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h “SLAIN GIRL RAD LEFT HEB HOME | TOKULL A MAK “EARLY LIFE BLIGHTED. * was to-day identitted by Lyman Davis, | Aged foikia Data Davis Is Almost _ Certain Kingston Victim Was His Daughter. He Identifies Body as That of Mrs. Elizabeth Davis Von | Mark, of Napanoch. UNCLE AN. Y, POLICEMAN. She Had Left Home with Avowed Purpose of Seeking Revenge at Risk of Own Life. (Bpeclal to The Evening World.) KINGSTON, N. ¥., March 2.—The body of the young woman found in tho ice filled Walkill Creek, near Gardner, ‘fan old man Hving at New Paltz, as his @aughter, Mrs. Hiizabeth Davis Van der Mark, who he sald was the wife of Charles Von der Mark, of Napanoch, N. ¥. She has a brother on the New York police force, Joseph Davis, of No. 114 West One Hundred and Ninth street, New York. Policeman Davis informed his brother that been in New York ago, at which time she probably out- fitted herself with the New York mark- | ed garments and shoes, She has not heen seen by relatives for two months, | Trembling with emotion, the aged father told the story of his daughter's blighted early life. Unfortunate Love Affairs. “My daughter had an unfortunate love affair four years ago,” sald Lyman Davis, “and left home later. She mar- Sieranaek f Van der Mark and went to to lve, but worry made her {yin and she left her husband, turning bome for a while, she went @way again, determined to hunt down and kill @ certain man, even if she Gee endanger hor own life. When fu y apts wists ae two months ago athe. gl edret af ne to Middletown, "Ig the body is that of my daughter tha fm certain she was murdered and pe se man she sought was her mur- Bilzabeth had two months in New Work these shoes, No. 4 In heels, were purchased @t @ Bixth avenue ‘department jt a thelr etook number is 25$—20,010, Dead Two Months. Mhe bellof of physicians who have ned dead girl's bod: bis been dead iy two Houta - ing that time io corpse, corpse Mt td been pi in the ‘oe, served by being 5 autora ay som that death be- Urles oreok, “tt Penta ig the case othe mu erere te believed to have thrown the woman into the creek a short ies where it waa found, ares en ¢ alien 1s) the {oe jam and held andi the 4 tere in, “On the head is a cut #o deeo that it wou, tie pare ‘been made Hy arp instrument wi The ene ee rerments, which we oF eel salve bear no mark w Spee peek to her {dentification; nor i ¢thefe any mark on the gold ring band, —— GRIEF CAUSES SUICIDE. W. H. Hammond, Crased by Death of Wife, Huds Lite with Bullet. Ww. H. 4, for many year as- @ocated with Col Henry W. Savage! .. fin the repl-estate business tn Boston, @ommitted suicide in the bathroom of Dis apartments at the Hotel Astor to- day, by shooting himself in the right eemple, Despondency over the death of his ‘wite last fall ts given as the reason for Mr, Hammond's act, He had @tieved 90 greatly over her loss that his mind became unbalanced and Col, Savage sent him to Porto Rico in the hope the trip might benefit him. He returned to New York last Monday on the steamship Caracas, but there was Do apparent change In his condition, My, Hammond, who was fifty-three Years oM, was well known in Boston, Before the death of his wife he was a ‘ul real-estate ato Pinos "bad been unable to conduct Ms siness. THREATENS A JUDGE. Once Rich Man to Bo Mxamined nv to Mental Condition, Magistrate Whitman, in the Centre fitreet Count, comm!tted William J, Lee, arrested by Central Office detectives Jest night in the Mount Morris Hotel, @t No, 2390 Thini avenue, to Bellevue want to be examined as to his yanity, Leo was formerly Li rietor of Kg Phoenix Iron Ci in Trenton, %, and lost it in bt gation. Bor gov- ‘weeks he has been writin eral oata letters to ieee Vroom, the Court Errors and Appeals, at ‘Trenton. He saya the. J conspiracy to defraud him erty. The Hats that made $2.00 famous. Better than ever. Investigate, FOUR STORES: BROADWAY, Bier Fulton, jelow Chambers, elow Bleecker, an NASSAU, Below Maiden Lane, BOOTH TUCKER , ARRIVES HERE Salvation Army Man to Join Rider Haggard in Colony In- spection in the West—Other Arrivals from Europe. ‘The Kaleer Wilhelm der Grosse, one day overdue, having been delayed by heavy storms early in the trip, arrived to-tay; Among the passengers was ee Booth Tucker, Weave tonight tor. Amity, Col, where he will join Rider Haggavd, the novel- ‘e- | let, who ts making a study of the col- onization work of the Salvaz@m Anny in this country. Fourteen Rusetan dancers were on the ship, coming to joln the Bamum & Batley cirous, Dr. Alexander Herzfeld, Professor in the Royal Theological High Sohool of Berlin, was @ passenger, coming here to study the sugar situation, Hoe eays if Cubs produces the 6,000,000 tons of sugar per year which it can do, Germany, which now iach ugar ‘here, will be forced to reduce its own production. Bithop Andrew Hodoboy, of the Greek Catholic Church, Philadelphia, was at the pler to meet five priests of the Greek Slavic Mission, who are to do missionary’ work In Pennsylvania. Other arrivals were Bernard Vernon Derbyshire, who, by common 1 Jeet on the steamer, is the Harl Denby, travelling incognito; hig Lie son and daughter, and Herr Direktot Zollner, of Berlin, who will [1 YEARS FOR EX-POLICEMAN Jeremiah Healy Sentenced to|t Sing Sing for Highway Rob- bery, in Which Staten Islands: Man Was the Victim. Jeremiah Healy, bday regia ex policeman highway sentenoed by Suiprem! frstend Burr, at Richmond, to eleven: yeara tn |oovee, Sing Sing prison for his share in the robbing of William MoKensle, wealthy feed-store man who was eand- bagged near his home in Néw Brighton lagt month and relieved of his watoh and money by three men, Healy took | $1,000 hie sentence coolly and was taken to Sing Bing in charge of Policeman Pe' or- 80m. Thomas Walsh, the crook who turned State's evidence, implicating Healy and telling of his part in the affair, will be sentenced to-morrow, None of Healy's former friends or associates were in court when he waa sentenced. Mrs, Healy's sult for divorce ie now pending In the courts, Healoy's sentence to Sing Sing marks tho closing of @ police career which was to have been very bright accord. Ing to the members of the Roosevelt Boani, who appointed him on probe- tion Dec. 1, 1894, at which time he was twenty-two years old. | in Avoiding One Express, An tihe | He, AY EVENING, MARCH 29, 1905, SCORES SEE MAN KILLED IN SUBWAY People on Twenty-third Street / Station Witness Death of a Trackman, oe LEAPED BEFORE TRAIN. Had Just Gone to Work When, other Ran Him Down. Albert 'T, Moore, of No, 478 West Twenty-fourth street, was killed by an express tralh In the Subway at Twenty- third street, shortly after seven o'clock this morning. The tragedy caused a long delay of both express and local trains, and the current had to be shut off before Moore's body waa lifted to the platform of the downtown Twenty-third street station, One woman who was on the platform | with the crowd that saw Moore killed falnted, She was revived, and was gy unnerved that she went home Ingiead OL gulny ly DusiieRs, | Mobre Was @ travxman and had only | been) wpiuywl py ule santervorougu | Company u lew duys, re went to worn at @ o'vlock thie morning, — Clundiiy gown to Lhe track from the ‘swenty- Unird street platiorm he sturced on Lis | tour of inspeotwn, ide aroaved over | from use duwatowa loval track to the uptown express track, and Aad hui “Moo yriry tspped over from the uptown core ate express track to the downtown track GiseBy in front of an oncoming train that he had not noticed. Men and women who saw Moore's danger orled one ts warnin, fp Bie ane ni rene eniere ney brakes just as the one velocity sent the be ae AY feat, hitting the lett of his } against the vee] posta, dropped partly on the third rail, Immediately word was telephoned to phe power-nouse to @aut off the clec- Lielty, a and after some delay ‘Moore's | body was lifted to the downtown loca! | track and the express proc: ‘he body was left in the middle of | the downtown local track, lying on its) back, while station men went to find | a policeman, Trackmen and armed ie red gay stopped all local trai op at a Fea wee locked twen' min 8 then the policemen arrived he and! three trackmen ralsed the fatal i i porters, ith. od He all peed ie was in full view OF re ak trains stopped @o that the door er of.one of ee Ca! was dl ly Opposite ms were ‘ody, several ane day |foroed to inten ove It in lighting, One on) | woman stood ib y the body and murmured tie OE ec) nd by the peltoemen a tty 1 proceeded Lar when un upiown express | 4 The bod a he eet, twenty-second iehes: The moto) of the ‘iain that pied Boars ras arrested and held in Gold in Your Garret Hundreds of housewives who never dye anything, who think they can’t dye, or imagine it io a task, are losing the good of castaway fabrics could be made new with IAMOND DYES Tt ts an extremely easy process to color with Diamond Dyes, and the cost to but a trifle, They are for home use and home economy. Diamond Dyes Color Anything Any Color Man-tailored Walking Suit of English Tweed, coat ef- fect,, 22 inches long, collar- less, with inlaid stitched silk, coat sleeve, side kilted skirt, The garment is fash- ioned in all coloring and in sizes from 32 20. 00 to 38, Value... Blouse model with Peplin of fine quality Broadcloth in all colors, Coat fin- ished in box pleats, The new double puff sleeve trimmed with fine silk braid, Skirt panel front with tucked flounce. Value. 85. ” Walking Suit of Sete, bone Panama in all the new shades, Coat trimmed elaborately with Plercules and Soutache Braid, Skirt panelled and side 0 pleated effect. 5. ° WOMEN’S DEPT, Extraordinary Valuesin Ready-to-Wear Suits 50 00 Broadway @ 18th Street. Strictly plain man-taflored Suit in Scotch mixtures of brown, blue, light gray, tan and black and white, A chic model, destined to prove popular for misses’ wear, Sizes 14 20. 00 to 18, Value... Eton Blouse model of Shepherd Plaid in all shai Finished with taf- feta to match and broad shirred Girdle, 3 5 P 00 The new kilted skirt, Value... A Bolero Coat effect with Postilion, modelled in fine quality Broadcloth in all colorings, coat buttoned WED TWOCIRLS Secs ON SAME DAY guilty,” Steffler told Judge , “but I haye no explana. 1 faven't the faintest idea Steffler, Pleading Guilty to Bigamy, Tells the Judge He Has Not the Faintest Idea) ‘Why He Committed Crime. |: vi married both women,” Judge Nowburger remanded Steffler to the ‘Nombs until toemorrow, Means ho will investigate, Board of Health records show the morning of Aug, e » olghteen ib Leroy street, Al- n P, Higzins performed the ceres his home, No, 103 Leroy street, oning Steffler escorted Hannah twenty-one years old, of acomber street, tothe home | that Steffler, 13 marvled | years old, of dor Vest One I | Sireet, and married her, aap Ay Bre Sanam The caso of John Steffler, In the | SLAYER SAID TO BE CAUGHT, Tombs anwelting sentence to-morrow on | a change of bigamy, will go down fn | @hts Time Police of Bureka, Utah, the annals of the General @essions| | MeHeve TRey Have Pettis, Courts as one of the strangest that Benjamin Franklin Pettis, the young | Now Englander, belleyed to be the mur- ever puzzled a criminal court Judge. j|derer of Mrs, Hannah B. Ross, who Steffler, who lives at No, 100 East|/was found dead in the rulns of her Lighty-seventh street, up to a few | home in Montelalr, N. J. on Feb, @ months ago was superintendent of the | jast, 1s sald to be under arrest in Bus stables of the Fifth avenuo stage line} Bea pan NC Pole Gane 7 ‘ lo ay HAR On August 18 last he married two YoUNS | Ch ct'of Potten Caliagher, of Montelal women, one In the forenoon the other | stating that he hag a man tn eyatody in the evening, He says he knows of | who answers in the minut: Aotally no reason why he should haye married | the pybliehed ear eons ot Pettis, two women, but the fact that he dld stands on the records, and he must FUNERAL, SHIP SAILS. take the punishment, WASHINGTON, March 29.~The cruls- Btoffler was arraigned before Judge | er Columbia, which hus been fee by Newburger In Part If, of Genoral Ses- | the Navy Department to carry the re- sions to-day on an Indictment for big- maing of the late Mexloan Ambassador 7 from the Untied States to Vera Crug, amy, Both of Steffler's wives appeared | jeft Pensac o-day for Now York. SUMPTION SUFFERERS EAM EAE DO NOT DESPAIR; THERE IS HOPE ee You Ms at pay Leste bave Alvan, de Cong ra 8 ties C moat tal ie ia nine, ae ce EAA ANY pee 10) ite B a most Bist ofa ee ee im thee imathods “and rea , Pain Seat necth ae BAR ise om now and will be sent 0 reatnenta 1 of the oart! (MAMMMAAM AMAA AAR wae MMMM MIAE AAA, 10 EMUSIN TREATMENT WILL: BE SENT YOU FREE OOO TAMAAEA AMAL DOE EEA MM EA MHA MEA ALLL A ent cite oe aye ee X os UNITED Sait MEDICAL DI DISPENSARY 94 Hast 98d St., Dept. 187, New York City. aN SSA a rite Paks & Company Broadway, 334 te S4th Street, High Grade Framed Pictures Formerly $2.00 to $5.00. At $1.00 From an exquisite etching to a humorous sporting print—from a faithful carbon copy of a classic to a hand colored photograph—such is the diversity of subjects, The frames are of hard woods in all manner of sizes and forms. ‘The prices were from two to five dollars. To effect an absolute clearance they have been reduced to one dollar, A Sale of Linens and Domestics $3.00 TABLE ChOTHS, at $2.25, All linen, heavy weight, excellent designs; sizes 2x2)4, $4.50 HUCK TOWRLS, at $3.00 Rer Roz. All linen, damask borders, hemstitched, large size, $2.00 TABLA NAPKINS, at $1.50 Per Doz All linen, desirable patterns, I7¢ PILLOW GASRS, at ie, Pull bleached'muslin, hand torn and ironed, sizes 45x36, 12i4¢ SILKQKINE, at £0c. $6 inches wide, in a large variety of designs and colors, 20c TENBRIRER ROYLIRS, at 10c With plain or open work centres, Cotton Suitings Value I5c. to 23c. Special at 10c. There are four weaves in six styles represented— Etamine with broken plaids, Grenadine in open mesh, lace effect, two Canvas weaves with con- tinuous and broken nub stripes, and two Voiles, one with chiffon finish in designs and dots on in- visible checked grounds and the other loosely woven with nub overplaids. The colors embrace heliotrope, gunmental, nile, golden brown, cadet, white, black, navy, light blue, champagne, red, corn. Spring ye ‘Fabrics Formerly $1.00 to $3.00. At 79c, In some instances there is but a dress length left; in down front with Persian buttons and finished off with Persian and fancy braid, The new side. kilted mrt & 00 Value .. 35. others an entire piece, though only in one color, The collection of weaves is most diversified, including Tissue Voiles, Silk-and-Wool Crepes, Grenadine Voiles, Twines, Silk-and-Wool Novelties, Imported black, and black and white fabrics and many ex- clusive French novelties. The minimum value is $1.00; the maximum $3,00, and the average prices from which the fabrics were reduced are $1.50 to $2.50. All at 79c, BESIEGED MAN wy Gered them away. Quickly ehengh, fire, Several of Rober were torn away by a bullét wi enti red his leg, causing an i , may ‘necessitate ampietion. pantons rowed to Freeport, whi reported the shooting. Ai A crowd of men hurried to cabin, They found the door discovered that Capt. Smith wae heavily armed. ‘Qept. Smith's companions at 't ‘of the shooting are not known, Wallace, of Freeport, has rants for John, Charles and but no arrests have yet been ‘The shooting affair grew out war between the oyster men clam diggers of Great Sou' fection Naccuaing tbe thor, IS RELEASED Capt. Zopher Smith, Who Seri- ously Wounded Alleged Oyster Pirate, 1s Permitted by Crowd to Quit Cahir, After'being beslesed by fifty men until 2 o'clock ¢his morning in his cabin over. looking the Great South Bay oyster dedi, opposite Freeport, Capt. Zopher Smith, who veeterday shot at three men he thought were oyster pirates, caphtur tated and waa allowed to go to hie home, Smith and two other men saw Robert Morse, his cousin Leander Morse, and Dantel Carman, rowing about in the bay in the vicinity of the beds and or. ALBANY, Maroh nance Committee has bore owe y the i ,000 for the purchase batted Me measi by the Daughters Revolution and other tl Sake & Company Broadway, 334 to 54th Street. Tailored Suits & Coats for Women With @ collection of tailored and semi-tailored suits 4 dresses of volle, panama, lightweight broadcloth, sumn serges and silks in taffeta and chantung weaves, elaborate character, diversity and numbers, our department is ready satisfy the most exacting demand which you may olec make. Summer dresses are presented in advance styles, wns, linens and nets. GC Coats are offered in a large series of fitted and box n in short, three-quarter and walking lengths, SPBCIAL FOR THURSDAY. Coats of tan covert cloth pri pel ng ep broadcloth or cheviot, silke lined throughout. At $9.5 Value $14.50 to $17.50 Spr Coats ong three-quarter Spring Tgp Se Coats of tan worumbo — covert cloth, silk lined throughout, * Value $27.50 and $29.50. At $19.5 Walking Coats of tan covert cloth in hy and loose three-quarter models, Value $35, $39 & $44. Rain Coats representing a series of manufacturer's samples in various model Value $25.00 to $32.00. At $19, Tailor-Made Suits, about fit garments in-a variety of spring styles and mate including short and long coat models, Value $25.00 to $29.00, At’'$18.5 (We Are Prepared to Accept Furs for Storage. A Special, Offer Handkerchiefs for Women Handkerchiefs of pure Irish Linen, hemsti with gh i above the hem, lue 25g. Special at b2c, t Handkerchiels of sheer Belfast linen, embroid and with lace insertions and edges, Value 35¢. and 45¢. Spectal at 23c. An Important Offer Spring and Summer Waists. More than one hundred dozens: of white lay waists in new and altogether distinctive mod one dollar instead of one seventy-five, and fifty instead of two fifty. { Waists of sheer white lawn with lace ; yoke and fine A al open back model, — Value $1.75. cial at $3,00,: Waists of sheer ‘| ite lawn, with fall © front of allover embroidery in a variety of patterns, Value $2.50, at $1.50 High Grade Shoes for Wome We offer all the remaining sizes and widths of si eral styles of our $3.50 Shoes for Women at $1.95. $5.00 Shoes for Women at $2.45 -—the standard Saks shoes in an extensive eol- lection of graceful and perfect fitting lasts. rhe The $2.45 Shoes Are of seen kid or colt| Are of patent leather or skin, in lace or button] vici kid with patent tip models,of vicikidin lace/hand turned soles wd or button models with |full Louis XV. heels, and kid or patent tips, andoflof patent colt skin ia kidin button with patent}mannish blucher lasts tips, Louis XV. heels. | with heavy soles, Tapering Waist R. & G. Corsets The New Models, The entire series of R. & G. Spring models (and they are diversified in style and proportions) faith= fully follow fashion’s imperative demand—a grace- ful, faperlai waist line, Our department maintains a full complement of styles and sizes in high or bust models, Of batiste or of coutil.