The evening world. Newspaper, May 21, 1912, Page 4

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~ | BABY COOSTO RY * ATMOTHER' TRIAL! FORPOSOMNG NE Winifred Ankers Kode Cass Her | Merry Infant While Her Life Is at Stake. — y, ’ » @e furore were in the box to-day when Winifred Ankers, clutching tight- ty in her arms the nameless infant that aid to have inspired her to crime, tal ward of the Brooklyn Nursery and ‘Infants’ Hospital The work of complet- ing the jury was resumed tmmetiatsly. Although nine babies are eatd to have Derished ne a result of the jealousy of this young woman, whom the State | charges with being a latter day Borgia, Assistant District-Attorney Voss, in charge of the proscoution, elected to try her first for causing the death of Richard Gamersall, a three-montha-old charge of the hospital, who died Feb- Tuary 17 of oxalte acid powoning, Mies Ankers, former girl of the streets, who sought to reform when her child was born, te accused of piacing the acid in the milk used in the hospital, where she was employed as a maid of all work. In her first oconfession— which she has repudiated—she said she Gia not intend to kill the babies. DEPENSE CHANGES TO DENIAL AFTER CONFESSION. “Johnny Mo,” whe maid, “and I wanted te get even, I thought I could make the babies sick, 10 those nurses who had shunned me and my baby would have to work hard to get them well again; honestly, I did not it to Weill them.” ares } Her defense, as outlined by Edward t 4%. Reiley, her counsel, wilt be that she had nothing to do with the presence of } Polson in the milk. He will charge t Sross carelessness !n the management of the hospital and will repudiate her } oft-repeated confession. » “The police threatened to take ‘Johnay » Bull’ away from me," she eald to-day, ) “but mata I could keep him if I con- } teased. Why. I would have ‘confessed’ } Simost anything then to keep ‘Johnny ‘Bull’ with me," and sbe snuggled the 4 Babbling babe closer to her breast. > Miss Ankers, dressed in a Peter Pan | Ghirtwaim and black skirt, bore the child in her arms as she entered the Teourt. Neourt-room. Bhe sat in @ corner by a Hiwindow, watching passing cars and | @utomobiles and pointing them out to the cooing babe. She laughed aimom Yaloud as Foerdinand—her baby's real ‘mame—clapped his chulby hands to- ‘'gether and shricked shrilly as an euto * horn tooted. } With her left hand she fanned \ “Johnny Bull" with her handkerohiet. The fourth finger of tbe left hand, AO RE Oe oe ween +e farren of ornament yesterday, was @ixcled to-day with a band of gold, shining In its very newness; a wedding wring that was not placed there by @ fusband before the altar. | ANFANT COO8 AT JUROR WHO TRIES MOTHER FOR LIFE. ‘When she moved to the table behind her counsel, who gave her little heed ‘ag he examined talesmen, she held Johnny Bull’ so thay he fuced the ry. ‘Tho chuckling infant arms toward Jur 5, and tried jw crawl acrom the table toward the Gery-box. Juror No. 5 is a stern-visaged Peek. who said he oould send a woman is the death chair, But th of the , held in the arms of the silgnt woman who Is said to have killed others, unnerved him. There were ; fn his eyes ae he turned his face ‘Considerable aimculty experlenced + im eecuping a jury, few men being will- Ang to admit that they could send a } woman, however guilty, to the death ‘ohair, Mins Ankors Kave lems attention the selection of jurors than she did yesterday, spending the morning playing dwith her baby. Nono of the wealthy beclety women who had volunteered vo the young woman during her feat was present In the coury room, John A. Petrie, a manufacturer, of No. 78 Decatur Lrooklyn, took Peat No. 7 in the box after an exhaust- fve examination. As the morning passed with the te-| jewmen, M tas A: j demeanor that Marked her early conduct. She passed playful “Johnny Bull" to Mrs, a Carney, matron of the Raymond treet jail, who sat at her side, und — her elbow bn the table, nervously Joseph F. D. MoCabe, a her nails. @f No. 571 Fifty-second stree examination of Jost the smi! After numerous challen Holmes, gro: of Ni ; Street, took seat No. 9 Daniel C. Courtney, real estate dealer @f No. OF Meserolo street, entered the jury box in seat No, 10; Charles J. Trenach, leather manufacturer, of No. 1188 Cleveland street, became No. 11 “George W. Clayton, boarding-b keeper, of No. 111 Henry atreet, com- Ploted the jury. Justice Soudder, as soon as the jury was completed, sald he would adjourn hureday, tlemen,”” he you mnst telephone auton thie tri Macon “are « answer the It has come ay ‘and that must be etopped.” ‘W. Bursch, a cnanufacturer of ninth street, who had Juror No. 6 then said mother-sn-4. tn the Kings County Hosp h was imme- lately challenged by the defense and hy work of filling the jury was re- gumed. Wiliam A. Brown, a polisher, at No. t Twelfth street, became per men in the country, He became a ‘ter on the New York Bvening Post young man, and remained with nty-one years, aspociated held out) -\thirty kinds of more or less harmful mi- ;|and teeth were scrupulously clean, - {ceived in the same way. to my ears that efforts are sometimes | made over the telephone to influence | 6 had | | » | 4 of health is by the daily use of an antiseptic with lsocrery GIRL WHO | IMPORTED phyla } | GERMAN BANDITS eet Rate boc DIE FIGHTING LIKE of APACHES OF PARIS Two Are Killed, One by Pal to Prevent Betrayal—Po- liceman Is Shot Dead. NAUEN, Germany, May %.—The ex- | ample of the Apachen who recently ter- rifed Paria and its environs has been Quickly followed by some German criminals here. Two of them detected last night while committing burwiaries Gashed to their bicycles whieh had beon left outside the house. On the way they Were confronted by a policeman whom they shot dead, ‘They then rode away, But the peop! fm the vicinity were roused and pu sued them, firing at the criminals they fied. One of the bandits wi wounded by a hot and his comrade deliberately killed him to prevent hie capture and possible betrayal, The surviving burglar continued the attic aguinat some hundreds of armed police and countrymen until he was finally shot dead. @uch resistance to the authorities by German criminals has hitherto been extremely rare, Mise Mary F. Andrews, the daughter of Mrs, Paul A. Andrews of Newport, whose engagement to marry Vincent Astor han been repeatedly denied by her parents, wi Passenger on the Kroonland, arriving to-day from Ant- werp.. She wae accompanied by her mother, Mr. Andrews was at the pier to meet them. Miss Andrewa brought home with ther a German police dog. She came Gown the gangplank with the pup on a leash. He saw two fox terriers nosing ‘ound the pier and at ance declared M Andrews made several un- willing between piles dag- gage in al directions bef ° managed to the leash hitehed into the handle of a huge trunk and make it fast, Even then the dog protested ‘bitterly because he found himself un- able to move the trunk, “TAG GAME ENDS IN DEATH. Three-year-old Tony Pentagrose was playing fag i the back yard of his home on Malbone street, between Al- bany and ‘Troy avenues, Brooklyn, ‘Tony in his haa stumbled women in the wildly excited, moned Sergeant Oppenheimer, and they prociited @ ladder, which they lowered was tied to it, held the end of the Williams into the finally reached Tony's body, meantime n fire alarm had been turned in by an excited nelghbor and a call sent to St. Mary's Horpital; Dr. Rob- erte sald Tony had been drowned for several minu THE HE EVENING ~ WORLT TR. COMES BACK, DELIGHTEDAT THE OHIO OUTLOOK iGrins Broadly, but Is ‘Not Making Any Predictions as to Buckeye Primaries. Cot. Roonevelt, back from the fight In Ohio, only had time to flash his teeth in a confident smile qt the Pennsylvania station early to-day before he changed |ears for Oyster Bay and went sky- | hooting under Manhattan and the East | River toward Sagamore Hil At 8.08 o'clock he ‘was in the underground gal- lery of the station and at 812 he was gone from view again. “Oh, yea, I'm pleased with the cam- paign in Ohio,” the Colone! said, with. his broadest grin. “Do you expect to win owt there to- Gay?" one of the reporters queried. “I'm a better warrior than a prophet,” was the Geile’ answer of the Gage of Gegamore Hill. “I may have @ state- ment to make on thie subject later in the @ay at my home. Good-by.” Se STRUCTURAL STEEL POOL Same “Gentlemen’s Agreements” ‘Were Made and Violated as {n Other Metal Combines. ‘The hearing in the sult of the Govern- ment to dissotve the United States Steel Corporation was remumed to-day at the Customs House before Henry P. Brown, the special examiner. John C. Langan, « real estate dealer of Brooklyn, formerly secretary to W. C. Temple, who had been commissioner Of a ates! plate pool, steel shaft pool] their being blown up. to shipments, tonnage, sales and prices. Former Secretary of War Dickinson's questions revealed that, like other pools inquired into, were made at meetings and violated fmmediately afterward under penalty. Sales of each member were limited by allotment. The pools broke in 1906, fertee) the withdrawal of the Carnegie Stoel Company. reival Roberts jr, @ member of the United States Steel Corperation Board, the second defendant to teatify, told of the merger of the American Bridge Company, of whigh he was president. There never were any negotiations, he swore. J. P. Morgan & Co, simply offered to exchange Steel stock for Bridge stock, and holders of the latter took {t. Mr. Roberts, by invitation of Robert Bacon, became a director in the Stee Corpora- tion before the transfer. He deviared there were no Interviews, negotiations or any correspondence with the Morgan firm before the deal mon gms “|rles. Another small army of foreigners MLLOTTED THE OUTPUT |!2vedet tho brickyards near Kingsland, “genaiemen's’’ agreements |° T, 1913. PASTORS ON HIS JURIES, Chicago Co: BF "7 3 "ANSFOR TPL TOILE WTH ARMY OF ERSEY STRNERS _—— Newark Orders Real Warfar on 3,000 Who Force Men to Quit Road Work. Posted on Fatal Aceidents. CHICAGO, May %.—In an effort to educate the public through the pulpite on how to avold fatalities, Coroner Hoffman will ask every preacher in Chi- cago to eit on Coroners’ Ue #tep in this direction wi day, when six clergymen mat on one case ’ |{nvolving an automobtle accident and \two on another. “There are too many fatal accidents | occurring in Chicago,” said the Coroner, | “I can use 100 jurors a day, and I shall eelect as many preachers to sit on them jee Doesible. By aitting on these juries| Cooke, New York, third, with 353. the ministers will get first-hand knowl- edge of conditions and they can advise thelr congregations how to imprewe| conditions.” a REV. DR. HENDERSON LEADS, New. Yorker First Methodist B ‘MINNEAPOLIS, May slecliyn declared, Rev. Dr, Hender- son of New York East Conference was high man on the ninth-ballot in the fight | U*ehn for a place on the Board of Sishaps of the Methodist Xpiscopal Church, Dr, Henderson received 451 votes, 616 being necessary to elect. W:. 0, Ghepard of | Co. Flatiron Bide. Chicago was second with 448 and KR. J. World Wants ‘The Police Commission of Newark has ordered tho distribution of fot gune among the police of that city because of increasing disorder growing out cf the intimidation of laborers on street work and quarries by marehing bands Of foreign laborers who are on strike for more wages. The clashes: between strikers and the police an@ county Officials of Essex and Hudson counties have become very serious and the ac- s tion of the Commission indicates con+ : certed efforts to put down lawlessness, Between 200 and 3,000 strikers have Deen parading the streets of Belleville, Bloomfiel4, Montciair, the Oranges and other auburbs of Newark, in bands of hundreds, driving the street and roade workers from thelr jobs by threats and violence. A Bang yesterday marched into the Mountain district back of West Orange and drove the taborers from the quar Bergen County, and by threate caused all of the laborers to quit work. It appears that all of the strikers, though operating over a wide terri- tory, are directed by dome central body at Newark. Bfforta are being made by the Newark police to run down these ringleaders. Hudson County authorities have sta- tioned armed men on various jobs in the ‘western part of the county, and ‘ the bridges on the Plank Road near Harrivon and Kearny, now under pe ‘ pair, are guarded nightly to prevent { Corded Silk of Smart 5.00 PETERMAN, DID IT Batiste, Found hiding in mouth right after teeth had been brushed. How Odol- izing puts all these mouth- invading foes to rout Scientistshave examined the mouth: of hundreds of people —all men and women of refinement—immediately after they had painstakingly brushed the teeth with dental creams, pastes, powders, etc. In every case the relentless search of the |microscope found that an average of over trobes had utterly defied these dentifrices, Yet every one of these people—deceived by the temporary fragrance left by tooth pastes and powders—thought their mouths And probably ninety-nine people out of every hundred who are still depending on pastes, powders and the namby-pamby |kinds of liquid dentifrices are being de- Evils Caused by Microbe Foes | Countless thousands of microbes are bred by decaying food which hides between the teeth, in cavities and hollows and other hard-to-get-at places where no paste or powder can penetrate; and which no brush ever made, no matter how its bristles are arranged, can reach, If not put to rout, they multiply with frightful rapid- ity. And, together with the acids they create, they attack the teeth, causing decay; attack the mucous |membrane of the mouth, making it a fertile field for germs of infection—which is one of the reasons why catarrh is 60 common in this country, The only way to safeguard against these enemies 0 Kinds of Mouth Microbes Defy Tooth Pastes and Powders long-lasting action—one that will the saliva. Odol—the delightful new germicidal mouth-and-tooth wash—is the only safe and pleasant antiseptic of this kind ever discovered, Goes on Cleansing for Hours Though a thorough Odol-izing takes only a minute, Odol keeps the mouth and teeth surgically clean for hours. It impregnates the gums And the mucous membrane, where it retains almost from one kind of health protection, ——- Odol Purifies Whole Mouth Odol is so penetrating that it reaches and purifies every part of the whole mouth —every hiding-place, no matter how tiny or hard to get at, where food particles, bacteria, acids, ferments or other impurities can lodge. And 60 effective that no mouth-invading germs of contagion—no foes of the teeth—none of the impuri- ties which cause tooth-decay or bad besath—-o8a sur- using the tooth-brush at all—it does more good than the most careful brushing with ordinary dentifrices, Cheaper to Odol-ize Than to Risk the Health The few cents a week it costs to Odol-ize the mouth and teeth two or three times a day is the cheapest Better begin Odol-izing to-day. mercy of microbes a day longer than you cau help. Price, 50 cents at all druggists Geo, Borgfeldt & Co., NewYork OS not evaporate or wash away in RAS its microbe-destroying effectiveness meal to the next. jons of Don't leave the mouth ta the | Women’s Dressy Silk Suits 24.00. Formerty-up.to.60.00 Plain and Changeant Taffeta, _No Money Down Best Credit ‘System—One Low Price—Cash or Cred Out-of-Town Deliveries Made by Our Motor Trucks Reed Arm Chair, comfortable ef Reed Settee with upholstered back and loose cushions of fancy iT cut, value Bonwit TELLER & Co. ANNOUNCE: FOR ' WEDNESDAY A CLEARING SALE.OF WOMEN'S = Coats and Dresses Charmeuse 75 Taffeta and Meteor Dresses 12.50 Formerly up:to-3500 A collection of one, two, three and four dresses kind in the most desirable styles. A SPECIAL SALE OF Summer Wash Dresses 6.50 8.50 12.50 Made of fine Tissues, Dimities, French Linen, and in fancy, tailored and Norfolk Models. Wraps, Motor and Steamer Coats 20.00 Values «to 30.00 25.00 Values to 40.00 a _ Taffeta Eponge All the approved models of the season including Coatees and mannish Top Coats Tee > Up= fancy Roosevelt May Bolt! But why should oven, though it seems disscul it vive its use, : secure the position you pe Axminster Rugs |(ruinster Carpets| Wilton Rugs 11,072, A Few Drope Enough ee $1150) ee [incu $18 50(WORLD “HELP WANED” You can use Odol any strength you rag My 89c = 9Bc_ i. : LAST WEEK : Amage , ; 15.98) vaiuesi.25 to $1.35 |v at $27.50|6,349 More Than All the 6 like. A few dro I Value 18, at hs ay ps in a little water is ordi- ont 17.98 Wave Ca 9x12 $31 50 Other New York Morn: id i h. H pets je $42, 0U | SundayN Co OO a tatate that even if the mouth is merely Henke * 26. 48 98c toot, io $45, 50 “Thess Sinan cake ig : rinsed or gargled with a mild dilution of it—without | Value 832, at viet $1.00 to $1.35 | Value $55, at e there is no reason why 4 ers abaald nae, let alone hal in their search for the - tion they seek. = reo Answer World Ads. and Be ‘El. Pp stil peat Oabi ISLAAL ES Lisle, 4 yyy _ ae AXON ti To appreciate convenience an great value of the Sunday World! Gretenne 12.98

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