The evening world. Newspaper, September 16, 1905, Page 3

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fo cAll the PRICE ONE C KILLED HIMSELF AFTER ELOPING ++ Mrs. Jardine. of Rye Park, Youth Who Hanged Himself as Young ' Man Who Sought Shelter at Her Home and Told Romantic Story, Lye The young man who hanged himself on the estate of C. H. Grif n, on the White Plains road, near Mamaroneck, last night, and was at first be- Jieved to be Paul Keily, the missing Interborough motorman, is now thought tto be William A. King, of Augusta, Ga., son of the owner of the King Cotvon jMilis, in that city, who is one of the wealthiest men in the Soutn Whether the suicide is young King or not, it is certain that as late as Jast Tuesday he was representing himself to be, and gave evidence that he qwas speaking the truth. ‘mvidow of a well-known architect of this city, King recently eloped from ‘Augusta with a young girl, whom he was afterward forced to leave hecause ‘me ran out of funds and his father would not forgive him. Mrs. Jardine, mvho identified the body to-day, believes the man was King and that his @ peal to his people, which he told her he was going to make, did not soften them. Mes, Jardine Is a woman of wealth | === and has handsome home at Rye Dark, wh she lives with her son James, who is in business in New York When she heard of the suicide she hurried to the Morgue at Mamaroneck and looked at the body. She ts post- tive it is the man she knew as King Bler story, told to the authoritles, ts as follows Asked Shelter from Storm. ' ' "During the rain Tuesday afternoon @ young man came up on the porch of “my house at Ry and asked per- Muigeion to take = from the stor: Mrs. Wilson Crazed by Grief Wis was very wet and I fett sorry for hin, 60 I asked Bim inside. There | When She Shot Hus- ‘was Impressed by his youth and ev €ent refinement, I also saw that hla band in Street, clothing, although wet and solled the atorm, was of good material, and asked him to tell avout himsel ie was very frank, In fact seemed aiee Mrs. Elizabeth R. Wilson, who anxious for a confidant. He told me he | *2t her husband on Centre street on “was William A, King, of Auguata, and TAUrday morning, was crazed by grief Uhat his father owned the King Cotton /OVer the loss of her child and the Mills in thet city. He showed me bis |*bandonment of her husband, and that YWather's business cards in proof of his |*#€ Was in u deaperate plight over the sassertion. He then went on to say that! latter's refusa! to support her, was ‘a short time ago he eloped from Au-| Proved by her lawyer, Mr. Noot, in the feusta with a girl, He thought at the | Tombs Court to-day, when the woman fore he said, that the offense would be | Was arurigned before Magistrate Breon orgiven by his father, and that he] Mrs. Wilson was very nervous in court oe bis father disowned him and! Magistrate ® Noot told the had visited her nd the girl could return to their home, | but sald nothing. Mr. ie was obliged to around Y-elgnth street and that he 7 wi rooms in Hast Sixt ‘ork for a job. The Ittle money he/bad found tier thy c use nid ei end the girl had, he sald, was soon! sands of little squares of mepee mn nnn Bone, and they lived as best they could |one of which was written eigen ena { e Ed ward 4 @ on the proceeds of an sccasional job | \Wiso; Thin waa the nes i ‘ 7 his was the name of her Be got. . ebuld who died last January, and | ‘Finally he told me it was agreed and Ls also her husband’: that they should separate and he went | she had writen ene Heo the Young Men's Christian Assocla-| also made hundrede ey anes and bad Aktion to live. Where the girl went he | quotation tho meters of copies of this did not say, or at least I do not re-| > 4 ea Wordeworth; : 5 | “I feel that @ moth ayed at the Young Men's |iogy of @ tater Christian Association. he sald, until be JO¥ed: ol Mr. Noot said nila cannot be as- wed a Dill of $4.50 and then decided to ty Saree phrases of con- eave and try to make his way to the |should soften the eg ® thought that Berkshire Hills, where, he said, his |ts that the Ittle fone WeOty And that mother and sister had a country home | bruised by ithe rou, ig will never be (und were stopplag unill the 26th of this |is like w treasure mig een, Of fe, ut ‘month. If he could get io them, he! world” away in @ better gald, he was sure they would do some- ahing for him. “I wns so interested in his troubles that I questioned him closely, and the more I did the more convinced I be- told me Mr. Noot eaid that nh reat many unpaid bills, of tho Lutheran Cemet. ® grave for ‘hor c deetor who atten: also found a » Including that ery for opening hild and those of the ded him and the un- i came of his entire honesty. H. dertaker who buried him, § that he was down to ‘his Inst cent, and) | The desperation of ‘this woman's that there were 99 many burglars he ly evident all over her home,” A ound that he was alway suspected of pete at Yoo, wand. t belie hee “he! when he aj for & job. nbalanced her. t Mele happened that that very morning} BeOlutely no way Phang in cned of getting any money my mother, who is inclined to be chare|@"d her husband had eves spare, itable, had sent me a $5 dill to dispose | Py the bills for the last sickne. of as I Baw fit to some deserving per- ehias iy ness of the fon. It struck me that this young), Mrs. Wilson wept jian's arrival was providential and | felstion of her u gave him the money, but not until my) fom the t softly during this roubles. A messagy howpital said that Wilson was fon James had a'so talked with him|stil! 100 y Injured to Gnd became convinced that he was all <vUrt although he ts. recovering’ a8 ~ he represented himself to be. Tomine! gon Was sent back to the Wanted His Clothes Pres: “Before he left us the young man aid he wanted to go to a tatlor and get }is clothes pressed and that he wanted to buy a new pair of shoes, as the old Puarot ones he was wearing were about useless. The balance of the £ hi id, he would use in getting on ‘his wey to 4 ‘the Berkishires. My eon votd ‘him js ~ where ho could find @ tailor to cl ang prete his clothes and where ge! shoes, and’ with man vatitude he eal ul 7 was no gan et tl er strat . a Hlon-of the, face: mado positive identih — IN JAIL FOR LEAP FROM “L” ROAD, Walter D. McCullough, of No, 11 Weehawken street, who jumped off the elevated railroad structure at One Hundred and Thirty-ffth street and ' Eighth a }_Biilaag sna oven no Rate Gay the A al 3 h nt Ho: 7 5 EG oe patlafeA with tn tle arraigne @ ip Hew lem Cour ie wee ti: kg hot only had the mule’ "ite told Mugistrate + ‘a nee, ue baat 5 ed and no intention of suc re Ni ee mer ir of mpted suicide against SG OE Erg Rare died Mapecnet Wa . 4d h fe of aaa Re the suis inate hi, fon ing charge Mente Jar- ATi Ly a le couldn't Ma " ve nent far 80 fe will meditate in the court prlaos “en lta’ telegrupnea ‘as | £0" Ave dave, ae FELL FROM “CHUTES, MINEOLA, JI. 1, Bent, 16—Mige Laura Reitz, eighteen yearn old, was red to-day while ‘shooting-the near her home on Main astpeat, la now In the Mineola Hospid)! in sired aid'she received internal it Identifies | By his own admission to Mrs. George F. Jurdine, | story was true. She also belleves that he killed himself because a last ap- | er's morrow for the | | Circulation Books Open to All,”’ ROBBER LOOTS HOUSE, WOMAN CRYING FOR AID ‘Knows No Men Are in the Dwelling and Ransacks Place at His Leisure. | — | |HER RUSE IS A FAILURE. | Thief Mocks Her Cail for “John” Threatening Death if She Opens Door of Room. With ac ching at her | te for yan whien | red In hope ng the ma- . Mes, J. J, Ament. living oe at No. 8) Argyle Prospect Park South, Brooklyn alf hour carly to-d4 door of her bed- | room, threatenes wii!) instant death ff she stopped out Interfere with th looting of the house. Mrs. Ament his | living tn the well-to-do residential section of Pros peet Park South tn the home of her sts. | ter and. prot law, who are aw for the summe With two Mrs. Ament r oto care for the 1 tts lack of mate guardians | the bargiar, who had | al te house. | ng In the rear 1 floor, walle the his morn- She sat man was the hall | | Turned on the Lights. | | Hoping to frighten the man tong! | etuugh to reach the p! Mrs. Ament | turned on the electric ontrotled the her 1 tha lights in the hall and in| m | The man ignored the light and could be heard rummaging in the adjoining | reom. Hoping to decelve the man into be- Meving that there was a man in the auuse MIs. An alled out as theugh trying to awaken a man: A mocking laugh was her only an- swer, tne bur showing that he knew the Gaprc d condition of the huuse, He continued to cauckle as: he moved a nd Mrs, Ament's screams xrd aim gather downstairs, She found that w loud up his Then she heard booty and huery the house had been literally ped of its sil and valuabies, including expensive , an Jostriv boa and other arth 1] mounting to $1,400, | Tae sequel . At 4 o'clock uw squad eight en why hi Just finished tn nights Work bourd- doa Sinithh street car at Cone Island and rode to Park Circle, w of thems transferred to a sever! rankiin ave nue ©. ice Charles W in and Join W. aleager were sitting fa- jside Woen tne conductor culled Meager | jout and related the curious story or a | pass > was sitting treme forward end of the Buod-sizea box, Chase for the Thief. As the car reached the Willink en- | trance of Prospect Park the poli | Rearing the strange story, sturted tow: rd the man, who had Slipped out the front entrance and was headed for a saloon. “Stop or Til blow shouted and the two the hug ex: | our roof a * he policemen charged ¥ word. “Dropping the box he was carrylng, the man dashed up Malbone street to Washington avenue, Msappearing around the corner. When the policemen reached the corner the man had vanished, but a spectator told them he had run toward a negro's shanty near by. A negro sitting in the doorway told ‘he policemen that the mau had sumped trto the cut through which the Brighton Beach line rung at that point. SENT WARNING OF HIS SUICIDE from Baltimore Revealed that Guest of Hotel Had Killed Himself. After writing to his home in Ralti- | more that he Intended to end his fw} J. 8. Green, eighteen years old, who | registered at Roche's Hotel, No, 203 | Vest =‘Thirty-eighth street, Inst Wednesday, was found dead in bed in his room at that hotel to-day with a bullet wound through his heart, The young mai, according to (he hotel peo- ple, came in Jast night from a visit to the theatre in apparently splendia hu- mor, About 10 o'clock this morning the hotel was called up by telephone tron Baltimore by a person who said wne was Green's sister Phe young” woniun told the copie that she had Jusl iwcoived ator Wg hat he ine from her brother sa! tehded to kill himeclt asked that OM at onoy, na be gent to hi hie was done and Green wy! (tee no 3 to 4 slip of fener wane % bill it Wane written communication which was taken jon of by the hotel people ee wp ORO, Coroner, Its purport se the intitle on ) Woman’s Inquiry by Telephone |: - EW YORK, EPTEMBER 16, 1505. BROKER AND HIS ACCUSER. BLACK HAND KEEPS THREAT; WRECKS STORE Brokinn Man Who Went ‘ to the Police Feels Ven- geance of Gang. The barb No. er sh) 812 Flushing ay