The evening world. Newspaper, October 30, 1912, Page 4

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Hah ere Spee CRISTALS SE EATH-TELLING OWN NG TRIAL ATFOISO f Seeress Accused of — killing Relatives Distur! View of Strange Globe. bd CHICAGO, Ort, HA yetal glass, nearly m foot into whose lo and then ans grounces, a ne to witnesses, the forthcoming deaths of members of her family, was introduce! in evidence to- day by the State in the trial of the woman on charges of polvoning ber fit- % aftor midnight Uns mor; Sher name, but ten-year-old son Arthur, Life tnsur- ance policies on other members of her family, the manner of whose deaths ts g disclosed as corollary evidence » State, also were introduce: vidence the a was | of as intense inte 6 crowded courtroom @s this globe, tirough whose colorless depths #o@ asserted came mes- sages from her “familiar Like ¢, no bit of evidence has «0 appearet Jeturb the complace with which the witnesses mysterious erystal app red dur: e testimony of I pt. Ber- Baer, who went with Coroner ‘Moffman to question Mes, Léndloff se after a question as to the cause 4 Arthur's death was rained | ‘The Captain identified a snail box of amineral poison which was found in the | defendant's ‘home, It was of the same | nature as the poleon discovered in the | Viacera of four deceased relatives of the | ‘woman, “Mra. she was willing to | answer question said the captain, “She wld us she Was a seeress, and that she read the future in the big glass | ball and gave electri treatments to Patients, The boy, ane sald, had been | wick nearly two weeks before his death. Bhe told us, when we questioned her, about the deaths of other relatives and of the amounts of Insurance eac! ried.” ‘Taat the crystal globe for which Mrs, Lindioff has said ene paid $00 was owought out of a biack velvet Hned box @nd set upon a black sandalwood base. The aroma of the sandalwood became @parent in the room, and it seemed to arouse the defendant to @ nervous cou dition. WHEN JOHN D. PHONES THERE'S NOT A CHANCE FOR EAVESDROPPERS He’s Putting an instrument With 33 Connections in Every Room of His House. After the next few days, when you all up John D. Rockefeller at his home tm Tarrytown, don’t continue to say: “Just @ minute, John; I'm afraid ®omebody ie Metening.” ‘That fear will soon become unnecces- wary. Rest assured that, after arrange mente are perfected, when you tele- Phone tim to complain that your oll is ‘it short measure, not a soul will you, Perhaps he won't hear thimeclf, but that won't establish Mr. Rockefeller, realising that when james Consumer phoned him was always some backwardness em the part of Mr. Consumer, who didn't know whether the operator was stretching out her left ear, is installing @ remarkable system in his new house, Ia every room will be a telephone, off his mind, he has only to press a button and he will be connected with his club, Or, if that $8,000,000 check from No, % Broadway, Manhattan, hasn't arrived on time he merely presses a button and he ts connected with the main offices of the Standard Ol Company, and nobody can overhear him, And if Mr. Rockefeller wanted to call up Henry Clay Pierce of the Waters-Pierce O11 Company and invite him to dinner, no one but Mr. Pierce would dream that Mr. Rockefeller con- templated such an invitation, —_—_ GIRL IN HOSPITAL A MYSTERY A young woman, not over twenty-two years of age, neatly attired tn @ Ught colored @uit, red hat and new russet shoes, became ill in @ trolley cag in Summit avenue, Jersey City, shoruy ‘ when asked failed to make herself understood, She was taken to @ station house, and while awaiting an ambulance from the City Hospital became uncon- scious. She is still unconscious. The police are making efforts to find her relatives, She gasped somethin ontmaoramesttipieostinenine Next Lord Mayor of London Sees Gaynor. Bir Charles Johns! who is to be the next Lord Mayor of Lon ton, cailed on Mayor Gaynor at tue City Hall tor day, accompanied dy Mr. win of Toront, a friend of Mayor Gaynor, wha iptroduced Sir Charles, Lone Dandit Holds Up 25 Me N ROCKFORD, N. D., Oct Twenty-five workmen employed by a con) t BIG NEW YORK ~ IS LAUNCHED AT THE NAVY YARD an Greatest Sea Fighter in the World Slides E ily From Ways. (Continued from First Pase) thre the bottle. It barely touched the steel prow and swung back. The girl ran along the staging, caught It on the return swing and threw it, stror this time, nt wide of the mark, swinging ont over the va- cated runway he tried Oo more, holding the bottle back until, as it ewung, Ite own weight gave it im- petus enough to swing against the hull. As Mr, Knox hauled up the ail- ver mesh case, wine was dripp! from it The disaster of an unchri toned #hip had been averted. Even though, as many bellév Calder had failed to break the bot the navy people knew that all about the ship, workmen and officers, each with @ bottle, were having ttle private christening parties, each one the failure Enough glass Miss of any of the others, was broken to have made @ consider- able tinkling had not all other sounds been drowned by the creaking and rrinding of the hull against the ways, the tooting whistles, the braying bands and the cheers ROARING WHISTLES GREET GREAT WARRIOR. The President, Secretary Meyer, Gov. Dix and hin military Aide, Eck- ford De Kay, J. Plerpont Morgan and his daughters, Miss Anne Morgan and Mra, Satterlee; Mixs Helen Gould, Mra, August Belmont, Mrs. Robert Bacon, the Congressmen, Admirals O: terhaus, Fiske and Watt, and the naval constructors’ wives, all gathered about Miss Calder and congratulated and hed her. ndeed I did break the bottle!” said Mina Calder to an Evening World re- porter, who had heard of the doubts of some of the witnes: They were to give me three signals. One to make ready, one to make etill more ready and 4 third to break the bottle, I heard two, and then the boat was al- most out of reach, 1 heard severf) People tell me to go ahead and break ft. I tried three times and the third time I waa way over at the end of the landing, and lots of people did not see what happened. But the bottle broke, all right, because I saw the wine leak- ing out of it.” For five minutes all New York, from sirens and whistles. From street to street, through all that part of Brook- lyn, atreets crowded black with people, sounded the cheer again and again and surged against the broad shouldered barrler of the huridreds of policemen set to work by Inspector Harkins and Capt. Carey to prevent accidents. EVERYBODY SHOOK HANDS WITH EVERYBODY ELSE. Down the steel and tron ways the bat- tleshtp roared to the water. e was & splash and a piling up of receding waves as her stern atruck, and before one could tell it she was floating gently back toward the Willlamsbu: with @ dozen tiny tugs darting to bring her back to the pier, where she fa to be tied up during the yoar and a half in which she is to be finished. “Daddy,” said the little Fitegerald @irl, eying the ship critically as she was turned about in the stream by the tugs, “when it was right up close here 1 thought it was the biggest ship in all the world, but it doesn’t We eh & very big ship out there in the river, does it?” Everybody laughed and felt better and the Provident of the United States shook hands with Miss Calder and with Miss Fitegerald and thanked them. Then ho shook hands with Secretary Meyer and Commandant Gileaves and the con- structors’ wives and the Congressmen and the wives of the Congressmen and Mise Calder hugwed her father end her mother, And with the Commandant leading «he way, everybody on the high Platform crossed the bridge into Loft No, 6, where there was @ festal luncheon set out. Gov, Dix and his party, however, made their way to First street, within id proceeded to pose, at tance of the operator of a mov- ing picture machine, Soon the party was harawsed by a great crowd, and it was with the greatest diMculty that the Governor and hia staff battled their way to Second street. The Gov- ernor did not attend the luncheon, UGLY SHOPS OF YARD A FLAG. DECKED BOWER. two days decorators had been | making a flag-decked bower of the ugly, rusty, gray and red shops which sur- rounded the hull of the Battleship New For LAY IT on Steaks and Chops, rae? # and Surdines D dding vnegit sen and Grocery Stores, Pine At Delbeater Bright Moro |World Wants Work “Wonders, ' York which ts to be. The colors of every nation under the sun (but most of all the colors of the United States) THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, 00 President Taft Talks to Sailors After the Launching President Taft went to witness the} aunching of the New York by way ¢ the New York Yacht Club landin the foot of East Twent rd street, whe was takew wit reter and ‘8 of his staff from the Manhat tan Hotel at half past ten o'clock, Aj n the naval yacht Mayflower | iting to inke the party to the | yson atreet, Hrooklyn, which | inside the Navy Yard. Commandant eaves and Ad a) Osterhaus, mand of th erth Atlant | were waith the landing an Jeorted Mr, Taft directly to the stand at the bow of the new raking (helt Way through Loft Building | No. 6 and over a temporary bridge to} the taxing | Afer the New York had taken her jinitial pl the President and his vice guards followed by J. Pi pont Morgan and Miss Helen Gout started from the sponsor's stand, buil |a couple of feet above the main gran \atand, Mr. Taft failed to notice the f ur} ading from the sponsor's stand would have fallen had he not been Secret Ser’ ler, arrowly missed a resident turned to congratulated him jury. lent Taft, y hu come | veusel, re | ster and caught and righted by | Agents Sloan and W |. Mr. Morgan also \fall, whereupon the the financler and upon his eseape from possible f From the Navy Yard Pre Secret Service guards, rrounded by jmotorcycle policemen and detectives, , gement of the members of the the |New York police force baving been supervised hy Police Commis: | Waldo, proceeded, after juncheon, tot Navy Y. M. GC. A. butkling, No, 167 Sands street, about a block from the Sands treat entrance to the Navy Yard. ‘As Mr. Taft passed through the gates lof the yard he encounte ‘a campalgn lorator for the Tull Moose party, who was hharamgulng @ crowd from a gre son | te {tae ntial part yon wh were hung a large t of Roosevelt and placarda tr * votes for “Teddy.” Ag the Presidential party ny the taxlew th exclaiming jon of the Standard Oil Company t fake the ‘Truat ere vrosecutions At the ¥. MOC. A, was the gift of Mins Jack Tar, M by Willan 4 and Navy Commi 7 M. GC. A and Secretary Tialale, ‘They were escorted to the gymnasium in the rear of the second f where about ) Jackies and the band of the Utah were assembled, As the I nd struck up “The 8 Following « y remarks by Taft spoke in the the are Instramer Christian y Mr in a iittle travel talk, he deseribed various foreign ¥ A. bublding in the Orient which he had visited dur- ing his famous trip to the Philippines, dwelling espectally on those of Hong Kong and Shanghat ‘The President then spoke of the great change that has come over the navy. of the older men,” he said. will remember the thine, not #0 very long ago, when to be a good sailor tt was thought Necessary to go out wet drunk, That time has passed, After a general handshak during whieh the President was cheered loudly 4 long by the sailors, t remfidential party proceeded to the Hotel Manhattan in an automobile over the Brooklyn Beli covered every ugly angle of brick and corrugated iron and slate. We have outlived the day when the launching of « ship (especially a ship of war) the subject of poetry and prettily worded description, The mod- ern warship i# a floating machine shop. The giant hammers which forge her guns @re worked by no less relentless steel-muscled engines than those of which the ship herwelf is built. As the New York was revealed by the lifting of the gray dawn of to-day, the first rosy shafts of the October sun could not have found, the world around, an uglier, more unromantic, cruelly brutal image. Belted with red paint to her water line and painted gray above to her deck level, the big ship loomed toward the sky until it hardly seemed right to com- pare her to @ “skyscraper on edge"—as was the firat Impulse of every news- paper writer who was allowed to pass the guard ropes stretched about the launching pier. The ship scemed more like @ steel warehouse six or seven stories in height and a block long. Every one of the scores of scaffoldings along her length had in it enough tim Derw for the framework of the home| of an American workingman’s family. THAT 18 USED. i Down if a whitewashed pit, about one- third the way back from the bow of! the huge shell, Naval Constructor Rob- ert M. Stocker at 11 o'clock