The evening world. Newspaper, November 11, 1911, Page 2

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Brooklyn to the theatrical district, Danked in a rolld line of cars that hed from the Grand Central Station treet. passeng: ited lines. jed to wal the mix-up was untangled. Insisted upon nd proceeding by trolley and <=) NOW FIGURES IN trains the order was generally An experienced fireman who wen Yok at the situation sald he neve: saw women and children beh: Becca. MACATINE PROBE ‘the imprisoned passengers in the jong lige of cars. en the cars finally started thi t were all off thetr schedules, 1 t two hours to get them ba time. Passengers in the tr caused the troub! it out some moments my Authorities said the liente | fore the train | : Say Marguerite carlin Disappeared About stopped and they could smeil the insulation while the train waa! sDeeding ee in the dark. STOLEN $422,000 “SOUGHT ON STORY ¢ TOLD BY WOMAN (Continued From First Page.) tog her how he had deposited a pack-| age containing $237,000 in the Corn Ex- change safety deposit vaults at Seven- ty-second street and Columbus avenue and one containing $19,000 in a fety Geposit vault in Jersey City, the exact foeation of which she cannot recall, @ays he used the name of David y in one instance and of Louis Levy inthe other. Et ‘became known after Rotshenild’s arrest that @ sum in excess of $270,000 had disapepared from the Federal Bank, then at No. 69% Broadway. Bui not @ word did he ever say about what be- | schdhe of it, from the time of his convio- | tion, May 2%, 1904, until his death in Sing Sing, Nov. 18, 168, although State officials repeatedly tried to induce him to give up the secret. Mrs. Rotshohild-Batten, before the crash, had been interested In the affairs of the Globe Securities Company at No. 1 Nassau street, a subdsidary concer of her husband. She eaid in her state- ment In St. Louis that she was making “a clean breast” of everything, not for any personal gain that might come to her but for “rest after the awful years of guffering 1 have been through.” According to her story, Just before the Federal Bank was closed by the Bank Commissioner, on April 14, 194, her hus- Band took $190,000 from the vaults, wrapped it up and brought it to their ‘apartments in the Ansonia Hotel. ONE OFFICER OF BANK KNEW HIDING PLACES, + Gubsequently, she said, he wrapped the money into two bundies, took it away. Gnd, as he later toid her, deposited it in places already stated. At least one & the then officers in the bank, she ‘wes aware of the transaction, and phe says she has reason to believe that The money Geposited in the Columbus yy vaults may have been removed the vault in Jersey City. The records @f the safety deposit company must show the transactions, she declares, and money has not mean while been wed it will be found ae indicated by her. “District-Attorney Whitman hi not Givclosed what his first steps will be to locate the plunder, but he said he would Institute a searching investigation in ope. the money may de found, and turned over to the depositors of the recked bank or thelr heirs. TING ESTATES PART OF ‘ HIS OPERATIONS. »Mothechild's get-rich-quick operations imeluded the looting of ites and the Wholesale robbery of depositors. In- with him on a charge of con- to loot the Welsell estate were tage Matthews, one time secret: the Republican County Committe 'W. Wooten, a lawyer, and Samuel “Ferguson. Wooten was pardoned Bing Sing by Gov. Hughes in 1907. Matthews committed suicide on the day was to have been tried. othechia on conviction, to serve nine years. POLICEMAN KILLS HIMSELF IN CLEANING A REVOLVER. ‘Policeman ‘Thomas F. Sommervitte of Fast Twenty-wecond street station, Accidentally shot and killed himself this fneon in his home at No, 637 Sixty- rigth street, Bay Ridge. 7 erville had just finished dinner With his nieces,—the Misses Rose and who keep house for young women were room he got out his ed to clean it, Sut dehly there was a report and Miss Rose Farrell found her uncie uncon: the floor. Ho died before the arrival of apammbulance. He was fifty-three years + old and had been nineteen rs on the) foree.. He had been ordered on reserve for etrike duty this afternoon, GUARD CINCINNATI MAN AS DYNAMITING WITNESS. | CINCINNATI, Noy. 11.—According to tory published here to-day Bekho® of this city hus information that will be of importance in helping the prosecution in the cases of the Mc- | Yemare broth and 's being guarded by detectives in order to keep him trom | ‘Yoeing killed or kidnapped by mys- persons.” Bekhoff, it is eaid, Knows where nitro- ine is buried and that, with two tatives of a private detective y, he went to a point near Beaver, Wa., and will try to find the hidden ex- ve. Eckhoff is an entirely innocent dn the case, who, it 1s claimed, by ip and accident, learned the tn: jon that was not considered vali since at the time, but which h: raved tmportant. KANSAS DEMOCRATS NAME DODGE CITY, Kan., Nov. Champ Glark, Bpeaker of the Nationa! House of Representatives, was indo for the Romination for President in 1#12 by the Democratic Convention cf the enth Congressional District here this Mr. Clark, who w: the on} alo | Bird Descends on Roof of (Ann) watkout was definitely learned by Com. George | CLARK FOR PRESIDENCY. Time Hayne Left City. | ABROAD, SAYS SISTER. |But Mrs. Kreig Denies That | “Promoter” and Actress Are Together. been investigating the affairs | of the Colombia-Sterling May | pany, ssrned to-day that about the | time J. Brinton Hayne, president of | the Columbia Magazine Comp: dis. appeared, M Marguerite Carlin, a Broadway show girl, aiso left the city. McQuillan located Miss Carlin’s sister, Mrs. John Kretg, at No. 20 West Fifty: first street, to- To an Evening World reporter Mra. | Kreig said her sister was in London, | but denied she was with Hayne. | ‘They went abroad Iast April," she ad- | mitted, “and they ed in Europe, | having toured the Continent, until the |iast of July, when Hayne returned to | this city. My ctater came back the last of August.” ‘The inspector believes, though, that tn order to find Hayne he will firsi have to locate Mies Carlin. He ts devoting | bis energies to that end. Gr Jury ts still probing Into the affairs of the Columblan-Steriing Ithesses are United States District-Attorney Brown, The postal Inspectors were informed | to-day that a new magazine is being | exploited by some of the people who sold stock in the Columbian Compans,, | and they arc asserting that a large Philadelphia magazine company ts be- | hind it. This company is advertising | extensively throughout the West that it has no connection with the new pubil- jon. GAYNOR BOUNCES HIS CHAUFFEUR RIGHT ON THE SPOT Second Driver He Has Let Out Recently — Bumped Him Into a Trolley. Mayor Gaynor's chauffeur, John Mas- ters, Is out of @ job. In\a manner similar to that in which he dismissed his former chauffeur, the Mayor dis- charged Masters, Leaning out+of the sutomodils window he sald angrily, “You are discharged and may leave the | car just where it 1s, if you wish.” * Masters, instead, took the Mayor to his Brooklyn residence, then drove the) car, to the garage, where he announced that he had been “fired” by the Mayor. This was on Thursday night. It fol- | lowed @ slight collision with a trolley car caused by the skidding of the rear wheels'of the auto. The Mayor was | angry over the collision, which shook him up somewhat. Masters has the reputation of being a careful chauffeur, He drove the Mayor throughout the city and made weekty trips with him to St, James. He was! very familiar with the country roads. A short time ago while riding uptown the Mayor dismissed ano‘her chauffeur on the spot. Th uffeur left the machine in a ga 14 his Honor} hired another car to convey: him home. ens cgpr tary | |WURRA WURRA, AN. EAGLE, | CAUGHT BY A DUTCHMAN. | Street Restaurant and Owner Captures It Like victory descending upon the banner of a conqueror @ young Amer- |toun eagle descended upon the roof of the Busy Bee restaurant, No, 7 Ann | street at noon to-day while @ score of jmungry workers were busy engulfing coffee and—- Some one told the pro- prietor, Max Garfunkle, that the king of the alr had called, and to the roof hied Garfunkie. The eaglet was sitting be- hind a chimney and Garfunkle crept stealthily upon im and with @ sudden | reach the restavranteur had him, Fighting with be and talons, the eagle was brought below and rudely In- serted Into a vacant parrot came, A fre- quenter of the place put his finger in the cage, saying: “Nice birdie!" He ts nura- ing a badly bitten finger now. ‘Then tt me to the matter of A name, Several were suggested, but Garfunkle, as the captor, claimed the right to mame the bind. Says Garfunkle: “This here bird ig some serapper, He be an Ameri- can eagle, but he's got some Irish tn him, Look at the way he fights! lil name him Wurra Wurra.” And Worra Wurra it ts. Garfunkle, after naming cal up the Bronx Zoo them Wurra Wurra. stantly acc Wurra will the and The gift was in- pted, and on Monday Wurra Bronxward, ov. U.-Postmaster- General Hitchcock atated to-day that he at the convention, wi wished to see the postal savings bank fullest Bn. and i 7 pening Be postal banks in stores and business very’ centre of human bitation, THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 11 1911. Actress Who Left City About Time J. B. Hayne Disappeared | boat ti | Operations except the municipal ferries TRICK FOG CAUSES |: CRASH OF TRAINS AND FERRYBOATS Fourteen Ocean Steamships Held Up Until Sun Pene- trates the Mist. COMMUTERS DELAYED. |¢ No One Injured by the Collis- ions, but Thousands Are “‘ut to Inconvenience. A 00d imitation of a London fog of New York to-day and grievously di that descends upon Manhattan every | morning. Fourteen ocean liners were) fog bound in the lower bay and out| @round Ambrose Light, all the ferry- with long routes suspended | between the Battery and Staten Island, and heavy towing was abandoned on both rivers and in the bay. ‘There were several ferryboat col- lsione—two of them narrowly escaping serious results to passengers. Two Long Island Ratiro.d suburban trains col- lided and half a score persons were hurt In @ collision on the Fifth Avenue ¥ in Brooklyn. Not a suburban train got in on time. Jersey trains were from fifteen minutes to an hour late. The fog was purely Daralysed weter traffic in the harbor) layed the immense army of commuters) te headed across the river and made tip to Jersey City without acci- All her damage was above the deck line, The Washington sustained no damage at all. The Long Island railroad ferryboat Garden City, just out of the slip at Thirty-fourth street, Manhatten, bound east, and the ferryboat Manhattan Beach, bound into the slip from Long Island City, bumped into each other and timbers were smashed on starboard side of Manhattan h. Both boat: wi low. | the time of thi Manhattan the | Thirty-fourth stréet slip without dim. culty after the collision and landed her | Passengers, none of whom was injured. ‘he Garden City got astray in the fog | and groped her way to: City. In heading for the slip the pilot rot | off his course and steered directly into the outer bulkhead, on which was lo- | cated the fog bell and the light. Both | bell and. light were jarred from their | supports ‘and fell into the river. Then | the boat became jammed In the allp and | It became necessary to back out into | m and make another try. The id Long Island | th to a landing finally made. | The fog was particularly thick on the | East River. Car-float traMc between Mott Haven and the Bay was entirely | suspended and the Sound steamers that came down during: the morning moved only fast enough toyallow steerage way. | TWO CROWDED TRAINS IN COL. LISION AT DUNTON, L. |. Two crowded suburban trains were Jn collision at Dunton, the firs tion west of Jamaica on thi is Island Rallroad at 7.40 o'clock. An electric train pf steel coaches bound for At- yantic avenue Brooklyn, was Just moving out of the station when a m train, bound for Brooklyn, crashed into the rear car, The pilot and headlight of the loco- motive were demolished. Many pas- sengers in the electric train who had the care at Dunton and had, were thrown down latform | t He jumped tn time to avoid being crushed, but was pain- | fully hurt by flying wreckage. Train hands carried him to the steam train, which conveyed him to Long Island City, where he was placed in St. John's Hos- | local to New York City, the Hudson Valley and the Hackensack Meadows. The weather was clear ten miles back in New Jersey, ERIOUS DELAYS FOR COMMUT- ERS FROM NEW JERSEY. The most serious delays were exper- fenced by commuters on the Central Railroad of New Jersey. The fog was so thick in Nwark Bay, over which the Jersey Central right of way proceeds on a long bridge, that engineers could not see the signals until their cabs were right opposite the posts. At one time seven passenger trains were apparently t MISS MARGUERITE CARLIN. STRIAERS A RSASK MAYOR FOR AN ARMISTICE (Continued From First Page.) In the city employ. message or a scratch of yor Just a telephone ur pen can settle all and a happy municipal fam- tly be once name of just appeal to you." e, right and The elaborate strikebreaking plans of | Street-Cleahing Commissioner Edwards jeally