was wrecked early nal machine placed against the r by mea professedly members of the Black Hand. Liotta was warned a year ago that unless ! a man who would aceost him at York end business would be destr ay was up ye Ever sine of the I ster en velved the first Bridi The year srouk 7 etter Liotta has had the master in the hands of the pol and extra made to apprenend the men who perpe: trated the Fortunately for 1 of we ordinary outrage. Stagg Street Station efforts are being tta he moved away from his Hving rooms tn the rear of the shop @ few months 1 che plosion did damage confined entir property, Liotta cannot do business uncil he furnishes a new shop | he first letter Liotta recelved de- manded $1,000 to be Brook- lyn Bridge. Adorning was a crude dvawing of a coffin 5 vody of a man, The barber ertion to 1 month 2 AMOL ® woulu be Liotta volver, ai until a_mo In the past few days lolte mat hat th firt intimation that th His ‘husness wa the sound of barded the leas. ors meant i} assured within Lown, ago. hop, rou a business: at rmit to carry a re- iyes, of ine Stagg +a @ man to sth night for moncas, Hmaniog Gone ce relaxed, 3 fairly bom- iy Visi Liotta erat he him from bed er shop, at 2 se) yelock th's morning, WOMAN SUICIDE BY In « Sanitarium for Mens to, HANGING ven Reco mranble, Mrs, Bernhetm Eads Her Mfe, A forty years alia. Bern ; dre Aapelia. arm, wh old, recently out of a & paen treated she had ble, comm! nangint ited Bule g herself to the tray mental trou ide this afternoon by om of her home ut No, 2 Base bedroom In her , ry Hundred wid Eleventh atreet, Her mand, leaving her alone for an hour, turned to find her dead, He cut ber down and oP was too, eicjiveim had so far recoversit gy tho saniturhum that or puaband tok he Op! Sweat _sasocta tion ar Wome tn the tone Swat cans velatlo, with ‘her relatives complete oure: ern ‘The 0! Nelghbors in the fhat the couple lived happily 101 said Ei 6 mind was ule had Bo children, LATEST NEWS OF THE DAY —.—__ }a bound for the front platform " scrambled off while the car was going New Mail Driver Hurt. at full Vetestive Wateh Jumped 5 " e form and landed on Samuel Wronkoff, of 220 Bast | from the r plat Broadway. a new mail yn driver, | bie man. A struggle ensued, and the n Was badly beaten by a crowd on + | aerivad two policemen from the Mercer rnoon, Core ‘After Bancroft had been locked up| | Teamsters to Retallate, Detective Walsh was sent home on/| CHICAGO, Sept, 16.—Phe Truck Driv-| sick leave. He had received serious in- ers’ Union tod J the unton! juries to his hip as the result of hls freleht workers that in onse the latter | fight with the big prisoner. trike 0 rier will not ald. th ‘She only injury lo waa a and that no ‘otting and me isos Weer bee permlitence: ration of the right fre ghitn ‘Chou to Pacterson was in court this id the rece f teamet fe but did not appear formatly | =e galnet Bancroft bo, was arralgn j S s rris. hh “dt iscuss her) |Ten Hnrt in Explosion. eT ieaeice the pricier, He waa Dad POTTSVILLE, Pa,, Sept. 16.—Te on ae the detectives pe Ba Ae er ae a at rearralgned an explosion of powder | >omplaints Valley Coal Company's t him todas, and two will | "Burris Is the son of the late Ello: carry ywder Kegs | purrs, of NO. 1s Macon str i motor a keg fell, | ivn, according to the pdlic y| led pow nm contact | that the father died of a bi Ha live w A policeman t 0 exan rfound him suffering ries wind sent Dog Judge Is Dead, MONROL, Davidson, tad Bu dled His a | bei MICH well to-day, aged last {line at while known ‘ acting A show at the Toronto Expoaltion, . SEPT in this cou pe as a dog fancier and judge, eventy ight with as jud. y gan |Killed by Torpedo Boat, CHRISTIANA, . ‘Thirteenth 16.—John| “ Circulation Books Open to All.’’ “BROKER LEAPS FROM GAR TO AVOID ARREST Two Policemen Sit on Him Until He Was Hand- cuffed. “Tf ft hadn't been for those two | policemen coming to your aasistance, Vd have got away from you all tight,” sald Thomas Bancroft, six feet two, thirty-two years old, who sald he was a broker living at Hemprtead. Long jIelind. He was arrested early to-day hurged with giand larceny by Detec- tive-Sergeant Walsh. His real name ie Burris. On the way from Thirty-first: street and Broadway to Police Headquarters Baneroft jumped off the car at Eleventh eet and fell on the stre wl De- tive Walsh on t him. A stru ensued during two police- from the Mer ret Station ed. 1s alleged by Mra. M. L. Patterson, 127 West Fort fifth street, tha! Baneroft borrowed from her nd ring valued at 0. | an of the money and the ring he prom- ised to give back to her af he had invested ft on a horse In a -thing’’ | He first. pawned ring for $50 and after rd raised $125 on tt. Mrs | Patterson alleges she never saw Ban- croft afterwar She complained to the Detective Bureau and Detective Tinker looking for hi ever ioh or St xle me ar 1 ot No on July sit and a diam sure the has been July. Detective Won't Leave Car. eived at elephone message Was adquarters last night to the effect that Bancroft was at Thirty-firat ind Broadway. Detective Walsh was sent uptown :o find him. On the way to Poltce Headquarters in 1 Broadway car Bancroft tried sever: times to get the policeman to leave the car, but the detective refused, Passing Eleventh street Bancroft faeces and A Police H Bancroft was rather the worse ook ve Bureau, he Detec’ he sald, | away from you all right. A ‘Yes. him and T keep up my training.”’ is the result of his son's many pares. GIRL LODGER HELD FOR THEFT Charge Made that Missing Ar- ntry i Norway, Sept. 16.—In ison between a Norwegian tran: ticles Were Found in Her loaded with mines, and a r= , ” oe tte ae Rese Tonabers.| Room—All “Fixed Up” Was two men were Killed, "| Hoe Defense, Nixon Getting Well. f WESTFIELD, y 18.—| Edith Hill, a pretty typewriter girl N passed a comfortable | Wearing on her white shirt walst | conditions favorable | 4 versity pin, which she sald wery, His fever Is decreas: a present, was arraigned | it ee Ket Court to-day on a ena FIRE ON BROADWAY. ‘According to the complaint ‘flea in roa a court the rented a i Blaze Out emen Satd, and Went! at No. a6 Weert Tw Away, to Con two Weeks ago, and shordy are x ane Hook Later, | deere in tne house began to A fire this Noon in the cellar of | Various articles poe six-story building at Nos, 35-847 | Parent a ifrorker, adway went up an atrahaft to ta eee tbs: dtall, Jett eur 1 a oF ooet led by Catlin & ¢ house that doy, stating th Rie sommission mer An aittomatic| was going home to yw Haven for Prougit the firemen, and ye \ itn minutes lyter they went away saying EE ea et Wak nomccied tho fire out init was found a cain which Par- It wasn’, though, and fifteen minutes Id Magistiate Moss ip court to Vater they had the Job to tuckle over | day? had been a {to hin wi Hgain, ‘Tate thme the ontiro building |i three collar i a Bed “wish arme net the few in it bes |" Miew Hil In her defense sald tha came ponicestricken (A half dozen n was “all fixed up” by (0 people in Jelnmbered down the fre-escanes to the! house, and that tt was done during he: Jabsence In 2 ny stre extl i woul an ret Hines. tho: wax Wolu ted, FIRE DP Sou w 00 ot first flo the pled by arrlag losed “n fumes Home two hundred {the upper floors of taurched out safely. about $2,000, lamps, after or the di $20,000. B ors of the build ——_—— QVE GIRLS OUT. |\FELL IN T: to Str m Fought Biase. Fire started this afternoon in the rear of the seven-st Was summoned, but It puilding at No. UM Grand street ovcu-| iiman, w manufacturer of; goaided to-day while emp » had been nen forced trance and Soon extingulsied the) Pap). the pl The tt iris employed fie" bultding were fell. into it, The damage Bhe chain Ja typewriter $5. employ: 1 we. ) per week fo Magistrate Moss nation on Wednesday pail NK OF | BOILING WATER. ex: ing an eet Workman Work» of M Company, Joseph Kroal, a lab ory was terribly poyed 4n the works of the Nichols Chemica! Com at Laurel HUl, L. f, le Was W awlng near a big tank of builing startch, when he slipped and OB tal Hin fellow workmen, rushed to his ald and pul im out, but not “* Until ne had been horribly burned. for wear when he was arraigned before the I could have gotten, I was In the crew of Harvard's football team in ‘vit All WIDOW RAZED ~ MILLIONAIRE’S STONE WALL It Encroached on Her Land and Heppenheimer Wouldn’t Buy. That pecullariy Now Jersey disturber of nelgaborhoods, the splie fence, men- fees the dividing line tween the rest: | dences of William C, Heppenhelmer and | airs. Margaret 1, Beit, a widow, in Jthe most uristocratic residenee seution of Jersey City. Mr, Meppenheimer is President of the Trust Co. of Jers A member of, the state Demveratic Committee and of the Exseutive Com | mlitee of the Public Service Corporation, reputed to Belt has pl Heppentietmer worth $60 of money mansion ts at Jer- | Mrs ty sey avenue and Montgomery street. jan Bel's home, next door, is num- hered 4% Jersey avenue. Up to a short \ume ago the properties were divided by n board fone Mrs, Belt went to the country for a acation and in her iow Mr. Hep- Penhetmer had the board fence demol- hire In its dd ohe caused to be el a wide stone wall Belt was not impressed with stone wall. She wanted to. know why she had not been consulted about ti anuval of old fene Then she som the News. PLUNGED 10 DEATH FROM — HOUSE TOP Joked Fellow-Workmen for Timidity and Then Tum- bled Five Stories. | Owen Mation, foreman for Nichol- son & Galloway, roofers, of No. 64 {Hudson street, rplunged ‘headlong five |stories to death this afternoron while ) at work on the bullding No. 202 Madt- leon avenue, owned by the Astor we and oc ed by Geonge Boyd. Malion, wit veral workmen, had been engaged for several days repai |ing che roofs ofr the Madison avenue house and that of the dwelling No, |17 dest ‘Thiny-fitta street, adjoining Jon the rear. A space of thirtey feet | separates (he roofs af the two houses |ind in order: to\-pame from’ one to//ttis | other mithout going five wiorles to |the ground and up again Mallon to- laay had a ladder placed across the tn- tervening space for use as & foote bridge. When he had done this he remarted to Willlam Kruger, of No. 285 West Fit- teenth street, one of his workmen, thet about flye vears before he had fallen | five stories from a roof. | ‘Better not use that ladder thent' measurements which e- a {in convineds her that A "Hep: bhatt Krugeria:advice, rs stone wail infringed upon| “Oh,” laughed Mallon, “I wasn't hurt x8 fed to get. Mr. Heppen- to amount to anything.’ jiner to move the wall, He refused.| 4 few hours later they had occasion tried to sell him the strip of her} to cross over to the roof of the Thivty- Pe eung, utek ule wall projected. Mr | ritth street house, which is about five feet | iad anaes Y Mive Belt nigher than that of the Madison avenue were was a conference between the! bullding? | lawy ee ne ne, a ¢ nm r, ne it Kruger crawled over on his bands and Was Agreed that surveyors should set-| pny Ue the location of the wall, They found] SWe¢s and Mallong luughed ¢t him. esterday that the wall was nine {nea mented Mallon. 