The evening world. Newspaper, March 6, 1905, Page 3

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Y, OH, FATHER, FOR TH Julia Bowne Pleads for Cor- She Eloped. DEAF T0 HER MOTHER Latter Visits Jail and Pleads in Vain for Daughter to shadow of life's greatest myst In them, Looking In them faced the ‘howling. mo Pretty Nora Wall, Cashier, Dis- her and Cordova when they were brought back from Washi appears with Clerk Dis- “ oharged Because Employer , Objected to Attentions to Her. And what 18 Cordova ike? He and two Inolibs shostor and #0 (bald ad to have a raiy moal ene that makes him look more it His upper ip has the thickn the former wearing of a mubtache ¢n- Of all eotives jn FATHER’S SEARCH FOR CHILD SO FAR VAIN, muet surely cal! that off other woman and with @ shame thit must ver, he still exudes an alr of clerical ‘ighteoushess, “Men have committed murder quite Penmisded, ain ‘That all the aposties would have do! they did." Wrote Heady And Mr, Cotdova seins e1 und in Girl’s Room In- dicate Elopement—Two Left Store Together on Thursday ' Night and Have Disappeared, perhaps whother SPURNS AID FOR HERSELF, Her Sweetheart Reads and Approves of Her Appeal to Parent for Mercy In Hie Nora Wall, sixteen years old, living ft No, 632 West Forty-seventh street, employed in a grocery store at Fifty- fifth street and Tenth avenue, and Paul O'Brien, twenty-one, formerly employed ' gt the same store, have been missing Bince Thuraday night when the man was discharged. The girl's mother 1s @istracted, She ‘has discovered a bun- + Gle of love letters from O'Brien to her @aughter, and is convinced they havo jerwise, and no d By Nixola Greeley-S mith. Julla Bowne, the South River (N, J.) cholr girl, who {!s in jail in New Bruns- wick with the Rey, J, F, Comova, with whom she eloped, !s determined to stand by her lover, and to-day she will refuse to accept bail, as she has refused it time and again, #0 that she can be near the man who hae deserted his own wife and children to drag her down and ruln her and ther family’s good name, Julla Bowne has written a letter, and in it bogs her father to have mercy on the mun ehe loves, writes, “cannot you have mercy on Mr, Cordova, Help him for me," not send ft, however, urtil after it had been approved by her lover, It was Cordova who, after the letter had been secretly conveyed to him, placed {t in an envelope and adfitessed it to ‘John Bowne, blackemithy § River,’ whom later in the apy Mt Tew men nre or have been loved, What ate we se nk of her? How ‘wom aa New Brunawick id_ spat upon her. sorrow and her shame, she has fotind a champion, For, as phe prayed thro rousley; a blond who plays freely about n awful nice youh, raid to to an: but she talks to me Abr Letters for Grand Jury. ‘Tw. more love letters of atmost fren- aled devotion and intensity, written by Miss Bownd between, the time of tholr first and second e have been found Be ine ginl's and wilt be pregented to the Mhidlesex Ghani J In ie eae ALY erty, his efor! ge a if to get enough money to fly the second tlme with Miss Bowne, one letter he Bt heart go to the post-office and fin und have to come away ao & to cry, In the streets, ——_—___—_ A, ERRING GIRL’S PATHETIC APPEAL, ‘rwo months ago Nora left High Schoo} ‘nd went to work at the store as Cashier, Manager Peter Slayne, of the Store, sald she was a@ “wonder” at quick Copy of letter written by Julla Bowne to her father from her cell In the New Brunswick Jail: “Oh! Oh! My Dear Father: You certainly see how strong my How | am bearing all this for him, Some day you will devoted to each other, jay here go that | can be any one who O'Brien went to work there a month @Z0, He wus a handsome athletic young fellow but with no prospects. He soon beman to be the regular attendant of Whe pretty cashier, Each night after work they would leave together ana nearly évery evening was spent ether @t a dance or the theatre, Thursday night thelr happiness had a rude inter- ; Tuption when Manager Slayne ) O'Brien he was discharged, “You are too fresh and too attentive @ the cashier,” sald Slayno in reply to the young man's questioning, As usual, the clerk and the cashier left) together after work was through, and} nelther has been seen since by parents or fellow-employees, Manager Slayne did not think much of the matter ‘when the girl falled to appear on Friday, but @alled at her home that evening to see The distracted mother told him she had not been home alnce Thursday morning. Nora is the young- Hor father, Andrew ‘Wail, Immediately began a search for her, so far in vain, went to the home O'Brien's parents, and says Mrs, O'Lt calmly remarked that the disappearan. was no affair of hens, if his daughter Is not found to-day he will ask for a warrant for O'Brien's ERROR CAUSED. GIRL'S ARREST Miss Regina Black, Bookkeeper for C. E. Barker & Co., Ac- cused of Larceny on Expert Accountant’s Mistake love for Mr, Cordova Is. cannot you have mercy? Help him for me, have the chance to see how much we a don’t want any ball. 1 am willing to if | cannot cee him | don't want to s 1 will go through fire and water for him. Never, nover, In this world will | ever give him up; but will stand by Oh, one way you could help would be Perstade with all 1 am not one bit sad for myself; but, to think you, will not help him. him through thick and thin. to Help him to get a divorce, mane (elc) for it to be done. oh! my heart breaks for Mr. Cordova. father, who used to call me his gall (sic) baby, wWl not help my For he ie, and will world, too, God granting same day we will show you what a happy The dear Lord loves us. He le of great mercy and long suffering. He He will Felp us In this trying hour, 1 need him now more than ever! Don’t look at it in the light you have been look. see, how strong our love for each other 1 will stay here forever before | will give him up, | | can't and do not wish to \f you cannot help your might and for the car and come, Notwithstanding the repeated assur- ‘cull for gome one ance to the contrary in this letter, Julla Bowne saw her father yesterday. And this meoting of the poor, shamed, but rtill loving, father with his seared face and knotted hands and his body bowed with toll, and of the strange, silent girl Who, standing erect and proud, wears the scarlet letter of dishonor as though {t were a royal badge upon her breast, Was most pathetla, Father Pleads In Vain. In vain the father pleaded with the girl to accept bulb and return to the protection of hia roof, 1n answer to all his pleadings she made the same condl- tion ax In her letter, “Ho ts my sweetheart, Help him if you Wow help me.” i And @t last tho old fether left her; more hopeless than when ‘he came, When you enter the New Brunswick | Jalil you are shown Into the Sheriff's oftce which, through an fron grating, commana a view of the corridor of tho On the right side of this corre dor are two separate parallel tlers of cella, one given over to the men pris- uners, the other to the women, tors lo tho prisoners are permitted to see them In the corridor, ao that when- ever Cordova fs led out to talk with his counsel he $s in full view of the women's And in some mysterious way Julia Bowne always knows when he iw there and comes and stands mutely at) the «rating which divides her from |} him, feasting her sad eyes upon him, throwing him kisses and even in th and In the next 3 his weak chil. the authority or even In 8, R., the Mayor 18 bound to help you, Ife we are living. if she was iil, ly we love each other. wil Help! Help! Help. dle, [am prepared to care for you, and T have written asking for a separation that person vou know, may be granted, Wants Trunk Guarded. “Don't let any one took in yo! even if they abuse you, for t many eters and plotures, and #0 on. * 6 '¢ Also watch papers for Oh! have mercy! Ing at It; but see, est of six children, will suffer with him and never murmur. any one who will not help my sweetheart. him, and by that way help him, oh! | must say | cannot see you; for as long as | live | will stand by and love him; and will bear You know by this just how | feel, and do what you wish; but If you cannot help him. stand by him whom | dearly and earnestly love, then do noth- Ing for me. With'love to all. From your daughter, Mr, Wall says window at abit 9 and ehrill noise Hke a young bird, you will know [ Ge aL aa Bie pall hour 1! 