The evening world. Newspaper, April 7, 1911, Page 4

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“WOMAN” INRAID “HUMAN COMET” FOR DIVORCE SUIT PRACTICES HIS ACT. PLAYEDBY AMAN IN HARLEM COURT CORRIGAN CHARGES Se! So Husband Says in Fighting Wife’s Case, and Imperson- ator Confirms Story. MAKES JURORS LAUGH. Father-in-Law Knew When to Break Into Apartment by Signal. | Fans Christian Kruse-Madsen tried to convince Justice Crane and jury in the | Supreme Court tn Brooklyn to-day that when his father-in-law, Nile B. Kraru ot No. M5 Willoughby avenue, Brooklyn, | and two friends broke into Madsen room at No, 166 West Fourteenth atrect the night of Oct 81 the figure they saw in Madsen's bed was that of a man. He produced -a man he said had been there and a witness who had been in hiding | throughout the trial | Madsen told how he had several con- ferences with his father-in-law at home and in Luchow's resta t the Cate Martin about a divorce, Father Krarup threatened to use a complaint against him which would be presented | by a woman detective who wrong actiohs at the Hotel "1 was afraid he would prove {t,"" anid Madeen, “though It was not true agreed to furnish him with other evi dence.” @ With Maid. Crane, who frequently took th examination of witnesses from lawyer, coukl not a any better ex planation of M t than this ‘On the nigh: sald Madsen, their servant girl € iron Building, where 1 met her and waiked about the streets with her f some time, ‘Then 1 put her on a for Brooklyn and went to the Martin and met Mr. Krarup.” “What was all that for?’ asked Jus- tice Crane, “Bo they could anawered the witness, “that they were suspictous be- cause they had seen me walking around with a woman at night” Madsen #aid he arranged with father- inlaw Krarup that there should be a woman in Madwen’s rooms on the follow. | ing Monday nigh!, and that when the window blinds were closed and the Mghts were turned down it was a signal to etart the id. Twas Wholly Impro Impromptu and Grand Jerome Won't Carry Matches in His Hip Pocket Again. und in Jerome's courtroom was fi f burning sulphur and eloth could have touc When Jerome landed he was in mo- clasped amid appears to have seessed of pregency 4 the contents of a eof the policeme UPHOLDS DEATH-BED WILL THAT CUT OFF RELATIVES. | Young Klinzner Left All His Money to Common-Law Wife With Convict Husband. of Charles Kiinzner . Who died April 9, an estate of $16,000 to a woman with whom he lived and who bore him two jority when he succumbed Cousins of the deceased, his ives, contested the will in the pos- of Margaret Hessler, the mother of his children, and charged that K been of unsound mind and influence of M when he made his will. At the trial it the Hessler woman had a husband ving, who is serving @ term tn prison. ¢ pointed out that there Meanwhile, Ma: the services of Harry |) he secured Groves, a drug clerk in a dep store, to come to the house came at 6 o'clock, At a little before Y o'clock he got into bed dressed only in his undershirt, trousers and sho and part). covered hi a. Gro hid In t vathroom. n ven. Father Krarup arrived and after looking at the figure In the bed and giving his two friends a glimpse of | it went out. Only an Arra Showed. wnt Petersen told the same story, expla@ine | jrouynt Jog how he pulled the coverlet partly |i anarre agalr over his face but loft his bare rigut arm | ,, in plain steht. Justice Crane made him strip off his « lank muscular arm and the jury luughed. One of the lawyers tried to/ontire esc ad been bent t pid Mr. Krarup and his witnesses bed pre-| of Ridsewood Viously testified that when they ente tie room they thought the figure in ack-halred w Petersen aired bu ot long married in December, 189%, after an elopement and lef husband in six months, ny MINISTERS ARE TOLD. Rev. P, R. “Miller of | Civie Pont Says Fund Has Been Raised to Pass Sunday Games Bill, @ARATOGA, N, Y., April 7.—That the Sul ball bill and the Track Liability me ded WIDENER ADMITS BUYING REMBRANDT’S “THE MILL.” 10 Philadelphia ( list Pays $500, 000 for Paintin That London Wished Retain, PHILADELPHIA The re port f 1 t Peter A. B Widener Oe 1s » expired $00,210 hud been contributed by the public. abt concerning the paternity of the children or the mutual love of ch | the parents for thelr offspring. in the insurance business, and Reuben| shown that Ki!nzner had had nothing in common with his relatives, His fath- eteraon er and mother had died years before ok up with the Hi The wil was mage the signal was ‘DE LABARRE WILL CONTEST. Witnesses to Document Widow Tentity. (Special to The Evening Work.) NS, April 7.—The contest the provate of the wil f her late husband, York physlelan who died coat and roll up the sleeve of his shirt | Mt White Plains and who out her off and show the arm to the jury. It was| Without a cent, was heard to-day, bef during his las! ing witnesses of the will 53 FI pead, but Justice Crane re-| alled the testimony that it. was in De Labarre dl van. | ¢ shaven and lack was under undue influence and Mrs, Madsen testified that she was} ori ate cies BOY INJURED BY AUTO. Was Stenting a Ride When $250,000 BASEBALL BOODLE, | ohts Off and a wheel passed He was taken to Harlem | Patersontan Dead, a WAAL CULE NVOLLE WON'T ASK GAYNOR | TO GIVE VIEWS ON Stories of Merchants Who Were Robbery Victims. * 30° WILLING WITNESSES, Lawy House in Few Weeks. Assistant District-Attorney nounced t not to be ons an- alled before the Grand Jury in the investigation of Magistrate Corrie N's chargea. Mr. Moss ts un- able to see what purpose of any char- | fe —_—_ | LONG FALL HARMLESS BUT SHORT ONE FATAL. | Roof Patcher Comes Out Unacathe: er could be served by puttin questions to the Mayor, His attitude m the qi have been arranged for the Grand Jury and the work from now on will consist of looking into specific ine stances of alleged police dereliction or |negiect. ‘The Grand Jury, composed an it i of business men, ts especially Interested in the charge that burglars and highwaymen are allowed to work in Manhattan and the Bronx without any apparent effort on tne part of the |‘ police to stop them. With the object of getting at de- n this line, the District- Attorney has been looking through the pers and getting the names of merchants and citizens tailed evidence files of the newsp who have been visited by burglars ¢ held up on the public streets, Let have been sent to all su them to call at the Distric office, and morning, Jeweler Tells of Robbery. h, inviting Among them was Lothair Rich, who has a jewelry store at No, 1 West Forty-second street. His front window was smashed jn recently and jewelry was stolen. “The neighborhood of Bryant Park !s infested with burglars, highwaymen and panhandlers,” said Mr. Rich, in a statement to District-Attorhey Moss. “I ha as they are now. “The feature that impresses me 1s} that the lawbreakers appear to have no fear of tho police. They work as freely and boldly as though thi equipped with Heenses to rob.” Half @ dozen members of the Grand Jury visited the Night Court and Ten- derloin police station and toured the ‘Tenderlom last night. They were look- ing for evidence at first hand and will communicate thelr experiences to their fellow members, Washington Heights In Terror. Robert 8. Conklin of No. 610 Riverside Drive, who began his career as a po- leeman, then went to the Assembly and is now practicing law, spoke at some length on conditions in the Washington Heights section, His home has been robbed and he feels sore about it. “The district from One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street north along Riverside «lway and the streets over to Drive, Br St, Nicholas avenue, has been terror- ized for months," he told Mr. Moss, “by ss of robbing flats by daylight. ‘Thi use dumbwaiter shafts, get into build- ings in the guise of old clothes men or laundry collectors, climb fire-escapes and loot at will the daytime in that section, If surprise those young burglars at work they are Mable to be blackjacked or shot. I know of dozens of these rob- There have been three in the mwell apartments at One Hundred nth street and Riverside In a few weeks, Two arrests have been made, but the burglaries go [right on.” and ‘Thirty Dri Mr. Conklin furnished the name Jozen or more persons who have been bed and promised to get more, He sald he had heard of three daylight holdups of women in the vicinity of the City College. Will Take Up Fire Disaster, this Jong. He ex a few days. e Police! Knowles, b Who were fin missioner for man named Smith for attempt ian, but the herty mitted Knowles, F » not been re. Jury wants t | timated at $70,000, The wreck | blocked the river channel, stopping | | gine packet traMe to the upper river and | the moving of coal from the river mines, | er Tells of Three Rob-| »| beries in One Riverside Drive jay that Mayor Gaynor is THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1911. | STEAMER TURNS TURTLE; THREE ARE onowneo. PATRIARCH OF 10 of Monongah ind Blocks the Channel SUA, Pa, April 2—The vig riv belonging to the Ves was wrecked by & orning, turned turth | bot uppermo:. | | ‘ey aie Begins Hearing| Be Hughes, cook, and Jane Law me unknown, | rence, with the fireman, were drowned, Mleven crew swam as thought to be a total } which ts — oe |AMERICAN WOMAN THROWN FROM HORSE IN PARIS. | Miss Rose Forster Strik Head and Is Taken Badly Injured to Hospital. PARIS, April 7—Miss Rose Forster, an American, lving in Houlogne-wur- | Seine, was thrown from a frightened | horse on the Avenue de la Grando-| armee to-day and her head striking the! miserably, and when they pa stion of the outward ap ince of morality in New York Is well known, | The main features of the charges | 8 ttorney’s about thirty responded this ‘been tn business up there for years and never saw conditions so bad were g8 of young men from eighteen to nty-five years old, who make a busl- omen are afratd to stay at home in Sullivan called the grand ju Witnesses culled this after- nent, sity was critically injured. pital, She was taken to a ho: But Stair Climber ts Killed. ‘The danger of & fall altogether do- pends upon who takes {t, for which fact witness the Brooklyn cases of Frederick Nelson of No, 1271 Seventy-fifth street, and Jacob Reafus of No. 20 Covert street son Was putting a half sole the roof of @ house at No. 133 Sev- -third streeet, when he slipped and fell thirty-five feet to the street. Dr. Lindsay was called and the only thing the doctor could find wrong was that Nelson had quit work with undue haste. ‘Ti 1 ladder for the sake of and the man walked away unhurt But when Refus slipped on the cellar stairs of his home and fell elght feet the fall caused instant dea| Oo © Falle Under Car Demonstra’ When Instru: Feltx Drolt of No, 149 West Ninetieth street, Manhattan, a demonstrator for the Rainier Motor Truck Company, was Killed at Hollis, Queens, to-day when instructing a chauffeur of the Muench Brewing Company in the handiing of a heavy motor truck. John Enig of No. 172 Irving avenue, the student chauffeur, was driving the truck along Hillside avenue, As he turned {nto Queens avenue Droit at- tempted to spring aboard the truck it was in motion. He miysed his auffeur, unfa- , could stop the “pasued over Drolt's shed out his life. ————>_—_— nw Driver. Admits Robbing Patients in Mai pital, Stephen no, a former property clerk In the Manhattan State Hospital on Ward's Island, to grand larceny in the second desi before Judge Warren Foster in General sions, @ d , superintendent of the institu: tion, with having stolen about $8) worth of property from varlous patients committed for care to the Institution. DIAMOND RINGS $39 Per Karat A number of Mamond rings are offered» ntity. being limted au early B ear Wedding Ringe Sold 14 and 1S-karat gold seamless welding rings “our vavecialty, Artistic marriags cert cate gratin CASPERFELO & CLEVELAND, 144 Bowery anni ilo Open Evenings tilt 7. Saturday tin 10. When you bay Fe lites insist upon ‘ ‘EDDYS” JELLIES Provably two hundred wines wiilf ‘The reason will be plain ‘be examined, 2 ph teas as ad Sun Noy SUN- RAY WATER’ co Nv. Ori ath when you taste them. The one object of these announcements is to get you to try them, The jellies will sell themselves after that. Grape, quince, rasp berry, currant, “Cooked in kettles lined with silver,”’ and sold by grocers everywhere, FH. Pritchard, Maker, 831 Spring @t., N, ¥. ner Henry A. Laughiin, | cook: YOUNGRO ROBBERS and went to the m of the Monongahela River, keel Coal Company, ore. ‘The steamer 19 ; : 4 th ny thers of the! — saitants Go to the Station | te : “and true! pinched and saved to amass his Bruised and Bitten. | f semeblte” He told we ‘eat Ne. was es on Her shop at No. 2 Eldridge street to-day | *| slaught and he fought like a whole man- KILLED UNDER MOTOR TRUCK | pleaded guilty to-day | no was charged by Dr. Willlam| Millionaires Who Starve. fe’s Deaf prep Larne, but As! Sida a uns teas eeseuee be wear, that touched my heart. Herman Lisak is seventy years olf ‘and has a long white beard Iike unto the |tamous hirsute appendage of the late ve. | “Elijah” Dowie. He ts slightly deaf and In short he wae literally # death, He wi limps with the left foot, but when four | 8 ihe nutritive value of food, taken Inte young toughs inv Jed his little Jewelry | $his system, and his stomach was fast ming so that It would not retain jand attempted to rod him, he smashed | $4 #nale particle of food. He had read the Osler theory forty-seven ways from | tabad Gad Weed to dee Gs Gh perm and came to eee me, more as a the fourth dimension, | ur cavitie dan he ‘The old man had not only a ready! punch tn both hands, but tn both feet as/ 3° What did ¥ do for him? f gave well. First he put two of the robbers | }him the same medicine that T sell to to screaming flight. ‘The remaining two| $ the humbiest workingman who asks sought to chloroform hm, but fatled |g his druggist for my stomach remedy. fed ran ato | ¢ While he was amassing his wealth A lived plainly and had good hoalth is Bepe e trode oaee When he became rich, luxurtous living Michael Piccolo of No. Dominick | Jhad been too much for him, He had street had the bottle of chloroform | $abused hia body, broken all the laws still grasped in his right hand when the | $of nature—and now it could stand no | detectives nabbed him. Salvatore Cap- |g iiare. rind was paying the penaity of polo, the other unlucky assailant of the ; i septuagenarian, had two black eyes, | $iy we me uname, hven gan came twisted nose and three bad bites, all of | $ished at the change in him. Mie step Wich, the long-bearded patriarch had | $ was firm and buoyant, conferred upon him. |Qorient and stead Lisak identified the two men at Police Headquarters. He sald one of thelr companions had left a watch with him to be repaired two days ago. ‘This man and Piccolo came in to-day and offerd a $2 counterfeit bill in payment for the rs on the watch. Lisak refused to bill. made threats and the old man reached under the counter for a lump of iron. When Cappolo and another man rushed in he was ready for the on- : wT t have done tt Without, that medicine he add t stomach ad A few weeks I fou eat on * lly ‘of that wonderfal agerle of tigers. the correctness of ‘onfedernte Veteran Dead, aties i¢ based on NORFOLK, Vay April 7.Col, Alex: | ander Savage, age: nty-nine, Con- | federate soldier and cotton expor died here yesterday. He commanded the ‘Thirteenth Virginia Cavairy, and was the last person asked for by J. B. Stuart, after fall) tally w ded. | “Where is Col. Si Tell him to| bring up his men, Stuart. Breaks a Cold in a Day. And Cures Any Cough That fv Curapie. Noted Physician's Formula, Get from any druggist “Two ounce: Glycerine a trated Pine compound. Mie these with | halt 4 pint of Kool whiskey, Take one to! aceite, teh hla Et! | Well Known coniing to ares Any ote san prepare cnia| OCUlist Recently Said Mn sot a de the best formula "prev | “Relievi ing eyestrain de- oan | pends upon three things: Finding the right lens, getting the right lens and wearing it properly.’ Our Registered Physicians, can and do find the right lens, because they ar Coun oculists to examine eyes. | always see that vou gel exactly the lens prescribed. Perfect-Fitting Glasses as Low as $2.50, | RE frlich& Sons Oculists’ Opticians, 223 Sixth Av., 15th St. 350 Sixth 1274 Broadway, 33dSt. 101 Nassau—AnnSt, 217 Broadway, Astor House, New York. 498 Fulton St., Cor. Bond St., Brooklyn. 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FURS RECEIVED FOR STORAGE {S$ GIVEN AGAINST DAMACE OR LOSS, AND ORDERS RECEIVED BEFORE THE AUTUMN SEASON FOR THE REPAIRING OR REMODELING OF FURS WILL HAVE THE ADVANTAGE OF LOWER CHARGES RUGS, TAPESTRIES AND CURTAINS ALSO RECEIVED FOR Fifth Avrmer, 34th and 35th Streets, New pr Ne EAGLE BRAND CONDENSED MILK Makes Your Tea, Coffee and Cocoa Really Delicious The adventure of the Empty House, a Sher- lock Holmes Story, by A.Conan Doyle, in book form. Free with next Sunday’s World. TO ORDER AT $12.00 STORAGE. RUCS REPAIRED AND CLEANED. LACE CURTAINS CLEANED AND STORED. |

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