The evening world. Newspaper, August 11, 1904, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

‘ ‘had vistted her .game house as Miss Love, “GIRL PAW WEDDING HING With It George Humphreys’s Mother Was Wed, and It Might Have Served the Same Purpose with Thelma Love. BUT LACK-A-DAY! SHE “HOCKED” IT. Dispute as to Whether Com- plainant Met Defendant in Molly’s or Rathskeller Import- ant Feature of Hearing, : Thelma Love, of No. 16 West Sev- @nty-ninth street, pretty and innocent looking, with hair of the golden va- riety, was held to-day by Magistrate Ommen in $1,000 ball on a charge of Brand larceny preferred by George HH. Humphreys, son of the late Dr. G. H Humphreys, whose office wus at No. & East Forty-seveith street. Humphreys fays the girl took his diamond ring, vat ued at $200, and pawned it Humphreys is well known here, bis brother being a prominent architect and he himself having made something of a name for himself a# a draughtsman Miss Love, who is twenty years old appeared in court a rakish-looking linen duster, Her eyes were red from a cnight of crying, and she plainly showed that prison life was something new to her, She comes from the South and has few friends in New York. The voung woman wes represented by an attorney. He produced a 1 written August 6 by Humphreys to Miss Love, who was then in Middletown, It real: ‘You can pawn the ring and send me the ticket Then thete was some reference to payments of $15 board and $4 doctors’ bills, all of which Mfr. Humphreys had evidently supplied trom his weil lined pocket, The complainant didn't look any too happy when the letter was being read and he told his side of the story He Knew Her Well, “I know her very well. 1 met her first at Molly's, where she was intro- duced to me” “Oh!"' exclaimed Miss Love, ‘You never did." “Maybe not,” rejoined Humphreys, “I Guess you are right; it was in the Tathskeller of the Marlborough, One night I met her there and she took my ring from me, She asked me to let her see it and then she never returned it, It was my mother’s wedding ring, a gift from my father to her, I never wore It on my hand but carried it on a chain. Bho took it off and that was the last of the ring.” At this point Miss Love's nervousness we off and her face mantled with anger. She didn't like the way the story was being told and her attorney had all he could do to hold her from supplementing Humphreys's remarks, Crowded It on Her. “Why, 1 simply hed to take the ring,” she interjected. “He pressed it upon me. I didn’t want it, but he In- afeted that I take it. Id di it to oblige him. He used to propose to me regu: ati § He considered us engaged.” “T did propose,” mid Mr. Hum- hreya, “but she always rejected me, our Honor, I asked her to marry me very often, but she always refused my and. “Why aia fig Spt d to hes. | pawn r strate aske ier you see, that was the only way I could get tt back,” answered Hum- * said the Court. “Let's @4t_at his novel method of recovery. “By having her pawn the ring I thought I might get the Ucket and then get my ring back, Las, Tuesday night I went up to her house and asked her to give me the ring back. She said that she had pawned it and that @ doo- tor had the ticket.” Pawneid Ri Then Humphre: yen. old, got « Too Late. ) Who is fully thirty uinely put out and early yesterday called on the police ot ith detectives went to see the irl, It was discovered then that she ere, the ring the morning after he and after he had warned Ler not to do so. For this rea- son the Magistrate sald he would have to hold the young woman, L_ Reisman, who lives in the testified in ire behalf. “The trouble is all due to Frankie,” sald. “Frankie” developed into a sister of Thelma before the testimony went much further. “She told Humphreys,” continued the doctor “a lot of things about Thelma, and that was the beginning of this fight over the ring, I know that Thelma wore this ring for more than a year and that Humohreys was paying her at- tention: the time, He was certain- ly very good to he trate Omm aid in the light of all the testimony he would have to hold the girl. bec \use it was shown that her’ rejections of Humphreys had put aside all possible thought of an engage- ment existing between them. “And he did meet me first in the res: taurant, ld Miss Love after the Magistrate had fixed the bail HUNGER DROVE HIM TO STATION-HOUSE Gaffney Surrendered to the Po- lice, Saying He Had Forged a Cheok for $50 in Water- town, Mass. unger drove John A. Gaffney, of Lowell, Mass, to surrender to the police of the East Twenty-second street station and confess that he had stolen from bis employers ip Watertown, he had been without food and surrendered in the hope something to eat. He said the name of the Sprague Lumber Company to a |GIRL WHO PAWNED WEDDING RING OF LOVER’S DEAD MOTHER, i Love 0 GIRLS HURT IN TROLLEY PANIC | Motor Box of Car Explodes and Terrified Young Women Badly , Bruised in Crush of Passen- gers for the Doors. | | More than a score of young girls were injured in a trolley accident at Flush- ing and Kent avenues, Brooklyn, to- day. The girls were passengers on two cars, In which there were also many men, but none of the men was Injured, In fact, most of the bruises sustained by the girls were due to the smashing and crowding of the men in thelr en- deavor to escape from the cars. ‘There were two cars Involvéd in the aceident, Nos. 3,200 and 1,964, of the Flushing avenue line, The first-named car wae bound toward the bridge and stopped at Kent avenue to take on pas- sengers. The other car, bound out, waa passing when Matthew Gibbons, the motorman of No, 628, turned on the power. Explosion im Mo! The motor box on the platform hel | ploded with a report like that of w connon, A fan-like sheet of flame en- veloped the front of car No. 3,200, and burst through the open windows of car) No. 1,94, Gibbons, badly scorched about the fece and head, leaped to the street with a yell of alarm, All the passengers on both cars start- ed for the dours and windows, the men, |acording to the statements of the girl | poesengers, kicking and gouging with al | their strength. Mrs, Olympia Arelgi, of No, 57 Flushing avenue, with a three- | year-old baby In he? arms, was situng |near the door of the in-bound car and | was one of the first to reach the piat form after the explosion, A man hurled himself out of the car and dashed against her, She was |thrown headlong to the atreet, abight- ling full upon the baby. The little one’s hip was sprained, Mrs, Areigh was badly bruised, Pashed Her Out af Window. Pauline Loehman, of No, 126 Joffer- son street, was sent to Cumberland Street Hospital suffering from burns and brulses and a cut scalp, The girl wus climbing through a window when a young man behind her gave her a | shove, sing her % land on her head }in the street, | Others injured and willing to give | their names to the ambulance surgeons were Lena Sehneider, of No, 186 Back- nian street; Tillle Germon, of No. 122 Boerum street; Tillie Handsmith, of No, 2% Troutman street; Ada Alden, of No, &1 Harrison avenue; Nellie Sussman, ot No, 172 Boerum street, and Lissie Kanopski, of No, 251 Montrose avenue. | Dr. Rink, of Cumberland Street Hoe- | pital, says that he trested more than twenty injured girls. Some one turned {n a fire-alarm im- mediately after the accident. When the firemen arrived the front of car No. 3,209 was ablaze and the paint on the other car was blistering, NULLED BY AL INTO CLL A man was killed to-day by falling down the steps of a bakery in the | cellar of No, 0% Spring street. The man, well dressed and apparently sober, was passing the bakery and seemed to lose his balance as he reached the entrance, He toppled over very suddenly, falling to the basement, Patrolman Sheehan called an ambu- lance, When the surgeon arrived ne said the man was dead. His head hung as though his neck had been broken, In the pockets of the man were found 4 penknife and five cents, The man about thirty-five years old He was clean abuyer, The body was sent to the Morgue. ——=__ BOTTLE FRACTURES SKULL. lRaplodes and Broken Fragment Strikes Man, David Helm, twenty-three years old, living at No, %1 West Eightieth street, was struck by a piece of glass from an ping be & pinky) street ras’ taken (0 the" New ‘York ‘Woe: SUITORS RAC WINS GIRL S HEART agin Stabbed in the Face by Man She Rejected, Young Woman Suddenly Discovers that She Loves Him Deeply. ‘Was ever woman in such humor woced? Was ever woman in such humor won? —Shakeapeare. “T love my husband more than I ever could have had he not disfigured me, said Mrs, Joseph Salaarueo, of No, 2 Union street, Williamsburg, to an Even- ing World reporter to-day. “and when I think that I saved him from prison by marrying him I love him more than ever.” This remarkable young woman, who was brutally bbed by the man she married, seemed to feel a singular ex- altation In the love that had ite impetus in what might have been a tragedy, She had beon a girl sweetheart of her hus band, but when he sent for her to come to him from Italy and she saw the change time had wrought in him her youthful fondness turned to indifference, She calmly told her passionate auttor who saw in her « change which only kindled his love to flame, that she could and would pot be his wife, In a sud- den frenzy he drew a knife and infiigt- ed a great gaph in her cheek that will Maligure her for ilfe, saying an he did oe: une ‘I may have changed for the worse, ‘out I will mark you so that no oan will seek your Nand in marriage.” His Anger Won Her Love, ‘The man was arraigned charged with felonious assault and yesterday would ‘have been sent to the penitentiary bad pot his victim withdrawn her charge and consented to marry nim on the mo- ment, “While lying im the hospital,” she sald to-day, "I thought it all over day fter day and night after night. The Pleture of his terrible anger when I refused to marry him presented itself to me in a hundred ways, At first I shrank fro mthe recollection, Then I began to derive great comfort from It “ Tsaw by degrees that Joseph loved me with & great love, and the power of it soon made a radical change in me. 1 feel that I could rely on a man who would love as he could, The very fierce- ness of his passion proved its absolute centre upon me, and as I slowly got weil felt more and more kindly toward him. ‘When I heard that Joseph would be sent away to prison for cutting me I experienced another senaation, a sort of joy In being able to make a great sacrifice for him. [ thought that my complete forgiveness would be as great as his anger when he learned that (| d@id not love him. Thinks Scar Will Bi Them. “I never thought of t! ar cheek. | knew it could not in ‘re 4 in hd sight, ashe putit there, It would T ever coul been had we just been married ia the ordinary w We will not start housekeeping, however, until we have a church wedding. We will hi to have the banns put up for three wee and then we will’ be married int Chureh of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, at North Eighth and Havemeyer ween then 1 will “Unul en work hard Joweph will work hard, for w mit t enough money together to start a comfortable little home. Some of my agg ee me if I do not ear usban Ause of aid betore. No, I car him. "tl know that from now on he will be ways gentle, always kind, but I know that his lov trong and pow: ful and that I can s Tely upon it, THROWN OFF TRUCK, INSTANTLY KILLED Henry Madison Was Driving at Fifth Avenue and Twenty- third Street, Brooklyn, When Horse Became Frightened, ‘The horse attached to a loaded truck driven by Henry Madison became frign:- ened to-day at Fifth avenue and Twen- ty-third street, Brooklyn, and balked. Madison was thrown from his seat by the sudden ferk. The wheels passed over his chest, killing him instantly. He lived at Beventeenth street and Bev. enth avenue, and owned the horse and truck that killed him, Qe AS re” ay Ee a BURGLAR NS APT HERANME ervous’ Woman, Hearing Steady Grinding of a Drill Through Partition Wall, Noti- | fies Police by Telephone, | DETECTIVES DISCOVERED THE MAN AT WORK. Robber Threatens Them with a Chisel, but Is Subdued by a Display of Revolvers and Quietly Submits to Arrest. A burglar who would rather go through a brick watl than force a door or win- dow, and who has such a careful for hia clothing that he takes It off and pursues his task in the ‘altogether’ is a new genius of cracksman that the Brooklyn police corralled early to-day. That this unique honsebreaker was captured was not due to constabulary vigilance in the sister borough but to the nervousness of a woman in a house adjoining No. # Remsen atreet, where he was engaged drilling a two-fopt hole through a W-inch brick wall Terry, of No, 12 Remsen street. She was trying to get a little slumber after hours of restless tossing, when th steady pounding of a drill got on her nerves. She went to a window and Ils- tened, The sound seemed to come from No. & It was very annoying. Then she knew that No, 8 was vacant, and her nervousness Increased. Burgiar’s Nolse Kept Her Awake. Finally she went to the telephone and called up Brooklyn Headquarters. She informed the sergeant that burglars were making a dreadful racket In a house adjoining hers “T cannot sleep for their racket,” she said, “and | do wish you would say that burglars usually @worked jook Into it.” The sergeant ventured to quietly and that the Irritating sound must come from another source: “They are not making a noise like @ factory,” snapped the nervous women, “hut a'ateady pounding that Is nearly driving me wild,” Upon this information the sergeant called up the Adama street police sta- tion, and Roundsman Thurston and Po- licemen Dukes and MoCarthy were de- spatched to the source of the strange sounds. Arriving in front of No. s Remsen sireet the three policemen stopped to reconnoiter and also to lie in for the pounding. Track Thief by Footprints. They had been on the und only @ few moments when the eteady grinding: of a drill reached thelr ears. The house {a owned by J, H. Prentiss, a oroker, of No, 2 Wall street. No. 10 Remsen street ja the home of Mrs, Sarah Dickie, who {a in Ew with her family for the summer. Roun residences were empty. The Hicemen lstened until they finally located the sounds as coming from No. §. The front doors and win- dows were barred fast, and an Investi- raion showed that no entrance had Seen made through thet avenue. Thereupon the three cops went around to the rear, wien la protected by @ high brick wa Wich the exercise of a iittle acrobatic skill they got over the wall, and, aided by a dark lantern, they saw the fresh imprints of shoes in the wet soll, They follawed the trail to a rear door that was swinging open. From there a trall of water that had dripped from ex om brella led the uniformed sleuthe to the third floor. ralar Was Entl The sound of the drill concealed the creakings of thelr shoes, and a filcker of light guided tham to a door, through which the grinding of the drill came dis- tinctly, They threw open the door, and saw before them stretched out on the floor a naked man, working with a hand-drill, hammer and chisel He waa covered with perspiration, and had made considerable progress in opening a hole through the wall into the adjoin- a * house. oundeman Thurston coughed, and the man ft to his feet with raved ee ‘Then he kicked over t candle an fate a rush for rhe police: men, Tl lash of a dark jantern and tie musales of two revolvers made him drop the weapon, however, end auickly submit to arrest. sons SS eh Se ly Nude, The durglar’s up in @ neat bundle jeposited in one corner of the room, and he dressed himself with cetertty, When he arrived at the Adams street station he sald he was Alton Rollston, twenty-seven years old, of the Milla Hotel in Bleecker streot In his clothing the police found a bunch of & keys. two pairs of eyexlassns, a jasa-cutter and a watch, on the back of which was the Inseription “From M. gie to J. W. Fallon, Christmas, 1886. A, week o the house of Dr. Perry Dickie, at No 17 Schermerhorn street Brookiyn, was entered through @ hole in the wall of the vacant house next door. “Did you do that job?" asked Rounds- man Thurston “L did,” the er replied calmly, “and | phink it was a pretty good jol at that” Then he was locked up ay later In the day held for the Grand Jury In the Adama Street Police Court BLAZING VARNISH URES THE Fire in Factory of Travis, Bailey & Co. of Brooklyn, May Cause the Death of Sis- ter of Head of Firm. ‘Three persons were badly burned in a fire In the varnish factory of Travis, Bailey & Co, at No. % Richardson street, Brooklyn, this afternoon. James W. Travis, forty-three years old, of No, 78 Stillman street, the head of the | item; his alster, Annie Travis, who was | employed as a bookkesper, and While fam Slowley, a workman, were the per- tons injured, The fri will probably die, Sie war taken to her home, while the other two were token to St Cathe erine’s Hospital, The fire was caused by the over of a huge pot of varnish. The hot liquid set fire to toe floor, and in less than a minute the main room of the factory was ablaze, Two shims | boiling of fire were sent in and a call for am- iy ad soon had the! | The nervous woman Is Mra, Anna P. | EVENING, AUGUST 'I1; 1904, AUSSI HER IS OMAN CAUSE "PECTED TOM LANIER AEST Dr. Rott, Royal Accouheur,’ Herbert D. Andrews Accused | | Hastily Summoned to Villa’ Mrs, Alice M. Hodgkins of Alexandra at Peterhof, Where —Qbtaining $250:by Misrepre- | the Czarina Is Staying. sentation. | ‘ALL RUSSIA IS PRAYING HE GOES TOJAIL WHILE THAT CHILD MAY BE A SON, COUNSEL HUNTS BAIL. | | ———e Bee } | The Call for the Physician Was | andrews Denies All the Charges, So Urgent that the Announce-) insisting that He Practiced | ment of the Birth Is Expected | No Fraud ot Any Kind in the! at Any Moment. | Transaction. | ! resid- Herbert Fo Andrews. a lawyer ' ing at No. Ml West Twenty-second street, with an office at No. 4 Broad- } | wav, was arrested by Deputy Sheritt Jay on an order issued by of the City Court, in an Justice Conlan Jaction brought against him by Mra! | Alice M. Hodgkins to recover $230, of | |which phe alleges she was defrauded by | him, Andrews able to give $20 ' ball and was locked up, Mra, Hodgkins in the affdavit upon whieh Ardrows was arrested, says sit } is the widow Arthur P. Hodgkins nd venides at No. 10 West Bighty \second street, Shortly after her hus band’s death, In October, 1908, she met | Andrews, she saya, in Broadway. Ke asked her what she was doing down town, having known her since she was 4 little girl, and she told him thet as jher eyes had given out she was no lenger able to work at her profession | las a stenographer and typewriter, w \ she had followed prior lo her marri Jand that she was trying to get some | | wort of Iucome from what remained of | | her husband's property, and also for a position where she need only work sev }tral hours a day if her eyes would | stand It | Andrews, she alleges, some time af- terward called on her at her home and leald he had a business proposition to make, if she would call at his office She says she did so, when he told her | that he had been restrained by a Mr | George H. Denison to bring an action |\for the partition of his property, No lat Weat Ninety-seventh street, of which he and his brother, Charles F, Dennison, were tenants of the property in common, subject to the fife int jthelr mother, Mra, Felicia ©. on, | Andrews told her, she says, that he was authorized by r. Denison to raise money to pay the expenses of the suit, ‘and that If she would loan him $200 to i CZARINA OF RUSSIA. do so he would return her $25 out of and disbursements when the determined Relying on his she says, she withdrew $200 hla ec case statement 87. PHTRREBURG, Aug, 1. ~ an| Russia is expectant to-night over the om the Emigrant dustrial Savings rap!dly approaching accouchement of | (fom, ‘ein! * the Empress. Any moment may bring|from him a the news from the Villa Alexandra, at Peterhot, of a birth, and pmiyers are being offered here and throughout the Bmpire that the Czarina will give to the nation a successor to the crown, Dr, Rott, the Imperial accoucheur, was hastily sumomned to fhe Villa Alexan- Norwood, counsel for Mrs in an am@dayit filed by him, Andrews asking fot says @ wettiement dra this evening. The command for hi Mr. George H. Denison, of No. presence was so urgent that the prox. | Manhattan avenue in an affidavit, de- ies having retained Andrews oF gly: Imity of the expected event In the Loi-|ing him authority to raise money to perial family spread to every corner of 4 f the clty, oon) the lelegtaph wires | Ce tor Andrews during the after. ¥, and soon the telegraph wires | noon called at the Bherift’s office with mn to carry it to the furthest bound: | the object of giving ball for Andrews's aries of the country he sald would ve ac- conduct any sult, release, which Son Would Arouse Kathusiasm, [complished before night, and said phat his client denied all Mrs. Hodgk{ns’s The birth of a male heir to the throne | Me tons of fraud and déceit on hie at this time would serve to enthuse new| part Andrews, the lawyer sak, had Ife in the Empire, It mighty ve said} heen retained in good falth in ihe Den- that it would make up for all the de-|ison partition sult, and had a complete defense to the action. ECE NAMED FR HANNA LS Action Taken in Millionaire Platt’s Suit to Recover Money from Her—Woman Allowed feats that the Russians have suffered at the bands of the Japanese and infuse in the military and naval forces an en- thusiasm greaters than an unbroken suce ceasion of victories since the outbreak of the war, The birch of a girl would have a correspondingly depressing efevt, Whose results the Russian nobility and aflictal classes contemplate with alarm, Four children have been born to the Caar—all girls, and consequently out of the Hue of ion, The oldest ehlid is the Grand Duchess Olga, whe will be nine years old on D er sisters: are Titania, seven’ Marie, five, and An- astasia, three. More than once it has been reported that the Cazarina’s Inability to bear a pale child uae estranged her with the d Cc | Fi Emperor and that steps have been le taken on such occasions to divorce her. Expenses an ounse ees. Church Promised Divorce, It is said in various quarters that \ a} dey ” the Greek Chureh has’ persistentiy| Justice Mianchand to-day appoint a prompted the Caar to cast off his tem-| Gilbert M Montegue temporary ree press, standing ready, it promised, to} ceivor, with the la wirm of Sinipson, ‘urniah him the most excellent grounds |». eo re for euch action in that the Empress, | Matcher & Barnum, of the real and although she espoused her husband's | personal property in the possession of religion at ihe time of thelr marria¢® | Hannah Blias, and @f several banks s it * e ollie eure was not a Greek Catholic at bh and trust. e¢ nies, In the action john KR. Piatt to recover prop: | np eught wad « by Jurtic Blancherd also continues and makes aly te the temporary tnjune- tion restraini@g Hanagh Elias from ltrarsferring or disposing of any of the | v ha.ds, but allows her aaieitiieaien from the of tel Chelsea Board of Public Im- and sush counsel fore as / miy t tred by her to d@ofend provements Indorses ile! Piss He also allows her to lretain her wearing app. j Proposed by Alderman Dow-| Justice mlancnard dire fy that Hannah Elias be ling in Ninth District. selling, conveying, encumbering of oth- erwise | ring with the real prop- = vered by Platt's action, covey- The Cheisea Board of Public Im-| ine the premises No. 13s West Pitty- provementa at a me held to-day | i i, street iO. Sal et Pay ants the City Hall app J the plans for alii wea weve TSonA cirnel 1 new west side park, to be bounded by [ders the tenar AvALLON therout Ninth and Tenth avenues and Twert to de with the “ wcetver ag by him. folns t seventh Twenty-elghth streets, e tenants from paying The proposition was presented to t Hoard by Alderman Frank Dowling, of | © allowed. to vere she |SPECIAL TRAIN PRETTY BELLE OF MONT BRIDE OF NEW YOR PRINCE HENRY TO REIT AMERICA Accompanied by His Wife, the German Emperor’s Brother Is Coming to Inspect the St. Louis Fair, |Miss Louise Benedict, Ong the Prettiest Belles of Town, Becomes the. B John Wendt. — MONTCLAIR, N. J, Aug Loulse Benedict, eldest P. Benedict, a New York ing here, and one of the pret of the town, was married John Wendt, a New York fas ‘The ceremony took place at the of the bride, Rey. Safrey Py Eat ccusin of the bride, officiating, am ‘The Prince and his wife, the Princess, rd waa Unite’ come are coming to visit the World's Fair, |over white satin, and she Recently the Prince has been enter-| shower bouquet of roses and. title tained by American society folk wholthe valley. ° ‘ have been abroad. The most promineat| Miss entertainment has been that of Mr. il ah aia and Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbilt maids; James P. Heath, of (Spectal to The Evening World.) NEWPORT, R. 1, Aug, 1—Prince brother of the Kaiser, who saw Mise Roosevelt break a bottle of wine on the bow of the Meteor IIL, and who endeared himself to the hearts | of all Americana, Is coming buck to America, Henry, The Vanderbilts created vulte @ stir} the best man, and throughout Germany when the Kaiser! Charles Wendt, brother of entertained them, Newspapers com-| groom. and Arthur mented adversely on the action of the! New York. ‘The flower Emperor. Doris Lenedict, a niece of Other Utled Prussians expected Yo} and Laura Wendt, a nieee visit Newport with Prince Henry, bridegroom, The gift of When Prince Henry visited New York two years ago he was entertained at dinner by Mr, and Mrs, Corgelius Van- derbiit at the house of Mra. Ogden Goelet. No. @8 Fifth avenue, which Mr. and Mrs, Vanderbilt occupied that winter, The day previous Mr, and Mrs, Ogden “Mills gave a ‘uncheon for the} Prince. In case these titled people do make a visit to Newport it will give a decided impetus to the season, which at the end of the month will be very gay. Aug. 2 ta the date of a dinner being arranged by Mr. and Mrs. Vanderbilt, to take place at Beaulieu. and it is ex- pected that Prince and Princess Henry will be present. Great preparations are being made, tt Is sald, for the event. PENNSYLVANIA RAILR' groom to the bride was a b crestent moon of diamonds, present a dlamond ring. —ee BADLY BURNED AT Fi ce Py: Tenant Injared Try mulch Fiames, While trying to ex the third floor of a thre ment at No, 1018 East One Hi Bixty-eighth street to-day shan, an occupant of the badly burned about the hands. He was taken to Lebanon rhe jamage caused by the {7 Ve pig " WORLD'S FAIRE ae NEXT GREAT EXCURSIO AUGUST 17 ROUND TRIP $20 FROM NEW YORK PROPORTIONATE RATES FROM OTHER POINTS of Standard Day Coaches leaves West 234 7° Returning in coaches on regular trains pokey J 1g Similar Excursions August 24 and 31. Tickets now on wale QEO. W. BOYD, General Pastenger Stern Brothers Linen Handkerchief Sale © Women's Hemstitche: Bs sheer ber Heodberehlece 1 2 Bagh $ 1.40 Py Women’s Hand-Stitche “ “ Sueer Handkerehits: Value Se 15° 51.75 Women’s Embroidered and 24° “ $2.75 “ 25° * $2.90 *. Lace Edge Handkerchiefs Men's and Women’s Tape Border Handkerchiefs the Ninth District, in which the pro was it. posed site of park will I tT companies are Iderman’s plan is to have the elty |. The by . acquire property by condemnation |flas any tm proceedings, tear dowy the hou nlchecks, depo the site and convert the spa to ajother persons park, In the centre of the plot ts Pub- |!" her" = | He School No, on W Twenty a | eighth street. Te la intended to toave| HATCHET CUT HER FACE. the school standing, and on one side of oie Sas nef . HT ineteenth atreet. had the left aide of | Alderman estimates th st fice chopped bday hatchet iw about | st vees Mrs. Frances Celeontt anand that it! o¢ the sume adute Tic twe wome J mitiion to rage th uiidings and to pur; Rot Into an argumer t the storing | the, finishing touch mm the ate as al of some stuff in the hallwa ott Mrs. Celeonti, who was The question of making that neighborhood has been public for the last decade, olalmed that she was tryink to d Herself when Mrs. “Blakely aceiden: ‘before’ the ore peut her face with the axe DI West Twenty-third Street, , 7 ne a

Other pages from this issue: