The evening world. Newspaper, November 15, 1904, Page 3

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: ee, i SS JANE SAT W CURLS UP Ella Louise Cornell Also Swears in Soulptor Barrell’s Divorce Suit that the Wife Hugged Parsons, the Co-respondent. BUT MRS. DARRELL SAYS THE STORY IS UNTRUE. She Asserts that Her Husband) Treated Her Cruelly, Knocked Her Down, and that She Was Forced to Leave the House. Miss Ella Loulse Cornell, of Mount Vernon, testifted to-day that as long ago as 1898 she saw Mrs, Jennie Dar- rell sitting on the lap of “Charlie” Par. sons in an fee-cream parlor. It was during trial of a suit before Justice Leventritt in the Supreme Court, in which Charless H. Darrell, a sculptor, | aaks for an absolute divorce, naming Parsons, a marble dealer, as co-re- spondent. Mrs, Darrell, a silght litsle woman with back hair, makes counter charges against the sculptor, to whom she was Married in 18%, alleging that he was nm habitual drinker and treated her amd their ttle girl cruelly. Joneph F. Darrell and his wife, also named Jennie; Joseph Genthener, jr, @ Presbyterian colporteur and theological | wudert, teatified to seeing Mrs, Charles R. Darrell in apartments at No, % ‘West Ninety-elghth street, where her husband alleges she ts living under the name of "Mrs, Parsons.” Genthener said he was selling relig- fous books and called at No. 3 West Ninet bth street, at the request of Boulp' Darrell, He asked her if she was Mra. Parsons and says she said| she was, Then he made an unsuccess- ful attempt to sell her a book. Later on he visited the flat again as a gna- man and saw Mrs. Darrell and her iit- Ge girl in the Parsons fat. Wife Before the Jury, Her lawyer called the accused wife to the witness stand and had her before jury while he opened the case for the defense, He declared that at all ¢ times mentioned by the witnes "egainst her she bad had her slater aud Uttle girl with her, and they would be her witnesses, Charnes Parson and his brother William became her boarders) when she was driven from her home by| her husband's cruelty and was coms} pelled to earn a living. At this mo- ment Mrs. Darrell’ ter entered the court-room with a@ little girl in big spectacles, | “My married life,” sald Mrs. Darrell | fo her testimony, “was most unhappy | from the beginning. He slapped my face two weeks after our marriage be- cause I had been out with his sister) Laura Darrell. He was a constant @rinker, and one night when he and| wome friends had pinyed cards and drank, he choked me and threw me on the floor, Next day 1 went away, gojng | to his father’s house in Bayonne. Miss Laura told bis parents now he had| treated me. Thai was last September, Then I returned to the city, sent for my aster and began keeping house for| William Parsons, with Charles Parsons as a boarder, ¢ had boarded with my husband and me for four year: i @y husband's accusations are fa Never K Correll haa testified that she/| @aw you sit in Mr. Parsons’s lap and| huge! and kissing him. Ie that tru asked her lawyer. “L never aa in Mr. Parsons’s lap,” the reply, “nor kissed him, and! Mins Cornell and I have been enemies for almost six years.” Mrs. Daniel said the theological rtu- Gent had told an untruth; that he never called on her; nor was he introduced to her. “I never saw that man in my life,” she declared, “until I saw him in eoure.”” Lillian L. Peters, the eighteen-year- eld sister of Mrs, Darrell, a strikingly pretty brunotte, testified that she lived with Mra, Darrell during all the time she has kept house for the Parstms's brothers, having gone to live with ner at oS request and on the advice of on ‘father and brother, In order to ward threatened divorce sult of Sculptor Dar- criticism and to cuard against the| 1. She and Florence Peters, another als- F. temtified that Darrelle’ charges were selees and that the divinity student bad never called nt the flat. HIS ELGQUENCE WASTED, Schuyler Van Ness Excels Himnelt, | but Gets © Months for Regging. Schuyler Van Ness, the ancient side show lecturer, who has fallen into bad Ways of late years, paid one of his Perlodions visits to Centre Street Court this afternoon. He was chaperoned by Charity Organization Officers