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a. "TO MY WF," READS LETTER Woman, Who Says She Is Mrs. Louis V. Bell, Makes Public | Epistle in Which She Is So Addressed. WANTS BELL KEPT FROM SEEING HER PAPERS, Declares in Second Affidavit in Counter Suit Against Bell that She Will Prove Her Right to His Name. In her answer to the motion made by Louis V, Bell for an inspection of the papers procured by Evelyn Clark Bell and now tn the vault of the Garfleld Bafe Deposit Company in the sult and counter-#ult brought by Bell and Mrs, Bell, the Rijer has placed on file a copy of a letter written to her by Bell and addressed “To My Wife, Evelyn M jarke Hell,’ which she will prove Her contention that she ts his wife, The first suit was filed by Bell, who @sked that the woman be restrained from using his name or from purchasing goods as his wife and having them charged to him. He avowed that she was not his wife, Mrs. Bell then sued for an accounting, In her afMfdavit she @eclared that she had lived as Bell's Wife, had been introduced by him as hie wife and added that money and bonds in his possession had been given to her by him. Quotes Letter from Nell, Bell then made a motion for an tn- spection of the papers in the trust com-| pany vault. In attempting to prevent this inspection Mrs, Bell put in a sec- ond affidavit in the Supreme Court In this second aMdavit Mrs. Bell says that she will prove at the hat she is Bells wife. proper She says thut | he does not ask for an inspeotion of the papers in good faith, and adds that the letter he wishes to see reads in part as follows: Y. March 2, 1899. “To My Wife, E In case of send for Mr. Ferris, my secretary, ut once, He understands about certain securities that | have deposited tn the Garfield Safe Depost Company vauits, and for your own personal use, I here- by sive them to you on above date, With the provission that during my life 1 have the privilege of using the same, Ee and interest, for my own per- ia] Une, Nobody has any knowledge of these securities, as I marked (hem on my Nn acooum oo-day as ‘given excepting Mr. A. D, Ferris, who can tell you the combination of fe. You haye the right, $0 red on the books of the Uarfleld Bate Deposit Company, of a joint owner- pin’ the deposit safe Wioh mo, wars you to be most careful not to y one wioh the fact that you own, these secunties (except Mr, Fer- r Tells of Bond Gitta, Mrs. Ball begs the Court not to per- mit Mr. Hell to see more of the weiter than relates to the cause of the ac’ In “referring to her application Mr Bell says that i is her bellef that Beil kept a privat count which taine{s entries relating to bonds that he iven her. She points toa iine in the letter which reads: "I marked them on my personal account to-day a8 given a She avers that he Is not telling the truth when he says that 1o| entry was made of the bonds she now claims, and she asks that an inspec- tlon of Bell's books be allowed por, for aMdavit concludes by faylog that she bn seen these bonds and sut the * Compons from them. SHFE BLOWN OPEN, USHER MISSING Apartment-House Proprietor Gets a Surprise When He Tries Combination; Safe Door Falls in Pieces at His Touch. | es are 100 cashieg of No Headquarters det for Edward Brown Tuxelo"” saloon at Twenty-ninth street West Both he and the] cash of the safe over which he presided jin front of Hurley's saloon, at Fifth | } havo disappeared. Fifteen pieces of the dour of the big office safe which had been shattered by nitro-glycerine and then patched together with putty are on exhibition in the office of te ‘Tuxedo. The proprietor of the apartment-house wanted some money last night and went to the safe, He didn't get far in tne) combiration when the door fell apar: and scattered its pleces all over him. Me Mought that some infernal agency ‘was working within, aud let out a cry that brought the office force with a rurh, The cash In the safe, amounting to $49, had vanished. The proprietor then sepia fact that the cashier nad Fat reported for work yesterday. At we home, No, 34 East Fifteenth street, waa learned that he had ae up an lett early % the day. ‘own had been employed in tho saloon for three Woeka, Somebody Wants Somet'i to Your Garret provided you have 2 ¢ and there is something in it of value but not In use, , Who ts the somebody? What {s the something? If you'll tell what the SOME- THING is through the For Sale column in World Wants, they will introduce to you the SOME- BODY. 9,064 for Sale Ads, in World Wants during Octo- more than | Twelfth street, and tour blocks