3 over the line of Mrs, Belt's propert ‘ine foreman crossed successfully, imight and early to-day a gang of work-| walking upright, bat as he returned he | = socceted by Mrs. Belt, razed the! toppled and feli head foremost to t] wa id, Polleeman ‘Muicahey, of And now Mr. Heppenholmer threatens ‘Thivtleth Street Station, who was spite fence as high as Mrs. Belt's|assing, saw him tumble and without louse |watting’ to see how CONFERENCE ON YELLOW FEVER Governors of Twelve States Sign Call for a Meeting to Devise Uniform System of Quarantine. CHA PTANO( A forinal call for a cont South- ern representative mer veld in thin in ember, was lxsued to- jay is signed by twely nd the oftels f the Cha ‘omme of cities i after recitin ye prosperity and bus! less growth of the South and {te pros- pects, saya ea) attempt that 18 has been ma and o} t th ues of yellow fever, at 4 unne th sary most and surdensome ed | erippte measures have been adopt- only tended to come and Ime but which reilected on the ve oul ommon humanity and yelviligation itself ofore, some | ne should be the appre- n Ize the angers resulting from an outbreak of | this’ disease. Tyas 1s ary If we | would sa the de- moralizing ani a pante Inapin dencies of Yat a KOMURA IS BETTER. HE at) | Waidorf-Antorin, n No-Day. Baron Komura, the Japanese pene envoy, whe I) at the Waldorf-As- toria, ts sald to be Y uy. Dr, Prite ad Dr i alled on the patient i 9 o'clock and Wlerward Mr. Suto, Uie secretary, Dr, F M toha. Al Hage the past twenty-four e to the patient Haron Komura was much che day byt celpt of a ea the Mikado expressing hopes for —___——. ORPHAN BOY KILLED, a 5 hird-floor win npanions, at the nee ne “th } bu twhen the aor ariing, airived the boy 0 ee, BETTER THAN HARLM, NEARER THAN BRONS. GET RICH BY BUYING NOW at East Elmhurst ‘ir CITY N PLOTURESOUE FLUSHING Xt mi aR Half Hour from Herald Square, Be. BY TROLLEY. Send Postal for Circular and Views. Bankers Land & Mortgage Co,, 885 Manhatian Ay. Bikiva. No ¥ badly Mi hurt telephoned «9 the New al for an ambulance. made his way pore nan had lon was ‘ork Hos- tothe’ yard where th 0 the yard where t an he landed. me ound a spark of life in the mam’ body and fixed him up as well as he could with the ald of piulows and Dlankets until the urrival of the am- bulance. ‘The surgeon who came mith |the ambulance pronounced Mallon dead when he got there. Matlon was single, forty-five years old, and! Nyed at No, 684 West Thirty- ninth street — 400 RAN FROM BIG MILL BLAZE Staten Island Firemen Have a Lively Fight with Flames in Plaster Plant, and the Em- ployees Get a Scare. Four hundred men and women had to run from a biaze that destroyed the plaster mills at Richmond Ferry, New righton, 8. [., ta The rush had some of the elements of a pante, but nobody The was Inju big after hud Just returned to h when the fire, start- ing in the -room, rapldiy spread Jto the main bullding and then to @ structure adjoining, All the firemen on Staten Island were summoned to the scene and by hard work conlined the flames to the plant The lime used at the mill ignited and burned fiercely for hours. ‘The damage was estimated 31 "LION BRAND FOR MORE THANA QUARTER CENTURY THE LEADING 2 FOoR25° COLLARS UME AS THE TEST OF sist “LION BRAND 4uavs DENTISTRY Tose) aivtiod 18a distinct ade tal science, originated, pacented by Dr Maran There sity for @ set of fal Specialists with ¥ disposal: reasonable Off 08 week days only. ne foe free to all GORDON MARTIN, WH 8 -, Suite 704, 320 5th Av., Cor, 32d NRW YORK, pmintments be listen telewram oF ‘phone ApmintNer ond Madinon Square) at your bata anieed IMPCRTANT! For the convenience of the residents of THE BRONX ‘The World Has fetablished @ Branch Office at 658 East 149th Street, ANBAR aD AY, leh will be opened in = few Cay Be geauption Of aavertiooments, Te ee ee eee ee

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