The evening world. Newspaper, May 19, 1905, Page 3

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THT TT RT ET a, NT ETN LCN TTR ER OE I ee THE WORLD? ila St MAY 19, 19 1905. ‘SEEKING DEATH THREW HERSELF BEFORE TRAIN Young Woman After Quarrel with Husband Is Saved by Quick Work of Motorman. \Onty the quick work of Freforick tone, a motorman on the Ninin aveniie x elevated road, saved Mrs. Carme Mich- @els from being ground to pleces early to-day at the Thirtieth xtreet station. ‘The woman threw herself before the train, which was so close (hat when it stopped she was partly under the plat- form of the motor wir | Mrs, Michaels, who ia a pretty young English woman, living at No, 24 West Twenty-second stent, bouslit a ticket at the downtowa station and went ov on the platform and sit down, W one train had possvd tho Michael Hines, asked going downtown and but she was watthig for some half hour later 8 a trl was ap proaching she walked forward as though and to take it, Wwnen the within thirty feet of her jumped upon Motor was | the track, ‘The train had slowed down, and Stone | applied the brakes, ‘The ‘train. con- | Unued on until the woman was lost to | the view of the man in the little box. He waited, and as there was no jolt | he knew lie had not struck her. A policeman on the train and pas- xengers carried the woman from the track, r a few minutes she raved about wanting Ww die At the West ‘Thirty-sevent, street station she suid | whe hgd had a quarrel with her bua band and had deiwrimined to Kul here | welt. | In court to-day Mrs, Michaels sald: “Phe entire trouble with my husband arose (rom his inssting upon keeping & boarder In te house, ‘This was the | Gisturutig clement, and as iON as ne das been there We could never get | along. 1 left the house yesterday, de- sermined iy r to return, 1 Jked aroun nd evening, and then be: thought f whould e i myself be- fore the husband. will, for: ve me and send the | oarder aw ‘ay it | PREFERS JAIL TO LIFE WITH HER HUSBAND |: Mrs, Jennie Campbell, of Bel-| videre, N. J., Accepts a Sentence of a Year. As between a year in Jaf and living with her husband, Mra. Jennie Camp- bell, of Belvidere, N, J., choae che jail | no-day, She could ‘have avolded im. | prisonment If she had consented to go, to the home of her husband, Wafler Campbell, of Rockport, Warren County, Mis, Campbell is a handsome woman, thirty-five years old, She was arrested | @ short time ago with John Torrence, ef Rockport, on a charge of main- taining unlawful relations, Torrence was tried with her and sentenced to two years in prison, When the women was up for sentence to-day her counsel @aid that her husband had forgiven her and wanted her to §0 home, » Judge Shipman sald that if Mrs, Campbell would consent to Ko with her » husband he would suspend sentence. To the surprise of everybody in the court-room Mrs, Campbell declared that J} @he preferred to go to Jall, “1 would rathor spend the rest of my Ute in prison than live with Walter Campbell again,’ sho sald, "I wouldn't Pompromise, my womanhood by: living e same house with him. “The in- alae ot a prison is “preterabie to. his ‘compaiy, as far as T am concerned,” Her lawyer appeiled to her but she would not liaten. She was asked to co aider her two children, one of them but ten months old, Her ‘answer was that she preferred life in prison, and the “Maintenance of her self-respect to Jie with her husband, “T ghall wend you to prison for ® year pnless you accept your husband's of fer," threatened the Judge, Gonit care it you send me to prison replied the woman, iy miled as sentence pounced and started for jail apparently Ce - SEEK ARREST OF YOUNG DAUGHTER ‘Parents Also Ask Police to Ap- prehend Man with Whom Girl Ran Away, Charging Him With |" Abduction. ‘The police of the Hast One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street station were asked to-day by Mr, and Mrs, Samuel MeGarry, of No, 165 Haat One Hundred | 8 end Twenty-elmhth street, to arrest their daughter Maud, sixteen years old, nnd George Sommers, of No, 1949 Third avenue, With whom they say she went away last nl ry have made @ charge uctlon agiinat Som mers, ry that ira, sold | the velles ommers and her ten ad been keeping them the 1 a her daughte 0) F for earns tithe ie jocemded in ht, however, @ said, and later sent he and Sommers had were going away for lo trace of the eouple has been found, CZAR'S BIRTHDAY IS CELEBRATED, t WHEN TEDDY Waites HIS BUOK ON BLARS. by T. &. Lore way AQ IT To THE PUBLIC Prom WHITE HOUSE ‘Ste “wren Leni 717 KANO, SHanes € J Powers. 7 Phiy swanes® It will be the story of his hunting trip, and poor Loeb will have to read the proofs—and the Gabinet | will have to listen to the first edition—and the Venezuelan matter will have to wait. RE Wrives | | RVING It ON THE CABINET. WILLIAM MAY Ger Ve wer Poor Castro! To Arbitrate Big Strike. CHICAGO, MAY 19.—Sub-committees representing the teamsters' joint coun oll and the team owners have decided to submit the question of deliv- eries tp arbitration, This was the pro- gramife arranged last night, but was opposed to-day by Shea, This means that the team owners will win and de- liveries will be mad Vanderbilt Yacht Walts. QUEENSTOWN, IRELAND, MAY 19.—The American meam-yacht North Star arrived where to-dey from the Olyde to await the arrival of Mr. and Mrs, Cornelius Vanderbilt, .who are ngers on board the Cunard line steamer Caronia, whioh unded on Flynn's Knool, off Sandy Hook, May 16 but which got off May 18, and again @arted for ‘Queenstown. Mrs. Mary Livermore III. MELROSE, MASS, MAY, 19.—Mrs. Mary A. Livermore, the well-known reformer, is critically iH at her home here with heart trouble, Owing to Mrs. Livermore's age, olghty-four years, it Ww feared whe my not recover, Elght Killed In Wreck. LOUISVILLE, MAY 19,—EHight men were killed and four injured in a no» | freent collision near Echols, Ky., last New Yorkers Win. SAN FRANCISCO, MAY 19,—The Fed- era) Court of Appeals has handed down @ decision affirm: the onde pyickores Not ‘the in ra Suge of Utle of the Cc The property involved te Serpe inom | reputed fhe can br pr Nine Now Norman LE James ry ‘faveméyer: Ground for | Palace of Peace. THE HAGUE, MAY 19.—The Second Chamber of the States General to-day py 66 pay 5 yee nphrocrvared the sum pale and of 264,000 t purchas Rround Jew tee po i ake eo ae A oh. oe} Teo wh saree of Wy: sito op sbontsniied, thag the other Poware th’ (providing © this ite a We amie, the ering 8 fhe pivAisae cenfoyea by pith set Balnce'for" the Court oF arbitration dee mranded that the money to purchase the alte de voted. i NEVER OUT OF THE STATE | AND NOT IN STATE PRISON. Bargiar Assumes that Sing Sing Evidently In Not in New York. James Regan and Charl Murray, typical wharf ruta, were arraigned, he- fore Recomer ff in General Sessions to-day, charged With breaking into a ST, PRTORSBURG, May 19.—Rm- peror Nicholas’s birthday was cele- brated ase general holiday, The paeate. were thaonged, the city ° aft Autoboats Important Foreign and Telegraphic News Boston After Landlords, BOSTON, MAY 19.—A resolution con- demining landiords who discriminate against tenante with children has. been | inimousiy adopted by the Common | weil, on. motion, of Councilman Foley refering to President Roosevelt's | Attitude on race mulctde and declaring that the refusal of landlords to rent | houses or flats to couples with, chil: | dren ‘ters to promote tace ‘suicide, Duke’s Auto Boat Found. PARIS, MAY 19—The autoboat Quand-Meme, owned by» Duke De- cazes, which was abandoned May 14 during the storm which overtook the racing from Algiers to Toulon by way of Port Mahon, Ieland of Minorca, has been found off the coast of t! I was only allgniy “Semageas tn She Appeal to Rockefeller. TORONTO, KAN., MAY 19.—The women of the Baptist church here have written to. John D. Rockefeller waking for financial assistance to re- build their ohureh which was destroyed by @ tornado, = Fallure Upsets Trade. LONDON, MAY ‘1).—Tie fatture for & large amount of a weed trader named Symonds, of Boston, Léncolnshire, has involved firms in London, one of them to the extent of $68,000, bie erty) Fultoa ts i fsa oxcit it in the ti oar? oe pL ngs organ en endy i ie very ait ‘am. ‘No Wasi for Doctors. DBS MOINRS, MAY 18--Dr. J. F. Kennedy, President of the Sate Bosra et Health, made this statement at the meeting of the board: ‘In several countries at the present time phywictana are required to discard whiskers, They are regarded not only &s Unprofessional, but @ menace to families they visit, If a woman's ekirts Carry disease germs from etreets into homes 1s it not reasonable to conclude that the bewhiskered doctor will carry rma from infected homes to other homes he may subsequently vieit, as well ax to aassembiles of people he may. chance to meet? Whiskers may be ornn- mental to some people and to some doc- tors, but all of the laiter for the sake of public health’ should be shaven and shorn.'” Members of the board said that in a hort time all applicants for license to practice in this’ State will be compelled to be clean shaven. deen out of the Stal Even the gtim old Recorder joined in the laughter that followed. Both pleaded gullty to burglary were wentenced to tie ‘penitentiary one year each, WORLD TEAM WANTS GAMES, The morning World composing room has organised a basebat team for the open for bakery and eteetion. 8 worth of mats- sla men sdmitiea/‘they had been in teams averaging seventeen years. News- paper teams preferred. The line-up Is Fish ana, CA » LIT CIGARETTE, for | Hope to Save Six Warships. LONDON, MAY 19% 430 A. M. A Tokio despatch to Nhe Daily Tele- graph reads: “The Japanese Admiralty considers that the Pereaviet, Poltava, Retvizan, Pobieda, Banyan and Pallada can he raised at Port Arthur and repaired at an approximate cost of $760,000 euch." hanghal despatches assert that the Pallada has already: been raised, Choate at King’s Levee. LONDON, MAY 19.—King Edward held a levee in the Throne Room of St, James's Palace to-day, Most of the members of the Diplomatic Corps at- tended. Ambassador Choate presented Teyls B. J puree BRA, Beare. | brly. other presented was Franols H. Leawett. of New York. German Flag Not Raised. @HANGHAI, MAY 19.~The German Admiral at Taingtau says that the re- porte ot the hoisting of the flag of @t Haichou, (in the southern part of the Shantung Penineula) are absolutely groundiens American to Teach Alfonso. LANCASTER, WI8., MAY 19.~Ralph L, Ray has been appointed tutor of the Boia He pect to King Alfonso of une expects to reach Madrid on Up State Bank Closed. WASHINGTON, MAY 19,—The First National Bank ‘of Cornwall, at Cyrn- pes ye Bead to<iny wy @- Tency, ow the greund of insolvency, and National Bank Exeminer Charnes 2, ‘Van Brooklin has been appointed re- celver, The First National Bank os Cornwall was capitalized at $25,000, accord. Terteek fevcht maenent, owed depen: {tore $18,000, Wants Morton Back. CHICAGO, MAY 1%—E. P, Ripley. Prestdent of the Santa Fe Rallway. when anked regarding a report that Paul Morton, Beoretary of the Navy and former Second Vice-President of the Santa Fe, would renew his relations with the railroad upon leaving the Cab- inet, safd that nothing definite was known yet; that the Santa Fe would be most happy to have Mr, Morton asmime omelal relations with th phat Mr, Morton, would. be in Chicags | next week and that some finrangement | Might possibly made then, SAT ON GASOLINE Spark Fell on Can, Fire Re- jaulting from Explosion At. tracted Broadway Crowd. A little fire which did §20 damage at No, 42 West Thirty-sixth street thie afternoon attracted much attention ‘from tho afternoon throng. < an Broad: Jacob Goldberg, k HUSBAND'S LOVE ' Woman GosFespandent in Di- Threatrical Manager Samuel | Hudson, a sheriff's jury of Westchester cime from Detroit to defend he: County to-day awarded Mra Jennie [, Sam a. Scriimer's sult for absolute Bletoher a verdict of $10,0M against Mrs, | divorce on trial before Justice Leven- Ada M, Patne, of Peeksiill, who Is 'itt in une Supreme Court named aso responden: in Mis. He ts of the Serthner-Drew Amuse- 's ce suit against her bus: ment Company, Now 1 udway, and is an officer of the ‘Travelling Mane | her complaint for a divorce, Mrs, agers’ Association, He has atvohes several Jove la(ters sh Ws on the road, Including * which she says Mim, Paine sont to her, Glevte wer Lillies" and thy Huscand. and whieh she io toreoptod. Newt York.” He olarges that she wen In addition to these two sults. William | to Wetrott for medical treatment na HW. Paine, of Peekskill, Nuevind of Ada, met he affinity in the form of | Paine, through Lawyer Noo Bu yell, the bitle groceryman, Who also rapresents Mrs, ilete has | Cnly a Kind Friend, his wite und Waties ‘Str, Pletaher gaits’! Mra, Saribner repiics that Higsins,| dent, the corespondent, was only a good) Mitt Postion agaist REEGTe | friend, but that for three years Scrib- Biturday, when he holds | ner ha» been over fond of Btta dieaatnna " a. | Cooper, a pretty actress Inf one of | ny Fup ainell aye he wil imme. | hia companies. She declares that Scrib- a ances bd taal t pee My Dalm for ner ow with w clreus when ahe ay se Pe cain tisif Ns |him, and they were married at the Col+ DOV SAR BUSTUE Iey.y son) BRO Mra ogiite Chureh, Fifth avenue and ‘Twen- jtyeninth street, by Rev, Burnett, | on April 2, 1605, She says at hie re} Jquest she handled the large snakes In the cous and entered the lion's cage, Until she Wearied of that work and res Uunned to the drama as a member of one of his companies, and he paid her 10 weekly silary, Mrs, Scribner was supported by her | for the doors and windows, | the aceldent. 310,000 FOR WEES AFFINITY, WIFE WHO LOST SAYS HUSBAND, IS FAT GROGER A. Scribner Accuses Her vorce Suit Assessed | | in Divorce Suit. by Jury. (Bpeciat to The Fvening World.) Accompanied by Charles M. Higgins, WHITH PLAINS, N, ¥., May 10.—For | the fat litte groceryman named as co- the alleged alienation of the affections rerpondent, Mrs, Maud scfitmer, 9 of her husband, James Fletcher, «| pretty brunette, who used to play minor prominent contractor of Croton-on-the- parts In her husband's shows, to-day It in younger and pretty sister, Mra, Rooks, who was all in | | hampagne color from i a hat to boots, and Whose name figured nthe of Bdward He Mur: ph: ective, who, shadowid | Mt endl Morning ot Oct. | to Mrs, Seribne: "found iB of an secne worthy at i last tac int with Detroit, and had date drama, i trial began with photographs of thi ipartmenthouse, the house opposite | Which’ Murphy had a room, and an alley om whieh he loo Into her window here Were depositions from two Do- trol, witnesses, and then Detective Murphy, told the story, of how. he shad- ‘end, Mis. Scribner from Sept, 21. to Oot, 6 Inst Each Day Like the Other, " tory for each day was ike t one before: Mea Scribner and her alee Rooks, who called at her visited one or another of cates and drank in the afternoon, ‘Then Higgina called and took them to some place in the even- Sometimes the, detective | teatie lied they. we' when iiipa' to: go home at oO \night.. After leaving Mrs. Rooks ‘At her Trolley Pole Slips. from. Wire, Causing Electric | Explosion. 6 a up. Several persons were Injured and) many were in extreme danger of fall-| Ing through the tles to the street from the Willlamsburg Bridge In an acctdent to astreet car on that structure this afternoon, Horace Kileger, of No. 69 Eldridge street, was so badly hurt that Polle man Mooney took him to the Delancey Street Station, where he was attend- ed by an ambulance surgeon, 2 on r} vu rOAG ( Higgins would go home with Mrs, The car was approaching the tower | oe ere aay til the. sleuth mot on the Manhattan side, bound. for and went to bed, This. was con- Williamsburg, when the trolley pole} tinued untll the night he Jed) Scribner slipped and pulled down the feed wiro, | ‘Y pe a and found Mra, Scribner ang r there, which bocame entangled in the running | Urye detective described the meeting gear, There was a sorles of sharp ex- between Scribner, his wife and Grooe plosiona, tollwed by blinding flashes of MAL {lisa eid Mra, Higgins, Us) “when did vou get to town? Between fifty and sixty passengors,| “I've been here three weeks," replied many of them women, made a wild rush | ‘Sinan eit, ‘arensed, am 1 not" re- dropping | marked Mrs. Seriby What yo pur nightmown on for Ot ae was Scribner's re- to the tes and scrambling out of tie LAP NS wa of the explosions, That some of them did not fall to the street far below was renfarkable, ‘Traffic was delayed half an hour by. All of the passengers mf. fered from electric shocks, but Kileger | to was the only one who requlted medical | slater. attendances, ADM’L BERBSFORD'S RAW fi KILLS OLD DEAF MAN. MOTHER IS DEAD. LONDON, May 19.—Christionia Mare chionese of Waterford, mother of V Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, {n_London his aifternoon.’ ‘The Maroluoness of Waterford was a ter of the late Col. Charles Powell | P. She married, the fourth! Marguie ‘of Waterford, who'dled in 1 to the detective, Hig- in the conversa i much," he n, accordini Jacobo Walker, sixty-three years old and deaf, a rpsident of Dunton, L, 1, was crossing tracks at Jamatea to-day when he was struck by a West-boundstrain and killed, ‘The engineer, James Wichorn, was held blamelers by the Jama‘ca police, and it was shown that the old man stepped directly onto the track in front of the train, evidently unaware of \ts appreach, died Running Down Long? You and Your Food Area Misfit Sure Iv's 4 relief to foel the sunshine and glow of perfect health, vounding energy and "go" of the successful, brimful-of- spirits nan. The joy of living real LIFE will come back when you give your body the kind of food It 1s mutely ap- pealing for, that from which it can make good the datly waste caused by brain work and exertion. fuppove you abandon for a time the food whieh evidentiy 18 not properly nourishing you, and go in for a 10-day teat and ane how near the food expert, who perfected out he Long Island Railroad | FATHER LOST LIFE IN TRYING TO SAVE CHILD Caciatero’s Little Girl Had: Sought to Get Kitten from Cistern, ARREST WOMAN edb Mrs. Nellie Hayes Hayes Found at Van Nest With Little Daughter, ' In rescuing bis only ehtié. a three- year-old daughter, from a@ olatern into which oF Mre, Nelile Hayes, for whom police have been looking for days on the complaint of Mr, and Mrs, Jobn ‘Murston, of No, 218 Fast One } Hundred and Twenty-ffth atreet, that ashe abducted her own daughter, whom whe had fallen to-day, John clatero, ef No, 154 Pailende avenue, nkers, Was drowned, The little one Was unconscious when dragged out of the water by neighbors and is in a@lthey pad adopied lesally, wae, to-day serious condition at Bt, Joseph's Hes: !aresiod at Van art, Westchester pital, Deteciive Thomas Teeven, A Uny kitten was primarily respons st One Mund:éd and twenty: j sible for the tragedy, 'T cold was sree joa, The ttle girl Miying With the Kitten in the yard) was found wha per and ight bok of Cactatero's house, where there ls an ty the detective, vlatern, sixteen feet deep, and When tie ebild, Irene Helen Hayes, with ® board platforn The Nest akon from her foster pare water in tle cistern Is seven f Jeep, Mr and Mrs. ‘Thurston, » they ‘Phere was a small hole at one corner sd she Wo8 tacit own child, Afters of the platform and into this hole the at adinitted she helonged to Kitten fell, The ‘babvy, In her frantic iid they had ty engerness to get héy pet, loosened a sowed papers be board and made an aperature through which she slipped into the water, | Caclatero, who had heard the child crying, ran into the yard just in time | to see her fall through the hole. With: | 8 healtating an instant he plunged | ar after her, at the same timo shouting for h 2 1 days the steanship plens Yoon watehed because Mrs, Hayes id sud something about going abroad, sald to the deveetive when she was: wted that she Whurstons never lee adop ed her daugnter, but that jert ger with vaem unc ela could lying wally nelgnborheod Is thickly populate and wnen were sdon on hand with ro ah f Hi a sah wn und poles. Caolatero had m: t vik We ash be ) tes Ds) aa hold the little one's head of the ae » OoHna water, He fastened a rope around her care will, probally haye to be body and she was palled settled by a cin! holler Ast apolse The atrugele had exhausted the fats | WMEIUAt dor tue. Sie; ba or and he sank from view when he Fr saw (hat the child was safe All ' a reas eget aural ame af ERY i oo i it was recovered from the bottom of he robbery of $250,000 is an exelting: the cistern, Cacintero Was a young man and pol wav in Yonicere, He worked in 4 ber anon the widow ted. to herself fn the oletern when she 7 that her hushend was dead and the if of her baby In danger, 1 Raffles Ie concerned in It tdeepens, Read all about, A ume Piece," second com= ~ moaOe Of ue geet aerieg, “Ragen, | 7 Pie Amatour Cricksman,’ In’ the ifolte | page color supplement of tos morrow (Saturday's) Kvening World, Annual Spring Sale of PIANOS | ‘90 uprnpas Purchasable on Easy Monthly Payments, An Offering of Slightly Used Instruments that, in their Uniformly High Grade and the extent and comprehensiveness of the collection, surpasses any sale that New York has hitherto known, O person with whom economy is in the least an object who is now contemplating the purchase of a piano or Is likely to need @ new instrument within several montha— can afford to lightly pass over this opportunity, The pianos placed on sale here are unprecedented in ithe fine condition in which they have been received,.and also in the reputation of the manufacturers represented, This special sale is limited to Uprights and Grande—no Squares or other pianos which for any reason have become out of date or unworthy in any respect, Among the manufacturers represented are: Weber Steinway Chickering Steck Knabe Wheelock Hardman Sohmer Gabler Everett Bradbury Stuyvesant etc, etc. Persons having @ limited amount to invest in a piano should ask themselves whether it is not better to buy a high grade piano, slightly used but in fine condition, in preference to 4 new piano, of unknown standing and reputation, If y have in view some favorite make of piano, it will be wise to see just what this sale cfters in that particular make, for if you can find here the instrament you want, you can be sure of securing it at a re | rearkably low pries, The uniformly high grade is due to the fact that thove plance were roveived in part payment for the new Pianola Pisno ‘and not because their owners had discaraed them for any intrinsic fault, In view of the unprecedented character of this sale, it will be found well worth attending so /ong as there is a single piano lett, * Special Pianola Offer: Included in the sale are a few exchanged Pianolas, originally costing $250, which will be sold comes to your case. Drop tea and coffee absolutely and if you want to get to the front by bounds cut your tobacco down to at least ono-hdt. Now for breakfast. A little very ripe fruit, a saucer of Grape-Nuts (not over 4 heaping teaspoonfuls with some rich cream poured over | \it, insist on cream, milk will do as a last resort, but water spoils the delicate sweet flavor ), a slice of very hard-baked toast, thinly buttered, and a cup of Postum Food Coffee, No more, Thet will carry you until lunch time, when the samo ar- tleles can be used, and add a Httle hot, clear soup, Take dinner at 6 or 7 and have a generous portion of meat, only one kind, Cut out the soup and fish, have 2 veg- etables and a Grape-Nuts pudding, a cup of Postum Food Coffee (which will not kvep you awake) ond one or two slices of buttered toast, QUIT THERE, ‘Two days thus will open your eyes and 10 days make this a} oon hop on the ground’ oor oat on an of gasoline white he lighted a he. oa: un ibe. pan amt ere was 4 THERE'S A WAY, AND uk "THERE'S A REASON.” good old work! seem a happy place again, It's nice to he happy. rape-Nuts tor $150—terms $15 down and 87 a month, Every Pianola has been put in perfect order and will be sold subject to the manufac. turer’s full guarantee, Also a few Piano-Players of other makes at from $75 (o $125—terms to Le purchaser THE AKOLIAN COMPANY, Aeolian Hall, 362 FIFTH AVENUE, NEAR 34TH ST. | AFull Dollar’s Worth Free | If sick, simply write Dr. Shoop, | box 40, Racine, Wis, and you will | receive free an order for a full dotiar | package, You pay nothing, promise | nothing, deposit nothing, risk noth: ing. Write to-day. Dr. Shoop’s Restorative OOK for this Shield Y on the window when | you buy cigars. ati gk Decawe when 8s

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