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‘yisit hia father in ‘The woman’ women. ‘also acknowledging your have seen. from lawn, Belper, Derby," ‘out a year later. my eldest sister. jen my way to joln you, wight of the appointment. mith ect mother s@ poorly, res “ Wooed by 8 Farmer. a farmer bf Chesterfield. kecps the Red Lion. ‘not engaged to him. | think is too good for me. “He to service. Youre lovingly, ji bave held for further examiaation. Not Cora @arensen. ' tional Guard, disappeared at a city dump in the seme conclusion wes formed ‘was Cora Sarensen. well, slightest resechblance ¢o ber. upon the woman, mkerior motive ‘weme other etn. é Dragged Along Path. water, cinders, ‘wan almost bitten off. Getertnined. investigated. however. To-Day ! (as advertised for in The Monday, Whew York papers Wrote of Her Coming. “Dear Albert—You will tink mé a Jong time answering your letter and beautiful presents. T think they were simply Grand. What lovely sights yeu must aad « |eerved. for thers were blushing brides World's Want Directory, ‘RACHEL.’ The finding ef these letters, which been right under the meses of the authorities ever sop last Thursday. ave some life to’ the investigstion. It had about been decided to discharge ‘Thompeon and Kirkman today, for lack of evidence. Instead they were letters are partioularly interesting, in view of Thompeon’ hement declarations of hatred for ‘The letter sent.in March, 1, “You muat not be surprised te seo re one of those days, as there seems te be nothing over atall You will ove I heye left my' situation and'am| |! Uying st Belper. It is awfully dull. ‘Chesterfield is getting quite noted for murders. [Three of them since, you Jett. So now I will close, Hoping ‘You are well and happy, with much’ lo} - RACHEL: ‘The letter was postmarked at Harri- on on Merch 17, 1907. It wes marked ‘on the back: ‘Return to R. R., Beech- Another letter. written in April, 186, by the same woman shows that “project of joining Thompeon in Warri: won, N. J, had been formed at that ‘time, but that it had mot been carried ‘This letter read: “My Dear Albert; Iam stopping with If my mether had hot been fll I should have already been I aftan t | how honorabia yeu were to me on the her “My position here is rather strange, T.sheuld settled about coming if I had Ro ona bit my sister, She is married @nd needs no one to jook after hei ! am making up my mind, thinking and ‘ planning how I shall come to you, for \ } you surely took my heart away with “T haye been keeping company with His mother You provably know where that fs -Of courses, J am and I think they to pee me every Maturéay | Pooserelt. night and pays me a good deal of at-|men at the City Hall beg to advise ‘tention, but I would rather come out| you that there 1x no prompect of im-| ‘to you. I would come sa you say and/ mediate race suicide in your native! tell no one, omly that I am going out) city, Nothing has peen Seung to eubstan- tinte the identification ef the deed mom- an as Agnes OWeefe or Annie Nevins. Neither can it be established that she was 8 woman known as\“Cora 6.” ‘A woman named Cora @agensen, the ‘wife of an officer in the New Jersey fem home in Jersey City @ week ago, that.¢he women |ploited in a pubijc rianner. i r ‘This theory was demetiahed to~day by | novices, indeed, to the ways of Cupid, persons who knew the Sarensen woman |Wwere not prepared for the rust. but ‘The depsl woman bears mot Ghe|teckied the job with the fortitude of There was no evidence ef an attack ‘and the desperate efforta made to conceal the victim's Identity after ehe hed been struck down have led Prosecutor Speers, of Hudson “county; County Physician Charles B. Converse and Chief of Police Rogers to agree that the murder wee fer some whioh cam oaly be, , ‘Jearned when the woman's identity ia established and her murierer run to "tee autopsy shows the women was gbruck from behind with a sendveg or Tike weapon. She was truck twice In the back of the head, at neither blow left its mark on the Gkirting the swamp 1s a cinder path. \{ The autopsy showea that the woman drowned. Both lungs were filled Her mouth waa cut with showing that she had been Gragged for some distance across the - * | path, her murderer holding her by the feet, It also was found that her tongue Whether this ‘wae caveed by a blow on the chin from the same weapon with which she was struck down or whether it followed the ough handling ehe got when being ragged across the path has not been The-polica_sey the woman could not Pave been hauled to the swamp in wagon and. there stripped of ber cloth- ing, for she would /have -became con- selogs during the trip and would not have deen insensible when thrown into the awamp. The wagon theory is being Deputy County Phy: pian Allers and Help Wanied Dec, 30. ‘Art. Flowers...... 4 ‘Grocery Clerks. i Krents + 4 irs {Bartender + 3 Housews Bookkeepers + 4 Irooers Boye s.cceeecsees O Janitors Ratchers ast Bindery Help..... 4 ‘Canvaasere -8 Carpenters GA Cashiers srk Chainbermaida ... 13 Operators Comporiiors ...... 4 Painters . Cooks (Mase)...... 10 Photographers GQooka iFeinate)...:14 “Preasers Day's Work......% Pressnen Dressmakers y.... 5 Roofers Dentists + 2 Balesiaiies Diahwashera ...., 11 Salesnen Drivers .....4.6e. 9 Tallors Prog Clerks...... 9 Tinemiths ‘Mlevator Runners. & Upholsterers , Peeters seers 11 Walters ., Firemen + 2 Waitresses , Foreladies + 2 Miscellaneous etal . . toes pene ‘The World printed 623 , Help ‘Ads. to-day, 369 more than all other (dd “THEODORE ROGSEVELTS” ARE ve- Of 135 Couples Applying for Marriage Licenses Most Make Promise. BRIDES RUSH BUREAU. Clerks Overworked by ‘First “Scramble -to Comply With New Law. At least 18% Theodore Roosevelia are premised as crusade durfig the year 1W@ These promises of couples who formed rush line at the (ity Hall to-day en the opening of the new marriage license bureeu, a 5 By noon 1% couples tad obtained Mcenses.” At that hour the members of the City Hall Reporters’ Association became enthused over the situation, | and the following telegram was sent to Bresident Roosevelt: “President Theodore Roosevelt, Mouse, Washington D. C.; Law requiring license to macryc!n this Btate goes into effect Jan. 1. One| hundred and thirty-five couples bought | Ucenses tg City Hail before 12 o'cldtk} to-day. One lwndred and thirty-three couples promised reporters that they would name their first boy Theodore The thirty Odd newspaper | 1 White} “CHARLDS t. WHITE, President, Association City Hall Reporters. Jamuary brid¢s besieged the City Hall to-day. Accompaniel by thelr future | bubbles, they started the Invasion early | and stood jn ‘line, patiently awalting | the official lssuance of marriage lIcense certificates. For the new no-marriage- without-a-license law was being anticl- ‘As the day lengthened 00 dia(the line of couples, until it soon became ap- parent thet City Clerk P. Joser Scully | must increase his force of clerks !f all | the couples In Manhattan who want to get married are to be accommodated. This Job Is No Joke. Policeman Jim Taggart: found that kepeping Cupid in line and directing the Mttie gentleman how to make out his pessporta was no easy job. Besides, certain forms of delicacy had to be ob- to be questioned, -and every bride @ceen't quite care to, have her‘age ex- Hart. Hull and Harris, no Trojans, 4 @tatistics prove that an average of 35,000 marriages are yearly contracted in Manhattan. This means an average) of 1% marriage contracts must be {ssued dally from the City Mall Mar- Tlage Bureau, not counting holidays, Sundays and’ balf-holidays. It also means thet the bureau will be the in City Hall, for an ave- of five minutes wil be consumed | inlsauing cach oartifcate. The first couple to obf«irt a license to- Gay were Isidore Levin,’ of No. 214 Mad- ison street, and Bertha Peters. of No. 263 Madison street. They. like tho) other couples who received licenses to- Gay, are to be married in January. Misa, Petera demuroly answered all \qvestions and Levin came to the} o resolutely. Misa Peters whispered | r age (twenty-three) and gave her Gocupation as dreesmaker. Mr. Levin is twenty-five vears old and a siiver- He paid the license with Dr, C. H, Schultze, of the United Lab- oratories” Company, of No. 45 Kast Forty-second street, Manhattan, as-| sisted Dr, Converse in the autopay. | “We found,” said Dr. Allers, “that the .woman had recelved two heary lows at.the base of the skull with aj diunt instrument or ;ossibly by a strong man's clenched fint ‘Water In the lungw and cinders. or biack Sediment in the bronchial tubes proved that the direct cause of death | fvus drowning. ‘The only assumption to bk drawn from this is that after being Mnocked unconscious the woman was; threwan Into the water. In her condition qe had no chance for life. She prob- wuly wave a few gasps which filled her Yanga with water and her throat with gre mediment which was stirred up hen she struok the bottom of the pool “The bruises were of suca a navite| t they didnot show externally, ven the most careful external exini-| ifiation failed to reveal them. ‘This w rtly due to the fact that the woman's | hoir ideadened and concealea the blows. PLEDGED TOIT | Hospital. | major portion of the needles elusive little splinters would be located a powerful }Mmust soon float to the heart. HUMAN NEEDLE CASE DIES AFTER QB OPERATIONS Mrs. Molly Dressler Swallowed “Combination Package” More Thana Year Ago. } | | | \ BY MAGNETS. ; Woman's Case Has Attracted | Attention of Surgeons All | Over the World. | | After having survived twenty-six aper- | DRAW. new enti-race sulcide | stions in the course of a year, in which | 1M needles were drawn from her boly prophetic statistics are based upon the| bY Powerful electric magnets, Mra | the | Molty Dressler, of No. 303 Third ave-| mae, died to-day in the Fordham Hos- pital. Just how | young woman's body will be determined | when Curoner’s Physician Thomas H. | Curtin, of the Bronx, performa an au-| i topsy. } ‘There is no more remarkable case in’ medical annals than that which re-| rulted in death to-day at the Fordham ln the first place Mrs. Dress. ler jpought deatfi by swallowing one hundred and forty-four neediea thirt:en months ago. She tad teen deserted by her husband and after a long period of despondency, in a sudden fit of freuziet grief, swallowed the needles, Bhe ho Purchasod what is knvwn as a ° | dination packege,"” containing one hun- | dren and forty-four tiny steal splinters | varying in length from three-quarters | of an inch to three inches, also severa: | bodkins. | Magnets Draw Them Out. | When Mrs. Dressier’s aunt, with} whom she lived notified the surgeons of | her extraordinary effort at suicide they | could not beélleve her. Mrs. Dreaster | was not effected by the needles for} peveral days, when x50 was taken to the Fordham Hospital on Oct. 30, 1x6, and transferred to Hellevue. Then the first of the series of twenty-six opera- ma was performed and a dozen| needles extracted. These were drawn by magnets from the abdomen. The had not begun to circulate, Hut when they finally dja enter the blood vessels and commence to flow Uirough Mrs, Dresvier’s system her! case became a causa for the medical world. Two needles reached her nose, | where they caused her great atinoy- ance until extracted. Then others float- ed=up to ‘eheek bones, others ap-| eared in the palms of her hands and | the soles of her feet... |, She would be taken {Sthe hospital, where a curious throm of surgeons would: watch the X-ray exploration for the needles, As soon as one of the electric magnet would applied and the tiny bisde of steel drawn out. Béfore tie fifth operation was performed last winter the aur-| weona. said that the ‘needle woman,” na they came to Call her, would sur-| vive only a few weeks, as one of the needles coursing tlreugh her veins | But at the conclusion of the tenth operation Mrs. Dressler scemed just as | fit as ever. Two three-inch needles had been taken from her shoulder blades and dhe from the region of her liver. The: X-ray machine fatied to} -ed und amore serious operation neces. | Uie larger blood vessels and | cut through the smaller veins ny Uiread-like needles, An in- dd to be made and a probe in- the cision @ dynamo with (a! triangy mounted on a tripod, wo: enUa bedside, needles would be would be spplied to a pewerful electric current In thle way” the elles liv worked to the surfac i e foating magnet nd on located the She Had Lived Well. Che” won: solute character. ished, powert pret} good care. of beautifully formed. wi portioned. 1 woul Was about thirty-five and that Benn used to some of tie xood of life, While 1 would not aay she occupled a high station in i must admit that she was e¥lden of a bettef cfasa than it baa beech sup-| | posed, : “We found 1s stomach, but not | that the woman |ghe met her death. Sho way not an Alcoholic by any means. Under the Cumstances there oan be no doubt but that she was murdered, \'My theory from the beginning that this was another case siniar the. Bosachieter crime. Now I that T was wrong.” ; Dr. Alera refused to Mxcuse’ this feature of the case further, ‘but it learned that all the physiclang age that the woman Was virtuous, Bhe t @/ never been & mother, but had und Ti gone an operation for a complaint Was by no means a dis.+ She “was well nour. y built and had ta’ Shi Me had things Unit in her When | Bwethia 1 wosun g/culiar to her sex. | ("No traces. of Polson w fou in! 3 wtamach from a ficial. exe] S amination. It. tox with the lungs. | Tithe heart and ot portions af the 4) body, was taken for microseopten) and oh vale ai the to. be held th Har-, 2 | ris0n night di ao - TO CORE A COLD IN ONE Day Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quluine ‘Tablets Druseists refund money if ft falls to cure. FE W. ANOVE'S signature J#.on each box. 25¢ | A Bolleau Gis! Art Calendar for 1008,/ in ten cotors, distributed with The Sun: {dey Weorkd on dan, 5, 1 nnd 19, Grater fork only’ Pretend Art {Qalandar of tha, year, | uppose | fe to | know | F Dressler first went-+. was [Wing at N Bronx, erted her. to the home of relatt Wihen she was taken to the Fardham. al ten days ago, however, she | ay. A fotilia 1g a disturbance remo Third aye to deep coma! eutment. | 10 died at respec ve failed in to a atale this mori: and Bull A history of her will Ma bik medical tome and there In mor to leatn autopsy, wich will be wh vcore eonn le at last reac the case & or of ditt! nied iw need! | Opa as well. a | MAIL ROSEERS THROW AWAY $15,000"IN CHECKS, | WHO, Tex., Dev. 20.—OfMicera have ust ¢hithowed the fact that @ bundle of letters, ered packages, &o., were m the mail trucks at Temple, ably Saturday night ari taken ‘and opened $15.00 worth of cheeks, money ordera and afts were found tn a pile where [2 ters had Seen torn open, tut all resistered packages and mone in letters had been taken. It Js impos- aible to tell how much money was cured. Tho letters were for points all over the United States, | toa At —— rhany needies are left in the | | the Julia, we ‘The bodkina could only move! ° ‘Minister and Heiress Who Again Vanish Aiter Being Located aN f ut, BARGE CAPTAIN AND WIFE BATTLE SEAS FOR LIFE PROVIDENCE, R. Dec, 30.—Two ‘arges, the Ida and the Jennie, bound orth. with three other craft of {he dame description, in tw of the tug! Jo Sanford, were lost off. Point Ji to-day, and Capt. Mavis. of the and his wife! barely saved their lives. The Ida sank and the Jennie was driven upon the breakwater, where she soon berth to goto pieces, Just before the Idwiikent down Davis and his wife took tolaA small boat and struggled dard to reach the barge Jennie, which was next GRAVE OF DRUCE Bee aaa ea eaten ta bore? HELD BODY OF MAN, BR eeperieneets the ife-nuvine | NOT ROLL OF LEAD. crew put out from Point Judith surfhoat and reecued Capt. Deners crew of the Jennie, The barges were from Southern ports, the Ida for Newport and the Jennie fur Fall River, The other three bs the tow, the Hurricane, the Pioneer « Drought eafely to an { he breakwater thia afternoon, | oe i Chere jhode Cbake. (Continued from First Page.) Druce-Duke of Portland controversy Is at an-end and the case of the olaim- ant, George Hollamby Druce, bis fallen to the ground. Inside Robert C, Catiwell, whose remarkable DENVER’S MAYOR ORDERS jtestimony a3 a witneds in the Druce GAMBLING LID DOWN. Ted to the reupentng of the grave jot T. C, Druce to-day, js now at the home of hia daughter at New Brighton, locate any others at the time. Wh MDENVER, Dec Ambling houses | Staten Island. He is under $5,000 bonds the “needle woman" was returned to| Which have been conducted injt{o answer to a change /of perjury’ pre- the Fordham Hospital for the elevent|Denver for weveral years were closed ‘erred by the Britian authorities In con time the surgeons jumped at the con-|tu-day on orders from or ho. nection with the story he told In the) clusion that she was eating more |W. Speer. following the publi { London court. Caldwell Cannot Be Seen. Needies; that she was possesued of a|4n open letter, to alk Aistriet-a tor ey peculiar mania for needles and as fast on nnounels iP they failed in, Caltwell and his daughter, Georgi- as they were evtracted she would ub-'the performa Bs ir ditty the At. haye apartments In the Woman'4 sorb a new portion, 8 horsey enere aon a Anse tele, Kxchanke Building on) South ‘street 5 New Brighton. To- Ci i It was when—the podkins began to "O89 1 niet and!Sunday saloon clos-| in answet. to an inuiry, aad’ chat her bother .ils—stratige human ng laws, tt ls announced. Kiso will er wae very sick and no one except the greatest difficulty was encoun-| enforced, and prizetwnting will nysician wax allowed to sxe him, mopped In Colyradg at ¢ Was told of the result of ‘the open- a ' of the Krave of Druce, and asked to and it of to tuke any message to her fathe i his condition would not. peri his being disturbed in a y. Caldweil —The races are as for to-morrow's City Park werted. Then Wie bodkin was fished. is being alten out, | follows Dr. Bearson, ‘The physician sald to- feel | ACE—Six furlons#; day that Caldwell was @ very sick man Some of the operations on the “incedle| F!RST RAGE Gad had to be kept very quiet. It was woman’! were from five to ten days'| canta Dyil aan BEOGRAD earec a pesca t Mires thnen day = 2c that Caidwell'4 daughter refused to duration. Three t a day “aqueer,| 35 \u Ow: tay ody to. pee her father, cons chia pad inatrument.ixometning lke | ‘Guldwell was arrested upon request cf | 1m? May Rowe . i Idalo i Deshanne . Vm Jim Hall os. 133 Tom McAfee here trem Farope one week ago last Saturday, and announcement was ‘made at that tma that determined. efforts woul be made tp have him taken back two. answer to the 44 Neptune London Bea Ieean bady Franklin ss Onis, the fai that he apparently was 104 Prince Hohentohe desperately Ml when be was arralgned “OND — RACE — Steeplech: t! before a United States Commissioner here was responsible for his release on {Gtmparatively Hight bail, ye Gtkinsel for the Britiah Viee-Conaul, Gugh whom the warrant for Cald- was obtained, insisted Ralph Reese Onyx UL 1% Merry Maker 1ST tu? Pee Vinewar x §7 Rip p.ss2. { Ys arrest 1h Haul “ot Fun i ees eee held a peisonée until. ex- Tit Coal Diack Lady. 2) \ thadiuion dings. be completed. | THIRD RACE--Five and one-half furtongs, | Gpon the appeal of Calawell's counsel | veiling. eM@lund the claim that such detention oles [would be almost certain to result in his) death, however, two physicians by the Court to the prisoner’ | were appointed jan examination @a° to | Biysleal condition, It was because fot thelr reports that | [ne was ina pretarious condition that | 0 | Onandor. 3. Kose 10 Thir "Heal 13 Larrimer j ball was fixed at Oo Sureties were | S Sfulihead | Cornistied by friends, and ‘Caldwell wan Mi sPetudant ‘once taken to\the home of hin | tis Ether Brown ugiter, Lt tx maid that hin health 136 Ethel Carr ¥ improved steadily since that time. 159. Aleatian FOURTH PETTIBONE SICK; HIS TRIAL | | | a bas fl i HAS TEMPORARY HALT. (1M) Old Honbaty 190) Alma Dufour 190? Pasaiiena FIETH RAG | | BOISE, Idaho, Dec, 30.—The ilIness of G. A. Pettibone to-day caused an ad- | Journment until to-morrow of hia trial for alleget complicity in the Steunen- |berg asgassination, Last night Pettl- , | Pone became very IM and was taken to ja hospital. For a time his condition Purse; six furlongs. f 18 Ne Prine (1@) Jacobite SIXTH RAC lig | improvement ‘was reported, 3 avo Faire LOS AN Vee. 3.—Attorney Git Jack Witt. | Clarence Darrow arrived to-xtay from) 1 Holwe, Ida, having. been compalied by" Los iiness to retire from active work in cy ef aes the defense of Georgy A. Pettibone, Wh ight Favorite now on trial for complicity In the Steun- 1s Anos Payee oe envere assassination. He went at once | Mh Rerae HAS \to the Caitfornia “Hospital, where an Hes Taek sacrarian jexamination of his condition will be 100? Lady) Gotland se. 0t)65 made preliminary to an 1 for *apprentice allowance, - { @ disease Of the-ear. {would be no meeting {n any otifer pune | way. ded dally by | | aha sritian authorities when he arrived | j organisation, . charge | which had been preferred against him. | pianned for to-night and to-morro ——_—.___—_ | | was extremely critical, but to-day much | THE EVENING WORLD. MONDAY, DECEMBER 50, 1907. 2,157 FAMILIES WN ANTI-HIGH ANT LEAGUE jLeadérs Rejoice that It Will} Cost Landlords $8 to Dis- } posses Each Family. t |TO-NIGHT’S ~MEETINGS.} Bingham Will Permit Them: in Streets Where Traffic | Won't Be Tied Up. ‘At Soctallatic Headquarters in Grand | street this afternoon It was stated that le the atrike for lower rents and | seainet the lessee system there had now [pen organized all the tenants pf Ol Jopet ide housca, making a total of | 72,133 tamtlies and abaut 15,00 persons. Hit was also stated | keeper In the deneely populated block on Clinton street from Cherry to Munroe street had pledged himself or} untli the land-} | Werself not to pay res lord reduced the rates. Tue first eviction a that have Fcome up as a direct result of the} (ils afters whorm | served | ‘and | on. Madison street, The three men against been Meisel No. 36/ Cherry tereet, which is one of the tener ments where the crusade was Inaugu- ed, These ten reported at head-| [avarters that when Municipal Justive/ | {eon Sanders hourd they enlisted in} the Socialist movement be told them | the: st Vacate thelr flats to-morrow, However, the sirike leaders were Jubl- lant, for in each case it will cost the [lessee $ to dispassess the Tebeilious | \familtes, and ay thelr neighbors of the |wame, building are to give them shelter | funder the roof from which they have} just been driven the landlord will prac iteally be carrying them as free guests, hUnder the law after their furniture hus semained on the sidewaix for three Gays the city must put it In storage. Some Mass Meetings Permitted. 4 ourt, | noon, |ispossess notices had wre John Bassin, John John Schneider, all jiving at Two other things br. cheer to lithe leaders. Word was reeelved that) Commissiongr Bingham ‘had | | Police labated the severity of tis original rule! against open air catherines of the eant 'giders to dlacuss their grievences, and} hat he would permit mass meetings) tin ths streets where trafic was not! tied up. i A member of the Committee of Ten. |naving in ch the defenses of the Itenanta, also brought word that last) night a central. body represexting 135 trade orgpnizations. Inciuding all of: the seventy-fve crafta in the United} Hebrew TradexAssociation, had voted to. put aside % per cent. of their in- comes to be used as a fund In pushing jthe fight for lowse rents. | he Gocialists:say there are already | |many thousands of mean ou. of work | on the east side and that this number | will keep on growing. Not, jalnce the movement’ was. begun | thas the/situation been so critical as it In! tnow, With the rain a feeling of rest- lessness and vindictiveness broke out! afresh. No violence was resorted to, but | the sentiments of the bix and needy,/ coimmunfty were plainly printed on the, jtaces of the thousands who wandered labout in the sloppy streets, half ex pecting the storm to break In dlmox jany quarter, f Hundreds: of policemen from outlyl | stations have been drawn to: the eas wide ynder the direction of Chief In- | spector Cortright. | phe Socialists, taking up cudgels for the Jatriking tenants, have given:notice that {Rutgers Square Perk tonight will Le’ the acene of the Jargeat open air meet- ing ever held dn the cast side. In spector Cortrigit said to-day wikt there | where congestion Hite Ike! Agitators at Work, In the Bronx. Hundreds of Young agitators aqitioted |with the Soctalists have invadég Har- lem and the Bronx, stirring’ up dis jsetiatied tenants there. |familiea In big houses on Washington | avenue yesterday revolted. at high} rents and sent to Sockilist headquar- ters, No,/ 313 Grand atrest, for Sins | meetings have beer: | place tramc |Pauline Newman. They are forming an Ten open air [Any number of Goolaltst speakers hay. | |aignifiod their willingness to be ar- | rested. Anti-Rent Leaders, ‘The anti-high-rent people consider a victory that Baniuel Edelstein, who was arrested on Saturday night for taking part in the rent atrixers’ meet- ing, was discharged in Esrex Market Court, it belng held the Park Com missioner had no right to stop suc ma “A Little Knowledge Is a Dangerous Thing’’ fWas nover more true than of the oy idinary optician, whose Mmite: knowledge means certain risk. t For Accuracy Consult Our | Registered Physicians of Experience: Examinations Without Onarge. ihkiSon i ST4BLISHED et arly $0 Years, 25 Sixth Ave., Below 15th St, 360 Sixth Ave,, Below 224 St. 1274 Broadway, Below 33d St. 217 Bway, Astor House Block, 101 Nassau St, Near Ang 8t. [imprisoned for three days in Ellsworth | ling’ maniac, ¢o-da: that every house-! - inl trike were heard in the City [" nique strike | offictal Wax overp wered, a hing could be Benertan mt Slav to restore his mentai |--= t ee, @ Was insan y pouansess @ from hunger meetings when the police had been | notified of the Intention to hold (hem. | The number of rent strikers i# grow- iow rapitly, and some of the landlords ate trying to siem the tide’ by shauttini off gas and water, leaving many of the tenants in straits, ‘Thay promptly re- | sortedito the use of candle and lamps, | however. and more fortunate neigh: | dere supplied them with water, j MINE MADDENED BY WOULD-BE SLAYER SENT TO ASYLUM Reale, Who Tried to Kill His Breather and Brother © Law, Found Insane. n= FEAR AND HUNGER Charged with the attempted murder of hla brother and brother-in-law, Car- ———— inello Reale, thirty-five years old, was to-day adjudged insane by a jury in if 3 IML. of 16 s 5 befo Buried Three Days by Blast,| afte tas! ot"fctleimue of te McGuire and Fos: Matteawan | le cause @ He Is a Maniac When Ace | cidentally Discovered, tently giving hy tng polices evidence axalnat him. ane aye made a thorough exam athe prisoner nd thelr testImony resul uittal to-day It was on October drew a revol der his relatives Jegel grievance of prison four day just completed a two y attempt Hie payatoians deck amination of Neale 1 been Ineane for several START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT by bringing a Pease Piano into the home. “There’s a reason for the popularity afl, the pianoforte; it’s because it glyts the best music with the least effort in learning how. The Pease Piano is now in the 63d year of its existence, and with over 78,000 satisfied ‘purchasers it he lis no wonder they are called the LAR JANOS Quality cansidered, our prices are very moderate, and we give 3 years to pay if desired. Many bargains this week in used pianos of different makes,. from $125 up. Write for catalog.’ OPEN EVENINGS. PEASE PIANO CO. PITTSBURG, Dee. %—After being! din Reale's last thet Reale and attempted to mur- ‘0. 1 Mine, at Ellsworth, thirty. friles John Omilllan, twenty. « Slay miner, waa released from pis ‘undergraund dupgton, a rav- He was taken to} e County Home at Arden Omilltan wetlf to work last Thursday in a small room off the main entry of the mine an Sgnited his blast. The charge provell xo strong that it loos: ened enougti earth to cause a fall which blocked effe ally exit from room, 1 his efforts to attract attention. were vain, and he might have been en- tombed yet. but for the accidental dt covery of his plizht A numer of mine oftictals, while gojug through the diggings to see that every- was safe, came to the point re Omiliian was entombed Tey In at onte aw that someshine was wron When the debris was cleared away the were istoniaved to have « manktc’ dash among them from the room knock tw of the rescuers down —— REMARRIES ON PROMISE TO WEAR TWO SHIRTS A WEEK. RNOOKFIELD, Masa. Doc, 30.—Frea- enck Climbers han purchased a new shirtd.ard has greed to chan them twice-a week, and so he and his) wife, {ram whom he waa divorced two years Sgo, are to be remarried. At the tume that the ‘divorce was se- cured Chambers teatitied that her was in the habit of donning a and keeping it on continually | orn out, when It would} ke an old porous plaster. svantered Inton fin agree. 128 W. 480 SL, near Bway, N.Y. h-the chi h Ivklyn Mranch, jNewark Bran: sours to change his shirts twice al 687 Fulton St. 10 New Se! COUNTER GOOD SUCH AS s LB., 20c. It and Nut Butterceps, Pecan Chips) Melacecs Roek, Molasses and Meppermint ‘Cape, Molaseer Cr¢am Kisees, Almond Chips, Vanilla Rutterscotch Wafers, Peanut Chi Chocolate Butterscotch Wafers, Cinnamon Tablets, SPECIAL for this MONDAY | SPECIAL for this TUESDAY. MOLASSES CREAM VANILLAN CREAM Kisses... POUND, 1OC| aLwonos..pounn 1Oc Z SPECIAL FOR THIS MONDAY AND TUESDAY Special Assorted Chocolates (7%, ) pounn 19¢ _- ONK_ POUND BOXES. BARL DY. POUND. MIXED CANDY— of Chocolate Drops, Dater French UND, FIVE FOUND BOXES, es FINE MIXED CANDY, an end- lena “nesortment of Hebou OLD. FASHIONED Cintectionn, peands for’ SUGAM MIXBD CAN! 85c MiG GRADE “BONBORS, OCOLATES end GLACE IT, oF am assortment 30 kinds, HIGH GRADE, BON. CHOCOLATES AND or ‘eocertment Chocolates, 40 kin jeustes,"40 nines, § 1,75 60c FRENCH GLACE. FRUITS, NEW © 4 . MET EUS ARRIVED, 5-POUND BOXES, 91.50 Sale of Imported Satin Lined Baskets, 25c. Each. ‘ro-pigbt our Barclay and Cortlandt Street stores will be open uatil D PF. park Row 1 1. M. H Hetcadlay all stores will be open patil midmiett. WE DELIVER FREE TURCHASES OF ONE DC OVER BETWEEN Piney AN out aT REET, raliver 1 to. 107 Tbs. Seite in Manhattan above fii Brooklyn, Hoboken and Jersey city No coods sent.C, 0. D, Can- dies for our out-of-town cust Ic $1.15 DB_OF- MIXED CANDY WITH. 100 ROS! PAPERS, 100 FRINGE MOTTO PAPE! ) VERSES, SUITABLE FOR TABLE DEC- M. mers, carvfully packed and shinved from SSP special mail order department, AHOME sft compuere ll. EL WEEKLY (og For This Month Onty ~ ON OUR '* B LIBERAL CREDIT SYSTEM YOU CAN PURCHASE |; HIGH GRADE FURNITURE $50 wortli, $3.00. down 75“ 5.00 * coo Rif q A AROS. 7.50 COLUMBUS AVE BET.105 & 104 ST A SMAVE DIEP. : i] A Boileau Girt’ Art Cau " . FTV RY.—On Sunday, Dec. 20, THOS, F,., tm, ten’ colecs, distributed’ with The Bga-, son of Jas, end May A. Mulvey, day Werld op Jan. 5, 12 and 1p. Greater ¥unerel from bis lete residence, 266 New York enly, Get the oat, Rypteiest ‘Bit at., Wednesday, Jon,'1, at. ote “ “