Forbes and Misick, who said they ni hig, beeing in Vescy streets caunte juyler Knew he was against Propealiion and his lecture of Soe tion and other things was a master. Piece, He talked for half an hour with all the art and pathos and humor of; in youth At the end of his discourse | at ae ¢ Cornell sentenced him to six tu. Brute.” deciat 7 a the unfeeling an hostages along the initial stage to the Island. — ENGINEER KILLED; Two HURT, BROWNSVILLE, Pa, Novy. Ba shifting engine on the Pittsburg Vir- ginia and Charleston Railroad ran into @n open switch and was derailed to. Gay. George Williams. engineer. waa | Instantly kifed; Samuel Davidson, fire- man, fatally injured, and Geo @ brakeman, seriously hut IARSHP T0‘SHL |'s the machine to fail, OVER NEW ORK Inventor Baldwin Here to Give Exhibition with the Arrow, Which Proved Great Success at the World’s Fair, TO FLY AROUND DOME OF PULITZER BUILDING. He Tells How He Overcame the) Many Difficulties Which Met Him—Comes from a Family Which Is Famed as Aeronauts New Yorkers wil! have an opportunity to see in Aight in this city the Arrow, | the only alrship that really Mies as its operator desires, regardiess of the di- rection in which the wind may blow, Capt. Thomas Baldwin, the Inventor) of the Arrow, is in town, making ar- rangements for his series of flights In the alr over the skyscrapers of New! York. He proposes to scoot over the Brooklyn Bridge, the gilded dome of the Pulitzer Building, the Flatiron wind- pivot agd the alry-clad Diana atop of| the Madison Square Garden tower. There is now being constructed for Capt Baldwin at Scranton, Pa, a| woline engine capable of generating | sixteen horee-power that will weigh| only ninety-three pounds, With a gas/ baw to ralae the engine, more powerful than the one he used in his highly suc- | cessful trips in St. Louls, the aeronaui believes that he can prove without a doubt the feasibility of his theory of alr navigation, The engine he used in St. Louis ixty-six pounds and 1s capable of generating 6 horee-power, but in none of its trials was (t pushed to the Hmit of its capacity, In fact, It was the effort of Roy Knabenshue, the operator of the machine, to get all the horse-power one day that caused the final breakdown of the machinery. The engine utilised in St, Louis was in many respects an experiment. Capt Baldwin was not cast down over the fam that It falled to perform its duties with the evenness and precision of a Swiss watch. Every time the engine broke down it betrayed a remediable defect, and in thie sense the Bt. Louls trials were the most valuable that hav been held. 1 Looking for Perfect Eugine, Expert machinists from the Scranton works were In St. Louls making ob- servations, and Capt, Baldwin is as- sured that they have discovered all the weak points In his nel will be able to avoid them In the new source of power. The dominating effect that the engine builders are working for Is simplicity, The fewer the cogs and links, and sets of gearing, the less likely Capt. Baldwin !s no theorist, nor 's he a scientist, He is a plain, intrepid ballounist wno hes been in the alr hun- dreds of times tn airships of his own making, and who feels as safe navigat- ing the ether as he does on the ground. In his long experience he has had many | accidents, but he has never been badly hurt. He has two brothers, Sam and Ivy Baldwin, both practical balioonists, who have made arcensions all over the countey, and their experience has been similar, “What I work for is simplicity and strength In construction,” sald Cap* Baldwin to-day. “If you have good material to work with you are tha: much closer to success, When I tackled the problem of bullding a balloon that could be steered I went at it in a plain, direct way. I went on the principlo that what I wanted (o do was to get up tn the alr and steer myself after I fot up there, That Ja all there is to aerial navigation,” Spherical Bag the Best, Yrom long experience in building bal- loons and tn operating them, Capt. Bald. BALDWIN AND HIS FLIKS—SIMPLE PLAN BY WHICH HK MANAGES IT.) ‘The man in the operating car ree By » win was informed of the lifting ca- pacity of gas bags of vaslous sizes and of the vagaries of the great silken bags, He decided upon a spherical silken bag to hold his gas and a light frame, sus- pended from It to carry his engine and steering appacatus, The frame can be moved up and down and from aide to aide by the operator without affecting the stability of the Walloon proper. By moving backward or forward in the frame, the operator can deflect the course of the airship upward or downward. The propeller is lcated In front of the frame ond pulls It along, instead of pushing it as a ship 1s pushed through the water. The rud- | der is behind aad ts handled ike the | rudder of a ship. | “1 belleve my principle ts right," de- lates Capt. Baldwin. “Natural lows fit into each other beautifully and they | are extremely simple All I want to | do 13 to stick as closely to natural laws as ponsible, When I get a perfect we gine, light enough to be raised in the alr and powerful enough to overcome the ule resistance, I can sail against the wind, That Is all there ts to it.” No Commercial Future for Balloons | For the present, Capt. Baldwin ean see no sign of commercial utility In the dirigible balloon, He thinks it will be many years before such « consumma- tlon can be realized, but he does not despair of its eventual fulfilment, In time he believes that small balloons, easily navigated, can be wed as auto: | mobiles were used when they were firet perfected, He hopes that million. aires and wealthy men of leisure will take up the question of alr navigation and study it “We have to depend a lot on our millionaires,” he explains. “If they get to butlding dirigible bailoons and trying experiments in them, the realization of the dream of going through the air In Any direction at will cannot be long | dolayed, Perhaps ere many years have passed, the millionaire may foraake his | Automobile, with which he endangers many liver along the highways for his individual airship, or his airship bulit | for two, in which he will have no earthly chance of running over any- | body.” | Capt, Baldwin thrilied the United | Htatea—and the world, for that matter, | in 1887, when he mode a parachute leap WOMAN RECLSE SMOTHERED IE Widow of Famous Artist, Once Prominent in Society, Had Lived Alone Ten Years—Her Death an Accident. (Bpecial to The Evening World.) NEWARK, N. J, Nov. 1\—Mre widow of Gottfried | 4 famous artist, some | gs decorate the wa'ls of the Royal Palace at Munich, was found dead in her squalid apartments on the top floor of the tenement No. 242 Broome street, this city, to-day. She policeman hustled him| had smothered beneath the pillows of| WAY. her bed, | Mrs. Goetze, who ten years ago was| papular among society people of New: ark and vicinity, became a reciuse and selected for her abode apartments at the Broome street ad- dress, She rarely left her roo rT had the meagre food supplies that she desired brought to her by children of the neighborhood, When she went into retirement Mrs. | Goets apparently lost the fine Instincts | that she possessed and gave hersel stufty f up| = | 10 a Hife of solitude and squalor. From the appearence of her rooma K would | By What Minne Wo tem that they had not been cleaned In | By What Means Were | Years, the greasy walls were hung with |@ number co off pa/ntings done by her | Over 3,000 husband, and said to he of ereat value, | Women and Girls Placed in | Paying Positions Last Week? 3) The answer is: Through the col-} | umns of THE WORLD, which are regularly used to obtain do-} | mestic, industrial or professional § | Hy DOUBLE the number of EMPLOYERS they are covered with dirt and | cohwebs, Neimhhors of the woman falled hear her moving about her anirtmenta. to os wee her wont, this morning, and they Investigated. to find her dead in fon with her head buried In the pil- ow? From the position of the body and, ° bed It would appear that one of the became detached and let the mat-| tress drop down lle Mrs. Goetse was) asleep upon It. The pillows toppled over ee head and she smothered to jeath, She was sixty years old and a woman of rare intelligence. County Physician MeKenasle was notified. It is not known ‘that ane has any relatives. F ESCAPE BY TUNNEL FROM PO -ROOM Yonkers Police Say Prisoner Had a Place Like a Fortress with a Passage Under River —Big Display in Court. (Special to The Evening World) WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., Nov. 18— ‘Thomas [, Corballis, of Yonkers. was plived —on —trial here to-day before County Judge Platt on an indictment enarging him with running a pout room at Nos. 9 and 11 North Broad- | Yonkers Evidence was given tending to show that the gambling: room was constructed ike a fortress, with a tunnel under the Nepperhan | | when her husband died ten years ago, Rives, to let the gamblers escape. Capt. Woodriff, of Yonkers, who mid the raid with a domen policemen had two patrol wagon loads of tele phones, barred doors, racing cards sheets, “dope” books and other para- phernalia brought into the court-room, which looked like a full-fledged pool room. The jurymen were shown how secret doors, covered with wall paper, were worked by electricity, and how the head gamblers escaped from the building by combing down a hudder into a tunnel, which led under the river to a rear yard on the opporite side of the stroot The raid. according the testimony of Surgt. Dinsmore, w: a spectacular id alx doors —* be smaeshed a battering ram. ————___ “CINGALEE’ NEW SONG, A new song. called "On a Crocodile, lyrica by James O'Dea and score by | Kendis and Paley. was introduced in “The Cingalee” at Daly's Theatre last might and soured several encores, °, wit THE WORLD: TURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 15, 1904 | 1 rs escitaht, CATARRH FROM BABYHOOD A Beautiful Little Girl Saved From a of Suffering by Pe-ru-na, 'Doctored With AIRSHIP, WHICH REALLY | FMNCE'S WAR MINSTER EIS Gen. Andre Gets Out After Being ward course, By epmatning tn the centre a dead level is malutaine By moving to the astern, as illustrated by F ship take ga rising course. wlates the eleva- simply moving takes « dowa- Accused of Spying on Army Best Physi- Officers and Being Assaulted ron Se in Deputies Chamber, ge Witho Benefit, PARIS, Nav ~The official an- nouncement is made of the resignation Perasna Cures a f Gen, Andre, the War Minister, and | Case of Catarrh the nomination of M. Henry Maurice | Herteaux, member of the Chagiber of of Long Stand. | ing, Deputies from the Versailles Division of the Seine-et-Olse, to succeed him. The attack on Gen. Andre was th result his policy of spylég upon the private lives of army oMcers, which culininated In Deputy’ Syveton | striking him in the face, for @hich the Deputy ts bel g prosecuted by/ the Gov- ernment During the debate of Nov. 4 1t way asserted that the Minister off War had Jored that I€ the existence of a sys- iom of spying on the privage Ives of \Mficers were proved he codld noe re- pndlate the reap onalbilty. It was thereupon declared, by Deputy de Villeneuve that the fac? were now | extablished and that there@ore It was Impossible that the Gener should re- main tn office, and he urged the Cham- ber to remember that Preraier Coombes hed tolerated and approvill the esplon- age employed by the War Dice War Minister Andre wag assaulted Nov, 4 in the Chamber of De; Nationalist Deputy, M, Gabriel Syve- ton, and since that date the bitterness ven the army and parliamentary) Ircles has been growing Several duels have grawn out of the affair, and the Mintater'b resignation is reganted by conservati®: people as the only means of checking .the bad feoling. Gen. Andre's resigndtion has been rumored for some days The resignation thevefore dia not cause any surprise. It had been practi- cally assured for some time past, and before the formal angouncement was made his retirement waa: discussed in the corridors of the Senate chamber as an accomplished fact LEAD TO CAT. NEGLECTED CATARRH BECOMES CHRONIC, Mrs. George Van\Dusen, Mohawk, Herkimer Co,, N. Yu. writes: Blt | derived so much benefit from your grand medielm 1 felt as if I mast write to you and tell you what a great it has been to us. ' “(My little daughter when but two months old took a cold and it settled in her head and continued to get worse, n in afew months terminated in the worst case of catarrh that ever been known in this part of the state, ee ‘44 fter doctoring with the best dcclors for three years and ore ene meh ceiving no benefit, we were persuaded to try a widely ., SCORE COMMISSIONER BEST.