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| 7 ee a ee | ™ SRFEEIS S2EULQCOFe? BS BAA Bee MMOs. OBO MH - ao ? a eer nererres ss ts ee tary) w * Thies was found in the room, So Sunny BEATEN AND LEFT TODIEW A CLOTHES CLOSET, | Little George Willensen, Miss-) ¢ ing Since Saturday, Mis- treated in Lodging-House, / SEARCHING FOR:NEGRO,| ’ Boy Is Unconscious and Can Give No Clue as:‘to Who Attacked Him. George Willensen, a fourteenaymmr-old schoolboy, who had been missing from bia home, No. 414 Lenox avenue, since Gaturday, was found about noon to-day, fenseless and covered with blood, in a heap in the corner of a clothes closet im @ rear room on the top floor of a Negro lodging house at No. 47 West One Hundred and Thirty-firet «treet. The en boy's skull was fractured, both Dlackened and his ody was covered ‘with cuts and bruises. Dr. Coburn, who toek the boy to Harlem Hospital in a dying condition, said he must have been attacked by a fiend. ‘Though the physicians at the hospital worked hard over the boy in the hope of resuscitating him Jong enough for the Police to learn from him what had hap- pened since he left his home, the Ind snever fully regained consciousness. At intervals his senses seemed about to re- turn, but he became delirious each time rr . THE EVENING WORLD, | Multimillionaire Heye’ 3 Wife Who Has Sued Him for Divorce. an@ muttered only something about having been beaten with an Indian club, It was vlood stained. LOOKING FOR NEGRO WHO OC- CUPIED ROOM. Why Willensen should have entered the lodging house is still unknown, though the police are looking for a Mgnt colored negro known in the neighbor- heod as Harry Bell. It was in his room Yehat the boy was found, and the police found persons in the neighborhood who sald they had seen the boy and the negro enter the house together on Sat- urday. . The youngster left his home on Gat- urday morning end his Reco rapieedel Mre. Sophie Willensen, reported to the Lenox avenue reel mutates! on Sunday morning. The boy's ¢ather, for the lad was sent out yesterday megning, but no trace of him was found ‘until noon to-day, when Albert Steriod, ‘the proprietor of the furnished coom house, entered the station, Steriod said that he had seen blood sricki): from Beneath the door of a closet’ in One of his rooms and was! afraid to open the door, He wanted aj ‘puliceman to accompany him back to of his clothing lay about th room. That which he wore was soake in . PROPRIETOR TOLD O&LL HE MUST GIVE UP ROOM. Haamen eent for Dr. Coburn at once @he lad was taken to the hospital. Bteriod tol what he knew occupant of the room. He said Bell, as he knew the man, had ye room for one week a week erday. On Saturday Steriod {t to another man for the eek and this morning he went room to advise Bell that he must behind the closed door Bell an- that he was not dressed, but soon as he had got into his Hue he woul! leave the house, Steriod to the room severni times before | Bou finally left the house, carefully | hosing the door to his room behind him, Steriod was there as soon as he hearé Bell co out the door ani was ter- rifled at once by the blood which cov- ere@ the floor and furnishings and the arry of clothing which lay on the floor, It was then he went to the police. ‘The search for [eli developed no clue to hie present whereabouts, It appeared that the young nero was a@ etranker in the Black Belt and nothing .’ more was known about him than the name by which he Introduced himself to @teriod. A gencral alarm was sent out fer him, ee LAWYERS PAY HIGH TRIBUTE TO LATE JUSTICE BISCHOFF. A a@plendid tridute was paid to the late Justice Henry Blachoff, as jurist and citizen, by lawyers in Justice Piat- vek's part of the Supreme Cou: to-day, ‘The Court with difficulty controlled his emotion and then adjourned the session for the day. James F. Donnelly was the first law- yer to epeak,;-when Crier Fitzgerald ane nounced court open. He asked that some action be taken on the ely and tragic end of the late Justice and added: “It was my pleasure to have known » Justice Bischoff for many years, and my own feelings at his death render me in- capable of speaking in a manner that would be fitting to his memory, I wish to say that in his death the bench and bar have lost one of their ablest and moet conscientious members." Eéward Jacods said Justice Bischoff's »@ecisions on equity law were known and quoted all over the country, Justice Platzek spoke of the personal loss he felt at the death of his long-time col- i f veclepue. =*"Sustice Bishoft was one of the rhost ) pote Justices ard men that ever graced this earth,” said the Court. “He was a + acholar, @ student and @ searcher for the truth, It 1s no disparagement to any te . One @iting on the bench to say that he ‘one of the ablest of then. The bar fost @ Great teacher in the law; the ich has, lost @ man of great strength Dower and the community an up- MILLIONAIRE WOULD GET OUT OF JAIL, BUT CALLS FIRE ENGINES IN BIG BUNCHES TO HE WON'T PAY TRAY ALIMONY) CAPTURE A UREA BURGLAR ‘William, ts a letter-carrier, An alarm| Alphonse ia i Asks Court] Women’s aa: Get Quick to Give Him Temporary | Action Out of Brennan, Val- ‘Leave, of Absence. (The case of Alphonse Charlot, a mill- fonalre mining ate, ocoupled the attention of Auprente Court Justice Leh: man this morning. Charlot, a man with ‘srown up children by hin first marriage, ta deing sued for a separation by his kirl ‘ride—Dace Metbourne Charlot— who js a third his age. She was award- ed temporary alimony of #0 a week Pending the trial of her action by Jus- tice Hendrick. Charlot failed to pay, And a month ago he was sent to join the Alimony Club In the Ludlow Street Jail, Recently Churlot's son Robert, by his first marriage, was killed in Naco, Ariz, Charlot’s counsel, Edwant Isaacs, ap- Peared before Justice Lehman to-day with the request that Charlot be re+ leased from the Jat! long enough to go South to recover his son's body, The attorney for Charlot, who is Pres- ident of the Charlot Mining and Smeit- ing Company) of Sonoma, with a capital Of $10,000,000, wuld he hadn't pald the all- mony because he did not ‘have the money, “If Your Honor will grant this request to go South,” he #atd, tain frienda of Mr. Charlot will pay the expen ff to accompany hi responded the ¢ “Mr, Charlot is cor ed in Jail for none payment of $28 alimony. It would cost considerably more than that to send a Geputy sheriff to Mexico with Bim. Now | i if Mr, Charlot's friends #0 anxious} m pay the : ourt, “But they won't do y protested, “And Interrupted the Justice, sure I can't follow the Peculiar mental twists of Mr. Chare lot's friends. I can only suppose judict- ally that they are’reisonable men, and {f they wish to get him out of Ladiow, they will adopt the simplest and most reaspnable course.” “Thin motion is simply made to get this man out of Juriediction of the New York courts,” sald Clarke L. Jor- dan, counsel for Mra, Charlot. “Chaniot has informed us he would never pay my client a cent of alimony; that he would serve the whole term in jail rather than pay; and now that he's in jail, aparently he finds it more uncom. fortable than he thought." Justice Lehman reserved decision on the motion, sey FIRE ALARMS BELNORD. The tenants in the Belnord Apart- ments, Elghty-sixth ‘eet and Broad- , were roused early to-day by fire aratus responding to an alarm for a fire in a grocery store in the basement of the building. ‘The many windows were filled with heads, and some of the tenants hurried out into the hall, but the hallboy ans y one by teleph The fire did slight dam- t,"" the at- Malls from the flood swept districts fn the central west are arriving at the New York ‘postoMce from ten to twelve hours late and the general mits uation ts greatly improved. All diver sion of mail trom the West has been iscontinued and the pouches are co: ing through directly from the cit! fa the Agod section. iant “White Wings,” eee ‘Thea bo whed, wheew-s-0." rde are intended to represent the streams of women heard by Michael Brennan, private in the Department of treet Cleaning, as he waa pursuing his profession in front of No, 67 Kelley street, Bronx, thie afternoon. Mere words cannot begin to describe the plercing notes of the screams heard by Mr. Brennan, Being a man of action, Mr, Brennan mado all speed to the fire alarm box at Leggett avenue and Southern Boulevard and turned the handle. Soon arrived on ‘the acene @ deputy chief of the Fire Department, two battalion ohlefs, three engine companies and a hook and lad- der company, Guided by the valiant and resourceful Michael Brennan the firefighters, blowing their whistles and ringing their bells and buttoning up their rubber coats, ran to the five-story apartment house at No, @7 Kelley street and entered same, ‘They found no fire; there was no fire But Policethen O'Connell and Foley, |who had followed the engines, found Mrs, Henrietta Cramer with her head out the rear window of her flat on the top floor, screaming luatily. Mrs, Cramer became calm when she saw the uniforms, She sald she had , returned home from a shopping trip in time to discover a man who had tied up all her household belongings ready for carrying away, making bis exit through the kitchen window to the fire | encape. | The intruder scampered down the fire escape ladders ‘ike a monkey, Mra, Cramer dropped a milk bottle, which bounded off his head, but he didn’t stop. Other women joined Mrs, Cramer In ncreaming and firing milq bottles and household missiles at the fleeing burglar, He kept right on fleeing when he struck the rear yard, and he may be fleeing yet. After Mic! what the firem el Brennan, it is dou naid to ttul if he would dare to tum i nan alarm now If he saw the Cathedral on fire. os WALES COULD NOT FLY. PRIEDRICHSHAFEN, Germany, March 31.—The Prince of Wales arrived here to-day, but did not make his in- tended ascent In the new Beppelin di- rigible owing to the prevalence of sharp aqualls over Lake Constance, aa So uniformly successful has ORRIN} been in restoring the victims of the “Drink iabit” into sober Sad sels its eurati yphasize the » powers, that we vet that ORRIN a trial, you get no benefit, your will be relunded. ORES fama only $1.00 per box by. legeman _' drugstores, Ask them for MONDAY, MARCHE 81 | IMPRISONED CHILD 1013. | was called to the case by Mrs. Murtha, | AND NEIGHBOR WHO [who lives next door, She By vate! CAUSED HER RESCUE. uy. gon ciinbod out to’ root prowet-| Ing from beneath the window of her own apartment and traced the sound to the shutters of a window of the Powell flat. | By breaking several slats of the shut- [ters she was able to see Irene inside, | | Jeane wo AWAY and say nothin) aot the tall girl sald. “Bee mother finds I have been talking | | neighbors sie will beat me. She doesn’ like mp because I am not my pal 1 and the baby. a and Raynor of Children’s Society came ant broke in} the door and took Irene with th | When Mra. Powell went home found out what had happened si | Hamel and the baby and w Pe ‘has not heen seen about neighborhood since. Powell is a long: shoreman. PIANOS | Founded 1845 Almost any piano sounds | good when it is new, but the “WEAREFRIENDS STILL,” SAYS WIFE. SUING NILONARE 6th Avenue at 31st St. Closing-Out Sale of Notions and Toilet Articles at Half Price Te Make Room for What Wil Bo the Largest Shoo Department inNew York, Notions Toilet Articles Spare iee) [Saat a] —a Mrs. Heye, In an Interview Through Portieres, Blames “Other Women.” | “ft 9 not men, it is women that have aeed the difference between my h band and iayrelf—a difference ton wide to de bridged.” Bo