The evening world. Newspaper, August 21, 1908, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ISMAN BUNS SITE. OF VICTORA AND NAY GUSTOSCIR —_——— Belasco Theatre Figures in| Plucky Motorman, Badly Justice Orders Mr, and Mrs. ! Deal and War on Syndi- cate Is Talked Of. PRICE PAID A SECRET. Hammerstein Holds a Long, Firemen Have Hard Work to! Strangers Have Been Keeping Lease on Both of the Houses. the wealthy Piitladel- operator, to-day bought proj at Seventh avenue and ond street, on which Hammers y and the indications seem to be Is the real beginning of a lively al syndicate, head- nger, and with Mr. Felix Isman, phia rea! estal the Forty rly stein's Victoria and the Belasco Theatre stand, that it fight on the theatr ed by Klaw & Erl Isman and David Be! sco the opposing: forces. The purchase was trade from the Davidson estate and price was not stated, Oscar Haminerstein Mids a both long lease on both sites, and b theatres not long after he completed the New York Theatre, now owned by Klaw & Erijanger. Hammerstein sub- leases to David Belasco, and in ad- ditional to a rental, It is said, gets a percentage of th profits from the Belasco and a private box, Will Try to Oust Hammerstein: Edward FE, Pidgeon, representing. Mr. Isman, who is in Philadelpliia, sald that in a conversation over the long-distance telephone to-day Mr. Isman declared he {ntended at once to proceed legally to oust Hammenstein from both sites, on the ground that the clauses of the lease which he, Isman, has taken over have been violated. “I am not at liberty to say,” sald Mr. Pidgeon, “In fact I don't exactly know, the details of Mr. Isman’s claim, but he assured me that he could have Mr. Hammerstein's lease declared void." “Mr, Isman may have bought the| Droperty—I don't know anything about that,” sald William Hammerstein, son of Oscar, and the m of the Vi torla, “but he will have to wait six- teen years before he gets into either Place. We have held a lease for twelve or thirteen years already and! we have sixteen more to run—sixteen on the Victoria and sixteen on the! Belasco, with twenty-one more on the ‘ater at a slightly Increased rental “And I might add," he continued, “that we aren't golng to move out be- fore the expiration of that time. Things are coming too good for us, As for vio- Jation of the clauses of the lease, that Yen't even good fiction. If he knows of any violation, why doesn’t he come out and say so? Confidentially, I think it’s just a dream—from Philadelphia.” Felix Isman bucked the theatrical syn- dicate some months ago, not very long @fter Klaw & Erlanger went out of a vaudeville venture in which Isman was interested. The Philadelphian stepped in and secured the lease of the Broad- way Theatre, in which Klaw & Erign- ger figured along with Litt & Dingwall. Then he got the American and Circle and added to his string of theatres out of the city from time to time, always invading syndicate territory, Since the Shuberts ceased to be inde- pendents Isman and David Belasco are practically the only managers outside the syndicate, and now that Isman has @nnounced that he is going to oust Hammerstein, the natural inference is that he and Belasco will combine, When Isman first started out to fight the syndicate he went into the vaude- ville field as well as that of r theatrical productions, taking with him as ally the booking ag William Morris, who had been forced out of the United Booking Offices, the vaude ville syndicate, who has bobbed back into the game more times than any other manager or agent in the his- tory of theatricals, Then, owing to a clause tn his con- tract with Klaw & Erlanger, when that firm and Isman withdrew from vaude- ville the Philadelphian had to sever his connection with the vaudeville end of the game, and Morris remains In control. He and Morris are still friends although, outwardly, they are no longer partners, and {f Isman succeeds In turn- ing Hammerstein out bag and baggage the Inference is that Willlam Morris will get the sublease of the Victoria and operate an independent house. Morris did not deny this to-day when asked about it. vaudeville. 1 TRAN APREAT. HOIST POT BROLIN Scorched, Backs Cars to | Station in Safety. | PANIC 1 tinguish a Lively Blaze. Just asa three-car train on the Fifth avenue division of the Brooklyn Rapld Transit. coming from Bay Ridgs to New York, pulled out of the station at For- | tleth street and Third this afternoon, there was an explosion that Ufted the 1% passengers out of their) seats, and the next instant the motor | box, up forwani, had a halo of blue and | yellow flame playing around it. | A fune had blown out, and the “shoo fouling on the third rail was doing the vest, What it did was a plenty,/ tov, | avenue Is | In the middle of a sensational habeas corpus sult for the recovery of @ beau- tiful sixeyear-old girl, Justice Bischoff !n the Special Term of the Supreme Court patrick to arrest on a charge of “will- ful and wicked perjury" father, who calls himself Victor M. A. Feyn, , don't AACE | ny known on the court records as Geraldine | !@8t year. I don't remember the ex9ct |inviteq Annis and his wite te in de Bonville. date, but Tony knows. The Invitation was accented, Atte 7 “When I became well I went with my |4inner at the Fort Capt. Hains | ab ° and his The habeas corpus proceedings were) | st. i. Bensonhurst, We lived ("ile and Mr. and Mrs. Annis wert es drought by Feyn, who sought to recover the custody of his baby girl. birth of the child and the death of her S_ PREVENTED.| AFFDAVIT THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, AUGUST NQ Wit NEIGHBORS FORCED THORNTON HAINS TO USAFE Sarena) SE" MEM QUARTERS — (Continued ¢ rst Page.) — | term of imprisonment drove the half-) 1, IsI distracted French woman to a revela-) formatio turns yn of lier motherhood. Here ts hei] 7 genwlng, als from y Gen, Hains and s asked by his | coum, | sel when ho first had suspiefon Feyn Arrested on a came to the United States from|aguinst his wife he did not appear ta ba > the south of France about three years | understand the questlon. Pressed for Goa ee 4 3) an er, he replied listlessly: as maid to Mrs. Gen, Peter C.) won, wien she told me she had been ‘The Geheral and his wife were! on the for ago Hains. Perjury Charg [then Hving in Washington in K street | The fore pont malar wes what led i : i 7 4 he divarce action appears that REPUDIATED Mrs, ‘T, Jenkins Hains waa living with | When Capt. tiains returned. from, di f + them. T. Jenkins Hains, ‘Tony,’ 48 1) on the Pacitle coast In response io @ know him, was seldom at home, message from his brother warning him of the trouble at home he sent no notice | “When Mrs. Hains died on Jan. 16/07 Nie nite Bho was greatly ermyrieed 906, I was given “charge vf little Mol! when he walked into his quarters at {le, whom I loved a8 L might my own) Fort Hamilton Without any. prelim. t one year ago Tony and 1|inacier, his liwyers say, he told her iid | About one) yean ago Tony ANG Lihat Neohad heard tron Mmlrathon Six-Year-Old Girl Since nd little Molly moved to a house at oKing him in the eyes, she asked, Her Birth Cropsey and Twenty-third avenues, Mngly Mn | Bensonhurst. le oi did you come all the way from “Before that time Tony had asked me, pear Rausltes on sich @ foolish er- | to marry him, but we never got to hav- ing a ceremony performed, When my baby was about to be born Tony took me to a hospital in Brooklyn, I do not | know where it 1s and I do not know the name of the doctor Who attended me, Says She Is Sure of His Love. | “Tony came to see me nearly every day while I was in the hospital. The bab ywas bora on Dee, 13 or Dec. 2 did,” reviled the Captain, “Tha stories your brother told vou are noting but gossip,” she declared jemhere ta no. truth In them. My fons with Will Annis have been per- fectly honorable,” he Believed Her at First. “'T delleve vou.’ Capt. Hab |lewed to have said. “And eats AM | forelbe what I tink of them and you nt you to invit n dinner to-might.” peg tye cn Mrs. Hains went to the telaphone and to-day omlered Policeman Fitz- the child's and his present wife, who {s Coney Island !n an automobtt, Anni was arreste: ine oe CHa ao d for speeding on Next day Capt) Ha there until last May when we oved up After the |here to Bay Ridge. Tony was worried Nasty Place for Accident. mother the child iad beeen in the care | about something: I suppose about some | wig | cies Yay ane Minato net: [t was a nasty place for such a mis-! of Miss Johanna Meade, of No. a6 West | stories he had heard about his brother's | 'r Jenkins Hatns mauled Riehl wauiee: hap, for at that point the elevated One Hundred and Fifty-tirst street, | wife sal ae RIE WE Shere she had been dur. structure stands higher in the air than Miss Meade, a pretty young woman,| "Since the baby was born I have) Uf tir Sosance ee. re emi tony fo at any point in Brooklyn—a# feet to be! told Justice Bischoff that she !s em-|spoken to Tony at marrying me. but! “Capt. Hains, Mar, Melniyre a Riven 1 vute| ployed by dressmaking firms and that! something has alway€ turned up to pre-j his wife the question, unesacreare ex and just beyond is the acute) ploy a fan ailae se duce pected! y i paces Oe ad as ‘i ‘ ) ak 7 y he loves me as well a Nec ushing, that she had curve at Thirty-ninth street, into she earned an average of $12 a week. j vent It hy , s < d villa which the train bad already turned, | Her mother also toid of their support- |I love him and Liat bs we eel ye kes spite friends {n a little village tht ; Onno | ringing up the baby Baboon ag helRea out OF this tLOuns: “How dlc ” With the men and women aboard in a | !n@ and bringing ur |have erled ail the time elnce he went Ww odid you go? asked the cap- state of panic, and fire darting into the | Firemen's Hard Job. | T mn had a hard time getting Thereupon Justice Bischoff immediately | Phe: freney eee committed the child to the custody of she would be extended credit by the her aunt and ordered the arrest of the | up on the structure to fight the flames. | After the police had cleared the stairs of hy reach the fire In the timbers, where It | statement of Mr. had spread along the sizzling, snapping | third ral] almost to Forty-first street, | tHey had to climb up the “L" pillars, wriggle through the underpinning and then haul up picks and axes and an- other Ine of pipe from below with ropes. It took them nearly an hour to put out the fire, The structure was pretty well scorched up for a two-block stretch, and of the front car not much remained except the trucks and the metal. A shuttle service was established on the southbound track which had not been damaged, In order to keep the line open to Bay Ridge until repairs couid be completed on the weakened side of | the road, ———>_— BLAZE TIES UP BROADWAY. ' Top Floor of Buildiug Blocks the Cars, tire on Clitord He tained the commitment papers Justice F evn at § ”), t MAS, HELE: | Feyns. and station fon them they ran one Ine | pasjer was at once 2 [had not were remanded to the Tombs ‘M. Bosse, a clerk of Speciat 2 ; i no. |away. y," responded his wife, “ windows, there might have been @ big | Term, on Wednesday, had to call Pow [iy ke ata not ine} went on the hoat.” met disaster to record if the motorman | iceman Fitzpatrick to save Miss Meade) ao) sin annoy when they lett | ngnhat boat?” queried the Captain, ran Bey ARTE! de by Feyn. i} i aes sharply, knowing that the v! f hadn't kept his wits about him, from threats made by Feyn. here last Saturday morning. The last |question wae nat accessible Nee aat He was one of those unnamed, under-| The Meades set up as their conten- thing Tony id to n ‘Marie, }and could be rea ‘train, paid shabby chaps that the B. R. T.}tton for holding Kdna, the six-year-old | pee a good dinner, because Pete and hance boat that ft ) move rol ocl he}ehild, that her father is not a prop 7 pals - {his wife. The ferr: hire# to Ht its sollte at ock, but ne) ee He eee for the little girl on the |! Will be home early I did not know | ye Motntyre Capt. Hains ace stuck to his post, although badly | prend that he has lived under various{anything had happened until the | cused his wife of lying and she broke scorehed and siuged, and backed the | Bi" ; General came down that night and/down and told him all, She sald, ac- train until the rear platform of the] Miss Meade testified that the present|told me Tony was arrested.” cording to the that she’ had » : sent | y |heen in love with Annis for six yeirs rearmost car met the edge of The! Mrs, Feyn had been known to hee 4§/ T, Jenkins Haina has sent no written ana that she loved him at that ‘ime station. j Mrs. Kenimle and, iso as Jennle Blait message to the woman who says she {s/Capt, Hains, Mr, McIntyre asserts. ‘nz Then the guards flung open the gate |S far back as I$. ‘the mother of his baby since his arrest.) mediately left the house and QA not a 34 f ate | On Wednesday, Gustave Victor Louls y Reatrnviaalenronil vay And the passengers and crew, running | a doip) senepper, according to an affi- She has been visited twice by Gen. Ysrough the train, piled out tn scared | dayit submitted to the court, was de-|Haing and once by Major John P.| heaps upon the platform, clared to be the f brother of Feyn, | Hains, who packed up and took away The ‘shoe’ which went wrong at the |@od 80 Feyn declared on the witness , cla or th first crash, ripped up the third raft for |stand. Abraliam Brill, of No. 20 Broad. eae otpclothinwy totathe avon men) Saray eg _ she way, counsel for the respondent, had . | a distance of more than a block, to an | information trom Sclepper’s wife that | Ignorant of the Country. } ‘acoompaniment of the same kind of | gchannor was living at No. QL Her {gnoranee of tne customs of the rorks iley have in the Brocken| ton avenue, Jersey City Helghts. By a| country and of the exact degree of T. | soene fro Faust.” The Interlor fs=|letptertuge, using a fake messenger | Jenkins Hains’s participation In the! Ings of the fron: car had deen afire| DOs. they, got Srieprer to come IMO Lining of Annis has served to drive the from the start, and ty the time th®) When he got on the stand he de- little French woman almost to distrac- | last passenger had landed on the plat-|cjared that he had never signed the tion. She has no friends and no ac- form the woodwork was burning and | the tles had begun to blaze up. enough to live on and if she did not | | | | afMfildavit to the effect that he was e the nelghi Her! ; h quaintances outside the nelghbors, Her merely falt-brother of the sultor, and | ggyotiok to both the children Is un-| denied absolutely any affidavit, mistakable. She says she has money ea Assistant District - Attorney | BAY Ridge tradesmen. Alou and | Salton CAOFheY | Marie Sulmande Is short, Sadie I. Werber, seventeen years up across the platform, To |Criminal Courts Building and took the|dark. T, Jenkins Hains is also rather | old, who lived with her widowed moth- Brill, and after ajswarthy, hia skin being tanned by ler at No, 39 South Orange avenue, conference with Justice Bischof! ob-|many years of cruising in the West | Newark, came to this c@y last night for|Indles, When the couple first moved and that for Mrs. Feyn into Bay Ridge the neighbors thought . When court adjourned bail they were Italfans, from the fact that been furnished. and the couple|soth went around continually in thelr ‘bare feet and were careless about thelr Bischoff fixed the ball | ber grocery, With them went Louls | Baron, another barbe®, and Rosa L. Gilmore, of No. 105 iairmount avenue —- line barefoot for hours at a time uP! dared the other to get marriod Jand down the walk in front of his! The dare was : aaah Jto Jersey City. where Justice of the jhouse with his hands clasped behind | cers’ ciay’ married both couples j his back. i} = Wieoy AL, GMS, T To-day Sadie's mother learned of t! “What Is your baby’s name?" he Wa3 e maarriage and dr her from jasked one day by a womin wno met | house, ‘Phe bride went to her husband nore, the mother of the parental bless. er and Baron, Mrs, Patrick Gil R ing to her daugi him wheeling the little one in a per-|the other girl, ambulator. y"" he replied confusedly, "youl ae ae haven't named hor yet. T B OOKL j An ha think we will call her Louls:—yes, that R YN Kir +! {8 her name—Louise,”” | Ee « Slayer in Bad Mental State. | (Continued from First Page.) a yo] John F. McIntyre and J hay, | ee basttle a met Mrs. counsel for the Hains brothe e|the bases, Abby fouled to Bergen. °7 | Wilcox wears ma r ito insist that Capt. Hains 1) RUNS | Jewels and her « and Is about to break Sixth Inning A fire on the top floor of the alxestory | business bullling, No, 15 West Seven- teenth street, at 5 o’clocie this morning, rrrerr Will Be KING AND Week of PVOle {OF iiseessseseses resident, led in Pe BE Se oe oh oe he ofr ake ofe oft fe ofe she of. | Official Voting Coupon. Thy Coupon Entitles the Holder to Cast One ‘autiful Woman, Who, on Sent. 14, 1908, at the MARDI GRAS FESTIVAL AT CONEY ISLAND, Carnival ot th Age of Progres® Contest Closes 12 Noon S2pi. 1G Creshonref, Lsu WORLD MARDI GRAS BDLLUM, PB, Oy town, 1 2 Washington «t, fe af oes fe oe af fee of fs oa: 0 for the Most ork, or One Vote for the Most Crowned QUEEN of the Sept. 14 donsoccenccguanod ile Nh 4 (or Queen) 10, 1908. eset. Aad 4 ———— Secretary, rlons branches: Harlem, 249 W. Polltieer Batidine amd Woks ahs obs obs ahs ss hs hs ahs ahs hs ahs hs t! Public Service | Long Island Rallroad Coi tuns the ferry, to the cormpiaint In his f § | Sagamore noon and at intervals of one hour.” Officials of t 1 the rt that while Capt Pattee s to left i t hera COT right ate ts way down to the fifth floor, and . vathataHacls led to 1 c flames and water da 1 the stock of | 1, Cetin) ‘ NRUNS ote gio Cherles Levy, a skirt manufacturer. peottg } ROWE e Was tobbad of by Lewis's The fire was confined to the two upper | Procedu has shown no traces | ie Was To f py Lewis's floors. During the blaze the Broadway oy { As for T. Jenkins Haing, | Breat stop and t Jordan ha. ars were held up for an hour, creating | tion, omplainant ts Mr has not been shaken since his | {nmi it . ade along the thoroughiare for | a” vrouig. of Mattituck, L. 1 out oa I t pels le raeanastiteos ihe wide er ct-Attorney Darrin tg not to be’ Maddox tr centre, soa ————»——__ Mrs cox is the widow he. if Boreas | founder of the Wilcox P. bans : Pe ed in tha prosecutton of the son. Th Med to Berg ONE KILLED; FIVE HURT | : arp apereBax Cont s brothers for the murder of Ane RUS any i veon Hving In) nig 5 he Queens C. Seventh Inning, IN AUTOMOBILE SM | Bast She and Mrs, Moule ick of funds. The Queen: | w fe hours in B | cy ofliclal saw Ce ler Metz to-day ‘Bergen was an easy out, Maddox to ASH, | wore tr 1 ghbors in Brooklyn aww Compr rotet: Melty tOs08T ararken. Maddox. could (not met den a | toe aay hi d was asaured that he could draw for Sheehan and he walked. Me- 08 ANGHLES, Cal, Aug. 21—Jo- aaaMcaneae stra, Wiileox: ¢ the alty treasury for any a:iount an made @ pretty, singie to centre bs, ratte Was Killed) lieving that Mrs, Wiscox wa owner me he needed, Ey Pe be Ay Adda d Mrs, Gladys Price. Mrs. Francis\of ti premis inbridge | “71 ask for $1000 first,” said Mr. pees WA huNS uiiee Tae eae or create ee and Balnb yaivin to an Evening World reporter, | Leach single! t0 left. clarke was ou of Los’ Angele: er tear y ay A ( i on a foul to ¢ ner fil day at Wesley and West Jamteragn arts meet dual Wilcox after the conference with | Tumiey, Abby filed to Hummel. > sireets, when a wheel of alxty horse: al D stroller, “and {f I find that is) RUNS. ‘chine turned turtle, ‘pinning. tine f : not sufficient I will request another Elghth Inning. O66 Thana NG | siniiar mount, If it Is necessary to Lumley flied to Thomas. Maddox followed wh Jeatl alienists to tefute the cont ni walked Hummell. Jordan foul filed to | The Injured fp of the defense taut the Hains br Storke, lewis beat out a ‘unt to — a is | e al will at le: Storke, Hummell was out, Storke mo, u Unitd, fe a reatonatle estimate to Leach, trying to go to third. NO ofr of oft ote she oh | ‘ aut nt | RUNS. | it sur ote of afe ¥% | Phaw.” Storke out, Lewis to Jordan Pattee ny? tat Jneichie) preseciLonege Anan to Jordan settled Wilson, Gibson filed District-Attorney Jubilant. ‘to Lumle: RUNS Ninth Inning. Rirgen foul fie& to Gibson. Sheehan out, Leach (o Storke. McMillan was walked for Ruel Attorney ft his was jul L. ANNEX FERRY =a. i his office sent to thalco d allowed was a complain Windmuller has Commies: uls about the proposed discon Bel onal H an | annex ferry boat b en Long} have sie y }Island City and Pier 8 East River.| hands. Five of them are u The Commission at its stated meeting | but I also have forty-elght o to-day adopted an order requiring the | AWA NK (TiAl, al Led Bet Mighty hard to quit, once t is certain that the Hain sand you start using Post (iat!) “salisfy or answer’ thin ten days | Mr. Windmuller refers | * announcement by letter was committe assured m yeoming 1 en to trini In Toasties McIntyre has , he would prefer to have Long van placed at A disadvantage a er to November persons In New Jersey, where arant the a “The Taste Lingers”’ onnect by downtown ferries w forced to consen ; That the. & pay, | trial : Phgs. two sizes, 10¢ and tic. jas Mr € y rgel a F. Mel and his sssociate due 1 Ye pudlle te e Inside facts of Made by he se ts) a sin boat the w Capt me convince} Postum Ceres) Company, Limited, kes the trip now twiee tn | th nis to him. The Battle Creek, Mich, story, was gleaned from disconnected (interviews with Capt. Hains in the morning. three times In the after- In-| rela-! | with Vincent Fornell, a young barber, | | who had worked next door to the Wer- | dress, Hains was accustomed to walk: While the quartet. were dining one | taken and all crossed | 21, 1908 YOUNG WOMAN CLOTHIERS. SCIPES FON NURSE IN STOPE TEAS MATCH | H.R. Haskin’s Daughter Flees Ames, of Providence, Forces | From Plainfield to Bronx | and Disappears. Philadelphian to Play Four- | teen Games in Middle Set. | Albert C. Haskin, son of I (kin, of No, 83 St, Nicholas auditor of the Amertean Tobacco Com- yjs toyrnament to-day proved a straight pany, reported to the police to-day the [disappearance of his sister, Minnle M. providence player put up such a stub- the cus- th |tody of a nurse of a Plainfield, N. J.| fourteen games were necessary \sanitarium on Tuesday. He had traced! ceveral of them went to deuce two or R. Has-) NBWPORT, R. 1, Aug. 21—The Clo- avenue, thier-Ameg contest in the national tetn- vet affair, as was anticipated, but the | Haskin, who from escaped born defense in, the second set employed for blamed the race track for his predicas BOVADMITS HE HARD-FOUGHT ROBBED BANK TO PATHE | Total Loss of the National ’ Park, as Discovered, Is Only $380, Harold B. Koliler, nineteen years old, ¢ of No. 8% Seventeenth street, dsrooklyny was committed to the Tombs this afters noon after pleading gullty th the theft of $380 from the National Park Bank, 214 Broadway, where he has been four years. The boy | ment, jher to the neighborhood of his uncle's! three times, The specific complaint against him home in the Bronx on Tuesday night.) Emerson, the Chicago player, found) was presented to Magistrate Cornell in | After that nobody had seen her, joe difficulty in disposing of C. M,/the Centre Street Court by Cashier | > i ; Maurice H. Rwer. He accuse’ Kohler, The young woman w ull, of New ; c : | young woman was operated on) Bull, of New York, four sete being nec-| | cae nace trom his vacation to, three months ago and the shock left jher {n a state of nervous prostration essary, Summar AUI-COMERS TOURNAMENT. Tourth round (concluded): W. J Clo. Por this she was delng treated In Dr, | Kuhne's sanitarlum et Plainfield, On| ‘hier, Philadelphia, defeated J. 0. |tuesday she expressed a desire to do AMt% Providence, 6-2, §-6 6-3; N