The evening world. Newspaper, July 12, 1905, Page 3

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)

| cAll the News. SEER “ Circulation Books Open to All.’ | PRICE ONE CEN NEW YORK, J | cAll the News. PRICE ONE CENT. TLY 12, 1905. GIRL LOST IN RIVER CRASH WAS BANKER’S GUEST Miss Gladys Dodge Was Taken on Fatal | Yacht Trip by John E. Green— She Lived at 225 West End Avenue. | TI list night, when C. young woman who was drowned in the Hudson River off Dobbs | W. Dumont's steam yacht Normandie, char-| mkers, was run down by a tramp steamer Ferfy tered by John A. Rudd, of Y flag and supposed to be the Velone, was Miss Gladys of No. 225 West End avenue, this city e Swedi: . of Yonkers, this afternoon ordered Rudd's arrest as a A detective was sent from Yonkers to this city to get | Dedge, a beautiful young woman of twenty-three and a membe- | of wea d sccial positicn in this city, went on the Nor- ly in the day with John E, Green, a banker, who has offices with ut No, 170 Broad Mr. Green is a friend of Mr. Rudd on invited to spend the day sailing with him. Mr. Rudd took se of the Columbia Yacht Cluc, at the foot of yesterday morning to get Mr. Green, and to Join them in the sail and she accepted, his niece. ‘The entire day. was spent ¢ going as far as Peekskill. It was on nt that the Normandie met the big tramp steamer in There was a mistake in signals and the big steamer crashed into the ht, almost cutting her tn two. Green Saved with Difficulty. to the water, and never saw any- M I was yoo ng more of ie Everytt poseib'e sees wi yne to locace her, but it was He captain Gracie came stradgat t York after ft wele alsy landing and went to tie Dodge home to break the sad news. That's all there w with the great- (1s tot ld usd Joseph! ‘The first thing that Mr. Rudd did after oi okhand, We aceident was to report the matter | te eheady kers police. He gave very w w a en hour ation at the ttme and no| bet jay he came to this clty, ywn office In the A ny a clegraph Company, at wo 1 Min G id of the ac and then p i flice cf Mr. Dumont, at No. | ee ; eit € Mr. Dumont js a ° of books and the| ors isudd ond fe. | ze 4 scat to Mr. Rudd xi ra and understood : yr excursion parties t a list th c vid Mr. Rudd br pie: wing statem ApAiD Mr, Rudds Statement. ‘ Tomet Mr. J. E no Is a pi inh i Jo. 170 | q wits any | Bread > has been a friend | . K \ ‘ at the Colum- ou s World re rh Rive was should dy morning, I fat 5 : Le e mandle for thé monta ; 2 Dunont, end had in- to sall ‘up the river 1 roMr 4 ¥ Green had a young lady with : he intr to an | ‘ " ) he name w r Dal to reason w Doce sure over w 1 ’ ne el her to paar up to Pechsiill and : 1s dvowned as the revult 0 n We were steaming r 1 1 F 3 Mr. Green and eee ae ig on the after 1 Norm, de p lot-hors ¢ vias one of those. Wv1 when Ts t At coud not te he'ped th down on us. | Wa TAN raey once to inform has 1 at to starboard bur family fo Thea hardly one hund 1 , We f ty feet from us” she whi ‘ i Stored ailceien twice. T saw at once that am A ee had been made in signals and that a D ) stimulus to its | collision was unayoldable trecdy reco 1 T fushed out of the pllot-house to H 1 married man, with q {G2 What I could in lowering a boat or A ana fc ; ea my guests, But before I had Is known to turn the prow. of the asa danke: Me us amidships, there was an H 1 We Were all in the water, 3 mane . die went down in about zn 8 Th E expen: An effort 1s now helng made to trace : ea Greos is reputed to) tHe steamer that ran the N aye down, She Is deserived as Jo tm long, beck. with a Mrs, Grocn Out of Towa, | funnel ng Swedish colors and c. he was appo und there ¢ eulty in tracin as this are not St | Hudson River, was| asariy to-day, when the Identity of the this | drowned wonkin Was stil enshrouded in naine | MY8teHY, @ Woman, who suid she Was sister of the ‘woman drowned in nothing cident last night off Dobbs Ferry, the Yonkers potice and offered of $3.00 for the recovery of She would not give her name hame of the dead woman, but i] 4 aceldent, but remarked would not be back sor the res¢ | ‘it is now belleved that she was the sis: 's Statement, tor of Miss Dodge, whose name is si i to be Miss Daisy, ‘This woman said In the afternoon Mr, Green} over the teleph to Sergt, McGowan, Wen: to his offlve again a ° f Yonkers, that her sister had several Eel in winceatalemenbithts nd dollars’ worth of jewelry and ee aS cor 1 y on her when she tit ts too bad to make am ’ ——— ’ y known h 1 dot her ur calied me unce, Yyeay that ah Matter of fact, we “Bhe wis a beautitul girl, and 1 waa very fond ¢ hard for me to ¢ y an ©o dazed and horritied ayer i Nas pened, 2 of what boon sild, however, 1 fel that 1 ought to make tis explanation. ‘Paw hoi in barrels on her decks. ntly bound for Yonk not to be much dif- her, as vesseis as large numerous along the en and the four aniry children left and since | vpartme! apartment ed that he " He left early his ottie: He 3 was nd no. ut me time oe “PEARY GETS $25,000 FROM MORRIS JESUP ‘The $50,000 required to start the Peary expedition in the direction of the North Pole was completed to-day by a dona- tlon of $25,000 from Morris K, Jessup, who has been the ‘main inspiration of the project from the start. This gift only revember dimiy what harpened, lenables Commander Peary to complete J think she was seated a Uttle forward the outfitting of the Roosevelt, and he fae the orash came, 1 was turown hopes to wall by Friday or Maturday, Wax 1) is As atly rela and talented hor’ It ts y thoughts, 1 what has weather affected cided to take a geked Miss Dodge to go with me. Hor mother knew abu tt of » much that I de> m the water, and 1 i at [ture of gasolene and kerose VILEST MAN FIREBUG DIVES NINETY FEET FROM WINDOW Prisoner Plunges Through High Casement at Brooklyn:Po- lice Headquarters, | Samuel Levine, twenty-two years old. | of No. 99 Norfolk street, caught in the act of attempting to set fire to a Will-| jamsburg tenement, the police say, plunged from the top story of Police Headquarters, Brooklyn, to-day, while the official photographer was preparing to take his picture for the Rogues’ Gal- lery. | Levine was arrested with Phillip Davis, a saloon-keeper, at No, 37 Gouverneur street, and the pair are al- leged by the police to have been con- nected with many incendiary fires in Williamsburg in which lives have been lost. Dived Ninety Feet. | Levine fell ninety feet, into an open. lot nafotning headquarters, at State and treets, landing a pile of ‘on building girders whic red there, That he was not instantly killed {s a marvel. He was picked up consclous and able to curse the fall of his plan to bring about Ini aad been in cu tectives who made the arre! about to step into the Bertillon room, in order to be measured and photo- graphed for the police record, after hav- s been exhibited to the staf of the Hrookiyn Detective Bureau. ‘Chis room is on the Moor of the building. The prisoner was taken up in the elevator in custody of Detectives Lydig, Hensler, Dugan and Graham. A nar- Tow passage leads from elevator to the Bertillon room, and the detec- Uves shoved Levine into this ahead of K in double file beaind. — | they neared the room Levine spled an open window overlooking the open lot at the side of the building and about twelve feet from where he stood. With a hasty glance at his custodians the | prisoner dashed for the open casement, | eluding the clutch of Graham, who divined his intentlon too late. Fell cn Iron Girders, With a cuvse at the baffled detec- tves Levine @tved straight through tne window. TWe detectives reached it In time to see Levine plunge down head- foremost, give a turn when about thirty feet down and land on his back pon a pile of tron beams in the lot uinety feet velow, The prisoner was round on the heap of girders, not only conscious, but ready to use his senses to deplore the fatlure of hls plan. He w curried inside, nd oon tae arrival of an ambulance from the Brooklyn Hospital Dr, Hulst examined him, Lives Frightfully Mangled, It looked at ff every bone in and was first as he man's body had vecn broken. Dr, | Hul fou compound fractures of | both ts and bruises all over the body, a s of internal Injuries. Levine was t nm to the hospital, evi. gently mortally hurt. Davis ts rich. He ts sald to own much Property In Willlamsburg. Through one of those mysterious hannels known only to the police a| conversation between Davis and Levine Was reported to Inspector O'Brien yes terday Police Heard Conversation. The conversation was reported to O'Brien without delay. ‘The police had a record of an attempt to set fire to ie big tenement house at No, 318 Union ty . Brooklyn, on Monday. Levine arrested while entering the place last night. In his pockets | were found a bottle containing a mix- a fuse, and a quantity of matches, ——————— INDICTED BY GRAND JURY Three Bills Against Neidinger —May Get 40 Years in Prison, Three Indictments were returned by. the Grand Jury to-day against Edward H, Neidinger, of 121 East One Hun- dred and Fourth street, who the polic and agents of the Children's Society say 1s the vilest man in all New York, All three indictments charge him with i-treating little girls, Under the first bill he may be sentenced to twenty years’ Lmprisonment and the penalty under the crimes charged in the other two Indictments is ten years in each case, The prosecution of the threo charges would mean a possible cum- ulative sentence of fortys yeurs’ impris- onment with hard labor, Six little girls were heard by the Grand Jurors before the indictments were found, They are Sadie Sokolin, Hthel Millian, Rebecoa Keck, Mangare. Beck, Jenne Rich and Julta Robin, Agent Powarty, of the Soctety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, was also @ witness before the Grand Jury. Niedinger posed a8 @ man of piety MOTHER SEES | wound only the better to secure his victims, He formed bast fhe cated fis iowse ¥1 SH is > tie'niris to ‘bis home and. there, accont: CATHERIN B DONAHUE. LITTLE CHILD FATALLY SHOT Donahue Hit by Bullet from Boy’s Revolver. Catherine Donahue. | ahue, a ry from in Roose- ear-old of Pal bullet ying a in front of her home ty-eixth street last night. Two youths have been arr the police have learned from t the bu He h. not been Bef ying out to play at Utue Catherine had 1 mother, who [s ill, Her tue brother was with the throng in the street, The sic mother wate them from the window, wi sho was startled by a report. Then saw her little girl topple over in the treet and a crowd close around her. — | ‘The bullet from a 3! olver hag Struck the child 4 Her frantic mother rode with the child tr t unce und waited at the hos the am wuld her the Lt West Sixty tectives: the nd Cooney, of treet Station, a elghth § made an Investigation in the neighbor hood and ted “Hank” Davis, #ix- old, and William Brassell, n, both of No. 27 West seventh street. The two b sisted In carrying the wounded child to] a drug store before the ambulance ar- rived. Both had big revolvers in thelr pockets, From them {t was learned that four- teen-year-old Benny Graham, who, they thought, lived somewhere Sixty Street, got possession of two 8 and a quantity of ball cart- ges on July 4, He has been cele- brating with them ever since, and was shooting at cats in the open lot across om the Donahue home last night, he pollee Were aisy informed that at had as-| least thirty young men and boys tn the Immediate neighborhood were golng about with loaded revolve! A round-up of these young terrors will be made to-day, : —_—- GIRL NOT MURDERED. « Death in Cellar Was from Natural Caunes, An autopsy iperformod by Coroner's Physician Weston to-day shows that Hannah Hartigan, the you: an whose body was found In the co'lar of the apartment house at 1M Wost One Hundred and Twenty-seventh Firest yest 1 of natural causes. The imi of death was fatty deseu n of the rt It 4s vellevod that ahe wandored into COTTON KIN prompted by nent eye 8 better and York last ton, Va Mr, Howell had a he right ear, dying inst cide was discovered to-day bermald who ned the di room with a passk MAGNATE, HEA vied to Blood-sta télegcams in his pock: ddressed Shepard, He Mr. Shepa couldn the d # have by ugh heat TWO KILLED 1 the cellar when she was taken i. ‘On Monday ehe had visited the house to} juauire for friends, and probably came back to make further Inquiries, Last month she was employed as a servan| fa the Mount Binal Hospital | been ascertained, but 1 The ¢ been caused by natural gas, wae wre ore, G KILLS HIMSELF AT NAVARRE Eight- Year-Old Catherine} W. B. Howell, Arkansas Planter, Feared He Was Becoming Blind. he certainty that he was ld spare her, lett New| onday for a visit to Staun- an in “whe joor of tae iD CRAZED, A SUICIDE wore Corder N HOUSE EXPLOSION “PSBURG, July 12-~Two persons | [has attracted more careful, home seckore killed and» riously in imuinating epeculetore ten any in an explosion In a dwelling vars [utise or Fortieth street and Laverty. | Shall We Tell You Why ? use of the explosion has noi | thought to have ‘The house he re adjoining buildings caugtt Howell and n And] He } y a cham~ theh was ure | d, found to Jacob J.| p1 ne mines s8 was in| a widow and | NOT BEAUTIFUL, KILLS HERSELF Strange Mania of Rich Eliza- beth Girl Leads Her to Commit Suicide. (Special to The Evening World.) BLIZABETH, N. J., July 12.—Miss Mathilda King, daughter of the late Col. Rufus King, committed suicide at the home of her aunt, Mrs. D. P. Thomas, on West Jersey street, list might by severing an arter. in her wrist and turning on the gas in the t where she was fou.d dead. reported last night thar she GIRL SLAVE TELLS WHY SHE KILLED HER BRUTE MASTER Fragile Berthe Claiche, in the Tombs, Gives for First Ti me, to The Even- ing World, Pathetic Story of Her Suffering. BY EMMELINE ad. wis Mt that sie over t euUtifal we She had often been heard to exclaim 18 se looked In the mirror: Oh, why am I not good looking Mie er’ girls he family have made every effort to ep the suicide from being made It is y-five years old, bi fact noved in exclusive soctety the State. TOOK A WAR 10 (CP HIM SOBER Housekeeper Says Milllonatre Recluse Duniap Drank a Pint and a Half of Whiskey Before Breakfast. The eccentricities of an octogenarian millionaire were further gone into to~ before Surrogate Fitzgerald at the ptinued hearing of the contested will of the late Samuel Fales Dunlap, who treet house for many years. Rose A. Ealden, who was the old man’s housekeeper for sixteen years, testified that in September, 1887, he was so drunk one night that other servants had to carry him to his room. He was sick for two weeks. In reply to questions by Col, Baruett, she said that Dunlap spent his time writing “when he was sober, He wus a heavy drinking man. Sometimes ne would be sober. He would be per- fectly sober in the morning and in an hour would be drunk.” B. Howell, a millionaire cotton | “What would he drink?” she was sete R i asked, ter, of Pine Bluff, Ark., committed | "St ene claret and Aulelle Teme MIRA ny pinion, Bb te etimes xin, I have seen him drink Hotel Navarre by shooting himself !n| foe rourthe of @ bottle of whiskey be- the head, He left telegrams explaining | (70 100 that his act of self-destruction was | °° Fe ieaemtnteatotes » longe she continued, “in my. sixteen Le MN in tae house’ was durmag the Mr. Howell was known throughout nish-Amerivan war, When he wad 2 3 : 2 Arkansas Cotte for uine months, He was al the Southwest as the Ar 1s Cotton Bio moni be 340) Was atone Bay ASO Reet ER ENS) Seat Le. er times he'd drink until he ve trouble with his eyes and was | fell on the floor raver Id by a Little Rock specialist thu: | Regarding Dunlap’s dress the witness | ts were formir salt he dressed shabbily, and duriug her Here sah Aint OH ixwen Years there he bougnt o: it Unavle to scoure reser at home, he | or blue clothes, two pairs of cheap gray came io New Vrs six wuntny ago Win | trousers and two lopeoats, fis sister, Mis, Me. dvuyscu, iid id that she cut his ‘hair, and for Picea uiusedt Hus be Ute eared to iiavis G 10) emis | at Rik mattress How ut underclothes?"” she was id. Underel ab hes? she exclatmed. | “Ills were so badly patched that and I to show them Fowler, Clifton,” the housekeeper sald, Dunlap was frequently drunk, and in 140 he was drunk nearly all Summer, with a speci list yes.erday aftern da bottle In every room.” retur he hotel last night seeming-| “In 1st 1 went one morning to his 1 yeep He explained to those who| room, He had been drinking but was made Inquiries that the heat had made| sober, He struck me in the mouth and him Mil 1 go: awny. He came down and euid, Late ‘last night he had two gin rickeys | ‘1 did you, see that woman up- sent to his room and complained of the Le ere Is no woman here hot weather to the bellboy. Some time me.’ ‘Oh, yes, there 38,’ he said. ‘a fter midnight. he shot} If behind vin that {s impersonating you. She sul- uu and walks ike you. 1 If I had my stick 1 ks ike y her ups: id have Killed her,’ Gave Her Lots of Stock, mified, Mrs. Ealden testified was a legates under the will had signed a release to the rder to testéfy for the con- Cross-e that she , be ein “ te nu Did Mr. Dunlap ever ive you anyy) asked Mr, Dexter, (Special to Phe Evening World.) prosents 1 ° OSTON 2 * He did. In ist he gave me $30,000 in BOSTON, July 12.—Hal Corder, of| wogy° and a Jittle late he gave me 200 je, Tenn, @ wealthy, fne-look- | wt St. Paul stock.” ing man, fifty-three years old, walked : was your salary as house- ato the barb £ John Mulley, : fi on Federal stre r Srankiin, to. Twenty-two dollars per month," was day, got waved, b after the imun| the answer, Whd Shaved him had finished, Corder| Witness also testifed that the de- looked at himself in the mirrdr, deli- | ceased had giyen her two rings and @ « took up a razor und cur hig /set of furs. "I put them in the allver severing the jugular y. v trunk, and they are there yet," declared first. cut. himacit” perpondicularly ergenmeuiarly | “ave you the 200 shares of St, Paul iree Unies ay I have, w did you invest the $30,000?" 400 shares of Chicago and Alton was the reply, “and I have you consult Mir, Dunlap about 4th h neulted the newspapers was the answer, told you what stock to buy?" but T didn't take his asvice, took the advice from the newspape! Did more HW be has ARE YOU TIRED anewerlng misleadidng advertisements? East Elmhurst, "ci" City, Half Hour from Herald Square, Send, Postal for Views and Circulars et to Make Money, BANKERS LAND AND MORTGAGE 0, atten BY., ame deranged brood. | ‘Sf 0 that she was net! Woman's prison in the Tombs and told to-day, for the fi dead woman and her relatives | throughout | lived alone in his West Twenty-second he fell down the back stairs and she and the Berthe Claiche, haggard and wot ni Evening World why she killed E master and who made her a s! wages of merciless beatings. e, living on her earnin, PENDENNIS. on’s room of fhe st time, to The 1 Gerdron, the