The evening world. Newspaper, April 7, 1905, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

‘ THE WORLD: fe Wt OT MYSTERIOUS RIPPER VICTIM, MAN SHE ACCUSED AND TH ‘FRIDAY EVENING, APRIT. 7, 1908, ELATTER’S WihE Ne entifies James Boyne, Stew- ard in Club, as Her Assailant. F Caught Fleeing from Scene ‘of ~~ Crime, but Stoiidly Asserts | > We Never Saw Victim, | SKE THE “RIPPER” CRIMES. | pon Used Was Long Knife, Sec: | _tlon of Whict. Was Broken Off In Young Woman's Body. | Mamie Wilson, an extremely pretty woman, died in St, Vincent's to-day of frightful stab tabbed her James Boyne, steward of the Avon Beach Club, at Bath Beach, "Phe crime was committed In a room at the Hotel St. Lawrence, No, 30 Kast Thirteenth street, and bears many tharks of resemblance to the ‘Jack the Ripper mysteries of London, ‘The knife with which the woman was @tabbed was found in the room, It is © 1h Whe soft of knife that a cook or chet f ea find handy in his work. \The | bade amped ‘France, and there | ‘@re four notches cut on the handle, | Boyne, who is married and whose wife @ave birth to a child last Saturday j “@turdily denies that he committed the | crime, He admits that he went to the ‘Hotel Bt. Lawrence with a woman list hight, but saye that it was not the Wil- Woman, and that the stabbing oc- as he was leaving the place ‘The identification by the victim, how- ever, Is declired to have been positive. Blood Stains on Shirt Sleeve, fer Boyne was identified he was taken to the Mercer street police sta- tion and searched. The right sleeve of hie shirt was soaked with blood to the elbow and there were aprinklings of ‘Blood on left sleeve, He sald that this | ‘wes blood he wiped from his face after am 4 Bs .? “LAWCERCE. hee ZzZotal | the place about 11 o'clock, Boyne regis: tered as "Mr. and Mrs, Smith," and with the woman was shown to room Ni 7 on the second floor by Mamie Smith, a | chambermald | According to the Newell woman—and | the rogister bears hor out—there were | but two other guests In the hotel Inst night, ‘The lights In the office had been extinguished and the door had been | locked at midnight when pleroing’ zereams in room No, 7 awoko not only | everybody In the house "but everybody In the neighborhood, ‘The chambermald ran in the direc- tion of the room. As she was approach- ing the door Boyne rushed out, with | his overcoat buttoned losely about him and his hat in his hand. He dashe. down tHe stairs, but finding the door locked was compelled to seqe another way out, Rertha Newell grabbed him and held on until Deteotives Lloyd and Kennedy, of the Mercer street station, who had been standing at Fifth avenue and Thir- |teenth street, reached the hotel to in- vestigute the reason for the screaming, ‘Phe Smith girl admitted thom and they | @trested Boyne after a fight, Boyne was taken to the hospital trom Mercer wtreet station, handcuffed to a detective, In the presence of a doxen nurses and doctors, he was made to | he was fully clothed, even to his over- #8" @0et. There ts no blood on the overcoat, 4) ‘The prisoner ds a Spaniard, twenty- ope years old and was born in Morocco, 4h He hes @ claim against the Government .; @f that country for $50,000 for estates if? confiscated from his father, Ho has * Mved in this country since childhood ad speake English well, Game to Manhatta Nothing te known of Boyne's move- peared which Boyne found her, Lawrence, Time was when a man wanted something, He had to look far, near, high, low; And scour around throughout the country— Lack of people and wealth made It so. But now times haye changed for the Can find what he wants in a hurry It matters not what his want may be— Perhaps a position he seeks, ‘A Business, a Real-Estate bargain, Or some one to help out a few weeks, His parlor may lack a plano, And a teacher is very much needed Here or there to show the right wi It might be his House or Apartment, tart single) his dark Furnished Room h etting to be a back number wee he wanted another right soon, Time was, as heretofore stated, These th But now it’s a much different stor: There's a machine that out all You'll have a chance to try it Sunda: ‘And secure your heart's fondest desire, Get a Sunday World's Want Ad. Directory: ‘The price will be five cents—no higher, / It will show you the short cut to an: Of the things that you long have Just get one and turn to its index, Want Directory last Sunday— ments from the time he left Bath Beach until late in the evening, when he ap- in Fourteenth street bétween, ‘Third and Fourth avenues, There he } said to have met the Wilson woman, who was extremely pretty, a blonde and evidently new to the surroundings in They went together to the Hotel St, which {s conducted by u) woman named Bertha Newell, reaching ‘Take Out What You Want! Thos Works This Wonderful Vending Machine. better, The' man who hard work now resents At a cost of no more than five cents. Or perchance his wife sings but can’t play, ay. ings would be quite hard to find; thioes will grind, Kooked for— And to the heights of success you will soar, Here are some of the ‘‘Position”’ and “‘Help’’ opportun- tties-missed by those Who did. not read The World’s Stand at the bedside of the dying wom. an, One of the detectives temoved the prisoner's hat, His head Is of a pe- cular shape and furnished a: marke of identifeation, tare “He stuboed ine,’ gasped tho woman, pointing to Bo ; wize without fi aohing, =? "RO m he real stabber got vay. lared, It T can find the wena wae with me I can prove an alin AAS, woon a4 the news of th. A the Wilson woman’ reache @lrept station Actin, ‘ erson Mi efore. hi nd arraigned, him Pina | disiriot-Aitoeney “Bernoohsy A*Matant Banow was committed to the cts ly of ‘the ae anit tewai n tion to his duti of the Avon Beach’ Club Boyne award Waller every day for three hours ee the Bowling Green Lunch clup, No, *48 Beaver street, | The greatest surpria Was expressed to-day by member Pree gmPlovees of the club over hi arr ober and industrious an that he betrayed any sig: dyin) et her he a n who as | ous and that he never degeneracy, ANOTHER WIN FOR BROOKLYN Hanlon’s Men Beat the Fast Charleston Team To-Day in Last Game of the Series by Score of 4 to 1. t Score by Innings, ' Oharlestos 0 BATTING ORDER. Chari + unten cr" wala Cr McKernan, 2b, 8 De Mont, ‘ss. Be moa Hf Smith, c, Tebala, Bb. Bb, Newman, tb, Lewis, se, orson, it, Met Munron, rf, Hitter oo bs Turner, p. Pp Jones, Umptre—Mr, Ashenback. (Bpecial to The Evening World.) CHARLESTON, 8. GC, April 7.—~Zthe Bnooklyns and Charlestona ned up for the rubber én their series of three games | to-day, the game stanting at %15 o'clock in omer to atlow the visitors to catch ‘he train for Baltimore, where they are scheduled to play tthe Orioles to-morrow and Monday, Help, sits, Heer aits Both teams were out to win the odd ‘Wanted, wanted. Wanted.wanted, | game, and the Supenbas looked for oney + 140 —|orRrne . 4\ploking providing they got an even 6) 8 - . —|break on the umpiring. The cold wave MS’ c| . 42 =| eee pe peetive gg) that struck town with the arrival of 18 in| Housnwonknns 117. $2) the Superbas continued, keeping the at- 455 #0] IMPROVPRS _|tendance down and making ball playing 4 | JANITORS 4a irksome. 10 S|LADIES .....5, —| Hanon sent In Oscar Jones to do the 4 7) LAUNDREBBEB 18) sled work, while the Charlestons de. | ‘ASBERG 20 -|MEN 4... pended on’ Turner to keep une victory | IAGH MAKERS, o —|MILEINERY re r 18 20] NECKWEAR —>— a. 4 2) NURSES .,. AT PHILADELPHIA, | CHAMBERMAIDS 8 16] OPERATORS RH. COLLECTORS «. 9 =| PAINTERS , PhiladelphiarN.L.) 0000001001 8 COMPOBITORS . 13 17} PLUMBERS Philadniniiaa Te) 00210008 4 10 sl Choke ia gr| SALwst.aDins Batteriia—Pittingur and Doin; Waddell «Sve work eid 70| 8ALESMEN .. DEEN plea apes ai ae AY T 8/SKIRT MANDS...; alte 10 BlaTENOGRAPHERS |. .; ga| KILLED AS HIS SON WAS, 182 BAPTAILORE ves vieee peng 1 sim aN pORR \ a 20) TRIMMERS. 4 NEWTON, N. J, April 7.—Steward 48 43/TUCKERS . —|south was killed by a train between | 6 11| WAIST HANDS. tebe 4 4 Andover Junction and thts place, He 20 A/ WAITERS «., | way shockingly mangled, his food being | 4 25) WAITRESSES =|severed and his logs cut: off at th 20 | WASHING oe si se se es 45| hips, South saw the train approaching 3 BELMCT EMP, AGENCIES 18 land’ tried to met off tho track, bug a @ MISCELLANHOUS ..... 1174 Gs) slipped and fell and the loco: ve struck him, It is @ remarkable ootneta fn. was anes in ne on ain wi A pom eee other developed, tion of what she was and she to what 1 was, Baoh of us recognized that in the other there was the samo soul, were mere than the supplement or com- plement of each other, for those terms imply @ lack to be remedied by oon: Junotion, and we realise no lack in each other. We were already one, | | Vames Poyne. ORIGINAL (Continued fro: World she will tell of the problems in her life's work and how she will strive to solve them. The first of Miss Pastor’s six articles will be published on Monday. will be entitled “My First Imnressions of New York.” “WE ARE ALREADY ONE IN SOUL,” SAYS STOKES, (Dictated to an Even By MR. J. G. PH ’ Tam giad to set myself atraight on | this matter of soul influence as ap-| mi plied to our engagement, because vf | M) the garbled account of my views which | was published yeatarda; never c e An e morning paper Miss Pastor and I have idered ourselves as “engag- 4," in the ordinary acceptation of the erm, ‘here was no bond, no pledge given or required, for wo are one per! asked, in view of his study: gon, not two, and thus need no such agreement. person In unfty of Ideal, thought, be- Miss Pastor and I are one Jef and attitude toward life's prob: lems; one in thought and action, "We met, Mutual knowledge of cach I awoke to @ realiza- we “We may each lack much, but we are both blind enough to fall to see any! Ci our own attitude, We to ou tho con- etant lookout for such defects in oder thet we may rectly them, vut we can-| not find any, reat, gross and numerous defect in “How did we recognise that we were one woul? How do 1 know you are sit- ting in that chmlr, It is a matter of mere perception to recognize persons whose soul is one with yours, There are Inwatd perceptions ag vivid as out- ward ones, “T have no reason to doubt that such affairs as ours are controlled by God, His work js manifest everywhere. “While I cannot prove that Goa breught Miss Pastor and myscif to- gether, I do believe we are under the direct Influence of a supreme powor. ‘Bo far as marriage is concerned, the veromony ts expedient and I believe in it; but In the caso of Mies Pastor and myself, I do not balloye that any cere- mony can make us more utterly one than we now are, “Our object In going through a mar: nage ceremony, na we Intend to do, {s mote out of respect to the feelings actuating a masority of the best and noblest people than from any belief of ours thet the ceremony will unite us any more closely in the eyes of each other or In the eyes of God, some form of ceremony tx die to public beliefs and, of course, we. understan that there is great thoughts and motives governing the marrage ceremony, “Tut, as in.our own case, Boul-marriage can be 90 complete, X think, that all else We think | 6 STORIES BY GHETTO GENIUS m First Page.) It ing World Reporter ELPS STOKES,) but pags through life In loneliness, the next lite In i fife, te one soul or the’ twe Here 48 my’ theory of the’ meet! Iss Pastor's soul and mine: Theenne man soul is a portion of' the divine } 8oul—a portion atly encumbered by {the errors that bewet the mind, Miss {Pastor's soul is, T believe, part of the diving (soul. My soul ond “hers hap- 10 al 1G Fane Htage 3 lution toward: the divine," @k® Of evo Stokes w. ‘of the old “Toward Mr, | Hindu philosophy and his bellet that i} | ceawele Goat ae every soul wl | purged of its encumbering “dros merge into thet Divine sou souls’ aprang. ho ‘animal mun, unless and until controll |divitie element, teade ‘man ints svete |4ort of error, One manifestation of the divine dn man te conacienee, Gonactese |diatinguishes man from the br | “No proposal of marriage w: |betwebn Miss Pastor and wore already one, and | almost blasphemous to think “of pm. DeFine 0 onoln own Aout “Same le may make a mistake fn si ig the boul of some to be Identioal with thelr omy, me, Ce my own oise T do not. recognize |Dopaiblitty oF auch a mista “Mise Pastor and re to | by “the. simplest possible. coremane ned with the feast compatible dewree nat form. ‘The simpler the seremonge tho etier I shall be pleased, We? both sire to be married by a Christan clergyman.’ ROMANCE OF RACE TRAGK Jockey O’Neiil and Miss MoCaf- ferty Announce Engagoment —Wedding to Take Place at Home of Trainer Burlew, Nirvana?’ such philosophy {8 not in muon pnllceopny joompatible with ‘Toward God!" waa the reply, Nb and whence all nature In ute. AB Neve a myselt, We it seems to me t in the Turf followers learned with interest to-day of the engagement of Frank O'Nejll, the Jockey who rode Beldame to ao many yictories, and Miss Mary MoCafteriy, daughter of Tony Moc ferty, the horeeman, and aigter of Charlie McCafferty, the jockey killed Chantly while riding in New Orleans. ‘Me couple marnied at th close of the racing season at the hom of Traines Fred Hurlew at Gravesend, Ah voor, ae 0 el and Miss Mo- Fy we made thelr hoi for some trp to Hurope will fol- jlow: the sie) |the telegraph station at| Kangra is | wrecked, Kangra, known in ancient times REGIMENT OF TROOPS BURIED "BY EARTHQUAKE Gurkhas of India Were Carried Down Alive When the Ground Opened, LAHORE, PUNJAB, India, April 7— | Four hundred and seventy men of Gurk- ha Regiments were burled alive as a result of the earthquake at the hill ation of Dharmsala (ninety-five miles | northwegt of Simla), according to the |" st information from that place, | | | The report Adds that it is impossible }to rescue the entombed men. | ‘The IKangra Valley {8 belleved to have been devastated, and it fs reported that the town of Kangra was reduced to ruins, with great loss of life. No con- |firmation of the report ts obtainable, as Nagarkot. is a town in the Punjab, ninety miles east-northeast of Amrit- | widows, wives and families of soldiers i | | | VICTIMS CRY TO —-GZAR FOR FOOD, Women with Their Babies Starving and No Funds to Feed Them. ST. PETORSBURG, \storles of i April fferings on the par 7.—The of the! at the front are attricting general at- tention, and the public damands Gov. ernment alg for the sufferers. The local charities ure no longer able to cepe with the situation, In many places the furss raised for this pur pose are entirely exhaus'ml, and (ho previncht] papers are filled with pa- thetic accounts of starving mothers and children begging in the atrects, | At Nizhni Nevgorod the palace of the | Governor was besieged by a crowd of hungry women with babes in their armg sking for bread. The Governor in- formed the women that he would ap- point @ commission to Investigate che | | var, Formerly Kangra was the capital of a Katoch state of considerable size. It is situated on both sides of a hill overlooking the Banganga torrent, The pulation, of Kangra numbers about | 5 ostly: Indoos. OM nivate telegram secelved here gays ine Bibte*towne of Palampur ‘has been | lovelled to the ground and that not a’ singh building Is left standing. This | announcement has not been confirmed up to the presen Tealampuris a town of the Punjab and wbout 6,000 Inhabitants, It ls altu- ated In the Kangra district and js the ntre of the tea plantations of the Palam, Valley, fn addition’ to the Europeans, already Kilie@d at Dharmgala seven children of Europeans are sald to have met their death. CALCUTTA, India, April 7.—Aocord- | Ing to the ‘eports received here, only i diers. mostly Guerkhas, ' were ‘Med at the Dharmsala cantonment, Ind these Were crughed to death by the ‘ollanse of a stone barrack building, In the Gurkha cantonment at Dharm- sala twenty-nine women and children And twenty-one camp followers were also killed and 186 Gurkhas were in- sured, ut it 1s added that Guerkhas are missing. MURPHY LAWYER AT GAS HERRING Tammany: Leader, According to Report, Likely to Be Called Soon as a Witness Before Legislative Committee. | | seayenty-one | John B, Sanborn, general bookkeeper of the United Gaslight Company— the charter of which penalized those directors who voted to transfer tho stock or enter Into a consolidation of interests with any other gas-producing concern in New York—was the first wit- ness called tigation mn teh legislative gag employ of the Mutual Gaslight Com- pany twenty-two years and lives on Pelham road, New Roohelle. He brought with kim the balance sheets of the company in obedinence to the com- mittee's subpoena, ‘The witness was questioned by Attorney Hughes regard- ing recetpta, rentals, franchises, cost of operation and earnings, following in the Path previously hewed out by the ex- amination of witnesses of the other “constituent” companies in the trust, Murphy's Lawyer Pri inte Peter A, Hendricks, who is a nized aa the pensonal legal adviser of Jammany Leader Charles F, Murphy, Was present at the sewion, and it was rumored that Murphy himself would soon be called to the stand, Senator Stevens, chairman of the Committee, has suited that in event of Mr. (Murphy's being aubpoonaed he would not be treated as @ political wit- nese, MURPHY SNEERS AT CITIZENS’ UNION. Tammany Leader Charles F, Murphy was at the Wigwam to-day. He con- ferred with many district leaders, "I anticipate that the Mortgage Tax bill will be signed by the Governor," he said. ‘Dt is a party measure and the whip is raised, Tammany's attitude toward that bill, as well as other taxa- tion measures designed only to help the upstate farmers, ie well known,’ ‘When informed that at the coming convention of the Citizens’ Union 1,100 delegates will be present, Leader Mur- phy ald with assumed surprise, “Really, I did not know there were 1,100 Citizens’ Union voters in the olty.” TRAIN HIT WAGON AND KILLED GIRL Philadelphia Police Report Her Death as Suicide, Saying She Drove in Front of Locomotive —Socially Prominent, —_—— (Bpeclat to The Evening world.) PHILADELPHIA, April 7.—Mas Mary Munce, a young Woman who was promi nent In eoctal circles in this city, was killed this afternoon in front of the Awarthmore etation of the Phiudel- phia, Baltimore and Weshington Rail- ads wh tretght train struck a Ight wasgon she was driving in, hurling her out and causing inetant death: ‘ The police say she drove directly in front of the locomotive and reported situation, His reply aroused the ire of the local press, The Viedomost! sald: | SAlwaye the eternal Commission! | While “tts investigating the women and children will starve.” cme FINANCIERS STRIVE TO END THE WAR.) ST. PRTERSBURG, April 7.-6.15 P, M.—Tho Japanese insistence upon an Indemnity, rather than {ndispoattion to, conclude peace at this time, late in-| formation Indicates, wrecked the recent attempt to bring the warring powers into negotiations. Another effort on different Hnes to bring Russia and | Japan together is believed to be under way, the movers now belng French and | English financial interests with heavy | connections In the two countries. WIDOWS OF WAR ROTHSCHILD " Mr, IMPLICATES =) MATHEWS Bank Wrecker First Accuses Then Exonerates Him in Confessions, The difference between the confes sion: which District-Attorney Jerome tind Abraham Gruber have from David Rethsehild, former President of the de= funct Federal Bank, but now a convict jut Sing sh ta that in the former Rothschild states that Armitage Ma- thews, Secretary of the Republican County Committee, nim in the looting tate, while In the li hin. : Mathews ‘was attorney for the Banke ers’ ‘Trust Company, of Cleveland, which bonded Rothachild, A rule of this company {s that the executor of an estate bonded by it must have all checks paid out by him for the estate countersigned by the counsel for the company, In Rothschild's case some influence operated to procure @ waiver of this condition, Otherwise the loot. ing of the estate would have been ime possible. In just what way Rothschild tmpll- cates Mr, Mathews in the, Jerome cons fession is not known at present, Mathews declared to-day that he had never seen Rothschild’ but once in his Ute, wis Involved with tho Weisel es- ter he exonerates ———— HEAVY SNOW IN EUROPE, BERLIN, April 7.—Snow, which fell intermittently over Central Europe yesterday, continued to fall to er It Mies deep th ho mounteing of Beale and _freezin peratures are record in many places in ( 4 A ry and Hungary, some of them being close to Eero, The Best Cod Dellolous to the Tast Meoiemat Eve ‘TAKEN From FRES| BUT N form. STRENGTH of “money back if it fails Troubles — Nothing i Try it— if you don't like Broadway and 9th, ‘Kinsman’s Drug Stores, and Eighth Ave, NTS—FEMALE inte SVANTID, The Ce ial toga, Lawn milolde. ME onne woman, Is boen man Fuccesmful ell. | im “IV u CAM rite ag known to medicine—Vinol is the only cod liver preparation which contains no oil, ‘grease, or any dis- agreeable feature, and sold on a positive guarantee equals Vinol. iT BUILDS YOU UP, and KEEPS YOU’ UP ———— Liver Preparation Not a Patent MENTS ACTUALLY H CODS' LIVERS, }O OIL Vinol contains ALL the medicinal elements of genuine, fresh cod’s livers and their oil; with or- ganic iron, and other body building ingredients, in a deliciously palatable and easily digested It is everywhere recognized as the greatest BODY BUILDER AND - CREATOR: to give satisfaction.” ~’ For Old Poople— Puny Ohlidren-- Weak Women — Debitt- ta b All Tied Ont Roene Gmene Al Wie heoeie ppb Ooughs — Bronohitie — . and Weak Mothere ’ it, we return your money. Riker’s Drug Stores, Sixth| Hegeman & Co,, 500 and Ave, and 23d St., corner|205 Broadways200 W. 125th St, 1917 Amsterdam Ave, 2835 Third Ave; J. Jungman, 1020 Third vt 601 Highth Ave., 125th St. Ave, 428° Columbus ‘Ave, Ts Hast 42d St, ‘ In Brooklyn at all Bolton Drug Stores, HELP WANTED—FRMALE, SEAMSTRESS to take entire eharge of sewing depart- ment in steam teungey phosoua Ay under: wer machines and stand BI bi able, to. instruct op

Other pages from this issue: