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+ Ment returned FORGERY CHARGED WHEN HER $3 WAGE “GREW TO $12000 Remarkable Business Career of ~ Miss Zindell Has Climax in Her Plea. BEGAN AS SHOP GIRL, Declares She Is Innocent and | Her Bail Is Fixed at $10,000, Mine Rose Zindel, who for years has fanked as one of the leading busine women of New York, to-day faigned before Justice Crain In the Court of Special Sessions to answer to @n indictment charging her with the forgery of a note for $5.6 She en- tered a plea of not guilty and ball was fixed at $10.00, in default of which she to the Tombs, It ix ex- » that bond will be fur- Deoted, howe’ nished shortly | Mies Zindel, who etarted work as a! Uttle factory girl at $8 a week and yor to @ $12,000 a year position, Is now pre: t of the Zinde! Manufacturing Co., ers Of tortoise shell goods, She was Arrested Jate yesterday afternoon In the Behermerhorn, No, 2 East Kighty- second street, charged with forging the | signatures of & I Quinn of Phila. | deiphia, to the 5,687 note which ehe dis counted at the Century Bank of New York. Sh t the night in the Tombs, despite the plea of her physician, T Harris Weinstein, of No, 825 Lexington avenue, who declared she was too Ill to be moved from her home The Zindel Manufacturing Company, of which Miss 7 te the , was Placed in involuntary bankruptey Aug. 7. According to Attorney Je Epstein of No. 149 Broadway, who r resents the receiver, William Henke her liabilities are more than $200,000, With assets of less than $20,000. WOMAN HAD REMARKABLE BUSINESS CAREER. Miss Zindel's business career has been remarkable. At forty-three years she te paid to have taken rank as one of the foremost business women of the coun- she was the assistant to t Trenkmann, one of the pioneer fertoise shell goods manufacturers of America, 4 salary of $12,000 a year. When Mr. Trenkmann's estate wns #014, Miss Zindel bought the business for $110,000, most of which money, it 1s said, she paid out of her own personal sav- ings, Then she organized the Zindel ‘Manufacturing Company, and took a GWenty-one-year lease on the big butld- dng at No. 373 Fourth avenue, where her Dusiness was conducted. The aggregate Fental was $1,000,000, and the name of the building, according to the terms of the lease, was changed to Zindel Build- on So successful was Miss Zindel's opera- on of her own pb siness that the last wating of a big commercial house ¢: ther assets at $160,062 and her lab’ Qt 05,01. It was a surprise, therefor to the business world when, on Aug, her creditors Bolt for the te bankruptcy proceedings. — William le jr. of No, 64 William street Was appointed. @AY SHE HAD BORROWED $100,- 000 FROM BANKs. In investigating the company Mr, and his attorney, Jesse Epstein, fearned, they say, that on her ow credit Miss Zinde! had borrowed $100,- @9 from banks of New York in the G@ixty days, It is alleged, howe @ome of these loans were made on Mindel’s statement that whe was @onally worth more than $400,000, At the time of the bankruptcy ceedings Miss Zindel refused to appear for examination and Attorney Epstein had her adjudged in contempt of cour On her physician's statement that st ‘Was ill the contempt proceedings w Mot pushed. At that time, through @ttorney, Louis KE. Felix, Mis» Zin @aid that the leasing of the Z Bpllding was what caused her trouble ve applied to Federal Judge appointment of a receiver » past | + that | Miss per- pro- @he waid she had been forced to rant concessions in the shape « @everal months’ fre rent, with the Fesult that sie was unable to meet her own obligations Miss Zindel'’s urrest was > Bhout by the Century Bank, to @he bad taken a note signed &R Quinn,” of Philadelphia, The bank | Bed discounted the note, and when it} Was presented to the Quinn firm for payment it | id they turned it down! ape forgery. ‘The matter was laid be. | fore the Grand Jury and an indict. | Armed with a warrant issued by Jus dee Mulqueen, Detective Lieut. Harber and Willlam Mork, of Mr, Lipstein's oMice, went to the Schermerhorn yestor day to arrest Miss Zindel, There was @ scene in the corrido: mp) es of th ullding, it ix charged, attompiing Prevent the oMeer from entering. | APARTMENT WAS MAGNIFI-| CENTLY FURNISHED. | When ba reached Miss apartment, which is magnificen Rished, the matd slammed te bis face ly mashing one fingers. Mivs % declared too Ill te Ko to the Tomb. this she was borne out Dr, We n but she \ forced to enter a taxteab. Wt de understood that wealthy and in fiuentlal friends of Miss Zinded nak Ang efforts to xettle the case. John Wanamaker ix said to have been ap Peuled to to aid her + Through her attorney Miss Zindel to- day entered a strenuous denial to all ye charges th fi been 1 ainst her and sald whe was Bbhe would prove her innocen oe My Son Had Consumption but by z ‘ 1 thought tt vas just @ bluff, but as I was g home midnight *IX young men fell on m ked me down, und, after kickin in the | head and stomach, carried me down to} san to bind my legs and wr re, and as they were doing it I ed Cavalla ¥00N as they had ted m they led my cout over my head like a bag so that i 1 not make an outery and the first J knew after this T had been thrown across the West Shore Railroad "” © discharged, Cavalla. w nitted to Jail on & charge of at Pat ¥ 5 ab Moatdimery oes be ious «ts | wwe vopy ‘i us, WOUNDED. T BOUND UPON TRACKS [WASHINGTON MAY WHEN HS DAUGHTER'S HAND WAS. REFUSED Hoboken Man Declares Six Set Upon Him, Tying Him With Wire. The refusal of his daughter's hand to John Cavalla, twenty-one years old, of No. 606 Grand street, Hoboken, ac- cording to Salvador Miragila, an clder- ly fruit dealer of No. 614 Monroo street, | Hoboken, almost cost him his Ife eariy to-day, when he was set upon by six young men, bound wich wire and thrown across the West 8 Railroad tracks Miragiia told the of the assault when he a Recorder Me- A and fled Cavalla as one of his assailants, He failed to identify five other young men wh» had been ar- rested with the refected suite “This man," said the frult dealer, to me ye rday and demanded that I consent to his marriage with my daughter Fannie, I would not hear of | it because he had taken out @ license! to marty another young woman only | two weeks ago. When I told him how | 1 felt about tt he became enraged and “I'l fx you for this, take long and it won't der a BEST PHOTOGRAPH EVER TAKEN OF GOV. wiILson, INTERVENE IN CASE AGAINST ‘KID’ MCOY No Evidence of Guilt, Detec- tives Say, but Boxer Is Still Held on Belgium’s Request. LONDON, some quart 6. 15.—It Is thought the United st ernment may tntervene In the vase of “Kid" McCoy (Norman Selby), the American boxer, who was arrested on July 25 on a provisional extradition war- rant on @ charge of larceny alleged to have been committed Ostend, but later released on hall Sheldon L, Crosby, Third Secretary of the Un States Embassy, was prosent et Police Court to-day when in brought up, ‘The emanded the accused another week at the request of the F glan authorities, Although th ted with the sult arrived here al days ago the attor for the Belgian Ls on declared he was un- until ade ditional papers had arrived frfom Os- tend, Belgium. Wu Phillips, Secretary of the Untied + Embassy, is making an inquiry Into the facts of the case on behalf of the Embassy the case evidenc they have no KING GEORGE'S CUP BRINGS OUT YACHTS IN NEPORT WATERS = pelea Crews of Four Schooners and Be First Winners of New Prize. Five Sloops ger to ' (From the Clarksville (Tenn,) Leaf-Chroniote,) Phe hronicle is indebted to the New York World for a Mfe-size photo- wvure of Woodrow Wilson, Demo ndidate for President of the oduced exclusive! Th New York, from a copyrighted photo: graph by Pach Bros, New York. ‘Thin| Photograph is admittedly the best ever taken of Mr, Wilson, It is being given free he readers of ‘The World, Its tain distribution in this manner is a fine|'® v stroke of enterprise on the part of & ‘The World will ase accept our warmest thanks for great p newspaper | It amounted to $19.26, | coffin, after being embalmed, wi 8 Gov-| 1s of the rican boxer assert that the Belgian auth “8 finding themacives involved in an inexcusable blunder are endeavoring to negotiate the unconilitional re of Met D ves who wen working on! HE _RVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1012 Defenders of City Holding Invaders in Check; | Take Up Fositions for Last Desperate Battle A DETACHMENT OF THE B.wES Wro opPesend . TWO BatTTARWION OF REDS NEAR SHELTON CONN. There are 3,000,000 cais in Chcago—more cats than people. A lawsuit weighing 300 pounds has been filed in California against the Santa Fe Railway, That is he weight of the papers in an action involving the long and short haul problem. John Cashin, a blind paper seller of Atlanta, may see for the rest of his life through @ murderer's eyes. The mur- derer is about to be hanged. Surgeons will attempt (o transplant the cornea of his good eyes to Cashin's bad ones. May Allen, a New York chorus girl, resigned her position when informed that a Nebraska uncle had made her his sole hetr. She spent the entire legacy in night. one Mrs. Berthan Nathanson, wife of a New York :rofessor, has been granted a divorce on the ground that her hus- band cursed her in seven languages. Prof. William B. Hill of Vassar College nad his Pocket picked of $900 in London. The oddity ts that @ college professor had that much ™oney at once. Investigation into the election of Representative James A. Hughes of West Virginia discloses the fact that one vote was cast by a Dedigreed bulldog. After smoking the same pipe for twenty-five years, Mrs. Gusanna Blatchford of Ver Pp dead, . Besides the smell of the pipe, she left fourteen children and 160 grandchildren and great-grandchildren. . The Wilson Campaign Fund ts enriched by a $100 ‘travelters’ check sent by Mr. and Mra, W. A. Bahike of Alma, Mich. They had that much left on tting home from Burope. London and Paris papers please copy. ico A dog with a bank account, an allowance and a reward of 10 cents for every Tat he killed, was buried yesterday at Columbus, ©., in a, white, silver-handled | The dog's name was Tige. He became famous for saving a hote! fire. His bank account was $800, ‘al lives in Franklin B. Forrest went into E. J. Townsend's barber shop {h Philadelphia and asked fora haircut. When he went to seep in the chair he was given also a shav hampoo, hair tonic and co- logne w: The check was $1.2, When Forrest wouldn't pay the barber took hts gold watch and silver match- safe for security. Townsen! has been held in 9600 ball on a charge of larceny, A Highland take (Conn,) clam worked the shell game the other day on Louls Rudden of Winstead. Rudden, at a clambake, standing be- side a barr] of clams, dropped a % gold pleco into the barrel: Diligent search failed to find the miasinr money, When Rudden sat down to dinner he found his $5 gold piece inside of one of his steamed clams. The clam bank had closed its doors after receiving the de+ | poste, From Pittsburgh comes the melancholy story of a woman's fatal neglect. Mrs. Mary Thomas for many years had been accustomed to rémove her false teeth and put them in a glass of water upon retiring at night. Tuesday night she went to sleep with the store molars in their masticatory position. Next morning she was found Gead from strangulation, Ko-Kee, a progressive laundryman in Rutherford, N. J. Some well-to-do clients don't pay up. It read: “Mr, Blank owes me money. 1s annoyed because He put a sign in his window yesterday. Mrs, Anna Drew of Helensburg, Scotland, just dead at the age of 101, lived in the reigns of six English sovereigns and remembered talking with Sir Walter Scott. ———— SS being clear and the sea smooth, The only drawback was the lack of wind, | The yachts sailed in one class, the | schooners being rated at 90 per cent. of choo! but was somewhat be: | thetr racing measurements, ‘The start-|the schooners, era, with thelr owners and hailing ports,;Nind the Istalena. It looked at that if iting time as if the race would not be fin- iilena, Morton F. Plan:,|!8hed until nearly sundown. and New York; Irolita, immediately tacked for the Narragan- sett shore, but the Irolita and Elena held out to sea, At 1 P, M, was still light. The Elena was leading pndon EK. Walter Clark, Marblehead and Philadelphia Enchantress, Willlam | SHIPPING NEWS, Inclin, New York; Princess, Demarest ALMANAC FOR To. Lioyd, Boston. sets. | Sun rises, DAY, B10) Bun gota "88a, Mon eeta.., 842 Sloops-dstalena, George M. Pinchon, haa New York: Winsome, Trowbridge Hall, | Avenger, H. 1. Maxwell, New York: dorerpars tis Bt Yor ndenbilt, Newport | Hell Gate . 0.0T te Now York: Shimna, Robert Treat PORT OF NEW York. era To) he? Get esis » bouts were sent away five min ARRIVED, PReR os ps went out to Utes before noon, The nmittee gave | Olympic .. + Southampton emeiety AL ei today for (Me yachts a triangular course of 6% HY Mong S200. + Giresios | the wy fc Mle, the first leg of which was a) junet del Rio .. ‘Naples the race for th Cup. the last twelve-mile beat to windward, ‘The! Jon the New York ¥ Cluh's yearly Boston yacht Shimna, sailed by’ Frank { INCOMING STEAMSHIPS. | prouramme for largo boats. Tt was the Crownlnahield, was firat over ihe tine, DUE TO-DAY, programing far | ae Tk MBA He dn after the signal, She | sirius, Rotterdam. f mutt Moston, jin # for the cup offered by Sine the Istalena, Aurora | une George V., und thero was ea ‘There was a handicap | M's Orleans, ainong the yachtsmen for the honor of nd the three large schooners | Parma, Demerure. having the name of thely boat the (iret, hung back from starting until the time | nxcribed on the tropiy had nearly run out: The lena was OUTED TOR yachts Were blown out of the the first of the two stickers, going over | oatic, 14 7 harbor by @ moderate northwest breege, & MMnUte Ahead of the Trolita, while the | Seewiacs, faraia, ate, tly when Clark boat did not cross until the time | Ameria, ure. at J Which Matte out ably when hiya nearly expired, mtaraels. ins i the bouts reached the light vessel a* 10) "the Enchantress and Winsome pandas ‘gruueetin, Beata he A. M. The day was superd, the air brought up the rear, The Enchantress | Civ Naaman 4 . ARMIES LINED UP. TWO-DAY BATTLE TO SWE THE GT Manhattan Reds to Lead As- sault on the Blue Defenders ‘From Brooklyn. A STRONG POSITION. Blues Massed at Tashua Hill and to the Northward—Ar- tillery Near Redding. (Specie Btatt C1 tof The T frome tscning Wont HEADQUARTERS CHIDF UMPIRE, STRATFORD, Conn. Aug. 15.—Both armies shifted ‘troops back and forth to-day in anticipation of the big two- days’ battle on the result of which hangs the fate of New York. Hoatili- ties have ceased for the day, but to- night at midnight the’ belligerents will begin their moves against each other, and at daylight to-morrow the deciding fight of the Connecticut campaign will begin. The Blue defenders are concentrating thelr troops in the neighborood of Tas- hua Hill, northward and to the west of | Upper Stepney and toward Newton. Somewhere near Newtown the heavie! fighting will probably take place. Fri Gen. Tasker H. Bliss to-day moved his headquarters to Newtown, #0 that h as chief umpire, can watch the bij fight. The Blues have fallen back consider- ably since yesterday's battle. It was not @ forced retreat but a move to locate in ‘a more advantageous position. Blue Headquarters ts at Redding and near there the Blue Artillery 1s con- centrated. The battle formation will be a huge V with the apex somewhere near Cold Springa The New Jersey troops, who bore the brunt of yesterday's fighting, have fallen back and will act as r serves. The Second New York Brigad consisting of the :*ourteenth, Twenty- third and Forty-seventh Regiments have become the advance guard of the Blues. MANHATTAN AGAINST BROOK. LYN IN THE BIG BATTLE. On the Red side the First New York brigade has been moved up in front to Telleve the Massachusetts regiment that did the heavy fighting for the Reds yes- terday. 80 to-morrow will find New York arrayed against New York, or rather Manhattan against Brooklyn. The Brooklyn regiment {s determined to exert its best efforts to win the credit for saving Gotham from the enemy. The Manhattan regiment is equally aa determined to capture thelr hotne city. Aeroplanes will play a most import- ant part in the two days’ fight. It was decided at first to give all three ma- chines to the Blues, but the work of tho army aviators in locating troops and Plotting positions has been so superb that it was thought this would be an unfair advantage, so each side will Probably have one machine. Captain Frederick B. Hennessy, the commander of the aviation squadron, and @ party of his aviators set forth this morning in automobiles to. locate convenient landing places In the battle zone, The country is very rough. Danger to the flyers is greatly increased because of the Iack of smooth open ground for landing. To land on boulders or in the wind | Wooded places is fraught with great danger, for the machines are likely to be upset and that means the falling of the engine upon the aviator, The mechaniclans have been at work all night and to- repairing Lieut. Foulois'’s machine that was wrecked yesterday, ; Lieut. Arnold {s tthe only aviator bearing signs of injury. He has a big plece of court plaster on his chin where he was cut in his fall with Lieut. Kiet- land in the army hydroaeroplane at Plymouth, This 1s the day before Waterloo. To- morrow New York defenders will be pitted against the Red invaders in a fierce fight. The remaining hours are hervous ones for both sides. The sol- diers are eager to be up and at it and to-night they will figuratively sleep on their arms amid the poison ivy and the lshiggers, awaiting the clear call to arms —>—___ ITALIAN COURT IN MOURNING, ROME, Aug. 15.—All society functior were cancelled to-day on account of the death of the Dowager Duchess Bliza- beth of Genoa, mother of Dowager Queen Margherita and grandmother of King Victor Emmanuel, The Duchess was not well known in Rome, but there will be the usual pertod of court mourn- ing for her. IMPROVE YOUR SKIN WHILE YOU BATHE Mare Benefits of POSLAM SOAP on Tender or Bruptional Surfaces, m Soap for bathing and ach ordinary c! ‘ation will become a source of For, besides makin, akin cl Jam Soap asi th, soothes tend akin, improves its color and quality, mak clear complexions and protects against Infection and possible disease. It is able to do this because medicated with Poslam, the healing skin remedy, and is the only soap containing the modern elements which fo readily and quickly cure di akin, So many are the advantages and so * | great the superiority of Posiam Soap that {a trial will lead to tte continued use, | especially by those whose skin shows any tendency to eruptional troub! | best shampoo for dandruff, | pants use. Unusually lar i. cake, Price 25 cents, For eale by all druggists. For free sample of Poslam Soap, write to the Emergency Laboratories, 82 West B5th Street, New York City, The | EATS MANNA WHO SHYS THER WY YOUREPRETT Him, Baby’s Mamma Has Him Fined $10. Baby Smith—the Baby Smith who be- longs to Mrs. Elizabeth Smith of No. | 63 West One Hundred ‘and Seventh street—was probably of the impression that affabliity does not pay when she awoke this morning. He really was a most affable gentle- man who followed mother into the north-bound subway train at the Grand Central station last-night, settled him- self in the next seat, chucked baby un- der the chin and remarked: “What an, unuswally pretty baby! “But, dear me, mother 1s so much prettier!” F Since the Mr. Smith who is related to Baby Smith was not a'member of the party, mother turned to the kindly- faced woman who sat to her left— but not for elther counsel or ald. She simply #ald something about being good enough to hold baby a minute. The next minute her two fists were beating a tattoo on the affable gentle- man's face. After that the gentleman, thus re- buffed, relapsed into an injured silence. Finally the train came to the One Hundred and Third street station. Mother alighted (naturally baby, too), and so did the gentleman. Baby changed hand in, and mother, freed of her burden, followed in his wake, they sald. She caught him| at One Hundred and Third street and} Amsterdam avenue. When Patrolman | Cashmag of the West One Hundredth | street police station came up the man was weeping. The ‘cause of his grief| Was at once apparent. Mra. Smith had almost worn out her umbrella on him, Down to the Night Court went the| man, Mrs, Smith—and baby. The man | said he was Melvin Osgoodby, a clerk, of No. 6 West Forty-sixth street, and he was quite ready to apologize. Baby stayed awake long enough to see him peel a $10 bill from @ thick roll of money and pay It into the court. —— RESTAURANT FIRE SCARE Dishes smashed, Food Hurled About, Patrons Forget to Settle. A small blaze In the cellar under Philip Spein's restaurant at No. 162 West Broadway this afternoon caused a panic among the twenty or more rons in the restaurant, with the re- sult that dishes were smashed and good | food hurled in all directions, The fire- | men were on the scene soon after the alarm was given and the damage to the cellar was nominal. The patrons al! lett the restaurant burriedly and Speln is how. bemoaning the loss of the mone; they owed him. His wife, who was ris | cashier, forgot all about the restaurant | when the fire was discovered and rushed | to the upper floor to get her three little children, who wer --— Good Mortar Fire Hite. HONOLULU, Aug. 15.—Five hits out} of ten shots Were made at Diamond! Head yesterday by artillerymen using twelve inch mortars on small targets at a distance of 8,500 yards at sea. Major Edward J. Timberlake of the Coast Artillery said to-day that this was an unusually good percentage of hits for mortar fire. _ are fifteen ! ity of these Feonious lives, Neit! infantil | of more or less opium or morphine, death, Properly, | ictured and described hundreds | in New York City. actual postage. (Address “Fall New York City.”) children bors in Koh yt Coden twenty-two or nearly one-quarter, die fore they reach one year; Ber cnet, or Rove thas one-third, before they are five, and ‘We do not hesiiate to say that a timel: iéath: occasioned by the use of narcot! tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children’s complaints contain I tity, they stupef, In any quant Mey, y, stupefy, bears the signature SOUTHERN OHA, WELLNOWN SHOT DEAD INHER HONE Mrs, Alva Cave of Nashville Victim, the Police Say, of a Jealous Wife, NASHVILLE, Tenn, Alva Cave,'daughte Lin Cave, Chaplain-General of the United Confederate Veterans, was murdered late last night, and Mrs, J. @, Jones, twenty-four years old, ts in jail, @e- cused of the killing, which 1s sald to have been impelled by jealousy. The victim was a widow, thirty yeare old, and well known in Southern cities, Mra. Jones had filed a suit for divorce and was living apart from her husband, Receptly, however, the divorce bill was withdrawn, ‘The killing occurred in Mrs, Cave's home, Mrs, Jones, according to the police charge, gained admittance to Mrs. Cave's room, and without pre- Uminarles began shooting. Defenses i Mrs. € Was mortally wounded, 4nd she died in a few minutes. Aug, 15.—Mre, slaw of Rev. Re ‘CANAL TO BE FREE ONLY 10 AMERICAN GDASTWISE SHIPS Conference Eliminates Some Provisions to Which Eng- land Objected. WASHINGTON, D. ©, Aug. 18— Nothing but a determined filibuster tn the Senate can prevent the Panama Canal bill from becoming a law at this session of Congress. The conference report will be pré sented to the House for approval to-day. Its acceptance {n both branches of Con- gress is conceded. The President has intimated that he will sign the meas- ure One of the chief objections raisi by Great Britain in the protest fled is removed in the agreement. Bxemy- tion from tolls is limited to Amorican constwi an Ame ships engaged in foreign trade must pay the same tolls as those of other nations, This will better recomeile the President to the acceptance of the measure. It may also influence @ few additional Senators to support Washington Star.) women Want to take a hand in politics?” I suspect,” replied Miss Cayenne, “that some of them are generously sym- pathetic with the predicament thelr hus- bands have got into while trying to run the country, and want to co to the rescue,” Save the Babies. NFANT MORTALITY is something frightful. We can hardly realize that of all the r cent. thirt seven before use of Castoria would save her do we hesitate to say that many io ‘preparations, y are, in considerable quant retard circulation and tes exactly the reverse, ‘of Chas, HL. opens the Will Be Ready This Week tor # REE Distribution at ALL WORLD OFFICES A big and handsomely printed volume in which will be of the finest apartment houses | Mail orders will also be filled when 6c is inclased to cover Renting Guide, World Bldg., APPLY IN ADVANCE OR WRITE FOR FREE COPY TO-DAY.