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ee eee Geath of her enter as well as th Druless @n the child's face. The jittie Girl's death was caused by hemorrhs fellewing seme terrible biow on Blew caused there, and they do not be Beve that the blow was made by a fa against « door. Goaroely had they departed with Mre Roger, leaving Detective Rangoon guard in the neighborhood when ft ourg saw a frail blonde young woman turn into Fox street from One Hundred and Fifty-sixth street and pace back amd forth to One Mundred and Hifty- eovemth street eral times, keeping har eyes on the windows of the fiat on Gira Noor of No. 7 At lnet she} to gather courage, for ane hur- @croas the street and into b@iding. Ransburg stole after ner and rept 8 @he aecended the stair he half a flight behind her, Had st turmed around he would have reen him IN BURST OF PASSION BABY'S SHOE! 3e was Mra. Salerno, and ahe drew key from her pocket and opened oor of the fiat on the third floor, her agitation she left the door ajar and h Ranaburg slipped in a! hiding bemind a door which gave in the front room from the private hall. He enw the young Woman atep to the middle of the floor, where a a lay heaped with the amall clothii her daughter, Bhe enatohed up a little pair of tan shoes. They were well worm and en intimate reminder of the child. Gira, Salerno carried them to her iips| Nps and kissed them Massionately, Bho | had bduret into tears and sods shook her as she handied first one and then another of the email garments, kissing @nd fondling each one in turn. At Jast he put the things back in the auit case and turned to go. Ransburg glided @amiy into the outer hall where he steed in the shadow until the woman had closed and jocked the door of thne flat. Then he stepped forward and ex- claimed brusquely: 1@ STARTLED BY SLEUTH’S QUESTION. “Why did you kill your baby?” “Oh, God!" cried the woman. are you? Why do you ask ine that” ‘Then she began to whriek wildly #0 that the house was aroured and men and wemen ran into the halls, Ran burg tried to quiet her, but for many minutes it was impossible. She Analy burst Into tears, and after a quarter of an hour had so far re ed her com- Deaure an to be able to follow Rana- burg to the Morrisanta station, There in the shadow of the Meuten- ant's desk sat Mre. Hoeber crying hi ailentiy. She could not @ee her daug! ter as ashe entered, but presently & Policeman told her that the young ‘woman had been taken into the De- ‘The ekierly woman fairly rushed into the room. At sight of her daughter she uttered a cry, opened her arma and would have enfolded the younger woman in her embrace had not Mrs. Salerno re- pulsed her, and turning to the policemen exclaimed : “Take her away. Take that woman Qway. I don't want to eve her, 1 don't want to speak to her. Take her away. ‘Dea't let her touch me.” ‘The mother burst into new teare as the daughter tuned from her, but the pe- unsympathethic,” “And I craved eympathy. I gtood it as tong as f could, but | eould not live in misery with him, 20 ran away with Tony and Joe same with us, 1 was happy. Joe and but they were never brutai, “OHE CRIED WEDNESDAY AND | just top. Then Wed- it was Mre. Roeber who wid of the Resday evening ahe collapsed and fell | trailing her for nearly four montha and against a door. Then I found her dead. |finally #he led them to Kegan, 1 @on't know just when. I told Tony —— O24 Joo and they promised to help me. ‘They got the undertaker and I kissed | Lalu good-bye, Then they took her away. 3 didn't know 1 was doing | wrens.” ‘The woman sobbed for a moment or two, bit then she burst oul Ditterly: | 1 he is dead. 1 have e@ would But now | te dead.” Seance Growth of her daughter's in for Fishel. @he told first of her daugh- the Beak. The police do not believe a eingie | Kisses * | disappeared, “ $5,000 IN JEWELRY GONE WITH SAFE WHEN MOVING DAY ENDED Thomas A. Regan, Driver of Van, Is Indicted and Caught After Long Hunt. When Thomas A. raigned at Police Headquarters to-day by Detective Geman, charged with steal- Ing 83,000 worth of