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a Ee es \ BIRL FRIEND ALONE » “SAW MISS LITTLE ~ AULD BY TRAN y Millionaire’s Daughter, Tennis wexpert, Struck Down at Pinehurst (N. C.) Station. BODY BROUGHT HOME. te: Miss Wildey, With Victim at ‘s Time of Death, Cannot Yet Explain. AH champion tennte player, killed at Pinehurst, N. C., Satur- was Miss Edna Wildey of N. J. The tragedy has made Wiley @o hysterical that she hae ga been able to give an account lee Little, who wae the youngest ter of Joseph J. Lattice, millionaire jer and former Congressman, ae- ied by her brother, Raymond D. ttle, and @ party of about ten others, them several well known ama- tennis players from New York, had the week et a tournament and about to take @ train at Pinehuret fo return to this city. Pinehurst te the terminus of @ branch Of the Seaboard Air line. The baggage bf the party was piled at the end of the Hittle depot platform and the sleeping bare in which they were to make their $earney north were on ao siding, beyond through track alongside the plat- =P. Ete qe ‘An engine was ewttching « couple of, day coaches. It was @ few min- 8 before 10 o'clock at night, and the ly lights were those of the emall are ” @8 LITTLE HAD BEEN KILLED INSTANTLY. walted eway owerd the Mise I iy if ts i ; { & 8 i i i i ; i 7 3 3 8 g wagedy. Geter got platform pansing engine. ‘whether she stepped Gown upon the l ose to was cal ¢ < ‘The return tc New York was aban- doned for the night by the entire party. A physician was called to attend to Mise Wildey, whose condition was serious, Yesterday tho visitors left Pinehurat. the body of Miss Little on the same train, Miss Wildey was also a pas genger, in care of friends, They reached Mew York this morning. WHOLE FAMILY DEVOTED TO OUTOBOR SPORT. ‘The Little home te at No. { West @izty-cighth treet. Miss Little was the ly favorite. Her father, though in seventies, is still hale and athletic, the entire family has always been ed to outdoor sport. Miss Elsie Little was twenty-six years wWeman and an enthusiastic motorist. In 19% ahe gained acclaim among her frtends by taking the wheel of en auto- mabile away from a chauffeur and out- her father and mother, there family two alters, Mre. left in the + £4000 Beekman”’ and have your “Lost & Found” Ad. printed in The World, so it York City GREATER than if "published in the Herald, Times, Sun and Tribune ADDED TO- i feature, The World prints #LOST & FOUND” Ads. conspicuously on the page oppo- Site editorial page mornings, and ‘on first page of Want Section % 83 ‘emty person who saw Miss Eivie| Tennis Expert Who Was Killed by a Traina | if | CHARGES HUSBAND WITH BURGLARY Lawyer Harvey Says He Went to Wife’s House to Get Children. ——_ Charged with attempted burgiary, Ed- win ©, Harvey, a lawyer living at No. 8 Franklin avenue, Brooklyn, and E4win Connors of No. 72 Gates avenue, were arraigned to-day before Recorder Yost at Upper Montolair, N. J. Har- vey te said to be general counsel for the London Accident Insurance Com- Dany, and Connors described himself as @ reporter on the Brookiyn Hagie, but At the latter's oifice ft was sald he wan got known, ‘They are acoused of trying to break into the home of Harvey’s mother-in- law, Mre. Wyokoff, at No.’ 1¢ Elston road, Upper Montclair, at 3 o'clock yes. terday morning, and the lawyer's wifo {# the complainant. A member of the Wyckoff household heard @ noise at ‘the front door about 2.80 o'clock, and suspecting burglars ere trying to enter, crept through # back door, ran toa neighbor's home and summoned police by phone. Sergt. Can- non ran to the house, Ho says he found pe two men trying to for® their way Harvey and his friend protested vainly againot Mrs, Harvey and her ot him out of bed. ation Harvey denied @ had gone to his for robbery, He In the police emphatically tha! An. a girl, whom Mri vey had kept from him since he separated. Mrs. Harvey insisted that both men be looked up, ao they were committed by the Recorder. Mra. Harvey has been living with her mother for about a fortnight. At the Brooklyn address it wae said to-day that the couple had been married about en years. Two weeks ago Mra. Harvey and the children disap- office. James P, Mylod. Jury. Connore was liberated on his own witness, ASKS POLICE TO FIND Schultz, Has Been Slain by Robbers. |nue, Brooklyn, | hip father, George Bohults, ‘Thursday night. Aw the elder | foul play. had searched all the hoapttals tn the city and had been to the Morgue, but without j@etting a trace of his tather. jcarried « large sum of money he fears |that he may have been killed and his body thrown into the bay or otherwise secreted, | ‘The missing man ia forty-nine and \welghe 20 pounds. He ie 5 feot ¥ inches tail and hae a scar on the back of his right hand. When lust eeen he wore « \wray wult and black derby hat. to Be Steam, Steam escaping from @ heating plant tn an unoccupied bu! hour caused an alarm of fire tered otter, We MISS ELSI R-LITTLS (s7 Tlunder the name of Miller with another peared after Harvey had gone to his Harvey was represented by Attorney He was held tn $1,00 batl to await the action of the Grand recognizance to appear as a material FATHER, WHO HAD $375. Son Fears Missing Man, George Frank 6chults of No. 412 Prospect ave. | of a tract asked the police last Right to send out a general alarm for | that wealthy | tract, James Donnelly, @ searcher of retired lumber dealer, who disappeared | records, and Thomas Evans, @ friend of Mr, | Schultz had $375 in hia pocket at the “ time he vanished his eon fears he mot | Staten withers Frank Schultz @ald last evening that he | YOU WANT Because he | ng running from No, 488 to 492 Broadway during the noon to be turned in. Frost on the window panes |of the five-story building ulso holpod the iusion, When the firemen arrived | a@ hasty eurvey of the situation caused the impression that the entire building | Wee emoke filled. When the firemen on- the butiding with nose to fght the they found only a leaky THE EVENING WORLD, c, GREATEST ICt HARVEST IN YEARS t Pinehurst, N. Finest Quality Seen in Half a | Century, Thick, Clean and Clear. fer INDITIONS ARE PRIME, Demand That May Be Made for Two Years, | the Hudeon. | the wweltering days of July or August, but If the old ice famine story be re- vived then it may be well to recall the |there been such opportunities for reap> jing the ice crop as in the last two | weeks. Already the eighty 044 houses | that siand on either bank of the Hud- }non are bulging to their sides, The jonty exceptions are some of those Jowned by nickerbocker Ice Com- pany, the residuary legatee of Charles |W. Morse’s American Ice Company. It may be that these houses will be filled by the end of the week. Perhaps they may not we filled at all, It all depends on whether or not the bls Ice compay wants to leave some of its houses only purtiaily filled so that its artificial plants in the city may be kept going. From West Park, a short way to the upper wide of Newburg, to Albany, about 20,000 men have been flecking the ice bound Hudson for the last two weeks. At most less than three weeks 1» ale lowed for the ice harvest, and this year the time has been shortened. The men thus employed are experts in their way. Most of them come from the country back of the river. They have been cutting and stowing ice for many years. ‘They follow the season and the tides, By intuition it seems they know Just when the ice ts of a proper thick- ness to be harvested, and then they float in to take up the jobs they left year bet COLD 6PELL IN JANUARY MADE PLENTY OF ICE. The month of December was #0 mild that everything pointed to a poor nea- won for ice, The Albany night bout made its last trip on Jan, 2-something heretofore unheard of. The ferry from Kingston Point to Rhinebeck was run- ning up to the night of Jas ‘The tee Ch HE HANGS HIMSELF iN RAYMOND STREET JAIL. Milk Dealer Who Had Pleaded Guilty of Having Sold Adul- terated Milk a Suicide, Charles Schmidt hanged himself in his cell in Raymond Streot Jail, Brooklyn, early yesterday, He had cut the cover of his pillow into strips, knotted them together, fastened one end to an iron hook and formed the other into a noose: ‘This he put around his throat and then lowered himself slowly so that the frail Une would not snap until he was strangled, The hook was about six feet from the floor of the cell and was used in the day to hang the cot on, Schmidt was forty-three years old. He was @ milk dealer at No, 20 Thatford avenuc, He was arrested last week for selling adulterated milk, and when ar- raigned on Friday pleaded guilty, He was given the choice of paying a fine of $0 or going to prison for ten days. He was taken to the jail Friday evening. All Saturfay Keeper Riebriet noticed that the prisoner was depressed and tried to encourage him, but Schmidt only shook his head sorrowfully. Oe HUSBAND ALWAYS SKIPPED WHEN STORK HOVERED NEAR. Last Time He Didn't Come Back Till He Was Found—Gets Limit in Prison, Bamuct Levine, « tadlor, was sentenced to-day by Judge Fawcett in County Court, Brooklyn, to serve not leas than one year nor more than one year and MONDAY, FEBRU UP THE HUDSON {Abundant Supply for Every | | A million and @ half tons of tce—this fe the record of the svason's harvest on It may neom @ far cry to ‘tact that nut in twenty-five years have ee Sy eS ! | Men were worrted. Then came the cota | preased yimseif yesterday. “gurety they | spell of January, Im two nights the! can't make purer ice than we have on Hudson was frozen hard. Less than a! the river now.” week afterward the 1 were =| Of the more than eighty houses, nine- Ing soundings to « tenths are owned by the Knickerboeker thick. | ( or th, Company, and many of the others are Joo) controlled vy it. No matter what call ah tiere hae been the Knickerbocker Com- : harvesting was pany has always had ite supply tn {) kness of five inches alight, There was @ time last summer A pow th javove Newburg the depth grew until) jit was thirteen inches through at Port|It may be news to those that went | Ewen, ‘The weather was fine for the | short of Wey i be told that scross j taking In of the crop. Men were cage Ones WH SAS tons tn te that ons |to work. There was no strike trouble) not touched last summer at all. The jto annoy the borses, So when Jan. 2 tee men in explaining wil! tell you that | came and it x e to begin the big) st war not ie that went short, but when the cry of ice famine was raised. Knickerbocker Company and the tnde-| the tuab til two years ago the | pendent companies spread their men | towing w me the most part by \ over the tor ficids. the Corn Wing Company. ‘Then tire ome of tho iy houses run 90 men| Knickersocker Company started to @o the wowing Itself, aoammeatt—ipoenaeenan 2,658 DIED IN CITY BY VIOLENCE IN 1911. More Murders Than the Year Be- |to the house. Their firet work ts the clearing of the snow from the surface, This year there has been litle for them to do in that line, The snowfall has been light and in most places the tce| showed as clear as crystal. The field once cleared the horses with the mark- | jing machines are run over. The ma-| fore, More Death$ From Autos | chines outline the sides of the cake and if 7 running over several times, cut through and Trolley Cars. ve the aupth of 1 | The annual report of the Liked, Theta - | Coroners for 1911 shows that Already a can cut througi. to the Icehouse and to the base of tho elevator which carries up the cakes. Once thé plant ts In full swing there is @ steady flow of ice cakes to the point where the clevator dips its end into the river, In the houses with the newer appll- ances the work then ts made easy, It used to be that four men looked after deaths were reported to the C office in that year than in 1910, or 6,701 in all, Of these, 3,043 were due to natural causes, leaving violent character. Th suicides, murders and accidents. The homicides by shooting ana 193, an increase of eight year before. There were 26 cases of malprestice, a decrease of 18 the foe as 1 came to the elevator. Now,| from the year previous, in moat of the houses, the elevator| , Of the 43 Itles in Manhattan works automatically, grabbing with] curing the year in which death was charged to some other person, 90 were caused by automobiles, an increase of 28 over the previous year. In most cases the Killing was due to careless- ness of chauffeurs. Surface cars killed 72 persons, an ine prongs the cakes as they come along and carrying them 200 feet up to the top of the house. ICE HOUSES HOLDING 46,000 TONS FILLED IN ELEVEN DAYS. | .,,,, of ®. The New York Central The record run of ice into the houses| tracks on Eleventh avenue killed 10 by way of the newly fashioned clevato: | pursons, a de is eighty two-hundred-pound cakes to the minute. This is enough to keep the average household in tce for more than a year, Steadily this goes on. Some of the larger houses hold 45,00} ® tons. Most of them have been filled this year In eleven days. This is some- thing that Hudson River tcemen have not heard of before, " More than this there has never been, |head. Prof. Wilder is making a study say the old-timers, ice of such quality. | of deformities at birth. “You can read a newspaper through | —=———— {t,"" Is the favorite way of calling atten- tlon to the clearness and tho purity of the product. The tide was low when the ice began to make, there was the cold snap that made It come to a thick- ness quickly and there was no surface dirt to cause trouble. And for these reasons the crop of the year is better than {t has been in a quarter of a century. The householder who in the summer months looks on the 10-cent plece of ice dwindling in the ice box may be inter- ested to know that ice is harvested on the Hudson for 12 cents a ton. It costs less than 30 cents @ ton to tow it to New York, so at the dock here it costs the company less than half a doll Why the ice company that controls the situation here should make artificial ice in view of the opportunities of such a season as this is something that up- river men cannot understand. ‘I sup- pose they have got to keep their plants going,” {# the way that one man ex- killed before. A rosident of Ithaca has sent to Prot, Wilder of Smith College a dead duck with two bodies, four legs and only one é eight months in Sing Sing, and to pay }a@ fine of $00. Levine, who was brought back from AI Chicago, where he was found living P > Be woman, has the disappoaring hablt, Ho has five children, Every time the stork was expected Levine faded, but he came back every time up to the last one. He Waited until the youngest child, Besste, was born, then went away and remained for @ year and a half. Levine's wife, Sarah, appealed for ald to the United Hebrew Charities, and tae man's photograph 4nd description were went all over the United States, Last November Levine was found. He fought extradition but he lost, and his return Ix the first In the State on the abandonment charge. In Brooklyn he waa Indicted. He pleaded gulity, os CITY OFFICIALS B (%. J.) Mem Chai With Fraud tn School Site Dea! John J, McMahon, register of Hudson County, and John Daly, a process server fn tho uherift'a office of that country, who, with two others, were Indicted for Jconsptring to cheat aud defraud the | township of North Bergen In achool alte deals when MoMahon was town treas- Jurer and custodian of school moneys, were put on trial to-day before Supreme Court Justice Swayze, County Judge Biatr and a struck jury It ts alleged Daly sold eighteen lots to the municipality for a school site out woventy-seven lots before he had taken title to the property and noney pald for the eighteen lots was used in paying for the whole | McMahon's, were the other two indicted, It tn understood Donnelly will be the Serviceable Hosiery — Sightly —with the right feel about it | and above everything else the | HePPENDABLE KIND, NQUEROR ON HOSIERY For Men, Women and Chudren, Combines all essentials: Right _ pric best qualities, Silk, silk liste, dull lisle, cotton and cashmere; all colors and weights; from to—well— just ask your retailer, 7 BN ‘one who will. Seay RUBENS & MEYER, P.O, Bes 64, Sta, D, New Yoru EWA REALS es Letters from Prominent Druggists _ addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. @. J. Briggs & Co., of Providence, R. I., say: “We have sold Fletcher's Castoria in our three stores for the past twenty years and consider it one of the best preparations on the market.” E, W. Stucky, of Indianapolis, Ind., says:' “To sey that wo have recom mended and sold your Castoria for years is the best endorsement we can possibly give any preparation. It {s surely full of merit and worthy of recommendation.” Henry R. Gray, of Montreal, Que., says: “I would say that your Cas: toria for children is in large demand and that it gives general satisfaction. Not being a secret nostrum many medical men order it when circum- stances indicate the use of such a preparation.” ‘W. G. Marshall, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: “We have found your Castoria to be not only one of the best sellers in the medicine market, but a preparation that gives almost universal satisfaction; in fact we cannot recall having had a single complaint from any of our customers who have used it.” Owens & Minor Drug Co., of Richmond, Va., says: “It is whh pleasure that we lend our endorsement to Castoria, a preparation of proven merit, During our long experience in the drug business we have had abundant occasion to note the popularity of the genuine Fletcher's Cas toria, which we unhbesitatingly recommend.” Brannen @ Anthony of Atlanta, Ga, say: “No doubt if we were called upon to state positively what medicine we bad sold for the greatest length of time, the greatest number of bottles sold, and the most satisfactory preparation to us and also to the customer, we feel that we could safely ‘and conscientiously say Fletcher's Castoria.” CENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use, For Over 3, Years. '@ wealthy contractor, be granted @ di- tnd |MINSTRELS TO AID CHURCH. |date in every particular, SHOW GIRL PROTESTS. Mrs, Melligan Takes Excepti Referees Report on Divorce. Mre. Bessie Van Néss Mulligan, for- merly @ show girl in ‘T: Beauty Spot,” filed an exception in the Supreme Court to-day to the report of Referee M. Linn Bruce recommending that her husband, George H. Mulligan jr., son of Merrrrrcry i This Home Made Cough es Syrup Will Surprise You vorce. Mra. Mulligan wes alleged to have conducted herself in an improper mAn- Mope Even Whooping Cough 0 @ulckiy, A Family Supply ner with a Maiden Lane jeweller. At! % ‘at Small Cost, the hearing before Referee Bruce sho! F denied this, although she admitted sive | ig sys peis a0 HM NCRUM Mo HIRO HIRI 2 | had visited a hotel with the co-respond- | ent early one morning. Owing to tho| Here ie # home made remedy that iakes lateness of the hour, she sald, the man- | hold of a cough instantly, and will usually n case in 24 ho @ pint—enough for a ‘ou couldn't buy as much cough syrup for cure the most stub ‘This recipe mi whole family. ager of the hotel would not serve her and her escort any drinks, so the co-re- spondent engaged two separate rooms and ordered two bottles of beer. “We had not commenced to drink the beer when the door of one of the rooms Wor burst in by my husband and some of his friends. I ‘had not even taken my.hat off at the time.” $2.50. ‘Mix one pint of granulated sugar with % pint of warm water, and stir 2 aninutes, Put 2% ounces of Pinee (fifty cents’ worth) In a pint bottle, and add the Sugar, Syrup. This keeps perfectly and pleasant tat hildren Wke_ it up the appetite and is alightiy which helps end a cough. probably know the medica! value of in treating bronchitis and throat troubles, lungs, @te. is the haw a minstrel An borate show, up to) 9 be followed by a reception, takes place this evening at Harlem River Casino, under the ausPices of the United Societies attached to the Church of the Immaculate Con- ception, in East Fourteenth street, of whieh Mer. William G. Murphy ts pas- lor, Among the box-holders are Charles F, Murphy, George P. Richter, William P. Kenneally, Jumes A, Foley, Edward Leavy, Josep: B. Martin, John B. Mai tin, Thomas Cunningham, Edward Cunningham, John Clark, William ore There most Norway white pine extract, rich in guaix- ealing pine etc- 8 will not work thousands of which explains why the plan hae been imitated often, but never Buc- cessfully, ‘A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or e money promptly refund a with this J. " J. | recipe, Your druggist has Pinex, or wil! Jackson, Wiiltam Philips, Joseph Court | ger it for you, I not send to The Pinex ney, James J, Murph: 1Go.. Ft. wayne, Ind. Denis O'Connell, (James McCreery & Co.’ 23rd Street 34th Street On Tuesday, February the 6th EMBROIDERY DEP’TS. 1m Both Stores. Complete assortment of Spring Embroid- eries, including Nainsook, Swiss and Hand- embroidered Batiste. Also White and Ecru Insertions, Edgings and Flouncings in matched sets. Bands and Flouncings. 2 tog in. Bands.. +.. §5¢ to 3.95 per yd. 27 in. Flouncings. 070 OSC AUB. Pinay 45 GC teseeeee td “igrg S 8 HOUSE DRESSES AND APRONS. 1m Both Stores, Second Floor, Twenty-third Street Fifth Floor, Thirty-fourth Street House Dresses of Percale,—round neck and three-quarter length sleeves or high neck and long sleeves. Size 34 to 42. g9se Fine Lawn Aprons, embroidery trimmed. With and without bib. 45¢, 65¢ and 9s¢ House Dresses of Fine Percale and Chambray. Various models. Size 34 to 42. 1.50, 1.95 and 2.50 James McCreery & Co. 23rd Street 34th Street James McCreery & Co 23rd Street 34th Street FURNITURE DFEP’'S. I Both Stores, J Sale of Kine Bedroom I urniture, On Tuesday and Wednesday, February the 6th and 7th. Suites of Rich Cuban Mahogany with inlay. Models are English reproduc- 450.00 per suite former price 587.00 Colonial Suites with massive Napoleon Bedsteads. Made of finely figured Mahog- any. e 425.00 per suite fine tions. Circassian Walnut form Suite: er price 573.00 -French re- production, finest plate glass mirrors, dust proof construction. 400.00 per suite former price 553.00 Suites of White Enamel and Gold, Colo- nia Imodel, all drawers built with dust proof partitions, Enamel, gold trimmed. cane panels. 23rd Street 195.00 per suite former price 263.50 in Period es . form: Louis .XVI,— White Twin Bedsteads with 250.00 per suite er price 376.00 34th Street