| | tised catarrh cure, aud at first we thought it was elf her, | °, as mA | but after using twenty or more bottles she was as ba ‘*As a last resort we began with Peruna, and ste is now nine} years old, and for the past year has been the healthi dd ; is youever saw. Thecatarrh has entirely disappeared. No charge nor odor at all, but we keep the precious bottle in honse, and at the firet appearance of cold with any of us we mediately take Peruna, We kuow there is nothing like it, our estimation it is priceless.’’—Mrs. Georje Van Dusen, Sees n to Save Money, In a communication to the Mayor read before the Boamd of Aldermen at | to-day's meeting Commissioner Best i scored for what the Merchants’ Asso- “Waante” in ciation terms an wnwarranted waste of the taxpayers’ money, NB of tne Greatest foes with #04 | is shrewd enough to always avoid | At the last meeting the Commis Oo every (amily bas to contend is OUT) evitable catching cold. climate, ¢ family from colds and & serious problem, and changead! To. protect coughs la alway’ [sioner asked perméisgion to change the jcontract for power, houses and ele- vator towers for; the Blackwell's sible. Island Bridge, The contract at pres- onaer ee later It. ts the Inevitable ber lent calls for an etpenditure of ges5,-| Moroso! 1 | ‘The Bridge Ccenmissioner desires|| The Root of the contract altered so a part of the|| Many Evils ork may be done for $3,000. To this|] —A COLD the Merchants’ oclation objects, b saying the work Inivolved ts less than | greatest of precautions they will come, Pe-ru-na Contains No Narcott One reason why Veruna has foul manent use in so many homes ie contains no narcotics of any kind, is perfectly harmicas. It can be length of time without t habit, Perana does not esnite, [tis permanent in ite It haa no bad effect upon the gradually eliminates catarrh Ing the cause of catarrh. ee fe ap rf homes \ rae ised off and on for twat ott roper clot protect from fehute jump nowadays.” gays Cupt. Baldwin. “But, when I marted in with my parachute the parachute jump was Almost as much of an experiment as ate Park, San Francisco, was Of his own making. Rocka- at Golden The parachut Later he made an ascension a way Beach and then went to London. % per cent, of the Jwhole, and that the| This te o settled fact of buman exnerience. where he created a tremendous sensa- | the dirigible balloon ia to-day, And pen 4, 50 Be Jtvéce as much as the to oan pg BM aD cess thing could not be possibl x tion, To-day parachute leapers are al+ | that was only seventecn years ago,” “The Commissioner's figui the sine’ any drugs of 1 narcotle natune. | most as common as trapeze performers. | The alrship's fight in this city will jetter says, “are gfoealy exceasi nd erhaps It will be wet feet. or a draught Address Dr, 8, B. Hartmai “Almost agybody with nerve and be made just as © as the new equips an unwarranted wéaste of the taxpay- | or ip clothes, or it mu one ® hy Bartmes, eevee ae Ls strength can make @ successful para- | ment Is completed. ‘ers’ money.” on other itt t noo corn a AnD Bird Center : the si » The Artistic ax Indigestion is the Stomach’s Call for Help! A disordered stomach should receive immediate atten- tion. If neglected, the general health soon suffers and life j is made miserable. Indigestion takes several forms and ‘ results from a variety of causes, No matter how severe } the attack Beecham’s Pills will act quickly, gently and thoroughly. Call and Ualefouwaterms i fa sma $13.98 ‘ Three-p'ece Parlor Suit 3 4 are a tried remedy for all forms of Indigestion, both chronic and acute, They strengthen the Digestive Organs and assist them properly to perform their duty, Their efficacy is due to their medicinal value. They a Lifetime! ¢ weekly or monch thie, taey The Opportunit >» ail 4 Beecham’s Pills purify the Blood, give vigor to the muscles, tone up the nerves and give health and strength to the entire system. y or len does we alow Karat Gold Crown wud Brid, A Written Gua’ Sold rywhere In Boxes, 10c. and 260. s 4 tote 4, DENTISTS, 25.4 WhST 42D 8P+ NEAR wentean A Ic. Ld sTu AVE. \, ¥.

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