The evening world. Newspaper, March 28, 1904, Page 3

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} SSUeeeemere moar as ee MRS. MAMIE ALMQVIST, BELIEVED TO HAVE KIDNAPPED NEIGHBOR’S CHILD WHOM SHE LOVED. VANISHED WITH CHILD SHE LOVED Urs. Almqvist, Childless, Grew Fond of Neighbor’s _Lit- tle Girl and Is Believed to Have Kidnapped Her. VAIN POLICE SEARCH FOR TRACES OF THEM. Woman When Last Seen Went Out with the Little One Prom- ising to Buy Some Candy for Her—No Harm Is Feared. Bearch 1s being made through the Onion Hil section of New Jersey to- day for Hazel Doyle, the four-year-old ebild who ts missing from the home of her uncle. Henry Bitter, of No. 141 East Thirteenth street. and for Mra, Mamie Almavist, who ix known as Mrs, Pe- terson, For some’ strange reason Mrs. Almqvist always gave the name of Mrs. Doyle before she was married. O#- car Almavist, husband of the woman, who shares the opinion of the police that his wife took the child from her home because of her devotion fo ts @lso aiding in the search. Since Thursday Hazel and Mrs. Peter- fon have been missing. The woman oc- cupled the rear apartments on the top floor of the East Thirteenth street house, and her devotion to the child has been marked since the Bitters brought Hazel from the gountry to live with them. The woman would take Ha- tel out for walks on fine days dnd buy her candy, In every way she showed her devotion for the little giri.*She is also very fond of animals. On the day the woman and child dis appeared Mrs. Peterson called to Hazel, “Come.” she said, “I want you to 50 out with me. I wili buy you some candy. The two walked together toward ‘Third avenue. This was the last seen of either of them. ‘Che husband of the missing woman told the police that it was possible that his wife had gone to Coney Island. where she has a number of acquaintances. he police have searched Cones Island from one end to the other. but there was no clue to the whereabouts of either the child or woman. Almavist then told the police that his wife had friends in New Jersey in the neighborhood of Uplon Hill, and that it was possible that the woman had gone there. Detective Lang, of the Fifth Street Station, went there to-day was simply fond of the child, and hav- ifm no children of her own has taken her away for a trip. My wife has been acting queer of late. Several times sne ‘away from home for two oF at a time without letting me her ,Whorcabouts, She ts pas- Midren ‘and animals, know of ately fond of ch Aha tT helleve {¢ she has taken ira away with her that the child Js safe." ' THE? WORLD: BABY ILL, SPEEDED AUTO. | wittam 5. Gonta Arrested, but Dincharged by Court. When William 8. Gould, of No, 16 Magistrate Ommen in the Yorkville Court to-day why he had exceeded the speed Imit with his automobile he plied: “My baby was sick and I was hurry ing for u doctor.” “L would do the same thing if f had @ baby.” said the Magistrate and then discharged Gould from custody. Gould was hurrying up Madison’ ave- nue at Sixtleth street yesterday after- noon when he was arrested by Police- trate that the machine was going at the rate of elghteen miles an hour, ee SCHOOL BOY DISAPPEARS. Yonth Wearing Green snit with Yellow Stripes Cannot He Found. A general alarm has been sent out from headquarters for Simon Y fifteen yours old, of No, street. The boy disappeared two weeks ago after he left his home on his way to Public School No. 22. He is Nght. complexioned and wore a green suit with yellow stripes and a green hat. He had seyenty-elght cents saved up at the time of his disappearance, |) to make a thorough search of the neigh. borhood. don't think that my wife has kid- napped Hazel, did not take this with him. His mother and brother have searched all the hospitals of the city for him. but no trace of the boy has been ob- sald the husband, "she! tained. GIRL IN NGHT DRESS CHASED ON ROTS ;Policeman Pursues the Pretty Daughter of Mrs. Ida Beyers- dorf Over Tops of Houses on West End Avenue. . East Sixtioth street, was asked by | man Jerry Murphy, who told the Magis- | Reversdort, of No. 433 West grain last night: “Am married and have started on the Ida {s lier elghteen-yeay-old daughter, | pretty, Uvely and willful dorf had reas was not married, telegram until she girl was in an apartement-house at No. } i West End avenue. . o'clock this morning when he got that close to her, and she called she traced the apartment at first, but as they entered the right place Ida darted out, in frafl night attire, and scaled the ladder lead- ing to the roof. f The policeman went efter the girl and for five minutes she and the policeman were dodging about chirencys and walls on the roofs of the houses: Ida was finally cornered on the roof two doors away and was led down to the rooms she had occupted. There she was dressed and taken to the West Sixty- eighth street police station. In the West Side Court to-day Mra. Beyersdorf said she did not belleve her daughter was married, but Ida insisted that she was and that her husband was in St, Louls, Magistrate Zeller sald that as the young woman was of age he could do nothing, and discharged her. But her Mother took her in tow then, and they left the court-room together, the young woman saying she might go back to live with her mother until her husband re- turned from St. Louis. ee ROBBERS GOT POSTAL FUNDS. PHILADELPHIA, March 28—The post-office at Wynnewood, a suburban station on the main line of the Penn- sylvania Railroad was entered by thieves rly to-day, Stamps and cash to the mount of $700 were stolen, An unex- Policeman Smith, on the beat, to enter ploded charge of nitro-glycerine was found in the safe door. MONDAY EVENING, EDWARD M. FIELD [9 IN BELLEVUE — Man Who Failed for Two Million | @aih Dollars Will Be Examined, Again to Determine Menta!! Responsibility. ' =" PHYSICIANS SAY HIS RECOVERY IS DOUBTFUL. | Went to Residence of Henry A. Brigg, a Classmate, Asking for Money and Bed—Actions | Lately Were Irrational. After wandering around for several months, giving to the control of worrte fin erses, Edward M. Field roof Cyrus W. Field, the renowned entist and father of the Atlantic cable, has been placed in the paycho pathic ward at Bellevue Ho: and) Will bo examined hy allenists to-day to determine jis mental responsthility Mr. Field went to the re Henry A. Brigg, at No, 1 Park, nilly It 4 nerey ast night and told Mr. Brigg that he would have to have some mor for n bed. Mr. Brig was a classm of Field at Harvard and at one tin @snociated in business with him. He gave hin what Kked for and ax Field seemed {ll asked him to come 4 and sit down. Field went into th: ement and sitting on a chalr was soon asl Mr. Brigg concluded he | was in no condition to take care of te avenue. Dr. Field, tt ts sald, telephoned Bellevue Hospital to send an ambulance for his father at once. When Mr. Brigg heard that an am- old friend go to the hospital in that vehicle, the should be cared for at once Little Hope of Recovery, Dr. Field was at the hospital with his father to-day and could not be seen. His wife, however, said that Mr. Field had recently been to Cuba wandering around, or he would have been brought to his home and cared for. Mri there is Little hope of Mr, Field's re- far from rational, it is said, and have occasioned much to his friends, They assert that it has been impossible to influence him in mat- TARCH 28, 1904. MISS WHELEN, WHO IS ENGAGED TO MARRY ROBERT GOELET. From Philndelpliia comes t daughter of Mr, The engagement hus been rumored for months, himself and telephoned to kis.son, Dr. | city. Cyrus W. Field, of No, 119) Madison | persistently denied, Miss Whelan is a sister of Mrs. Craig Biddle, and ts well known in the New- bort colony, where she met Mr. Goelet. bulance was coming he sent out for] ters @ conch, but the ambulance arrived | coul first and he finally consented to let his} 2&°?, Pertaining to welfare which WIDOW GETS INSURANCE. Jennings Awarded 83,400 Ver- ewal Fight, qually powerless to do anythin dict After S81 Mrs. Mary Wells Jennings, widow of was awarded a verdict in Justice Scott's part of the Supreme Court against the Loyal Addi- Association, which had refused to pay a $2,000 death benefit to | rgeon declaring that he| gifted father, EB tered Wall stri of Field, came ward Morse Field en- t ax head of the firm ley, Welchers & Co., be- a power In its affairs, and from that position he sunk by degrees until among A gang of tramps in a police court, charged with vagrancy, eS M ST. LUKE’S HOME Sister Jessie Gertrude, Field denied that her hus-| some, band had sent an ambulance for his| police to find and ar father. dell,’ a a made c It was anid at the hospital to-day that | made her escape The sister did not tell the police how covery. the girl made her es: Of late Mr. Field's actions have been| girl and that his son didn't know ot his|FLED FRO! The, ground of the refusal wa Jennings had for @ policy as a cor cealed this fact when €: ¢ applied a sec- ‘The case has been fought through the is described as 5 feet brown hair and dark eyes. When sho left the home she wore « ain and annoyance! prown jacket, long, ight tan-colored skirt, ani Bridget—Thim announcement of the engagement of Miss Elsie Harry Whelan, jr., to Robert Goelet, of this but heretofore has been curries with It $700 in- terest and $70 costs, making an aggre. mate of $3,400. — Tollers of the Pace. (From the Indianapolis Journal.) workin: ov 3 ROEBLINGS MAY EACCSED. Responsibility for the Hotel Dar- ' lington Disaster Likely to Be | Charged Against the Big Company. : ENGINEER ROBERT E. MOSS | MAKES HIS REPORT. Gross Negligence in Use of Frozen Concrete, He Says, Helped to Cause Collapse of Big Structure. The John A. Roebling Company may have to tace responsibility civilly, if not criminally, for the Hotel Darlington | disas As a result of an Investigation made by Engineer Robert E, Moss, who | forwarded his report to Borough Preale dent Ahearn to-day, the District-Attor- |ney may be requested to inquire inte | the liability of the Roeblings, In his communication to the Borough President, Engineer Moss says: “There no question but that the professional mind will dictate that the use of frozen filling In, in spaces not planned for im the original drawings, was an act of | &ross Indivcretion, I with the tes- timony of Ingpector art of the contractors to put in a sya tem of fireproofing which was not ap- uroved by the legal authorities, Defective Fi “In tracing the origin of the of the Darlington Hotel.” adds heer Moss, “the authorities should not jlose sight of the fact that, according to | the testimony and evidence, inadequate and defective fireproofing’ was which, by reason of Its dead weight and the absence of solidifying element, tend. ed to impair rather than: strengthen the structure.” It was the Pep aeteenl who secured the contract for the freproofing work. Engineer Moss adds: “It is clear from Mr. Parsons's testimony that the pi gause of the collapse of the Darlington Hotel was due to a lack of lateral sup- port to the columns, Dead Weight to Building. “It appears from the testimion: }in thie” building. the ‘concrete, Swat, made up the fireproof flooring, did not tend in the slightest degree to stiffen the building, inasmuch ae ¢€ was put in tn @ frozen condition, and not only did not do the work of giving lateral support, but was actually a dead weight jto the building. It is not safe to wu concrete fireproofing in freezing weather. Mr, Peck, inspector in the Butlding Department, when he .was asked | the investigation If the parties wh2 had the matter of installing the fir: Proofing were equally criminally lables as those who were openly condemned [by the Coroner's jury, replied: ‘The idence seems to Indicate this.’ Borough President Ahearn will fore | ward Engineer Most’ communicatior the District-Attorne: Try Just One Day of the Hearty No Other Tonic in the World Like| lt--Gives Almost Instant Effect-- Braces, Invigorates and Cures. No other tonic in the world ts Ike Paine's Celery Compound; no other remedy takes so simple and actentific a way to perform {ts wonders.as this remedy vand vitallzer discovered by the eminent ‘Prof, Edward E. Phelps, of Dartmouth ‘University. Paine's Celery Compound aots direct upon the inner nerves, feeding them Na- ture's nerve food—celery—Alling them with vitality, An@ through the inner nerves it acts upon the blood, purifying It, strength- ening {t, making it pure and strong and red and healthy. No other remedy purl- fles no gently. Paine's Celery Compound 1 tho one spring remedy that purifies without purging or weakening the system in any way. Nothing that ts written or printed can give you any idea of the full luxury and delight of being always at your boat, able to live your life for all that in in it You cannot understand {t until you bave once felt the exultant thrill of pure, rich blood and abundant nerve force, made by Paine's Celery Compound, 2 Don't walt. Go to your druggist. Try Paine's Celery Compound to-day. Take just one dose when’ you go to tace the hard part of the day's trials, Seo how much better you feel. ‘tww much more easily the trials roll own, Wibe vaine's Celery Compound ts not = mere atimulant—it gives to the nerves the actual substance that they need for food, bulld- tee ing them up and giving them strength. In this way it gives real nerve activity, in- stead of the false activity imparted by mere stimulants, It is the best spring tonte. Tired, weak-nerved, thin-blooded, un- happy men and women get quick, sure, hearty health from thin celebrated Nerve ier and Tonic. It drives away las- gives courage and strength, There rich increase in blood supply, and soon the whole system thrills with hearty’ health, A CASE IN POINT, “When I war a child IT had St. Vitus dance and serious affection of the nerves, Last summer, under the strain of family nursing, my nerves gave out again, and for several months I was irritable and moody, though I did not realize it at the time. “Morbid fanctes made my life a burden, and I began ft suspect nearly everybody. Mother began talking about sending mo off to recuperate in a change of scene. The superintendent of our Sunday school reo- commended Paine's Celery Compound and brought a hottie to mother one day. | “I commenced to grow stronger before the bottle was finished, and in two months 1 was feeling better than I had felt in my Ife, and looked it, though I say {t my- self. “My friends are astonished at the transformation. 1am hearty, well @ strong, and can do my work with more pleasure than ever. “I sleep well and have not had a spasm ‘ * MISS GERTRUDE BARTHOLD, Indigestion, Neuralgia, Né : Could Not Sleep Well. rvous Breakdown. since I began taking Paine's Celery Com- '—Gertrude -Barthold, 11 West 18th street, New York. Recognized as the Official Tonic and Nerve Vitalizer by Leading Institutions, Public Asylums and Homes. All doctors throughout the country know the formula of Paine's Celery Compound. It 18 no secret. Doctors in institutions Prescribe it regularly, especially in institu- tions for sickly mothers, and for the aged. They know the power of Paine's Celery Compound to restore strength and prolong Hfe. It is @ priceless help to the aged. A’ CASE IN POINT, “T am one hundred and one years old. I was always considered a well-preserved man and was very active, doing most of thy own farm work until I was more than sixty years old. In 1880 I sold and came to the eily to lve with my son and shortly af- terward I began to have a gradual) falling off in strength, ‘All my muscles arew weak and for thren | summers T had summer complaint very bad-,| ly. from which my bowels did not recover fully, I was about thirty vounds leas than I was when I came to the city, and my skin was hanging 100 ‘and it was only natural, but 1 was not ready to kive up vet, 1 read about Paine Compound m an advertisement and com- menceg taking it, “I found that I could eat as heartily as ever:and that my exercise did not make! me tred. ; { “It {snot Yoo much to nay that T feal ten or fifteen years younger, and I have re- gained the flesh I lost. Paine's Celery) Compound I can reccommend as a good medicine for persons well along in years, | “I am good for many years yet. I am! taking your Compound regularly. ‘H. Moyer, 444 East 78th street, Doctors Rely on It—Con-/The Most Marvelous Record of Any Med- stantly Prescribe It—A Standard Tonic in . the Medical ical Discovery — Its Wonderful Merit Ac- knowledged by Every School of Med- icine. schools of the healing art—no one formula could ever point to cases no wonderful, 0 numerous or #0 rapid as those which go to make the marvellous record of Paine's Celery Compound, In every zone, in every quarter of the globe, the virtues of and the cures of this celebrated Nerve Vitalizer An ever Increasing fame. done more and ts relied on by more people than any other remedy, In cases ‘of sprin weak, the run down, the discouraged and | the nervous, 1 thought ‘this was olf age coming on’ | Celery | fered agonies from neu | sald tt was all due to my weakened nerves John) JOHN H. MEY ‘ow York, | He ty what he likes" A CASE IN POFNT, NEW YORK Nov. 19, 1903.—"Paine's Celery Compound has debn worth a thou- rand dollars to me. 1 would certainly not Stake thot sum and give back the beneft I have received from your remedy. “Last spring the strain of my stonal duties left me a nervous wreck, 1 went home, and for weoks wns nursed by | my wother as an absolute invalid. My digestion was very wonk, and I sut- Igin. Our doctor but he wns not able to better, “A gitl friend who heard ak® me any ot my iliness ta all the history of medicine—in all | and Tonic are known, and are growing ia) As a apring health maker and health| protector Paine’s Celery Compound bas | breakdown Paine’s Celery Compound !s the| | sure, easy and unfailing resource of the rofen- | ooattets MISS FLORENCE Bracing Health that Thousands Upon Thousands Are Getting from the Celebrated Nerve Vitalizer and Tonic. Paines Celery Compound. Not a Patent Medicine, but - the Most Famous Fore mula Ever Evolved-by Medical Science, tent me o bottle of Paine's Celery: Com pound, with such a cheerful, hopeful. let- ter, telling what {t bad done for her, that I was encouraged to give it a serious trial, “I took four bottles, an@ by the end ef summer I was well—edeoluely well. My neuralgia was gone, and it has never re- turned. “And I can eat any kind of food with- out far. “Not since T was a child have I felt such buoyant health and spirits, Our doctor saw me. before I returned to the city and be was astonished. f am happr to send you this new photo | graph as a proof of the benefit I have re cetved from Paine's Celery Compound.”— (Miss) Florence Worden, 314 West Forty- seventh street. Try Paine's Celery Compound YOUR: SELF when you feel exbausted—when you grow tired sooner than you should—when | vou lose patience with the irritating cares of daily Mfe-—when you feel that your hopes and ambitions are not as high ae they used to be—when you spend a sleep- less nigbt—when you get up almost as | weary aa when you went to bed—when you | are worrl —when the spring tired feeling | puts its heavy touch upon you—stop 17 | ttme—now | You need the omd blood, the serve ralzia. !by strength and fresh vitality that is eiven ‘AINE'S CELERY COMPOUND eit Slots aie Go to Your Druggist TO-DAY---get one bottle of Paine’s Celery Compound---See w DIFFERENT it will make you feel.

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