The evening world. Newspaper, December 27, 1913, Page 3

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THRILLING RESCUES FROM FIRE PERIL; ONE WOMAN DEAD, Fails in Brooklyn Divorce Suit SAAAAAAABAAANANAABIAAABARA ARBAB Flames Through a Crowded House on Colum- bus Avenue Corner. Sweep LADDER SAVES MANY. § | Dozens of Women and Chit. dren Swung Down to Safety | as Crowd Applauds, the ald acrobatic win of high awaying | Inders, feats such as cireus performer would dare attempt, roaring, popping flames, clouds of stl- fling smoke, women and children driven | « from windows to fire escapes with the heat forcing them from behind, a po- liceman cut off by the fire and calmly sitting on a window sill forty feet above the strest—all these and other happenings mate for thrills in @ blaze that ewept the apartment house at the northeast corner of Columbus avenue and Geventy-first street, and caused the death of a woman. ‘The victim was Miss Lilla Sanford, ‘forty-seven years old, of Warren's, R. L, in the city on a visit to her friend, Mme, Conant, who lived on ‘the fourth floor. Mies Sanford wae evercome by emoke, She was breathing waen firemen found her when the bia: had been controled ami an ambulance @urgeon used the pulmotor revival | ament in vein. he fire ovourred shortly after 9 e'oleck lest night, a fortunate circum: q@tance considering that it spread moat instantly from the cellar to the woot of the building. Had the blaze froken out when all the tenants we: eep the loss of life would doubtless have been heavy. POLICEMAN ALARMS TENANTS) THROUGHOUT THE HOUSE. ‘Policeman Hardiman, one of Commis- gioner Waldo's new recrults, saw amoke | issuing from the cellar of the house, ran’ in and found the negro janitor fighting a wicked blaze at the foot of the atalr well in the cetlar, ‘The policeman saw that the fire was far beyond the con- trol of the janitor and shouted orders to tim to turn in an alarm, \ Then Hardiman raced up the etairs When he was through poinding on the sc Hebron the first floor and was starting ] to the second te flames were right pe- BS MNKLLLLSLAMS RENO, Dec. %.—Mra, Mabel Lorraine Miller Swan began to-day an action for divorce from Kingsley Swan of Brook- lyn, @ grandson of William C. Kingsley, who took part in the construction «* the Brooklyn Bridge. Desertion and non. support are alleged in the complaint. The couple were married in they have one child. Mrs. Swan is a daughter Miller, a court with her proof. "RENAISSANCE BALL” BRAVE POLICEMAN WHO SAVED MANY ‘ROM FIRE PERIL. hind hin, racipe up the stairs, By the) time he got to the top floor the whol: airway was ablaze, Hardiman hi {Warned at! the tenants to make for the | Ate estapes as there was no chance of | escape tiirougl the hails, When the firsmen arrived the fire ex: | cape iandings were jammed. The panes | ef glass in the windows flanking them | were popping out and fire was shooting through the apertures. It was time for Costume Affair Givi Mrs. William F. Dr: WASHINGTON, sitting in a fourth-story windew, | with his feet hanging over the ledge anit | the tails of his long coat turned up over \ the back of his head and shoulders «| protection against the fire that was bu foting him from the room. ‘The pelice- man was leaning out, shouting to thowe @@ the fire escapes to wait for rescic PROPPED TO SHOULDERS OF | FIREMAN BELOW HIM. | rare jewels, It was a ri nificence of her court, were tume patterned after that o: var [RAAB HKSLHSMALH A RABALISAAIAADASHASS Dec, 2 agreed to-day that the National Capital had never before witnessed such a daz- zling display as attended the ball here The hostess received her in @ pearl and diamond bejewelled cos- THE aa kt and Now Seeks Decree in Nevada belek BSLALALAAAM SAAAKSSALS =< KASS 1908, and of Alvah New York paper manufacturer. Early this year Mrs. Swan sued in the Brooklyn Supreme Court for an abso- lute divorce, but falied to satisfy the RECORD DAZZLER FOR WASHINGTON SOCIETY Five Queens Held Court at en by aper. Society outck action aud the firemen were equal fast alate CiMin, Willan # Graver, Berens Leader Trick’ ‘Three hundred of the elite of Washing- ern piece of apparatua, t ton society attended, garbed in allks to the alr in mbimte. One was dis and ermines that outrivalled the splen- ted toward Policeman Hardiman, who | |dor of the mediaeval courts they | mimicked, and flashing with a thousand nalseance