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, pn AS | Whether he wanted to see them or pleas of not gullty for each defend- a, ont. ie EL'S PROPERTY SAIC TO BE Some surprixos were contained in ; IN WIFE'S igaleagt the text of the Indictments against | hat to- Be Another ray of INsht Siegel and Vogel. The charges that | Pe day into the commorcial sloom which they they violated section 2% of the x burround= the Siegel stores in a Penal law in receiving deposits after, letter received by the District-Attor- Infolvency are based on the allega | \$ —— Be nby, alleging that Frank BE. Vogel ton that on Dec, 20, 1918, they re-| has xpent a co ble fortune in celved $100 from Charles Grimm and | ‘ » m William Johnson. This was & mR ding and furnishing a home at $100 from y rah Pouch, N. J, within the last bine days before Henry Melville was turned over to Irving 1. Ernst of O1- SAY STATEMENT ERREO NEARLY BLAMES KING’S POLICY. cott, Gruber, Honynge & Me as, | $2,000,000. counsel for some of the depositors in A similar precaution was taken In + a ‘ © the defunet Siexe! bank Jestablishing the charge of grand Dramatic Scene as Prisoner, * Mr. Brnst said this afternoon that | jarceny, The specific allegation ta) ‘ he had heard that Vogol had banked | that Siegel and Voge! on May 17, 1913) May Richardson, Makes a Speech to: Judge. 2 ; 1 ne “appointed receiver for the bank and| » ba) few yea Furthermore, the letter “4 i 5 | 4 a That Vogel transferred this OMe banking day before Siegel and) |. 3 a Property to hls wife and not naide VoRe! began tho sequestration of de- ‘Slow Murder of Mrs, Pank-| % Ad tanked’ thousinds of dollars in Povlts. Thin they started Dec. 23, and ” " ‘ 2 ee wane an eartior date was sought, so that it) hurst” Led to Slashing, She | 2 4 v4 ney's office is Mht not be set up in their behalf) ‘ e Sr acd enty 1 alta evieaiial Sree that they had not jeopardized moneys | Declares in Court. 5 4 ecution of Slerel and Voxel, the letter Beate during the last week of the _—— z Mike Hot ta Ke uded by him, but is to be | HAHk's operation + é a $ 4 + oe “money in his wife's name and added got a loan of $25,000 from the Na- he Would place Vogel on the stand tional Bank of Commerce on the and question him about thin matter. strength of a statement of financtal) He will rabject this partner in the | condition bearing date of Feb. 3, 1912. lege! enterprines to the same searc! Vogel testified in his examination| LONDON, March 12—May Richard- ing examination as that to which he | before Special Master Holt on Jan. 21,/ son, the militant euffragette who on subjected Siege! yesterday afternoon, | that banks began to curtall credit Of | muemday hacked the celebrated Velan- Just before the latter was taken to| the Siogel stores a year before re- plead before Judge Rosalsky. ceivers were appointed, and to block | 4Ue# picture known as the “Rokeby “GRAND JURY MAY FIND MORE |any contention that the banks knew Venus” in the National Gallery, was - INDICTMENTS. what they were about the loan of) to-day sentenced to six months’ tm- Additional Grand Jury of the | May 17, 1912, was picked out. Sheert of General Seasions is not] ‘The note given for this loan was | Prigoninent for her crime. The case through with its investigation into|made by ‘The Fourteenth Stroet |Crtinst Miss Richardson was dis- the Siegel-Vogel failure, Aasistant |store, Oscar A. Prall, ‘Treasurer; | PO8Cd of in record time, She was District-Attorney Arthur Train has| Frank E. Vogel, Vico-Prosident.” It|“frested on March 10, taken to Bow fained by subpoena from Leon Levy. the strength of which the loan was|"ame day, The Grand Jury yester- These books and records are furnish- 1,158,680.08, which ts and to-day she was tried and convict- fag amazing information about mod- pre kronthe thal Hy ed by a jury at the London Sessions. erm merchandiaing and finance 48 | crepancy of The Public Prosecutor in addressing _* eonducted by Siege! and Vogel. tng in roality insolvent by 9816,289.11,|the Jury on behalf of the Govern- No loss than fifty specific offenses! oth merchandise and cash on Rave been uncovered. ‘The books and records thus far} ooncealcd. w to th tions, according to the) HAD ape Ma lla FOR | iss Richardeon, who had al “hunger strike” since her arrest, ‘n It bas been shown in the teati-|® mony that the statements made to|Feplying to the charge, said it had th Th reece thing. the Grad Jurors| ART, SHE TELLS JUDGE. were feed oe ee condition et haa Addressing Judge Rebert Wallace, been arbitrarily agreed upon as liko-| who presided over the court, Mies drawing large sal- CA a rig be tae eae ee was need-| nichardson said she had t as art Five statements were signe’ }student, but cared mere for justice Lk Vogel during 1912. During 1913|than for art. She eald she firmly be- gel signed two and Vogel one. The! jieved that when the nation had shut ments of 1913 showed a profit of for the Fourteenth Street |'t# eves to justice and preferred to Leese the img year. In-|have women who were fighting for it, [earl i? 7 A J emaierpoaeres Lid Justice maltreated and tortured, euch foun yan ore actus oat € we . It te declared that the. store |" action as hers should be under- ‘They | NA# @arned no profite within the past | standable, ¥\ five yours and that it is doubtful if 1 meditated murder of Mra. Emmeline Siegel | tho Simpson Crawford Company has olther. id evi ‘Bioget | JUFY haw fixed at $70,000 a year the | breught about the eutrages. The ne- jade by Siegel | amount of salary received by slezel, faived but $46,000. Vowel's salary has o . Vogel's ae tments charge| been fixed at $60,000, while Tee ‘A, | vainly at the doors of the ministers, to believe that| The evidence heard m! accepting de-| of the Siegel stores when the Rothen-|the King himeelf. She concluded: | ‘"* case. berg & Co. store was bought teovhas been recelving 900,000, “The| “! know that you will sentence me, tun during the last three y for (ie) chief purpose of paying th bs uty Attorney-General M: y-' tn chan om ney- to carry out what | believe in.” dressed to him. As Judge Wallace was about to secured for this bond, and it has not | occurred: been paid. The Attorney-General’s Be ' ors, Rabie AGES BISCHOFF DEPOSITORS RIOT WHEN MONEY Peualf of the deposl-| sestroyed no money could have re|ing a fine Ii placed tt, PANKHURGET. * the Federal Budding by the Heovins Pankhurst? 5 ef United States Marshal Henkel) raboring under the mistaken im. | killed. outside, shouting condemna| preesion that they were about to get} The Judge—You have plea guilty and have glorified In your] writer, of Henry | erime. EFENS| No, 287 Broadway, Miss Richardson—! don't eay that. B ite of rooms on the | 1 think it a shame I had to consi it my duty to de it. Vie | were >< Qtone of the nervous little man being * some money, 600 depoattors in the quissed upstairs, Armed guards con-| bankrupt banking house Glegel to the Criminal Courts) Hischoff & Co. after the bankruptcy hear-| gathered in a . There be met Vogel, and Joba B,| fifth floor of the Woolworth Building to-day, and when the money was not thelr attorney, entered) torihcoming precipitated a diaturh ance that required the services of th \ Greenwich st , . It to v our to Ket the hysterical and disa pointed tathering out of the building ognized the sentence to be totally y of six months’ imprisonment, q way of the freight elevator, inadequate, but it was the maximum Harrison A It was a polyglot guthering of poor | sentence for damaging works of art.| Mrs. Pollar savings to the Hischoff concern, w is ; those who could were 1 si your Back hurts or Blad-| ive tntellizent attention to the p Miss Richardson looked ill, and it| out. was suggested in some quarters that . ceedings, They assembled in ler bothers, drink lots | sponse to notices sent out by Hefere of water. Maxrane Coxe and vote for th When your kid hurt and your| interests in the negotiations with t feet ‘sore, don't get scared and pro-| recelvers of the Hischoff business, to load your stomach with a lot of | + that excite the kidneys and irri- 5 Tjtate the entire urinary tract. Keng your| f ‘ 3 picture to the extent of $600.” be withdrawn. |S hidneys clean like you keep your bowels | a ' ) rd AY as salts which removes the body’s| Horrman and Hdward C. Dusenberry | ROW on bunger strike after ber sev-| busine urinous waste and stimulates them to to look after the interests of the enth arrest under the “oat oy their normal activity. function ‘oxe put on bh ndieye mite nee the blood. ‘ cont and left the roc ira they strain from it 500 grains o! started for the do ~ “4 we can readily uni cue for trouble, A] woman lw the wife of a Loadoa po the vital importance of keeping | Pp n doak and start- not Hichardson. kidneys active. Yiddish, i Drink lots of water—you can't drink | 1 mn. Croatia her dia! [WANT Rableapepatul. ine glass of wat crowd Was clamoring for money etan: y the KEPT IN CUSTODY. iam of the militant suf- lore breakfast each morning for a few | , Ait, Luctchos. whe ts magalvely con ie Fb ope pled Soe the furnishing a consplenous ob- ARCTIC EXPLORER morusvonscorrs SCOTT'S ADE HERE: WHO TELLS OF SCOTT’S PRCPEDIDSIDIAORT @urned over to the Grand Jury books|/was indorsed by Henry Siegel and| Street Police Court and committed | was making an Inquiry into the ques- : for trial by the Magistrate on the|tion of the best way of protecting the and records of the bankrupts ob-|Frank E. Vogel. The statement, on National art treasures. personal counsel to Henry Slerel.|made, declared tho net resources of |4A¥ returned @ true bill against her! op eps cerrEs BURN ment, anid that one might well doubs | arin conruseccan 4 ubt}| Militant suffragettes to-day faimilar to those mentioned in thel nung wore overstated, it ts alleged,| Whethor the prisoner was in her right | to and burned to the ground a larke| (ro eurrerine eT Aka e ‘thee indictments found yesterday | pig and accounts payable scaled |°%%% There was, however, no med-| unoccupied mansion belonging to tho| 4.4), med Lastiey hauled bik on fown and other big debta entirely |'a! evidence to show that she wae! Free Church of Scotland at stowar-| *" gh ecto cet MB Lh ” & persca not responsible for ber ac-|ton in the northern part of Ayrstire. A message, was left in the vicinity | begged them to leave him to his fate. ing: “Revenge for the brutal ar- rest of Mrs. Pankhurst.” March 12.— t tire —_———~ the banks when Siegel and Vogel| been premeditated and she pleaded sought new credit or the eatcnsion| guilty, Of credit already established bore >| Canes MORE FOR JUSTICE THAN “ "7 was pretty hard going after that. I begged our men to leave me, as it ——. (Continued from First Page.) also was a witness as to the good char- She added that the slew and pre- | acter of the defendant. the fact that | am really’e grateful vain to break down her testimony. oQuaid,| and happy woman because | have| Samuel Rittenhouse was called to|it took him and the doctor and his me of the New York City| been able to. live in a century in| C°Mtradict the testimony that one of | attendants only eighteen hours to get has been lnatructed by Astor. which Mre. Pankhurst lived and be-| ‘he scurrilous letters w cause in a slight measure | have tried| eek of a magasine wrapper ad- written on _ Julia Brewerton told of aiding Mrs. Be panty Company han never tend| pass sentence the following colloquy | Pollard in her church work. prosecutor created a same 5 Mrs people who had intrusted thetr small| tf {¢ had been window breaking, he| "70m" Jones ‘used the Pollard type Sin ae gacir i + Bel writer, He sald Mrs, of them could speak English and |&!d, he cot ave given the pris: | toid him sho used It able to|oner eighteen months’ tmprisonment. | nolly ordered that statement August Hartkorn, New York hand- the precarious state of her health| Wiiting and typowriting expert, was had been the reason for the taking of/ testimony the past two day! the unusual course of hurrying the} A furious Guarre when Mrs, Pollard’ to a juror, ‘ed the move an outrage Prisoner was “malicious damage to @) and threatened to ask that the juror Judge Connolly” told ‘The prisoner was taken to Hollo«| both lawygrs they acted like school- 1, the receivers, boys and’ ra so vigorously for com, by flushing them with » mild,| \’sminated ° nan tous | Way Jail, where Mrs, Pankburst ta oer ne Re roke le waved, started counsel banded the end of it flying acrcss the missing Prose- ‘The prosecutor neh and narrowly mouse’ act, cutor Stein's head. dodged and sat down abruptly and It wan alleged in court that the|doded and ant tow liceman and that ber real name is| LAWYER AND DEPUTY SHERIFF HAVE ROW IN COURTROOM. RICHARDSON WOMAN] There was a row in the courtroom Just after adjournment for the nc Deputy 2| Carey, who testified for th yeaterday, got into an argument with Behleimer, ee. 3 | . “Blutter, State Vollard’s Tr,” “erook,’ t and gai-| vere some of the words passe i, ASAE SaE A a THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, MAROE 13, 1914, ~TRLSOFHEROSH AT SOUTH POLE Commander Evans of Terra Nova Expedition Gives De- tails of the Tragedy. HIS OW LIFE SAVED. | Member of Crew Braved Bliz- zard Four Days to Bring Doctor to Rescue. Commander C. -B. Evans, who was second in command on the Ill-starred Scott expedition to the South Pole, arrived here to-day on the White Star liner Oceante and left for Wash- ington, where he is to be the guest jof the National Geographical So- clety. Ho is to repeat before that body the story of the Antarctic tragedy. The Commander told of some of his experiences in his state- room while the Oceanic was coming up the bay this morning, many of which have never before found their way Into print. ‘There wero two heroes in the party ANOTHER MANSION, |°t which little have been heard. Ona of these was Tom Creen, a young Irishman, a petty officer, who risked his life by a four-day tramp across a sled for four days after he had “I last saw Capt, Scott,” said Com- mander Evans, speaking In direct sallor fashion, “in latitude 87.35 south and longitude 166 degrees east. He was then 150 miles from the pole and we were 600 miles from our base of supplies. We were on our way back. On Jan, 17, after leaving the party, I was taken with scurvy. We were then 500 miles from our base, and it was impossible for me to go further. I was suffering so that T bit through my lips to avold from screaming in my agony. “The answer to my request to be left by Creen and Lashley was to strap me to the sledge and then rig up a sail, We went along like an REAPPEARANCE OF THE GIRL |icedoat. At thi 4 the Grana| Pankhuret wae an ultimatum whieh CAUSES EXCITEMENT. iceboas je end of four days my ‘The reappearance of the Sobler gtr!| stand any farther fatigue of the jour- was the signal for whispers running ney. I told my companion so and through the groups of women sur-|then Creen started over the ice to Price, who became general manager |blehope and archbishope and even of | Undine the rival central figures in| get Dr. Atkinson at the Hut station. agony was so great that I could not It took the brave fellow four days, ‘The girl repeated that she saw Mrs./in the face of a blizzard, to make the “Tom” Jones “sitting at the type-| tri It was an awful trip for him in uestion has been raised in the Grand | but it will make little difference not rip. jurgut the stores have not, perhaps, |enly from the fact that | ean stand | "Fter in the Pollard home, tapping |the solitary wastes, but he got ears | only a few months’ torture, but from |*b® keys.” Prosecutor Stein tried in| through, He had to remain at the station for eighteen hours, and then to us. soon as I was back on the Terra Nova I began to mend, The id is familiar with our voyage ‘The | ba%k, for poor Scott and the rest of disturbance|the party. We sailed away in the ‘The Judge—if the picture had been} among the women in court by draw- | gayest of spirits, and when we land- of distinction in so-|ed at Cape Evans, on Macmurdough clety by showing that while Mrs.|Sound, we had all colors flying and “NO MONEY CAN REPLACE MR&.| Pollard and Miss Brewerton were|the ship decdrated from stem to astern. Py Wichand D ft friendly in church work, they did not} We had a banquet prepared, and at r jae ~Richardson—Do you realize| move in the same social strata. IS NOT FORTHCOMING. | that ne money can replace Mrs.) Vernon C. Stickney, a lawyer and|whom we had gone was his letters, She is being slowly| typewriter expert, was called to dis-| each package tied up with ribbons, prove the assertions that forgeries ded} could not be perpetrated on a type-| but one man on shore instead of the the plate of each of the party for “When we dropped anchor I saw crowd we expected to see trooping LOCKS MOVE OF THE | down to the beach, This was Lteut, PROSECUTOR. n ‘The prosecutor failed to get the| from the bridge: “Are you all right?’ Court's permission to have Stickney The Judge—With the greatest re-| cive a demonstration by writing two grot It Is my duty to pase sentenee | jetters on the same muchine, one so diegeined that an expert could not Judge Wallace added that he rec-| prove they were Le eed pachine, Stickney declared such a forgery was sere posite e. Victor Campbell, and I shouted to him jhouted back: We have their records. sailed for New Zealand.” stricken with scurvy on Jan, 17, _—>——_——_ ALASKA BILL SIGNED $35,000,000 to Build a Govern- ment Owned Railroad, ¢rnment-owned railroad in Alaska, n as! ROMANCE AND TRAGEDY AT THIS “KISSING POST.” ‘The romance and i! Elite Capt, Scott and his party reached pole on Jan, 18 of last year. But were lost on the homeward march. “There was consternation on our ship. We got the survive.s on board while we were removing the decora- Dunn, brother of|tions. The banquet was forgot! The ship was turned from a joy craft into one of mourning. And so we Commander Evang kept a diary of tho party's travels until he was BY PRESIDENT WILSON Measure Authorizes Expenditure of WASHINGTON, March 12.—Prest- dent Wilson to-day signed the bill authorizing the expenditure of $35,- 000,000 for the construction of a Gov- APPROPRATION BL TOTALS31 200000 No Provision for Efficiency Department or Fire Mar- shal’s Bureau. ALBANY, March 12.—The annual Appropriation bill, carrying appropri- ations of $31,200,000, but no provision for the Department of Efficiency and Economy or the Fire Marshal's Bu- reau, passed the Assembly to-day by & vote of 88 to 46. ‘Te bill represented a cut of $3,- 200,000 under the amount recom- mended by the Department of Em- ciency and Economy. GIRL, 20, SHOOTS SELF AFTER LOSING PLACE IN PICTURE THEATRE Theresa Piggott Ends Life in Parlor of Own Home While Family Sleeps. Robert Piggott found his twenty- year-old sister, Theresa, lying dead on the floor of the parlor of their home at No, 66 St. Mary's avenue, Rosebank, 8. I, this morning. The wirl had shot herself in the right temple because, the police believe, she was disappointed in love. She left a note for her mother, Mrs. Richard Piggott. Coroner's Phy- siclan George Mord took charge of it and declined to make it public. Miss Piggott was employed as ticket seller in the Park Theatre in Stapleton, a moving picture house managed by M. H. Taylor. ‘When she reached her home last evening she appeared to be in good bumor, but it was learned tq-day that she had lost her position in the mov- ing picture house. Robert, the first of the family to awake this morning, supposed that his sister waa in bed till he came on her body in the parlor, She was dressed and apparently had shot her- self soon after the family retired. None had heard the report of the shot. — AWFUL HOLDUP AND BOY'S HEROISM HIS OWN FAKE NAMED BY HUSBAND IN-DIVORGE SUIT (Continued from First Page.) | | Norden contends that he and his wife were happy until the Mayoralty cam- paign of 1913, when, he says, Bootsel j began to exercise a strong influence over his wite. e He tells of a gathering of Mitchel suporters in the Mitchel League Head- quarters on election night when Boet- zel was host to a number of friends, ‘among them a Mr. and Mra, Ullman and Mrs. Norden. After the returns thé group repaired to Bustanoby's Cafe, when Norden charges his wife was introduced to Mrs. Ullman under rs. Norden's maiden name. He says that Boetzel was toasted by Mrs. Nor- den as “Commissioner,” and that Mrs. Norden was toasted as the flancee of Boetzel. Boetzal has made a complete denial of the allegations contained in Nor- den’s aMdavit and asserts that as a lawyer and as a friend of the Nordens he was engaged in an effort to restore peace in the family, It was said by attorneys for Norden that @ counter claim will be filed to the suit. Mr. Cukor, Mrs. Norden’s lawyer, sald to- that he expected the husband to bring sult against his wife in retaliation, but he had not yet received the complaint. SAVING SWEETHEART, HE IS HIT BY TRAIN West Virginian Hurled Into Ravine and Girl Whose Foot Caugat on Trestle Is Killed. ‘WILLIAMSON, W. Va., March 12.— While attempting to save the life of Miss Dixie Blackburn, his sweet- heart, whose foot was caught in a railway trestle near here to-day, William McCoy was struck by a train and tossed into a ravine fifty feet away. Miss Blackburn was instantly killed and McCoy was dying when picked up by the train crew. ink PRIVATE BANKERS FAIL. ——- Trustee Tella Crediters Firm's As- sets Are Overestimated. A. Bol. nest & Co., private bankers and export brokers at No. 53 Wall street, were placed in involuntary bank- ruptey to-day in the United States Dias- ment or Feb. 13. Dellt Paolt & Co., Inc.; Carlose Ex- press, Inc. and Alvino & Figtio are the petitioning creditors, They have claims aggregating more than $3,000. ‘They allege that the firm's debts amount to more than $80,000, ‘The assets are Hominally placed at Sp. At a meet: ing of the creditors erday Francis Gilbert, the assignee, asserted that the firm’s easets had mn overestimated and the schedule showing assets and Mabilities of $249,000 was incorrect. ‘Already the asscta are shown to have report made by accountants. . —.——__. He Sure Was Some Kid and a Scrap-| HORSES FALL INTO SEWER. per, According to the Account He Gave His Boss. After careful investigation of a thrilling story of a hold-up told by sixteen-year-old Alfred Fraser, of- fice boy for the West Hoboken Coal Company, Detective Sergeant Vetter reported to Chief McAuley of the West Hoboken police to-day that Al- fred had a vivid imagination and also thought pretty wall of a certain party named Alfred Fraser. The in- vestigation has been dropped. M. V. Altman, manager of the coal| | Firem: company, cn entering the office at|tackle around one of Savoye street and Clinton avenue af- ter a short absence yesterday after- noon, found Alfred lying on the floor | the swe! with a handkerchief stuffed in his mouth and both hands tied behind .| hts back with a piece of rope. Re- moving the handkerchief and un- knotting the rope Mr. Altman voiced his curtosity. “T was sitting right here, I was,’|goite Marte, Sante M said Alfred, “when two rough looking Before Rescuers Can Act. feet wide in Bedfor: avenue, Brooklyn, thi horses dashed directly tl tn, Barron t and landed and is twenty feet deep, at Bedford and Myrtle avenues and e i they lifted the antmal to the st: Fhe other horse kicked 1 the hurne Southampton. Antwer; Oceanis Finta Mi Arcadian, trict Court. The firm made an assign: | | Laxative eal 1 shrunk at least $75,000, according to @ —_—_ One of Snow Damp Team Drowned ‘The horses attached to a snow truck driven by Antonio Barrone of Kast New York avenue, East New York, becam: unmanageable as he drove them toward a snow dump sewer opening sixteen renue, near Greene | horses hung, suspended by their harness, in the opening to the newer, which ts one of the biggest in the city came from Truck No, 102 d, dropping down into wep’ ASSEMBLY PASSES FRCL BOETZEL : — wii POO CHARGE AGAINST GILLEW Police Headquarters Hears Taat De- moted Inspector Is Slated for Dismissal, Assistant Corporation Counsel Josiah Stover, who was Third Deputy Police Commissioner under Conamiie- sioner Cropmey, was assigned thie lernoon at the request of Petice Commissioner McKay, to conduct the Prosecution in the trial of Capt. James H. Gillen on charges off neg- of duty and violation of the rules while Inspector in charge of the Thite District. The Gillen charges wil Be completed and served to-morrow. Commissioner McKay’s action ia taken at Headquarters to mean that Gillen in scheduled for diamissal. The main charge against him will be that he allowed disorderly hotels to aun in his district, This was the charge against In- Spector “Ginger” O'Brien, who wes in charge of the Coney Island @ie- trict during the summer followahg the attempt to assassinate Mager Gaynor. The present Mayor, Mr. Mitchel, conducted an investigutfen at Coney Island which resulted fn the filing of charges against O’ Baten. Mr. Stover, as Third Deputy Petice Commissioner, conducted the trial. O'Brien was “broke” and his @is- missal stood in court. |TWO TURKISH AIRMEN ARE PLUNGED INTO SEA JAFFA, Palestine, March 13,—Zwo Turkish army aviators, Nutt Bey and Ismail Bey, fell into the sea to- day while flying to the south of this port. Their aeroplane had broken down and they made a rapid giiée to the water, where they were able to disentangle themselves from the ma- chine and managed to swim ashore. Both were exhausted when reached the beach and were taken to a hospital, where Nuri Bey ex- pired later in the day. -——.—__- * BLIZZARD WAS 26 YEARS A@O To-Day te the Anniversary of Nev: York's Receré Storm. =; ‘Twenty-six years ago to-day the ty, biisgard in this city began. oN At 1 o'clock in the morning of March 12, 1888, the “loca ta Se it, kept falling until on afternoon of March 14. Bromo Quinine (Coed te World Over to Garo a Geld tn Cue Gay C WLerorer Piano Player: - will transform your plano, ne saaiter what its style or puke, into (Be most artistic of player few hours’ time in your is all that Is necessary to give you this marvellous player plana, Me change in the ptano’s sppesrames” —no obstruction to the keyboard. TUR TEL-ELBCTRIC (200 Gth Avenee, Cor. Bist ‘Tol. Mad. Gq. 6848, HELP WANTED—FEMALE, i i =e, “ = STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. 9A.M.|Co., 408 Fulton st., Bkiyn. ladies wanted. SALESLADIES—Extra sales, ph; once to manager W. T. Grant men entered the office. One of them | © ~~ had @ big revolver, which he pushed under my nose and commanded me to hold up my hands. “I obeyed, but I backed up to the safe, slammed the door and turned the combination. The men were wild, they were, and told me to open the safe or they would kill me, But I leaped on the man with the revolver and we fought all over the place, we did, and the next I knew was when you came in. I would have died be- fore I would have given up your money, I would.” Mr. Altman found this unsigned note, written on office paper un the office typewriter: #0 easy as he look ———— FINDS HUSBAND A SUICIDE. do 2 nous a ? attack, Mr. Ernest, Mr. Hoff-|ajbert Museum, the Ci ‘acid of rapes and lemon juice, combined and Mr. Dusen i im vain |tecten oe ae with lithis, and has been used for genera- ui tions to elean and stimulate clogged ki also to neutralize the acids in so it no longer is a source of irri- ie ¥ , thus ending bladder weakness. t with Salts ie i i not ine rted n- | flected again to: jon of jumping | a number of que out. expecially urging The pullding employee finally tele tho #1 or the police. appear- | suc! bee Of th bluecoatn only added to the the Charterhouse were those affected. When the Paul's Cathedral, the|!am J. Kinsley became inv tables attached to Buckingham | the three men menacingly. Y n{ i odds against him, backed out of the| A ft resentment tn connection | courtroom. ‘The at. | Brady gn iffragette outrages was re-| tracted the crowd and se 4 screamed in terror. hleimer sought and tried to make complaint against Yarey for defamation of character, “am May | but the sheriff refused to accept it, nor referring the matter. to the court, reconvened no trace of remained. Sheriff Wright the ‘of next Sunday's World, @ many other cleverly among then bein remarks by Island's “Kissing described in y, heirs am he money on hiroadway, ne egies! ‘doe, Vickery Boubrette, me | er feel ady: MUU SMtltions,” Mastera of oe ae y ult v Wite Ie Awak: Bi Life, had shot and killed himeelf. Hi “You got some kid bere. He ain’ by Shot That Mrs, Otto Weyh of No. 348 New York avenue, Jersey City, was awakened this morning by @ pistol shot to find that) her husband, lying in bed beside her, t Suggestion for rhureday A crvet EN Mis 29c been employed for some yeara by the F You Only Knew How Extremely ‘“F We Are in the Selection of the itary Soda, you woul lize wi ls 00. DIFFERENT, so exceptionally good, and 00 jucts Used in Loft hy LOFT. cuocor eee! for Friday WERT G hy