The evening world. Newspaper, October 12, 1904, Page 3

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. i ) { " check which they sustained Oct, 10, owing to the determined resistance : by i» a) groure ba - ‘GENERAL IS WOUNDED, AUSSINS CHECKED ~ AUT IGT BES O Three Days’ Battle at the chili River, Though Accompanied by Tremendous Losses, Has Resulted in No Decided | Advantage for Either Side. ST. PETERSBURG, Oct. 12—No definite news has been re- teived at the War Office, up to this time, of the battle of Echili River. | All the indications are that it was still in progress to-day. The latest’) Feporis indicate that the fighting the. is of much larger proportion than Supposed yesterday, | The battle has now raged unintcrruptedly for three days and nights, and the Russians have teen unable to make further headway since the | of the Japanese, DESPERATE, FIGUTING ON EACH SIDR. The latest War Office information says the fighting {s of a most desper- Ate character. The positions are constantly changing hands, the Russians {nflicting and sustaining heavy locses, A mention of the Tomsk Regiment as being the worst sufferer, indicates that the Second Stberlan Division, Gen. Gavnoffs corp, is engaged. An officlal report from Gen. Danieloff, commanding the Sixth Siberian Rifle Division, who is wounded, shows that Gen. Stackelberg’s Corps Is also fo the fight. If tho full two corps are Involved about 50,000 Russians aro actually engeged | The late news alro confirms the Assoctated Press's despatches indicating that Kuropatkin is transferring the weight of his blow to the Japanese right. LOCATION OF RUSSIAN LINFS, The extreme Russian loft extends to the Taltse River, where it bends northward to forty miles above Liaoyang, The line includes the villages of Uitey and Tant: itzy, three miles south of Bentsiaputze, and then bends northward to Slaliuhedzy, on the Upper Schill, a few miles porthwest of the Yentai mines. P There is no evidence yet or mention in official despatches of operation ‘west cf the rallroad. Intenre public Interest Is mantfested in the fighting at the front, Great tension and some nervousness is dirpiayed at the War Office, —++o—. O¥AMA REPORTS THAT RUSSIANS WERE BEATEN, TOKIO, Oct. 12.—Field Marshal Oyama reports that there was fighting along almost the entire front Oct. 10; that the Japanese are gaining ground, and that the Russian attack on Slenchuang—on the Hun River, thirty-five | miles southwest of Mukden—was repulsed, A brigade of Russian infantry, with two thousand cavalry and two guns, having the object of striking Gen, Kurokt's flank, crossed the Taltss River Oct. 9, The Jupase cut off the retreat of this force - ~My will BUT STAYS IN COMMAND, ST, PETERSBURG, Oct. 12—Gen, Sakharoff, telegraphing yesterday evening, confirms the reports of desperate fighting north of Yental. where the heights were alternately held by the Russ!ans and Japanese, Gen) Danteloff, who succeeded Gens. Trousso and Romanoff of the Sixth Siberian Rifles Division, was wounded in the leg. relinquish his command, The losses are not stated, and aci MUST in command but did not | cording to the latest advices the battle PALMER DEES LAWVER' STORY Justice Barrcit Rules that! City Court Judge Asserts that Banker Charles W. Morse Will, He Never Tore a Subpoena to| Have to Testify in John E.| Bits, ag Lawyer Dobbs Al- McDonald's Suit, leged in Affidavit, CE TRIST ~ FEVEAL SECRETS | | | | Supreme Justice Barrett, of the Judge John Palmiert, of the City Court, refused to-day to modify the Court, told an Evening World reporcer order o fthe Appe' Division for the this afternoon that ther was tet examination of Charies W. Moree, | wor , avons of truth in the aM@davit filed yes- former Ice Trust president, in his ex- terday in the Fourth District Court that amination sefore Eugene 1. Pomeroy, | had torn into pleces @ subpoena tesue-t Of No, 31 Nassau street, in behalf of | by Justice George F. Roesch, stamped John E nald of No, 216 West on the pleces and tossed the service fee Beventy-seventt street, who wants to | Of 2) cents to a court attendant to buy sue him for #0000 which he put Into | 4 ¢lgar, Tce Trust stock or what he declares to| Judge Palmlerl was in his chambers be “faise and fraudulent” statements | When he made this dental, and there by Morse. | Was present John J. MoSherry, who, {t MeDonald got an order for the ex. | veloped, was the officer to whom the n of Morse ror the purpe ¢ | 2 cents Is alleged to have been thrown The Justice declined to say anything | until he bad sent for McSherry. | “All I've got to say,” declared the! Judge, “is that ebody is looking for cheap advertising. I'll give that somebody some cheap advertising In about a week. That's all I've got to say.” Do you mean by ‘somebody’ Justice * Roesch or Attorney Dobbs, who made eeded by him in nt In this action, is to begin Oct ham Bened Untermeyer & Mar Gusmenhelmer, 1, protested in be ‘al scope of the aMdavit you say Is not true?” | M herry De . Teo, nothin’ to it," broke In Mo- ‘Y'm the feller what's con- > nected with the other end of this, an’ ‘a. LE didn’t get any twenty-five cents to buy a cigar, Nothin’ of the kind hap- ened.” You hear what he says.” remarked Judge Palmierl “No one ean see me unless he is wit me or unless they 7 get to me through him. That's righ echoed = McSherry . ‘You se you had to tell me what call your business wae before you coud hime of sone get to him vot Do you mean to say, Judge,” asked Paid + 3 the reporter, “that the aMdavit of At- celved him torney Dobbs ia so faise that no one pacity ot even mode an attempt to serve you with a subpoena vom Justice Roesch’s court? That you did noi even hear thet some one wanted to serve you wih a subpoena? r Htons the stock $16,008 allowea that id by company for only $80.00 at mont, Was aware of the con: lee we end that Mor @itlon of affairs. “1 do, ealcbomaia 4478 there wax about pn. | “Toate Hight" sald MeBherry, “No \ of n) water tin the American | one came here w! & SUD; ne. La es Company's trsue of stock, | had oa AN AR oy pe ek i} -ISCENE IN THE COURTROOM WHERE “DIAMOND WEINSEIMER IS ON TRIAL ON CHARG The Former Head of the Building Trades Alliance Sits in the Same Place Where Sam Parks Sat When Convicted 02 Charges Sim —Weinseime:’s Wife 1s One of the Most Interested + pectators. 44 POG9O44 0949944 90-499999094 294490 09OO50D D9 HID DHIGGD 494-9905 09O DOO POEOLLD b LOEOE ODE OEE HEUTE DODD DOI. SLE ETRE EEE ~ FLIPNG SAMS LEED AD FE Father of Bride Who Pursued His Daughter and Najeeb Hashim from Chicago to Prosecute Them Relents, Although the pursuing papa of the brife rpread his hende over the heads and gave them his blessing to-day, Najeed Hashim, a Syrian merchant, and his wife, Loulse Kanioos, with whom he eloped from Chicago, only to be ar- treated and thrown into police cells upon their arrival here, can testify .o the accuracy of the axiom which says “the course of true love never rus smooth.” The couple were arrested on a tele- fram from the Chicago Chief of Police aq they stepped off a ferry-boat at Forty-second street last Fridgy. They were charged with etealing #1000 be- longing to the tall, raven-hatred Loulse’s mother, Mary Kanloos, of Chi- cago, with abducting Louise, who, do- apite her mature @ppearance, is de- clared vo be less than seventeen, They were going to tae Hotel Victoria, waere the brida) sult had been reserved by wire, In vain they showed a marriage |i- gense got M Chicago, and in vain did | Hashim protest that the $3,600 taken from him was his own money drawn (rom bank. ‘ihey were locked up, Next day, In spite of his offer to prove by @ bank officer that a certain identical note on the Bank of Havana had been issued to Hashim, Magistrate Barlow heid the eiopera 1or ury-egnt hours, inen Hasina s lawyer secured a writ + ue COUPLE reseased, oniy | Paps haniovs aad armved from Ciicago with ine necessary legal pApers ana @ Warrant iseuea by a chleago Justice of the Peace, | ine ewpers had only wad ume to} cross Para row to the offices of heir! lawyer, when they were rearrested on new warrancs, | Phere were other habaes corpus pro- ceedings, and to-day, when Papa K. toos gave his patenal blessing, forgave bis daughter and accepted Najeeba a son-in-law, thus relievi Haslum of one charge. ‘The lawyer for tne newly wedded pair pressed for the discharges of both on the ground that the paper is now defective In the larceny charge Dismissed by Ju a ¢ Leventritt gave Mr. and Mrs. ‘a. thelr freedom, but