Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
B00 IN JEWELS FURHYPNOTIC MAN fs Woman She Robbed to “Be Merciful and Then Swoons in Courtrom. ) ES WORKED A SPELL. g Wife Declares Alleged Owner Met Here Bade ‘weird tale of hypnotiom, the tura- pot an imaginative gold mine, the ‘Of $8,000 in gems and the wreck- @f @ young couple life was un- 2 im the West Side Court to-day two women faced each other Magistrate House. Mrs. Theodore Eggert, wife of B.plambing contractor of Elmira, was with having gone to the fem of Mra. Bessie Young, owner of ‘Motel at Keuka, Steuben County, > Btate, and stolen $8,000 worth of! rings, necklaces, sunbursts, fevelliers and watches. The woman be faced her as accuser was Mre. Young herselt. _As Mrs. Young approached the rail Mesert, petite and pretty, turned m , Then she Painted. Ac hor side sat her husband. It was explained to the court by ives McGann and Van Twis- turned toward a chair and io 4 in this city, that Mrs, Young the prisoners held until Tues- r morning, when they will be taken to arasben Cow M Egse' the $8,000 worth her meeting with thi claims wrecked come to town on a shop- ran across this young accidentally. He had the arkable eyes and tal incingly than any buman repeated ‘and told me to get It for him. oy serge that I bad a good loving hi ind—everything, I went home to Elmira, my and I began a tour of the I sald nothing to experience in New commented on my reached Mrs, me, took determined to go to ‘3 room, while she was else- talking to my husband.” she turned What the fh, | AW TOs THE © COUNTRY © BOY THA © EWO -OF e THE © WOMAN HE LOVE INSANEFOR YEARS AND NHS CARE Arrested for Holding Her Pris- oner and She Begs to be Taken to Him. Hopelessly insane, Kate Fisher tn Bellevue Hospital begged to-day to be taken hack to the home which Thomas Scott, a dapper olderly rent collector of Brooklyn, had made for her sin a tenement at No, 409 West Twenty- fourth street. The old man, worn with| One night about eigh NING WORLD, End of Vacation ‘Means WORLDee TOcHe Luchy + @ikxem RHE © DEONININGCOPe LIFE se" cost of caring for an insane woman whom I loved and would have mar- ried had she been sane. She is healthy in everything but her mind. If the stan found her unclothed ft waa ause the day was hot and be- cause she is insane, I kept her sup- plied with plenty of clothes and fed her. She has refused to leave her bed for several years. “I first met her in 1895. She was Hving In those same rooma in Twen- ty-fourth street. She was married to a man named Miller, with whom she had eacaped from an insane asylum at Sayville. Of this I knew nothing at the time. I called tl once in a while and then, realizing I was falling in love with Miller's wife, ferent Materiale > had left her, she said. I took her to her rooms, bought fuel and pro- visions for her agd in the end went there to live beeause she told me she thought of becoming housekeeper of a Greek boarding house. SHE LIVED IN DREAD OF IN- SANE ASYLUM. “We went out together in the aven- ing. I did not I!ke to have her go out alone because she had queer 4° it yen ago she the experience of the twenty years| Went out alone and was gone for during which he had seen the mind of the woman he loved «o to pieces, (s in Yorkville Court prison, held on the charge that he kept an insane person In custody without prope. au- thority. He was arrested last night. One of the neighbors whose imagi- nation was worked upon by the mys- tery of the woman, who had not been out of her room for ten yearn, brought about the separation of the atrange pair by writing an anony- mous letter to Police Commissioner Woods telling him that Scott, who was known in the house as “Miller,” was secretly keeping a girl a prisoner against her will, and in euch close confinement that all that was known of her was her cries and yells for help. PRISONER HAS A WOEFUL STORY TO TELL. Detectives Horton, Hickson and Cantwell went to the house, and re- ceiving no answer to their knock, broke down the door, They found the woman, unclothed, lying on a bed in @ room with the windows boarded. She fought them and. the ambulance surgeon they called to care for her, Though her hair was matted .and her nails grown long, she was strong and there were traces ot her beauty left. The police did not find Scott until last night. “I have done nothing wrong,” Scott eaid to an Evening Word orter today, "I have saved the State the _ Substitutes «- Imitations ane” HORLICK'S MALTED MILK minis bast Maited We do not make “milk Skim Milk, Condensed | But the Original-Genuine pach dee aia HORLICK’S MALTED MILK BATTERY DAN WILL LEAD. pure, full-creem milk Made from and the extract of select malted reduced to ‘water. Beet food col all ages. twenty-four hours. She came in ragged and bruised, and almost wild, She has never told me what happened to her, but she would never go out again and sho could not bear day- Night. She would allow no one in the} ¢ house except Mrs. Prescott, who was| once janitress there. She turned her| @ mother and sisters away from the door. She had a horror of being} « taken away from me to an asylum She insisted on my locking a pad. lock on the outside of the door whe T left her. Since she took to bed IT have done the cooking and havo fed her morning and night. “Of course T never talked about her! ¢ and the neighbors made up atorles to fit the and that led to my being here and her being In the one place her sou! atho Her mother came to see me early] ‘ this week. She was glad to have Nellie, Alice, as T called her, tn m: ca: I took Miller's nam CAUSE {t saved a lot of explanations, not. because I felt I was doing anything wrong. I have a mail addrass at N 180 Montague street, Brooklyn, at the offices of the lawyers who have charge of the estates for which T collect rents. I was never imarried, jand It seems to me I hi nearly a right to do wt done. Mra. Prescott, the former janitress, who {8 now at No, 409 West Twenty- fifth street, corroborated Scott's story Yn every particular. She said that “Mra, Miller” used to allow her to comb her “beautiful hair’ sometimes, but at other times she refused to | her into the flat. The mother, Mra, Phoebe Fisher, of No. 49 Columbla avenue, Winfield visited Bellevue to-day. She sald she been willing that Scott should for her daughter as ahe seemed happy with him. She sald her daugh- ter was forty years old. . —_ GIRL AND MAN ARRESTED. PATERSON, N. J., Sept. 5. jan Van Dusen of No. 8% Ward atreet, Richmond Hill, No. 3607 A\ as they Ke @re under arrest here o havin tt aaked t an i made at of tl the young woman, who had ing her since she disappeared from home | last Sunday, | gThe police say tho young woman told them that she met Boos by appoint. | ment on Sunday at Eighth ue and | Thirteenth atrect, Brookly ‘couple of ai to ere. They had not been mar- eo Balk M BABS PFLE-OOPQOD IS FHIDG-D5-9-9G-9OSE4-OTFTHELISODOT DIESE SDSS: Wal 3 By Mile. Ledewick. © DESCRIPTION. Aas the fall days approach we all feel the need of a not too weighty frock of more sombre colors, If rightly planned this frack can be worn under a heavy coat on many occasions through the winter, boll @ good variation of the popular sul In the design I am showing to-day leeves and wash of matching material supply the variation, cre- ating quite a now impression. The manner in which the : Young Battery Dan will lead the First | Assembly District to Wi Point, to-morrow, Young Dan his committees who, have been overtime to make this outin trreoted inthe baseball he ts e . auite a Prise fo ners. Harrison, the pres! a, 0 dalignied at the ry lub, a2 is every mem! a wi Caffrey, with one loop and end ia prettily distinctive also, Many attractive new colors are be- ing shown this fal) in as many beau- TeeTHe + BUSINESS © DacKe TOe THE e GRiVD Making Dresses at Home From Original Designs What Can Be Done With Same Design Made of Dif- and Trimmings. OOS: » Chairman of the Committee on Mor- $ uu | with great interest to see whether the 98099 OGOES HIEEIGOPIGIETODY tiful new materials, some of which can only be criticised for their welghtiness. One very pretty color which I predict may become popular y dark, rich red, My design at the right would develop charmingly this color of gabardine with black satin sleeves and sash. The trimming piece on the bodice Is severely finished in a hem fashion, corresponding with the tunic, whic’ is finished likewise. A flaring collar of white lingerie closes up at the neck a little higher than we have been used to, and a small bow of black satin makes a pretty trimming. Soutache braid applied in rows makes the frock at the left attmc- tive ‘The blouse trimming piece ts filled tn solid with it, and by mitreing the corners at each side a delightful effect is obtained. The sleeve cults ed solid with the bi j and ral rowa applied on ¢ skirt to a hem depth or more, com bine to gain an effect quite different | from | tl | ash of this dress is of the teri 1 have not given the j outline of thi \2 three plece: bask of the pattern ain skirt, which Is athered @ bit at the * PONGRESSMEN LIST ;| TOs DESSW@+ BUTTERTY 09 (MCRELY® THES SHPTINGSOF © SLENES* TORSTABC* H @RECONGUESTSee WOULD ARREST POLICE FOR ALLEGED FAILURE. TO ENFORCE DRY LAWS Violations Be Stopped in Chelsea District. “The excise law must be obeyed to the letter thin fall, or those responsi- ble for its enforcement will be prose- cuted,” sald William E. Murphy, law- yer, former sergeant of police and als of the Chelsea Neighborhood As- jummer home in Blue chel and Police Commissioner Wood: yesterday threatening to cause the ar. rest of Inspector Frank Morris and the precinct captains of the Third District unless excise violations cease | in that section of the city. “When I return to the city from va- cation next Wednesday,” said M Murphy, “I am going out on tours of | inspection to see that the selling of ‘ Mquor between 1 A. M. and 6 A. M. is | stopped. “When Theodore Bingham was Po- lice Commissioner I was @ sergeant in, charge of the legal bureau of the de. | partment. Arthur Woods, then Fourth | Deputy, suggested that we get afte saloons on the Bowery which we: \ violating the excise law and we cleaned them up. | “I have always been interested in the vacive law and believe it should | be enforced to the letter. During May- or Gaynor’s administration the pol- icy regarding excise mattera was it liberal one, and I have watched | present administration would take a | different view. I believe conditions are the same as they were under Gay nor, and I propose to edy them, —_————— WAR TAX ARTICLES 10 BRING $100,000,000 Hard and Soft Drinks, Gum} and Amusement Tickets Among Those Considered. WASHINGTON, Sep! ‘Spurred! by President Wilson's appeal for | emergency lui » Howe Wa and Means Cowmitteemen toed worked on plat spectal Interna) revenue ill $10,009,000 to | meet the loss in customs, receipts | | caused by the war, Lists of articles) | suggested for the special tax levy} were considered by the committee- en, and as soon as they complete thelr programme it will be submitted to the Treasury Department. ‘The amount of money to be pro- duced on each article apd the taxation rate will be fixed; then the bill will be introduced in the House for im- medi action, Artie! nue producer’ tie wines, whiskey, ¢ gum, proprietary artic! playing cards, railroad and amuge- | ment tickets and gasoline. to valve » special reve- beer, domes- Englew North Nyack Fl does not stop | ‘causing lagher | depot there mornin, by ti This train SUICIDE ON FIRE-ESCAPE. Tabe From Jet The body of Charles A. Smith, thirty- six years old and unmarried, was found on the second floor rear fire-escape just outside his bedroom window, at East One Hundred and Etghth street, early to-day. In his mouth was a rub: ber tube, the other end of which was attached to a side wall gas jet inside the room. The window through which the tube pasted was drawn down so that there was Just enough space for the ube. . t The body was found by Mra. Reichel, who lives In the Fieesnt ak joining that. of James H. Smith, a brother of Charles Smith, with whom the man lived. H. Bmith said his brother had been in ill health and out of employ- ment for several months. It was sup- posed he went out on the fi after turning on the gas eo that fumes would not endanger his broth family. Sues Steeplech: for $10,000, Caroline Roettger yesterday sued Steeplechase Park Company, the 81 echase Company, the Tih mu 20 iu breeze so ye Jumped to an scigeartied form. The result was physical and nervous shock, she says. plat: tajury and Ointment Will help you when all else fails. Unsightly complexions are often a bar to social advancement and sinéss success. Start life with aclear skin and good hair. Samples Free by Mail Cutioura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the ‘World. Liberal eampie of each malied free, with 33-9 Pook. Address “Cutieurs,” Dept. Pete The Standard» Re the safest, most reliable and most popular—for the common ailments of stomach, liver and bowels, is always 'BEECHAMS PILLS ‘The Largest Sale af Any Medicine in the Wortd ’ Lasor Day, Sept. 7th Lake Hopatcong, 81.00 Ly, W. 234 St. 8.50; Liberty St, =. Jackson Ave., Jersey City, 9.17 a, Mauch Chunk, 81.50 }. 6.50; Liberty St. 8.30 a.m, jersey City. 8.47 am, wa NEW JERSEY CERTRAL For Sunday World Readers In the Editorial Section William Sulzer’s Claim That He Was a Pro- gressive Long Before Any of the Leaders of the Bull Moose Had The Relation of the Pol ring Nations to the Progress. In the Magazine Won by a Champion. A Romance of Life Savers, How It Feels to Be Forcibly Fed, by Djune Chappell Burns, Help Wanted; No Woman Need ! \pply. An Ex- om) press That Employs Only Men and Boys. A Two-Page Qolor Map of the Russo-Austro-Ger- manic Theatres of War. Seen the Light. lish People of Three War- Great Struggle Now in and Story Section { Another Story of “Cleek of Scotland Yard.” Confessions of a Bank Rob- ber. No. VI of the Series, ' Beads, Such as Moderns Wear, Adorned Prehis- toric Belles, Great Moments in Base- ball, by Bozeman Bulger. About Schaffer, the Whole Show in Himself. In the Metropolitan Section Burr McIntosh on Stage Southern Colonels. The National Dancing Masters Say We Are Tangoing Gracefully Into a Romantic Age. Jokers Among the Boiler Makers. Bumping the Grand Bump on Fifth Avenue. Great Excitement Over THE FUNNY SIDE—All Iss Vell? the Bagpipe Contest. Yes? No! By Rudolph Dirks, Originator of the Katzen- jammer Kids. Many Treats for the Lovers of Good Reading