ball.” queens, each noted for the mag- represent- guests f Margue- rite de Valois, Queen of Henry of Nu- Miss Margaret Draper represented The ladder meant for Hardiman was Queen Marie of Anjou; Misx Helen about eight too short, Elsworth! Walcott, Queen Clotilde of Frauce— ‘Clemmons, » fireman, raved to the top gold crown and all; Miss Frances Noyes of the ladder, stood on the top rung, braced himeelf against the wall and NU HARDIMAN, eked Hardiman to lower himeelf. As deliberately as though in the perform- SES tra te rs| ESTHER ACKERMAN, GONE 4 DAYS, RETURNS ‘sili until his feet rested on Clemmon ghoulders. |Brooklyn Girl of Thirteen Says She Was Working in a was Queen Isabel, ~| Austria, wife of louis XIII, A small fortune was ex; draping the walls with Amer ty roves, ‘A wearohlight played on the two men. Ceretully but ewiftly Clemmons wen 4own rung by rung with the policeman on his shoulders, both men bracing | themaclves against the wall of the | Father 1 wife of Richard IL, and Miss Alice Whiting was Anna of pended in ican Heau- — REPORTS GIRL MISSING. uke She Plans Blope- ment Dash to Montreal, Giuseppe Nargadonna asked the police house, When Hardiman's feet reached Candy Store, of the St. Nicholas avenue station to- the top reund of the ladder Cleminons Naor Nad bs GaRGRD Alanis ba Beet guided him down and both were soon| kether Aykernan, thirteen, missing | 46, nip daughter Jonephine, wie he maid on the ground, the policeman minus his last Mouday, returned yesterday | 24 neon miasing since 3 v'cloc cort, which hed been half consumed. — }ig ner home at No. 784 De Kalb avenue, | Mo vee since’) o'clone ¢his | cheer ny the r of morning from his home, No. 0% West cheer thet epee! BPOVA) sae) Tom Brooklyn, It was 2 P.M, when ahe re- ; ) the flames dnd the puffmg of the en- ¥i nal One Hundred and Sixty-ffth sireet, Her ines grected this rescue, In the mean- | SPPERTC). and from then til dark rela-| rather said he believed the gir) had gone sie Sept. Hicketta's. men had raised {tives fFlends and neighbors held a sabi- | away with a young man Who has lived other ladders and were taknig the peo- | /@tion. ; in the neighborhood, Nargadonna de- ple trom the fire escapes. ‘The following | Accordiny to the story told by the| scribed the young man as twenty-two reons were rescued: irl, who came to this country six weeks the railroad stations. Badger, sixteen, when she returned to in the street. She said had lost birds} tn the fire valued at $6.00, Later ahe | her home, No. 1% Prospect street, Ja- und that « fireman had resoued moat | Malca, L. L, in time for Christmas din- fibem. After the fire Chiet Kenton | Pe" he eloped with Thomas Kirby, |twenty-two, and the two were absent mended Patrolman Hardiman for two weeks, right ankle dislocated. He De Witt C, Skilton BP HARTFORD, Conn,, oi | "care only for Charley Jacobi," sata} Avion, who rat | 5 el i o the girl. ‘ (atta ban te) | Jacobi, her flance, ts a wireless opera- Preaiaen' o ‘A man thinks he is graceful if he oan | tor at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. Jacobi dance with a girl witheut stepping on | Said he would forgive her and mar: ber. Ladd saderwri years old and curly haired, with @ scar . the Afth floor: Mrs, Harriett|ago with her mother from Austria, she | 0M bis head which he concealed oy , eo her obiidren, casei, Got tired of Brooklyn and its schools, ee ane oe ala tant kal eighteen; ee, anc = ; Na | Gilzabeth, two years, and @ guest, Dor. |*0? Monday wandered across Willlams |gaa weighs about 1% pounds. When exhy Withford, Actean, of No, 1h West dure Bridge to Muuhattan, which 89) phe left home she wore « black skirt, Geventy-fourth ‘street. hed at 8 P. M brown sweater and black shoos and From the fourth floor: Mrs, Margaret| She made the acquaintance, she says. | stocking Laughlin, Mfty; her daughters, Ethei|of 4 woman who keeps a candy tore at |" Ngrgadonna said he thought the and Apna, and her grandson, Edward|Veluicey and Orehard streets, The] young pair were on thelr way to Mon- , Bulger; Edward Neuman and e.| Woman said she would employ her if! teal, and asked the police to wateh ft) would register at an employment From the third floor: Mra, Withel-|amency. The girl asserta she did tui amcsdan mina Hauschmann, alxty; her daugh-|and went to work, She tired of che coc Gunece § ter, Mra, Meta Hoffmeyer; her grand. |cavdy store yesterday and tramped back use en ravenna daughter, Meta, thirteen, and Harry | to Brovklyn. Broome street, leaning out over Weiser. - v Platform of the west side of the subwa) . 