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| | ~ GALS WIS WON BATTLE WITH BURGLAR Miss Schwab Induced Big Negro to Leave House by Strategy. SPRANG FROM CLOSET. | Demanded Money, but Ree fused to Take Valuable | Diamond Rings. TOLD HARD-LUCK TALE. ‘Accepted $3 Cash and Made Girl Promise She Would Not Notify Police, Police of the Eas Sixty-sey Btreet Station hewun to-day to pew tor & negro tunglar, bold and desper- ate, who entered the hame of L. BR. / Sohwab, No, §9 Bust Seventy-seoond | stree:, and was found there by Miss Theresa Sohwab, the latter's daugiter upon her return from the Horse Show, | The police were not told of the burg lary untt long atier tt occurred, and when they loarned the fnots they agreed that only the bravery of Miss Sohwab faved her from being dered by «he intruder. The young woman {s very atimotive, | tall, with big gray eyes and brown hair, | On Thursday night a8 Schwab was & guest, with other girl friends, at « box party at the Horse Show. A sup. per followed at Sberry's, It was nearly 1 A. M. when Miss Schwab a home, on the north aside wecond street just east of Thief Grabs Girl's Arm. Miss Schwab was ind 1 to-day but her proud er told just wha happened to tt ng lady, She said; | “Theresa had place) a chatr in front of hor dressing table preparatory to pitting up her hair for the night, had Temoved her waist and went to the closet in her room, which 1s In the front of the fourth floor, As she opened the door and put her hand | to get & dressing sacque or 4 kukmono with which over her shou dors a man inside wet erabbed her] farm and held to tt "She screamed, but although maids were asleep in the roar same floor, none heard her, My ad, my son and myse Wn rooms on the floor under dh} pot hear he “iohet man paid afraid, 1 won't vell-dust keep quiet | “Tyoresa fell to the floor and was fainting when the negro stepped the closet and lifted to a Ag he did this he was saying "Now, don't come here to won't murder you ot a sick mother and I can't ve gat to have money to burt you, My mot I bave to help her in some way ol at venty- | avenue. he severa Li © asieop | We to hurt her: n but de Ou; Burglar Demands Money. “ ‘Oh, picswe go away,’ here him, as she recovered herseit have anything 1 have, but a Bo away. jut I must have mon y,’ he por-| sisted. | “Theresa reached for her purse and| threw it to him, telling him to take 9, | He opened it and found only % at | fan't enough,’ he sald, tossing it back | &o ber, ‘I must h more.’ "That's all T have, but take my jewels,’ tny daugh- | ter sald, and she tore her rings from | er fingers and threw them to him hey were worth several hundred dol. | fue, The negro looked at them and as he put ther down on the drewsnec table he said: ‘They won't do me any| d_get collared trying to pawn I must brave money,’ '"Phet's everything I have,’ aid, gaining mor Theresa | courage and edging hone in her room: | me where you live of your sick mot! " you too, only you must leave anes.’ "He saw her move toward the tele- phone and he walked over to the wail and tore the instrument down, break ing the wires off and leaving the paratus on the bed. * where L live, You might have of heart,’ he sald to her police.” “It I promise not to tell any one, | even my own folks, that you were here. | will you go away right now?’ she asked A cha ‘and tell im. "Be studied It over for a minute and| then said; ‘Well, I guess I got timo the wrong place. If I go now and quietly you will promise to tell no one, not éven the police, or will not even try to give a doseription of me? ‘Oh, rit promise that, and anything else, only go before It fs too Inte, “Well, you'll have to come down to] the front door wit me and let me out, | as you mieht wake vour folks before 1/ got_out if T left you here” he sald. “pherosa sald she would go and t| 9 the closet to get her kimono. During er conversation she had been in her] bare rhoulders and arms, Makes Thief Take Cash. “When she had put the garment on ricked un the purse the man had thrown back to her and she made him take its contents. Ho did not want to at, first, bot Mnally accented 'Thoy walked down the three Jong | fights of stairs together to fiont el THAT RANTANKEROUS MAN UP THE RIVER, BY T. F, POWERS, GOING To SEE THEIR FRIENDiUP THEIRIVER MAKING HEA THe RIVER WAITING Te BE CALLED Th THE STAND ChOWO SEES MA ~—LLED ONL" Car Coupler Slips on Track and Is Crushed by | Wheels, | Hundreds of men, women and younn | girls saw a man killed at the Cypress Mills station of the Lexington Avenue | Blevated road In Brooklyn early to-Gay. | and for more than an hour the manmled | body lay on the sdation platform while the various trains were filled up with passengers The accident happened at the bustest | time at that station. Fully 90 persons were on the platform walting for a train for Manhertan. The dead man ywas William Barry, twenty-four years} }old. of No, GTA Summer street, Brook- liyn. He was employed as a car coupler |hy the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Com- pany and was @ careful man. It was just about 6.30 o'clock when employees staried to make up @ (raln, Barry stood down on the track ready to couple an approaching motor car which came along at a slow rate of speed. Barry stepped in front of it, and as he did so he slipped on the olly thes and fell under the wheels. WER OH STD SENS T STORY |Declares Corcoran was Slain by Two Strangers—Trial Ends To-Morrow. Jacob Frederick Bauer, indicted for the killing of Thomas Corcoran, an JL road tleket chopper, of No, 10 Third avenue, on the night of Oct, 13, went on the stand in his own defense to-day before Judge Cowing and a jury In General Sessions, The prosecution had closed and sev- gral employees of the Union| Squar Hotel, where Bauer had worked a elevator attendant for six years, had testified in his behalf, Bauer seemed | remarkably cool In the face of the/ ghastly crime of which he ts accused. He repeated in detail the story hej) told the police after his arrest: That he and Corcoran invited two strangers to Bauer's apartment and that they were both drugged and the erlme commitied while he was insensl- ble. The trial will %e concluded to- morrow, SLIM LOT OF BIDS FOR NEW CITY BIDS. Two Syndicate Tenders and In- dividual Offers to Take Small Amounts Received, door, past the mame in which the reet of the family were asieen, and she onened the door for him, “Now, don't you tell,’ he said, ae he etepped out won't, you may depend on me,’ sho replied, and he ran away in the darkness, My dawghter then collanrad fs she closed the door. But she quickly recovered and went to her tom. To rext day ahe had a high fover and we pia al ase rae DAY brain fi Doctors attended her, but she kept. h boomise to the burglar, never tative ane of ws about ble visit, ‘To friends ehe inadvertently spoke of her expari- ence, and tn that manner the story reached ve, Even then I had a hawt tlme getting her to te me the story Rhe wanted te keep her promise of silence to the burglar,’ CHIEF'S AUTO HITS WOMAN. Croker, Bound Down Mra. Patello on Broadway, 'HAD HIS POCKETS FULL OF STOCKINGS, Dgtectives Found Twelve Pairs in Reynolds's Newmarket and Held Him, Two capacious pockets in the tails of the handsome Newmarket coat worn by Harry Reynolls, who with Mrs, Mary Ray was arraigned in Jefferson Markee Court to-day charged with shoplifting, yielded up twelve pairs of #ilk stockings and fourteen and a half yards of velvet, all worth $60 Ay heither Reynolds nor Mra. Ray ts a cen- tipole, Detectives Pogurty and Funston | dectded that the man was varrying too many stockings for his good. Keynolds who is thirty-two years old and Her) he Is {salesman living at the Cadillac Hotel, was seen with.) Tie te twenty-eight years ola tna. Hee ». 2% West One Hundred and Twen- ty-fifth atreo’, carefully serutiniging the goods on the counters of a Broadway to Knocks Just ap Mra, Caroline Patello, of No, 807 West Forty-third street alighted from a car in front of No, 72 Broad+ Wily this afternoon, Chief Croker's au- tomobile came dashing along. eit figucl Mrs, Fatelio. aaal lew -goods store Yesterday afternoon her down, She was taken to Bt. ant House Detective Connor detained Cent's Hospital in a cab suffering from] ticom until Wogarty and Funston ar- A fevere contusion of the rieht leq, root, Comptroller Grout opened bids to-day | for $12,500,000 three and a hakt per cent. New York City gold bonds exempt from jall taxation except for State purposes, There were niniteen bids, and the rep- GRIEF CAUSED THE * DEATH OF VETERAN, Eckstein, Mourning for His Dead With, te resentation in the audience of dig finacial houses was romarkably _sfim, xception of the syndicate " rvey, blsk & Co, and Parson, | Daughter, Stricken with Lach & Co., who bld for all, only $90,000 of the amount wi bid for, Apoplexy. Practically all the bids wore from ka! y | dividuals and for small sums. One bid- Grief caused he death at midnignt| der, Harry Horn, bid for 810 worth at! of Iseac Eckstein, a prominent G. A. R,|2 per cent. premium, and sent two} man and uncle of Abraham Gruber, | dimes to conform with the rule that lawyer ted politician, Although apo-| Glan’ °° DO Sent: deposit on al plexy was given as the cause, those who bids, Exorpt one bid, which was rejected, | know Mr, Eckstein believe he died from | #ll were above par. the keenness of his grief for his daughe erg He Geen aan tein tle atta "ten oe pA Neb scty Tecently | became) average, price of a little les than $101, Mre. Emmanuel urts and who died | 4 e " lust. werk. Mr. Bokatein Was door [Orta tla neues Were Announced Mr, ;Son of Chicago Millionaire, | et : , Whe soit i Bibi at Pia rT FIELD SHOOTING 1S TAKEN UP BY POLICE >. Likely to Recover, but Facts Sought, FATHER SPEEDING WEST; Young Man's Friends Unite in De- claring He Received His Wound Accidentally, (Special to The Evening World.) CHICAGO, Nov. %.—Hope that Mar shall Field, Jr, will recover was (engthened greatly by the stitements of his physichan and of visitors to his vedside In Mercy Hospital toaiay, After STRANGE MISTER + OF YANSHED AUTO |Policmen on Trial Because Opera Machine Got Away. | Singer Jerome's | Deputy Polt nmlastoner MeAvoy loft is Mulbersy street trial room day reoing red and yellow a He had conducted his firs the mystery | ot m1 omiabilless om the disap: of Gr into ving 1 red touring car the gor, T last duly. even nts towtifed pearan ald ¢ car van men and two serg case, which de against Policome THtsey and Mast Fifty-first © hang on In f ered patrol in opera st Patrick R John Murphy. o set station, for fa the red auto, Ret omer to any out red automobile each ry oft must be a visit to the sick bed this afternoon, Dr, Robert H. Harvey eaid Mr, Fiel) hag an even chance for recovery. Yes, I think he has better jan an even ahance, Gunshot wounds of any kind in the abdoinen are neces sarily dangerous, but the operation stopped the hemmorhage and resulted n the removal of the bullet, The effect ot shock on Mr. Field's system appa eotly was slight Friends and relatives of young Mr. Field indignantly denied to-day that here was any possibility of ve bullet being other than in an accidental man- ner, Mr. Fields himself told physicians it was an accident, (iis friends declare ho had everything to live for, was en- tirely happy and that all circumatances confinm ube statement that it was an aceldent \Nouwilhstanding these denials Chief | ot Police Collins to-day made the an- uinouncement that he had ordered an investigation of the circumstances sur- rounding the shooting, The Chief de- clared ie had already sent out men and would carry out the work, as in the) case of any citizen who was shot under | similar chroumstances, | Mr, Field's first words upon regaining consciousness were In the nature of a followed in its prop order, Last July Gerald Gerome, who {a now at Hot Springs, wanted to sell a red car for which he asked $4.10, On a Thursday he sent the auto to the garage of a Mr. Levitt at Nos. 54 and| 66 Wot Forty-thind street, who evinced a desire to pur Mr, Ge ne stated afterwamd that “ve got a note for $4100 from Mr. which was only a He note when he wante | real money asked for the return of the machin mal | | On the follov asked In valn Saturday he saw his qestion asking how had been shot The young man'@ wite ts keeping a continuous vigil in the room adjoining that tn which her husband les uncon scious at Mery Hogpttal Marshall Field, sr, who ts hurying from New York on a apectal train over the Lake Shore roa, is expected to reach Chicago early thia evening. The the roue and all other trains ordered to give way ‘The millionaire merchant will at once | be hurried to the bedside of his injured | pon, | FIELD MANAGER UNDER OPERATION, | R, C, MvPherson, representative of Marshatl Field in New York, Is fll at his home, No, %1 West Ninety-thind street, Mr. McPherson has been fn fll health for nine months with liver com- plaint and an operation was performed on him last night. | Mr. McPherson was told of the shoot- ing of Field to-day BLOOD CLOT FOUND Captain of Harvard Football Team Will Have to Un- dergo Operation. (Special to The Evening World,) BOSTON, Vv, %.