giant who was her and giving -her rn, sat in the mat Berthe {s a frail little pcagen, rather short, but so slender and smal? that she seems of average heimit, at least. beautiful girl, whose cheeks have fall hair, frank brown eyes and dainty red and what, if rest and happiness are ev Her voice 1s low and soft, and her ac- cent decidedly French. | In spite of her life as the victim of a fiend, the worst of his vile type, Berthe |has the manner, the look and the per- fect artlessness of the ingenue. Bhe talks readily, with trust in her big eyes, and a seeming surencss of sympathy. Remembered Only Wrongs. “Am I happy here? Non—non! How could I? I think of mother and home and my lttle sisters. If I could be with | them I would be really happy. How | could any one be happy in prison?" “But your family come to see you and help to cheer things up a bit, don’t they?” “Oh, yes. But then they and then—and then I cry." “Do you know why you are here?” | I asked her. | “They tell me Emil ts dead." said Berthe, dropping her voice grave! “Do you remember killing him?" The recollection of her old lover camo | {nto her eyes and she cried “I don't | know; I don't remember anything, but go away days. How he sald to me, ‘I will Kill) you,’ and I know {f he said tt he would.”” It seems that the events of the day | of the shooting have faded from t girl's consctousness. She remembers her suffering and her fear that Ger would kill her, and she knows that bh ts dead. She has no actual recollec’ of the fatal day. “But hadn't he threatened to kill you before?" “Yes, always; that ts, after the fir three months, When I first knew him he made love to me at all times, It was always ‘Je t' alme—Je t’ atme,’ and he promised to marry me, he} when he brought me here, It was a ways beatings and cross words and will kill you,’ Brought by Way of Canada, “How and when did he bring you | over Five years ago. But we did not] come here, He took me first to Ca | sda. I was only seventeen. He was | ted." | afrald we would be arr The girl explained how the money their osbin passage on the Ca Steamer was borrowed from a fri erdron, “He skipped with the money. And when I knew It I had to send the money back to the man—the m« 1 mad Rerthe told how she was earnin, seven francs a day at embroldering | evening gowns “with pearls and stuit When Gerdron first courted } attended public school, ree how crazy and sick I was for days, for y She looks the wreck of a once en and faded, but whose gold-brown. lips are proof of what she was once, er her lot, she may find herself again, To treat Pimples and Blackheads, Red, Rough, Oily Complexions, gently smear the face with Cuti- cura Ointment, the great Skin Cure, but do not rub. Wash off. the Ointment in five minutes with Cuticura Soap and hot water, and bathe freely for some minutes. Repeat morning and evening. At other times use Cuticura Soap for bathing the fac often as agree- able. No other Skin Soap so pure, so sweet, so speedily effective. ap combl Irate mesttelnal and emote Citheura, the gre (Continued on Tenth F yesight Examination—by Oculist, a registered physician whose specially is the eye. NO CHARGE exec miaasoa and that moderate, AA YPARS PRACT ION a Sixth Ave Below 1845 Broadway, Below 217 Broadway, + Antor 2 ‘Broad St. te eAtoade SPECIAL FOR WEDNESDAY, |, Sumar-C | and Raw ASELM, 106 Chocolate Peanut Clurters...Lh, 150 SPECIAL FOR Plautation Bonbon: Chovolate Maple Charlotte | FRGRRO cereeee tteeeeee eel, Mie 4 BARCLAY ST. a + 106) COR.CHUACH "| Extra Charge for it. forld may be lett | y eamenger Office CANDY - wa 29cchTiNTST | re When you feel dull try Jayne's Sanative Pills OST, FOUND AND REWARDS, HELP WANTED—FEMAL LAUNDRY WANTS—FE nave Tyron Alate ag auth 81% Bete at; auoly betweed 9 aud 19 a,

Other pages from this issue: