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from Harry Thaw than any feature of the present or former trial. As soon es the purport of the District-Attorney’s motion was understood by the de- fendant, he leaned forward excitedly, and in an animated conversation with Mr. Littleton communicated his approval of the suggestion. w After Mr. Littleton had risen to signify the defense's desire to spare » &velyn Thaw a public repetition of her horrible story, the defendant threw himself across the vacant chair that separates him from Dan O'Reilly at Evelyn Thaw on the Stand a Second Time Brought No Thrills Same Dress, Same Pout and Same Story Fail to Impress Spectators as They Did a Year Ago, A WARMED OVER SENSATION. Looks More Womanly Than She Dr at: Previous Recital, but Still Wears | Childish Costume. | By Nixola Greeley-JS mith. Nothing is colder than a warmed- over tragedy. Sensations that follow each other too quickly become commonplace. | The big day in the second Thaw trial brought both the wife and} the mother of the defendant to the witness-stand. Yet, compared with the appearances in court of these witnesses, it held no thrill. What sensation could be ex- tracted from its warmed-over situ- ations, from its rehearsed climaxes, was captured by Mr. Jerome, who seems to have a natural affinity for the sensational, by his suggestion to Justice Dowling that the press be excluded from the hearing of ie|| AG SéMOTE, Thaw’s evidence. There are many men and women at the trial who from purely per- isons would prefer not to be there. But Justice Dowling took logical view of the matter when he said that the District-Attor- ion would have had more weight if it had been made at the first dded in response to what was virtually an attack on the press Jerome that the Court was not a censor of public morals nor in a te the policy of the New York newspapers. sonal re Mr. by position to dic’ THAW EAGER TO PROTECT WIFE. Mr. Jerome's suggestion that Evelyn Thaw’s testimony be heard in private, concurred in by Mr. Littleton, for the defense, elicited more interest the counsel table and talked earnestly for several moments. He showed much more animation and directness of purpose than I had ever seen him F When Mr. Jerome interrupted, Evelyn Thaw had brought the glory ‘of her life to the fateful moment in Paris when she refused Harry ‘Thaw’s offer of marriage, and he asked “Is it because of Stanford White?” Several persons jn court expressed the opinion that Evelyn Thaw's childish costume—a duplicate of that she wore last year—was inappro- priate to the greater “matronliness” of her figure. WEARS LAST YEAR’S POSE. The word “matronly” can scarcely be applied to Evelyn Thaw. Until I saw her on the stand, the new health and radiance of her appearance had led me to think she locked older, principally because she appeared more womanly. While testifying, however, she struck me as amazingly like her last year’s self. She spoke in the same low, clear tones, answered “I don’t remember—exactly,” with precisely the same pause and accent, pouted and drew her eyebrows together In the same expression of im- patient petulance whenever Mr. Jerome stopped her answer to a question by an objection. She also turned in her chair and glanced at Justice Dow- ling, just as she had turned last year toward Justice Fitzgerald. Her story, so far as she had told it yesterday, absolutely lacked tha tense interest, the breathless suspense {t held last year for all who heard! it. Not that jt was in any way different, but simply that we had all| heard !t before. The court-room was filled with men spectators. called my attention to them, saying: “Look at all the old fellows, They've turned out to see Evelyn, They haven't been here for a week.” Even the Grand Jury, which came fn toward the close of the session to} present indictments !t had found, took chairs and remained until adjourn. ment, that they might see and hear the famous motive of the Thaw tragedy. MOTHER AN APPEALING FIGURE. The appearance of the defndant's mother, Mrs. William Thaw, was| much more appealing than last year. Sickness and sorrow have told upon her, and she walked with difficulty to the witness-stand. She told sim- ply of her son’s strange melancholy, of his sleeplessness, of his final sob- bing story to her of the gir! in New York whom he loved, and who had been wronged by another man. “I was so relieved,” sald the old lady, ‘when I learned that he grieved ‘A court attendant Perfectly erect, but not stiff. and {nha The amount of barm done from eat for another's wrong and not for something that lay upon his own & tremendous ‘breath. which exp, hieqd | until t was found that he had made a ng food which lacks the nourishing | ‘i con-|him quite visibly to the audience, drop- | similar get away from the Paterson, ing " hat the| science.” ping his jaw loosely. He would then | Nias {elements or in suc he fone ths the ik; ttack his note anc f 801 y D ystem can't absor! $s mucl eut- She told of her meeting with Evelyn Thaw, and of her consent to the! syn sath ne ta seer eR Oluely | “starr poses as an actor and ts a a sont abeorn GucaElBHOet marriage “ns the best solution of a difficult problem.” Grternin Go om [:eapable song and dance artist. He has €T,than Diny Minoan ecoerected by | An interesting Ilttle detail of her testimony was this: When Mr, Lite] “Moat prima nome teens Nevsl: ndid yoice and usually mingles! 4.00 either, There must be a com- tleton asked her if Harry Thaw had ever told her Evelyn was to blame for] ates. if they dare make any gestures | WH actor folk {plete change in the dictary—the) the wrongs he had spoken of, she replied, quickly: atie sinauoleniu ward |gertlirem@ ber do|ja that he lie powelsul’ ty ohdss 0) yee icausemofathe) Wouble) iuiuats|le re-| J a 1. 0) a a down es- | Yo Le Der c y iH v “Oh, no; he would never admit tha turetonre: Wianinote as Tetrazsin' does pailte Oras cen Ie neve fuotess 1 tant sufferer] f 7 y nove "| police off his b sees “T have been # constant sufferer Then. fearful of the effect she had produced, she leaned torward and| of the shoulders,| June, when two men identified a victim |prom stomach trouble, constipacion added: “I think I used the wrong word then—1 mean, he never had any’| 1s sa notte With aome ob tie | ot a Coney Island automoiic a a Ce a a ae such idea.” tot tinwee CaaS from A! as wawin Starr. ‘Phe dead man's Iden-| writes a Mich, lady, “and the past thaw rary - reath in the upper geet | tity wax never discovered, but Central | y scame tired of life of every- Mrs, Thaw gave way to Evelyn on the stand, her strength not being! ry UPPEE DATE) Ug gn WoL” Siare's brother, way | Year Dee Tet ‘ eqral to entering upon the subject of her son's insanity, and Evelyn, after| Louls Kellogg: who had a| lives in Newark, to positively, say that [Dre cc doctors and sev “y = high soprano y Nae, tossed the be Wha not that of Edwin, 1» ant relating her story up to Harry Thaw's proposal of marriage, ylelded the notes with her. } to ‘01 ed out) tit was stated to-day that Starr's re-| weeks at a Sanitarium afforded me entre’ of the! stage to the DistricvAtt the ition waa Considered quite side | capture is due to the efforts of former lief. eB" strict-Attorney and his motion to exclude the| in those days. Table} Capen ele ee dy, Dwo weeks age najoniy wemporary, relief, Ninully press. felba has said that when she has! notified Headquarters that Starr way | atl ek of the grippe caused me — ners any particularly difficult singing to do,{in San Franciaco playing an “|give up hope of ever being well she stands so that her body forms alt/ ment. at one. of the small varlety again, 1 was growing weaker and JENKINS BANKERS mismanagement of the Wiiltamsburg | met pf Faleet rahe Ainge ie tate) NOUseE a and. Starrs arveat followed, (tore emaciated every” day, ind Jenkins ‘Trust Companies j the fle tukes Kreat pains thather| Ie wil prougit back here early | “Atclast a doctor advlecd me to} WANT VENUE CHANGED. } ur tiaitwin stated that a motion tor | atin shall not inter next "Ww nd arraigned on the doubie|try some predigested food, as nothing} @ichangelot! ved 2 } l-breaking and grind lar- stay on my stomach, My hi VWidctces an se ees an OT ean ey re precautions will be taken | one se} for some Grape-Nut Be e Soudde cola, returnable | cle she other escape | banc s , \ Indicted Family Apply for Trial in| Fen. 8. Hie asserted, in hg application 22! FOO a eee which I ate a little with milk, and (oriiallnla GEM ChaCree Tet ation | or Bessle aken it, Jthen awaited the usual results, | Mineola, Fearing Prejudice [forte we atmos, inh eat tne il ie ow much above the staf the note) POPE IMPROVED. BUT [MMy ntomach did uot reject this| yanking commun in Brookly ties has been cen the Jankinn | AE | }tood, and from that time on for sey in Brooklyn, | and Outh not | NEW NAVAL S SUPERVISOR, STILL. CONFINED TO BED.| feral weeks I lived on Grape-Nuts and Lewyer Stephen Baldwin, repr a air lefend them- WASHINGTON, Jan, 18.—Lieut D + Sts =i milk. I fe't no pain whatever in my if the . | z ».¢,] ™ or aes {ng John G.ed nkins and Jonn G., jr, |Brooklyn. | took place in lesa has been ontered to. tem. | ROME, Jan i8-—the Pope was visited! stomach, my health gradually came : Seine rary duty as Nava ervi ne | t® c etacol, | hac ve weeks I gained Frank and Fred Jenkins, his sons se: Ffarbor. of New York. He takes the} who found the Pontiff in better heal Lasts ee t re eaneera See gee zth cured from Justice Rich In thy Appel- | Conghe—"Brown's Bronchial Trocnes" | place of Commander tiosley, who dieg, but insisted that he continue to rest Re Grape Nuk Trani everuiattes late Division of the Supreme Court, | need by coughing, giv. | recently himself. Because of this the audiences| ont cepa er gaat aes Brooklyn, to-day a stay in the trial | 2 pene ee . = z | airanged for to-day were suspended and|® Meat and potato diet here's a oe vedyba for Monday, in which the les C1 ‘0 FRI NT Tae . GRIP. the. Pol ‘aed received the Papal ') | veason. D> as ured im @ Paso eke LANATING BROMO QUININE removes the | tary of State, Cardinal Merry del Name given by Postum Co., Battle Jenkins family are made defendants 18 | mont te go ee ir oe Is only and Mer. (isiettl, Major Domo of tif Greek, Mich. Read 3 os SiN i ne fn inictment charging conspiracy in the if, La Sige navn ocnnuure ae Xatican. The reception took place fh waiivitte’! in nkes — Expects on is on tiptoe for her tm- personation of Lucta at the Manha’ Opera House next Monday night. Mean while her debut as Violetta in “La Tra- ‘last Wednesday is eagerly «= ssed everywhere. Although there wus {some carping criticism of the new {of remarkable THE EVENING WORLD |How Tetrazzint Took the High E Fiat, a Feat _ Which Has Set All Musical New York Talking Remarkable a eet of Mr. Hammerstein's New Prima Donna at Her Debut, Performed as She Bent Over to Pick Up Her Skirt. \ | HAS WONDERFUL RANGE | Most Prima Donnas Take Their High Notes With Up- ward Gestures, but Tetraz- zini Struck It With Almost Contemptuous Nonchalance. By Sylvester Rawling. Tetrazzinis high E flat, taken non- fe she stooped to pick up chalantly w her skirt the talk of the town, star's method by one or two of the re- viewers, none dented that he therverdiet af acclaimed her this particular, the great aud Was confirmed bh: Making all nervousness with nee that the experts for ch the natural en a singer wances of experience such as Tetrazinnt’s must have been afte facing a new audience, known to be the most critical and exacting, the writer believes the new prima donna has qualities yet 0 be disclosed. The marvellous ease which she sings—apparently with no effort—has not been adequately ex- plotted. In the hurry of a first review, for instance, the manner in which sh> took that E flat in the “Sempre libera” wan overlooked. There was something of contemptuousness about It. She bent over, picked up her akirts and walked off most indifferentiy, carrying the note with the utmost ease. What other artist could have done it? What the Prima Donna Can Do. A singer who has studied abroad with the best masters was much impressed with this feat of Tetrazzini's, She sald to the writer: ‘Tetraazini hax not announced what| the limit of her voice is, She has sald enjoys singing the big air of the ‘Queen of Night,’ from Mozart's | ‘Magic Flute,’ which has a staccato! passage on high F. The high F Is re- peated several times, and this aria also makes a quick jump from the extremely | high notes, high C, E and F down to B_ below the staff. “Now, as no singer dares to sing ‘) the absolute limit of her voice In pub- Mo, for fear of some misadventure, safe to say that Tetrazzini could s! a G If she wanted to, and, possibly, G sharp and A, above the second staff. | “Occasionally a phenomenon is heard | of whose palate is shaped like that of a song bird with a slight split in it, #0 that when singing the high notes it almost vanishes out of sight. Thes people usually can sing above the sec- | ond staff, and whistle beyond that, but| the medium voice ts almost always in- sufficient, and even cultivation will not | make a perfect singer of these human birds How the High Notes Are Taken. |E “The approved method of taking the | 9) high notes !s to relax the jaw abso- lutely, to open the back of the throat) very wide, to lft up the soft palate and make as large as possible space ts for the emission of sound and to at- tack and sustain the note on a deep abdominal breath, The root of the tongue must also be held so as not to obstruct the passage of the tone. The resonance of the high notes Im felt in the nasal cavities and in the face, and some singers say that er overy hy notes feel as if they were coming out of the top of their heads, “In order to get all the resonance possible and to avoid any obstruction either of the flow of breath or to the rofonance cavities, most very careful of the way tt tn jan singers are} they stand when producing their high notes. The | ¢ position of the head is of much im. tr portance, lw “Jean de Reszke used to take a high A in the first act of the young ‘Sieg. tried’ for which he began to several seconds ahead. He would w stand | jot great ability Is again under key. charge of gra. larceny honey amounting manged to cra | man were harges which were dismissed. prepare | aperture not more inches startled the Police Sessile > Abbt ALARM STARR CAPTURED |... (CLIORNS Francisco the police « ay he most spe ala confidence man the day and a wanted here on the in drugging an a fe Blank in @ SI! stealing nam! rings, last and pins sensational ils ar recalls the ape which he made m the We y-seventh street station after bel ked up by former Lieut. Frank F charged with the robb fully built fellow, high and weighs Despite his stature and nan 160 pounds. sip out the station hou x a crowd of prisoners, za disappear. Capt, Russell, a Heutenant and a door-| icing on jeaught fire, Every | will be ork was | brought up afterward in, boat and exit from New atched for weeks, but Starr's esc as complete. His ability to pull hi nine or Departme SATURDAY, Man Who Escaped From Po- lice Here Will Be Brought Back. In the arrest of Edwin Starr. alias} John Sweeney and a dozen other alias le- ar jail breaker of Starr nd ed | nd ng more th through an opening in ils cell through which a stove pipe extended, | door during the axcltement of arraign- leap a high picket fence in the rear of the station |2 A. elf through an) ten nt quen TETRAZZINI SINGH EE LAT JANUARY ' 18, 1908 MILLIONS RUSH IN AUTOMOBIL TOWAMILTON BANK Swift Motor Cars $2,500,000 From Lower Broadway. READY FOR MONDAY RUN Carry Reopening of Harlem Institu tion on Time Calls for Broadway, |tx counting and transmis erick D. [intendent fof the Kilburn, of Banks and now a direc Hamilton, and Anthony Stumpf, eotor, Who represents the Bronx |directorate and Bronx depositors. In the directors’ room of the Guarantee and Trust Company money was counted and prepared shipment. It was necessary for Hamilton Bank to have n hand bills all denominations from one dollar hundred, as well as sily sillver dollar. numbers ta MARCE.LLA KO5 MIBRICH a, the for the toa the at pssential It required more time to count 1 all the rest combined, Five active and error-prouf clerks counted the huge bulk with fleet fingers, however 40 FIGHT FOR Lit IN DASH THOUGH Suh NG MINE attle Five Hours With Fire j in Covering Seven Miles Underground. | MONONGAHELA, Pa, Jan 18.— | Mirac sly escaping death by ere ma or suffocation forty miners em- ployed in the Gatsburg mine of tt Mo! gahela River Consolidated Coal and Coke Company made thelr way throug the dark headings a dis- tance of seven miles and nally reac open alr. and guide them vattle when they fac and | reached 1 for und their we were in stumbliy > time du Ww the men started Charlerot explosi s, panie-s their jou etically When the men M. to-da were sobbing «\ large force the part und all ips ached the surface at majori of all i ‘S | REVIVED AT LAST Emaciated Woman Restored by Proper Food them | Stacke of Currency, The product of their work was then AP WARSHIPS ALL it TUNED and a photographer were admitted the room during the counting. Seated lat tables were the five clerks, each working with the energy of beavers Piled on the floor were hundreds of of bills, and on desks and of a family for a year, Two and a half millions makes a formidable ap- 4 Tens WEece Declaration of ar bers Min-| 0 rie former state Banking Superin- ister Confirmed by American Hlth) Soci ae Gree Chine v nd ont, keoping to 4 Naval Attache. tall of the count. ‘The room. re-| 1 do one of the tron cages in the asury when tie count was fin- (Copyright ished and the money was ready to he nok deposited In bags and rushed to tl on 0 iting sautomobiles, Men in) uniform TOKIO, Jan, 1/.—Japanese fleet is [in Japanese waters, except few small in China and Coreat port given all disposition of ships to sociated Press corre The of the arms and legs are tubes like a piece of gas pipe. The | hollow centre is filled with soft red fatty material called marrow. This is the place where new red blood is made. 'Scott’s Emulsion feeds hone marrow. The rich fat and the peculiar power in SCOTT'S EMULSION gives new vigor and new nourishment. That iswhy pale peopleimprove on SCOTT'S EMULSION. It has the power to produce new red blood Dai ee in Ceylon, via she will cal] on a friendly | AU Dru S0c. and $1.00, visit Any statement differing fr absolitely without foundatt ‘The rule for old people i is | ‘one Cascaret daily. The bowels, | | like other muscles, grow less active | with age. They need help. Most old people must give to the bowels. some regular help, else they suffer from constipation. | The condition is perfectly natural. It is just as natural as it is for old people to walk slowly, | The muscles are less elastic. i And the bowels are muscles. j So all old people need Cascarets. | And most of them need them daily | One might as well refuse to aid weak eyes with glasses us to neglect | this gentle aid to weak bowels. The bowels must be kept active. mever so much as at sixty. This is important at all ages, but Age is not a time for harsh physics Youth may occasionally whip the bowels into activity, Buta lash can't be used every day. What the bowels of the old need is a gentle and natural tanic, that can be constantly used without harm. And there is no matter of choice here. The only such tonic is Cascarets One Cascarets are candy tablets. They are sold by all druggists, but never in bulk. Be sure to get the gemuine, with CCC anevery tablet. The price 4s 50 cents, 25 cents and 10 Cents per Box. 3h If you want your “business” to become the talk of the town, tel “Phe Road 10] aout it through a World “Want” Ad, of | sion being the supervision [Frank L, , the newly elected | Went of the Hamilton Bank; Fred- former Stato Super. | Title | mi bun Is, an chairs other packages, each containing | a sum that might relleve the necessities | dose, =| Hollow Bones Kean eyes pon. carrie What the jist package had _ been toned. into the attomablies and the tally ul rendered thelr reports. en took thelr ure Kot under Money Now “On Tap.” President Grant sat in one automobile, while tho former State Super- intendent took a position in the second i arrier, ‘The money, upon arrival the Hamilton Bank, Was placed tn the vaults und will be on tap to any f the 18,000 depositors who call Menday merging at thelr bank Grant is a Vice-President ‘arnegie trust Company, and {t s efforts in a great meastire that opening of the Hamilton Bank effected, or twenty-six years be ‘onnected with the Central srust Company, having entered the employ of stitution, as an errand boy and his connection as an official. red He said to-<day: “We are prepared to pay every claim due in full) We contemplate no further inte ption of the uftairs of the bank. W more than aacore of new, eposits, We worked hard to accomplteh’ this ning, and loing so have elim- the connections which had every- « to do with causing the temporary ing of the institution.” a Strenuous Work. TRASK MUST PAY $10,000. 3 GLI FALLS, N. Jan. 18,—A verdict of $10.00 was found against In two swift automobiles, each con- | Spencer Trask, of New York and Sa: ainin uniformed polle n, two and | ‘#82 veste vt Sandy Hill, The pla! t aniformed policeman. two and | 10 imi a Carthy, of Ge a million dollars in notes and sil-) as. who Was knocked down ane | severely, intured last ‘summer ‘by. Mr. ver were transported today to the/Trask in his autmoblle near Lake Hamilton Bank in Harlem, which wilt | Gore’ resume business under new director- Ps: ee mo ship at 1 o'clock Monday morning. The | money was sent fro mthe Title Guaran- | Ley and Trust Compa on lower | MANY VIGTINS HERE ——— | Easily Mixed Prescription Said to Be Doing Lots of Good in New York. To make up enough of the “Dande- lion treatment,” which is claimed to be relieving nearly every sufferer who uses it for ba he, kidney com- plaint, sore, weak bladder and rheu- matism, get from any good prescrip- tion pharmacy one-half ounce Fluid Extract Dandelion, one ounce Com- pound gon and three ounces Compound Syrup of Sarsaparilla. Dundied in small packages, each in-|Shake well in a bottle and take in | dicating the amount contained therein. | teaspoonful A reporter for The Evening World |and again at bed) to] doses after each meal, e. Those who have tried {it claim that lit acts gen‘ly but thoroughly on the kidneys, relieving backache and blad- der trouble and urinary difficulties al- most instantly. Many cases of rheu- atism are known to have been re- |lieved witain a few days, the pain jand swelling diminishing with each A well-known local druggist, who is in a position to know, asserts that jthis prescription, wherever it be- jcomes known, always ruins the sale lof the patent medicine jrheumat , kidney cures, &c. It is a recipe which the majority of patent medicine manufacturers, and jeven certain physicians, dislike to see | published. Few cases, indeed, which |will fail to fully yield to its peculiar oothing and healing influence. RADWAY'S READY RELIEF I never to re born attacks of Kheumatisn t Lumbago, Paty in Sprains and Strains race of soreness " unusunl of toll or by annoying nflammatory Als the strain palnful atta RADWAY vy YORK, NOPMING Bei TER | lows State Normal School For age is never so active as youth | H.W. SEERLEY. Prandent CEDAR FALLS,1OWA. I know of nothing bet- ter to give veneral infor- mation to teachers and pupils in public schools than such a publication as The World Almanac and Encyclopedia. H. H. SEERLEY, President, THE QUARTER-CENTURY RECORD OF EVENTS IN THE A (1,000 PAC ts oomplete and accurate nee one interesting feacares reference book. the most popular of of that 25 Cents (West of Buffalo and Pittsburg 30 Cents); by Mail 35 Cents The Sunday World’s Want Di- rectory makes more “Offers of | Positions” than any other two mediums isftho universe,