—The real reason why Capt. Hurley, of the Harvard foot- ball team, will not be able to play in the big Yale gamo on Saturday js that switches have been spiked down along | * pres Jan upper floor ON HURLEY S BRAIN - car standing in front of Leavitt's garage got in 1 and was going to recliim It nN Mr. Levitt and several helpers attacked him, ‘J Was an exciting skirmish all over the carmine car that soon ft 5 The police made prisoners of the war ring men and drove them to the Bast] Fittyefirst stre ation In the red auto. At the station-house the opera | singer and Mr, Levitt ante charges assault, The eunt at the desk hold the red car as Wyhiblt A and ordered Policeman Rogera to take jt! to the age of a Mr. Bowman, which | adjoined the garage of Mr, Levitt. As| Rogers is not a chouffeur Mr. Levitt | volunteered fis services and ran. the car in garage, Hog ley ing It Was the galage of M my Rogers had been detailed to waten ine | ar until he Was relieved, His rollet | came in the pers ot Policeman Ditsch, and Rogers red getaway { Ditsoh thar th 8 that Mr machine Was fnto. be ielleved in r Murphy. Murphy wa In ar rivirg, and Ditsch went downstairs to too Why he delayed. Here the. plot and mystery becomes almost glucose Downstalrs Ditech met Plain Clowes Men Summers and) Conroy. Ditsen asked them If he Was correet in wateh- Ing the ellow aut ey reassured him, he declares, ‘Then he went out acd cormik| Policeman Murphy... } turning to the Levitt girage, he BAW a ed airto at the entrance, Conroy and niners stan bine de it M Hy had an tden that the auto was red and plain elsthes men, ask ¥ agsured him i ved thelr hands t man int Ine car aa he drove off. Murphy upon went Upstults to watch the yellow. mach As Ditech left tim| and pass olares tha aml the men say: “Let's get out o well make money somewhere elas,” “When all this teat nr mt upon record By fren out Avoy looke and nde fourned the case ervina’ Ruslit The red auto |# still among the van CONSUMPTION NO LONGER A FATAL DISEASE, Symptoms of the early st. Sumption are so silght and failing health, loss of appeti or a clinging cough or cold warning of the dangers of nogivet ‘agos of con DRE | should be a he has a blood clot on the brain, The condition of the big Harvard captain is serious, and an operation will be neces- sary at once. Outside of the loss of Hurley's eervicee in the most im- portant game of the season, the develop: ment of this trouble is grave because | it has again started the tulk of tho! faculty interfering with the game at the university ater Saturday, Early in the season Hurley wae in- jured in @ game and an examination showed that he had broken a tendon in his thigh, In this same game he was kicked on the head. He jaid off for some time, but managed to round to | for the Pennsylvania game at Philadel- | ia two weeks ago. He played in the | Dartmouth game inet Saturday and in one of the scrimmages he was again urt, Coach Reld last night gave it out that) the tendon had parted again and that | Hurley could not possibly play, More than this he did not say, but to-day It ig learned that a blood clot has formed on the brain and that Hurley’ con- dition is causing the physiciang great alarm, ‘There 's gloom at Cambridge over the matter, Wendell, who will take Hur- jace In the game, is an aggres- fast player, and may acquit him- elf as well as Hurley would, But Hurley i the team captain, and with the captain off the field a team like Hervard is seriously handle \. Again, Hurley is very popular, and the chance that his Injuries may result fatally has caused unt | apprehen- ton. Me statement from the physicians is expected late this afternoon, ————=—_— Two Reform Governors to Speak, | Gov, Folk, of Missourl, and Gov, La! ot Wisconsin, are scheduled | at the annual entertainment | Modern Woodmen of America, Lexington Opera-House, on Fri day evening, This fraternity was or. ganized (wenty-three years ago to pro- vide cheap insurans enrollment of of 2000, da membership GRAPE-NUTS | PUDDING keeper of Part Il, General Seasionas, ” I laust night at midnight he was taken | ag i ie becoe tats bees ole il and called to his wife that he was Y dyng. A physician was summoned, but bderwonted van aLW tee fan Jasst | death came soon, Mr, Eoksteln, was sixty-two years old | Week an advertisement . and lived at No. 129 Bast One Hundced | Pers offered half a million dobiars jand Fixtyeevond, atreet. He was com-| Worta of city bonds at par, This con- mander of Phil Sheridan and Elsworth | dition ts the result of the mon Fonts G. A. Re. and commander of the Liaw, won by exempting the ebrew Vote ssoolation ‘ « (faxes Eliy'on New Pork, We presided se the from the State tax provides & 4 1-2 per | serent inyelling of the Jowlsh Heroes | Cent, rite DELICIOUS! Try one for DESSERT, ated, | olly vapors are breathed Into the alr tubes. | Tt has a total) Consumption in the frat stage ism treated, by the family doctor, for t or asthma or catarrh of the tube of frst 8 of consumption, only meany of examining these diseases has been to from the outside or by ase the mping the chest, | You may have consiimpiton and not k ft, or you may fear that you have con sumption and yet have only bronchitis. | asthma or a catarrh of the tubes, An examination by the Dr, Anderson X-Light will clear up all doubts. correct doctors’ mistakes, because It rovenls in-| ntly the extent, severity and a stage of any disense of the tubes or Jungs By his skilful use of bis X-Light, Dr Anderson ts able to differentiate and noi | confuse catarrh of the tuber with asthma or mistake consumption for bronchitis, The Dr. Anderson X t detects the very earliest stages of consumption before the tubercle bacilli appear, and in time to | effect a speedy cure. In connection with this absolutely ao curate means of determining a true ding nosis, and with the most modern methods for the successful treatment and cure of lung diseases, Dr. Anderson uses his new Inhalation treatment | Ly this process the medicated, healing reaching directly to the seat of the disenae doatroying the germs, clearing out the mu. cus and healing the sore spots, This Inhalation principle, as used by Dr. | Anderson for the past ten years in his clinic and private practice, ts the only pos. | sible method whereby @ germ-killing, heal. ing medication may be sent directly Into the lungs and to the diseased parts Medicine, drugs or “cough mixtures" taken Into the stomach never cured in| ) Chic Skirt Sale glish Walking Skirts, & @) Ens Dressy French Styles, p58 and $10 Models, @ Beautiful Thanksgir Gf ine Offerings, Genuinely stunning separate skirts that have the style and newness of the finest Winter costumes—drawn from many high-priced assort- ments for Friday, New Battenberg Cheviots, Rich Broadcloths, Attractive Cameron Checks, in new green and blue colorings. Popular Scotch Plaids, This sale includes every mode! for every purpose—serviceable street skirts, warm Winter walking skirts, effects, dressy plaited and knee kilt models—a stun- ning variety at an almost incredible price, $5.98. & We invite comparison ot BENSDORP’ ROYAL DUTCH COCOA with any other make, It leads at every poitit, and is most economical because of its double strength, Remember the YELLOW WRAPPER, / Use Bensdorp’s Cooking CHOCOLATE (Blue Wrapper). ” Tailor Shops: 110 Fifth Av, Aftertiury Sistem Clothes Suits at $25.00 Your tailor would charge you double, Ready-to-wear, top-o'-the-style, hand-teilored sack suits—cut and put ! together’ with the best custom tailor art. Pure wool worsteds in grays, blues, blacks and self-colored plaids. Only at the Lambert Stores, “Ask _the Man Who Wears _Th | Salesrooms: . | Clothes, 89-41 Cortlandt St, Also ‘ | Furnishings, New Haven, | Shoes, Hats. AMBER Conn. - _—_ — single case of lung trouble. Such medi eines generally contain alosbol or opiates and are injurious to the stomach. Consult Dr. Anderson, the only axpert X- Light lung specianst tn New York, and find out the true condition as It actually exists inside the (ubes or lungs, before incurable | stages develop. | To thone patients who feel that their con dition has not been fully understood, Dr. | ‘Anderson extends an opportunity for’ con sultation and X-Light examination without any charge, Hours—10 to 5 (Sundays, 11 0 2); Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings till & OMce, [0 West 224 at, New York (between bth and 6th avs,), A meeting of mambers of the ROYAL ARCANUM willbe held at Terrace Ganten, Iti B.08th a on Friday evening, Nov, , at 8 o'clock, All membera who obfect to the new rates arr Invited {> be present * THE FINAL (PINK) EDI- TION of The Evening World, cn sale everywhere, contains Complete Charts of the Day's Racing and the Results of All the Day's Sport ) AAA AAAS No little gift is appreciated more than a box of good candy. Loft sells all ‘inds and every k the best, and al only a PENNY A POUN? PROUTT, SPECIAL FOR THURSDAY, |. p ap t van pourn15¢ DRILLIANTS .,..POt sv lOc SPECIAL FOR FKIDA ie ASSO pounD lve “thocora’ Park Row Swe Oven Eve CHAMPAGNE WAFERS ngs Until 10 tbs Man. We will doliver 1 to at the following rates hatlan lalund, lo, Br Cor. West B’ 29 CORTLANDT ST, Jersey City, Hoboken or The Brat i & ae s Cor.ChurchSt. | ane dnl aes ex (0% PARKROWG NASSAU, ‘our Special. Mail 3 At City Hall Park. (ane eeemreee