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1&@ ‘8 SARE ~ AULLOF EWELS Thieves trie Up te Up to Salvatore Manzella’s Liquor Store with Horse and Wagon and Carted Away the Valuables, TWO BLOCKS AWAY FROM ~_ “POLICE HEADQUARTERS. In the Shadow, Too, of the Mulberry Street Station, but Robbers Seemingly Worked Without Fear. 7 Balvatore Manzella, importer of wines end liquors, at No, 190 Elizabeth street, two and a half blocks from Police feadquarters and three blocks from the Mulberry street station, lost to-day an 900-pound safe, in which he had stored about $1,000 tn Jewelry, sliverware and money. Burglars in the early morning fight got Into his place and carted off aving nothing but footmarks leuths of the department to ‘The burglary happened in the small, @till hours when the copperg y and the desk sergeants snooze. “Beating his weary tramp up and down’ Elisabeth street from Bleecker to Hester, Police- man O'Dea first learned of the burg- lary when the excited owner discov- ered at 6.30 o'clock A. M, that his jew- @la and his money and his 800-pound Wagon There, store covers the entire @round floor of what is otherwise @ Yenement four stories high, He’ lives at No. 102 Elizabeth street, not very far from his store, About 3 o'clock a wagon (was eeen in front of Manaella’s place by some Itallan workmen who rise early to go to work. They pald no at- tention to the wagon other than to take note that the horse looked as if he used to drawing heavy loads, Three hours later Manzella opened the front door of his shop. He had a suspicion that things were not right @ account of the plentitude of alr that was in his place, The back door was open and the draught nearly took him off his feet, Mangella’s subsequent In- Wn left him speechless. ad a fear that a burglary had Fee) place and his Immediate hurry we to see how much they had left him, hen he reached his office, which partitioned off from the rest of ¢ Store, his eyes bulged and his han hung lifeless ». foo. wi pM his sides. The Then there was a great ded! of nolse and almost as much gesticulation. The polcoman a. (roll his beat was soon ie and In short time Head- quart hove shadows of safety were tho o extend at least three and a halt blocks, was notified, Acting Cap- tain Lasky, of the Mulberry street sta- ton, has put two of ost t men—Sullivan and Greete-on ihe a Has to Patrol Eight Bl Patrolman O'Dea has ie Nanation which haa satisfied Ry Alone he has dight Nock Ma trol from midnight to8 A.M. Acting Sapt. Lasky had nine men last’ night to send out for duty Instead of the twenty which {s the usual number, Va- gations and sick leaves have reduced hte force, Aebidepe soatly 8 jurely. the store by snapping the fron bars nat guarded the window on the side they packed the safe out of the store to the rear door, which leads Into the hallway of the tenement ‘Then i, rolled the safe to the street, ID) and, placing it In the wagon, drove off. The re of the tenement say they heard nothing. In the rear there {s &@ court, around which are other tene- ments. 89 far the police have found no one who knows of the burglars or the nafe. Some of the Italians who have a sus- picion as to the identity of the burglars Ray they are kindly men, who rarely \ MISS BOWNE MAY G0 MAD; ment io Church. It was reported in South River, N. J., to-day that Miss Julla Bowne, the beautiful girl who eloped with her pas- tor, the Rey, J. F, Cordova, is under Medical treatment and Is in danger of going insa: When Conover Bowne, the girl's father, was asked about this report he wal; “My daughter ts as well as we can expect; that is all I will say.” Dr. J. E. Wood, who ts said to have advised the girl's removal to some dis- tant place, where she can forget the painful incidents of the last few months, also declined to talk about the rumor, Neighbors of the Bownes, however, say that the report is founded. They tell of hearing the girl's agonizing sobs all night long. Sometimes she is violently hysterical, and raves ineo- herently of her wanderings with Cor- dova, Bownes Expected to Move, Tt {a understood tha soon as the charges against the Rev, J. F, Cordova have been disposed of the Bown will move to another part of the State. The clergyman, according to Deacon George Farr, bas handed in his resig- nati ®. That it will be accepted there is little doubt, Friends of Cordova, however, are in consultation with Bishop Fitagerald, and it Is not con- sidered unlikely that when the trouble has blown over the pastor will be reinstated. Headed by the women of the church & reaction has set in in Cordova's favor, Several members of the church who read his open letter to the newspapers believe him more sinned against than sinning. They argue that the pastor was the victim of circumstances, Villagers Bitter Against Pastor. Outside the fold, however, feeling Is still high. “Cordova would find South River mighty unhealthy right now," remarked one of the villagers to-day. The Cordovas' household effects have not yet been moved. When they are the village will have a chance to learn his whereabouts, Harry Dudley, who as- sumed charge of the Bowné household, so far as publicity was concerned, has returned to Brooklyn, The tponement of the hearing In the Conk Eplarnpal Church to Pantry ty charges against Cor- foree the elders of the church to drop proceedings against the minister, Cordova's wife, whom he !s accused of having ill-treated until the neighbors interféred In the interest of humanity, has forgiven him, For Cordova, now|M that the church trial has been post- poned, possibly indefinitely, the way Is easy. But in Julla Bowne South River has a Hester Prynne. Confined to Her Room, Never was an explation more pitiless than the one that this girl muse face. Almost a week ago she returned, Bince that time she has not left her room, PASTOR CORDOVA HAPPY OO —— Girl Who Eloped with Minister Is De- nounced by Women, Who Defend the Man, and He Now Seeks Reinstate- except for one brief drive with her brother. This drive, taken the day after her return, was tp have constituted a test as to how the little community would look upon the repentant girl. “Shameless!” cried the girl's former Intimates as they turned away from Julla’s apparently gay greeting. They did not know that behind the smiles were bitter tears; did not know that nM seemed to them a fling tn convention's face was the effort of a broken-hearted woman to forget the past and to try to make the village forget too, But Julia Bowne {s to-day treading the same cruel path as Hawthorn eroine trod, Next Sunday will see her cup of bitterness filled to overflowing Her resignation and the reason for It will be read out from the pulpit in the white-spired church where she first met the man who proved her ultimate undo- ing. From the window of her little room, darkened by tightly closed shut- ters, she will be able to see her late! associates crowding into the church; will be able to hear through the open windows the words that proclaim her shame publicly. “Just Pantsh: it.” Saye Father, “It is her punishment,” says her father, hinwelf an ele of the church, thin lpped, sa wed, not unkind- ly, but cast in @ mould that recog- nies no degree in the Infraction of a moral law, As he wields his hammer in the forge his eyes often stray up to the shut- tered window, behind which has daugh- ter fs sobbing her heart out. But, as yet, say the neighbors, he has made no sign of forgiveness. If Cordova's name Is mentioned he grips his sledge the tighter and his lips come together in @ thin Ine, but that fa all. Con- over Bowne is a good deal of a sphinx | ).4 but he Is jood man, to the neighbors; 4@ staunch friend. Julia's sister Emma told an Even- ing World reporter to-day that If the strain upon her sister keeps up the family fear she will go mad, The gir! eata scarcely enough to sustain life, All day and most of the night she site at the shuttered window, gasing out down the valley, She does not speak, Does not ery, The little daughter of the good old German family who occupy th house to the Bownes picked a bunch of fragrant honeysuckles Julia,” She was allowed to present it to the girl in person, Julla Bowne buried her face tn the mass of bloom and wept bitterly. “But they were hap} Y, tong! Miss Emma Bowne said to- i ied then that the Reous Tou world was not against. That this lit- pe ghild trusted her and believed in Me suth River women are bitter against {ss Bowne and many sympathize openly with Cordova, With the men, however, the feeling is very different, and Cordova has wisely decided td give o8uth River a wide berth. At any rate, it is the woman in the case who {8 suffering most cruelly. The man is with his family and |e happy, he says in a letter to a South River friend. It is Julia Bowne who ts tage ncin Mi the bitterest extent Kipling's wor For the sin that ye do by two and two Yo must’ pey for one by ‘one next CAPTAIN'S CHILD create a disturbance and at no time care to arouse tie police, BADLY BURNED BY EXPLODING LAMP Blazing Fluid Thrown Over Man’s Body and Nearly De- stroyed Whole House Before the Firemen Arrived, In. fighting fire in his home, Shore road, near Manhattan railroad crossing, Charlies N, Nicholls was badly burned, The fire started when Mr, Nicholls started to light an alcohol lamp. The lamp expioded and the blazing fluld wa: thrown allover. his. body, | By rolling in blankets he saved him- self trom eing burned to death. The house caught fire and the engin called. Before thelr arrival the hou wan almost destroyed, The loss was estimated at $2,000, Mr. Nicholls was Island Hospital. a HOFFMAN HOUSE TO STAY. What Part of taken to Coney + “James P. Caddagan, manager of tho Hoffman House, says that through some error many persons have come to the conclusion that the Hoffman House Is to be torn down. “Ot course that Isn't true,” sald Mr. Caddagan. “Only the old Hoffman House, which ts the middle bullding on Broadway, fifty feet south of Twenty- Afth street and 100 feet north of Twenty- fourth street, is to be torn dov. pri and on that oe te a new bukng: urteen stories high, is to be erect Pat's ihe only change eontempia it my head aches through wearine: responding to,inquiries which were the result of inaccurate Information yoncerning our plans.” en GIRL FRACTURES SKULL. WEDS WSERE Sixteen-Year-Old Minnie De Nyse Married to Capt. Alexander Sendt Nearly a Month Ago and Father Protests, When Minnie De N! the only daughter of Capt. Henry De Nyse, of Stapleton, 8. I, one of the oldest tow- boat captains in the New York harbor, announced to-day that she was mar- tied amagement was expressed by the Other members of the family. The gir! firat revealed her secret to her mother and then her father and brother were informed. ‘The girl said her husband was Capt. Alexander Gendt, who Is In command of one of the big tugboats of the Bal- timore and Ohio Ratiroad. He ts well known and popular on Staten Island, ‘le is twenty-six years old and has been living with the De Nyse family bo: Ww ih a boy he “apt, De Nine, Objection wae made to the marr because of the youth of the girl, {s not quite seventeen. On June &% Capt. Sendt and Miss De Nyse went to Mariners’ Harbor, where pe were married by the Rey. Dr, Jo- Howard, or of the Trinity M. B. Chureh, |, It is said, gave said ree Nyse’s son, Harry, that Capt, Bendt had been ow to leave his parents’ house, He sald also that he thought his par- ents would make an effort to have the marriage annulled Capt. is well known to been present at all os, has been jn command of the s or press boat, Ee SLOCUM VICTIM'S WILL FILED Mrs. Hencken Leaves $100,000 in Trust to Hier Husband, The first will of a victim of the Blu- cum disaster filed in the Surrogate's Office ni Pings O County g the last t tament of Lucy G. Hencken, a wealthy woman of the Bastern District who, with three of her four children, was drowned from the burning steam- Falls from Baleony of Home te the | boat. Yard: Pochlandt, six. years oid, while on the balcony in the rear of Heneken made the will on bi ot the Gar before the disaster. to have some ome 9 of Mra. & Was taken to| clude satate, MA ARRESTED FO KILLING CT Flat-House Janitor Charged by S. P. C. A. with Cruelty to Animals and Held for Trial in $300 Bail, —_— Magiatrate Cornell in the Jefferson Market Court to-day decided that it waa not justifiable to kill a cat which had disturbed a neighborhood by its cries, and held Patrick MeCrane, forty years old, janitor of the flat-houses ai Nos. 15, 17 and 19 Abingdon Square, in $90) bail for trial in the Court of Spectal Sessions, MeCrane is charged with cruelty to animals. “It's this way, Your Honor,” Mra, Hermione Kiix, of No. street, the complainant, sald 1 Bank “L was look- ing out of my back window, watching | t my two little boys playing in the yard, when I saw a big black cat trying to Jump through the pane of a wirtiow at No. 19 Abingdon square, but the gla: was too strong. Then I saw this ma: A itegsorgs | McCrane—"'take a big iron bar and hit the cat with it until the cat was dead. “My two sons, who were sitting on the fence watching the whole thirtg, | jumped off Into the yard and went Into ‘the cellar, There they saw the janitor taking the poor dead cat and putting it into the furnace and starting to light the fire. I called up the soclety and they sent Officer Lambert and the man was arrested. ‘The prisoner sald that the cat had been howling since 2 oclock A. M. He aad be caught the anima! in the cellar and threw a furnace rod at it, so it would not disturb the tenants any more, Magistrate Corel! found that a clear case had been made aginst McCrane and he was held. NO USE FOR SLOCUM HULK. er MeAdoo Now Will Have to Dispose of It. Dietrict-Attorney Jerome, United States District-Attorney Burnett and the Coroner have sent word to Comimia- sioner McAdoo that they have no further use for the hulk of the Slocum. The Commissioner said he will now have to dispose of the wreck, He dors o ty | Bat at to sell it to be"used for exhi- bed |=) Ge Te aig, | randum Book in Pocket Over | |dawn he went to Van V | League Club. Limburg had only been }rest, but Limburg | Collings started after Limburg. For sey: | |eral blocks they chased him and then | In this book was lodged a bullet t THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, JULY 15, 1908 POLICEMEN FIRED VOLLEY OF SHOTS Chased Innocent Man for Burg: | lar alrd One Bullet Hit Memo: | Air, When Policeman Accost- A memorandum book saved Edward Limburg, of No. 431 Pacific avenue, Jer- sey City, from death to-day when he was fired upon by three policemen, who mistook him for a burglar Limburg is a respectable man, and he 1s employed by the Pennsylvania rail: road. Being unable to p before ‘at Park tn jJersey avenue, Directly across the | street from where he sat is the Union on the park bench for a short time when he was joined by tranger, He and the stranger talked for a time, when Policeman Doyle ran up and sald “Both you men are under arrest.” The stranger submitted quletly to ar- thoroughly trig ened, broke away,” Doyle whistled for hely and Policemen Morash, Burns and they drew thelr revolvers and began | firing. Fearing that he was going to be killed Limburg stopped and the po: | Meemen came up. He waa nlaced under arrest an? a call sent In for the patrol wagon. Before the patrol wagon ar- rived the policemen saw that thelr | prisoner's clothes were on fire and that a hole has been burned over his hearth, “You are shot,” sald one of the polices men. “I don't know whether I am or not.” answered Limburg, “‘omething struck me over the heart when I turned to see If you men were near me. I expect I am shot. The pain Is pretty bad.” An ambulance was called and the surgeon made a hasty examination of Limburg. ‘There was a distinct bruise over the heart, but the flesh was not broken. An examination ot his clothes showed a memorandum book in the coat pocket on the left side, had passed almost through the book and was burried in the pages. An elghth of an inch further and It would have entered Limburg’s flesh Limburg, demanding to know what ad been offense, and deci that he was a ble citizen, waa charged with being a suspicious per- son, LISHED ROBBER WITH HIS RAZOR Protege of Bowery Barber Badly Cut Up with Weapon He Orew in Alleged Attempt to Steal Watch and Money. In attempting to rob his employer while the latter was sleeping, Antonio de Luca, nineteen years old, a barber, was slashed so severely about the head, face and neck that It was feared for a time he might die, The man, who in self-defense did the slashing with the ragor, was arrested on a technical charge of felonious assault. He was released Inter in Essex Market Court, while the victim was held for trial on a charge of attempted robbery. Dominick Romendema 1s a prosperous| barber owning four shops. He lives over the largest one at No. 13 Bowery, and with him live four of the seven men he eniploys in that place. A few weaks ago he gave employment to De Luca, who comes from the same town in Italy that Romendema hails from. On the Fourth of July Romendema missed #45 and charged De Laca with stealing It. As the story goes, De Luca admitted taking the money and said he apent it Because of tie friendship for the boy Romendema decided not to prosecute and gave him another chance, De Luca went to work for him agsli last Mon- day, with the understanding he was to pay back the 45 at the rate of $l a week. Romendema says that at about 22 A M. to-day he was awakened by feeling something moving under his head. He opened bis eyes and saw a hand end arm drawing bytes {a which he keeps his watch and from under his Allow Looking Te! in the dim light, he saw a hend at nie side of the | bed. Romendema grabbed E with both | hands and up in bed. As he did ao r and felt ita keen blade . He seized the hand the razor and wrenched it! grasp of the would-be robber. When Romendema plied the ragor with | frenay, yelling for hel wife, who) had awakened at the drat jump Romen- dema je, grabbed the intruder, who proved to be De Luca, and held him! while the husband slashed him again a a “De fu badly in Nota Patent Medicine. |Hquality cheviot, plain » fabrics, fashiona- | wool worsted Trousers, @ Band figured, made and durable every pater oe ifup into men's § Trousers in sizes *? and design 83 id young men's to su ery sel Hyomel, the Guaranteed Ca-| trousers . body. Fe one A (oe tarth Cure, Prescribed by Summer Underwear, excellent Balbriggan 23c Physicians. Summer Shirts of reliable Madras 45c No one should confound Hyomei with patent medicines that are ad-| vertised to cure catarrh. It {s as far superior to them all as the diamond) is more valuable than cheap glass. | Their composition is secret, but) Hyomet gives its formula to all repu-| table physicians. lts base is the valuable eucalyptus | oil, famons for its antiseptic quall-| ties, This is combined with aro-| matic and healing gums and balsams, | making a pure liquid which, when used in the Hyomel pocket Inhaler, fills the air you breathe with germ- killing, disease destroying and hea! ing powers that restore health to every part of the throat, nose and lungs, Hegeman & Co,, 200 Broadway, under an absolute guarantee to re) $1.25 our sale price is 69c, Men's Summer Suits, Lightest weight garments of fashionable homespun, THE SURPRISE STORE, Open Saturday Night Until 10 o'Ciock. Vogel Brothers 42” S.Cor. Bh Ane, Sale of White Lawn Waists at O8c This is the greatest white lawn shirt waist of ering of the season, The waists are such as are sold elsewhere at $1.75 and $2. Its a rare cppo:tunity for women who want to possess the dantiest and and most charming waists way under price. The cat alongside shows one of the waists, and there are a do en other brand-new imodels here to cheose from. These $1.50 and $2 waists allon sale at9&&, Sale of Other Dainty Waists. Wivte and beet Jop, to $1.08. While lown waists, labcrately trimmed, res d cel b $1.98, $) Jay. vith waists, reduced to $2.98. Wore af dotted Swiss ard Lawns, rediced 0 $293, $5, 16 nd $7 waists, redued to $3.98, Sale of Dotted Swiss Summer Dresses at $2.98 Here's a bargain that will ring true to every woman. These shirt waist suits, charmingly made with all the daintiness of summer style. Exactly like cut along- side, sizes 32 to 42. They cc me in fancy dotted and embroidered Swiss, on w'ttte, cadet, royal and navy blue grounds, Waists and sleeves tucked, side-plaited skirts. These are $5 summer dresses; special at $2.98. Sale of Brilliantine $2, 08 Runabout Skirts at We place on special sale 150 WHITE, BLUE and BLACK brilliantine skirts in the new 9-gore knife-plaited model. Regular $4.50 skirts, at $2.98. Sale of $8.59 Voile $4. 08 Runabout Skirts at These skitis are made in the new 17-gore knife- platted model ; skirts of BLACK Panama cloth, All on special Sale of 50 Dozen Girls’ 79c Suspender Dresses at These make splendid summer dresses for girls ages 41012, Same style as shown in cut. Colors pink blue and old rose, in fancy plaid chambrays ~white guimpes. Regular $1.50 dresses; special at 79c. Sale of 75 Dozen Girls’ 69c sik waists reduecd Low-Neck Dresses at Special sale of these cool dresses for girls ages 4 to 14° Same style as cut alongside; low neck and short sleeves, finished with ruffle, edged with lace, white grounds, with blue, pink and red figures, Instead of Vogdl Brothwrs ADE Sy. Cor. Bt Ave SURPRISE SPECIAL SALE N° 292 pene W. 14 Si | THIRO AVE. NW. CGn,832°S BRI.WEENAG?2 AND 7.) meal ih BLOCK FROM ELEVATED STATI MEN’S *10 and #12 make a busy week—splendidly fit- ting suits of firm medium weight gray effects—tailored in the fashion that's The MONEY PLANK in The Surprise Store’s PLATFORM The Wholesale Stocks Are On Sale at Retail Absolutely permanent blue serge of pure all- wool A midsummer special that will fabrics, chiefly in 56? justright. declare’s for Double Value, Men's Serge Suits worsted—a new suit free The Surprise Store's workshops are running full time every day. The outlet for thew preduction must be hopsacking and bast and continuous ti it any one of tweed, with vests i (0 fn season and out Of} them fails to 1h and without vests. U,UU psc4so% satisfy. mt What could surpass the men’s suits of ( clay serge, of Scotch tweed and of silk-and-worsted that are massed in this ¢ $ Manufacturer’s Midsummer Sale at... 10 ana $12 Trousers for Every Man and Young Man, An astonishingly good Handsome striped and | Very choice pure all- STW HS hambray Russia Boys’ Tweed Norfotk av Pants row and Monday LY Fs MEN'S “SOLID TAUNTON CALF SHOES, Good reliable leather through and through 10 P, M, SATURDAYS. OPEN UNTIL Third Ave,,N,W, Cor.83d St. One Bipck from +L" Station, 132 to 146 West [4th St., Between 6th and 7th Aves, | | : Greater New York. | STORE CLOSES AT 1 P. NO CONNECTION WITH “e RON RSP The B16 STORE ACTTY INSEL SIEGELE. opERG | SIXTH AVE. pecs sta Te roman NEW YORK. | Double “S, & 4." Green Trading Stamps Saturday Moralng from 8.30 till 12 o'Clock- Thereafter Single Stamps Until C osing Hour. Women’s Shirt Waist Suits At /, 00 andl. 50 DN. Stylish Creations Chat Me Are Hil the Rage Yow. | hid A Saturday inorn'ng sale of |:veliest in- tere:t. Beautitul new Suits at prices so low that one is almost impelled to doubt them. Bur the Suits will be here to-morrow, and \) eagerly await your coming. The materials ¥ include Sheer White Lawrs, Fancy Madras, Linen Batiste, Shepherd Che:k Per-ales and Dai .ty Dimiti:s, Charming colorings, natty figures and stripes. The illustration pictures their attractiveness. Some are prete tly plated; others neatly tucked. Som2 have lace insertions and em- brodery. All havz fancy stock col- lars and bishop sleeves. Instep length skrts, Some have cuntrasting co.or pings. Sa ur- 100d 1,50 + day morning, . td Ploor, root. or VN a a ns Apparel Sections, Men's Summer Outing They're high priced, but money can’ buy better quality; Manhatian or Martini, in full quart bot Sucts Saturday Morning at J 4,50/ COATS and TROUSERS. Single and Double-breasted Coats. Some are ', sik lined. The fabrics in- clude Flannels of soft texture, and Home- spuns in a variety of styles, designs and colorings. We can fit men of regular and stout builds with equal celerity. The garments are ideally dressy. Simply \ J remarkable values at (Men's Store, Main Floor, Bast.) Sood Summer Shoes Saturday Morning at About /-2 Price, Our phenomenally successful "Doube Value Soe Sale offers numerous bare inp ogra ‘atiractive character for to-morrow morning. The particwar SHOES $300 TAN I8e PENS $3.50 OX. 145 WOMEN'S $200 OX gp, MEN'S 350SHOES 7 gig Hundreds of other marvellous'y good Shoe inducements. No beter time and place to equip yourself with foorwear for the Summer and Fall than at The Big Score to-morrow forenoon. (Consolidated Shoe Stores, Se¢ond Floor.) RDAs Pure Wines and Liquors. Yale Cocktails. sah IN MARASC HINO, choleest large, ripe cherries, full a Bike JERMOUTH. fineas auatiiy, fu PRIARS GRAPE BRANDY, WURirN BLACKBERRY BRANDY. rowed SCOTCH WHISKEY. | per ou MIGHLAND scoTCH WISE i at. toe ul taNac ow ARS 7 CATAWDA: per ete a pnd RHINE WIXES, ace aiity, ner ee), 1.00. Take ih Av, Elevators, NIITAGR. RYE, 10 years old he 280. ful! ounrt pares Dake Stirring Sale of Wen’s Straw Hats Co-Morrow Forenoon at Sonnus, Splits, Wertintuns Rough-and= | Ready Yeddo Foather-Welg Ais. The Most ‘Sweeping and Astonis a Sale | ; on