The evening world. Newspaper, September 6, 1905, Page 8

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)

t They Continue Carnival in West Side! BURGLARS LOOT TWO MORE CI Dwellings While Owners Are Away — Spend Days in Maloney Home and Use Wagon to Carry Plunder. EXTRA! EXTRAI BURGLARS, BEWARE! M’ADOO IS COMING! Bulletin—Formal announcement was made at Police Head- quarters to-day that Commissioner McAdoo will be at his desk to- morrow morning, without fail. Assistant Secretary Stetler sald that First Secretary Howell had telephoned him that he had just received a telegram from Commissioner McAdoo that he would be at work to-morrow morning. Two burglari TY HOUSES in which the thieves worked in the most leisurely fash- fon and carted away wagon loads of plunder, and attempted burglary pre- vented only by the unexpected return home of a member of the family. and convincing evidence that a dozen houses on the west side, the owners o! which have been in the country, have been visited, is to-day’s contribution to the list of recent lawless acts that have startled this city, If any evidence was needed to prove that there has been and still is a carnival of crime in New York, it 1s found in the robbery of the house of Warren Leslie, at No. 408 West Forty-third street; the robbery of the house of Miss Mary Maloney, at No. 320 West Forty-sixth street; the dis- covery of three burglars in the houso at Ni 314 West Forty-sixth street, the presence of thieves in the Lyric apartment-house, at Ninth avenue and Forty-sixth street, and the condition of the roof scuttles of a number of ‘other houses on the same block. The police have been sufficiently aroused by these latest crimes: Ke be- gin a house to house search for evidence of burglaries, but so far as doing any- thing toward catching the thieves or re- covering the lost property 1s concerned, even the police admit that they are powerless. Found Home Looted. ry Maloney, her two sisters epee: uretbee own the houses at Nos. gis and 30 West Forty-sixth stres: | Which they were found. | eutity ‘They live in No. 320 and rent the other | as a furnished-room rouse, For the past two months they have been at Point Pleasant, N. J., but his morning Miss Maloney returned to town. She went to ther house and, on opening the door, found that !t had been chained on the inside, It was Impossible to force 1t open far _ enough for her to squeeze in, and, as she couldn't break the chain, she went to the West Forty-seventh street police ation and reported to Capi. Gallagher, He sen! a policeman to the house, tho door was forced, and {t didn't more than a glance to tell that burglars fad been in during Miss Maloney’s ab- wence and made themselves very much at home. From cellar to top floor everything was in confusion. Closets had emptied, pictures torn down, bureaus overturned and their contents thrown on the floor, Not a room in the house had escaped and so greedy were the thieves that they had e miyitresses to pleces on the cha valuables had been concea.ed 1 been em, Great bundles had been made of car- peis, rugs, pictures and wearing apparel, and REPerently, the thieves had not b A been when something A through with the frightened poun. floor, and it ool 8 though thieves had staried to bore around lock. .A great deal of valuab and glass had been broken, a was still a good deal of s| had not been taken. Spent Days on Job. they that must have Spent days a Maloney says they must y very heavy exact loss sie docs nut Dut ft will probably amount to thi sands of dollars. The thieves got in in the usual Way, through the scucie. at the corner of Eighth avenue is apartment house afd the police bel the thieves got to the rouf thi building, The Lyric is at th Ninth aver nd the would ba iny to get to the roof ry off their pyldence ted that t and left by the In ¢ poll enUnuing thelr found out Ww ie Maloney’s hi rk. 1 y Mreet, whic Tp happened thar a fly had revurned, howey ing @ bath when three heand them and, rir cvuld ne Police. Whether 't) . the Do you Are You in @ Financial Frenzy? | enc a way that keeps you in an imitable, erratic frame of mind —that whitens your hair— drives deep furrows of care into your once unwrinkled brow—and that lends a fright- ened look to ycur less eye? Then the tm op and to rely upon Morning World Business Bargain Offers for a sure and profitable living Belore You Become A Nervous Wreck | make your now rest- b Right Now— take | beds and | polte The police now say the robberies were committed by that they believe the threa boys who were arrested in Min- nie Seligman’s apartment in the Lyrto on Sunday night last. It 1s doubtful, however, tf these three boys could have handled the safe as they did. or thrown around the contents of ‘the Maloney house in the way In If they are the ones they are exceptionally clever young men, for to Alspose of the Missing property’ would take a very able thie Mr. Leslia, who fs 2 brother-! “law of Supreme Court Justice O'Gorman, has been In the habit of returning ‘from Centre Moriches once a week to see He $10,000 worth of his property taken, hing in his house was safe. got home late last night to find that house had been gone thnough and | The thieves had made a very complete job of it, ‘They cut pictures from ft he floo: ica rs. and o} arried away roved s they did nog wan and took the entia@ collection of carved Japanese tvories, hls Lesile has spent a lifetime Sven Mr, | Lesite’s Hhrary did not escape. them, hoy took many destroyed others Police Are Helpless. Mr, Leslie was completely crushed by | The beat him when he 3 to place al house to see that | the loss he had sustained, the police could do for reported the mat w. frames, they | took all to carry away books and | po one else gets in. t door to Mr. He, at 405 t Forty-third Street, lives George Doascher, Mrs." Doescher returaed from. the 6 before then. Shear slightest s howss.* she Tam sure all that thave take plc wi my house hearing {t y T heard Mr. Walking around and went tof vastly hinking it might be a bargar. ‘This robbery took place before last Wad- nesday."" Mr. T as he ‘ould not deny 1! hour Mr. and| J. Harper, last Wednesday and the latter | sho was sure the robbery | 4ve her, 4 | it was early in June thet at con- v4 Lesite d not ber the Aug 2, the day before the Dc * Te: turned ‘The police are satisfied that the burg- place in the day re are no candle grease sp: time, where in the house and the gas was | turned off, They admit the thieves may have had @ lantern, but think | this Impr y Capt, G ner, when he heard of the also attributed boys arrested at 6 to Cl the Job Leste fs far from satisfied. Hunt Other Burglaries tly freque Malon Neither left ROBBER, SAYS WOMAN; that to Mise ft ‘ap but | ALIBI. SAYS KEHOE, of N Rast Sev pleture the pr wa fend any man to pr ——__— LOOMIS IN WASHINGTON, WASHINGTON, sept. 6 Becretary Loomis to- returned acuing 6 Secretary of Slate, Ausistant | y to} Washington from Oyster Bay and is AT WEE SLE PHONE DISAPPOINTED IN LOVE, y-™ MEX Dine bX TOGrMER YF TEM WORLD: WHONESDAY MVENING, ESAS TEMES, TNS. SHE KILLED HERSELT. ED o & X W“4ISS LI z 06eL45 JSON HE TAKES HER ‘To THEATRES i GEMS GONE, WOMAN TURNS DETECTIVE Mrs. J. E. Chapman Causes the Arrest of a Man She Says Took Her Jewelry. slick nished at No. 145 Wes » Mrs. Jennie Cha) 0 do her own | sleuthing, Chatham Club fin J. Harper, of of Pro man says this is the but Harper post his guilt, she rented one of h 0 a nice who paid ca [bis baggage would arri Mrs, Chapman gave front door, and the ve disappeared. After ne Chapman discoversd that Were missing The list she gave the police at the time consisted of a pendant shaped dia- mond brooch, three diamonc with two two-curat stones, three large stones and one a ring, with @ brown diamond in the ce tre; a pair of cuff buttons, with t Initiale “W. H. C.;" a wedding ring, a neck chain of gold, a bracelet set with amuthysts, a diumond-studded locket, a gold w with the letter “C" set tn da diamond pin. | arraigned 4m the per was tos Mrs. Chapman the f seeing h | t hinatown and! y him with two y Val t me up, so semt me wenty-third York, 1 t will, If you w she could ae GEN. CRITTENDEN DEAD. | MADISON, Ind, Sept. 6 recelved here to-day that News was Brigad. Ga the Bixah died at ht. WOMAN WHO CAUGHT THIEF BY SLEUTHING. "Tt's so easy to {t's hard to be hut th York situati court to-day rday when West I robbed, olv Patt Mrs. he had the har J. 8he: case adjourned own pretext Tow days ay pair of oper the thett pawn dost Swaltleld for lid 1 steal? work ppose 1 Will ts for @ long time.’ “SOENSYTO STEALIT'S HARD: n wa Lizzie Sy aed the me I was educated in i served two years al or starve, from Commander Rober: to-day by the message, ) twenty-five undred dogs. extends from Litt Isabella, but This may of A base at Cape was in sout empt to reach t Herbert L. er! logs and walrus t Etah per in Inglfleld Gulf than for year hauled ima “on board.” OUST THE DEMON. PEARY’S FINAL _ WORD BEFORE DASH TO POLE Explorer, Headed for Sabine | Island, Tells His Doings and | Reports All Well. What ts believed to be the final word Peary be- voyage Pole, tary of the ssuge came and 1 , the Roose- with Eskimo base at Join- Aug. 18. winery, and leaves Buch, for the Kimo men and 16. eld Island to ntly {8 Lattlefteld Tussle with Coffee, There is something fairly demoni- | g MD oat in the wi coffee i A) | wreaks {ts flendish malice on those —_—-—. who use it w | frightful ArT whom | vin Into | straight; r, ap-|most intense pain. We nd suggest till a fi in| the coffee this) to do with ft, nd ady 1 Jam ered iis esl h he short time ‘ed lentirely relieved. 4 4leame steady once jaches ceased, the muse of my neck relax straightened up valuable | very Valton adi Mo 1 by Mrs, 1 eo hg 1 used the old ished. “We have the old coffee, but r beverage, to find that the delighted thing we ne old kind of cofte in, Postum Co., 1 don't When my money is too bud, But ho use for inouey pais ‘There's a TOMOR a. |quit it and try Postum Coffee, 3] “We followed his advice: the day that we began to use Postum hg a room|we both began to improve, and in a us were nerves of more, and the pain that had #0 punished me while kind of coffee van- sometimes A lady writing from Calif. says: i | tow ml ‘My husband and I, both lovers ¥, his prices. $20 's0 $45. Rie lot coffee, suffered for some time “ask the Man Who Wears Them" from a very annoying form of ner- || ~ : el fousness. accompanied by most Salesrooms : | headaches. In my own 39 and 41 Cortlandt Street. se there was eventually developed 4 yes-|gome sort of affection of the nerves of |lending from the spine to the head. “| was unable to hold my head up the tension of the drew it to one side, causing me tho| Bot vad the lef from medicine, and were puz- he |zled as to what caused the trouble, 1 that possibly we drank had something nerves no rer | that we and from the my never resumed the use relish ery day as well as we did And we are we can it freely to our children also, some- dared to do with the ¥ Name givin by tle Creek, Mich, Postum Coffee contains absolutely no drugs of any kind, but relieves ‘the coffee drinker from the old drug * | about {t, both sent abs be- head- in the back head dreadful our give LAGK OF LOVE DROVE BESSIE TO HER DEATH Chum Declares Belief Alleged ' Army Officer on Gen. Grant’s | Staff Is a Fraud. Wilson, the beautiful tele itor of the Hotel Navar: 1 undertaking | : 1 responsible Lik woman's suicide was not few were there to follow grave except the Lin © life 1 assumed name in a t shed No. 2 Weat Porvy-! sn in the case is said to be an, i ember of Gen, Fred- af at Governor's Isl- iiss Jeanie who was Miss Vilson's nidant while she) t -room house at S Hfth street, says myth, y well, 3 a ld me ms a West Point graduate a member of Gen. Grant's staff, | bel he told her that yarn to as a mere child and hing. ellow came around to the e day in broad daylight n No West Point grad- such @ thing. oo Much leisure to be y headquar veetheart ome be 2 ind three ‘eft home and went to the etheart of hers ce in the chorus of companies, and she Lyrle Hall She me of the costumes she r. She left the Hotel Na- riday saving she was going . came her reniiza. ras her HOW TO FIND OUT. Fill a bottle or common glass with your water and let it stand twenty- four hours; a sediment or settling indicates an unhealthy condition of the kidneys; {f it stains the linen it is evidence of kidney trouble; too frequent desire to pass it or pain in the back is also convincing proof that the kidneys and bladder are out of order, What to Do. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Root, the great kidney remedy. fulfills every wish in curing rheumatism, pain in the back neys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passage. It corrects inability to hold water and scalding pain In passing it. or bad effects fol lowing use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant neces- sity of being compelled to go often during the y and to get up many times during the night. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. If you need a medicine you should have the best. Sold by druggists in fifty-cent and one-dollar sizes, You may have a sample bottle of Swamp-Root. the great kidney remedy, and a book that tells all lutely free by Dr. Kilmer & Co., Y. When writing be that you read this nerous offer in the New York ening World. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr, Kilmer’s Swamp- Root, and the address, Binghamton, N on every bottle mail Address | Binghamton, sure to ment ailor Shops: Atterbury | System Clothes | in the New cAutumn Styles are | here at the Lambert Shop. You will be pleased to see how the latest London Fashions are reflected and improved in these perfect garments, You may buy> with the supreme surety~ of having the proper clothes, <Atterbury System Clothes are all ready--for-wear, They equal the best tailor's best at 110 Fifth Ave, === cjothes, Alo at! PUrnialitngs, Sole Agent, New Havens Shoes, Conn, The H, C. Co, Guaranteed “SPECIAL” $3 00 | A STYLISH DERBY |of uncommon shape and merit, | All the leading shapes in Soft and Stiff hats, from $2 up. STETSON DERBYS §,0 8 BROADWAY STORES, Ath wt Canal st. —mear Chay ®O CONNECTION WITH AKY OTHER STORNT ‘THE BIG STORE i + & H.’' Green Trading Stamps Given with Purchases Amounting to 10c. or More. Fall Soods All Over Ghe Big Store. Do you wonder that the Siegel Cooper Store is as busy as it can be from the opening until closing hour ? New merchandise is crowding in fast. Coming in every day and hurrying to all sections of the mammoth establishment. IF you are a New Yorker you'll be glad to know what is new. IF you live in some distant part of the United States and are in town merely on a visit or are simply Passing through, you will be just as delighted as those who are residents. It 1s a great store any way you look at it. White Embroidered Linen Waists for Women, 52, Ti 3. This 1s but one of the charming styles now being, displayed in the Waist Store, where beauty of design and distinctive individuality are the rule rather than ex- ! ception The prices, no matter how beautiful the j model, are net prohibitive; on the contrary, very ate tractive. for instance WAISTS, of imported pure Linen; handsomely em= ; broidered in raised effects; see illustration; neatly tailor= ed and designed; a new Fall model that would ore einer sell for $5.00; specially 2. 75° by Hlso Women’s Lawn and: Dotted Swiss Waists, G5c and SSe. Comprises all of our WHITE LAWN and DOTs TED SWISS WAISTS, about 156 dozem. which we have divided in two groups for convenient selling Prettily tailored and trimmed effects—Waists that reg- ularly were 85¢ to $1.25; 65c @ 5c your choice at Conver Store Seeomd Floor Centre 19th St Waists and Blouses 38 for Boys Chursday at Cc Well-Known Brands Sold Glsewhere at 50c. and 75e, In this sale there ares such popular brands as the | “Mother's “Cadet etc. y These Waists <, or Blouses can be had either with plain neckband or attached collar, Si iiyears OOC DUROY TROUSERS, }’ 4 to 14 years, 25c¢ Second Floor, Bast, Pianos! Beautitul Caldvell Pianos. Also Special for Ohursday I } COR sizes at Other Speetal Values For Co-morrow Include: Smart Tailored Suits 22 50 . for women at One of this Fall's most popular Rich in Gonal Quatities, styles; made in best manner of dressy gray worsted; coat 52 Unexcetled Values at inches long. Also Women’s Suits of Tweed 00 Casy Mixtures; oh long coat ° Paymont and plaited linen == £, skirt, 22.50 (Slegel Cooper Store, Fifth Foor.) Women’s “Foot Mould’ Shoes Yew Fall Styles with the “Senga Hook’? Addition a Great Innovation The greatest improvement to shoes since hooks and eyelets were first invented is the “Senga Shoe Hook.” Lying snugly to — the shoe it is impossible for it to catch in and fi tear skirts or dainty laces. Remarkable Ease In Lacing or Unlacing Shoes Faulbped Foot Mould Shoes Afford the Greatest Comfort and Wear for the Least Money You'll understand their wonderful popularity! the moment you try on @ pair. Special tanning , processes render the leathers soft bur tough, and * they adapt the shape of the foot, giving wish every movement and returning pressure is released, Soles are of white oak tanned cowhide, An uabaned like @ cobbler does, pounded hil thi ing the greatest wear pliability, ' lal “More Than 100 Styles of ‘Foot Mould’’ Shoes, For men and women, FOOT MOULD SHOES are superior to any $3.50 shoe made and the equal of many at $5.00. Newest Fail models are now on sale, and i ‘Many are equipped with the ‘* a Shoe Hook,’’ for which price remains the same a8 all Foot Mould Shoes. (oye) Ilustrated style book on application in Shoe Store. ° Sehoe! Shows Yow Here In Large Assortments ; 49 their capacity with Children's Schaal: Shas —ong |

Other pages from this issue: