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* ‘hl ry . " THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, SEPTEMBER 9%, 1904. WO GALS AD |WIFE DIES FROM CORONER PROBING. 15-YEAR-OLD GIRL ANGRY MOB BEAT MAN TRY SLICE. GAS IN BATHTUB TENEMENT FIRE THUMPS PARENTS. ON KILLING MAK j —_—_—— trie of a Few Months Takes Mrs. Bertha Belsinger Discov- Scholer Impanels Jury of Build- With Golden Hair Hanging Down Italians and Negroes Seek Re- «' Polson After Quarrel with Her, ered by Her Father-inLaw, ers and Real-Estate Men to, Her Back in Braids, She Is, venge When One of Their Ac- Husband, and Probably Will, —In Her Mouth Was Tube Investigate Fatal Blaze in Arraigned on Complant of} quaintances Is Shot Down— Store Closes at 5:30 P. M. The Campaign in China rh Die, Say Doctors, | Mother. Detectives Save Man’s Life. 5 © {YOUNG WOMAN LEAVES ~ + LETTER FOR SWEETHEART. D *Senseless on the Street, and | Is Found to Have Taken Car- » * bolic Acid. months, and one young man, all | _ years old, are dying to-day in ; sburg hospitals as the result of suicide, “Maggie Goodman, of No. ™ avenue, Williamsburg, was Aoday to the Eastern District ital In a dying condition, The doc- say she {9 suffering from some of poisoning that cannot yet be ined. At the Throop avenue was said she had been there @ week. said when she went there that hed a quarrel with her husband he had left her, She said she had married only a few months, Noth- was seen of her yesterday and when did not respond to rappings on the of her room it was broken open, wad unconscious on the bed, She not recover ber senses when taken | ‘hoapltal and the doctors say she from which they | te of com: fear ae will never hia Btefandel, of No. WT avenue, Williamsburg, is ®t. Catherine's Hospital from ¢u. ing. Her aunt, with whom she found her unconscious in bed to- and summoned an ambulance. On Vable near the bed two letters wer One was addressed to her theart in Austria and another( to aunt, She has been In this country & f¢W months and her aunt says became very despondent over her from the young man she young man, well dressed, but whore! contained nothing by which ould be identified, is dying in the “hospital from carbolle achl pol- . A policemaa found him stag- slong the street at Bushwick and Boerum sireot, fan@ when he oa young man fell sensele: ment. Me was hurried ‘4 Hospital, but the surgeonn say| @ap live only a fow hours, | PEAS SHOPS — Pits to Work 2,000 of Its For. tmer Employees at Much! : tLower Wage—No Labor Agi-| { jtators Are Hired, ss 10, Bept. 2%%—Work will be re- a to-day, after a brief period of . in the car shops of the Pull- man Company. The company will put work 2,000 of its former em- at wages lower by 10 to % per it, than they were receiving previ- 1 They will be employed in the department. men have been picked with in the ten days the plant has closed. In thelr number will be none who has been known as a agitator, weeks ago the company began of men. This was continued it. 18, when all except a hand employed in one repair depart- it were told to go. cut in wages to go into effect y will be general, extending to yes in the Office force. Tae wage > lnpoied ore has ranged in the pet 1.7 to Ta da. from of, ed Catholic Church in 1 yesterday, The past her John MoGuire, too! jen, PIERCE PIANOS No plano equal to the Pierce has ever been sold new for as as the Plerce cc $151. On a first payment of $10 the Pierce Is delivered to your home immediately; then $1.50 a week—25e. a day until the balance is paid The twenty-tive cents a day paid for the Pierce is just that much saved—and any one who cares to can make the saving. Liberal service, Easy payments. $ PULLMAN CAR CO, Attached to Gas Jet. RELATIVES MYSTIFIED AT YOUNG WOMAN'S ACT. “Well-Dressed Young Man Falls With Every Comfort Money Experts Will Be Engaged to Could Buy Sh2 Was Apparent- ly Hoppy—Husband Out of City at the Time. | young girls, one a bride of a! Mra, Bertha Relsinger, a beautiful Coroner Scholer Impaneiled a young woman twenty-elght yeare old, was found dead in the Valencia, the fashionable apartment-house at No, 319 West Ninety-fitth street, early to-day, she having ended her lif during the night by inhaling gas, Why this young woman, a happy wife, with every comfort money could buy, with many friends and a devoted husband, should have ended her life {sa mystery which the Coroner and police have been unable to solve, Mrs, Belsinger’s husband, Relsinger, has been out of the city for a at days, and during his ab- sence she had peen Mving In the apart- ments of her father and mother-in-law in the Valencia, The father-in-law and his wife went out calling Inst night and asked younr Mra, Belsinger to mpany them, I want to visit @ friend In the neigh- borhood.” All of yesterday Mrs, Belsinger seemed to be In the beat of spirits, She' was happy, she sald, because her husband was to be back with her within the next few days. ‘The theory ts tnat this smiling and apparently happy young woman pre- pared to end her life the minute her father-in-law and his wife were out of the apartments. She went in the bath- toom with a long rubber tube, placed one erd of the tube on the gas Jet and the other end In her mouth, She then ted the tube in her mouth with @ string, passing the atring around her neck, locked the bathroom door, tumed on the gas end lay down in the bath- tub to die, When the elder Mr, Belsinger and bis wife returned home about midnight and the daughter-in-law was not to be found they suppored that rye had gone to visit friends and was spending the night away from home. Some hours * later the father-in-law had ogeasion to go into the bathroom. He found the door Iccked, and, forcing the lock, came upon the body of his beautiful daugh- ter-In-law, Mr. Belainger called Dr, Knight, of Ninety-fourth street and West End avenue, Dr. Knight said that the ‘oman had been dead several hours, 1 cannot understard this at all,’ said the father-in-law. "She was very happy yesterday, She had no reason on earth for ending her Ife." — | BOTTLE BROKE HIS SKULL. Newark Man Who Made a Nolse Nettled ttn Nelwhbors, NEWARK, N. J, Sept. .—#4ward Lvertson, twenty-seven years old, who lived at No. 64 Nichols street, on reach. ing home early to-day awakened some of the neighbors by a nolse he made, and somebody hurled a bottle at him, strike ing him on the head and fracturing ais skull. He was ved to St. Jamen's Hospital In a eritienl condition, ‘The polles are now trying to find out who threw the misslie ¢hat struck Evert. son. $500,000 IN PRIZE School children’ Public School No, 47. accept and use. All» at be acon package of and costs much less Harry P. | o; 1 won't go to-night," she eatd. | have a lot of letters to write, and | This sketch was made by Ella Dud- ley, aged 10, 222 E. 39th St. N.Y, We give a cash prize of $5.00 for any drawing of this character which we my y Pag-O-See Egg-O-See is the most digestible, delicious, economical and healthful of foods. It is much more nutritious than meats Itis conceded the best of all flaked wheat foods, and a large package retails for Ask Your Grocer for the Green Package, If your grocer does not keep it, send us his name and 10 cents and we will send you a package, prepaid. Address all communications to THE EGG-O-SEE CO,, 105 & 107 Hudson St, New York City, A.C. MONAGLE & CO., Selling Agents, ‘These prise drawings will appear in The Evening World on Mondays, Attorney Street. INSPECT SCENE WHERE, . LATTER SHOWS BLACK | FOURTEEN LOST LIVES. EYES AS EVIDENCE, | Assist in Arriving at True! with Strength of a Man, Sub- Cause of the Awful Loss of Life, Together, —— Jury of With both eyes blackened igs Peed | rulses Mrs. ary Investigate the fire at No. 10 | 4 Street in which fourteen Peete | eectay as complainant against her their lives on Sept. 4 Inst, tee 4 daughter Esther. | The proceedings are technically in the >! | nature of an inquest to determine the! | cause of the death of Yetta Miller, ono, |of the victims, The duties that will be | performed by the jury, however, em. | Mr that hangs in two long braids) brace a careful inspection of the burned | 40% Ber back | bullding, and for that purpose the Cor. | #00 ' P waged of great oner conducted them to tho scene of the | Mé® Burrell saya that her da disaster today. |has been unmanageable ever sin They were scrompanted by Fire Chit | Was twelve yeara of ag Croker end Inspector Schmittberger, infrequently sna has Ever since the fire the bullding has been under constant surveillance by the | Mission. police, | phe trouble with Eathi Atter the fire Leon Sobel, the owner | plained Mrs, Burrell, "1 of the building; Morris Lavine, the | have her own wi As long as things lessee, and Henry Breitmann, a con. |§° ‘9 sult her she is a nice gir) tractor Who was remodelling the ten- easels to wre jement, were placed under arrest, ‘They s strong as a blg| wero later released on ball and Lawyer | man, and when she gets started noth. | | Abram Levy has been looking after ing can stop her until he thelr Int out. Her father and I are a Mr. Levy ent out with the coroner's jury when it began {ts Investigation |to-day. Coroner Secholer sald to-day that tho Butlting Department, the Health Department and the Fire De- partment have been shifting the blame about, their officers declaring that they | were In no way responsible for the dis | aster | of will make a thorough Investigation Jinto this matter,” sald the Coroner, “and the duties of my Jury will probably 18 t™ | occupy more than a week, We will ens drawers, | gage experts to aasist us in arriving at the true cause or the awful loss of lite | |tnat accompanied @ fire of such seem. ingly small magnitude, All the mem- bers of my jury are builders and real estate men, and should be able to give expert opinions as to the place where | the responsibility should rest.” ‘After to-day's inspection the jurors will not meet again for a week, Then @ score of witnesses will be examined told Judge Olmated, by her daughter, atrength nd that not simu!tancously | | 19," ex- expedition, When she [her house on the | is crowd in front been a fire and eating as the realiza. was locked In the 98 her mind there had been no fire, although it one furni- eat of What would whole she a! » pl of suitable was finishing up with the car- Mrs. Burrell arrived Thi yesterday al when Esther, against the pr her mother and father, dressed in her best and went out nounced that she would be hom and she kept oer word, It wa when she got home. Mrs. Burrell says that sh to remonatrate with the git] parent on her mother's er, according to Mra. - ™ veat her almost into in- sensibility add then drove the father ont of the house, He went back with a lideman, who took the belligerent | —————_-— id to the #tation-houge aad from transferred her to the rooms of | KILLED WHEN CAR sanoetn Maruirets | Portion agente of aie OMe Motorman Met Death and Three Others Aboard Injured in Crash of Trolley Against Tree —Slippery Rails the Cause. | there in PD th ‘# Boclety time to make an investi. on oe MISS RUNKLE RETURNS. Author of imet of Na Mas Another Novel Ready, Miss Bertha Runkle, who wrote “The Helmet of Navarre,” returned this morning on the steamship Minnehaha from a vacation trip which was spent tn England, While abroad Mise Runkle completed & new novel which deals with modern Amerie: e. hing) Mr. and Mrs CAMDEN, N. J., Sept. %—A trolley running from this clty to Riverside, N. J, Jumped the track early today near Riverton and crashed into a tree. «arriving Ww i motorman, John & White, of Paliyra, | ci “e DD Ashley, Mise CL. wab- was ki and the conductor and throg cock, Mr. and Mrw. EC. Frampton, sssenee were Injured, One of the Col. George Ho Hart, Prof. Charles Intier, George Frege, of Delanco, may Knapp, Prof. Harry C! Jones, Mra. E coe [De Balmer ate nad Men I's Bhep. lent was the result of slippery /nard, jr, Dr. and Mrs. Ralph & | Mra. Charles Tudor Wing eat Sa of $5.00 each to be given tol’ the school children of America, s competitive advertising contest No. 5109, die. ‘The acel rails, caused by a heavy fox M 10c —_— Giuseppe Zacomeno, twenty-five years 7 West Twen old, of No. ‘a in Roosevelt Hospital to-day suffering from numerous injuries mob of Italians and negroes after he {had fired his revolver at Cetenete Do- Father Tells How Youthful Fury, | menico of No, &9 West Thirty-ninth Domenico lives at No, 89 West Thirty- . : i, ninth street and found Zacomeno tn the dued Him and His Wife ‘away. He told nim he had no bual- [ness there and ordered him out. ‘This jled to a fight and Zacomeno drew his revolver and fired five them struck Domentco In the right leg, The others missed Tho negroes and Italians tiving In the ne Children’s Court | house heard the shots and rushed to fit. |the hallway, They all knew Domenico Tho and when they saw him In a fight with ‘and the bruises on Mrs, Bur | Zacomeno they pounged upon the lat ‘4 countenance were Intitcted, she | ter, Kicked the revolver out of his hand, knocked him down and beat and Esther is a comely girl with golden |Kicked him into Insensibiiity, Only the arrival of Detectives Eng- She weighs 125 pounds and and Lynch and Policeman Rook feller saved Zacomeno’ er |heard the shots and cries and ran to she | the pot, dispersing the mob with their Nightatioka, An abulange surgeon from Rooseve! beaten her father and mother into sub- Hospital found that Zacomeno had eev- eral broken ribs, a posal en to the hospital. also taken to thi bullet, extracted REGENT OF LI He wa: fturrell and her | Phe Count was selected as Regent when | , Charles @. late in the 70s the relaning. prin was declared Insa The Will Compa tae 35 330 Between 20th hoepital to have thi m his | Sept. %.—Count | Regent of the Principality ot Opening Sale Heaviest Taffeta Silk Costumes SIXTH AVENUE, ty-ninth street, infileted by a shots, One of ‘s ite, They | ble fracture of born in 1831 lexander, iams ny Alterations FREE, & 2ist St. , is Blue Trading Stamp Dividend Day. Bring your Stamps Added Tuesday] oe) ei cium Eshibit Room, tb floor, and you will re- because it’s Blue Trading| ceive 10 B. & M. Blue Trading Stamps free. This is the number Siamp Dividend D we give the last Tuesday in each month and you will get them just dependent of and ten you receive on account of Dividend, Extra Special Bargains for Tuesday. For women and misses, 1,00 to 2,00 values, a pair F 69¢ | Spangled Robes 20,00 and 25,00 values, at the usu; B. & M. Blue Trading Stamps with Each 10 Cents You Spend] +« 7 —- — Strap 200 Slippers Gold Clocks Perfect time- keepers, Tues- day at 98¢ Gold Rings Solid and heavy, some set | with stones, at 95¢ and have been made slightly {in perfect ; Stamps Free \ — & M. Blue Trading Stamps free Tuesday in every new book, Have as many new books as you want, 30 B, & M. Blue Trading Stamps absolutely fre given you at any one of the trading stamp bodths, to purchase or not. these Cut-Offs you present for redemption the better we shall like it, addition to the 30 free stam Arabian Dress Goods | ht Sewing |MochaGloves}; All- wool ile “| Clothing silk 1 , 38 net, , 00) Positive 1,00 puke ch a, | thes wile, do ee 15.00 | Buck only, out $0 | prone with military $ Fall Suits Tues- | yard spools, 2 spools | values, at value 50c, a|sble colom; 125 Poet HPO | pad value 29e, at ‘ yard, values, day at for Se; per dos., Is Pushing to Its End This Week The entire tremendous resources of this aggressive movement are being applied to making tis week-a grand finale, to this most successful September China Sale. We bought more largely this year than ever before, and because of that foresight, have sufficient tine offerings to keep up the stirring interest every day until the very last. Then in the cleaning up of the odd lote of September wares, we present some offerings that are better individually than any previously announced, These offerings of Dinnerware have never been exceeded in value in any previous sale. The same is true of (ut Glass, of which we make a splendid showing, and name prices, which, though equalled in @ few instances in the past on some special occasions, have never been exceeded in value anywhera .. The items below give the principal details of the offerings : In Dinnerware We shall close out two patterns of our open-stook Dinnerware, One in the finest English porcelain, and one in Theodore Haviland china—ae follows: English Porcelain Dinner Sets of 100 plecea, {a @ rich border decoration, with all pleces gilt. This set includes soup tureen and three platters; and has never been sold before for less than $19. At $10 a Set. Theodore Haviland China Dinner Sets ot 101 pieces, with soup tureen and four meat platters, In a fine violet decoration, with all handles gilt, This ret has never been sold’before for less than $37.60. At $20a set. The Odd Pieses remaining of these two patterns are on a counter, at half prices, Then we have these unmatchable values, as well : Pouyat China Dinner Sets of 114 pieces, in ating rose decoration Theodore Haviland China Dinner Sets, in a fine spray flower pin Mal oe al so 113 pleces, at $30, regularly $59, 100 pieces, at $25, regularly $45, Fine Austrian China Dinner Sets of 101 pieces, in flower decoration, and all handles gilt. At $12.50 tegularly $22.50, Bric-a-Brac me Very Ane plones, whieh will be cloned out at these prices: . . At 25c, Worth Double . ‘ancy China In the following assortmen' 4 Pl Tea Plates, Bread-and-butter Plates, Oat al taucore, Fruit Saucers, Cups aud Saucers, After-dinuer Coffee Cups and Suucersu Cut Glass re opened for today, and are marked at at 5, fren en ss $6, from $12. mn - asi ao, ass § t $9, from $18, Marble Statuary In the rush of this September business, some of these New prices Pibbacd " 50 and $4,50, worth $4 and§6.50, uxare and Cre ! 5 ascetae: an $3.50 and worth $5 Water Jugs at $5,$6.50 and $8.50, worth $8,910,912, Tall Comports, ut $5.50, o Pe ETA at § }, $7 and $8.50, worth $&, $12 Claret Jugs, at $7.50 and $8.50, worth $12 and $15, Bowls, 8-Inch, at 0 and $4.50, worth $5 and §7. 75, worth $4; S.inch, at $8.50, ) and $5, worth $3,50 and $§, h 25 and $1.50, worth $2 and $8 At $5, $6 and $7 a dozen, from $7.50, Basement. JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co., Broadway, 4th Ave., 9th and 10th Sts. ——— od At $4, f 2 At dot trom $1 AL gloss, an At $15, from $25. At $25, trom $65, French Bronzes At $20, from $42.50, At $50, from $126, Fancy China At half prices, All French china, and richly decorated: Salad Bowls, at $1.25, trom $2.50, Shop Dishes, at $4, from $4, ‘omports, $5.50, from Plates at $4.50, $6 and $9 dosen, from $¥, $12 and Ice-cream Sets, at $9 a set, from $18, 2.80, 99 and $10.60, Women's J. B. Corsets, Sizes 18 to 30, Value 1.00, at ESto WP HENRY SIEGEL This Cut-Off Is Good for Trading Stamps ne Without resttic- tlon or condition, \\, we shall. give 30 B. B.& M, Blue Trad- ing Stamps. Free and ‘in each you will receive o These will be whether you intend In the upper righthand corner of this advertisement we print a Cut-Off, One Given Free |ot these Cut-Orfs may be exehanged for 20 B. & M. Blue Trading Stamps, in addition to al number, with each dollar's worth of goods you buy. The more of the same as if no special stamp offers were made, We shall give 2 B, & M, Blue Trading Stamps free with each F ped spent until 12 o'clock. After Tr o'dock , shall give one stamp free with each 10 cents spent. | This is the usual number of stamps, and you will receive them in. \’. ps In new books, the 20 for which the cut-off is exchangeable, and the \’. so that with the first dollar you spend you receive 80 stamps. , — 4 . Men's Dress Lining Milline Men's Shirts Dadeowear Umbrellas Tatieta ry Net Robes Stiff bosoms,|Keguiar 89c) Men's and) Positive 50c Trimmed Hats,|In black and Wool Shirts Women's, regular) quality, per | values to. 6.00,| white, regular 7Sc, values, at 49e 22,50 values,at 5.00 and Drawers,at | 1.00 values, at at 39¢ | 49e yard 29¢ | 3.98 50c | 69c | 29¢ | 69c. | 10.00 | 22c