spoke Mrs. George G. Hoye, wife of the multi-millionaire banker and pos- seseor of one of the most valuable an- thropological collections in America, in her apartments at the Hotel Langéon, Fifty-sixth street and Fifth avenue, to- Gay. Sho had admitted divorce proceed- ing against her husband had been insti- tuted by her lawyers, she was cau- tlously fencing with an interviewer In an effort to justify her position without having to reveal family skeletons. Mra, Heye, who was Mins Blanche A. spool; regularly 10c,...... O.N. T. Ue ag rs ee | ——~'| thie “Personal”: jor Free Booklet. | Williams, daughter of Mr. and Mra. Henry Heard Williams of No. 14 Bast Bixticth street, was one of the most Prominent members of New York an@ Newport society before her marriage in 1904 to the @on of Guatav Heye, ene of the old group of Standard Of} men, who died many times a millionaire, leaving his riches to his son George. Since their marriage the Heyes have regularly 18c., at Borine, 250, bottle at Face Chamels, reg. 10c., give that permanent sa‘ faction that can only be ob- tained in a piano of the high- est class. itso, WOME, rs kinase ses 75¢| Ideal Hair Brushes | béen much In the eye of society, enter- + M i Crean 1 30 ee i es taining both in thin city and at thelr In tone and construction jagic | Buc! Cleans grade, 1 mr Gantey nore 18 the Meadow Brook buck kid, canvas and % a a5e am, 18/401 I in jthe Waters Planos are all Ratan Gaebinaion | Black en Combs superb examples of the piano | maker’s art at ite best, and colony at Roslyn, When whispers of infellcity began to be bandied about a few months ago the idyllic happiness of their family life seemed to be ouf- Aclent refutation of all ugly rumors, wi hoes; “PERSONAL” AD FIRST AUTHEN- | etree encanto eeaaaerd bottle TIC INTIMATION OF TROUBLE. ee. ie sue apasatnaeetra a ummten sike reqularly 28e; at........+ £470 | Sen 'Notinee or Fon Arica “To Whom It May Concern: Notice le hereby given that I witli not be re- sponsible for any debdta which iv have been or which may het gett contracted in my nam» by any persoi other than myself. GHORGE Hern ‘When an Evening World interviewer called at the magnificently furnished apartments a the Langdon, which used to be the town home of both Mr. and Mra. Heye, but which Mrs. Heye and her children occupy alone now, Mrs. Heye called through heavy, red velvet Dertieres that she had not yet com- pleted her ¢ollet and that the inter- view would have to be conducted through the ecreen of the tightly closed curtains. On @ teakwood atand in the recep- tion room a great bronse Aztec god crouched, head in hands end tongue lolling frem hie mouth, as 1f in derl- tion of the fragile happiness of mere human beings, Behind wim, in the shadows of heavy draperies, minor ged- lets from Yucatan, from the tombs of the Incas in Peru, stood at hump- tention, aa If their stone drink in every word that Pounded gold ornaments of @ past grandeur, tongue plates of the precious metal from graves in Ecuador ceremonial sticks from th fonly $250—is a jleader and the equal of other pianos widely advertised at itime will be allowed for pay- ment, without charge for ~~_ |interest or extras. | The ee eteea iets dred, eight years old, and Lawrenen, fo ra They are with their mother. @. Kingsbury Curtis, attorney for Mr. Heye, told an Evening World reporter the suit wold ‘not he contested “The -onl¥ ‘question ‘that remains to de settled is that of alimon: attorney. Mr. Curtis would not verify ‘the re- Heye ts asking for POLICE ARE SEARCHING FOR PARENTS WHO LEFT _ BABY ALONE IN ROOM j Irene Powell, Found Crying} by Neighbor, Now With Children’s Society. icellence and are also sold at aid tho} easonably low prices and on| easy terms of payment. Send Postal for Catalogue. Horace Waters & Co. Three Stores: 1134 Fifth Ave., nr. 18th St. 127 W. 42d St, nr. Bway Harlem Branch (Open Evenings) BLUE Serge SUITS $14.75 to $29.75 ERGE is undoubtedly the most popular fabric that is used in the making of Men's Suits, and Macy’s Serge Suits have helped material- ly in building up that popularity. Good Serge is above all things a service-giving fabric. That is why the Blue Serge Suit is found in every store in the City, at every price that is ever asked for Suits. But there are points of difference: Macy’s blue Serge Suits are ne more like the ordinary kind than a rhinestone is like a diamond. There are ship- leads of Serge Suits in New York that are almest . worthless, but will sell readily this Spring on the reputation won by their betters. The only kind of blue Serge Suit that you can buy at Macy's is OF ALL THe! TROUBLE, SHE SAYS. “No, I will not give the name of the— lof the person who is named - | dent in the papers my lawyers hav served on Mr, Heye,” @ the answe: to the first question. “Why should I? We have tried not to drag this thing out into public view and I certainly do not wlan for publicity. You can’t get any bet- ter sauce than this, though you have to pay much more for some. Policemen are searching the Bush T minal and the adjacent piers for Thomas Powell and his wife, Anna, of No. 693 Fifth avenue, Brooklyn, They want to call them to account for the conditions under which the woman's five-year-old daughter Irene was found in a bare room at the back of the house, where she had “I did not say she was,” was her) been kept for days with iittle or no equivocal answer. fo04. Mra, Heye was told there had been) eames 3 husband's almost undivided | = ‘The stvention of the Children’s s Society attention to the interests of hi: te- markable anthropological cotection | had been the cause of a gradual widen-| —Tailored of the best serges. —Of fabrics woven of the finest worked yarn, with double ply warp and 10c PER BOTTLE ing of thele mutual interests | At Grocers and Delicatessen Stores, filling. “It he coll or tl | ee a wo ep ake 11 ie orn atthe ELEM Y tres, eterey, presshrunk, and ottom of the whole thing,” she an- color) . TE an mn neers ee | oy age Smart and carve incu, fn Personal my) husband caused tw ‘be| dition ofthe stomach and nerves, should adopt Lod Jad comet and design. came another answer the wonderfully successful treatment known through the curta! vit he saw 1 and druggist: ‘grain hypo: yysicians Ineert that in a newopaper, that is ox-| uullane tablets put up in seaicd packaaes clustvely his business. Aside from the! with full directions for home use. one great cause of trouble between ts, | gink cheeks, and 10 to 30 pounds i ad. in Mr. Heye and 1 are on the best of weight are not uncommon rel rom several months’ usage. Ask your ph: in oF a well. stockeddruggist for them,—Advt, AITKEN, SON &Co (FOUNDED 1635) BROADWAY &18" STREET Sale of Laces and Veilings At 18th Street Store Only Alencon, Shadow Venice and Net Top Laces Our knowledge of the material and tailoring of our Suits warrants us in saying that they take prec- edence over any shown elsewhere at or near their prices. on have two tea Priced $14.75, $19.75, $24.75 and $29.75, and ebtainable in all sizes frem 34 to 44, ‘The Big Flood! | destroyed goods and chattel: but it could not wipe away the MORAL :~ INVEST IN SAFE "AND = | PROFIT-YIELDING REAL ESTATE. | | The valuation uation of New York Real ate is being enhanced by:— ist a INCRE IN POPULATION; 2d.---BVILDING OF BRIDGES AND LINES OF TRANSPORTATION; oo “business” to become the | and Bondings 3 at one-third to one-half off regu- 34. EVER MULTE OVEMENTS. | talk of the town, tell lar prices. Remnants at half price, | or House, Lot, Farm or Acreage | I about it through a Lace Veils in Black and White, at $1.00 Bargaing World “Want” Ad. See World ‘Ads. Any Day WORLD “REAL ESTATE WANTED” ADS. ARE Regular prices $1.50 to $3.00. Broadway & 18th Street Store only, MOST EFFECTIVE