replying to the question of Assistant Disirletcattor. ney Sandford, sald it would not be in contempt of his court if a new warrant was sworn out for the couple. Hashim and his bride have oo ued to the Court-House as a ploce to} celebrate thelr honeymoon that they Iingered about the rotunda, waiting for A new arrest, perhaps to save troubie| for the minions of the law and avold| the annoyance of journeying up to thetr | hotel and back again. | At last accounts they were atill wait- Ing. and incidentally holding a reunion | with Pana Kantors and a half score uf | Syrian friends, DEAD BABY LEFT AT C!!URCH, George Baler, a the body of a mal ved about three days after its birth in the doorway of the Church of the Holy Trinity, Clinton and Montague Streets, Brooklyn, to-day, The baby was wrapped in a woman's undershirt, around which was rolled manila paper tled with string The package was taken to th: street police station. et sweeper, found child that had ig Adame The Coroner's physician made an examination, but found no marks of violence on the body. The poilce are at work on the through me, an’ I don't know nothin’ eyour it.” If 1 wasn't a candidate for election, the Justice continued, “this thing ¥ id never have gone as ft mebody wants cheap advertisin, met even with them. You saw nere T was up for tndorsement lost by the Bar Association? Well, Part of this cheap advertising tlee Palmieri, who is on the Re- publican ticket, and Joseph I. Green, Tammany Hall, were refused in- of dorsements by the Rar Association In view of Justice Palmieri’s denial Attorney Willoughby B. Dobbs, of No. 167 Broadway. will probably be reques « ed to explain his aMdayit on Oct. 18, when the sult of Mra. Julia Bonnacto against imiert te called for trial be- fore Ju Roesch. The suit w for the recovery of $165 alleged to be di in Inatalments and interest on a for 14,000, executed, it is alleged, Judge Palmier! in settle of a certain affair, ag Water's” make-up, In che scramble that | apirit. producers ¥ | man, but looked pal HOW POO" SED BLACKCK Victim at Seance Alleges that Spirit of “Running Water” In- flicted Big Bump on His Head with Weapon.’ Rival spook finders, ghost weavers and disgruntied court oficers who have been endeavoring to serve a warrant for assault ‘on spirit designated as “Running Water” oceupled the atten- tion of Magistrate Furlong to-day is Gates Avenue Court, Brooklyn, It waa medium againgt medium, and the teatl- | mony was fairly hopping with wraiths | that danced about spiritual planes and | jammed chose in the flesh over the head with blackjacks at material angles. Thp defendants were-Hugh H. Moore and his wife Cora, of No, 3% Madlaun street, Brooklyn, They have been aiving little at homes In which @ haunt- ed typewriter and Indian shades were the chief attractions, Against them ap- peared Jacob Rasmussen, of No, 110 Bedford avenue; Mra. Ida Yittum, of No, 219 Lexington avenue, Brovilyn, and o Mrs, Sawtell, her friend. Attended Seance to Seoft. A week ago Mr. Rasmussen and the two ladies attended @ Moore stance, They admitted to the Court to- day that they went to ecoff, It was thelr intention! to enlighten the public on the absurdity of Mr, Mogre's pre- tensions with his haunted typewriter and his “Kunoing Water" spook, When “Running Water" floated out of the cabinet and danced along a spirit plang across the parlor carpet, Mr, Rasmua: sen lost his patience and stepped over) and slapped the alleged «bagtiy fim of the Indian on the wrist. Mr. Rasmussen placed a large round bump tn evidence to show where “Run- ning Water’ had returned his saiu.e with @ blackjack. The redskin, than Mr. Moore s aged but agile father, Indian Spook Shed His Fi Mrs, Sawtell and Mrs, Vittun bore to court sundry feathers and legging fringes @4 testimony of “Running followed Mr. Rasmussen's bump the In- dian spirit had shed some of his trap- pings, declared the complainants, and they had collected them’ at no littie personal risk. “Running Water's” folt of Mr. Ras- mussen and the alleged “wilfully and unlawfully using one Pansy, a child of seven, in the Moore performa: the chief charges against the prisoners. ‘On such a complaint they were held in 4.000 ball yesterday and confined all ight In the Raymond Street Jail. When the case was finally called Mr. Mpore aeked and obtained through his counsel, Fenton Rockwell and E. H. Benn, an adjournment until Monday. Mr. and Mra, Moore went back to thelr | cells in Raymond Street Jail. He was feeling in good spirits as he learned from a message the haunted typewriter turned out that he will geq ball to- de | ty, cared Ma, Rasmussen, was none other \ FATALITY FOLLOWS {MRS,OEPIETRO MAY HOUSES TENANTS) BE RELISED SOK Young Man Living in Apartment | Coroner Begins Inquest To-Mor- Has Legs Broken—One Killed; row Into Shooting of Wom- and Other Occupants of} an’s Brothertin-Law, Whom Building Hurt Recently, She Killed Defending Herself. | Tenants in the large apartment-house| Coroner Jackson Issued subpoenas to- @4 No, & West One Hundredth street | day for the inquest into the death of were discussing with considerable alarm | Michael Rago, who was shot and killed to-day the number of accidents to per-|by Mrs. Rosa De Pietro, while she was sone living among them in the pat few | defending herself and baby from his months, This discussion was precipl- attack, , bl cat. Mel pee tage rent oe ‘The inquest will begin to-morrbw fal Peter Nerent, of that address, last morning, andyshould the Coroner's jury cide was justifiable evening as he was getting off an ¢le-|find that the homl: the woman will be allowed her iiberty, aa at the Ninety-third street oO° ne Dietelet-Attoraey will preas the ant TONE, man—he #, srgninest “4 eels Mada sceg stepped m= e train, 800 one OF is eas mae the W. U, REVENUES UP, aity foet tore the tial ‘we stopped fore was hi | But the Operating Expenses for bh ja legs were and man the Largely Increased. He was taken to the J, Hood Wright Hospital and trom there he was trans- ferred to the Lincoln Hospital in the Bronx. He refused to mi any state- ment to the police or to the physician of tee hompitals concerning the tal jen’ Only two weeks ago Nerent’s brother was reverely Injured by being run down | President Robert C. Ciowry, in read- of the Western Union Telegraph Com- pany peter, made no mention of the agitation during the year over the dissemination ‘4 the company of racing hows, nor it the difference in, revenues on account of the cutting ry by a dicycle, Five weeks ago Rene Z (off of the racing news service. In his Spleh, also a tenant of the One Hun- | stutcinent Mr. Clowry said: dredth street hou: was killed “There was an increase of $81,700.64 pe saree in vhe revenues of the year and of $406,100.39 In the expenses. Of named amount $1%,373.8) was in main- tenance and reconstruction of lines, In- cluding nearly $100,000 for repairs to the company's transatlantic cabit and state was in rating and eral expenses, including removal an improvement of offices, e an clvated train Injured ye tion where Nerent day. only a few days before that | Spleh's father 1s injured in a bicycle | accident and ‘al other tenants of use have met with slight accl- tn “the past few months. CAN D'I\K TROUBLE Tha sO. Wa to Get Although they won't admit it many people who suffer from sick head- jaches and other alls get them straight from the coffee they drink, and it le easily proved if they're not fraid to leave it to @ test as in the case of a lady in Connellsville. “I had been a sufferer from sick headaches for twenty-five years, and any one who has ever had a bad sick | headache knows what I suffered. Sometimes three days in the week I would have to remain in bed, at other times I couldn't lie down, the pain would be so great. My life was torture, and if I went away fro home for a day I more dead than al: “One day | was telling a woman my troubles, and she told me she! | knew that it was probatly coffes; caused it. She sald she had been, | cured by stopping coffee and using! We are offering this Smallest Price night ‘The medium, spectators and spiritual- ‘iste were prodiiously disappointed at the adjournment, A Mr. R. Maurie, of No. 210 East Eighty-first street, stepped up to Policeman Muldoon and handed him his card. It bore his name and this addition “Nature's Physician, Hygienic Physi- . Herbalist and Magnetopath.” "I wish to defend Dr. Moore,” sald the herbalist. ‘He is one of the real He materialized my own dear mother for me, and