thro ALONE, TOOK 3 Policeman Donohue Rounds vp! Grocery and Marches Them ONE BREAKS INTO STORE WHILE OTHERS WATCH. — Guards Surprised in Turn with | “Hands Up!" Joined by Third, | and All Are Landed in Cells— Held in $2,000 Bail Each. —_——- Tike the mythical deeds of OM Sleuth was the canture of three burglars all at once by Policeman Wittam Donohue, of Hoboken, to-day. Single-handed rounded up Ms men, marched them blocks to a poltce station amd had them lockde up, Reluctant admiration was in the voice of the prisoners aa he re marked ,to Donohue: “Well, vou're the neryfest cop 1 ever ARNED BURGLARS r a Gang Robbing Hoboken Ten Blocks to Station-House. | saw.” The prisoners gave the names of Frank Carter, Cranford, N, J.; James McKenna, of the Vigilant Hotel, on the oBwery, and George Irving, who re- fused his address, Carer and oKenna ‘are Ittle more than youths, but Irvins appears to be a seasoned criminal Donohue saw the three men stinking | atong Washington street, in the vicinty | followed, keeping well out of sight and on the lookout for another policeman The men tried to enter a cigar store at No, 9) Washington street, and a candy store at No, 78 Washington strest. Then they went to he grocery store of Henry Erxmeyer, at Tenth and Bloomfleld streets. Donohue had been unable to attract the attention of another policeman, He did not want to signal with his night stick, knowing the nolse woult frighten the supposed burglars and that probably two of them would get away. ‘The futtlity of tackling the three at onee Was apparent. The men played Into his hands by separating at the grocery, Carter took & position in Bloomfield street about one hundred feet from the store and Mcenna went to look out for inter- ference at o point about equally dis tantK from the store in Tenth street, Irving forced the front door of the grocery with a jimmy and entered. Donohue got busy immediately, He got behind Carter and pressing the muzzle of his revolver on the back of the 3 neck ordered him to throw up 2B : pends. Carter eres. ia: oe ‘ou utter & pee = ae "TN bore a foe: ole clear wrought *gilently marching Carter around the block he came upon Mcenna_and sur- Then walked both his prisoners to the and met prea coming out the ‘he surprised thief lost no Ume in istendiog his hands skyward. Donohue mde three range them- | selves aide by side and marched them wo blocks through Bloomfield to of Seventh, just before daylight. He| prised 2 minto throwing up Tis hands. | (4 ‘Twelfth street to Willow venue and Second Precinct station, In this lone march Donohue did not meet a citizen or a policeman, The sergeant on watch nding @ turakey to open it three men walked in with thelr anms elevated and Wonohue, with drawn pistol, walk- ing behind them. When the men were serched loated revolvers were found on all o fthem, made no effort to resist, Apparently they readized that Donohue meant busi- ness. Recorder Stanton held the three in) $2,000 ball each for the Grand Jury, and| his nerve, POLICEMAN BADLY By Friends of Prisoner He} Arrested as Ring Leader of almost fell out of his chair when he! | herd a call outside the door, and upon| Policeman several blows In the face. Thy could not explain why they had) j help when the man dived overboard. took occasion to commend Donohue for | ton-house, -——memee {0 answer any questions put to him, BEATEN BY THUGS ¢ |Is Knocked Down and attacked HE KICKS AgOUr THE AIR IN THE Suva wAy— 04 FIGHTS TO DIE, 'MALADY NCURABLE, DEAD WN CELL Desperate Man Commits Suicide in Station Under Eyes of| Police After Being Pulled Out) of North River. So determined was a well-dressed man, who said that he was Herman Winkel- man, to die that, under the very eyes of the police of the West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Btreet Station he strangled himself to death to-day, ‘The man had previously tried to com- mit suicide by drowning in the North River at the foot of One Hundred and Twenty-third street. He walked out on the docks about midnight. Several men were ut the ond of the docks, and push- ing past them he plunged Into the water, Policeman Cosgrove, of the West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street sta- tlom, ran to the «nd of the pier, peeled off his coat and helmet and dived in adter the man, Mights to Die, ‘The tide was running out and the ‘would-be suicide was far from the end) of the pler when the policeman reached him. He fought to die and dealt the Cosgrove is a man of great strength, and with @ well-dirusted Uluw he} knocked the man half unconscious. | Then he seized him by the collar, and with one arm swam to the plier. The policeman, well nigh exhausted, was hauled out by those who had called for Cosgrove took his prisoner to the sta-| The fellow refused at first) Then he said: “Tam Herman Winkelman, thirty- five. Just put me down as homeless and without occupation,” Strangles in Cell, $ E93 DOSSOSSHOM ‘ *|Toom. She was found dead !n bed early ‘he man was chilled to the marrow | and the police striped him of his cloth: | ing and, wrapping him in blankets, placed him in a cel! on a charge of at- ed BULGE, A Oh wach Was pt on him and he wes not ir, so ft Was assumed by Wood that he had fallen asleep, man was only waiting for this chance, The doorman was no sooner away from in front of his cell than he en to|® Docrman | tore a strip from his blank fastened | It about the water pip the cell and made a nec he slipped his neck. Then he adjusted the strip of blanket carefully so that [t would permit hi Barroom Fight. In a@ free-for-all fight late last night} » javenue and Twenty-third street, lyn, Policeman John Drisc: } Fifth avenue station, was He was taken to Seney beaten Hospital suf- fering from concussion of the braig | and a score of cute and bruises. Driscoll was passing the saloon when} |@ commotion inside attracted his atten- ion. Finding a general melee well | under way he grabbed a young fellow waio was apparently the ringleader, Driscoll started ont but had got no farther than the side- walk when the crowd rushed after him and knocked him to the sidewalk Bleeding and unedle to arise Driscoll scattered before the reserves arrived. An ambulance was called, but before being taken away Driscoll was able to rive a good description of the prisoner | who had broken away from him and then assaulted him. Shortly afterward Roundsman Busby arrested a young man who gave the name of Arthur De Cantillon and sald he Hved at No, 10) Sackett stro. Brooklyn, His face was badly bruised and smeared with blood. He answered the description of the man who had led the attack on Drie | | call | Just after Do Cantilion’s arrest an- | other man, who gave a flotitious name | | 9nd address, and who also showed evi-| ty dence of having been in called | at the station to inquire about Dris- | colt’ anrtlticn, He was locked up, the police say, the two prisoners p AIF wine Oe ae er were pheard al ie, wee onid Deter galls ale | Blanket Brook-| had evidently sought of the! identity. with his prisoner| Bird comer blew his whistle for help and ¢he crowd | to keep in a lying position with ovey his body. In this money in the clp to eoncea’ this this Mr. 's just good business. up eome new tune quarter and go do the m, matinee afternoor Jimmy—Gee! dat's kind o° you, Groft Employer—No, T want you to be] I'm getting tire: | . BIRD CENTER PARTY™ HOME GAME CO., wo into which | Etiquette 600 AT. ALL DEALERS .OR 600 POSTAGE PREPAID Dearborn 8t., CHICAGO, Re MN te oem 0 He oe Oot BUNCO 00 ot All Oealars ot Propait (By T. EB. Powers. ) Then THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBUR 14 1904, KRONIC KICKERIN THE SUBWAY! HE LIGHTS A TURKISH CIGARETTE OOOH S$ 4984-6:94 0088 4-00O00O 144 G0< WOMAN ENDS LIFE Rather than Return to Hospital Miss Rosa Rosenberger Com- mits Suicide in Her Room by Inhaling Gas. Rather than go back to the Mt. Sina! Hoepital, from which she wag dis- changed recently with the gloomy infor- mation that her malady was incurable, Miss Rosa. Rosohberger, fifty-eight years old, of No, 160 Bast One Hundred and Third street, committed sutcide t day by inhaling gaa, Atter carefully bolting the door of her Mttle room in the basement of the house, shutting the windows and stuffing the crevices with rags, she turned on four| gs jets and also opened the flow into a mall gas stove which she kept in the to-day by the janitor of the bulldiag Louls Wagner, It was three weeks ago that Miss Rosenberger was dischrged from the hospital. She was told that there was no use in her staying as nothing could be done for her. What means she had were speedily used up and for several days she ¢ dapeniet upon the charity of her neighbors. Several of these went to} the Mt. Binal Hospital yesterday and asked to have the woman taken back | there, ‘Tne surgeons agreed (0 take her) and she was notified to presént herself w \Well-Bred German Dead in Room of Forty-second in} |second street. committed suicide. contained @ draft on ne money, but he did not reveal ite con- | third floor of WALDERSEE'S ADE DIES BY GS Street House—Served Siege of Pekin. Frahk Brandt, { myatery, was found dead to-day in boarding house at No, 122 West Forty- The police believe jhe 4 tivit Gustto in Berlin, and when the young man cam it ‘was sald that his family were wealthy, Ht was said alwo that there was some mystery in his life which made him more or less of a recluse, He con- fided his past to no one, and was quiet Brandt's father 0 New York several months ago father Brandt retired ae his room on th use last ight at about iy o'clock. clock, Barty to~ eer | wet the other inmates of the hou Wakened by the olor of gas. Was traced to Brandt's room, the door WIN! ls Found! graduate of Letpaic! college and aide on the staff of Gen, Walderseo during the siege of Pekin, stralogor and in many respects a man} ‘he cae | handed the editor a sheet of paper FAMILY HUNGRY, RE SEEKS DEATH bat Fifty Siegel Finds He Is “Too | Old” to Get Work by Which He Can Earn Food for His Wife and Eight Children. |TRIES TO JUMP FROM WILLIAMSBURG BRIDGE. “| Cannot See My Loved Ones Starve.” He Tells Policeman Who Prevents His Suicide, DO YOU GET UP ITH A LAME BACK? “People Want Younger Men.” With Nis wife and aight children starving in three miserable rooms at No. 67 Pitt street, and himself worn out and disheartened through his in ability to obtain employment, Morris | Slegel, @ tailors pressiman, to-day | tried to end his life by jumping Into | East River trom Williamsburg Bridge. A policeman, whose attention hat been attracted by Stegel's walking back | and forth on the bridge and who di- vined he meint te do himself harm. caught the pressman just as he waa climbing over the rail on the north side. The man begged the bluecoak not to arrest him and sald he would go home | and not think any more of death His apparent earnestness roused the sympathies of the policeman, Jensed his hold. ‘This wi Just the chance the man wanted, Feeling him self free he made a dash for the rail again and fought hard against recap ture. “T have been out of work for six weeks,” Siegel told Policeman Tittner, “and my family i starving. When I left home yesterday morning there was not as much as a crust of bread In the house, I walkedthes treets all last night “1 waa not brave enough to go home and face the wife and the young ones Tam fifty years old, and I_guess people want younger men now. I am too old to get employment and the best thing I can do ts get off the earth.” —__ WOMAN’S SKULL BROKEN. Fell Down itaire and Is Likely to Die, Sarah Tobin, sixty-two years old, liv- | tng with her sister, Mrs. J. Waters, at No, 761 Washington etreet, fell down stairs at her home to-day and received probably fatal injuries, The aged woman arose early and opening the door leading into the cellar lost her talance and plunged headlong down the entire fight, Mra, Waters notified the Charles street police station and a St, Vincent Hospital ambulance was summoned, The hospital surgeon, Dr, McDon- ou eave the woman's skull Is frac- who re- and often moody, Recently he en-|tured, It is not believed she will re- @aged In busin with D. O'Hal an, | cover, Of No, 258 East Twenty-third street. randt reece’ p+ ol eaterda | morning. The letter is 4 to ha | baapine (Prom the Kanaas City Sta A Green County paper hired a new | reporter the otber day and sent him | out after some news. Three hours jater he roturned and n writing. After ltwenty minutes of hard work = 1 His which he had written: “Joe Green to-day, Oo which was locked. The door an accldent at his home to-day, Sited ‘Rosenberger, sald nothing when | ferced, and” there the yon Gorman | wife fell off the porch and landed on ‘ecelved the notice, but went to her| was found dead. of the gas a room and was net seen again alive, -— AGED WOMAN'S PLIGHT. | Mra, jh, Seventy Years Old, Is Fo andering Wandering about In search of her daughter, Mrs, Barbara Hirsh, of Phil- adelphia, was picked up last night by the police at One Hundred and Twenty- fifth street and St, Nicholas avenue. Mra, Hirsh, who is about seventy years old, sald she had sent word from the Quaker elty to her daugiiter, Mrs. | 8, Lee. of No, 7 Seventy-first street, | to meet her, and when Mrs, Lee fatled r the aged woman begin a| or the Lee home. Mrs. | well dressed and wore jewolry, was taken to the first street pensive e omm~4z>x>Cco OLDCLIFE “Bedelia.” | Tso Artistic and Social Hit of a Decade Bevery Card from Original Drawings by the World » McCutcheon. Truly a Voicano of Excitement atts iy pomp ed at informal Suicst i arty micate. Stove had been turned. on full. the It was an unfortunate occur- pot ea renees cian To those gift that involves engraving, this offer is particularly price conce: insure deliv order must be in the hands of the engraver in the im- This offer will be in force until If you elect, we will hold the work mediate future, November 23d, for delivery at Christmas. A Combination Offer. sheets of fine paper stamped with monagram die, of which we have a large series of designs from which to select, and fifty envelopes, in shaded old English and Value $3.00. A pound of Regal Lawn paper, stamped from an address die in Old English, roman or script and seventy-five envelopes Value $2.20. At $1.45 Plate and fifty cards in script. Value $1.00. At 50: Sake & Company Broadway, 334 to 34th Street, eConttable oe THURSDAY, N © contemplate a holiday opportune. Not only are the ssions extraordinary, but to ery within a given time your A Cabinet containing fifty together with a name plate fifty visiting cards. Special At $1.75 Business cards, one hundred of the best quality from your own plate. Value $1.00. At 65¢, Visiting cards, one hundred of | the best quality from own plate Value 90c. At 5Uc. OVEMBER 177TH Sale of Sheets and Pillow Cue mad: of high grade fine muslin, plain hemmed— SHEETS 63x99 inches . . 62¢ 81x99 inches . . Be PILLOW CASES 45x38 inches. . | Proadway 72x99 inches. 0. 6Re 90x99 inches . . 82c l7c 1916 Sticet. Have You Rtoemstine Hidney, Liver or Bladder Trouble? ; To Prove what Swamp-Root, the Great Kidney, and Bladder Remedy, will do for YOU, all Readers May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by r tability, wornout feeling, lack of tion, loss of flesh, sallow compl if your water when allowed to undisturbed In a glass or bottle twenty-four hours, forms a aa settling, or has a cloudy appe: is evidence that your kidneys Jer need immediate attention, In taking Swamp-Root You afford nate ral help to Nature, for Swamp-Root the most perfect healer and gentle | the kidneys that Is known to | science, in order to prove the wonderful of Swamp-Root you may have a bottle and a book of valuable tion, both sent absolutely be by 1) The book contains ape: sands upon thousands of testi ters received from men cured, The value and sucess Root Is so well known that our are advised to send for a In sending your address to Dr. Ki Co., Binghamton, N. Y,, be sure to. you read this generous offer in York Laer ay hgh os ‘ of this offer is if ie are already convinced. ¢ Swamp-Root is what Psd need, a purchase the regular dollar size bottles at pee poke where. Don’t make any mistake, b remember the name, § Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. Pain or dull ache in the back Is un-| mistakable evidence of kidney trouble It Is Nature's timely warning to show you that the track of health is not clear. | If these danger signals are unheeded, | more serious results are sure to follow; Bright's disease, which is the worst form of kidney trouble, may steal upon you. The mild and the extraordinary effect of the world-famous kidney and bladder remedy, Dr, Kilmer's Swamp-Root, is soon realized, It stands the highest for Its wonderful cures of the most distress. | ing cases. A trial will convince any one —and you may have a sample bottle free, by mail. i al Lame back Is only one symptom of ki ney trouble—one of many, Other sym toms showing that you need Swamp- Root are, being obliged to pass water often during the day and to get up many times during the night, inability to hol! your urine, smarting or irritation in passing, brick-dust or sediment. in the urine, catarrh of the bladder, uric a constant headache, dizziness, poor diges tion, sleeplessness, nervousness, irregular heart-beating, rheumatism, bloating, ir- 85;197, 109 FAST, 29", ST You will find our Credit System most liberal and commodating, enab Pay at Your you to dlichnegs ae Convenience | cs monthly payments as you may prefer. And our ligations in small weekly prices are all right also, as the following specials testify: 5-Piece Mahogany Finished Frame Parlor uit, é like de-ten, highly polished, covered in tapestry or green 33. 75 ur; actually worth $5.00, special this week....., Sideboards Of best seasoned oak, tnely carved and polished, with 3 drawers, cup. 4 boards and /) Fre ch bevel mir ‘or; actual value Siturvay Evenings. 112" Whit: Enamelled and Brass ae Bedstead, like cut, wort 3, 79 4 & $6.00, for. 4 Rooms Fur- on a $10.00 Ladies’ Desk: 6.49 ‘ .00 Ladies’ Desks, for,. 6+ Rooms ru 98,” $9.00 Music Cabinets, for.. 5.98 $14.00 Chiffoniers, for... —— . SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY MORNING WO