The evening world. Newspaper, April 21, 1905, Page 3

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Eisenberg Declares He Saw Caesar Young Shoot Himself—Ignorant of Ameri- can Laws He Fled Scene and Kept Knowledge Secret, Wn? (Special to The Evening World.) f'' CHICAGO, April 21.—"I will go to New York to testify for Nan Patterson if her lawyers ask it I would be glad to help save an inno- cent girl from death or prison, because 1 know Caesar Young took his own life.” ! This statement is made by a Chicago man whose evidence may free Nan Patterson, When B. Rosen, of No, &67 West Fourteenth street, this city, wrote the New York police a postal card that he knew a man who saw Young fire the shot which killed him, he gave # clue to evidence which may be the means of freeing an innocent woman, Rosen admits having written the Now York authorities. The men his communication rererred to is his brother-in-law, Samuel Hisenberg, who came to Chicago two weeks ago, Eisenberg cannot speak English and his story was given to-day through an interpreter, STORY OF EISENBERG. “I was in West Broadway, New York, when Y passed a cab in which were a young woman and a man, The woman was crying and the man was struggling with her, She seemed to he trying to hold his hands, and because she was crying my attention was attracted, “There were reveral vehicles in the street, The coh I noticed was not moving rapidly, 60 I could follow it. young woman's head on the mun’s shoulder, I was on the side next to the man and he seemed to be reaching in his pocket. The next moment,I saw a revolver in his hand, and he raised {t and fired. RAN AWAY FROM SCENE, “Phe cab was filled with smoke and I could see nothing more, and, frightened, I ran away as fast as I could, “I stayed in New York until two weeks ago, I worked for the Pennsyl- varia Railroad—for I could not find work at my trade. Then I came here. Early this week 1 picked up a Yiddish paper and read about the trial of a young woman in New Yorl on @ charge of murdering a man in acab, I was aure this wns the affalr I had seen and I told my brother-in-law Rosen abduut it. He wrote to New York about it,’ Elsenberg je about thirty-seven yenrs eldo to represent the cab old, and fs of the laboring class ot Rus-, asking an Evening World gion Jews, seat, and, correspond- West Fourteenth street, Chicago, as Nan Patterson, he acted the auicide bears a close resemblance to Hester) with the minutest detail. street, New York, Closely crowded Acts Out the Scene. ‘Talking in German he uttered a num: bor of asgry sentences, and reaching back in his pocket drew an old briar pipe in leu of a revolver, He placed this to his side and then attempted to repalce It In the pocket, but lot it fail to £he floor, He owught ‘the corespond- ent around the neck with his left arm, a3 he claims to have seen Young do, Gnd whe o shai cry fedi ily lve lap. Here he lay, as he said the dead man Mec Hue lap of the chorus girl. Says is the wny I saw the suicide minitted. The man sho ; Was hot shot by the wines Mmeelti he Later Elsenberg, who ‘la employed as tatlor In the eetablishment of H. ff & Co., No. 147 Staite street, po: ented a photograph of Nan UWterson, a8 the woman he suw in the cab on the day of the tragedy. -. NEW WITNESS SUPPORTS EVIDENCE OF HAZLETON tenements filled with men, women and children, who hail from many climes, make up the nelghborhood, Elsenberg @ coat finish’ He came to this country from Mertz, Ruwea, a little more than a year ago, He landed at | New York and had been there about | three months when the shooting of, Young occurred, ve Feared to Tell Story. Elsenberg kept his secret nearly & year because of his ignorance of Amer fean methods of justice, He was four ful ‘that he might be tmprisoned and threatoned with the same fate that con- fronts the ‘Florodora’ girl should ne reveal his story, | He read nothing of the case since the} Gay he asserts he saw the sufctde, and might have kept the secret forever hal he not by a chance remark to Rosen betrayed the fact that he had been 1 witness to tho tragedy, Unable to express himeelf in English, Elsenberg placed two chairs side by Mr, Levy, counsel for } n Pattersoy I got alongside {t again and saw tho! jent to take the chair at his left, posing | NAN PATTERSON HEARS OF NEW W1ITN NAN PATTERSON'S CASE AT A GLANCE. The crime—Killing of Caesar Young, bookmaker, in a hansom cab at West Broadway and Nouh Moor strest sune 4, 1904, Result of previous trials One mistrini on account of the sudden {linens of a juror; one disagreement, the jury stand- ing 4 to 6 for acquittal, BDetimeted ultimate cost to the county of determining the mno- cence or gullt of the acoused— $88,000, Prosecuting officers — Asatstant District-Attorneye William H. Rand, Jr, and Franola P, Garvan. Counsel for the defense—Abra- ham Levy, Henry W. Unger, Daniol O'Reilly, George Simpson, Philip Waldhetmer, Preatding jutge—Reoorler John W. Gort. telegraphed to a lawyer in Chicago to- day to nce Bamuel Elsenberg, who says | he saw Caesar Young kill himself, and Rot tho story in detail, ‘Nhe recital tal: led in every respect with that of the | witnows Hazletom, of Oneonta, N. Y¥., who testified for the defonse of Nan | Patterson in the last trial, Mr, Levy's associate in Chicago advises that Eisen: berg tells a most convincing narrative and {s willing to return to New York) and repeat his story on the stand | “The man does not spenk English,” aid Mr. Levy to an Evening World re: porter, “and I do not Know how pe would stand under ithe fire of cross-ex- amination, but ‘his etory impresses me. I am advised that he corroborates In| every. detail the estimony of our wit- ness, Hazleton, Feared American Law. “His long silance was due to his Igno- rance of American law. He feared that | if Te Went % the polito he would be | | Imprisoned and perhaps punished, 90 he | j Kept quiet until he read an account of | the approaching trial of Nan Patterson jtn a Yiddish newspaper published in Chicago, and told o friend of what 6 had seen last June.” v Warden Flynn, of the Tombs, ar- ranged \t so to-day that Nan Pater- son and her alster, Mra, Julla Smith, could occupy a hoepital cell in the western wing of the prison together, The sisters were mightily pleased at this and hope the arrangement will be continued throughout the ordeal of Nan's trial, Should much Illness de- | NEW ROMANCE STIRS PITTSBURG Samuel S. Reymer, Son of a Miil- ionaire, Marries Nellie Paris, | Beautiful Daughter of Poor) Carpenter—Off on Honeymoon | Wide Area of Country Cov- ered with Bodies of Coy- otes and Bob Cats, a = co =. > =< re | a Aw Gi is] ras | B (Special to The Evening World.) Expire from Exhaustion After PITTSKURG, Aprii 214—On the heels ‘ of tho sensation created by the an- | Fleeing Out of Range of ouncement of the marriage of Miss, | President's Rifle. Nancy Carnegle to her mother's coach- man comes another that creates no less a atir in Pittsburg woclety circles, A second marriage garlanded with ro- mance became public to-day, ‘Tho bride- groom ts Samuel 8. Reymer, gon of ono | of the wealthiest merchants in Pittabure | and the bride i Nellie H, Paris, daugh- | No Such Epidemic of Panic Among ter of a poor carpenter who lives among Beasts Since the Days of Daniel the smoking coke oveps in the town of Oliver, near Pittsburg, Boone and Davy Crockett. The bridegroom is the heir to several millions and ithe girl he wedded at one time travelled with carnival companies, in whioh she did a posing act, @he is very beautiful, The couple are ow in Denver enjoying their honey- moon, GRIZZLIES GROW GIDDY. (Special to Tha Event vi GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Gon April *L—An astonishing number of bear tracks have been discovered In the mountains within a radius of a hundred miles according to despatches to this plage and the reports of ranchmen who have travelled from distant sections of the State to shake hands with tho President, ‘They consider it remark- able that all of these trails lead away from Mr, Roosevelt's camp, A close cxamination of «he foot prints ehow that the animals were travelling at their best speed, As for coyotes and bobcats, they have disappeared completely from the region where the President {s