The evening world. Newspaper, January 30, 1911, Page 8

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aii git o CALLED “INSANE” | BY POLICE WHEN SHE SOUGHT VOL Miss Hanlon Calls for Explana- tion of Commitment When Bellevue Discharges Her. SHE SEES CONSPIRACY. E, H. Harriman Gave Her $10,000 Stradivarius She Sent to Have Repaired. Mies Marie F. X. Hanton, through her attorney, Daniel J. Grady of No. 189 Montague street, Brooklyn, is going to call wpon oPtice Commiasioner Cropsey to explain how it ts that a young wom- *"an whe comes to Police Headquarters in an effort to get back her stolen prop- erty can be raiiroaded to the insane ward of Bellevue Hospital without he- Ing permitted to communicate with her physician, lawyer or friends. To Miss Hanlon, who, stripped of her wn clothing and barged in the coarse un@erwear and rough wrapper of @ charity patient, wan kept at Bellevue from 2 o'clock Saturiay afternoon un- til 19 o'clock Sunday morning without due process of commitment, this is as muth of a mystery as the whereabouts of her $10,000 Stradivarius violin, lost since iast summer, which was the occa- sion of her misadventure. Given Her by Harriman, s"The violin,” waid the young woman thie morning to a reporter for The Eve- Ring World, “was presented to me per- wonally my Mr. KE. H. Harriman in the ! soon atter he identified himself with the ratiroad and when ite stock was very low, telling me I cou “When I was singing with the Van- Concert Company. early inst T.gntrusted tne instrument to named D'Acugne, @ Mexican, aceompanyist for the com- ‘he wae to take it to C. H. .. Mo, 8 Bast Thirty-fourth Might repairs several times reported that ‘were not yet ready. In Bep- ‘Ditson firm old me that the he had vought there had away by him « short time began my experience with the T have Deen sent to and fro like between Headquarters and the Detective Bureau, until Satur- ‘when I came to Headquarters with Jetter of introduction to Inspe:tor from Mfr, John B. Coary of the Association, with the re- the public already knows.” : Neo Justice in Octentie: 4 i i my i eptecte, Mise Hanlon had operated on for adenoids. As the Of ber weakened condition she Cwine while in the hospital, but thie tact Dr. Gregory to be brough! @Ceanor in the BOTTLE OF THE GREAT KIDNEY REMEDY AQCOMPLISHES WONDERS, ‘Whee I sent for Thed to ms ceived perrerit vicinity aad tals us ry t! scalding sensation did not bother, afew ti would not have believed such a small petit would have done so int fer it was gone I learned kept Dr. Kilmer's Swa: #o got a large bottle for o it actually worth one hundred dollars. only took one large table: ti Gratefully yours, GEORGE 8, CHAMPLIN Ashaway, Ri 1, Personally appeared ( o me well known and m fi . R. Notary Public. j er to Prove What Swamp-Root ‘Will Do for Yor . Bend to Dr. Kilmer & Co, Binghen- fon, N. ¥., for « sample bottle. fonvince anyone. t wil You will all be sure to mention the New. orld. Regular fifty- Ye w uRNawe By _- it before Magi Yorkville Court B sample by mail, I went to ow Mand he is second to none ts | him how 1 felt es in the middle of the day. | vonful three tement by him sub-| | volved in the disappearance of the ee curtties, Trained by some detective work which she did for her father in amug- giing cases, Miss Hanlon says she has followed up clues and the scent lately has become very warm. Gtyatery is added to the whole matter Dy the statement from the office of C. H. Ditson & Co. this morning that the vio- urday. taken as a precedent. mes y_and before I had taken one- bottle I was all right and have been il} time to time, booklet of valuable inf: re are valual information, tellin, K the kidneys and bladder. When | | Violinist Who Wants Explanation Ot Unjust Commitment as Insane | | | i Ran \S HANLON: | lin brought to them by D'Acugne was not a Stradivarius, but a much less vale uable instrument. “That being aid Miss Hanton, “D'Acugne is responsible for the fraud, and if the police had spent half the time and energy hunting for him that they have apparently spent in question- ing my sanity the violin might have | 7 been recovered long ago.” oh hy, faa, sre Store Opens at 8.30 and Closes at 6 P. M. “Nothing Better Illustrates .the | Fairness: of Methods of Your | Piano Store Than Your Present Moving-Out Sale” | Said one of the most eminent piano manufacturers in the country Sat- “The fact that you are taking the instruments that have stood on your floor and been used in your concerts, or for demonstrations—and are marking them at less than regular prices—is evidence that when you sell a piano as a new instrument, the customer gets a piano ab-. solutely fresh from the maker's testing rooms.” There Are Not Many of These Fine Instruments to Sell at Lower Prices These price concessions on We rather expect that all of these pianos will be disposed of by tomorrow night—when we take stock and end our business year! If Any One Has Been Wanting a Piano the time to come is today or tomorrow when these fine instruments may be had at lower prices and when you can take advantage of our Easy Terms of Payment In the list of pianos you find such eminent names as Chickering, Schomacher, J.C. Campbell and the celebrated Knabe—names &*-\]| intimately associated with the great piano business, Piano Salon, First Gallery, New Building. Nothing short of a FIXED POLICY would make it possible for us to provide such Overcoats and Suits at the prices pertaining in the Basement Store. Accident could not be expected to accomplish it. No Accident About These Chesterfield Overcoats at $10.50 We expect to make a similar offering of such coats a year from now. fixed policy permits of looking that far ahead. No accident about these All-Wool Suits at $10.50 and $13.50 Our fixed policy will enable us to offer such exceptional opportunities from JOHN WANAMAKER Formerly A. T. Stewa:t & Co., Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Street. THE EVENING WORLD, , BY MISTAKE, SAYS | Accused Woman Declares She | "3, 0titore exceptional instruments are not to be MUNDAY, 7 jsyrup of rhubarb. She sald tiat she | trad been employed as a midwite by | the Zeldine at the instance of Dr. & D. | Douglas of No. 72 East One Hundred | and Eleventh street. She had obtained & midwite's certificate in Russia, she |rakt, but hed failed to bring tt to | America, Sho was not a graduate nurse and had no nurse's certificate, ‘The young woman was remanded to the | Coroner. —_—— JANUAKY 6U,. 1911. Zoldin told of the poisoning and of the antidote. Dr, Dougias says he then told the father that everythii been done for the baby, child was then only forty-etght } old, he could not use a stomach pump. “He went away satisfied and did not ask ame to go to the house,” said Doug- | las, “Yesterday at 8 o'clock I re- ceived @ telephone call from the nurse.) She sald the baby was in a bad condi- tion, I went there and found the baby in & serious condition.” Dr, Dougias said Miss Kalser had been recommended to him as a nurse by her brother William, @ druggist of No. 2386 ‘Third avenue, She had @ diploma from a midwifery echool in Russia and had had considerable experience there. necessitates For Free Immigration. Delegates of the Federation of Jew- ish Organizations of the State of New York representing 800 gocteties, met yesterday aft in the Young Mon’s Benevolent “Association rooma, No, 811 East Broadway, and by an overwheming vote declare’ for unre« He stated! stricted immigration. ‘ Resolitions | other boarders heard @ shot, and FEUD BEGUN IN ITALY ENDED HERE BY DEATH. \lanairo with a butler wound in ae t temple, while Zigiitte wae bends Re aa cctremeetes tng over him with a smoking revolver if Alisandiro Dies of a Pistol Wound ©! hand, ‘ pottpe n Wigiitta, who is eighteen years and Zigitta Is Held for old, was seized, he denied that he had done the shooting, but Coroner Jackeqn Murder, is holding him on a charge of murder. An old feud, which had its beginaing cae Seer ceo se aren Ww neee Gre No More Catarrh | seppe Alisandiro and Michael Ziglitta Hved before they came to this country about a year ago, ended to-day when qf you have a hard rubber Hyom@ pea Tivin poten iL Won a nee inhaler somewhere around the house, wound received last night. The shoot- Set ft out and start at once ¢o forever Ing occurred in the hallway of aboard. Td yourself of catarrh, . the-houss at No. 9 Golden City, Port _ Druggists will eell you a bottle of Richmond, where both men fived. Hyomei (liquid) for only 60 cente; ‘The difference between the two men 6tatt to breathe {t and notice bow seemed to have been forgotten by them quickly it clears out the air passages an dthey were very much {tn each and makes the entire head feel fine. > other's company tintil Inst weok, when Hyomet used regularly will eure catarrh, coughs, colds, bronchitis or asthma, A complete outfit, including a hard rubber pocket inhaler, costs GAVE BABY POISON jole had After the girl had administered the lysol and discovered her mistake she rushed out to @ drug store and obtained Tridore Zeldin went Hundred and Fourth astrest station |nbout 6.39 Jast night and told the po- \ifee that when he Teached his home! about 11 P. M. Baturday he found the nurse greatly agitated. She told him about the lyso! and said that when @he Sara Kaiser, twenty-ete years of, wan | fod the baby in convulsions whe ad minister xture of milk, vaseline arratened defore Magistrate Breen in 14 water, without alarming the mother, the Harlem Police Court to-day on a! ny, 8, D. Dougins of No. 72 Hust One charge of having @Aministered @ fatal | rundred and Eleventh street attended dose of lysol to a two-day-old infant, | Mrs. Zeldin in her illness. to the East One Administered Lysol Think- ing It Was Syrup. the boarders noticed an estrangement. Last night the men quarrelied in the living room of the boarding-house. Other Persons intervened, and apparently 1eo- Florence Zeldin, child of Mr. and Mrs. |to-day that he heard nothing of the | ware adopted asking the Government to! onelled the mén. $1.00. No stomach dosing. Just Isador Zeldin, who live at No. 71 Mast | accident until 1 o'clock yesterday morn- appoint Jewish army and navy chap-| Ziglitta left the living room first. Al- breathe ft. It kills the germs, soothes Ninety-seventh street. ing, when Zeidin came to his housa, tains. Ueandiro followed shortly after. The and heals the inflamed membrane. ‘The prisoner admitted that she had | = given child the tyeol in mistake for Wonderful Curative! Properties of the Waters from the Min- Ala Mineral Wells, Texas al Gincovery of the urative properties of Special to Charge Customers LL purchases made on Monday or Tuesday, Jan. 30 and 31, will be in- cluded in the bills to be rendered on March 1st. Our Greatest February Furniture Sale NEVER before in the 40 odd years’ history of the Simpson Crawford Company has a Furniture Sale of such magnitude been inaugurated with more enthusiasm and prompt response on the part of the public; never before have we offered so vast a variety; never before have we been able to make the price markings so low on | strictly high grade furniture. May we invite you to-morrow to witness this tremendous display? Come, whether you purpose purchasing or not—you will be doubly welcome! —¢-Arrn Loon. $35.00 Brass Bed) $55.00 3-Piece Parlor Suit | oe.00 Dipeion LM nena ET; Deferred Payment Plan: | Sieg omes or hot Department of Accounts, Second Floor, for extended time. t the Min-ala Min Physicians fro are writing of Rheumatism, amaghees = adari the Standard Mineral Water Co, 52 Broad 8t., New York, Massive Mission Li- brary Table, like cut, size 26x46, large drawer and lower e shelf. 3 jal yet artistic; i actual value 855.00; February Sale........0. 000005 ; ly ate head and foot. Exceptionally aI1R, Creveseees 1 2.50 eva ata *22.50| Unusually Handsome 4. 10.00 Solid Mah. -s Mission 3-Piece Suits..,,,..Rocker, ; Actual Value $27.00 i is this hi large Soli Gonsisting of large Arm Rocker, Arm Chair and Table. Rocker and Chair hogany are covered with genuine Moroccoline, guaranteed to wear better then leather; Rocker with a spring seats and upholstered backs, Table is 24 by 34 inches and has pockets on the ends for papers and books. ki : This handsome 3-piece Parlor Suit, like design, is a new pattern, made for our This handsome brass bed in new) ry artistic frames, beautifully finished, design, has 2 inch posts with]! door knob vases, 114 inch square top rails, with 15 1 fillers in ion seats, covered with best grade silk velour; Arm high curved back, 847.00 Brass Bed: saddle seat, built ¥ for comfort as $12.00 Cotton we tacteane, regularly $18 Morris Chairs Very massive jrames, beauti- fully carved; wide arms; com- plete with cever- sible h uffed . cushions; choice ie. mahogany or Felt Mattress 835.00 3-pc. Parlor Suit. 40.00 8-pe. Parlor Su 60,00 5-pe. Suit. An exceptionally fine elastic Cotton] 45.00 3-pe. Parlor Su 35.00 Big ane eae ie 65.00 golden oak; ac- Felt Mattress, weil +» COV-| : 00 5-pe, Suit Solid g ; fred with Fancy Ret Tioekeagceui| 85.00 8-pe. Parlor Su 43.50] Mahogany eee pall py j} edges. All sizest Feb- $ 85.008 pc. Solid M 150.00 5- bd ates 10 ruary Sale Price ' 8.75 any Suit... 62.50] Mahogany. price... some Buffets This design gives but a suggestion of the tinctly fine lines and finish of the buffet. This is only one of 150 pate terns all reduced for the February Sale. ‘This piece is 43 inches deep, and has a mirror 12x36 inches tong. A swell front, French legs,’ claw feet, wood knobs, all selected Value 840, $4 Dining Chairs Large size, exactly like cut; made of selected quarter sawed oak; lished finish igh panel back, with a genuine leather slip seat; French legs and claw feet; an ex- ceptionally good | chair; Monday, <6 Ag $35 Dining Table This table is solid quarter sawed oak, has 45-inch round top, a 10-inch diameter ped- estal and claw feet. Positively $ 4 $35.00 value, Sale Price... 1 6.50 stock, Sale 1100 American Machine Made Rugs Underpriced HEY include rugs manufactured by the best and most reliable manufacturers in the United States, These are new, fresh from the mill. In addition to these there is a lot of éight hundred rugs, the entire surplus stock of one of the i mills in Philadelphia. Purchased at reductions not heretofore even known to us. 300 Best Ten Brussels Rugs $ 1 3 00 ———— 250 of the Celebrated Royal Axminster Rugs. Almost !4 inch thick. A tremendous assortment of designs and colors, Suitable for almost any room, Size 9x12, 317 00 $26.00 value for ire Tapestry They are full9x12. Reguiariy retailed at $24, sale price... a 135 of the Best Rugs made by The M. J. Whitta!l Company, also the French Wilton rug and the Herati, All of the finest $50 ’ weaves made by mac! in this lors reproduce exactly the Ker- Our or any other country 10.6 A Designs and Size 8-3x10-6., $15.00 manshah rug of Persia and the high grade rugs from | | Size 6x9 East India and Turkey. Size 4-6x6-6.., 116 Pieces of Linoleum, 2 and 4 yards wide. 160 Rolls of Inlaic This is made of Representing tile effec rble and ofher popular Bure cork and Kind in which te id designs. id 850 colors go through “k. A number of these Besemont, New Building grads pets oq. 3 56e¢ Took life hardwood, mowle tile end marily effects, Usual reta 1.75 to 82.25, sale price 1.20, 1.35 & 1.65

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