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ee ees ee PRICE ON EVER , NINETEEN Passengers FROM PORT Two Sent to Pest House, Others to Hoffman’s Island. Seventeon persons were taken off the | Panama line steamship Seguransa f Colon and placed ‘n Quar “ bers of the crew, bedridden with { 1 e others, Derature, were sent to Hoffman Island for observation Ten of the suspected cases were mem- bers of passeng to Sw en were > men whi The Rigid Examination. Dr. A. H. Dp Port, who !* determined to ke York free fre vw fever tn and are not suffering from y as far as I can tell," eald Dr “put I am taking no cha: them there because they are and will have there proper care clusion in case fever. The other fi temperatur blood they are will be released." I de made, and if that Four Had Yellow Fever. Dr. Doty learned that four of th A's crew, su Tor yellow fever, y removed » just prior to her Colon The passengers placec were ss Hechstel and Henry first. ‘cabin | nasaengers, and Daniels, Andrew 8: Btaley and Miss W Tape Rovd and Wempe did not show high temperatures, | ut they were detained because their} gabin mates were suspectod Beguranca was released Quarantine at noon and proc her dock. On board were Panama Canal Commissioner Peter C, Hains and B. M, | mpson, Minis! 5. steamship Harrod, Archibald J. to Ecuador, and C Corn! will take command of Havana, recently purchased from Wart iine. Two more suspects were added to the when the ado, which ar. | ay from New Orleans, reached lst at Hofman Is! gan line steamer} rived to the Quarantine Inembers of the crew who wer: to have abnormally high tenipe Phe Eldorado brought no passe No Cause for Alarm. “Bven should the patients tion, Both the Seguranca develop yellow fever at Swinburne Island there is no gr for alarm here,” said Dr. Doty, @ strict quarantine th is possibl by a mo: polaon from a fever pate tranemitted by the clot search has sololy by th en that it Is FINAL EDITION cAll the News. 1 CENT. nburne’s Island were suilors, y, Health Officer of fection, above normal—the ere quaran- to Swindurne's Isl- Now fe on showed rising | started to talle At Hoffman Island dacterfological examination for suffering from malaria, they | 3 in Quarantine CB. Oster, e 18 not least likelihood of the disease getting into New York, Yellow fever Infectlon only through fnoculation quito which has derived the t. It is not or the bod- fly excretions, The most careful ito, ‘The cases thar Might be discovered on board ship or Pe ee A ee ee ITION “Circulation Books Open to All,.”’ | “ Circulation Books Open to All.’ NEW YORK, JULY SURETHING (PRETTY GIRL” MAN” TELLS OF | SPANKED BY $10,000 HAUL) STAR BOARDER Case of His ‘‘Deing Har- “Well Done,” says Miss ris or Being Done.” of Seventeen. Sometimes a star grafter and sure-| Marguerite Adams, the pretty: eoven- thing man confides some of his expert-|teen-year-old daughter of Mra, Therese ences to a limi circle, but it is sol-| Adums, has left the maternal home at dom cne of these worldly-wise persons | No. 1932 Brosdwey, Brooklyn, for the makes an open confession In court of a| protecting hospitality of her friend, $10,000 deat Mrs. D John Strosnider, big, strong, fault- | Way. lessly groomed and full of nerve, did| Marguerite Ceeen't find nome happy {t in the Court of Special Sessions to- | beciuse her mother's star boarder, Br- day in the examination of Champe $.| nest Zimmer, spanked the girl last Sun- Andrews, the lawyer, and Dr. John 4 day, and the mother said ‘Well done.” Harris, his client, on a charge of ex-| So Marguerite stamped her foot to- tortion. day and sald: “I'll never go there any Strosnider and4 a man named MeKee | more." k between $10,099 and $12,500 from| The gir! made a complaint against r. Harris hy a confidence game as 01d] Zimmer and told tho story of her hu- as the Pyramids, ‘Mhey were arrested, | mi and Lawyer Andrews and Harris are] ginbotham tn th: Gates Avenue Court c of forcing Strosnider's wife tO} Zimmer is held in $300 bail for General to Harris her $13.500 home 1] Sessions, Flatbush by threatening to ratlrovd her hushand to SIng Sing with the ald Calls Spanker “Beast.” the District-Attorney and the Grané| Ae er friend's home to-day the pretty Jury girl told an Evering World reporter the rosnider took the stand to-day after | story of the Adams-Zimmer home's lost the two detectives who arrested him | fotie!ty, and McKee had testified. He deseribed ¥ iimself as a professional gambler. a beast and we all hate ‘him—that is, Admits Jail Record. my three Mttle sisters and I. Mother thinks ho's the whole show. Zimmer hac that idea, too. | to | | | 1 was convicted in the District of rigid examination of the Se-| Columbia of obtaining money oa fal “He's boarded with us a good while. ints took the tem-| pretenses in a fake foot raze,” he vol-| yyy father left home seven months ago. r on board from | wnteered, “and T got In trouble in Pitts | pre wouldn't etand for Zimmer's tem- all who showed | bY ver skianing @ few Buy ani ber and all. We children stuck to my ent three days in the workhouse, Thoso are the only times they ever | mother and I guess that's wh were foolish Robe. | ‘Last Sunday Zimmer, who's a sti T met Dr. Harris in Paris last De-| cember, and we got friendly. I was | jog: | wise right away that he had picked me out for a good thing L “When he started back he took my| address, and when I got to New York | f he callal me up on the ‘phone an m piece of a chalr He had a great scheme, the doctor | said, He ‘ stood up for her. in the Subway at Twenty-third street, | F ‘All he wanted me to do was put up| Chocse Daughter or Boarder. $25,000 or $100,000, or some such trifling) “My mother was mean all along and amount, and T was to be treasurer, or| When I had Zimmer up in court she made things so hot for me e president, or the main squeeze, or some-{ here Bee Ores me that t cam | thing, I didn’t pay much attention, 1] “She can choose between her boarder see right there that !t was a ca: of | and ik (if you want to know the truth, 1 do me or me do him, and I made dink tt Was a Put-up job to get me of the house. I mean, IT don't y mind I would do him first. think Zimmer lost any money, and. his "I got busy the next day and tele- | Dealing wus Just to get me so mad that the doctor to come to my ‘ What I wish now is that we c! r ha sh now is tha child ere I introduced him to MeKee, I|had turned againet Zimmer monthe ase ye Start, iasiewd of standing tp for il tis An |inim for mother's sake. You know your ix {t so we could xo to the fam- |ihother is your mother, no matter what bling-house where he was worklag and| she do: and, though we all loved win $18,000 three times a weel fugher, 1g waste Tia part we took, Maeve ip ee ht “Now It ve'd all be ready to McKee explained how thin cvuld be | jaye mother for dad If he wants u done with his heip, and wo hed regular | “it~ was Ernest Adams, “the girl's rehearsals at my house and at iia dec- | father, Who appeared with ‘het in cours, i At agl Mare vo | and the inte: fe shows in his daugh: | tor's. On ihe nigat a Marea 47 we] tor is catherly, It 18 not improbable tried to beat the gambl/ Neves out} that Adams will claim the custody of ot $18,000. iy eulldren. Hela: ~ bs hy Until the appearance of Zimmer, who We took our families to dinner at] 4g) omplayed by Trommera’ Growing Mouquin's and after dinner left them | Company, all went well In the Adame at the Wallorf-Astoria, while we went | household, according to the girl's story t house tr “4 The father, a bartender, was support- to @ gambling house in Thirty-Aret | ing his happy little family at Now 156) street. A cop at the door warned us| pfoadway. After Zimmer and hie toy not to go i, ‘Phe doctor lost $10,000, | children came to board in the Adame but we showed him how we made q|flat Adams sald he noticed his spouse butiake, and when he left he was| Was Very attentive to the boarder's Inxdous’ to have st feed go. that he| Rants, Jt wae Zimmor who drew the could come a i py | Dest cuts of ea e hottest pan- sould ame regein andi ee Cia omoney. | cokes he says. Bo Adame said B . “Choose between me and’ t! : Wanted Another Try. er: ne doard “A few days later he told me he|, “All mamma said." tho daughter pasa needed money, I gave him my notes for Sede TL tical eC EU Iu io, Lt was all w matter of business, | Etnies went to live in bachelor ‘quar. en 1 went to Pittsburg and was gone | ETS wonder I lett home when When I got back McKee told me the | ti# man spanked me? br wanted to try the game again —S——— re we some money—a miserly 45 cenis accused me of takjng it. I told him {idu't need his old money. “Well, the entire tamlly” spent the i he house, lookine Tt wasn't found nighi, when I had fallen asleep re y mot house qT told him McKee was a faro-dealer znd | at the could A Bee fait the capital We met] WOMEN SEEK DEATH; that develop later on Swinburne Island| to his house for a rehearsal, me carry- are treated by complete. Isolation in| ing $7,100. 2 TALK OF A PACT. compartments screened to prevent mo: quitoes reaching the patient, In Way the possibility of the tion of fumigating these ships 48 no oveasion for it. Neither is It poa- sible for these shipy to carry fever-Ini- nated mosaultoes from Southern "8 to this port. Investigation has p hurl demonstrated that mose the ship only two day: NEW ORLEANS yitoe, BLAMES MOSQUITOES Mayor Says City Is Suffering More from Quarnntines Than trom Yellow Fever, NEW ORLMANS, July 2%~-The most Aisquieting news in the yellow situation to-day Js the evidence panic 18 Increasing in the smalle 18%, when some of the country from New Orleans, Mayor Martin Behrman to-day gave OnE ue, following statement: “New Orleans |s cept Roosevelt's ideas, BERLIN, July 2.—The Foreign Offive, taking cognizance of statements frou Bt. Petersburg particuigrly tiose pub- Mshed in French and Wnglieh 4 Guthorized the Assocluted Press to say that Emperor William. ty he Views off tho Island of Hyjoerkor, Sniper + Olas to continue the war. but gave his Only did not encurage inflvence directly in favor’ of dent Roosevelt's peace poiley, Most posltiveness, says that the me ne tovk vluce on the with of Emperor HCHO S, mre pepenterretaetnine mead disease | 0 yanted me t y $7, At ear, § is averied. I have no Inten- Ht i ‘and give Blin the follow | against ‘us. fever towns of Louisiana and Mississippi and @ disposition lg growing to revive the disastrous commercial quarantuics of towns oven refused to recelve ice or hardware suffering more from the rigid quarantines than from yellow fover, of which the citizens herd hay Go fullest control, The mosquito the- ory is accepted by our physiciana KAISER URGED CZAR 70 PEACE Russian Emperor Sought Recent Meeting and Was Advised to Ac- he Foretsn Office again. with the ut- | “When we got there the doctor was so excited 1 was suspicious, Then, (Special to The Evening World.) EWARK, N. J., July 9.—Two women envelope with his an v¢ “ Sivelype Twas wise in Ysecoad, 't | dead. from polson and gaa and a third gave MoKeo the tip that the doctor was|a patient in Bt. James Hospital here to- ora dit was ih far, us. to a aa day suggestel a suicide pact to the cn the whole gang, Andréws, | ice. vest Riordan, Platt and Harris, Wned up| lice but Investiguiion showed that there was no basis for #uch a theory, “On the way down'own in the coach | ‘Mme three women sought death within a Androws and) Harris ariel” ihvirs test | period of two hours to get the $7,000 IT had. 1 told Androws These who succeeded in their empis ft Wasn't mine, but that if we could | were Manha Blake, twenty-five years stop and telephone Ic vild vet gome. | old, of No. 105 Vesey street, who was Hie wanted to ston, but the detec:ive | asphyxiated by gas, and Mra. Emma Wouldn't let him. Andrews was always | Ross, aged twenty-six, of No. 481-2 hollering to tie driver not to go #0| Hinge sireet, Who’ swallowed carbolic + aod. “Harris wanted mo sip him the| “Mrs, Jessle Pfeifer, twenty-four years money and promised that "he. ‘would | oft; ot No. Jed Forty ‘street, also. took On cross-examination Sux mit R ed that he had done five yeers in| Railroad avenuc ton prison. work unusually early this morning and, ‘At hard labor?” he was asked, going into the 0 arranged a bed Prison Life a “Cinch,’ “I didn't call it hard labor. It was a cinch.” “Did you intend to commit a erime er by one of the clerks, on Dr. Harris?” |. hy ded to get that money, 1 | homes ___ — don that a esime,” replied Btro- | > enider, bigger Mr. Andrews's share would be Melee, a big, handsome nan, who | and the more disposed he would be to dercrloed iinecit as a book at| ist my husband off,” Aqueduct,” corraborated allt mony. of’ Stronulder. concerhing’ oveure Story of the Arrest Fences after the arrest, He told how] Detective Rlordun swore he went to rept drewa's office, Ana Went inti court and. de Mektew whon the caso was calle Fours afver the property. transfe made and Melted Way aischutwe Arm. Htrosnid told of how. she wai argued with sal Mgnt on Jy 4 to transfer hoy prone a few \icortted ond the was}overals and disguise workonen ectives put on themselves 45 entered the next reom and talked hor money watiers for half an hour to AL ris aid Andrews. Reardon sad the cc was not clear to him, but av “asked Mr. Andrews {f it was falr Mer to treat a woman #9, and he sald he | \\iiiton fh the morning, ad suse as there wae i | Khtger had God In heayen would have my hus- 3 t Andrews ordered the driver bung secretly Indicted and sent to Sing |. eh pee Hieadugarters, and that a: Dr, Harris told me he had already |Andiews’ told Sin paid Mr. Androws $3,000. Ho sald the {that It was thelr. | mors Hberal I was in making 08 What ae clalined "my too the on chance His tes- detective, GIRL WHO WAS SPANKED AND HER MOTHER, Strosnider Says It Was a|Mother Looked On and Said, O'Bslen, of No. 1552 Browl- | ting treatment to Magistrate Hig- | |arst of last May ‘at man (referring to Zimmer) is| |in shreds, half starved, half r old thing, went eround swearing he had| | uy My mother said she was glad of 1c. | ‘framed up to start a bank | That broke me all up. I’ve always | Mys. Adarmns Miss Margaret. Adams EXPLOSION TO BURN TENEMENT WAS ARRANGED Bottle of Oil Found in Blazing Paper in Hall of Brook- lyn Dwell CARLTON SAYS IT WAS HIS DOUBLE DECEIVED WIVES DEPEW, WITH “EXPLANATION,” IS NEAR HOME Senator, on St. Paul, Due To- Night, Comes to Give Light on Acts in Equitable. (Continued from First Page.) also succeeded mirror the marks on my body. I was living with my wife in fhome while 1 place in the household without my wife haying the slightest suspicion, and had lived so for more than a week when I came home one day and found him at the head of the table. All Victims of the “Other.” “Now, women that this man married coming forward and He took my An attempt the four-story eae Bushwick avenue, okiyn, early to-day, was discovered tlme to prevent damage, and the fire Was put out without calling the depart- Paper soaked with bengine and and a bottle con- {ning both was found. The building {s one of a row of frame tenements between Flushing and Bush- Benator Chauncey Depew, having hy connection with the ng New York quitable Life, andkwcongealars jot losing her, ‘Then Detectives “Me with his bad record, for I admit he has a Rcstacasutror |} Park West and tool up the a bad one. | | which continued fa this terrible predicamentt some sin that dragged up against have I got me for another's wrongs?" Carlton wrung his hands and paced his cell, and he told this strange story sald that his mysterious double had at one time gone to a safe deposit vault and managed to get a lot of valuable this fellow committad ts matters over upper floors are occupied by seven families. Unable to sleep last night because of the heat, Antonio Bonsur, one of the tenants, went Into the hall and tried to rest, He was awakened by the smell of smoke, and called another tenant, gether they investigated. At tho foot of the stalrs they came across the pile of paners that had been soaked with oll, While one ran for a policeman the other raised an alarm and carried some of the stuff to the street. who was on | trembllag ylolently Jie here, Tam asham ble exposures, Depew's fri ntenr as a wi Investigating This cousin of mine bore the ca raid ana t director and will set forth tn detail the A policeman ices he performed in the corner ran house, and the three men soon had all the blazing paper thrown out and then came across the bottle of oll and ben- ture of the & eration of his anaual nomy of being constantly charged with et MORTON § JAMES H. HYDE. man I could clear up everything, but I don’t, suppose ever #ad a grateful Impulse," Police Finds Another Wife. Cariton's amazing reconl as a “Blue- was supplemented police discovered but had not point where it was ready to explode because of its being made of extra heavy glass. A peculiar thing about the fire was that the doors In part of the house were closed. other nights in the summer they stand The incendiary is thought to have closed them to hide the fire fram any one passing by, and largely the failure of the fire to gain headway, as there was Uttle draught. The Fire Marshal and the police are The bullding hottle was warm, NEWPORT? to-day .when SHOR eens comin drop the case, but T wouldn't give up. | held, but was discovered and taken to 1 knew. they ‘didn't hhve ‘anything ‘on |the hospital, where it~ was sald she me, Andrews sald Jorome believed ¢y- | Mould probably. dle, eryiting he told. him and would ratt-|"‘The Blake Wouan was employed in road ua to Sing Sing to a_ certainty. the refining works of the Hurvey Os- nide:’ ad-| horn Company, at No, 62 Now Jersey fate wi y 'e of the PC Og fate was inet by this wife of the man with the marrying habit; to learn If she is alive or the manner of her death, wife in the long list was Misa Wiletta Sherwood Bird, of No. 422 West Nineteenth street Carlton on ator Nelson to this fact is due On two chairs and, attaching a rubber tube to a gas Jet, placed one end of it in her mough and then turned on tho ‘as, Her body was found two hours | os ria Pers Mrs, David Martin Dies. “rhe other women sought death in their| investigating. short distance from the one Jn which a life was lost last Ty nt under the McCandless time as tw day in an ineen-| gave his age at three and his home address as M: eee BROKER HAAS NEED NOT ANSWER. Han Been ¥ Cohen, who lives in the neighborhood knows of no enemy oy Ms property, —_ UMBRIA DOCKS TO-MORROW. The Cunard Line He ways he weuld wish to dest both of New ¥ ho was proaent when Mrs. Strosnider |(he residence of Dr. Harris on ths | 1 her house co a@ man in An-| night cf June 2 with Dotestive Pliu! i At the reuuest of Mr. Andrews who | Mi. Gray, A Inwyer in the oftice of | told them they were wanted to arrect| ended) two swindlers The house was heing| at in Poultion of De- Suys Judge, WASHINGTON, the proceedings against Haas, the ang uae The Best Hot W: = iM BOXES A YEAR F took the stand and! “Sirocnider and a man named Meken | questions In mies east of probably dock about 8 A ‘etary Wilson's report puts Haas |) a defendant inal proceeding, and go he cannot be to answer questions em STUDENTS AT ELLIS Two hundred students of the Colum- University Summer School iulile Island to-da departments of the Immigrant Station Commissioney Watchorn made thovgns dt Waa,” testified Mew, stro: | Nd, Piatt arrested the men wen asked | “Ho tld me that unless T trang. | 9.02 edb) f | n ins: on swore that Andrews and ferrad the property to lin by ¥ o'clock | ,Ateraon Moor the sribw that Stree e Way down in tie! the party, Was enlering Headquarters ee ider and Mohe: annwer questions r lived in Washington ployed in the Department of Ag W the various tmony Was corroborated by Platt, the ol - TFINAL EDITION] cAll the News. GIRL LIVED | THE PARK FOR THREE MONTHS Like a Savage Among Birds and Squirrels. Isabel Cowan, the fifteen-year-old girl] who lived for three months like a | savage In the depths of Central Park, was arraigned in the Children’s Court | to-day, Sinee she was captured by De- tective McManus there has been a great PRICE ONE CE NOT HUSBAND OF HIS WIDOW AND PROVES IT \Pretty Isabel Cowan Existed| Painter Washburn Convinces Court that He Is Not the Real Smith. Who fot into “Hen” Smith's shoes when he was solemnly and ceremont ously waked and buried in March, 1908, was A matter up for adjudicetion before Magistrate inn in the West Side Court” to-day, The Court propounded x: oi | change for the better In her appearance, | “Hen" {ts still as dead as he was In a clean new frock she looked almost] the day he was wuked, but Mrs. Bridgd jaunty, “From what I have been tolé of you,” | sald Justice McKean, “I belleve it would be to your best Interest to send you to an Institution. I am told by Smith, who was “'Hen's" cood woman, ving at No. 44 West Forty-third street, with her tears on the evening of the wake, Insists that he didn't dle, but 15 embodied tn the personality of your guardian that she is afraid she| Frederick E. Washburn. a sign painter, would have no control over you if 1 should allow yau to go fnee. The Houve} Wille Smith, of No, 100 Bowery. Red eleven, who alse of Mercy Ie the best place for you, and| wept at “papa’s wake.” backs dis you must remain there until the Sisters| mother in her claim that Mr, Washe are convinced that you have made up| burn is the whilom “Hen” Smith, Mra your mind to be @ good ‘and obedient girl.” ‘The girl waa found yesterday after a search which had continued since the and which had en- giged the attention of the entire Police Department. She looked more animal than human when found, with her heavy halr matted about her head, her garments hanging on her wasted body 1, know- ing only how to run when capture was threatened, Victim of Fiend'’s Drug. ‘This girl—and a beautiful girl she was, too—before a tragedy came {nto her life, vhe latter part of last April, when, motherless, she fell into the hands of somo designing man, who gave her iriga, $s the daughter of the late k' Cowan, who, a score of years , Was @ prominent newspaper editor this city, “Jack"’ Cowan made good money, but ho spent It in good living, In having 4 good time, There were several children, but they all died but one, and then ame the death of his wife, leaving Cowan to care for their Ittle three- Smith was his connublal companion far fourteen years, and. wake or no wake, 1s certain she has made no error, { ‘Thelr meeting took plice several weeks ago, but the sign-painter managed to escape from the untoward embraces of Hen Srith's widow and her young hope- ful, But Mra. Bridget Smith was not to be so easily frustrated. Her heart still beat tenderly for the “departed’® Hen, who had been faithful for four- teen years until he died in the Seton Hospital at Spuyten Duyval. Some time after the wake friends had informed her that Hen had somehow. re: sumed the mortal coli. Then what bets ter testimony needed she than the vig sion of the mourned husband in the flesh? She got a warrant: and began camping on the trail of Mr. Washburn Smith." She never let up in her search for an hour and vesterday swooped upon the substantial wrath of her “departed”? Hen and had him taken Into custody’ for having so wickedly deserted her in death. When the man appeared before Magistrate Finn to-day, he seemed in a daze. “Washburn made a general denial and was backed Up by a Board of Health: certificate testifying to the death of Henry Smith at Seton Hospital on Scton Hospital March 24, 1903, after a; year-old daughter, Isabel. Cowan died | {cjg ines. iwelve years ago, and little Isabei was| The Court decided, however, to dis- adopted by Mrs. Jean Miley, of No. ia.| charge Mr. Washburn. He left the <Yewiwus avenue. Bhe was us good a girl as there is in the World,” suid ite, Huey to-day, as she told of isabel, 4 cy eue veCuINy protic. ii music—as p courtrnom with winged heels and if the "Widow" Smith finds him sgaim she will have to learn to sprint. sient, at least. as a gins of ver 4eell Foe Invigorating Breezes could ‘be expected to ve-whe made friends of Wavm 1 uid not appiove. it was the jatter part of April that ISUbeL BLOWER wus Lae ade Was uecers> ig ine, She was invited to a children’s ty next door, and 1 thought she Was Ulere, Sue did not come home unul next morning, and then 1 dis- overed that she hud been lured to the Colonial dance hail by some man, sie had met." { believe she had been drugged. ontinued the foster mother, “Huweve I took her in and did my best to com fort her, she was so young and so tty In her innocence, A few days later she again disap- to the C ere I saw he Isabel ran from th p last I saw of he Isabel went to a fruit stand and . charging it to her foster mother, Then she saw tbat she was being watched and. wita a faint scram ried Jsho Started for the Park. For four | blocks the girl ran, ths man folowing. Manus and § jort, of the West One Hun- bundle of rags skimming along Central ase, nto the Park, The girl was about to dive into a thicket ere she would have been almost safe m eapture, when McManus laid his ng hand on her Ashamed to Go Home. “Don't take m> home! he burst out would) rats ‘ J to £0 home. he girl was taken to the statlon- use, where food was given to her he ate ravenously, and in a quivering and with halting speech she tult fruit man 4s the first person bas heard tho sound of my vei, hose months. T have been aurk most of the Um night I would steal’ ove Riverside Park, and ones or twice ‘f bathed in the river in a cluded spot, Usually, though, I bathed in one of the Park lakes. I'would steal down to them after the poMecemen had disap. peared and wade In deep. ‘How did I eat? Well, the ptentc parles leave lots to eat in the park hid I knew where {t could be found Then 1 stole milk from the doorways of houses and once I was so hungry that I stole a loaf of bread. from cing baker's wagon, One will steal when starving, me I would keep tn. the from the places wher: If i saw a policeman ew the hiding places so well that it Was easy for mo to conceal thick the 7 myself. times at night tt was very cold, y when it ralned. “And I got fearfully lonesome, T only had tho birds and the squirrels for companions, nd they were afraid me. Shields Viilain's Name, “pur T don't want to go home! 1 Aou't want to xo home!” the child con= Tuded, “Lam afraid, I am ashamed to. foe, my fostor-mother,” Tsabe was asked the name of the who had dragged her and lured from home will not tell,” she said, for playing spirit, 1" will she emphasized, and no could Amw® the secret from (h street station, saw the little! G CENTS AND. A TROLLEY to aHome bythe Sea Half Hour from Herald Sq. EAST ELMHURST, ci: on Picturesque Flushing Bay. theIdeal Place toLive. Send Postal for Circular and Views, ired, and J knew that sho had gone! fl Bankers’ Land and Mortgage Co., join that man, whoever he was, | 887 MANHATTAN AV. nlonial dance hall and} On catching sight of} hall, ‘That was| Brooklyn, N. ¥. Let Us Clothe You. There’s athousand reasons why you should make here your shopping quarters, One is, I'll save you 33 1-3% on better clothes —the other 999 are the suits you'll see, Moe Levy & Co., 119 to 125 Walker St., Three Blocks East of Broadway, Branch at 1437 Broadway. DENTISTRY pte EE es By the Alveolar 9 ud not ade Vanes in de age, pinatec. patectas. eluding pyorr! ‘ond all work guaranteed. Office ‘A.M. to 6PM. week days only: DB Aine inne aaston tree to All G. GORDON MARTIN, M.v.,0.0.8.ctney Suite 704, 320 5th Av, Cor 32d St, < Pati erat or ' oe Jatmente Dy cietter, twisgram oF 'pho APDRL AHH (2068 Medison Square). cen Jayne's Expectorant cures croup. VAN’S NORUB; SUAKAN D ABSOLUTELY GUNA our Ani NCLEAN, winde eat) ere 10 conts ber package, Made by VAN ZILE CO,, New Durham Nid} AUCTION SALES, SHANLES 1 GORE, Auctloneer, will sel CHM Day, Gt bid West Onth at. Hor Wagons, &é LAUNDRY WANTS—FEMALE, AA en pel | GHIRT irovers and heer, Hotel Hoyali 4 Ww, dat ate te | | | | | | |