The evening world. Newspaper, March 24, 1908, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY,: MARCH 24,1 FORMER MONK 'Here’s How Homely Girls Can “Think” Themselves ‘HAFFEN'S Into Venuses of Dazzling, SLA BY FREAD. F EAD PATENT | Bonnano After Leaving the Franciscan Order Tock :. Role of Faith Healer. IN FAILED ONE CASE. Detectives Believe He Was Then Killed in Sicilian Way for Revenge. ‘To-day's dovelopments in the mystery | ef the murder of Vincenzo Bonnano, the aged faith nealer, who was found mur- Gered and mutilated yesterday after- Boon in @ room in the tenement at No. 985 Was Twenty-ninth street, prove that the crime was committed between UM ociock and ¥ o'clock yesterday morning. Lieut. Petrosino has led up in his investigations to what he belleves was the cause of the murder Old Bonnano, a former Franciscan monk, living ot N Mulberry street, freated hundreds of Sicilians, mainly | women and children, by the faith heal-/ fmg method. His simple fflends be-| Beved that, because of his former re-| Ugious aMiiations, he was @ holy man | and that the touch of his hand and he power of his prayers went far to! @ombat disease. Slain for Revenge. | Potrosino believes that Bonnanp | failed in his treatment of a woman or | @ child at some recent time and that the patient ated. Thereupon, accord- | ang to the theory, the father or hus- | Dand, determined upon revenge in a @haracteristically Sicilian wa A room was rented in the Twenty- ninth street tenement. Old Bonnano was told that a patient awaited him there. He called per appointment and two men, lying in wait, overpowered Bim, killed him and stole what money end jewelry he carried Bonnano was seen yesterday morning @t 7.80 o'clock walking rapidly in Mul- Derry stra between and Broome streets. He was probably on bis way to the Canal or Grand street Station of the Third avenue “L" a train for on| town. T vhere he was Yast seen nth street tenoment consume more | than twenty minutes. One of the women tenants in the| Twenty-ninth street house, passing | through the hallway abutting on the Foom in which Honnano was murdered, at 9 o'clock yesterday morning, saw the feet and legs of a man on the floor through the open door. She thought tt Was some one asleep, A few hours later another tenant, entering the room, iscovered Bonnano dead, The fdentity of the old man was ¢! tablished through a# letter addressed to himself found in a yeket of hia coat last night. Dete owed this Que found his {to Slols- mondo, of Nv. © ard street. Through Sicismondo an effort ts being made to-day to trace all the persons treated by old Bonnano for a!lments uring the past month, Here for 19 Years. Sleismondo said his uncle was sixty years old, and was born tn Casterler- mine, Sicily, and entered there a mon- @stery which was afterward abolished He became a carpenter later, but about nineteen years ago he journeyed to America. | Tirtng of carpentry about a year ago Bonanno had taken up faith healing. He went back to Sicily, but returned to America in the early part of the win- ter and rented a room in Mulberry Street, Italians in that part of the city, knew he had been a monk and were | fond of him. He was not known to! have an enemy and tuere 1s a_ be in some quarters that he was marked seorelg learned and that nis layers elther him to this country or to their, dloody task b ‘Help Wanted | To-Day ! | (As advertised for in The Morning | World’s Want Directory. | TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 1908. rdeners | Sirthy around the tropics, so she has opened a violet and primrose studio | Such thoughts, says Mrs. de C. Berg, are “rankest polson,” Perhaps that + te They Needn’t Use Paint or Powder, Either; Just Cut Out Spiteful Talk and Think Sweet | Thoughts. Squints and Freckles to Disappear Under Aesthetic Physical Culture Don't look at a girl's pink cheeks and wonder tf she paints or potcders. Not to be beautiful fs to cry to the world that one has lived a discordant life. Women are like th e trees of the forest—if they are not beautiful tt is because they have been deprived of sufficient space and sunlight. It is impossible to play a sonata on a piano that is out of tune, and it is impossible to be beautiful tf one's thoughts are not pure and sweet. True beauty consists of three parts—physical, mental and spiritual, From the philosophy of Mrs. Ivah de Chippenham Berg, Aes- thetic Physical Culturist. With the first whisperings of spring and the primal moving of the vernal sap, in from Chicago, has blown Mrs. Ivah de Chippenham Berg} (of the Illinois de Chippenham Bergs, you know). In addition to her name Mrs. de C. B. is burdened with a mission and a title, the last being: “Aesthetic Physical Culturist”—no less. Aesthetic Physical Culture not being a thing that hitherto has had much of a run hereabouts, it might be well to make an explanation. Aes- thetic Physical Culture Is to think beautiful thoughts while exercising. Simple, isn't it? Mrs. Ivah de Chippenham Berg, however, doesn’t think it Js as easy as {t sounds to touch the tips of your toes with out- stretched fingers, for instance, particularly {f you happen to be a little at No. 19 East Fifty-ninth street, where the beautiful thoughts are handed | out. THOUGHTS TO SUPPLANT ROUGE. Of course Mrs. Ivah de C. Berg doesn’t guarantee to make a Mary Garden out of the girl who wears a thirty-two and takes a forty-one-inch skirt, but she can help a lot. For instance, such a lady, to quote Mrs. de C. Berg, must never “look at the soft bloom on a beautiful woman's cheek and fhe G rouge or attribute the sparkle of her eyes to bella donna.” accountr some for the homely bunch along Broadway theae days, It is really the aimpleat thing In the world to become beautiful if you follow Mra de Rerg’a instrnetions. For instance, tf a lady feels “all upset” over thines In general ahe had better run right to the plano and pound out some llvely little thing or hunt up a good picture and look at it; for by nursing that grouch her good looks are wearing off as fast as a new sub- way guard loses his human attributes. Then, too, the Aesthetic Culturist can spread Joy wherever she goes— at home or abroad. Mrs. de Berg recommends every one to lay up a stack of assorted sweet thoughts, and then take them out and try them on the plano—ao to speak— when the occasion seems to require it. For the piano is to be the home maker of the future, according to the new light of the West. A scene in the honest workingman’s home, as Mrs. de Berg has It doped out, will, when the aesthetic culture thing gets going, run something like this: Honest Workingman entors with a hangover bun and a full-grown grouch. H. W. (unpleasantly regarding dinner table)—‘What! corn beef and cabbage again? Why tn thunder don't you get liver and milk for a change?” Here {s where the thought waves come in. The H. W.’s wife is already as handsome as she can be, having put up a fall crop of thoughts and got a plano on the instalment plan. She therefore does not reply to the Grouchy one, but, sk!pping merrily to the piano, touches the keys thusly: WHERE THE GROUCH VANISHES. Piano—"Um-tiddy—um-tiddy—um-tum-um.” H. W. (setting down the corn beef and trimmings and a wintry smile breaking out on his rugged face)—‘What is that thing?” His Wife—"The new thought sonata, my dear; {s it not beautiful?” H. W. (overcome with aesthetic physical culture)—“Go on playing. I'll finish the corn beef and cabbage. I don't care what happens when you play like that.” (Finishes the corn beef and cabbage and rushes from the house as one overcome with a new and strange emotion.) Of course Mrs. de Berg admits it wouldn't work as weil as that in all cases, but she does say emphatically: “No girl will need powder or rouge or marcela or other things !f she will only stick to the thought and piano exercise while thinking, or think while exercising—it goes both ways.” Some of the young chaps who dish out tickets for musical comedies that are here "for the summer” overlooked a good bet on the Aesthetic Physical Culture proposition. Test to Be Made of Music’s Effect on Human Subject by Odd Machine James E. Homans, who is a member of the National Society of Musical Therapeutics, 1s going to bind a young person—sex unstated—to a queer musical achine of his own devising in Carnegie Hall to-morrow night and size up how nis affected by the various kinds of harmonies that will ‘ According to the sort of melody handed out by the machine, #o will the heart Apprentice the snid young nx Bakers be distilled by his lyrical apparatus. Honnaz Hartente ; TAnkalide ‘lee battore 2. 4. |8nd pulse action of the subject vary, Kkeepers . Laundressea 1 |may be no mistake as to just how Boys Brickia Machinista Manicures Milliners W/ Nurses... the winter of much content. Operators | 7|that long suffering collection of notew will be juggled in new harmonies through 6 the musical kaleldoscope that Mr. Homans built, This should Interest many. especially as barrel organs are just waking from 8 Mr. Homans, and in order that there © Merry Widow” affects different folks, Painters. : 10 aphers ~NEW BABY BRINGS FAMILY $3,000,000 sen wee Tl rae ving Clerks .. 1 Dresena m painers 1 Other Heirs of Illinois Magnate Dishwashers Slee aad Al Will Lose by Birth After Drux Clerks Will Is Filed, r Runners 4 24] a 4 Engravers 2 Tingmitns 1| CHICAGO, March %4.—An event of Fam Hands 1 Typewriters (F).. 1) Rreat importance to the family of the Feeders ...cc:.5. 9 Upholsterers | 1|late Otto Young occurred last Sunday Finishe 6 Walters US gp night in the birth of a bow to Mr. and Rees 2 Ww ay| Mrs, Samuel Ko Martin. The boy is Fs . the ninth grandchile share the mill wa _)/tons left by the merchant, Until the Foreladies .... 2 Miavellaneous birth of this, thetr first caild, the Mar- -_. tins, under che terms of theo welll, Ria Total bnew eee e eee eee ves ae vt he World printed 1,110 Help| Now they h i pros Ads, to-day, 598 more than all other | the, frat Noung. Eraichtd oe! pore New York pagers combined: (Roose. a Ga cone ak S\chants of {| continuation of this line ts not only in four branches of the tamuiy arises from | the, Peculiar provistona of Mr, Young's In his testament Mr. Young directed that his widow and four daughters be | given. practically the entire income from his estate, but the nrincipal itself, amounting at the time Wf his death to | 000, “he left to be divided equally Among his grandchildren. The fam with the most children thereby will celve the most money and the one with none living at the time of the distribu- jtion will not share, The birth of the Martin effect of disarranging ca the families of the daughters, 5 \BRITISH ACCUSE JAPS OF TREATY VIOLATION. PEKNG, March %4—The British mer- Tlentsin and Ntuchwang have sent strongly worded protests to the British Government concerning the course pursied by Japan with regard to| the Tsinmintun-Fakumen Railroad. It} 1s held that Japan's obstruction to the violation of the pledges given at Ports- Youthful Beauty | IF. YOu Pont OWN A PIHNO JRYA Zz PHONOGKBPH 2 ALTH WORTH $1.00? alth Giving Vibrations the Minute. will relieve your indigestion will relieve your rheumatism VIBRATOR will relieve your deafness THE HOME ViBRATOR eighs 10 ounces, can be operated by n be placed in contact with any part of ing 50,000 vibrations per minute—S0o most expert master of massage. BREA Bronx Borough’s President Says He Was Vilified to Her in Anonymous Leit While Presitent Ha ta undergoing career at the "3 Invest! fn a sanitariu tacks made (iro mously upon her hus President Hutten sald t for The Eve: World to “Since the gation {nto my man agement of affairs in the Bronx m) reporter DEANE wife has been the reciplent of most Beatness, He Noises,,; Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lum- soandalous letters. I have been Ne! | Ringing in the Fars, in most|Dago, Gout, &e., are caused by to her in the most outrageous manner cases, are caused the thickening ot | ur id in the blood in the form of As @ husband and father I can trul say I am not the creature that I have been depicted. nor as culpable as many of my friends would seem willing t believe. “I do not care the snap of my finger what the findings of the commtisston result In y may remove me, tak: my officlal scalp and put me down and out for the time being, but they cannot through catarrh te of soda. This acid, through s|poor circulation at some particular point, gets stopped on its way through the system and, congregating, causes | 1. Apply the Vibrator to the spot and y il) give inner mem vr colds, ‘To relieve this the only thing, as it is the « each the inner dr ip the hard wax or foreig ound may penetrate to the dram THF HOME Vib s recults in the i marvel- Lvery home should have our Vibrator. $0 ws, May Fever, TRYING Al THOUGHT SONATA’ ON CORNED-BEEF AND CABEAGE.- i NOW LET ME. THINK THINK OF THE BEAUTIFUL | ( AITTLE BIRDIES FBC OGi Ts AND THE wit EES TAKING TREE-SIES. ERERCISE CARRIED INTO COURT Flower Hospital Patient Quick-! ly Discharged of Attempted Suicide Complaint. Miss Marguerite Beauvais, twenty- five years old, and said to live at No. 2 Wes Forty-seventh street, was charged in the Yorkville Court toxlay with at- tempted suicide. She was accompanied in a cab from Pivwer Hospttal, where she {6 still a patient, by Policeman Mul- cahey, her guard; by Dr, Allen, oe ital staff, and by a women. 1e | wan ao weait that she had to be atmos ORIENTAL DEPOSITORS carried into the courtroom and sup- STILL AWAIT PAYMENT. ported as she stood on the bridge. Many at the Bank With Their Dr, Allen requested that the case be expedited in order that Miss Beauvais Pass-Books To-Day Expected to Get Money. might be back in her cot before ill ef- Deposttors in large numbers came to fects were manifest. Mulcahey told Magistrate Cornell that five weeks ago the Oriental Bank, at Broadway and John street, this morning with pass that the young womay had swallowed six tablets of Bicnio de of mercury. A doctor was in attendance and sai Was taken’ to Flower Howpital the po-| peeed to be paid out of hand and were Uceman had been ordered to keep her| a ppointed when informed that thelr Ager MuEvel Aion, told the Gfagistrate| accounts must be verified and thelr cury in tablet form and there wag no Attempt at suicide, merely an overdose, | ‘The bank pad a number of bits, how- the Magistrate formally Qlscharged her | ever, and @ number of disputed ao- counte ware, gone over by the adv to-day he had been called to the Wout Veeventh street house and told f di r and no ambulance! books, which were turned in for cheok- yee called, but when the Young wonlan| ing and accounting. Some few ex- that Miss Beauvais had been in the books balanced before rat habit of cing the bichloride of mer- ould be taken. wep th reared that the young ry S i woman is a private patient at the hos- committee! hyped ssible to learn sent out to pital, And, oeirpeae ot thaving ner re: | depositors to come and get thelr money. moved from the espionage of the police. Information as to her personality was denied. LAW OF 1794 INVOKED TO PUNISH FOR SHORT WEIGHT PITTSBURG. March %4.—Informathas have been made against about twenty- five bakers in Pittsbure by those who claim they are getting short weight for a loaf of The law of 17 aays a loaf of bread must weigh e@ pound. EVANGELIST ATTACKED. UTICA, Neb. March 24.—Twenty men assaulted the Rev. F. A. Miller, an evangelist, of Lincoln, Neb., as he was on his way to the railway station and seriously injured him. In a sermon Miller 1s accused of having criticised the members of a woman's chureh society, Good Food Clears the Complexion, The best “Beauty Doctor” in the world !s a good, pure food. Rich, greasy or poorly cooked foods will ruin the finest complexion a woman was| ever blessed with, and all the cosmetics and treatments she may give it will only cover up, not remove the blemishes. The treatment must come from the {nside, for the pores of the skin must have the proper food to be healthy. | A lady living in the West of London, England, writes as follows: | “Grape-Nuts food has done me a world of good. Some years ago I fell | a victim to a serious illness, which did great damage to my constitution, I) gave up hope of ever recovering my natural good health until last winter, | when tempted to try ve-Nuts more from a liking for that kind of food | than from any hope of it doing me good, “T found, to my surprise, after trial of a week or two that I was getting quite plump, my voice much stronger and my complexion was becoming Deautifully clear, In fact, since eating Grape-Nuts my friends say years younger, and I believe them, as my glass tells me {t is true.” Name given by the Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. “There’s a Reason’’ for mouth in the peace treaty with Russia, Dut that 1S. Figo the ei future de- [velopment of Manchuria, Grape-Nuts I look 10) ——— the Constipat roorder now f suffering. simple a child can work it, Nothing to get out of order. deprive me of the honors I have won for the many years I liave been prest dent of the old Bronx Borough, and I think yet that the people will stick to me. “But above this whoie proposition It 1s my wife that I conslde SPECIAL PRICE for led prepatd for One Dollar, It Is always Bilmtieaitinesoniy, DL<OO) eye) crepsla for Che molar IU yea ELECTRIC VIBRATORS, ALL HOME ViBRATEGR CO. KINDS. Dept. W, 10-12 W. 27d St Near Sth Ave., New York, handed to me e jook in her eyes ouls, Is. th . I told h and she that. Oh very sick after y tung, And then away of Furniture so that T her. It’s i | : : ns beat tt and my, wife will er | from the Parker Building Fire. ‘Ihe goods are well, “what's the use of | uninjured; they are parts of broken suites aud odd urther?” ‘Haffen eat another. thing lots brought over from our storage warehouses, salary of the Rorough President i ¢ one million dollars a year 1 would While our insurance is being adjusted we offer our fo election oe . |Fee teva Winuklose one the: honor elegant stock, comprising the latest designs and pat- eres but when a man loses the com- terns in modern furniture, for— 90e on the Dollar Our New Store, 30-32 East 2isi Street, contains the larger part of our $100,000 stock, samples of which we displayed on the entire 7th floor of the Parker Building. In most cases the pieces have just been unpacked from our storage warehouses, All will be low prices, FREDERICK W. EVERS, 30-32 Easi 21st Street, Between Broadway and 4th Ave. forta of home and the confidence of 3 wife, then it Is time to cease aspiring. ————— YALE MAN DIES AT SEA BY FALL FROM MAST. Conn, March 24— Through the consular service at Mar- seilles, France, word has come here of the death of Allan Schuyler Malcolm, of | Yale, 1906, at sea, by reason of a fall | from’ a ve! is mast. He had shipped asa sailor for benefit of his health, His father’s home was in Melbourne, Aus- tralla. He obtained his secondary education at Medway, Mass., and Worcester, and while In Yale won he Hugh Chamber- laln Greek prize and the second Berk- eley premium. In junior year he was a hich oration man.” Later he made Phi Beta Kappa. After graduating his health failed and he went to sea. | NRW HAV sacrificed from our ,former exceeding AN ANTISEPTIC LAVENDER ‘ Crown Rewtstered E-0-DO DE-0-D r DOES - IT A DELICIOUS to, *%e., aw me The Favorite Smelling Salts {S. Eyer) scan ry For Neurly Forty Yeare , oe | QUT-A oe Boo CHEWING «3 ‘THE CROWN PERFUMERY Co. a Sig ~ - os eet 30 EAST 20TH STREET, N. Y. > — A BAD WHICH WILL POSITIVELY KILL BREATH NO MATTER WHAT f 5 CENTS A PACKAGE. FO Have you tried our new Periume RAL JEUNtSSE DOREE The Fuyorite of London Society i Sold Everywhere. j b Street. ALL JOB! New Xork City Branch. 221 West 25¢ an a ON SALE BY

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