Emerson, Ohicago, defeated ©. M. Bull, | some shopping. New York, tf, 6-6, 2-6, 6-3. | Disappeared in Store. Fifth round: B, C. Wright, Boston, defeated C, le, Providence | She was driven to the town of Plaine pj qry © [ale Providence, €-1 |field in charge of a nurse. Arriving at ja crowded department store she had a $5 check cashed. That was all the money she had, In the crush about a ; bargain counter Miss Haskin slipped ‘away from the nurse and boarded a ‘trotley car for Fllzabeth. Inquiry at Hilzabeth revealed that she had gone to Russ's catering establish nt and purchased a box of cakes and sandwiches, Early on Wednesday morning the empty box was found in/ the vestibule of No, 53 Kelly street, the Bronx, the home of J. H. Kilne, DROPPED FROM TOP THE MONUM | the ung woman's uncle, Tne box bore the name of the Eliza _ | | beth caterer, The family thinks this He , e proves that the young woman was in Player Street, of Washington, the Bronx on Tuesday nig Her brother and sister are living with the uncle in the absence of thelr tather in | the West. | The theory of the brother is that his | | sister might have reached the vest!bule lof his tncte’s house late at might and jbeen waylaid thete. No one in | distuzbance, nor did |nouse heard any he doorbell’ ring. The @ntire house- hold retired early. | ‘The girl was described to the police jas twenty-five years old, 6 feet 2 inches! though often attempted feat of oi | tall, weight ninety pounds, blue eyes, !ng a regulation baseball dropped from | fair, light brown hair. She was dressed Monwnente tl jentirely in black, half mourning that 2 [she has worn since the death of her Go; mother two years ago. The father was advised of Miss Has- ™ent, before kin's disappearance by telegraph. I jplying, lie asked that the police be no- involved, tulled and private detective aged t |search for her. Hes hurrying home| THe ball was dropped from one ot ‘the small windows near the top of |as fast as he can, was considerably jarred by the Impa FARIS HS GOOD = SS Team, Accomplishes Feat Many Have Tried. WASHINGTON, Aug. | Street, catcher on the Wast dali jmade %1.—Charles ngton base- pain, to-day with J by performs won Biddle, the a bet of ! of this elty, the top of Washington sary {0 secure a Bromwell, In charge of the monu- his feat could be under- | the pavement, where Street It on the thirt pelng due to a rather brisk wind whi defiected the ball in its course. Stre | caught oon's American League game {jn this | clty. | pela Sr |W, OAKLET STEVENS IS SUED BY WIFE. | | Vice-President Misses His Train, So Goes for Dinner and | Drive With Friends, ‘Brooklyn Woman Brings Action in, Omaha, Alleging Cruelty and ST. LOUIS, Mo., Aug, 21.—Vice-Prest- Non-Support. {dent Fatroanks arrived here to-day Gy taHA, Aug. 2.—Mrs. Nettle G. | trom Excelsior Springs, Mo., intending gtovens, of Brooklyn, N. ¥., has sued for |to proceed eastward immediately, but | giv: ‘illtam Oaklet Stevens, of | missed the train and is remaining un- provklyn. In her petition the wife says ul evening, Accompanied by Congr ne was marr Stevens In Brooklyn man Coudrey he dined at tae Plant 191, and that have Hotel and ) Was taken for 1 Bree Slavens Jent Fairbanks |s en route to farm near Mansfield, Il He alleges that was enthusiastic in spetking of his re- th extren slor Spri hen ached he 4 rf I R SPRINGS, Mo. Aur 21 Vice-Preeident Fairbanks, who aq dressed the autauqua here ter | dence in ¢ day, left last night for St. Lout divorve | | | Chocolate Covered Sair Dates te—Lott'n pure, nfeetion of ri SPECIAL FOR TO-DAY, THE 21ST SPEGIAL FORTO-MORROW, THE 220 MAEAMED FULBERTS 100 | Means ton 106 SPECIAL FOR TO-DAY AND TO-MORROW Special Assorted Chocolates (xis) vo 19¢ High Grade Assorted Chocolates Poms 25¢ except thos no matt i i P| e of purity } Meee ay by the moat expert and experienced candy make money ean hire. Jast try Loftts candle e and we ot t= da wan this again. Park Row store open every evening until tt o'clock, All our stores open Saturday evenings until 11 o'clock, WE DELIVER FREE 54 BARCLAY ST, see MAWES saris Cor. West B'way. aR site 29 CORTLANDT ST, Ta Cok gS 9. ConChurch3t. st” PARK ROWENASSAU. |! 3 At City Hall Park. | Jday, and th | volunteered himself tion Before going away on his vacation og Aug. one for $200 and one for $180, sent First and disposed : “Tf there are any er. to take his medicine amination and was held for the Grand CATCHES BALL Jury ULCERS FORME could just manage to had places broken out as BG, dollar and I used to lie in misery almost perinit from | gi) night long and would cry with the ains, which were something terrible. Vhen I got up I would have to sit in -|taken, because of the extreme danger, two chairs in order to reat my ankles. My sister advised me to try the Cuti- * cura Remedies, F with hot water and Cuticura Soap e tho | applied the Cuticura Ointment and | monument, at a helght of 560 feet above had instant relief the firat time I ured them, enth attempt, the failures my ulcers are all heal walk as well as anybody. Oliver, 8438 Cedar Ave., Hampden, Baltimore, Md., Jan. 11 and 18, 1908, | ee i aie Meg Qe oN exercis hair cleansing, for baby t che Orr. Br Mailed EXTRA SPECIALS TRUNKS 95 Horc'lea$s.05 | $3.93 Leather B25 ' BAGS * | i So West, on 14th @¢, | & Door trap FOR ROOKLET, WTLLIAMS.—At St | on Friday, of his age, ¢ LIAMS, John J ful frien: tions of the Milhau faintly, LOST, FOUND AND LOST, diamond and pearl scarfpin on Cen tral Park West, between 59th and 88th youngster confessed and to go to court and give, up, He had spent his va playing the ponies,” 5 he had abstracted two checks, that were bank for It by the Bank of Mount Vernon’ ¢ them, ather thetts we have vered them,” sald Cai “These do nol amount to mu nler has made a full ¢ ession, boy nodded to this and informed Magistrate that he was prepared He walved ex- to the National in default of $1,500 ball ON BOTH ANKL As Big as Half Dollars—Followed Attack of Varicose Veins—Would Lie in Misery Almost All Night— Cried with the Terrible Pain. | HIS CURE RESULTED FROM USING CUTICURA “T had varicose veins and was in the $5) hospital three weeks. charged big ulcers broke out on my ankles, unprevedented which they had given me but it did not atch. do me one bit of good. They, tting worse instead of better an: After I was dis- 1 got some of the ointment kere tad I washed my ankles Now I am Nery alad to aay thes up and I can Faabe. EL —_+—_ WIND RASHES And Irritations of tne Skin Soothed by Cuticura. Warm baths with Cuticura Soap and ntle applications of Cuticura Oint- -= ment, the great Skin Cure, instantly relieve , and point to a speedy \ cure of the rashes, / itchings, irritations, ine flammations, chafings, . lameness and soreness * Fjincidental to outdoor For preserv. fying and beau the skin, scalp, native antiseptio hes, itchings and 3, 8 Well as for ecvemas, husnors, blackheads and other terturin, ng affections of the skin, Cutle ment are priceless, External and Interns! Treetr {Inf dren, and Ad ing, f tifyir d hands, for + ta sin, cura Resolver Coated Pils YOUR OLD TRUN 10D AS N & BAGS, Etc. K or BAGGAGE |The Only Company of Its Kind in the World, PY ‘3 § EW | TZ) tnd Maile to Order, tare Drummers! Samples, Bought, sold, Exehanged Factory Damaged Goods, Ete. IN NEW GOODS |. CASES LL i ‘75.05 | 1.08 Ext.btyle By Beat BMD | 008 Bari 4.05 Steerer |e | Short trip, 65¢, ather, Wardrobe wid verland Try u re runks ‘asea. Committed. Cases and” drips Fs NRW YORK, THOUSANDS OF BARUAINS cage Repairs Called for and Delivered. LOOK FOR THE "Emergency Baggage Repair Co. , 25 East 14th St. OIleD. Vincent's Hospital, 21, in the 60th year , RGE HASKELL WIl- body servant of the late Gen, Miihau, U. 8, A. and ® faiths and servitor of four generas Aug. « Notice of funeral later. REWARDS, . ee Liberal reward for its return, Low, Ri RENSETIN, 275 Conteal Park Wat. ne ee No Extra Charme for It. The World may be lett District Messenger Office P,

Other pages from this issue: