The evening world. Newspaper, November 3, 1904, Page 2

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‘|CAPT. O’REILLY’S DAUGHTER, WHO HAD MASHER ARRESTED, AND HER FATHER? — JHLit | ~ OPTANS HUD of the Famous Po- Miles O'Reilly. BASED HER ACTION ON MOTHER'S ADVICE. "Is Proud of Her Work and Does MM -She Can to Ald Working! and she has got the Her fine figure and the street masher, vice yeaterday when overy good woman of New ‘Will fully agree with ber, while all men heartily applaud her) ters summary action in causing | arrest and fining of a Brooklyn whore attentions to her upon @ GL MORE NOMS TAC Cut Down in Street on Way Home, Her Head Crushed and Her Body Dragged to Vacant Lot. ity. he was the youngest daughter Brooklyn police captain, was & seoret most care- by the young women in the Centre Btrest 4s complainant against her perse- who had forced his attentions her all the way from the Reld ave- ‘nue station to Manhattan. Although but nineteen years old, Miss O'Reilly ts a remarkably sel{;possessed young wom- © gb, and carried her case through court without jewal asaiatance, Then when the masher was fined $10 she quiatly slipped | away to her business, Helen Kathryn O'Reilly lives with her parents, an older sister and two broth- vere at No. 15 Quincy street, Brooklyn. father is commander of the Ralph | 7 ta police station. and made his reo- a Coot MNES OReilly STOESSEL SHOT DURING ASSAULT (Continued from First Page.) + i any conditions that mean surrender of tet mM tad @ mal - the fortress or of a single man, They fea thet the Rumlans ue fer are choered up by Gen, Stoeasel, WhO latroying the town, It is Pr has declared more that once in mes | everything that will be of fervice tot ‘ —— rod CINCINNATI, Nov. 8—The body of Alma Steinway, @ telephone operator, was found to-day In a vacant lot near the entrance to Spring Grove Cemetery, Marks on the body point to murder, tt sald that the Jai eptrance Into. the main, an Utation as the foe of evil-doers im the | ang the condition of the girl's clothing | oo. cea that Port Arthur will |Japanese is being blow up oF st on fi Adams street police ye vy ba Indloated a desperate ay iV yen Aang prt bdo B on fire ‘ _ Melly, ey ane te known row *) tater developments fe no dou ‘This ls the apirit with which the Port % t Beighborhood, ts the baby of the family, | tar the girl, who was an attractive arene earring Seating to-d LAHN MADE INTO { ‘ By . gaaet she does things with her father’s) 114 respectable young woman, ot tne Agnaine ie canaored by thé Jape A BALLOON SHIP, anese, and the exuot conditions aud feat Wie the cfg in va Nn @ been tearful on both Pi Shaadtaad murdered, She left the Cumminavilie telephone exebange shortly after @ o'clock iast night and her transfer to a ‘ Winton place was timed 9.40, One report’ says the Ja ee It im believed that some one waylaid | have been able to take aqreral ot her in the suburbs or possibly followed | ap " her from the cat, as she had some dia- | tance to walk to her home, dorer, it le believed, attacked her and BERLIN, Nov. 8.—The North German yt steamer Lahn, which was fold to Rusela several months ago, has un- dergone reconstruation and will serve 48 & captive-balloon ship, Her misgen- mast has been removed to acoommodam as generators, The vesse| has been tted out with a wireless tel ap- Paratua and powerful searchitg? is. Bhe Will lenve Geesteninuende for Russia on Saturday i ‘Reilly were frequent guesta of Aly Thomas Lipton, the Irieh Baronet, took a great fancy to Mise Nelly, ‘ ind her sister Marie were aboard +, the Bhamrock on numberless occasions, thelr bright eyes and clear complex: 3 y Gttracted the interest of many | | “Young millionatre members of the New | z. aault to-day began at daybreik, " fore there was likht, the Jap- The Mut ‘anoso rushing from all aides, Phere was sharp fehting, and then as the Russians were driven back or shot down there © thereby inereased the admiration of the York Yacht Club, But the Captain's! @aughters held themsel: aloof, and @wner of the Shamrock. Proud of Her Work, Miss Netly works for a living and ts of {t. “For nearly two years she been employed as stenographer by dragged her body into the vacant lot adjoiuing Spring Grove Cemetery To-day a blood trail from the lot to the street car tracks was found. ‘the girl's teeth wore scattered along the bloody trail and parts of her clothing Were ecattered about, She was cut over the temple, her skull was crushed and came explosions which could not be min- taken ‘The Russians have begun to explode thelr land mines. These mines extend far out from the Jnner fortresses. The explosions were terrifie and the sur- rounding country was shakon. The vie bratton was felt here, and it waa like an earthquake. It ls ald regiments of men were blown up in theso explosions, but the ny ROJESTVENSKY’S SHIPS ARRIVE AT TANGIER. TANGIBR, Nov. 3—A Rusalan aquad- five battleships reached Tangier hero The other Russian abt ere coaling and taking providions on rare and will put to sea this even- ni. ‘Walter B. Atterbury, the former Repub Hoan leader of the Twenty-third Ward, | Brooklyn, When Mr, Atterbury left fh * Place in the city government with Bt Mayor Low he persuaded Miss O'Reilly _ © attach berself to the office of his firm—Atterbury & Beekman, No. ™0 Boadway. “E never dreamed I would get into all ‘this notoriety,” said Miss Neily to an Byening World reporter to-day,but if it Will help rid the Bhooklyn ‘L. ¢rains of | the masher I will bear my burde: her jaws were broken. There are male Japanese kept on and then came the footprints In the trail, but there Is wo | hand-to-hand encounters. elue to the murdered, There came more explosions later and HOVEL MAUNCTION RUMAWAY AIRSHIP. ELL TO REPLY To <2 AOANST A OHM FUND ALL SAE) PARE T-VH ; riven to Baldwin's Arrow, After Almost|Maitman-Governor Will Tell the = meek tte, tye see ov oie “Evelyn M. Clark, Otherwise ci ylour Hours’ Wander- Republicans of Yorkville What Wor writeds “Piease oiice atte Pe) Known as Bell,” from Calling ing. 's Held Captive by Limb He Thinks of the Attacks ‘Was writen: ‘Please write down your ame and address, 1 want to iree: you'! Herself His Wife, of a Tree In Fleld Made on His Character, ‘Phat ts only sample of the trins of a} young woman going to work. it was Mot the same person who tiled to spoil! B Yesterday for me, But they are ail of| Louls V. Rell, the stock broker, of | | Governor-Chairman Odell Is scheduled spe class, and when you sirike at ove! No. #0 Hrondway, has brought a moat| ST LOUTS, Mo., Nov. 8—The Baldwin |, sadness tho Republicans of Yorkviti . You hit them all. | remarkable suit In the Supreme Court, |“frhip has been found sixteen miles ss ie in @ mass-meeting to be held at Turn Hall, Etphty-fifth street and Lexington avenue, to-night, The meeting is to by unde? the aveploes of the Thirtleth Aa Louls, in a cornfleld, near amlet of Fern Ridge. It ia unins d was still floating when dis: ithough It had anchored Itself. ~**it has becomo dangerous for a youn; west of § " inary an | to go ow 7 4 which he eeoks as a prelim’ fea Mar i baltan ‘aay mors, tian | 132 yuction “restraining Evelyn Mt. | the ! ,. wih wae’ Was always in| Clark, otherwise known as Evelyn M. | Jur men who suffered ab-| Belt” from hodling herself out as his | rere and 1} The tr rope had become entan- ; wife or Incurring any Indebtedness hers EO A lh ad hd en ere “* | glod in @ decayed limb of a tree, which |embly District Repubilcan organisa- e mat 5 n' “4 had broken off, by ou Ge the Te trkinae aed {2p ats| The Injunction asked for ta ponding) wight ty deve theracrat orate ae the | Hoe. Of whlch Ambrose Neal le the 4 Stnorer s punishment vu be a warning ti triat of his suit In equity to have Ie} Bround. 1 sagued down inte leader, nwa of what thy miv axpect”| fudisially determined that she ts not (Held and was discovered. t mation hen | Seg rsaky determing that abe is sot Gece the catty part of the hay Mr. Odell has unnounced that he will Wha & Heryin, dave ls oer fh fa in “o Pel the news spread slowly, finally teach-| take advantage of this opportunity to 4 ; Y avs in biv complaiut that there ts not|ing Fern Rtuge, when J. A. Mraun, al rept oe Pinte keto het al ts Love) und navor has been aay marital rela-| merchant, telephoned to Capt, Laluwin| (hY '@ the @biacks made upon hie cavtured the rol eng es, She! ton between thea, | of the discovery chmracter and administration hy Judge Fake, Le eoceedings begun 9 month ago| Baldw.n and’ Knabenshue, aceom-| PACKER ‘There will be apeechen also by have been condvefed in a most secre d have| mar.ner, but when James KR Soley, of | for the place In automoblies Frank Platts frm, pot an ' ; vt an Order | bring the erratic oy a rom Jus ice in what is known | courte, 1 nu” S7Aft back to 4 the “ex parte p of the Suprene | “We. will brin , ‘ ‘ourt to @ e Ne @ it in sure this time," have been frequent complaints‘ 4] o examine Mrs. Kate Husnell,| was Baldwin's parting remark, 7 Fiding 00 bo of N West Bitiy-fith street, —-— rains,” ad M fore Adam & sakes as referee, an a | ran EX-PARKHURST MAN CAUGHT. t| panied by several others, have started | Jullus Mayer, candidate for Attorney- j will) General on the Republican tieket, and ne con) others. Brass bands and red fire will be emplayed te whoop things up, BAND OF BANDITS CANNOT ESCHPE aes fn her sult came out. yn V. Bell (or Clark) ob- Mr. Boree, of Righ. Wied. f, Applied to J he sa bra champion ths, $e 24 UL ane ford & It bes to-riay to have the order y ar bork ad J e Amend took the ark at they tererved decision > made Edgar A. Whitney, formerly an phat, of the Parkhurst Roclety, who di a ROCSEVELT TO PANAMA,’ ‘peared wien called a» a witness against . valid Fdward Glennon, Devery’s wantman, wet Tanna ne teed Saude Rew Virte in Sezer | Buffalo Bill's Posses Have Gang ary. Whioh Murdered Bank Cash- a Whitney dtmppeared, last June, ‘ HNOTON, Nov. %—Prealdent! the | to} ier jorevelt to-d y transmit‘e! tirougn the i . Their apt tate Desertment the following enble-| eter wie acq at Gay me Capture Hogiect of duty. Since then W: may been searched for far and wite, While looking over the telenho day an attache of the Di ‘8 ome to Pres dem Amador, of Panama Exerliency, Preaident Amador, ts Sure, j clita love of this first anniversary of 1.'° THE WORLD: THIRSDAV EVENING: OVENAER s, ‘904. LIFE A RELL GIRL ~—-SUCIDE WROTE Miss Jessie Peters Ended Life with a Pistol at the Home of Herself and Sister After a Quarrel, NOTHING BUT MISERY, SHE SAIO IN A NOTE, She Complains of Work in Let- ters She Left, but There Are Hints of Objections to Her F Asie Miss Jensie Peters, a very handsome was a hell on earth. Mrs. Gwansburg, who had an {nk ling of her sister's desperate purpose, had followed her to her room, but tound the door locked against her, While she was beating frantically on Gee pan- ste of the door and orying for assipt- ance, the young Woman sot Herself. Theugl the two sisters of the dead woman meintain @ slience over the matter, the police have two otters that show the young woman was tn the depths of despomtence, One of these letters reads: “If there ip etch @ place as hell this life ja a living hell, But what is Hfe? = It's wok from morning wnt! night, Life id nothing but misery,” ‘The second note was addressed to “Lally, and it was admitted at the house that “Lally” was one of the dead givi'e sisters, In it Miss Peters wrote: “Lally~It will come home to you. You are the one to blame Lal is to have aj} my money and the shings that are lett,” Neither Note Signed, Neither rote was mined and the writing showed that they bad been sorawied off In @ moment of desperate haste, probably while her sister was clamoring for an entrance to the room. ‘The sisters owned the Thirteenth street house and are saia to have many wealthy relatives in the city, ‘With the exception of a few rooms they rent out they occupy the entire three- story brick building, which Is situated in what was once @ fing residential cen- tre. As far as could be learned from the lodgers in the house after the shooting Miss Peters bas been despondent for some time, and has dropped hints now and then that a! 8 troubled over some love affair, Though Mrs. Bwans burg would not admit it to-day, it was sald that she objected strenuously to the man her sister had fallen in love with, The two young women had been in- separable companions from childhood, and this friction brought about the melancholy from which Miss Peters seemed unable to rouse herself, To-day when thecalsters were at brenkfast table they bad a few aharp words, whereupon the younger woman went up to her room on the second floor, Ae whe passed through the door of the room she turned on Mra, Swaneburg and eald. “It will be all over soon, I will put an end to it.” For some min- utes the fall import of these words did not seem to strike the older aleter, When they did she rushed up to Miss Peters's roam and struggled to open the door, It was locked, and she beat fran- tloally on the panels, As one of the panels crashed in under the blows 4 pistol shot was heard, and the younger woman fell upon the bed and rolled off to the sl Mra, burg reached her arm ‘through thé broken panel and unlocked the door, When ahe entered the room she found her elster lying on the floor near the bed. Blood was flowing from a wound in the head, and @ ®-callvre revolver hat rolled away from her side, An ambu- Jance was sent for, but as there was some delay In It reeponding Mrs, Bwana- burg hurried out and summoned her family phyeleian, Dr, Wilfred Allen, of No. 110 West Twelfth street, Doctors Arrived Too Late. Dr. Allen and i. creas, from the New York Monpttal thts but when they reached the side of the Young Woman Mt | expired. At the house nothing could be learned to base & motive for the suiode upon. It wap admitted, however, that the young Woman must @ dellde ate: planned the act, as the revolver she used was new and had not been in_ her ion before. ‘When Coron r Scho ae called to ‘announer wi ipxeotign suicide and grant H SOCIETY IN POLITICS, Many Fpahtonables Will Attend To- night's Meet on Beha! of Pinkney, ‘The Independent Democtacy of the Fifteenth Senatorial District will hold jase-meeting to-night in the concert hall of Madison Square Garden for the purpose a4 ratifying the national and Gtate tickets and Cornelius 8, Pinkney, the candidate for Senator from that district, Among those who hi * indorsed Me, vend age Marry Dy Re Ad hela on ocar Co a om we fer ihe dee cd eS takes era y' BE. A. Whitney BA Pearl owed aa the oes * our hapyy Whitney was peop.e und |: ster, MEETEETSE, Wyo, Nov. &—The investl Ddand! UT Walsey: tere re ie who shot and killed Bank Cag. Judge |*PAeavor to rob the bank were drought came | to bay early. to-day by Ook Cody's Monday for | posses in the forest between was to have tes-| and Thermopolis. PD merocenis| Death etther by rife shote or ty stip "ata a Sons og. THCOSORE ROOMY Lr. «7m Booames Mins croc te A Sun Of enthus'aym on th! i eerne? to the withers. arraignel bet is A terncon a warvetl Nae ages Middaugh at Cody Tursday in the} # PARKER H | true of abuses which become rooted in my bomen life, sith tee: 8 ect * easy eno | who, in thie case, Is the predominant river with the Yovernment, p Feaiet ny suggention at hange. But t Peace J dpe ee 4 in er mother Enutled to inquire her this policy of using the law to give favors to the few, while the many are left 5 4 wense of injustice, ecole me ¢ wr 4 lagores, eden ot =f ome, ¢ s ‘an ed "ine pate fe p> ‘amily—tl i Seen PARKER RIDICULES STRENUOUS LIFE. NEW HAVEN, Conn, Nov, &—A large and eager crowd of men and women filled the New Haven station as Judge Parker's train arrived this after- noon, ‘There was cheering when tue Presidential candidate was recognised rossing the platform, accompanied by Judge A. Heaton Robertson, the party candidate for Governor. They took car- riages and were driven s'owly through Meadow, to Church, past City Hall, through Elm, to Orange and Court streets, to Music Hall. The sidewalks on the streets through which the car- riages were drivba were lined with peo- ple, and at many places cheers went up. Music Hall, which comfortably holds 2,20 people, was well Ailed before Mr, Parker arrived. The gallery had been reserved for Yale men, and applause was unstintingly given by them as Mr. Parker teok his seat on the platform. Tn bis speech Judge Parker said mn part: “It has become a fashion during to cent years to exhort our young men to leud what hes been called ‘the stren- uous life,’ “We have always had an effictent army of brave soldiers it has been wufflole, that we ha‘ n_ able to resist the onslaught of th: ba 1g ward of fore sreesion to settle our lyn as own Internal troubles. “Bot chis does not seem to patisty, We must be strenuoas, not alone in all things which make for good, for safety and for permanence, but we mua be strenuous in adventure, for pergonal jory and even jn looking for as he tts, apparently, not eno t wo shall be active In every J re liglows movement, In sveryehlog thax ean promote education, the training and the Kivcipiine of our youthe—theae, ap rently, do not assure real progress. Go" we sre invited to turn aside fro these into thase lines of agtlvity an: adventure whlch smack of the Cru- pades and of the dime when the moaic! castle was the only home tn which human Ing’ cou fairly said to have a right to live “Even the st in our colleges udents have eee Invited to become strenuous. A little investigation or knowlerige ayn to show the college student al “How ‘nue! Sreater activity in this Peapeot is demanded by our Umes than we now show? But even there wer thts greater demand, there never was Period when sports were more univera- Glly practiced, or when they were more rect, Our successful rivalry in these as been shown In every quarter of the world. But this sucege bag not perenscea by bas a a, siheleacy In scholarshi not ma our young me swashibucklers in gehooi or FOUR MONTHS. Dr, Anderson's New Process. at the same| '? JAMES CONNERS. “For years I had been subject to what 1 thought was just ordinary catarrh. Some- times it would. be very annoying and then It would subside somewhat, but the slight- feat cold or change of weatber would cause Mt to return, each time worse than before, Fiaally my symptoms grew so serious, that I became alarmed. There was a consiant » I relsed 4 dition wi bat Pinkney’s candidacy and who will at- 5 eloy “deen ie, dente | me to pe cheat, chitts, fever nbd a to distress me, and 1 noticed that I fre- wently , ay blood nrixed with the m fad Kevngtt. any (el'so very weak inet foe fo] to td for | TH Tiling bad ‘not’ belped mea particle. ead tect was completely upset from ram "I 4 pretense ot Cornett 4 Ny Seas fae Reo ape it iu rte, cured. 1 sot maaties at y Wel ae a a Ume to andl Bogan then and there, because | s 4 ae} no sincere oot oe Seca {hte every moot tn my. papi! woon cen aby wrents limeppes' lore or ton. att tat ay fas vr lo NN STAND-PATTERS 22 (Continued from Firat Page.) ITS AT after they have gone out into the world.” —-—~ NOT OWNED BY G. 0. P. Colored Demoerats Rally bers for Parker and Herriot, The Republican claim that the col- ored vote of this city will be almost | 4 unit for RooseveX and Higgins got « severe blow last night when the United Colored Democracy held 4 meeting at the Carnegie Lyceum, The hall is only Supposed to hold 400, but fully a thou- sand crowded im ft and many who 4 came late couldn't get in at all. James C. Matthews, of Albany, pre-| sided and speeches were made by J.) ¥. Wheaton, James D. Carr, W. R. B. Altman & Co. MISSES’ AND GIRLS’ DEPARTMENT, , MISSES’ DRESSES IN THE MOST EFFECTIVE NEW STYLES, FOR STREET WEAR’ OR DRESS OCCASIONS, CHILDREN'S FROCKS, PARTY AND DANCING DRESSES ALSO A LARGE STOCK OF MISSES’ TAILORED, AND OUTER GARMENTS, SEPARATE SKIRTS AND WAISTS. CHILDREN'S SAILOR AND RUSSIAN DRESSES; COATS AND REEFERS. CLOTHING FOR BOYS, A SELECT GENERAL STOCK IS SHOWN, ALSO FINER GRADES OF APPAREL, INCLUDING RUSSIAN BLOUSE SUITS OF SILK, VELVET, EMBROIDERED SILK AND CLOTH. CHILDREN'S OVERCOATS OF FUR, ALSO SILK, VELe VET AND CLOTH, WITH FUR TRIMMINGS, AT t t, ($25.00, $40.00, $55.00, $75.00 AND $110.00 } AND A LARGE VARIETY OF HATS AND CAPS IN tac’ ‘ ‘Nineteenth Street and SOth Aven, New York, Suits And °\ Overcoats : Friday and Saturday. It is in all respects the most remark- able sale that we or any other house ever at- tempted—and we mean to make this Friday and Saturday the most remarkable days in the entire great movement, To this end we have added: Four hundred more of our finest $12.50, $14.00 and $15.00 Suits and Overcoats fresh from the ‘ workrooms, garments conceded to be the richest, smartest and very best obtainable in New York at their regular prices—all these now added to this offering at She Re rae The. Suits include both single and double: breasted. ; Fabrics are this seasons newest Cheviots, Cassimeres, Tweeds, The | Overcoats are in all lengths. Fabrics are Cheviot, Melton, Kerseyand Frieze—in fact, every good cloth, every good color and ory eee mixture is among them, The garments are beautifully cur and - square, shapely shoulders, close fitting collars—presenting in every de- tail that grace of fit and Sinish so much desired by gentlemen, and rarely found except in costly custom work, Open Saturday evenings tli! 9 o'clock. 740-742 Broadway. ‘WOODS @.: 4

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