she wrote me a sweet letter on his wonderful typewriter. If have seen ‘Running Water’ dozena of times, and it was dle- graceful the way those people acted ef Materialized a Mayor's Spirit. ‘Tea, indeed,” chimed in Charles B. Low, of No. G6 ClePmont avenue, who declared he was a grandson of Jacod Weatervelt, the «ix.y-ninth Mayor of New York, “o# materialised my dear grandfather, tue Mayor, for me, and I wan frog at the disgraceful proceed- {ngs last night. I saw ‘Running ter’ iep out on the spirit piane and was shocked when this man went up and strock at him. The spirit then van- ished in thin alr, He did not club this BE Pa ined and grieved a van it was @ most ‘acet Ever Quoted. | Postum Food Coffee, and urged me to try this food drink, | “That's how I came to send out and get some Postrm, and from that | time I've rever been without It, for it suits my taste and has entirely cured all of my old troubles, All 1 | did was to leave off the coffee and) tea and drio! stead {ts place, Ti more good thap everything else put { os. together. OS ae: “Our house was like a drug store, for my husband bought everything he heard of to help me without doing any good, but when I began on tho Postum my heedaches ceased and the other troubles quickly disappeared. [ have a friend who had an experience just ke mine and Postum cured her just as it ald me. “Postum not only cured the head- aches but my general health has been Wiis, Soe ARLALI SI tial, sold elsewhere at $4.00 and $5.00. We give Casi Cartificates than before. y Postum more than I ever did coffee.” Fi Name given by Postum Co. Battle Creek, Mich. “There's & reason,’ finding out. Get the famous little book, “The! "and It's worth | | wilh every purchase, ‘Road to Wollville,” in each package. | ing hie report at the annual meeting | DS-157e 9 EAST 23°° ST. WO DOORS WEST of THIRD AVE..N.Y. This White Enamelled Iron Bed- 10 be had In all sizes, made very substin- PHIL” DOT rED Lines Siow WEN SEINER, Seaweed of ° TINY BOY SLAVS “NEW BABY SISTER ‘Jealous Because of Attention) | Paid by Parents to Newcomer Two-Year-Oid Lad Crushes Her Skull, Vor two years and cight months iit tle Emmet Robinson was the idol of his home, the petted darling of his father | and mother, Then came a little baby sister and nobody paid much attention to Emmet. If he wanted to play he was told not to make a noise, “Little sister has to sleep.” The kisses and pettings that were once his seemed to be transferred to the newcomer, and Emmet sulked in @ corner, His little heart was breaking Decause of the neglect. { In all Nyack there had been no boy #0 much potied and made of by his pa- rents before the arrival of the little sister, In all Nyack there seemed to be What she saw was Emmet by the crib with the and baby was dead, her little head being battered frightfully, Coroner Bittig was notified and hed an inquest. He ordered the only ver- dict he could, that Gladys Robinson | was killed by her brother, whose age makes him Irresponsible for the deed. After Gladys had been taken away |by the Coroner? Emmet hung around his mother and father, Once he plucked his mother’s sleeve and sald; “Baby is gone; why don't you pet = OF EXTOR ilar to That Which He Now Bs 2 F vies 2578) we = $10,000,000 BABE CAPTURES SHIP J, Nicholas Brown, Four-Year+ Old Heir to Great Fi Autocrat of Oceanic on” from Liverpool, thought that ship on the ended in this # Fge258 he i H = 2 i : : at & = z > Hie ges : E> j 5 i i 4 = 5, i E tee: hi < 3° fs ¥ me now, mammat’ week inducements not to be equalled in any other § store—in fact we have made the price feature such an attraction that you should certainly take advantage. Bookcases, like design in golden oak, with shelves, avery neat piece of furniture and worth double the money; special, Ny iW ,_—_ pnd | me mo rT = and oak of ma- hogany finish, carved fronts, adiustable backs, rever- sible velour cushions, wuss ne $200: $7.85 Open Saturday Evgss $1.25; special, Six-foot Oak Extension Tables, like cut; finely polished tops, with $7 hesvy round legs, $8.00; speciil this week. ,, Liberal Credit hi ARR vitae i \ | | in) Made very strong’ Value $4.99 easy working, 75c, Week Opens an Account. ” eae id gd

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