jewelry, he anid he lived at the Knickerbocker Hotel. Regan wore about # worth of clothes and a derby hat that had once been black, but wan rapidly turning green. Regan was ar- BARBARA WH ITNEY-© “Phey wouldn't let you break a wine dow in the Knickerbocker Hote," sald & policeman, “I don't mean Jimmy Resan's Knick- erbocker,” explained Regan, the Knickerbocker at No, ® Highth ave. Regan in a moving van chauffeur, was employed inst May by the Pow Auto Van Company, at One Hundred and Twenty-first street and Lexington avenue. Michael A. Hueman, proprietor of Sulser’s Harlem River Casino, em- ployed the Powers Auto Van Company to remove his household furniture, The Job fell to Itegan's van, When Mr. Hueman checked up his effects after the moving he found that a email which had contained %,00 worth of missing, He reported to the van concern to Mind that Regan had Mr, Hueman complained to the police and after time an indictment was found against Regan. He kept out of | the way until to-day when he met at Fourteonth street and Eighth avenue a woman with whom he had be friendly terms, The (Continued tr ter's marriage to Salerno ten years ago when she was cighteon. “They were happy for @ time,” she “but about a y so my daugh- ter met Fisher in a moving picture Ghow and he began to call at the house when: my son-in-law was not at home, I protested, but when I confronted him ia my Gaugnte flat, just above my ows apartment, he drew a revolver and me to mind my business. continued to protest as his visits, how- ever, and about siz weeks ago my Gaughter and I became estranged be- cause she would @ thie man up. k ed the actua) meeting but the slate, for- mulated by Cha) ¥. Murphy, went through, he holding that New York City tw not represented on the Court of Ap- t the present Ume in pro- ite Importance ines of the meeting opened with the selection of « nan Joh Fitzgerald of Hrovk! tate com day, taking her little girl with ner, and) Jamey: who wm ones ar telling me she had gone for good with pecking thin sin sive it to Brool forthooming campaign ‘Phe Sulzer case way brought right into the meeting by the appearance vefore the committee of Alton UH. Parker, who ané@ Bernard Dillon, the English jockey | # leading counsel for the Hoard of Mary With whom she came to this country | aers of the Annem)! uuing the @arlier in the week on the Olympic, | Governor, ani Austen i. Fox of coun was decided to r effect int Ses MARIE LLOYD TO STA’ Marie Lioyd, the vaudeville singer, Went to the ship to-day to sail for home {mel for the Sulzer defense, ‘Mhese two eceeréing to the terms of @ deportation istingulshed lawyers wer ment Ae order by the immigration authoriti | committee sele-ted by t Amsocla Om the pier Mire Lioyd received | tions of the State to nthe felegram from Washington, saying that committee the political wisdom of en an nominews, Judge the order had been modified so that |dorsing the Hepubil i anager might | Werner of Rochester and Judge Hiscock c carry out | both Repubiicans ’ vaudeville contract,| Mr, Fox made an argument 7M they fied & bond not to misbehave | of 4 non-partinan ticket He favor while here, with all respect. that it would mi The actress and the jockey at once Oo nominate Judge Hartlett for the left the ship and went to Ellis Jaland f Judgeship when he ts pees to Bile their bund. record jn the matter of the impeachment —— ; ay , [of Gov, Sulzer, Mee Gintariit. Germ. ce “While what T have told you is alt * . with truth," said Mr. Fox in concluding his A mew record for high fying with five was mai talk to the commlitee, “1 fully realise at the aerodrome HeEten HITCHCOCK ON BRENT- Woop . OSBORNE ENDS WEEK AS “CONVICT,” FEARING “LONG DAY” IN HIS CELL Voluntary Prisoner Will Get Experience for Expected Pro- test on Silent Sunday. AUBURN, N. Y., Oct, 4=—Thomas Mott Osborne, Chairman of the State Commission on Prison Reform and now & voluntary inmate of Auburn Prison, to-day cloned the week with coneider- able information in his possession to ald him in the work of the commis- sion this winter, His day in prison was spent, as usual, in the basket shop, and he will be locked In this evening for the long and dreaded silent spell, from Satur- fay unti! Monday, With other prison- ers he will be let out to-morrow morn- Ing for tho chapel exercises, which are the only break in the thirty-mix hour period of continuous canfinement in the four by seven cell. Mr, Osborne has no communication with the outside, but It was sald that he will imsue a statement covering his experiences after he comes out. It is expected that the prison re- former wil surely find fault with a | system that keeps a man tn hin cell for nearly fourten hours a day, and allown him only an hour for recreation «uch as the playing of some musica! instru- ment that does not make tov much dl turbance, Time hangs heavily on the inmate locked up from 4.30 o'clock each after- noon until 6.30 o'clock the next morn- ing: and the “long day" tx dreaded by all, the locking in from Baturday after- noon after the men have come from the bathhouse until Monday morning at 6.45 o'clock, an interesting 4 to narrate, It was anid at the prison to-day that the time of his departure ts not known but it is certain to be within a few ays, This afternoon nvict”™ ¢ borne enjoyed the greatest pleasure since he has been in prison, a shower bath in the big, up-to-date bath house, meeting. ‘The nominations proceeded. When Judge Bartlett had been put tn nation Henry Burgard, State Com. nan from Buffalo, who wiped the } floor of that part of the Btate with Willian Fitzpatrick, the Murphy sub-bose in the primaries, arose and said that Erie had not had a Judge on the years, Appeala bench in forty nducting, he sald, a tan tn By and the p Court of He wan o tien rty in Comm Hitoheook ward Dani showed — (Wenty-seven f B for Mikus and four Hattigan and thin vote by Joined fA snanimous the pitte wratulation to be sent to F Vice-President Manshail, ot Underwood and Senator sim the passage of the Under wood-Rimmons Tarit BIL. ip the busin of the meeting, Hefore the committe assemble: Charles . Murphy was asked why hy would not conalder the 4! Judges Werner and Hiscock mt Dugar any voted telexrs mo en e y by the Austrian aviator, (hat my argument hus been utterly fu- who reached pn altitude of tile.” 2 | With that ne vowed pimself out of the PSGAT URL ee Bete mp - This»! ch of confinement ts not broken except by chapel exercises, Onde will probably return to hin} friends on the outside next week with >| To help the dof the State he nominated hen boing This vole was also made ‘This wound ndorsement of te replied, “ihey are ite- ~ wy A THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1913. ‘BAY STATE REPUBLICANS HIT OWN CANDIDATE IN RACE FOR GOVERNOR Convention Rejects Four Plat- form Planks—Gardner Withholds Speech. | ROSTON, Oct. 4—Four planke offered by Congresaman Gardner, cands | Governor, an mubstitutes for thom pre- were rejected by the Republican state Convention to-day. Gardner, after the fight, mounted the Platform and expreased his disappoint- \ ment. Holding aloft his prepared speech, he sald ft would not he de- livered, as ita four cantinal features had been eliminated by action of the } convention. | Tho planks offered by Gardner dei | with the restriction of immigration, # | minimum wage, State credit for homes wteads and the publication of the facts in labor disputes, | Mr. Gardner, hitting back, #ald “L have in my hand the mpeech which 1 was to deliver to thie con- vention, but I shall not make it ball have to enter the campaign with- jout the four cardinal features of my own platform, and I don't Hke to do #0. } “If the Hepublican party stands for | Uberalten and progreasiven it wil! win and the progressi will go into oblivion, Hut If the party becomes stage Inant, the progresives are bound to suc- | If the party cannot Hberalige {t- \aelf T shall leave public life, but 1 shall cave It as a Republican, for T have no symp with t who have fed at sur board and ¢ now howling at the heels of wounded greatness A rip i fret re the other owe and then heard marks of Mr andidates were Stabbed Corporal Glovannt Han army, Qotar! who fought thre of the xl the recent war in Tripoli and was un- ved only: three Commit: |Meratched after twelve battles, was teomen for Werner--Keith of Naanwu, | utken to St Vincent's Hospital to-day Tattlgan of Cayuga and Hurgard of With @ long Kash in hin throat, three i ‘On, motion of Mr. Keith. the ays after his arrival in this country, PR erearaend ane RATA | He told the police he had left his home, Mr, BUreAra ie) vamibated Judge | N° Ase Thor to look for Hick te Associate Judie. Phe vote |Werk: At Broadway and Houston str | a stranger spoke to him and offered him a joy at Mercer street. Once ineide the building the stranger tried to anatch the corporal’s wateh, and when he ry sted glished him with # Knife and ran 7 t , ; -|Rrookiyn, a boatman, died to-day in th ng Iniand ¢ Coroner's Phyate fo could ha Hospital of tetanus, Pabst, who wold that ‘» been saved had he kept open the wound in his foot made by a rusty a e it up and allowing it to he clally cutting off the infection from ¢ au. ne nar {pared hy the Committee on Resolutions, | | the e per- is ite nail three Weeks ago, Instead of binding |, superti- DRL HERES TO TEN MLNS SES FOR DORE (Continued from First Pa; beat known familles of America and Europe, filled the Cathedral. Mra, Emmet, who was the daughter of Joseph Drexel, partner of J. P. Morgan, was known In her youth as the original Bachelor Girl,” as well as the “$10,000.00 heiress. After she inherited that amount from her father she exhibited her independence by refusing @ great debut ball at Philadelphia and came to New York, where she soon won famo ax a dispenser of charity. She purchased a home for poor students of the Norma! College, and alao gave large sums for the education of the Navahoe Indians, Next to Miss Helen Gould, she became the best known charitable woman in America, Her relatives and friends were greatly excited in 1900 when it was rumored that Mies Drexel had decided to take {the veil, but these rumora were soon ,Allayed when she gave a “red ball" at ; Delmontico's to demonstrate had not given up society. Her deb Delmonico's the year previous was one of the most elaborate New York had ever seen and the favors at her Phila- delphia debut were said to have been \more costly than any that city had ev \known, More than | tended each ball, |ANNOUNCEMENT OF ENGAGE- MENT CAUSED GREAT SURPRISE. The announcement of her engage- ment t Dr. Emmet, then connected | with the staff of the New York Col- {lege of Physicians and Surgeons, came @ Surprise to all their friends in November, 143, a» Miss Drexel had shown no marked favors to any of her euitors, many of whom were titled for- | eigners, Following her marriage the young heiress excited Newport t caustic erit- [ielams of the customs at that fashion- able resort. Each winter the Emimets gave a din- ‘ner to some one of the officiating pre- lates at their wedding in commemora- tion of the event, and this was made an annual custom until 190, when the last commemoration, as far as the public | Knows, was observed, The Emmets’ town house at No. 103 Madison avenue, which was bequeathed Mra, Emmet by her father, 1s closed, and the caretaker told an Evening |World reporter that all the furniture had been removed, At St. Anthony's Club, No. ® East Twenty-eighth street, of which Dr, Em- met le a member, it was said that Dr, Emmet left town in the spring, giving | as his forwarding address Cannon Sta- tion, Conn, He has not been seen ut the club in several months, Mrs, Emmet from her girlhood been noted for inte in the af- faire of the Roman Catholic Church, which frowns upon divorce. She frequently ent and has given 1,000 persons at suma to the Church. Raeseta Recognises Chinese Re 8T, PETERSBURG, Oc with the other Powers 1 the Chinese Republic on Oct. @ MRS. JE DAN IS ON IMPOLSE ed Catholic prelates jatruments out sian Government to-day agreed to join|wought havens along the coast, recognising | Nantucket boat did not etart on is trip HeGuee) SOPY RIGHT EeRWYOOD: AND- ONDER WOOD: ‘ TLR, OFF TOHUNT AND TO EXPLORE, SAYS “LR” AS HEDEARTS (Continued from First Page.) port, ‘eredited to Mr. Barnes of Albany, that the Bull Moose party was behind the nomination of Justice Seabury and working with Tammany for hin election. | “That's just another of Boss Barnes's {natural lea," said the ex-President, grinning his broadeat, A reporter called to hin attention re- cent comment upon the allegation by the friends of Judge Werner that Roosevelt |haa “thrown him down" for the nomi- nation by the Progressive party to the office of Chief Judge of the Court of Ap- peals. The Colonel answered: “Lam glad the Werner incident has been brought to my attention, I would {it not that Judge Werner's friends brought the charge that I offered to get the Progressive Convention to endorse him for the Cour f Appeals, “Judge Werner told Mr. B8tern of Rochester, who told Teddy Douglas Robinwon that if he had to render the Ivea decision (on the Workmen's Com: pensation cuse) again he would render a different decision. 1 tried to get the Judge to make that statement in pub- ic, aaying that I would use my best en- deavora to have the Progressive Con- vention Indorse him if he would. “Judge Werner refused and there my connection with him ceased." INVITED BY SOUTHERN REPUB- Lics. Primarily the Colonel started on the ‘exploration and exploitation of South America on the invitation of the Min- | ister at Washington of the Argentine Hepubiic to deliver a lecture in Buenos Ayres on “Democratic Ideal: Then Brazil invited him to detiver a lecture, and ¢hie was augmented by @ third in- vitation from Chile, In the trip across the Andes to Val- paraiso, Chill, the ladies will bewith the Colonel, Then they will proceed up the west coast, and return to New York by the way of Panama. After hia lecture at the University of Santiago, Chili, the party will get busy with the scientific end of the expedi- tion, Exploring South America wil! not be like the exploration of Africa, But there are jungles in tho country through which the Colonel must paas, there will be hardehips and wild animals, The Colonel expecta to reach parts uf the Amason River where the foot of white man has never touched, Then he will make the trip down the Orinoco, which will land him at Caracas, Vene- auela, where there may be something do- ing. When Roosevelt was President he made those Venesuelans pay their debts, and he wil) be as popular in that country us the me: in @ young ladies’ eem- inary. But the Colonel 1s going there, just the same. —_——_— BOLT HIT WIRELESS STATION, Operator Injured and Damaged by Lig! ROSTON, Oct, 4—During the worst storm that has visited Cape Cod this year lightning struck the United States Government wireless station at North Truro to-day, put all the receiving In- of commisison and in- red hief Operator Corey, Practically @ll vessels except u the jo |largest have pyt into port. A number of 4.—The Rus- | ocean-going tuk cast off thelr tows and | & The = to-day owing to the high seam | ‘SOCIETY WOMEN AND CHILDREN FEATURES AT PIPING ROCK HORSE SHOW not have said a word about this werd! —"~ semen ‘ —es to an automobile and was driven hame. town turned out to whirled along bitants of the Inha see Toshesky a& he wae LYDIA FLEITMAN when he Wagon hin Ceo In fret. iwo w by nt up the situas «entombed in @ space tion, b found 1 even by fifteen feet om Friday uni Tuesday 1 was without am | . and on the last day my 1 was iy darkness, It wae 1 period from then until the ree bore hoe through, drinks of egg noge 118 LOST WHEN STEAMER , SINKS AFTER COLLISION | Only Four Men Saved From Gare denia, Sent to Bottom by the H Cornwood in North Sea. YARMOUTH, England, Oct. 4—Eigh- teen neamen of the crew of the Britian steamer Gardenia are believed to ha’ been drowned when that vessel found. ered to-day after on in a fog off this port In the North Sea with the British steamer Cornwood, Four others of the Gardenta’s crew were picked up alive. ECZEMA BURNED AND TCHED BADLY | On Forehead, Then Face and Arms, Couldn't Sleep. Clothes Irri- tated Arms Somethin Cuticura Soap i Ointment Cured Eczema, ON. Rio cee em MINERBURED | earvssguararaicc FOR EIGHT DAYS. IS SAFE AT HOME (Continued grom First Page) —— ee peared when the steal was hdrawn. There in the jagged frame the haggard, bearded face of the man resurrected from the dead showed in the yellow Mght of the miners’ safety lamps. 14 eyes glowed green like those of some wild animal and they blinked uncertain- ly in the feeble lights playing out from the nodding lampa on the rescuers’ caps, “Boys, Boys!" Tosheaky muttered, and his voice was choked with sobs, RESURRECTED MAN DRAGGEO OUT INTO THE SHAFT. Quickly the hole in the wall was made jarger and dy hands dragged the body of the enfeebled man through into the shaft. His comrades supported his fainting body as they half dragged him down the shaft to the cage. They clua- | tered close to him and put thelr arms | about him in gestures, half of awe and halt of affection. It was as if they were witnesses of another miracle of Lasarus rising from the dead. } When the cage reached the mouth of the pit, where the etrong raya of the early sun slanted down over the moun- | tainside, Mine Inspector O'Donnell was on hand to take charge of the man brought back to the land of the living. He clapped a pair of blue glasses over hin blinded eyes and then stepped aside to aliow Toshesky's wife and children to run to him. FAMILY JOINS IN PRAYER OF THANKSGIVING, The woman and children knelt at the knees of the in and as bis hands played affectionately, gropingly, over their heads they offered with him a prayer of thankagiving, The scores|* | clustered about the pit-mouth desisted from cheering until the wife rose frem her knees and Toshesky spread out his 3i 55 EERVE li i Hd HU Li zR8 ! I § i i i is E i & i if if trey Lfeze Ah H i H t i a i Nov. 18, 1012, end DIE. IBAHAM.—-On Oct, 2, 19 arms in a gesture including them all is the great burst of thankegiving. ‘Then they rushed to him, patted him on the back, called to him affection- ately and would have lifted the stagger- ing man on their shoulders had not In- spector O'Donnell hurried him to a waiting automobile to bie little home down the mountainside, ‘There physicians examined him and reported that his physical and mental condition were far better than they had expected. The man's face is drawn into a mask of tragedy and hi hair 1s whitened about the temples. The doctors were surprised to find that Tosheaky's temperature was nor- mal and hia pulse only 72, After the more than one hundred hours of terror and existence under abnormal condl- tions of cold, dampness and darkness the miner's physical condition was oon- sidered litle short of miraculous. Toshesky was caught in one end of a gallery by,a cave-in in the Mam- moth vein of the Lehigh Valley Coal Company’s Continental Colliery at noon @ week ago yesterday. Tons of fallen | rock were piled above him, and for time it was thought that the man was dead. But rescue work was pushed, and after three days a four-inch pipe was riven through the mass to the niche where the man was supposed to be. The faint sound of his voice reassured the workers above, and thence onward until the rescue to-day he was given Mquid food and water through this pipe. An electric globe wes lowered to bring light to him. ‘Once before in his experience as & coal miner Toshasky was entombed by & cave-in, but that was for only 48 ours. Toshesky wanted to walk home, He was persuaded to ride in an ambul: Ge Ase, mille, was taken | ARCHIBALD D, Gnanaae Soon 42 * ral services at tat Brookiyn Hills, L, 1., om Sunday . a 2.30 o'clock, Interment at Boon at 2. Cypress Hilis Cemetery. OH, LOOK HERE! Sq). This is a picture of a dog, But there are many other kinds, of dogs. There are watch dogs, lap big dogs, little dogs and dogs of many different breeds, colors, ete, Dog breeders make money, They win prizes at dog shows, Children are fond of dogs ag family pets. Burglars di ike dogs and usually keep on the other side of the street, ° So why not buy a dog? See World “Dogs, Ete.,” Ads, fer Bergeins [+