7 |Rertha Badger Goes Home After Heal ‘ m the second oor: Mme. Hordan, Rlopementcawuy Tova Week, [cation At Eighty-nixin street and : roadway, struck by a train ear ood weeping| Her family welcomed Miss Bertha! 1 gay tie wan knocked back aguinat | @ pillar and his head wax cur and his | wan taken to the Knlokerbocker Hoxpital. > : Dee |New ions oe Congressman | \Barges A. G. 3 Rapes and Un- ELEVEN p | Moulder of Rovert G, Bremner, Deni-| weegey the A, G, Hopes and Undaunted verathe Represented @ in Conm ers from | wgoke ' tehty-mite écked off Barn tanty ew Jetacy. Dintriets In| Weekes off Barnegat In an etgnty-mite oem Ae - ™ WORLD, va $100,000 RADIUM 11 LOSTINSTORM, INLEFT SHOULDER 150 HOMELESS ON ¢ OF BOB BR BREMNER THE JERSEY cS Hopeful Under Treatment for Cancer. TUBES daunted Known to ‘Have Been Wrecked off Barnegat. TRACE .OF CREW Surgeon Confident He Will Victims of the Gale Arrest the Four Years’ Growth of Tumor. USED. NO at Se bright Sheltered in the Fire House. RALTIMORE, Dec g—Bleven tubs each about two and a half inches long and a third of an inch thick, and cont: | ed with rub Inwerted a nacond | “ATAECT the Adjacent cr Lime this inorning to incisions in the teft | York and New Jersey Ten men of the crews of two coal Bieven which started on Christmas night and s of New lives were lost in. the storm the Lubes are $109,000 Bale, were drowned. Tholt odie have orth of radium, the most expensive quantity of radium | Mt been recovered, One man pexshed ever used in a single operation, It te|!n the Ennt Hiver from a akift over- hoped the treatment will arrest the| tuted by the wind. |xrowth of, if not permanently destroy, | Wirele received from the revenue a and Seneca, in the gale yen. 4 malignant cancer from which Bremner has suffered for tour year: ‘The valuable radium, of course, can be used again and again after today's operation. y to save lives, bts of the fate of the men aboard the barges, Capt. Johnstone of the The operation was performed by Dr,| Seneca reported that he found both | Howard A. Kelly in his private hospital | ®Arwes sunk. From the Itasca Capt. {in Eutaw place. it was the second | Van Bonkirk sent word’ that both were that Mr. Bremner has undergone in| ® total I two days, The tubes were put in place ine Ptr shifted in the night to ko the firwt time on Christmas mornin, west, bringing the loy br and allowed to remain there for twelve Siisard whith has been preva hours, Dr, Kelly observed the result | State. Tremendous seas still prevall carefully yesterday and to-day deter- ae the coasts of New Jersey end | Mined to repeat the operation. eee tee ReTInS th: coset je doctor looke for a degener: byt ty? still prevails, tho malignant cells in Mr, Brémne t Sewbrighir N. J., where the butk- shoulder under the application of the [0684 haa been torm away faving the gamma rays. The operation ta no per- |#*& @ Clear road into the town, 160 per- formed that the alpha and beta rayx ‘Giueenine engin e the fire ae are filtered mA meless and shel- Tays to penetrate the cancerous tiene. | teens. Most of them fisher Dr. Kelly expects a cure, The cancer on Mr. Bremn shoulder is of a most malignant type It extends over the shoulder and almost meets under the arm, The extension in front ends just over the heart and the extension over the back covers the shoulder blade, The patient has bee: compelled to carry his arm in a strap holding it constantly in an elevated po: sition, COLLEAGUES IMPRESSED BY BRAVERY OF SUFFER Mr, Bremner (“‘Siniling Bob") Is one of the most popular of the newer mem. bera of the House. A native of Scot- land, where he was born thirty-nine ars ago, he went to Canada with hi parents when he wasia boy. He settled In the United Staten before he was of age, and began his Iife work as a re- potror in Paterson. In 19@ he obtained control of The FP c Daily Hera, and is its present editor and publ He had never held public office until clectedto Congress in 1912 over Repub- Hcama and Progressive competitors. When the special seasion of Congress met in April and Mr. Bremner wan who have beon exhausted by their feed ‘a arm and |Snu0us struggie with wind and wave for the better part of forty-eight hours, DAMAGE AT ROCKAWAY AND CONEY. The Rockaways are by no meana out ot danger. The Arvetné Pier Theatre tottera on its shaking piers, some of which have been battéred out by the ‘Waves. Waves fifteen feet hixh are etili pounding upon the shore, and unless tt Storm relents the theatre is doomed, In the Hammels section many rew- Gente have packed their movabies and moved. Many of the 3 bungalows of {he Ocean Breeze Camp, at Edgemete, have been washed from their founle- tlone and are floating on the e Waves are running through Surf avo hue in Coney felund, Many small boas flooded, and from Norton’ Manhattan Beach the storm Mas left in mark. The damage ts clAlly hew nd. tric Heht ut the Sea Gate ‘mined or biown thin r vworn In av a member of the House, | {00m the growth on his shoulder had become fe two coal-laden barges lost down @ serious that the chances of his Ilv- e oct folng tug, enbaah, Chris mas night stranded off Forked River. They both sank afte? daylight bout three-quarters of a mile off shore. The two barges were bound to Provi- dence. Capt, Willlam B. Fickett of Chelsea, Mane, commanded the Un- daunted, and Capt, O, Glsan of Pro dence was in charge of the The tracks of the Bo the Central Railroad wore swept away 4 Sea, An eme) ‘an put to Work in relays and at midtight had reatored the tracks #0 that It was pow Mible to run trains over them at ¢ ing many months seemed slight. The fortlitude with which he has borne his pain has evoked from his colleagues many expressions of admiration as well Well as aympathy. HAS NEW METHOD FOR THE EX. TRACTION OF RADIUM, Dr, Kelly, who is a specialist of the Johns Hopkins University group, re- centiy bought with James Douglas, prenident of I’helps, Dodge & Co, of New York, twenty-seven carnotite int claims in Paradox Valley, Col, where are now believed to be the groatent radium ore deposits in the world, Announcement that they had bought 01 and these claims and that they «| tlous speed. Under orders from the ised a National Radium Inatit wealthy house owners, contractors all by, with the co-operation of the Fed Along the whore from Normandie to Séa- Bureau of Mines, the radium would be the bright began replacing bulkhead piling that had been torn out by the ‘The present repalrs are merely temporary, but It hae been decided that extracted according to a new and more @Mcient process, and used for medic purposes, was made by Dr. C. L. Pa fone of the Mines Bureau at the Amerl- jean Mining Congress in Philadelphia {n| im the apring a new system of pulkheads | October. will be put in to protect the apots where It was stated at that time that not! the storm «id the greatest damage, one cent of the radium would be sol ta ee or ee but that every bit of the precious metai would be used in the caune of humanity, |‘ clinics for the treatment of the afflicted | housen were wr being established in the Memorial Hob-| lowed to muke pital of New York City and Dr. Kelly's| piel cottages unt hospital in Baltimore. joverturned hour $200,000 NEEDED NOW WILL TANGO AMID FOR HOSPITAL WORK. Treatment to a Suffering Man, Womun or Child, To-day ad to-morrow mark the climax of the campaign to provide funds for free hospital treatment to the poor, Throws r homes |i unoceus the mashed and ne je been replaced. But Staid Diners Needn't Worry, | foPit Will Be on New Year's Eve Only. All ages, sexes, creeds and ra Dancing between bites has never veer Creat nity are benefited. It te nec permitted in the dining rooms of the i yatse $200,000 now to enable the Waldorf-Astoria, But it will be on New forty-seven associated Lospitale to ii Year's Five, Persons who have made reservations have told Oscar that » mea! without any tango In It is @ flavor- lean affair. Oscar had hard work to prove it to |George C. Boldt, the proprietor, who falied to see why turkey-trots should be sandwiched between courses of a aquare meal. | Reluctantly he consented to smotner | hin prejudices—for New Year's Eve only their present beds with aufferérs, who cannot otherwise get medical and eur- Many 442 free days to more could have been treated but for lack of funds, Bvery $15 giver a week of lospity care to a suffering child. Thix ofter health, frien many Oscar 80 announced yesterday : nee | nadia ography and te author opened up the gas cocks in the parlor “Spaces will be left vary oes papal ([eCanadian Men and Women of the bevy was almost overcome by the rious dining rooms Pe Bn a nae a BY humerous works dealing {Nes Of Kaw when he entered the apart | Rose Ror Cate ee oe eadpbeitedye wctay History, died ay his t this morning, and the dead body 5 pain Met crowing of the Pennayivanta] MU Canad an henry ea of the man was | e floor. dancing.” Railroad today and Motorman U. N ary note in Yidideh, written in pencil, rea piiet of the Ine ive into the ——_ ould let me lay for ree « f afer dan 1b You may take [he pint ott tari rn ari Py tHE WHEREFORE, TO @ROUlA teh my wink is ete seis r . who knows. " ’ 4 A she Pittsburgh Post.) happy. | love her, but 1 could not lve AiOweRd, MAOH Miquider wee dale Why dows that hen re.iime io a¥so- without her. 4 hould come and ser i ‘There were no pa e018 ON} olate with the ot hens ™ “ YF STP Nas 4x and the conductor had not ye ee eal ee | ouaave % wnen it was surusia a remove the last |% “|scond further and eventually SATURDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1918. |Actress Wife Who Served Writ on Gallant Husband “saneacea¥Cit on Galle LAMALASA ES % A ? %, ASILALABLAABARSLARABLALAM % % * [Paanas % v ' SES HAND fr POCKET OF SUBWAY SLEEPER AND MAKES ARREST sees" 4 BRAAAMR LILLIAN _ % 3% : sasasanas was eee SITOOK MOVE PICTURE. | ON CRATER FLOR OF VEL IN ACN American wees Man and 3 Aides Descended 1,212 Feet Inside Volcano. Into Game of Three Alleged Pickpockets. clotnes and off duty, had a flerce oacti> early to-day on a subway traia with an He hid boer downs jon n and wa he noticed three men acting sus- [later proved to be Frank Warnecke, secoml street. Two of the men soemed to be “atalie” NAPLES, Dec. 11.—Frederick Burling- @] ham, an American newspaper man, has |waw one of the men put his hand in convinced Prof. Mercalll, director of the | Wernecke'n overcoat pocket. He grabbed | the man’s hand and says it clutched #. | ran before they could be intercepted. The prisoner fought, but | was taken off the train at the One Hun- | Bonino, Formasnino and Gaudino, were |a,e4 and Seventy-neventh street station and locked up in the Tremont avenue Vesuvius Observatory, that he de- eended to the floor of the volcano's crater last Tuesday. ‘Three itallans, The ia" with the American, Burlingham has furnished Prof, Me@calli with proofs of /xtation on a charge of grand larceny. the successful undertaking, heretofore considered im-, possible, For three nights the party slept on the top of the mountain, waiting for A propitious time to descend, On the third day ropes were swung over the previpice and the deacent was begun. Burlingham's story of the journey to the Inferno, 1,212 feet below, ta as fol- lowa: “While descending below the third precipice, almost immediately over the large sulphur fumerole, the wind changed and we were enveloped in dense sulphur fun A cloud ofsdan- gerous acid fumes camp next “An they continued we decided to ¢ reached the floor of tho crater by paxsing over & steep slope between the #ulphurous fumerole and the main mouth of the crater Which Wan op ty-three, a bricklayer, of No. One Hundred and Forty-third street. company of Freeport, way his soft, white hat been a long time win brick. Wernecke suid he had been out playing N. J. The pollo indteate It hb Of intoxication, He could not explain how he expected to get to Ni Blgnty-second N. STRAUS JR. BUYS COMIC WEEKLY, “PUCK” Will Not Ma Paper's Organization or Policy at This Time. feet through the tunnel to the mouth, |. Bonino, who is an expert on Veeuviua, || Nathan Straus jr. has purchased Puck, Warned me that the lives of all would |"@ weeky comic paper, The articles of be In danger, but We finally agreed to |ncorporation of a new company, whieh take the risk, | WHL publieh the paper, have been fied “We reached the edge of the openings, in Albany. The incorporators are Mr. from which red hot smoke was issuing | Straus, Max J. Kohler and H. Grant in @ great voluine, { ostimated that | Straus, The capita! stock Is $40,000, the temperature was 90 degrees Centi- The paper was purchased about a week grade.’ jamo, Mr. Straus does not contempia! Moving pictures were (aken in the | making any changes in organization cr crater. |polley at this time. He @aid yent r > 4 “It je true that I have bought a con- ENGAGED COUPLE IN PERIL. troliing | in Puck, However, as Almont Ran jastine in January, 1 not amuine active charge untl, Thi From Marriage 1 A mfiton happy my return next spring. le un- finished work of my father’s In the |Moly Land which [ muat carry out under hia inatructiona before | do anything visions rose before Michael Sincof of No. 2% Eldridge leige, Until my return the paper wit Street and Fannle Hyman of No, 24! continue in ita fo t Mast Houston street ax they tripped | /terference at all happily out of the marriage license bu reau in City Hall and started across Park Row to catch a car shortly befors noon to-day. Neither he nor his sweet heart noticed tie approach of a om that swung out of Nasau street and up Park Row at a lively pace. When the owllng vehicle was at the point or run them down Sincoff perceived the anger and dragged his flancee fre TURNS ON GAS IN EMPTY Unknown Man Leaves Note Yiddish Explaining Cause in when | am found dea body ta at the Fordham Morgue unideatified. ‘Oh, that hen is descended from one @f the origina) Plymouth kos! ‘|Patrolman, Off Om Bue, Breaks | Policeman George Silva, in citizen's pong 9 his way to the Bronx | \trirty, a butcher, of No, 300 Rast Kighty- ccomplishment of the | Ie said he was Charles Howard, twen- 105 Weat In his pocket was a budge of a fire truck | he handled «| pinochle and was arrested on a charge | ¢ Any Changes in FLAT AND OIES FOR LOVE. under the horse's hoofs, but am he did so of Suicide. Mise Hytnan joa, her footing and tu bled to the nent. After helping A dead man about twenty-eight yeart her to her feet Michaie overtook the old was found tn the parior of @ v1 offending driver, with the ald of « apartment in a tenene bridge policeman, far out on the Brook. 38i Sy at ie em lyn Bridge epproach, put did not ' ' the heart’ to press Ja . the dy se ‘ a would in ay ‘ vnitors wits left aim in the Siaeosat > - poarently looking It over Joted Canading Sathor Dead, the woman's departure th: (OOK VI Ont. Deo De ive tenant put a quarter in the liencr 1 Morgan, a auttority on Cas 4% meter, and, whutting all doors "| SINEROFLUOWIG | ‘GIRL SAYS HE ONLY SHOT TO SCARE HER | After Reported Confession Killer Is Hurried Away to Avert Threatened Lynching.” Afier « week of imprixonment and stern questioning by Sheriff William J, Doyle of Westchester County, Prank Cappeio, under arrest for the wanton Shooting of Mins Mary Ludwig in the ralitoad yards at Cro Thee made ‘esnion, the Sheriff reported torday, 1 did not mean to shoot the @tet,” {¢ ‘appelo watd. “L only wanted to fri on her, When I fred two shota in the to make her stop screaming an@ | keep her from running off to get help, she dropped to the ground. 1 thought T had killed her-and ran away.” | aia at the time of the shooting. Be- tectives have made @ hunt for thie other man, but have been able to get no better trace of him than e repert that he bas gone to Italy. The two men, according to the eea- | tension, saw Mise Ludwig get of a ‘train, her arma full of bundles, and ‘atart for her home across the trmeRs. | They followed her and, out of eight and | hearing from the station, confreated | ner. She turned away from them end they caught her by the arms, Then @ie began to scream and Cappelo used his revolver. After Cappelo’s arreat he was to the bedside of Mise Ludwig, | was in the Ossining Hospital, 4 through the lung and the a | anid she gould not certainly identity him unless she heard his voles. Sheriff Doyle made him repeat @e words Miss Ludwig said he had wied Just before he shot her: “I¢ you dea't ‘atop fighting mo T will Kill you." tse Ludwig with a moan, nodded ber “He is the man. Thet te hin e. Ever since the Sheriff has been re mering at Cappelo for a confession. soon as he had it he hurried the over to the county jail at White | because of threats made py citiaeme ef in jously near a sleaping passenger, who! Harmon and Croton that tune lynch him if he were proved | e C) | "rei me me | Perfect biscuit perfectly protected No matter what National Biscuit | Company product you ask for— crackers or cookies, . wafers or snaps, . cakes or jumbles | it will be delivered | to you in perfect | condition, either in packages with the | famous In-er-seal Trade Mark, ib attractive small tins or from the familiar glass-front cans. ; | Wreshnessisassured through the distrib- uting service of the National Biscuit Company, which affords a constant | @upply of biscuit to every part of the | United States, bahed by NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Always look for that name 7

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