The evening world. Newspaper, December 17, 1907, Page 3

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PETER SRS RN ne pe ater a CRACED BY LOVE, KILLED IRL AND HIMSELEW AUTO Wallace Planned Murder and) Suicide in Taxicab Be- fore Tragedy. | { { | L : RIVALWON SWEETHE: * Sten i i Miss Kerlein Had Refused to! to ‘ -| to the po- Nee, that young Bernard H, Wallace, of No, 76 Jefferson‘avenue, Brooklyn, shot Miss Elsie Kerlein, of No. M77 Bushwick avenue, /frooklyn; to death and then blew out bis own brains Secause she had | g refused to break lier engagement to Al- ? Dert Maegi!, of Borough: Park, and be- , i The police 10 be Wallace had | come his brid Ni the girl and| in his pocket ne went to meet evening. He r to become | aths, and her refusal in} deliberately planned her afte: e theatre la had. been pleading with 1 his wife for m believed te and despair that his mind Binged. Deliberately Planned Murder. + Te is thou! aw © s0 arous also, that when the cou- ple took the taxicab at Forty-second street and Broadway, Manhattan, and started to drive to Brooklyn Wallace! had fully made up his mind to kill both, as ali his arguments during dinner, which the two had taken together at the Histel Knickerbocker, had been in vain. Wallace's mother had not been told of hia sulclde and the murder of the girl. She fs Il, and.{t ts feared tie news will | her death. 4 Jace learned a few weeks axo that in Was enga to marry Was then he gave rein to Miss Maegil. It this jealousy. © He learned also that} Ofiss Kerlgin-and Maesli expected to pe mattied in February next, and bexan’| to despair. Last Friday he sent Elsie word! that he could not endure the thous’ of her approaching. wedding, and that he was Kolng far away for employment and a change in the hope he might be cured of his infatuation for her. “I have given up my position," “Give me one last day. > Monday, and jet Us say good by. ‘The girl debated the wisdom of tho step, her sister sald, and at Jength consented. He sent her a ticket for tho Victoria Theatre matinee yéater- day and met her after the -perform- ance. They went to the Knickerbocker Jiotel, Broadway and Forty-second street, and had dinner. They were recognized there, because the man ined frequently in the restaurant. They sat over thetr dinner an hour and thelr actions did not attract at- tention. He left the table near the ‘end and telephoned for a taxacab, The fdea of murder was in his mind thea apparently. D. F. Kilmartin, of No. 405 West One Bundred an& Twenty-fourth “street, was the chauffeur, He met the couple fn front of the Knickerbocker, 77 Young Woman In Tears, he t me “They stood talking on the pavement for a few minutes," said the chauffeur Jast night. ‘She was crying, I did: yay much attention to it. I thought qnaybe it was a lovers’ quarrel. ‘She Wid not want to go In the cab. Hoe was inalsting, and. she finally sald, ‘Ad right,’ and thoy got in, As they eatered he told me to go to Brookiyn by way of the Williamsburg Bridge. When ¢ taxacab had crossed the bridge, Wallace told the driver to go di- rectly to Bedford avenue and down the avenue to Eustern Parkway, At this : point the fatal shots wern fired, eg NO SIGNS, NO SEAT WITH EVERY FARE ON 5TH AVE. If City Interferes with Advertise- ments on Motor Stages Plans Cannot Be Carried Out. Justice Leventritt’ took teatmony and heard argument In the Supreme Court to-day. reserving duction {nthe action Of the Fifth Avenue Stage Coach Com- pany to’ permanently enjoin. the city ame 1.0 ity eaten cr vet authorities from Interfering “with the @dvertising signs which run lengthwise j on the roofs of the motor ‘buses and «tinder the railings of the winding staire } leading to tire roof, peut y j These cara are used ax much for i Sightseeing ax for transportation up ana down Fifth avenue, und the societies i whlch have been engaged for years in j _ efforts to make New York a city beauti- i ful are back of the fight against the red advertising signs on the Fifth ave- nue motors, President: Richant W, Meade said the income from these advertisements wax $10,000 a year and was absolutely neces- wary to ke out the earnings of the wtages from fares to a atage make both ends é {Tite rant enables un to carry ont our pian to give @ reat for e yf ye anor ¥ fare,"” wale Seven ail Bi So.remenbder,t SE Use Wont! Fina Wanthds AF ing. ‘edge that Parisian dandies are basing | workmansiip. And the making up of Oi vuss: ‘Mbres Weald B\as.are beers Cringing many a leer. Sosy fall woney cofiars. = While American Women Seek French Men Swellest Tailor in Paris Comes Here Every Year to Pick Up Ideas, and His Son Is Takin a Course in Our Sarto’ Architecture. GIVt NECK AND SHOULDERS. That's Where We Excel, Says This Expert; So Maybe Paris - Believes: That Properly Pad- | ded Shoulders Will Serve. Better. to Attract the Heads “of Our Lovely Girls. By Edna Cain. | “The Fifth a ue tailor im the best ‘in| » world. young Monsieur G. Har- | rison to me yesterday, He 1s the son of one-of—the~ best-known tailors of Paris, ahd te here to study his business) for the reason given, Thus !t hax remained for the New! York-tailor to wipe from our nartorial| ‘scutcheon the blot put upon it by Paris) modistes who dress our women in French fashions, } | Now,..when an American woman boa r pride may be soothed by the know!- their reputation for being well dressed upon the American‘cut of thelr clothas. My father comes over-here about once a yeir to xet new ideas about the cut of clothes,” sald M. Harrison, “and I have been here two years studying: with Mr. Graziade, I will stay another year, when, I think..I will know all the) becrets of the American cut and fintsl of men’s garments.” “Wherein are the American tallors #0} superior?” Ky “Oh, the shoulders! The collar!” sald M. Harrison. with true Gallic enthu- asm. ‘There is nothing ike the way New York tallors build coats. The ft of the collar requires the moat delicate the shoulders—that ts a special art-/ Our Louse advertises “The cmpecial Aniertcan atyle and that means that} mar 3 Of cut and finish havo a! longer—what do you ca}! {t?—tenue.” if The London Tailor a Has-Been. “] supposed you' Would co to London to study tailoring,” sald I. having an {dea somewhere in my head that Eng- lish ‘tailors thought extremely well of themselves. I've been to London,” said M. Harri- son, Andifforently. “The London tallors used to be the best, dut within recent years American enterprise haa put the New York tatlor at the very top of his profession, The New York tallor Is original and brings out new ideas, and our Paris dandies. of course, like the new thingy In clothes.”" 1 had a moving picture of the Parisian young man of fashion arraying him- elf In the grand garments and pal sionate waistcoats affected by some Americans and the joy he would feel exhibiting himself, ts of hor Parix frocks our national lA Samuel M. HE SLAIN WER OF MARY DEFEND WIFE AANST IASAIT CHAR Incarceration of Woman Bellevue Protested by Friends. In In the West Side Police Court Thurs- day morning Mrs. Eva Fales Jones will be arraigned before Magistrate Wahle | And disposition made on the question whether or not she js of unsound mind. host of friends of the women de lured to-day their intention of being Prement when her case is called, These woarey potest) THE EVENING WORLD. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 17 Parts-Vade Gowns Demand the New York Cut in Clothes KAT — 4 4 tow) 5 1907. SIGHTLESS GIR “WILL STUDY T0 APPEAR IN OPER | Miss Robertson, of Brookly Ditficulties in Her Work. SINGS |, Succeeded, Why Should H ‘Not 1?” She Asks. Messrs. ing Anchor line, persona have known Mrs. Jones in- Sears, and all de- she shown the siighteat trace of mental irregularity, Dr. Walter Hastings Jones, husband of the woman now confined and under observation in the Bellevue Hospital paychopathic ward, has left the city, so it was said at the Omaha apartment- house, Sixty-ffth stret and Broadway, to-day. Dr. Jones was until recently a house physician at the Ansonia, He Js now living with a family named Clark at the Omaha. It was at the instance of Dr. Jones that his wife was taken Into custody on Saturday and com- mitted to Bellevue. Up to the time of her arrest Mra. Jones was stopping with Dr. and Mrs. Reynoida, at No. 173 Wem Elghtyifirst street. Dr. Reynolds de- olared to-day that Mrs. Jones is per- fectly sane “He ta an elderly. physician, with considerable experience in judging, tmately for neve: clare that never has cases of mental ‘troubles. Dr. Herman Grail, of No. 10 West One Hundred and Twentieth «treet, has known Mrs, Jones for years that ahe has never siiown symptoms of Insanity, He says Dr. Gregory, in charge of the psycho- pathic ward at Bellevue, refused to dis- ‘Mrs. Jones's case to-da other “Bathhouse John" Coughlin, of Chi-|than to iy: vf f0.- haying loxt, political prestige.) "It would not be proper for me, to ig make any statement now ss might find congenial work in Haris) Tare "condition. The time, for me to showing them just what real clothes are. Sa aasEe “How Is it that Frenchmen, who claim rupremacy in” fashion, haye failed to fashions for men?” J evolve the beste inquired, a ‘Well, I think they have concentrated all thelr art on women's clothes and buts, and have neglected the men, French Not So Freakiah in Dress. “But Frenchmen do not really wear the freakish clothes you sec in car- toons." (Sea Mr, Long's cartoons with | this.) ‘ThGlr trousers fit, And this overcoat Iam wearing, which was made ‘at my father's place—don't you think it is quite American In cut?’ he maid, proudly, evidently feeling the jov of attainment. I inferred that all Frenchmen did not realize that they had. been cut un- der by the New York tallors, for M. Harrison sald: ~~ “I am the only Frenchman in New York who is studying tailoring, |We have ‘a good many American patrons, | and they demand the highest standard of make and atyle. They are accus- tomed to it. and know {t when they ve it." All thin was very Interesting, In view of the criticisms of M. Alexandre Ular editor of Le sett Journal, who is now visitine New York. He not only 4 clinea to think American women di: Ungulshed looking in their French . but he thinks our ‘men sloppy, | OW fooking Io--thelr business clothes, He complaing thet, they wear derby’ hata! anc sack coats to their oMces [natead! of the silk hat and frook coat attire of the Frenchinen. I mentioned thin to M. Harrison, and he said. “tt in true that the morning dress of | the American business man {s not as) formal as that of the Frenchman, but conditions are different, Buatneaa lito Ix. more ‘leisurely in Paris, and people take more time to dress and to tunch, | Fifth Avenue Tallors the Best. |, “But all that does not affect the fact | that the best tallora in the world are on Ektth avenue’—that was the way he sald it-'aind, ie American Mien, aa! a rule, have Sxtremely fine figures, | from the tallor'n point of view, They are so ere and have splendid shoul- ders, Which show the fit of the garment off ‘to perfection,“ The French—welt, there's Fomething different," and) he gcd his own shoulders express- 3 good Kp WW . | > | | dgoave best, you want der the stove. jaunt, [cian at the Black make svch a statement a when I serve notice on the court as to what my ob- servations have xhown, done on Thursday, observation for Mrs. Jones will end to- morrow night.”* This will be ‘The legal pertod of THIS GIRLS XMAS WAS SCORCHING FIRE Little Philomena Wanted a Doll, but She Chased the Cat and May Die. Now you be a good little Kirt while Iam gone,” naid Mrs, Chime to her five-year-old Philomena. ‘Banta Claus is Watching Ilttle girls these days, and If they are bad he won't give them any the kitchen door Mrs. of her flat on the second floor at No, 823 East One Hundred and.Forty-ninth Chime locked street. Philomena, a xolden-}nired tot, wan playing on the floor with her ray kitten. Soon after the departure of| Mre. Chime the kitten scampered un- The child fattened out and reached as far aw her chubby arma would allow, but she could not, touch Uhe kitten, In an effort. to exiend tier reach she jostled the stove, the door opened and nome cottts dropped on her dress, The fiimay material caught fire and Nttte Philomena lovped to her feet and ran screaming around the room. Her Josephine Fenell!, living on’ the floor below, heard har, ran. upstairs and fonw the door, She xmothered the flames with a shawl and pin tothe street with the child, but ahe wax too-late, Dr. Rowen. of Latanon: Hospital who rexponded to an Ambulance call, said that Philomena. would not lve to see Christmas. HUMMEL BETTER TO-DAY, BUT. CHANCES ARE SLIM. Lawyer in Island Prison May Get} Well If Heart Holds Out, Physician Says, mon Tynberg, visiting physi- "4 Island Penite: tlary, sald to-day that Abraham Hum- el was slightly Improved, Dr. Jeuange tt made! made homes GEO: PIPOT TELS Ca GIRL: WHIRLED cauned to that ‘ric cond cabin the United TOMS RIVER. N. J.. Dec. 17,—Whirlea | around x big power shaft, Molinda| Dagens, the fifteen-year-old daughter of George Downs, of Lakehurst, was kiiled | ai the Lakehurst Rope Works. Miss Downs and another gitl were in the) mill yard yesterday, when Miss Downs | tied to step over the power shaft. To prevent ust aucJh a thing bare had been | erected, but the girl tried to climb un- der there and over the shaft. “Don't do that!" cried the startled companion of the victim, but the latter Tove at Pitts journey Findlay rietles, thelr “match crushed and her adm and collar-bone take not until they ly | Jollet, IIL, coul greet his flance, ‘There SHIPLOAD OF KMAS BRIDES | Thirty-seven Fair Scotch Las- 1 sies Arrive on the Cali- ‘ fornia to Marry. Hymen, shipped the..biggest and most Interest, consignment York to-day. The invoice of this well) vers true ear for music, and when I {known firm on the California, of the|learn the notes 1 never forget them; called Scotch lassies, all destined to be Christ- thirty-seven who have them in thls country. | Tt was merely a series of coincidences many the boat They came from all over Scotland, and y met one and, got mas brides for young Scotchmen. bound ‘hither on the same mission. The young women will States, elves they have agreed that ‘if possl- from Harringtonshire, will find her true! Mis« Jessie Carr] y Tne tongest lanid- tractive to ine, and T am wtimulated. by ‘ot-ait fatix to Miss Williamenn | fecling my powers and capacities grow. my memory is so fine; | remem- burg. goes to Washington, ‘of Dundee. Nl the way to San Francisco. laughingly replied: ‘Oh, I've done this cay eh Reds ot lots of times." Just then her dresa| Mer, resort on the Sco i caught In! the shaft) and «he waa} {cy “o Deen engaged ever since. whirled to death, Her skull was] Cupid thac but come to New York to 0 hia broad arms walked little Miss Edith E. Drubb, one of the prettiest of the thirty-seven va- wax a romance Young Stuart saved her from drowning two Years ago at a eum: Scotch Ihave not found my way AlMeult.”* ertaon, the young whose remarkable performance yest day created a sensation. She sang aightloss Association of the Blind at No, East Fifty-ninth street. Her youth, beauty voice within the young and charm! the fact almost themselves, but woman - 1s to a Temarkable extent. she told how she managed to overco! | without mtght. “My Htué sister, who fn jold, helps me with th know—enough to distinguish the ke: came to New flat or sharp, and the time. my memory is excellent.”* “And in {t true that you are study! for opera?” “On, not yet,"" and she laughed dept catingly, “It Is early to talk of that for thirty-seven | husky | already | have only qulie young yet and studying ser! isiy about a year, Has Faith in Herself. soa-cronaing At Glasgowe another in the nequainted dic of the lot wan atter all over among them-| am blind. If Helen Keller and oth have ‘accomplished such things I do! not see why I cannot a» exclaim on my. stu I love music; It la #0 | Then, ber ¢ grapple She must travel and I love things; erything 1 learn, with dimcult thirty-seven 2, rt, now of | tlah' and ‘Carmen.’ tal Fxbinit yesterday?” Gets Much Out of Life. “1 had not sung In-so public a w before, but I wax so much Interested the work of these blind people, my. ay: pathlex were so with them I wanted Indust | ubout coast, and A n, | Tells How She Conquers ?OR THE BLIND. “Helen Keller and Others Have sald Miss Idijas Grant. Rob- singe er at the Industrial Exhjbit of the New York! us} BIIND GIRL WHO | WILL STUDY FOR ing would have attracted attention that! blind heightened interest {n her performance “| When seen thin morning at her} home, No. #6 Pacific street, Brooklyn. me, is the great difficulty of studying mvyeii) fourteen yearn practising. 1) & Claus /sit at the plano—I can see a little, you ya. he telle me the notes, whether they are I have a ng re- would take years of study and I am been Miss Robertson hasean extremely dell- cate, mobile face and her eyelids droop slightly over her large dark, pathetic jeyes, but she has none of the unpleas- ant, vacant expression the blind some- she ent ith Long before the boat docked thirty- seven poy secrets: had percolated to| times have. She ts about twenty-one. ‘ every quarter of the shin and when| “My teacher, Prof. De Stefani, the Scotch girls came down the gung:! continued, “takes the Kreatest inter [Plank thelr fellow-paseengers , were| in me and seems greatly Impressed w | Waiting to shower them with rice which| the possibility of developing my voice jthe stewards had provided. to Me greatest extent, oven thougie h ors wonderful tre qble all the ceremonies will take place} coed, It has never occurred wo ime to G y at the same nour on Christmas Day, nt my raid.”* tan 5 a. +|doubt myself or to be af ing as’ She Laughed at and a sort of endiess chdin system of/ And how does your progress com- r, : iy congratulatory telegrams nus been de- " a bate Warning. x y d pare with that of other pupils? the n ng. vised. For exainple, Miss Louise Mil-| reporter asked. = Jer, of Latham, will Ko to New Orleans | The teacher tells me I have made to be wedded. Miss Kate McNichol, | more proxress than any pupil he has,’ 4, brightly, “Perhaps It in| concentrated my energies ate to am studying parts from ‘Samson and De- “How did you happen to sing at the ray in} m= to | 6° gomething, and I thougnt my songa | " t ~ WLLIAS GRAN’ 0 ROMER TSON- bie give them pleasure, so that was went. “OL course I hope to do someth sith my voice I have my life to. tee st like other people anc 0 toto hing Fit ple and I must mak “I have never felt dejected or blind people sometimes-asem to eee ikht-ttas been impaired since 1 thirteen, but It is improvin, rmanefit cure. always been cheerfu: dr ip or Shrink from life. Parties ‘and. pla er peop enjoy mynelt rp poop le: to x wi and I have Any way, I refuse to zo to ha jb hebad ‘ ane friends 1 love Ket ® great deal of my life.” Ever sinc rople AG told me my vol wos y, and i a y , Gull rs Jum naturally grew UD Into abate LEOPOLD'S LEG SCORCHED. BRUSSELS, Dec, 17, King Leopoly evived a severe burn on the lee ge ie rumored, while undergoing a. he A treatment in Paris recently. The King's poyate physician has been summoned fo that ¢ Eyeglasses Hold Firmly i KS) your nose without pinching tilting. marking if you have the Harris Suction Clip Attached to Your Giasses—35 Cents. Sold Only at Our Four Stores. OCULISTS AND OPTICIANS. 54. East 23d St., near Fourth Ave 54 West 125th, near Lenox ave, 442 Columbus Ave., sist & #24 51a. 489 Fulton St., BROOKLYN. Opposite Abraham’ Straus‘, were broken. She was dead when the machinery waa stopped. > NORWAY’S KING AND QUEEN ON HOMEWARD JOURNEY. TONDON. Ds —The King. and sn of Norway, who have been on a isit_ to England, left here to-day for | Copenhagen, The infant Prince Olaf fx with thei, SPRY AT 77 Made Young by Change of Food. Any food or combination of foods. that will restore vigor to the diges- tive organs of a person 77 years old wno had been troubled with indi- gestion for years is worth looking. into, This Kans. woman says: Tam 77 years old and for many years had suffered with Indigestion, which I supposed was caused by old age. Thought the weakened organs woulg never’ do good service any more. “I became so weak I could hardly get about, my breath came with dif fieulty; [ was really'in a bad way. 1/ lived as I always had, ate meat and other things that were clearly too heavy for my digestion, but--dtdn't know any better way. “Five months: ago I came to the conclusion that 1 would not live much longer without help of some 'kind. I was badly discouraged, un- til one day I read about Grape-Nuts, wnat it hud done fol others, and} finally I concluded to try {t myself, ‘Wonder’ of wonders, what a} T eat thres heap-j} ing teaspoonfuls with cream — for breakfast and the same amount for supper: -Of course I ent fruit and something light to myjke up a meal,! but I can eat a hearty dinner—leav-| ing out meat, i “How gooi I feel! I can do more! work in given timo than for the past five years. I can walk two milea! lor more and can hardly believe mr/ ‘own senses as to the change. I did| not have much ftth at first, but tue next thing I knew I would get up fn {the morning and rush sround and) “Hummel ts hy ) better to. do things so easily {t surpriscd me. ! day than he did yexte sald the All this change is clearly due tol physician, “but he Is’a very sick man Grape- and loam tf ankful n orst < » looked for at any Name glyon by the Postum ( | er tle Creek, Mich. tend RWaondnoe sore ite booklet, ‘’'The Road to Wellyine, packages, ‘There's a Reason.’ ; i N entire éatisfaction to our patrons, Finest Goods, Greatest Value, Lowest Cost. The constantl: us to greatly enlarge our facilities for their production. entire buildings are now used for our stores and factories. Sa Vasa lensec tee or Our Stock a Canvyine? THE VERY LOWEST PRICES, s Holiday Presents Selected Now Will Be Reserved Until Wanted. Manufacturing and Repairing Departments on the Prenises. 290 Grand St., Cor. Eldrlige. Finest Genuine Diamond and Solid Gold Jewelry DIRECT FROM THE IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER, Our high reputation has been sustained for the past 47 years by the manulactur.ng: and selling of only such goods as will give y increasing demand for our goods has compelled The Largest Assortment of First-Qua’ity Goods at - Three OPERATIC STAGE. | I ; | BORDEN’S| PURE MILK 9 Cents Per Quart Fifty Years in. One Line of. ; studying - Business, jit ness; means that such a business must grow. & Natural. and-progress of qn Industry like SANITARY | MILK . PRODUCTION and deliv- ery is certainly welcomed by all thinking. people. As a Consumer, do you not consider QUALITY before QUAN- TITY, and results more- important than first cost? AsSponsor ‘°° those dependent upon you, are you not honorably bound—_ to’ protect the health of those in your home by de- ciding sanely in regard to your milk supply? The Recognized of safe Standard © *3'¢ BORDEN’S PURE MILK, the result of Fifty Years’ Careful Study of _ this Question. : 9 Cents :Per is the price for Quart BORDEN’S QUALITY of ABSO- LUTELY SAFE MILK, and it is a Low Price. Borden's Condensed Milk Co, “LEADERS. OF QUALITY ee ESTABLISHED 1857 THE ONLY COMPANY OF ITS KIND IN THE WORLD, ANNOUNCES A | | | Wilting Foti ‘riting Foliog, Fitted" Roll Fitted 6. 15.44 Collar Bags: Pocketbooks, Wallets, Toilet Cases, Imp Dress Suit Cases. Thousands of Bargains! EMERGENCY. BAGGAGE REPAIRCO, ” 25 AND 20 E. 14TH ST. ‘Av. & Union 8a: Evenings by Search bul proucet by: Nascent Oxygen 5 tooth decay and tartar Waltens teeth. Can be unad or without + toothbrush. Carriea ity in pocket or purse, pleasant to vke at all times, Cannot spl or waste, Recommended by Dentists. Tiel Packane, 0c. aroe size, 25¢. Drogs's ChanutGloves. SPECIAL HOLIDAY GIFTS. Fancy Nox uf Six Pairs frat $49.50 quility. French Gloves selected sh “__ Guarantent French Importation. \} Glove Coupons Issued for Any Amount From $1.00 Upward. J. M. Chanat & Cie., S50 Broadway, N.Y, Brooklyn Store, =) 3]0 Fulton Street. |W. L. DOUGLAS $3.50 SHOES i Atrialwillconvince you that-W.L.Doug- Jas $3.50 shoes are thebestinthe word. § Stores in Greater New York : 140 Neat tah toad wi derseyehy 1s Newark AY, 421 Fulton Bt, €or, seecth has bivad'Streck ai) FAD Ay Gor, Lids mb, %

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