to-day turned | a little valve wheel no larger than that on the radiator which you turn every morning when you jump out of bed and back again after the alarm clocs rings. With the turning of that little wheel, water gushes out of a cylinder about as big as an everyday ico cream freezing Down drops a huge trigger of chilled steel, shaped like the trigger of # boy's Fourth of July pistol but as big around as the calf of your leg. So slowly that the eye can no more) follow it at first that it can follow the swinging circle of the hands of @ big: clock, the greatest ship of war ever built went into the water, But down! in that whitewashed pit, under un- | wet keel, were the three men in uniform who had to do most with her building, | Constructor Stocker, of course, was there; he has spent an hour and a half or more a day inside and outside that gigantic steel skeleton for the last ten months and twenty-eight days, He has put in ten times as many hours working over plans to make the battleship splash into the water as gently and with Uttle strain as may be. THE THREE MEN TRIGGER PIT. With Mr. Stocker, who has general charge of the yard, the honor of being in the trigger pit was shared by Naval Constructor J, B. Bailey and his right- hand man and all-round assistant, John Lord, chief carpenter. Constructor Bailey and Carpenter Lord IN THE side the big ship's skin since the keel bed was laid, ‘They have worked with- out ceasing every daylight working day since last February, including Sun- days. The need for that Sunday work ts the explanation of the reason why the tusk of all the men who have made the New York, #0 far as she has yet been made, is bigger than ever the building of the world’s biggest battleship. ‘Chey have been proving that Unclo Sam and his hired men can bulld a ship as well for the same money as any contractor who could be hired to do the same work for @ profit. WORKED SUNDAYS AND NIGHTS FOR HONOR OF THE YARD. When the mighty plates of a battle- Ship's hull are bent into place, it is weil that they be riveted as soon as may bi before they bulge or flatten or warp. For that reason Riveting Quarterman Fratles—his folks back yonder were Portugese—has, under Mr, Stocker and his aldes, worked Sundays and evenings after whistle blowing time and far Into the flare-lighted night, oftentimes, to make sure that the battleship Ne Is a credit to the yard and the § after which she jg named and the busi- ness ability and workmanship of the United States Navy. There are a (iousand litle things which go Into much a job as the prep) ing for such an event as that of to-day. The simplest kind of a device is that In- vented by Constructor Stocker and used for the first time in this Heretofore the «reat featur ing has been the splitti of launch- vat of hun- dreds of blocks which let the hull down ‘on the greased slide to the water. Constru Stocker has got away from much of the block scheme this way He built sive! boxes, watch hold for inches of sand, between the beams abou which are clamped. When the time splitting out blocks—as ‘GLEANS THE HAIR AND i BEAUTIFUL—25 CENT “DANDERINE” In a few moments your hair looks soft, fluffy, lustrous Vo fal and abundant— Surely try a Danderine Hair Cleanse” if you wish to immediately double the beauty of your hair, Just moisten a cloth with Danderine and draw it care- fully through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; this will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt or any excessive oil. In a few moments you will be amazed, Your hair will be wavy, fluffy and abundant and possess an parable softness, lustre and luxuriance, the beauty and shimmer of true hair health. Besides beautifying the hair, one ap- have been in charge of everything out-! plication of Danderine disrolves every |t There’s too much suffer- ing among older folks from achy, stiff, lame backs, dis weak eyes, dropsy and rheu- matic joints. These are signs of kidney weakness, which, in youth or age, poisons the blood, dis- orders the urine and lames the limbs or back. There’s help for weakened kidneys. Doan’s Kidney Pills have brought relief to thousands. lere’s New York City testimony. tressing urinary disorders, | ———— “ Every Picture Tells a Story.” “When Your Back Is Lame—Remember the Name” DOAN’S KIDNEY PIL Sold by all Dealer. Price 50 cents, Foster-Milbum Co,, Buffalo, N.Y. Proprietors ie | a launching. | [ceived contributions of $42 | under the old system—five hundred men y Wrenches open nut ho! aides of the boxes; the beam slowly and without the silghtest jar and shock, and one of the most | Lana lof the ship ia | As the bigs | over the tv Krease wh the 2 [nave been her cradle, there were three linen directly responsible to Mr. Stocker for the smooth, even tunioading of her | bulk from jand to water, They were Leading Man Shipfitter Samuel Carson, who Is in charge of everything trom. the | bow to © No, 47; Leading Man Shipfitter Nickum, from frame No. 47 to frame No. 8, and Leading Man Ship- fitter Frank Connors, from frame No. 89 to the stern. Every one of them was at a speaking tube connecting with a workman at every frame, and with an- other tube leading straight to the mid- ship pit, where Mr. Stocker stood at the trigger. All along the ship, uring and cautions ing the men at the wedges—for they still use we a little—is Master Ship- right James J. Gillis with his keen- assistants, Leading Men Ship- wrights Downey and Dowd, at his el- bows. COLOR SCHEME WARDS AGAINST MISTAKES. ‘The wedges and shoring timbers which must be cut away or driven in are paint. 1 red, white and blue on the ends. ; When the order is given to “drive away" |the foreman have simply to shout “red”? land their men cannot mistake which timbers to make the targets of thetr hammers. Hegamiing the launching of the great Secretary of the Navy |b launching was @ brilliant affair, ent off without a hitch, The con- yrs of the and the com- mander of the navy yard are to be Leongratulated on the precision and ef- ificlency with which everything was | conducted.” | Postmaster General Hitehcock sata: ‘It was a great day and @ great les- leon, I have been educated.” | "The New York is a capital hip,” said Herbert Satterlee, Who was once As- sistant Secretary of the Navy. “We ought to have a capital ship for every star in the flag. We have gone beyond the dreadnought and super-dreadnought class. ‘The New York and the Texas are as big and powerful as ships can be built, We ought to build five more of them next year—one to make up for the slp we whould have bullt this year and did not—and four every year after that until the existing fect of thirty- four t# incre ght—one for ery State in rien TWO INJURED BY FIRE. Woman's Sleeve Ignited by a Gan Stove. Miss Kate Mulligan was badly burned about the body in the kitchen of her 118 Flatbush avenue, Brook- jay. She was froning a flimsy apron with an fron heated on @ smal sax stove. ‘The sleeve of her dress ‘aught fire and she fainted from pain and fright and fell across the stove | Mrs, Marjorie Kennedy and Mrs. Cath- Payton, with whom she lives, ran to her aid, Mrs, Payton tripped and fell n lifting Miss Mulligan from the stove nd her clothing caught fire. Mrs, Ken- quickly put out the des. Dr, Bull ©. 46 Pourth avenue was cated, and his advice Miss M gan was taken tot y Funily Hospital for treat- | ment. — Soctalint Fund $42,755 WASHINGTON, Oct. 90.—The Natio jalist Congressional Campaign a mittee, with headquarters at Chicago, fied a statement with the clerk of the House to-day, showing that for the pe- | and ex- ing that period $40,621, AND MAKES I ling hair or dandruff. of Dandruff; cleanses, purifies nd invigorates the scalp, forever stop- ping it ig and falling hair. Danderine is to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sunshine are to vegetation. It goes right to the roots, es and strengthens them. Its exhilarating, stimulating and life-pro- ducing properties cause the hair to grow abundantly long, strong and beautiful, You can surely have pretty, soft, lustrous hair, and lots of it, if you will just get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine from any drug store or let counter and try it as directed, NEW YORK CITY PROOF Testimony of a Resident of E, 14th Street. Frank Jarvis, accountant, $02 Ef. 14th St., New York City, N. eT “From exposure and hardships I endured, my kidneys were so weakened that in 1908 I suffered from an attack of kidney complaint. Fora time I was unfit to carry on my duties, In addi- tion to having a weak back, I could hardly bend forward or backward. ‘The kidney secre- tions were irregular and too fre- quent in passage, causing me an- noyance at night. A few boxes of Doan’s Kidney Pills permanently cured me.”’ TOBER 30, Straighten That Lame Back. 1912. ' CITY RICHER BY $245. Chaeffeurs With Smoky Exhansts Contrit the Amount in Fines, ‘Twenty-four chauffeurs, rounded up on Fifth avenue yesterday, were fined $10 aplece by Magistrate Krotel in Put 1, of Harlem Court totday on th of violating the @ordinance against smoking exhaust) om automo biles, One lucky man managed to get his case before Magistrate Appleton in Part If and was fined only #1, At the sane time four other lucky ones were | arraigned before Magistrate Corrigw in the West Side Court on the sume charge and each was fined $1. Thus did the city of New York enrich itself for the mells which had escaped on tts highways by $245, potabnidees Hin 13th Operation Lucky. Joseph A. Cahalan, the Boston athlete, who underwent his thirteenth operation Monday, was doing so well last night at jan Hospital that Dr. Joseph said there was every reason to As The World yesterday troubles started six years ago he disp) some organs while running a Marathon, Every six months since then surgeons erated upon hin Wet Weather Coming | Buy Your Hub-Mark Rubbers Now | You are probably like most of us— you don't buy rubbers until a sudden | storm forces you to buy in a hurry whatever the nearest store offers and rubbers bought that way are as| unsatisfactory as anything else bought | off-hand. Get your Hub-Mark rubbers now while dealers’ stocks “are complete. They are made in styles to fit all shoes. The wear of a rubber de- pends more upon the fit than you realize. Ae a rule rubbers are di can Mtaele just ft doesn't fit oF 01 Standand firet ‘Quality run down Hub-Mark rubbers are thoroughly weil! f the beat material, They will give ‘an reasonably ex-| Dect of any rubbe umay be wurprived | to find how long @ really good rubber) we jub=Mark Your Value-Mark on| ube | If Your dealer cannot supply you, write us Boston Rubber Shoe Co., Malden, Mass. Established GENUINE A» 7 Diamonds purchase exchanged at full value or ret cash, less 10 per cent. within o Special To-Day and To-\Morrow interest you te kno isainmondn ba Thro othe if si mine ‘saat ret ite vearly nds at tl n (omday, and no tw Wants the beat value mn when buying dia. diamonds direc Incas Is thay: raed Ing in value js on. yet one Ar mon je on 0 fram the rant 40 wer ee in Tore and vor can orove It, fee our Window display of over half, million dollars’ worth of diamonds, Biainiy marked, #10 to 85,000.00, CHARLES A. KEENE Importer of Diamonds, 180 broadway, New York | AL yok TODAY. Sum rises. GT) San ats, 4.50) Moun ‘rises, 8.21 High Warer, — Low Water AM. P. AM. UM Sandy Myok ee ONE 16, aay 4d Governor's Teand 1020 10, aor 5.16 Hell Gate oe. 5.6 213, a PORT oF N YORK, <> OASMZ—-7AMMAZO 65-74 SMITH SToese QPEN MONG-5AT. EVENINGS | | i Be Coat Sale Your Free Choice of Any Style SHIPPING NEWS. ARKIV Mar, New orleans, A Great At Biggest Known Price Savings Coats Actually Worth Up to $15 Coats Actually Worth Up to $20 12°° Coats Actually Worth Up to $25 1 qe Best Values Ever Offered in New York CHINCHILLAS, ZIBELINES, BROADCLOTHS, ZEBRA STRIPES, BOUCLES, PLAID BACKS. or Any Fabric at the Sale Prices—7.50, 12.50, 14.50, GOREN EVER ¥ $75 Worth $5 Down $100 Worth $10.00 Down * $15.00 * INING ROOM $130 ak tiant. sewiaae "M4 want, Sewiaug "Mite ies with & h | ya the lat ide bourd, “ Mirror. of $200 $20.00 ; $30.00 tees tenth $40.00 h $50.00 amounts in moto a Pinncetteut, “Ail Goods” Marked in th Ave. Corner To-Morrow Your Choice of 1000 Fashtonable Models in Ali the Popular Fabrics and Colors in Liveral Credit ‘Terz dome $50 Worth $3 edule Bot w York Masanc! TEV ENG: Ue Ei: ran vaso Ae Hat valueis measured by style as well as quality. That is why Young reputatioy Sizes for Women and Misses FURNISHED ms s 7 Plain Figures —— Bed” $15.98 Guaranteed. get the | May Manton Fashion Magazine 8 Pages--FREE with NEXT SUNDAY WORLD For pictures and descriptions of t styles of robes, coats, ete., for afternoon and evening wear, RED BY $65 148

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