more established. In the equality, 1 were prac! barren of results to- day, the Imob violence of yesterday having caused wholerale desertions from the strikebreaking ranks. lice were ord ot to draw avenue a patrol were forced The pr revolvers and shoot into the air to drive back tho infuriated moté. Mounted men rode down and clubbed @ mob on Water where the police details we While great progress Brooklyn by the new forces Commisatoner Edwards the the Manhattan and Bronx wu to almost completely eripy partment on this side of the Fifty Harlem strikebrea! Philadelphia deserted the 1 bles this morning and de Commissioner Edwards that the frankly that they | | feared meeting the fate of one of their | |number who was slain on One Hundred | street yesterday home. They admitte and Twenty-ffth ternoon. That the district superintendents and | foreman have been aiding the strikers and urging the sweepers to Join In the missioner Hdwards to-day and he peremptorily dismissed District: Super- intendent T. C. Adamson, who had | charge of Stable B at No. 614 West Fit- ty-second street, Not a ca was street @nd every: | re doubled. made in enlisted by violence of nobs Kerved ple his de- river. kers from larlem sta- manded of be sent rt has gone out of Stable B since Wednesday and it is alleged that Adamson wa: the act of urging sweepers BACK DOWN. Both the Mayor and Edwards are determined not point the strikers, and Was obtained to-day tegiment d Sixty-elghth street racks for etrikebreakers. breaking agencies In town men from a dogen cities in the but the reerulting has fal low expectations. The riotous fined to any ance of an asheart being draw @ mob armed with bottles out of the ground bing of the police eacort structions of Inspector Cah men to beat down the first attacked a strike-breaker, one district, to turn the TD Armory at Broad: assaults were not s caught in to quit | MAYOR 18 DETERMINED NOT TO|‘#!ked of by the organized teamste Commissioner t to yield a permis! en: into @ bar- All the strike are rushing Kast, len far be con- the appear- suMolent to bricks and The dou- and the Ine alane to his person who failed utter- ly to awe the strikers and thelr sym- pathizers, In lining up his detall of bie G, at No, 44 Hamilto Inspector ¢ svuimand to them: “I want you men to have o: in your heads, and that is t! employed by the city of Ni Protect life and property. aay every one of you responsible for the! waving hie o esa Places In| river who ts in your charge, I am/ the sergeant ahduted: going to assign one man to fifty men tn n street, tox lane addressed this nly one ide: hat you are ew York to I will hold adh driver n | day, and I want that man to stick to that driver through everything. Don't lose aight of him a minute, You've got your Mghtsticks. J.nock down ths first man that offers to interfere with your driver. The assigning of one patrolman to each cart and two mounted men to each group of five carts in the big dis- trict covered from Stable G, revealed desperate ‘plight of the Street Cleaning Department in the most con- gested, area of Manhattan Borough, The terror inspired by the strikers and thelr friends also ptoved its potency when twenty of the thirty-five strike. | breaking drivers who reported for roll ed to meet violence with | violence, and during one riot on Tenth | twenty policemen | thelr call took the first opportunity that of- fered to sneak out the back door and Vanish. Of the fifteen carts that went out immediately afterward the crews through Before the fifteen wagons were sent out of the Hamilton street stables In- spector Cahalane sent twenty-five men up on the ‘by roofs, where they nices with thelr arms filled with bot- tles and brickbats.” They were driven denly from the roof of No. 56 Market street there rained down hower of chimney cornices and bricks. Half a doxen drivers were picked off their carts, and as soon as they could scramble to their feet they fled. Sev. era! drivers were forced to seek shelter under their carts. NEW CREWS AND GUARDS IN RAIN OF sfISSILES. Roth the mounted and foot policemen Were struck by the miss! and con pelled to send for reintorcements. ‘Ten strike breaking crews quit right there jund the five that continued on to Park | Row and Worth street passed through 4 dozen more showers of stone, wood and fragments of concrete, A sympathetic strike 1s still being and may be ordered on Monday unless the situation Improves. The! parade of trikers to the City Hall to demand their back pay will take place on that according to present plans of the union leaders. Stable KE sent out sixteen wagons from West Seventeenth street, with a guard of ten patrokmen and four mounted men. This little squadron had hardly left the stable before mis- siles began to hail down from the roofs, A crowd of fifteen hundred hooting men, women and children fol- lowed the carts on their way to the West Eighteenth street dumps, In ont of No, 440 West Eighteenth Street @ shower of bricks came cas. cading down, knocking three drivers off their carts and injuring one man #0 seriously that he was taken to St. Vincent's Hospital. Several policemen wet hit, whereupon they charged the mob with their night- sticks, When the procession of wagons ar- rived at Tenth avenue and Nineteenth street another shower of bricks and hottles came down from the roofs, The mob was getting noisier every minute, and the sergeant in charge of the police guard gave the order to his to draw their rev: ‘Then, weapon “If another brick comes down of found hundreds of men and boys, and| not a few women, hiding behind cor-| of the! hopelessly stalled in the outside Communipaw. One of these trains land- 4 ite passengers in New York an hour and twenty-five minutes late. The South Brooklyn ferry line was pital. The rear car of the electric train was derailed. Two hours were consumed in getting it back on the track, and this isarranged all traffic on the line be- tween Jamaica and Atlantic avenue station.” Commuters on this diviston reached Manhattan from an hour to an hour and a half late. TWO BIG SHIPS GOT IN AHEAD OF THE FOG. Sixteen ships were due in port to-day, but only two succeeded in getting in ahead of the fog, a Red Cross and a Red D liner. The largest of the fleet | due is the White Star liner Baitle. The ferry to Ellis Island could not start on its early trip and many em* Ployees were left on the Battery to walt for the fog to lift. The Goveri Island boat ran at irregular interv The first accident reported was to the ferryboat Montauk of the Hamil- ton avenue line, which left at 5.30 on her first trip. It required half an hour e@bandoned during the thickest of the fog and the service was cut duwn on all other lines. Commuters on the Lackawanna and Erie who usually take the ferryboats flocked to the McAdoo bes and caused great congestion in that system of transportation. “L" express trains made the ep of locala because motor engineers ed to slow down to observe signal: Even the subway was affected beca: of de- lays on the open lines in the Bronx where the fog rolled off the Sound tn thick wa It wan 10:30 o'clock be- fore the sun penetrated the mist. During the thickest period of the fox at 8.90 o'clock the Pennsylvania Railroad ferryboats Washington and Chicago col- Mded at the entrance to the Cortlandt Street slip. The Chicago "was so ely: damaged that she proceeded to Hobok for repairs after landing passengers re teams at Jersey City, but no one was injured on either boat. Because of repairs under way only one slip ts in use at the Cortlande street ter: minal, Two of the big double-deck fer- ryboats are sufficient to handle the rush hour traffic on a foggy morning since the tubes were completed and the ter- minal was shifted to Manhattan. The Chicago was moving slowly out of the slip. She had few passengers but was heavily laden with trucks and was low in the er forward. The Wash- ington was lying outside, to enter the into the tenements and the procession| slip a8 #von as the Chicago should va- of carts went unscathed until they | © 2 turned into Market street. Then sud-|PCG MADE IT IMPOSSIBLE TO SEE OTHER BOAT. Pe Neither of the ferry boat pilots could see beyond the forward end of his boat. ‘The Washington pilot, hearing the whistle of the Chicago, Ngured that the latter boat was well out of the slip and headed In. The Washington was light. Her for-| ward bow sild right over the lower for- ward deck of the Chicago, tearing off the forward port rail and about fifteen feet of the men's cabin, Fortunately no one was on the forward lower deck of either boat. The Chicago dipped alarm- ingly forward until the Washington backed off, when she resumed an even keel. After a lot of manoeuvring in the fog the Chicago got by the Washing- that roof we'll begin shootin The mob kept on hooting, but the shower- ing of missiles promptly stopped. STRIKEBREAKERS ZDWARDA PROMISED NOT AT WORK. The mobilisation of an army of 5,000 atrikebreakers that Commissioner Ed- wards promised, has, failed to mate- riallze, Not cart went out from ti followin, bles this morning: B at No, 614 Fifty-second street, A at No. 50 Fast One Hundred and Six- teenth street, F at No. 625 East Elght- feth street, 8 at One Hundred and Highty-fourth street and Amsterdam avenue, and R at No. #0 Rivington street. Fifteen carts that left Stable G at No. 44 Hamilton street were driven back by mobs. Only six carts left Stable H at No. 4% East Forty. ht street, and they ran the gauntlet of a continuous bombardment from t | roofs. le A at Avenue C and Be’ enteenth street sent out ten carts, 1 which were mobbed until their strike-breaking crew deserted, jen- ty-seven department drivers took’ as many carts out of Stable M at No. Sullivan street, but the majority of them were driven beck me all Harlem and the Bronx only irty carts went out. the only over he Gi for her to reach her slip at the foot of | Hamilton po ce et TWO WIVES DEAD, HELD FOR TRYING TO KILL ANOTHER Daughter Gives Clue That Causes Carpenter’ 's Arrest as Would-Be Poisoner. On the information of his own thir. teen-year-old daughter, Saran, Charle Engler, a carpenter, was arraigned be- fore Magistrate Herbert in Harlan | Court to-day, charged with attempting | to poison his wife, Bertha, who live first street, Engler has been married | four times in fourteen years; two of | his wives are dead and one divorced him, Little Sarah ts the daughter of his first wife. Three weeks ago Engler visited the house when his wife was out. Sarah de- clares that she saw him open a bottle of rhubarb and soda, which her mother used for Indigestion and pour something | into t from another bottle. Her father, she sald, did not see her watching him. | Sarah told Mrs. Engler about {t when| she came in, The stepmother took the medicine bottle to a chemist and had the contents analyzed, He reported that ‘enough phosphorus had been put into the medicine to death from a single dose, but the strong odor of the mixture would probably have given plenty of warning to Mrs, Engler. Mrs. Engler reported the case to the police of the East One Hundred and Fourth street station, and Detective Buddemeyer was sent out with a war- rant to find Engler. In hunting for the carpenter the policeman said he learned that Mrs, Engler's life was in- sured. By his advice, he told Magts- trate Herbert, she went to the insur- ance company and found that a policy had been Issued on her life for $300 In her husband's favor, and that he had been paying the premiums regular! She said another woman must have impersonated her in the physical ex- amination, as she had never heard of | the policy. Engler was held in $2,000 ball for ex- amination Monday. «Just Say” HORLICK’S| at 10 o'clock.. Windows were broken | the | port side of the Garden City and the| apart from him at No, 352 Kast Ninety- | Kea | gel a bay WAR GUNS SCATTER REBELS AT NANKING AFTER MASSACRE | |Manchu Troops Who killed | or Hundreds in Streets Now Control the City ‘ NANKING, Nov. 11.—The Imperialists | have regained the upper hand In Nank- ing and the Dragon flag again floats over Klangyin fort. During the night the Imperial gunboats shelled the revo- lutionary camp and this morning troops making a sortle found that the rebel Position, three miles outside the South Gate, had been evacuated. The suce of the loyal forces ts attributed in part to the discouragement of the rebels over their failure to re- celve new supplies of ammunition and partly to the fear inspired by the whe sale slaughter of Chinese by the Mi chus yesterday. FOO-CHOW, Noy. 11.—The Manchus who were defeated yesterday have con- centrated at the Governor's palace. Robbers are burning and looting. The whole city in disorder. AMOY, China, . M—Attacks by robber bands in different quarters threw the city Into a panic early to-day. The authorities self-conetituted, dealt with the situation as best they could. The water patrol captured a piratical junk, men await de- Junk traMe pro- freely to-day, but coast been wholly suspended. Taotal Chang as s office to-day. A conference of offictais with reprosenta- tives of the conservative and the rad- ica! elements was held to determine a course of action, PE , Nov. 11-649 P. M.—The Throne and Government alternated be- tween? hope and despair to-day. This morning a telegram was received from Yuan Shi Kal, he stated that able to come to Peking and ed a pessimistic view of the sit- uation, A second message coming sev. eral hours later struck a more cheerfu: note. ‘ GETS $100,000. BY WILL SHE SAID WAS WORTHLESS Mrs, Rebecca Gold of Brook- lyn Let it Stay in a Drawer for Ten Years. Although Mrs. Rebecca . of No 390 Liberty avenue, Brooklyn, knew that she was the sole heir to the estate of her old friend Reinhold Keager, died in 1901, she thcught the old man, who was eighty-three when he passed away, had di nijless, so she kept bis will In her desk and didn't file | A month ago she happened to read about Long Island City real estate, and remembering that Keager had an equity in some building lots there, she took the will out of the drawer, dusted It off and submitted It to Merrill St. John, a lawyer No, 15 William street. , looked the matter up and to-day Gold is one of the happiest won Brooklyn, for she is worth, under the| conditions of the will, $100. | Mr. St. John found that Keager had | vougit an equity in 823 lots in the heart of Long Island City in 1878. The | district then hadn't been developed and the property was not considered very valuable, Foreclosure proceed- inj were brought against it and Mr. felt sure his property was practically worthtess. He made his will In 1898 and died three years later, leaving Mrs, Gold itis sole legatee, be- cause she had been kind to him and taken care of him “unto the end. When he died he didn't realize that the property he owned would ever be worth anything. Mr, St. John dis- covered that there Was @ serious defect im the foreclosure proceedings and that under the law his client’s equity In the real estate will amount to $1( 000, as it is situated in what has be come the most valuable part of Long The Odorless Disinfectant Prevents Disease fold Everywhere. Write Henry B. 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Last At | of this city came to my office, trow with a severe skin eruption, At first I ¢ | Bes — the nature of EM Se] ha exi nee 1 | need ft it his occup "ae be } awat and decorator, iw was worst form, It started with a | Honand vould affect most parts of | thighs, elbows, chest, bact and hd teriminate’ in Lye iiching and burning wi would clmost tear Visa sl ins apart Lys fot relief, Tecommen: fod pil reatment could thin bout fifteen foliar, “i m preee jothing seerued to “In the giro Ag ey et rhe. 8 was tinually suffering with @ teh and who had been ites i a tions and Pont with i¢ she Was going to get oe Remedies and va, a ae ad arras. e first poplicd ie vate ih hice | ts ations of Cu she naw decided provement end 48 et days she was completely cured, “T lost no time I Fecornmenny the Cuti/ cura Remedies to M thi fwo months ero. 1 told him’ tovwesh with the Cuticura Sig and to” ious bath ort fa ‘Gin the uthura time n| ere re. Helicveme, from the very firs rieaaeee {Cr ermedies he was srestl elle’ and to-day, he is completely ct thele use. Ihave great faith iy the di Remedies and Cy always havea fort now thet J am convine ny inertia . July 22, 1910, Cuticura Soap and Olntmen hout the world, but a liberg " book'on skin en mntled free on pa ic & Chem. Corp., Dept. 7B, Bost tmouth St. ROBINSON’S PATENT BARLEY The Only Infant Food All Grocers and Drueniste. NEW PUBLICATIONS. ~BROADWayY BUGLE ~ Best Yet your newsdealer's Monua’, Yes, ——— RELIG! Us NOTIC | WU! he on sale @ Don't et. ty THE. SALVATION ARMY ANNOUNCES A THRILLING IN TABLEAUX Carnegie Hall, Tues. Nov. 14,911; COMMANDER MISS BOOTH will preside and deliver an address, Are ‘of offic from all parts Of the Mast wil ‘be prew Muste ‘by famvie NATIONAL STAPF BAND & ALE C jay LL 8, oe kets sod information AUINTYRE. 122 W. “in loving Memory of SOPHIA E. beloved wife and mother. whe lsh’ ene Leoneee ““Fox”’ Is His Middle Name This man is off on an important mission, You see, his brother Bill is dueda’ New York to-morrow so a real swéll Furnished Room and an elite Board. ing House must be located without }a moment’s delay. Our friend will have some trous ble i in finding the desired place, think’ you? Not a bit of it! Looks are sometimes deceiving.’ tn his overcoat pocket he has tuck | away for ready-reference a copy af | the SundayWorldWant Directory, Oh, his middle name is “Fox,” alright, He will go STRAIGHT. to Furnished Boom and Board | House he seeks. 30,739 WORLD “TOLET” “BOARDERS W, ANTED" ADS. MONTH—9, a 6 MORE THAN 2

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