now encamved. The following conservative statement recelved from Oklahoma may account for the exodus of game from the Rock- fea, and show the furlous haste many animals were In to escape tho Jethal weapons of the Chief Executive: “LAWTON, Okla, April 21,—-Deaa coyotes are being found over the entire tract of the Kiowa and Gomanche par- ture reservation, Cowboys and Indiana who have arrived here during the past few days report seoing great gray wolyes drop dead !n their tracks while running in panic, ‘They are always fallen obliterated all old tracks | headed South, A score or more Colo- and the purty hoped to get clore to njtado hobeats have been found uying pear by nightfall, the guides having | Of exhaustion on the banks of the Deep Joowted several froah tracks, ‘The mati | Red River, several hundred miles fr: was unusually heavy to-day and goo. | the camp Mr, Roosevelt occupied when retary Laseb and the two sténographors |!n Oklaboma, ao GLADDEN REFUSES TO ANSWER ROGERS Clergyman Says He Would Reduce Mimself to Standard O1) Man's Level. (Special to The Evening World.) COLUMBUS, O., April 21.—Dr, Wash- fmgton Gladden, who opposed the accep. nce of John D, Rockefeller's $100,00) @iot to the American Board of Foreign ‘Missions, declined to-day to make reply 2¢ &. H, Rogers's strictures upoo him fin his New Bedford speech dast night, “It 4 gomething ‘to which no gentie- man could reply," said Mr. Gladden, by @nawering, he said, he would reduce thimaelt to Mr, Rogers's lovel.” ——————_—— ROOSEVELT AGAIN OFF ON BEAR HUNT GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Col,, April B1.—After a day's enforced rest the President's hunting party started out and early to-day. The snow that bri hunters !n Colorada, cannot account for | the strange conduct of the Rocky Moun- tain bears and the wolves and bobes*s | who have run themselyes to death in} Oklahoma, ‘They recall remarkable tn- | j stances of animal intuithon or presentl- | mont, but there is nu precedent in local tradition fur the seoming Might of the furred folks of the Rockles, “S| Burbank, who has.a record of having slain three grizzlies with one small chisp knife, disnussed the unto- ward state of affairs at some length to- day, He sald to o large throng that had gathered bout him in the post-| office; “If the rerarts the boys are bringing fr from over the range are true, and {f that message from down Oklahoma way can be relied on, thean here anir mals are suffer from, | thing ‘that tells me I shall be acquitted, | chalance have to go back to the cells they for- merly oocupled. Both young ‘women Good Friday services in the prison chapel to-day conducted by the Rev. Mr, Monroe, Bpiscopal chaplain of the Tombs, They have splendid voices and sang all the hymns selected, ‘Lead Kindly Light,’ and “Nearer My God to attended the Thee." They seemed to bo in excellent spirits wher vhey returned to chelr joint cell, “At last I think the turn of the tide has been reached," sald Nan toan Byen- ing World reporter, "There is some- and in short order, too. At the last trial I had a foreboding of evil that unfor-| tunately was partially realized by the) failure of the jury to acquit. This time| IT haye no fear whatever.” There {9 scarcely an attache of the District-Attorney's ofMfce who will not | rot hope xo convince twelve men that : Hes |#nd unconcenned to bo most atiractive. ‘ y < vhic 08 an Batterson Mordeney Bang ttat | bone and hair upon which Nan re pata. - Fudots Young. emake for her charm are such neat and taste-| It Was when In conversing with her she ful rags, such small and well-covered|Telaxed that Impenetrasle expression, rey THE REAL NAN PATTERSON SEE) BY FEMININE EYES By Emmeline Pendennis. It may be sald of Nan Patterson that she ts tho “rag and a bone and a hank ss, even felt little. Is one of pleasure-loving, —the world's She ‘own-up no law but that of hearts, le Chastened by Suffering, Nan |# a gitl of much personal charm, She ts cowed and chastened now by her self-firings, and the old viyacity and dash have given way to a simplicity that would appear almost Ingenue of her past life were not an open book. Bhe is reverting to naturalness, As sh expresved It to mo in speaking of her plana for life after her hoped-for ao- quittaL ‘1 shall try to forget that I have grown up and suffered, and be Just @ little child again,” Yes, Nan has lost her old-time chorus. gin air, much of her viyaolty, but has gained instead a modesty and sweetness of demeanor that ave iniinitely more ap- pealing, So far as Nan's “actual looks" most people would call her pretty. xo, It %. ey, 3 ny any means at her best. The strain |of the Jof the penetrating gaze of the crue! -men searching her for tome answer- ing clue to the unanswered ‘DA you kill ‘Caesar’ Young or not?" that her ind calm, one realizes m a mood, embarrassment after all. talnly true that her determnation bones and such jivalr that one accepts her as a mem- ber of that large class of women who are pleasing without being cerebrated admit to those he Is in the habit of |p, ad spoken with her, or even seen her, pie into his confidence that, despite | would for a moment hesitate to de- thelr new tools and their keener edges, | werib> her as far from Intellectual—even * Jemme and his able assistants do | unintelligent or dull, But the rag and nicely animals Not that Nan js not thinking now, As a woman entering upon her third trial for munler, and as a prisoner for brushed brown But In Nan'a| sn hex od her comeliness, When She Looks Best, Nan's face 1s une smiled naturally many have balled her beauty, She ds no Venus, to be aure. she a pre-Raphaelite maiden, a Raphael, for that matter, is no more than that of a pencilled id weli-pivced ears, all in I was a boy, My! how old Dave would tear 'roun’ when he found the bears an’ bobeats were down again with that paricky disease, forsin those days thelr lvin' depended on the pelts they got Animals PanicStricken. "Skee: is, $0 faras the old hunters and trappers ‘could explain, a Bort oO coningion, Only a great huntsmas cai slum the thing In epidemic torm, but once he's got I Burted the Walls wil be covermd with dead animals goung away from his presence, 1 guess ke this: @ne animal se of with « slic on the hunter's p H fairly Khocks hun siusy, Ho runs off to his cave and gets thinking abouc tt until! he can't dee anything but hunters ike tis all "round abou oon ne with c.ewtures of communicacie Animals they can Jook in each 0% visions and i daftynéss | wK, but "8 eyes and si the Springs, who are among the most noted! Boone and Dave Crockett tell of when !* he'll have to got ¢ i gente > then, Long Distance Gun & Kinet ' th hing. fr eof those ion hot hinder mAs ton wet te Mut Tm sory to. fur my phew, Roh V eft the trait lost ni Tatssod seven erize! 1 T gu now ond on the ene avlanche down to cuver ut h@ NO-tail cate are going south ire, fore Tere jue ry Ringe sri n Hewltated to look Ab} they weren't clean gan thon after a territie & tear down two ov suind heop them up. its iy tril, ‘Then when they vide they'd m Te wa ever mount thousand ‘old boys? Needed. pt in their way, but ees m start » their tracks, PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT AND HIS GUIDES ON THE TRAIL. (COPYRIGHT STEREKOGRAPH BY UNDERWOOD & UNDERWOOD, 1906.) hard that they are expiring of t H pass eech, other ES | ne ie nervous brostration, But tf) s d Pe, 8 rd “aap dy nt is golng to e sappoint- fo kiting acrons: hile and SNEAK HOADTOU RKINK ene was ie In the Rockles since an Toone and Dave C xiilavating qualittes of a : i (op ups Doe eat naruto th ' Coates’ Original Plymouth Gin G yen Wat for hey Bavally wholes ring When Taken flavor at ears D ian’. The siandard win for The only jreniine MONK on the labo}. NEW YORK AND KENTUCKY Co,, j@ Agent for the United States, an & those | happy-go-lucky people children—who face no problems, fight no battles, obey thely own Mgnt ts not while eho alts in court that sho ts situation and the consctousness question, 8 she sits beside her counsel ao quietly coms posed features form a mas Cor none too The nervous pout she makes from time to time, the compression of the ps and wrinkling of the chin, show that hind that cold, steady azoze and stolid, ruffed attitude toward all that goes on around her there ts no inconsiderable And It Le cer- to carry everything with noncnalance tabs fe must be happy and talked eastly in a quiet, low tone that I saw In her what Nor ts or even Her charm prottlly ten [curved mouth, a nose that ls character months In the Tombs, there has been| {zed chiefly by saying It Is not large, no lack of opportunity for meditation, | blue eves, clear, And there Is none now, velop In the Tombs, however, they will | of hair’ type of woman, for no one who | past whe seems to have thought Ittle, day DAZED ANIMALS DROP DEAD IN FEAR OF ROOSEVELT. brows and the old Nev's chin was well turned and heart rekey, ore cnoyed ” r Wymouth Gin has the | NAN PATTERSON HEARS OF A NEW WITNESS WHO SAYS HE SAW YOUNG SHOOT her cheeka sleek and high colored, but prison life gives no one beauty, and to Nun it has bequeathed considerable fat that makes her figure too heavy and her cheeks and chin flabby, Lack of exercise and close confine= ment have robbed her of rosy cheeks and brightness of eye, and yet sho is sulla pretty girl for all that, She ts certainly growing much too fat, Her figure has grown too clumsy for her height, but a decidad grace and ease of carriage Nan reteins, Her attitude 48 she rose to face the jurors as they wel om in was alway triking LANGAN RAIDS "TOREDO” CLUB Police Captain and Two Detec- tives Selze ’Phones at No. 1066 Lexington Avenue, a Fine Neighborhood in Yorkville Capt. Inmes J, Langan, of the East Bixty-seventh street station, this after- noon raided an ‘alleged pool-room on the second floor of a three-story ‘house ostensibly occupled by the Teredo Club at No, 100 Lexington avenue, near Sey- onty-fitth street, He was accompanied by Roundsman Fay and Detectives MeBvoy and Burns, ‘They gained admisalon to the place without resistance, though the Captain had anticipated opposition and had « patrol wagon filled with policemen, turmed with ax% and sledge-hammers, waiting near by to call upon, Throe prisoners were taken and eleven telephones row of loeker cloets and in a roll-top disk, were confiscated. ‘The prisoners aatd they were Leo Low, steward of the club, of No. 1066 Lexing on ayenue; William Best, of No. 310 West chweitth sirect.a clerk, and Hag of No, 1163 taken Langan and his the house ehortly adter 2 6 Aftornoon. Why they choge t atowhioh the afternoon's business Cuipt ten cleverly concealed In al ¢ ——. one. It bespoke to authority, amd ment was never tn the least or uncontrolled. Idke her. walking, it showed physloal | ease of motion, me On the whole, Nan Patterson vort of young woman who seems) out of place dn @ criminal personality is naturally so care-fros amd so carcleas that it one as absurd that she should be: me aMirine, sul: crime, accident, or, not, as clde, whether guflty or lace of the character get Not j The house js located in neighborhood, this block the best along the avenue, say the ‘Toledo Club” hag fe some time, as @ social jon. ia hav > orisoners were paroled by trato Flammer for, examination on aay, n ———_——. SAYS DR. KUBIN 18 INSANE, Mrs, Elsie Kubin, of No, 120. We Highty-seventh etreet, applied to Jw tlee Glegerioh thie afternoon ta 4 her husband, Dr, William Kari committed to a sanitarium, Dr, Ewald gave it as his opinion that Xubin ts mentally unbalanced, wus reserved, SEAMLESS WEDDING “Direct From the Manufa Hl Engraving Free ef Charce Walle You Watteo: AlL rings ara cuntantred exact qnallty ae stamped [OPTICAL DEPARTMENT x.tuteuhtln. Il. LEWKOWIT2Z Established 1860, Manufacturing Jeweler nnd Importer of Sixth Avonun Corner 17th Street, Downtown Store, 200 Grand Street. / FRIDAY ONLY. CHOCOLATE PINGAPP LE ICH CHUAMS, POUND. uu. 10c f ASSORTOD FRUIT AND NUT CHOLO~ LATE, ‘Ices amsortment of dainty BNocolate, covered sweets, with Cc fruit. nutand cream (Miinks, 1, Vania. hocolat Strawberry, 1 9 n v . Walnut &eo. Pecan Walnut, c Ute wis Cc GRADE. CHOCOLATES AND Hie ONS On AN ASSORTMENT OF oO) DIFFERENT KINDS Ob CHOCO. rc ATES. q 1t, nut And cream centres, Fane fa are. usually sold, by Ay Stistve confectioners at B0c. 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