath. ing Exercises. BY MABEL PARKER. It is a relief, and it i2a't, to get back from the hun- @reds of accusing eyes that are cb stantly shifting from the progecutio: witnesses to me, and it is reat from the continued Question. and answer that seemed wo pound into my: brain. It Is a struggle, however, to steady my nerves against the anxtety to have it all over with, to know finally wheth Iam going to be a free woman ag @r branded as a felon, to spend lon ~ years in jail, I have spent just 121 dayg in this litte box-like room with its iron-barred door and the damp gray lght that fills these prison corridors. By reading and writ- ing and sketching 1 have managed to while away the haurs and ease the aw- tul strain, Lived “Without Herself.” I have practised mentally ving with- out myself, and until my trial began had succeeded wonderfully. Many have remarked that notwiths.anding my jon coniinement my cheeks have none ol the prison pallor in them. * in fact, some have hinted that I have maintained my color by the practice of those delicate little atts which are gu wall known lo some women, but ot true, 1 have kept up my color Rorouen the practice of a breathing ex- role, I found during the early days of my confinement that I felt better in every way if I devoted thirty minutes eyery morning and evening to continu- ous deep breathly F. Toward the end of the exercises 1 fvel the blood flowing hot and fresh through al} my yelns, and when T finish 1 am atingle from head to foot, ed over the break mad> wlio, the handwriting ex- ‘infallible’ oman when pert. ‘This shown a slip of paper containing a Hunvier of signatures, teatified that thoy were all in the same handwriting (mine), although a few minutes before Detective Sergt, Peabody had sald on the stand that he had written two of the slentures on that sheet. Tutle Mr. Train is my ideal of what a prosecutor should be. He is courteous And gentlemanly and nevor uses any of the Brutal methods employed by other ible prosecutors T have heard of. Ho is mak awful strong case against me, however, and I begin to tremble for e the outcome. BURGLARS RETURN POLICEMEN S SHOTS Three Men Seen Running Away | MRS. CREIGHTON ON THE STAND. She, Discovers that She Has Nerves, but Has Managed to Get Along Quite Well in Her rs “HAS DODGED PRISON PALLOR| ¢ Mrs. Parker Discovered a Way to| “ UR. ‘TRAD N QUOTES SHAKESPEARE; (Drawn in court by Mabel Parker, on trial for forgery.) 3 o wb? $EDDOQOD SSSPHFP DOL DSGB2O3-4 PHIRPPOTSIIS? i toee oeeeeoeses: ® SET HOUSE ON FIRE Pa DO'S BARK TO KEEP QUT COLD) = SAVES A FAMILY Intoxicated Wanderer Was En- Terrier Arouses Master, Who joying the Heat When Police-| Find His Wife and Three Chil- man Spied the Flames and dren Unconscious from the Turned In an Alarm. Effects of Escaping Gas, The foolishness of Michael McDonough} The barking of @ pet terrier saved an piaced In Jeopardy the liven of scores of[ARtire family from asphyalation by gas men and women and children in the |!" Bloomileld, N. tenement-houne at No, 24 Kast Twenty-| Gustave A, Laufler, @ druggist, at Ne. second street to-day. In hin dsive to] 18 Orange strect, war asleep in the ep warm he bullt a fire on the wooden| House. In another room hin wife and fuor of the ddorway of the house, and | three children were sleeping. Laufer was had it not been for the appearance of /®W#kened by the barking of the dor Po'lceman Levy, serious results migat} and had dimeulty in breathing, but he luye followed. ‘ Iran into the other room in which his whhtanlerhet tan Fy Pe manonoualy wife and children were sleeping and. flames. He had gavhored paper’ and |'htew open the windows. pleces of wood toget! id the pile was | The wife and children were uncon- burning briskly. The woodwork of the | scious, and Laufer, after vain! bullding and ‘the floor were nlready | onda ablaze, anid the man was making him: |‘? revive them, telephoned for a phyat- Acif comfortable in the heat jelan. After working over them an hour, man waa evidently intoxicated, oth d child he Wimneolt Geciared. when takes iorshe eee ane children ware revived. stalon-house, and the police ort The gas was escaping from a broken Hieve that he tad any ouner iden thea | main tn the aireet and had Collowed the 0 gel warm. le looked Gin oO completely 1O eenalee tne earlOUeneee ee Ie: rauling | coding every room, But for the tiavely from a First Avenue Saloon Fight Desperately When Driv- en to a Vacant Lot. Three policemen and as many alleged durgiars fought desperately for a quar- ter of an hour early to-duy in a vacant Jot in First avenue, between Twenty- fourth and Twentyc0ttir streets, after @n exciting chase, The shots awak- ened tenants in the surrounding bulld- ings and frightened men ran to the street to learn the cause of the dis- turbance. ‘The alleged thieves were finally over- powered and taken to the Fifth street police station, where they -described § themselves as John Anderson and John s McLaughlin, both of No. 629 First aye- nue, and John Johnson, of No. 400 Kast ¢ ‘Twenty-first street, They are charged with breaking into the liquor store of Patrick J. Grace, at First avenue dud Twenty-fifth street. ae A milkman on his early rounds heard| + © crash of falling glass and saw three en breaking into the liquor atore, He attracted the attention of Roundsman Stanton, who, with Policemen Levy and MeConnell, started for the store, When @ block away they saw three men com- ing out and gave chase. ‘The fugitives ran up First avenue, and, coming to the vacant lot, turned in. The apace was littered with plies of debris and old wagons, and the men were Jost In the darkness. The police- men, groping among the wagons, final- ly came upon the alleged thieves and the fight followed. - ‘Tae policemen started to fire when the men made a break for liberty and the snots were returned. Being totally dark their aim was poor and no harm was done. Each policeman picked out & man and finaly overcame him. When the men were taken to the sta- tlon-house the policemen went back With Janterns to search the lot, They found severa) hotties of whiskey, five Moxes of cigara and a box of chew- ing tobacco. that had been taken from Une saloon. Burglar S hen Window or \ Broadw: Store, ‘A burglar hurled a rock through the WW window of F. N. Vincent & ¢ er of Broadway and Twenty-séc street, to-day and eastied off two over- oats and a pair of trousers, ‘Phere is a restaurant below loth: $$ a BROKE GLASS, STOLE GARB. Before the palloeman tode Hien io" the | Warning of the terrier the entire. faruily statlonshouser and. the polive donot be, | Would have Deen suffocated. Tauner fire. The lower floor af the building |sas# he will buy a gold collar for the was all ablaze and the amoke had gone | dog. Up through the obher oars and awak- ee ened the tenuate, who othe street, half clothed, ‘The fre was put out with FIRE DESTROYS JEWELRY. culty. When MeDonough waa arraigned in sae Xorkville Court to-day the sald that he| ince tu Maiden Lane Store Win- iad no intention of burning the building dow Causes 5 Dut merely built the fire to warm Wm: | gic. fo tic anew aan eae self. Deputy Fire Marshal H. W. De| Fite in the show-window of I, Stalignon told the Magistrate that he|Sweet & Co.'s jewelry store, Nos. did not belleve McDonough entered the|vnd 39 Malden lane, to-day, endangered building with any madtclous Intent, and| many thousands of dollars’ worth of the prisoner was accordingly discharged. |joweiry, ‘The fire started after the — breaking of an electric. globe. ‘The window was decorated for Christmas and is sald. ta have contained $15,00) worth of valuables, The window cur- tain blazed up, and the flames became ro hot that the Jewelry In the windows could rot be reached. Tn the store there were great quanti- tle of Jewelry, whieh r Placed in safes and. the safes é When the firemen arriv he flames were quickly extinguished. S$, Ratves, a member of the firm, sald: 'There wus such a lot of jewelry and diamonds in the window that we will Fire in Quarters of American not beable’ to lertimate. the: tons” unt Fakirs’ Society Does $2,000 sui Lae FAVOR. aah HOUNDING. Damage and Destroys Valu-| x 5 able Mementoes. ¥., Deo, 12.—Tha sox “County Fave placed theese! Ives on record as favoring the hounding of deer and will petition the legislature for the repeal of the M jouncing, law. Fire {n the American Fine Arts Build- ing, at No, 25 ‘West Fifty-seventh street, to-day destroyed property of the American Fakirs’ Society, vulued at NO SECRET. 2.000, und for a time threatened the] There is no secret about destruction of the handsome aR te ; i 5 ‘nd {ts valuable contents. E Scott's Emulsion of Cod The fire started in a closet on the} Liver Oil. The label tells fourth floor, 4 Art Students’ c | the whole story. There is a Known. Tho flames had gained -|knack in making it. The erable headway, when Janitor Ruy H 1 mond, smelling smoke, traced it to the| Oly secret about it is the closet. He turned in an alarm, but be-| secret of its success Aierhon Eekiee | _Ehis year, when cod liver y of the Society been ruined. ‘These be-| oil is very scarce and high, longings juded costumes, musical in- struments, Valuable papers wid cata.| all kinds of cheap, inferior logues that were greatly pried. The! ojls are used to take its place, firemen: confined the blaze to the ce and all sorts of things pre- On the lower floors of the tuilding} sented as substitutes. Think Dhiable: paletin ose | Of petroleum bein taken as meting) hom ot | a substitute for cod liver oilt —too absurd. Think of the so-called wines, extracts and cordials of cod liver oil!— | they are simply the shadow without the substance; no wtore and it was epen for customers the crash came. ‘The proprietor d tie nolse and rushed upstairs, but ‘burglar had vanished. Bven’ the Witotman Boas in the middle of not feet distant trom at window kuew nothing ot FSO the yindgy is $100. i for Ate. Mare! thet ne never heard dt payed that apeive| tne aay cl way bax Druxgista, Muntele Couch rosexesd Ha: de | food value in them. o-day in the sult of Jacob Schneider, asl Ga eg) . assignee, of the claim of Max Rendix tn}. Scott's Emulsion —* The rom Herman Hans Wetsler, for tie Old Reliable” is the same 48 violin soloist at the fourth iu lea of conceriv in Carnegie Mall yesterdays onlay Ang dareen. rity can bay ie fitewea Wetzler broke the con- etang ity ene PuMey tract for four spncerta ecause ‘endix| be absolutely depended upon Yefumed to play’ a phrase in Moaart’s Symphony, in the ‘manner ordered by! at all times. He said it was inartistic and ‘We'll send you s sample free upon request. ¢ ACUTE @ DOWNE: cae Peart Strost. N, ¥. $04059966 48640665. 15409994004 ODDEROSHDEEOODO® DIPS FISHOSESSSS SHDIDTDSOOS WED IN THEIR-OLD AGE, THEY GO ADRIFT Carl Buser, Stricken with Pneu- monia During His Honeymoon, Is Now Threatened with Evic- tion by His Landlord. It Is @ gad honeymoon that aged Carl Buser and his more aged spouse are spending in a iittle one-story drick house in Liberty street, New Durham, @ settlement on the flats back of Mo- boken, Buser has pneumonia, and Frank Bloom, who owns the land on whioh the little house stande has brought <dispossess proceedings. Buser is sixty-three years old. He had been a widower twice when he S| met Mrs. Mary Klebel, of the Hudson Boulevard, West New York. Mrs. Kiebel is sixty-five years old, and her matrimonial experience had been gained in two marriages, Buser called on Mrs. Kiebel last Wednestlay evening. Outside the rain fell in torrents and the wind dashed It against the windows. Tho fife was 0 cheerful that Buser contemplated awith dismay a return to his lonely quarters alone and popped ‘the question. He was accepted on the spot, Justice of the Peace Albert Stein, of North Bergen, wan called and the marriage ceremony was performed. Caring nothing for the min, the couple tramped to Buser’s dwelling. ‘The next morning the old man wes unable to get out of bed. Before the day was over he had developed pneu- monla, Mr. Bloom, to whom {s owing con- alderable money on the leasehold, heard of the marriage of Buser, and was not pleased, A constable called at the little Buser house fast night with a notitt cation to Buser and his child wife to vacate forthwigh. Friends of the pair in. West New York and New Durham are engaged to-day In taking up a sub- orl ies to keep a roof over their hea ——_——_ GIRL OVERCOME BY GAS. Flora De Beilo, twenty years old, of No. 165 West Houston street, was over- come by gar to-day at her home. The police repor’. the case accidental, That Xmas box of cigars CAPT. MARRYAT (lnvincibles), $1.50 a box (25) a full-sized, 54 inch Invincible, all Havana filled, in Sumatra wrapper, hand-made—the kind that ordinarily brings two for a quarter in high-class mild domestics. PALMA de CUBA (Londre Grande), $3 a box (50) a clear Havana, Cuban hand-made, full size 4} inch—a cigar that costs the jobber the price you i pay. We.make the cigar ourselves—nothing wasted between the plantation and you: GEN. BRADDOCK (biplomaticos), $1 a box (25) a mild domestic, wrapped in Sumatra leaf, made by hand—a sweet, pleasant smoke. you would do well to get such a cigar three for a quarter, FELIX GARCIAS, $1.50 a box (50) a remarkably good grokeeen fact, the high grade nickel cigar, usually sold for $2.50 a box. By cutting out the old-time selling expenses we save you the difference. PORTO RICO BREVAS, $1.25 a box (50) a cigar that sells everywhere else at 5 cents each worth the money, too—but as we handle half the tobacco product of Porto Rico we simply give you the benefit of our pur- and for $2.00 a box chasing power. CONTRACT: This advertisement is a contract » absolutely guaranteeing these cigars te be as represented, and carries the positive obligation on our part to please you or return your money, eats Vata Wi biome MORPHINE, Opium and Other Drug Habits CURED FREE. Many Cases Are Cured by the Free Treatment, Twenty onderful cure fens, and patients will great tenet even thounh ther éo} ROX. E,, Beach ntinue with reatm ed physisian writes to a broter Soc- Major-Gen. H. C. Corbin It beats anything I bay tor: ever tuten, T'curga ny bower oanty, ater es.|Vames Creelman auming al my axil tod wat ot =x) Chief Sylvester, of Washington Lieut.-Col. Espitallier, or tne rronch army kpown to the medical world in general.”* Dr, CHARLES THOMPSON. Another ph: dan, well k thi - out the East, a few days ano wrote as|Q, HONTY follows: “T haye given the Opium Habit years of SIM@eON Ford study in Chine, India and this country, and I will admit that I am a child and Lo} novice in the presence of thin AMAZING Rev. Geo. C. rimer medicine. Surely ther ing medit in a medicine comparatively un- known, within a few that could pro- ust be an astound-| Justice Wm. S. Bennett To- Morrow’s Sunday Wort a7?,7ill Kindly send 4 large teat bottle of Grover Cleveland (P™Ynied'stie" *) Fredérick: Hobbs Governor Wm. Dinwiddie Langdon Smith Margaret Hubbard Ayer Mrs. Osborn Belle Gordon Margaret Kent a Charles W. Saalburg C. De Fornaro George Herriman duce such good results, Six thousand physicians use this medict in their private practice. More CUR! made in the past two years than all others in the World combined, -Fifty thousand people attest its wonder- New tight REAL LIFE and happiness, and a knowl- edge that you will be free once more, All = ciate Cleveland. these you will experience from test. Closest feeling of sympathy fidence exists between our Med! and patients, All letters returned if de- Sport Versus Slaughter. The Cooking of Wild Ducks. On Having One’s ‘‘Eye Wiped.” Hardships of the Duck Hunt. Duck Hunters Born, Not Made, sired. ST. JAMES SOCIETY, Sulte 145,1183 Broadway,New York ————— ee" One of Rex Beach’s Best Efforts: “Guthrie Boyd of the Shooting Star.” A Stirring Adventure Story.‘ You Pay §12,Week, NO SECURITY. OPEN EVENINGS CLOTHING 2» CREDIT The Most Talked-Of Royal Pair in Russia. DEN! S_—W OMENS CHILDRENS, with Su MARIE rb Photographs of GRAND DUKE -VLADIMIR and © Ty PRICES. ITY. ndien’ Devenaletn suite, rice 8. NATIONAL OUTFITTING CO., what Happened to a Maryland Village 160 W. 28d, N. ¥.5 G2 W. 125th, N. ¥. 68 Newark ave., Jersey City. Priest Who Is the New Pope’s a. Brains Going West? A Unique Study of “Who's Who,” with a Map Showing Some Surprising Things. The New East River Bridge. A Superb Photograph, Together with Interesting Facts and the” Opening Day Programme In Detail. £ Descri i FEDE Major-General Henry C. Corbin’s tion of Coming’ JOINT MANOEUVRES OF STATE AND > L TROOPS. A Spirited Interview by James Creelman. The Latest Photograph of At retail Veteran Chief of Police Richard Sylvester. Writes All About the CRANKS THAT PESTER THE PRESIDENT. How George A. Beaton Will Entertain a Whole Town at Dinner, ( ( Mrs. Adolf Ladenburg, the Celebrated Cross-Country Rider, ABed Quilt Worth $6,000 Owned by a New York Woman. All the Facts About It. Story of a Little Armless Girl who Lives.in New Jersey | How She Sews, Writes, Plays thé Organ, Eats, Opens the Door.’ Plays with Her Dolly and Story, with Photographs Specially Taken for The World Magazine! ° ‘Fake Pearls in the Jewel Collections of Rich New Yorkers to School. A Beautiful True, Gov. Dinwiddie, AN B.Altmandey. IMPORTANT SALE OF FORS Will be held on MONDAY, December Elghteentd St., Nineteenth $t,, Sixth Avewme, Hew York. 1 one French Army Lieutenant Describes for The World the Ragord Flight of the Great Lebaudy Balloon, Which Sailed 46 Miles in'1 Hour and 41 Minutes. “The Social Triangle.” Do New Yorkers Live Beyond Their Means ? Discussed by Simeon Ford, Dr. Lorither and Others Qualified to Speak. A Splendid Short Story by: 0. HEN teat aot Large Philippine Province, Writes a Stirring Description 0 Exceptionally Fine Photographs. The Most Remarkable Robber Band the Law Fofces of the Eastern States Have Ever Dealt With, Is tha. Subject of an Interesting Article by Langdon Smith. -HUNTERS, and Accompanies it with . |Fashions, Home Hints and Puzzles. Bright Humor and Miscellany, SOMETHING WORTH READING ON EVERY PAGE OF TO-MORROW'S WORLD MAGAZINE. '

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