2. La ft minten ae it 1 was going to smoke. i Haan Bikgets her we e t stand this much longet, will eo where they. cannot harm us aay more, “Yours, yours forever, your oe “Lost” Without Her. Another letter Js in part and never murmur, and ran. one arm holding a handker- with whioh she endeavored to face, igh dusk had fallen and the lights in the jail were lighted, she was afraid, ‘ And she had reason to be. For notwithstanding her absolu' Tefusal to see reporters, Public Prose- | ¢ has access to the cells at any time, took a woman armed ack to her cell, and Julla Bowne, with a shawl wrapped about her face, fled past them room at the end of the corridor and tood behind the door it till the Sheriff, ht of her distress, camo and persuaded 'He knows that Cordova has nothing new to tell him. But he goes, never+ theless, to seo him, And thus Julla and Cordova, the nineteenth century Abelard and Heloise, are enabled to seu dear, T ath lost without feems to feel sou near me. F My Jove, my always, for my A Love All-Possessing. Any one who has seen Julia Bowne realizes that he ts in the presence of one of thore rare elemental passions that seem to sum all the loves of all women that have gone before—a lo that has no shamy, that wears dishonor a coronet and smiles even in the with @ camera quarter before ¢ tear bared away, ty that I Ie joa. oubt me notatall. I om nd will be wholly yours, for it, In fact, I sou He cate to tive locked herself in, After having prac Regina Black, a pi A felon by procuring a warrant charg> ing her with grand Jarcen C. B, Barker & Co., dealers stamps, at No, 6 Warren strect, made the startling discovery to-day that ex- pert had made a mistake in going over ber avcounts, and that she was not charge placed ag ig woman has been s Ny branded Mies y bookkeepor, as Her Personal Appearance. Julla Bowne ts about five feet six! Inches tall and weighs probably 130) Her carriage {8 very erect, she wore a brown skirt, halt by an apron, and a | Her face {!s long and at the present time very pale, brown hair is drawn back from her forehead too simply and smoothly to form a pompadour, and they wear, What does the victim of such a re- markable obsession look Ike? What ts she? And what {a the man for whom she has defied the world? When ‘Julia Bowno came out of her cell In answer to her father's sum- ;mons she moved with a free and ener- jgetlo step ull, In crossing the corridor, she caught sight of a 0. meet oon if pranible, I " liys to the oold bars that sepa- rate them, a fin the afternoon. in our sorrow, ‘ {8 help and re- T hive told the lady of thia house that you ‘had gone it may come any minute; so she will let you In and think nolih- You ‘can write fh the Wweu- lar iway, for there is no danger here. lute and yet serene sacnoss, and the! With all my love and kisses to you," For an hour Cordova sat in the cor- ridor yesterday talking over his case with nls counsel, Harry Cooke, one of 1» furemost erimin ers of New | the furemost criminal lawy: Hel re oe ake now, a look at abso- treet, Brooklyn nted thing, she crouched low Mr. Cooke knows the ease by hear RUDE ME She Was Mme. Herrman, Medium, and Feels “ Flus- trated’’ at the Expose, REAL “ SPIRIT” SCARED. It Ran Away, She Says, and Left Her in the Hands ot Two Strangers. accompany them to jail, N GRAB HALO OF A 200-LB. SPOOK from Canarsie in the room when the trouble took place and I don't know what they'll think of my having two promptly furnished a bond of $500 gu anteel’< the girl's appear Yombs vollee Court to-day, And while the girl 1 home, tho expe Herrman, medium and clairvoyant, at front room, which seats about fifty, They face the curtains over the en- trance to the small room, Prof, Herr- man sits besides these curtains, Herman sits directly between the two sets of drapery separating the small room from the audience-room, There it hag been her ‘habit to con- jure up the lone ghost, thing was ready for it to appear, Prof, Herrman would throw aside the curtains and presto! there stood ithe | Needless to say, the features of Mme. Hernman could not be discerned, Selzed the Spook. ‘Things were in this condition at the gathering lust evening when young Ber- wick sprang forward and seized the At the same moment Grind- ley struck a match and lighted the gas. Prof, Herrman fought yallantly for the “gpook,” which did p whole lot of fight- Ing on its own uwocount, “i beautiful "roughhouse."’ The ‘of, Herrman and the men struggled all over the audience, ‘The young men finally conquered, and departed with the "spook's'' halo, “It's an outrage those voung men were to come around |to our meetings | No, 1600 Lexington avenue, will no long- er walk, It was trapped last night by two young men In as olever an expose as was ever carried out, and when the smoke of the supernatural battle cleared away, the “splrit’’ stood before the startled audience in the form ot Mme. Herrman, She was clad In a mags of gauge coated with a phosphorescent Hived to weave the thought was bel drawn about her suddenly discov hes ed a slp In ther Ags FRAUD IS COMMON, ADMITS DR. FUNK. Dr. T, K, Funk, who has been inves. tlgating “spirit plotures"’ and the eu- | pernatural power which Mrs, Pepper, the Brooklyn medium, clalms to pos- sess, sald to-day the exposure of Mrb, Hetrman's methods was not a aur. found more mista the girl's books wa and at the end it ‘8 found that she Instead of between . E, Barker, of § prove to be an ery taken a penny of the eld Mr, Barkor, ’ has been made. A phosphorus-coated rim of a felt hat which she wore to represent a halo was {n the possession of Clavert Ber- wick, a young Virginian, who conducted the expose, Mr. Berwick declares Mme, Herrman has induced his mother to in- vest thousands of dollars by means of “spiritual advice,” Alding the young man In his attack was Harrison Grindley, After tihe pair “Nine mediums out of ten are fraude,”’ sald Dr, Funk, “nevertheless I still bi |lleve in spinitualism, Those who make a practice of investigating can recog- |nizo a fraud at eight, The methods re- ; Sorted to by these fake médiums ts ng home ond was une Abie “tay communt charge against her will now probably sire she wil ie Able to oxpldln the little shortage Oe $10), undoubtedly ror," The lone ghost that has held forth In the “spook chambers’ of Mme, Harry Miss Black entered Barker & Co, three y the employ of rs ago, “In my experienve I know of ono medium who impersonated tho spirit of & woman elmht feet tall, who said sho |had come from the planet Mars, She | Used a wim bust covered with rubber and had a false face, |] knew ised four cork soles one and . | half Inches thick, "I also know of a case tn which a }medium used a pneumatic dummy to \yepresent a child, j Was carried around as a bustle, There |dummies are covered with a prepara: i iton of phosphorus and ether which , but coffee that ts doing it. "In the grocery one day my hus-| weirhing at least 200 pounds—ti they departed with the felt Herrman was anything but a she was the victim of a foul conspiracy, UA a As evidence that she really made spirits appear she produced a diploma from the weren't real gentlemen at they didn't prove anything, a8 soon as they grabbed at the ‘spirit A Chest of Assorted Business Tonics, TRY ONE TO-DAY And Watch Your Business Grow. ened was that I showing she and her husband were the curtains and Meensed to converse with spooks, Where Ghost Walked, wag eitting behind my husband was sitting near them, and coming up out of the When defated tt the spirit began |floor just as It always had done, The Herrmans occupy four rooms on| ust received a message for one of the} young men and cailled out his name, gives out a soft ieht, t-medium who used a paateboard star mounted on A eross whieh she worse | All sorts and varieties | Postum, which he brought home, and of fraud are possible {n spiritualism,” a LECTURES TO MO | Honplial Nurse WIL Tell Them How to Care for Infanta, who are membera of the my cheeks, and I got stout and felt good aa I ever did in my life, 1/ jthe third floor ot } ‘The front rosin ta the “spook [grabbed nt the apirit. Cit In this her audlenc ye feared the spirit away, and the young her audiences Nave | man grabbed mo Instead, the /T was the spirit, Medium Is ‘Flustrated.” “Why, I have seen spirits ever str | T was born In Hesse room about twelve feet long and eight | Darmstadt, Germany, and 1 used to It 1s separated from the au- | |dience room by two sets of curtains. | The rest of the apartment doesn’t figure|® Clilr-audient medium and an auto: |{n the spiritualisde rites held by Mme. | Herrman and her husband, except that she declared to-day that she alwaya saw| to me and I've given them spooks—for her own benefit only—in her) OM how they ought to marry The last of the rooms, kitchen, contains a parrot and a lot of welrd-looking wearing anparel, When Sunday night audiences call on Mme, Herrman they are ushered into the’ over it, over her head, ns (1337 Capable Workers [it Realty invastments] 800 ‘To Let’ Offers 87 For Sale Offers Ti Position Offe | 360 Business Bargains] ‘ which she made appear every Sunday evening, Then I came to Amerler and settled out In Chicago, band §# & medium, too—that ts, he is matic slate-writer. We never ask peo- nile for a cent, and we do a Lots of young girls Mount Morris Baptist Church will b given an Interesting course of during Lent by Miss Mabel Woods know I owe it all to Postum In place | Tuttle, a graduate of the Metropolitan Hospital for Nurses, These lectures, ALL IN YESTERDAY'S Sunday's World Want Directory. from golng astray. ®) of harm hanging over them, too, “And after all the good work I've ) the first of whi to be delivered in the ohurch Fri March 10, at 4 P. M,, will be devoted men should come around here and ¢ay i jweetions cs to the proper care or. I was a foke! TI just feel all fustrated e alee pepple REST IN POISON CASE “Dollie” Everard Again in Cuss | tody on New Evidence in Con- | neotion with Death of Harri- son F. Johnson, LAWYER FOUND DYING FROM MORPHINE IN HOTEL. Prisoner Arrested at Time, Ar- ralghed and Dismissed, Ad- mitted Giving Man Opiate, | Saying He Was Used to It, “Dollle Everard, who formerly lived at the Regent Hotel, Twenty-elghth street, near Bixth avenue, has been re- s| arrested by ordet of Coroner Brown, who @ay# \6 has obtained new evidence in the case of Harrieon F. Johnson. ‘the young lawyer, who died of morphine poisoning in tbe Hotel Regent on Feb 16, Misa Byerard and angther. woman werd with the man at the time, They Were then arvested, arraigned and dis- charged, An autopsy was made on Johnaon's body, ahd ft could not be ascértainod wheter of not the morphine had been injedtod or swallowed by him, The Everard woman wald he wad in the habit of taking the drug, ‘and after refuting to let him have i that night she Analy relented and gave him a dose, whieh ho thjected into his arm, Jobnton, Wno was about thinty years old, was employed at No, 91 Nassau Sirest In the law office of Frank Ver- noi Johngoh, He lett his office at 0 O'clock thet night and with a friend called’ on Dolile Everard at the Hotel Regent. A party of four was made up and fohta Were engaged at the Regent, Dubhig the alghi Mew Bveratd rushed out of the hotel and summoned Dr. ENUIpAs Rt No, West Twenty-seventh i street, told him her husband was ay fom polgon. He found Johnson dead, Wy his Bie val THe Dinttlot-Attorney's office Investi- @. Chase and ordered the arrest of the two women, They gave the namnek pf Dole Iiverard and Lottie Reynolds, ‘Tho Hyerard woman sald she was the divotced wife of the prize. fighter of that name, PAID BILLS FOR WOMAN WHO WAS NOT HIS WIFE. that This Eatition Mra. Walter D, John- son to Legal Separatto Juatice Fitsgeraid ruled to-day that Mra. {lllah A. Johnson is entitled to & deoree Of separation from Walter L, Johnson, formerly of the Brooklyn lum- bee firm of Johngon Brothers, ¥WV6 ene maeried in Brooklyn: March 9, 1887,"" nald Mra, Johneon, in reply to auestlons of A, H. Hummel, “and livou at No. 421 Lafayette avenue until we wenArabed ih 18%, We had threo ser- vant’ and Uved at the rate of $10,000 a yeu! f, le} Wi ¥ hpehand ci Ua Ue Sea other wom: Tre foube ft trese ote tie are ead a ress | ) Mary I nied, In St, i \ rookie, ‘wont there ag alone’ drive, “One evening 1) met ithe the atreet, fey hunband pe oie irew me'down and held me down while that other woman made her ¢ Met, Johtson must sup) rth the ohildren in a separate ttn THB TRICKS Coltee Pinys on Some, Tt hardly pays to laugh before you are certiin of facts, for it 1s some: un humiliating to think of after- ward, “When I wae a young girl I was a lover of coffee, but was sick so much the doctor told me to quit, and I did, but after iny marriage my husband begged me, to drink i again, as he did not think it was the coffee caused the troubles, “fo I commenced it again and con- tinued about 6 months, until my stoitiach commenced acting bad, and pated iad {f I had swallowed some- thing the aise of an egg; One doc- tor said it Was neuralgia and indiges- tlon, + “One day I took a drive with my husband three miles in the country, and I drank a cup of coffee for din- ner, I thought sure I would die be- fore I got back to town to a doctor, 1 was drawn double in the buggy, and when my husband hitched the horse to get me out into the doctor's oftice minery came up in my throat and seemed to shut my breath off en- tirely, then left all in a flash and went to my heart, The doctor pro- nounced it nervous heart trouble, and when I got home I was so weak 1/ could not ait up. “My husband brought my supper to my bedside, with a nice cup of hot coffee, but I said: ‘Take that back, dear; T will never drink another cup ot coffee if you gave me everything you are worth, for it is just killing me,’ He and the othera laughed at me anil sald: “Phe idea of coffee killing any- body!’ ‘Well,’ T sald, ‘it Is nothing else {hand was persuaded to buy a box of \1 mare it for dinner, and wo both | thought how good it was, but sald nothing to the hired men, and they | ‘thought they had drunk coffee until | we laughed and told them, Well, we! kopt on with Postum, and {t was not long hefore the color came back to yo no more stomach trouble, and I jot cotter. “My husband has gained good ‘ay, | nedieh oh Postum, as well as baby , and we all think nothing ts too {O,pay about it.” Name given by Postum Co, Battle Creek, Mich, = a Ae ld doses ppCranrs CASTOR the expenses of the road have increased twice as fast as the), T vaw my thus! arive fi tran nn take thet woman’ oll for’ BOTTLED SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK Joo Drovs} Detireatat tng the Stamens and Bowels of | IND ANTS. CHILDREN —— re aa Oni Mineral, sMorphine nor or NARCOTIC, Apefect Remedy ‘ tens Sour Stombeh Diarsven Worms Convulsions Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Fac Simile Signature of a VG srenths old And Other Patrons of the LONG ISLAND RAILROAD; -. No. 4. eh oe For fourteen months the management of the Long | nd Railroad has been confronted with the unavoidable necessit an increase in its passenger rates. During the past ten earnings; and, with increasing traffic, the management has | forced to, realize that the more passengers the road carried, the rates recently prevailing; the greater would be the loss, The road purposes to spend large sums in great improv ments which will in-effect make Long Island a part of the cons | tinent, shaving’ all rail connections with New England an north, on the one hand, and with the south and west, other, ‘There is planned a system of electric traction w will cut down the running time, probably reducing by o the time for passengers on the western end of the island These undertakings are not only very costly, but also time, When they are completed the passenger traffic of | Island can be handled more economically and more efficient Meanwhile the road must handle the increasing vol of passenger traffic as satisfactorily as possible with its ¢ ing equipment, It Is believed, or at least hoped, that by the recen advance in passenger rates the railroad can prevent any furt increase in the deficit resulting from passenger business. i The management has felt confident that, when Its patro ne knew the facts in the case, as the officials of the road kn them, the advance in rates would seem natural and i The effort of the railroad, therefore, is to explain to the through the newspapers and otherwise, the conditions by whid the road is affected. The Long Island Railroad conducts business for profit; but it believes that all of its patrons perceive that it can make a profit only by building up its bust ness on Long Island, and that its business :cannot be increas without benefiting all other interests of the island,’ Island requires a more efficient and a more thorough. ser than the railroad Is yet able to give. If the income of the ral road cannot be increased, then it is inevitable that the standar of the service of the road must be reduced rather than proved, The policy of the railroad is based upon faith future of Long Island and confidence in the good se justice of its people, sites: W. F, POTTER, Offices of the Long Island R, R. Co., March 4, 1905, hi beg es hi IN BOND OLD CROW ff HERMITAGE WHISKIES, with the Government Green Stamp over cork of each bottle, insuring Jima Origin, Purity, Age, Strength and. full measure, ‘ f \ IV.A.GAINES & C0. Distillers, Frankfort, Ky. Sold by All Dealers and H,B. KIRK & CO., Distributors, New York A MORNING

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