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1) LOST NEWARK GIRL | GES TO HOSPITAL Annie Nussbaum Hazily Re- calls Being Held by Old Woman and Man GREW PAINT IN STREPT Clothing Changed, Torn and Unkempt, She Is Found Wandering at Ferry. ‘The experiences of Annie Naue- haw, a5 related by her when she Fegeined consciousness at the & BR. | mith Infirmary Hospital at New Brighton, Baten Iviand, should fur- Bish, eventually, sufficient material | for one of thone “Agonies of Angeli flime which + ih wimuitaneourly and interminably in the picture houses and the newapap Al present there | ere gape in the story which th heroine hawn't filled in, but doubtiess details are forthooming According to the jaid out, Annie left her home, No. Grove Street, Irvington, N. J, last] Saturday morning and proceeded to Borgen's shoe factory on Canal Street, | Newark, where she was employed Her costume then consisted of a white Panama hat, a light blue dress, tan | shoes and tan stockings, This is an important point in the story. Bhe Worked until 1 o'clock, then drew) her $6 pay envelope, and left the fac- tory in the company of two girl) friends, from whom she separated! Presently to wait for the Irvington | Btreot car, The next time she was noticed was late yesterday afternoon in the ferry house at St. George, Staten Island, whore detectives found her in @ state of collapse akin to that produced by drugs. She hadn't eaten for twenty- four hours, she had no money, her shoes and stockings were found to @ontain seashore sand and her cos- tume had undergone a complete ohange, underwear included. She now wore a cheap new black velvet hat with motal buckles, a dark blue suit, black silk stockings and black shoes. At the Staten Island Detective Bureau she was unable to talk, but later at the infirmary sire sald she had been standing at Broad and Market Streets in Nowark, Saturday afternoon, looking at a milliner’s window, when suddenly “everything went black.” The next thing she was conscious of, she said, was a gas jet glimmering over the bed on which sho was lying in a eheap room in New York, An old woman, ugly and evil looking, was smiling at her, and there was a young, rather good-looking man in the room. She asked them for food, she says, and the man tried to force whis- key on her. She lapsed {nto uncon- sciousness again, still fighting off the Mask. When she awoke yesterday morning, she says the young man was alone in the room with her. He tied a white flannel pax over her eyes, she asserts, and her outdeors to @ taxicab, After a long ride she claims the taxi stopped and she was put out near a ferry slip which the young man age sured her was the way back to New Jersey. She took the ferry and found herself at St. George. That Is her story and she stuck to it this morn- ing when she awoke apparently nono the worse of her experience, There will have to be a few ro- takes, however, before the film vrill run smoothly For instance, when ghe left home Saturday morning she told her father, Louls Nausbaum, that she would not come home from work, but would go straignt down to Brigh- ton Beach with a young man who works in a Newark drug store. This scenario as now a young man denies that he had auy appointment with Miss Nausbaum, and his employer backs him up in his) ¢. assertion that he worked all Stturday afternoon and evening in the drug store, ‘According to her story of what hap- pened when “everything went black,” she did not go to the seashore; yat the detectives are positive that the sand in her shoes came from a beach some place. Again, she can give no definite description of the old woman and the young man with the waiskey flask, nor can she locate the place where they held her captive, Detoo- tive Ackerman has taken the saves and stockings to the shop where tiey ‘were sold to seo if the purchaser can be located. Detective Graham has gone to Newark. AMERICA’S GREATEST CIGARETTE Dlabers tthe a) oven Cupid Arrested for When Pretty Valla Hopkins Elo TEE EVE in In Racer With Aviator Thompson > Speed and More Speed Starte the Romance That Led tu Wedding BRIDE IS AN HEIRESS. | Saw Air Pilot Ply and Later Was Attracted by His Driving of Auto. Bpeaki« of epeed The firet th attracted the attention of Mine Valla Mopking to Frederick A. Thompson, the aviator, Was the awiftness with whieh he rose from the aviation field at Mineola and cuted loops and curlicucs against the menith, The incident that really warmed her heart toward him was his leaping into her powerful roadster and driv- KM sixty miles an hour across the at Mineola and “r an em! ykiment to the ald ef @ Japane aviator whe was (he to have fallen to injury or d The place chosen for the proporal was the same roadster, at a moment when it was «iiding rapidly up to Yonkers (the only slow spot in the story) And the first wedding present the young couple received after the cere- mony at Yonkers, Aug, 25, w oum-| mons to appear in court for speeding! on the North Hempstead Toad on Long Inland that same afternoon, Now that the secret of thatr elope- ment is out Mr, and Mrs, Thompson are about to depart on a high pow- ered honeymoon tn the yellow racer that has figured a)! through the ro- mance. The bridegroom is a captain In the ‘st Aviation Reserve under Col, Dy lano, 8. A. He has been living with his mother, Mra, Martha Thomp- son, widow of Lysander Thompson, the actor, at No. 10 Manhattan Av nue, Sho will know of the wedding when she sees it in the papert The bride is the’ daughter of John C, Hopkins of Baltimore, a cousin of |: . . . ; ; . ? ; ; ; : : P . ; . : | PFANG448- APDAADDR AAA GIRL NEAR STARVATION COLLAPSES ON BROADWAY the founder of Johns Hopkins Unt- versity. Her mother, who lives in Baltimore, alao will hear of the wed- ding through the public prints. The bridegroom—the bride being willing, and he thinks she will be— expects to make a flight over New York City some time before Sept. 15, on which date he leaves for Los An- geles, Cal, to take command of an aviation camp there, The bride plans to take up flying herself, since their romance got such a flying start and landed them in the midst of so much happiness, She hasn't been up in an aeroplane yet, but her husband has promised to take her, Mra, Thompson is a shy aort of person—twenty-six years old, the| wedding certificate aays—and not the type one would pick for a speed en- thuslast, but she drives her own scoot-buggy as fast as she's allowed to and was fascinated by the speed of the aeroplanes at Mineola. She met her husband two months ago at Mineola and the romance rum- ed ulong on first speed until that nt of the Japanese who swooped th so swiftly that every one thought he had met with an accident, When Thompson was so quick to} spring to the rescue, the romance was immediately “slipped into the high" and shot along with the muffler off from then on, When ‘Thompson called for her a week ago Wednesday and they start- ed up toward Yonkers, things wer progressing so speedily ‘that the pro- posal came as a natural consequence. Thompson got to 4 telephone tu Yon- kers and called up Robert Grosvenor, 0, 601 Madison Avenue, and asked him to act as best man, Ggosvenor has a high powered car o! + own, | and it was but # short time before he was at the Yonkers Marriage Li- » Iureau, John Geary, the clerk, in Alderman D. Ralph Dedrick and at high noon the ceremony was performed, The newlyweds have been dodging their friends and publicity ever since, stopping one night at the Belmont Hotel, the next at the Great North jern, and moving along thus until last | night when they took rooms at No. | 171 West Seventy-ninth Street, Yes- terday they w down to Forest Hil site for the home nt to look at a Young Woman Who Left Home in Binghamton Says She Had Not Eaten Since Saturday. Exhausted and starving, Jane Hur- ban, eighteen years old, who sald shn lived in Binghamton, N. ¥., and taat she had left home two months ago because of ill treatment by her father, was taken to Bellevue Hospital tc day. She collapned on the sidewalk in front of No, 448 Broadway, Her condition was such that even when she reached the hospital she was unable to give a clear account of herself, but she made it known that she had eaten nothing since Saturday night, when she was dis charged from work in a Vesey Street lunch room, Such of her story as she could tell was that she left her home, No. 18 1-2 Phelps Street, Binghamton, on July 1 to get away from intolerable conditions, She had $15 and went to Woodlawn, L. I, she sald, al- though she could give no reason for doing #0, She remained there until Aug. 22 and came to New York to get employment as an apprenttce igarmaker, This failing, sho took the work in the lunch room. “I am afraid of New York and T to go home, I am sorry I ever she said to-day, “After L lost my job on Saturday night I went to @ rooming house and stayed over night. Sunday night and last night I alept in one of the park: ——>—— EVERYBODY RAN BUT JOE; HE JUST PUT FIRE OUT Pitchpot Overturned Factory «nd Instant Panic, in here Broom Was ‘The men and women who work in Charles Plunkett's whisk broom fac- tory at No, 205 Duane Street are tell- they plan to build there. Thompson was a chum of Linooln Beachey and just prior to the death of the latter they had plann “repertoire” of flights over New Y Thompson attracted attention in tember, 1913, when he gave a demon- stration of bomb di ing while fly- ing upside down. The demonstration ended when he fell nearly 2,000 feet and was seriously, though not perma- nently injured. pL A DOG DOCTOR'S SYSTEM, A New Yorker veterinary tells of his system of handling the pet animals tn- trusted to his care by rich women, “When,” ‘says he, “I receive an over- fed dog I consign him to a disused brick oven with a crust of bread, an onion }and an old shoe, When the dog begins to knaw the bread the anxious talatress te informed 1 her darling t# ‘doing ing to-day how Joe put the fire out, |The Plunkett factory occupies three floors and ts filled with inflammable materials alongside a heater which melts boiling pitch used in actting the brooms, Twenty employees were at work at 8 A.M the overturned, flames leaped to the ceil- ing and there was a wild rush to the street, Joe Kopler, a lad of seventeen, did not flee, He ran to the rack where the fire buckets were and threw pails when of water over the blaze, He had it out in a half minute Where's the fir asked Chict Walsh after the two alarms, "Oh, Joe put it out,” all anawered in chorus, nicely. When the canine begins opera Hens on the ont a wee te ent at the | Gets Nineteen ¥ for bhery. animal ts ‘decidedly better.’ When the! Nineteen years a alx in dog tackles the shoe my lady t» grati- fied to hear that her precious’ pot is | Sing Sing was the sentenc 1posed ‘ready to be removed,’ " torday upon Joseph Buransky by Jude oo Mulqueen in General al for Playing With Matohes Fy vietion of highway robbery He Blanche Selesina, four and a half/served three years for a similar crime, years old, played with matches to-day | Baransky, who lived at No, 42 Division and was burned to death while ne in Street was convicted of « a Kus her parente’ home, at Union and Broad sian immigrant to a room on July 13 Bteeeia eh veer a a r ae wekenee, of setting him $ aw e e an it agt in | an the cy im Up an time to ave the child. ‘tecking $20 from him boiling pitehpot | PERE EL ELLOS ELLA EA DDO ODED EEG ELED GD CEEEEDERLEDED oe | Cee eee ee oreo ee oY PAG eae SUBWAY JOBS ON SALE AT $5 PER; YOUTH IS TRAPPED AS SWINDLER Money Paid But Work Is Not Forthcoming; Victim Aids Police. Leeoood Aided by Supt. A. L. Merritt of the subway, Detectives Scott and O'Con- nor trapped Robert Friedman, twenty- four years old, of No, 911 Southern Boulevard, in a flat at No, 636 West One Hundred and Thirteenth Street yesterday afternoon, He is charged with swindling men who advertised for positions in The World and other newspapers by representing himself as confidential agont of Supt. Merritt and able to put them on the Inter- borough payroll. The detectives to-day waid Fried- man d confessed. He is on parol from Elmira Reformatory, where he was sent for burglary. The specific complaint is made by Roland Schwartz, an ‘lectrician of No, 117 West One Hundred and Sev enteenth Street, who advertised for a situation Aug. 21, Friedman, calling himself Schneider, called on him, he swears, and said he could put Schwartz on as @ motorman, He was told to come the next day to the dott Haven station and be Intre luced to Mr. Merritt, Schwartz said he saw Friedman there, coatless and batless and with @ pencil over : 16 ear, “sorry,” sald Friedman, according to Schwartz, “but Mr. Merritt has been called away, However, you've wot the job, He said you could have it, But you'll need @ uniform that will cost $5, You can elther go up- stairs and give it to the cashier or turn it over to me,” Schwarts says he paid Friedm who went up the station stairs, say- ing he would return with a receipt Ho didn't come bags, ‘he next day Supt, Merritt told bim he bad been awindled Louis Lasky of No, 636 West One Hundred and Thirteenth Strect asked Supt, Merritt if, before an electrician could obtain employ with the cor. poration, he had to purchase $5 worth of tovis, Mr, Merritt learn ) appointment with iky's tat, The detectives went and arrested the Elmira grad- uate, Magistrate Nolan in Night Court i Fried: on @ charge sin $300 bull for triat f petty larceny, COLD SPELL IS WIDESPREAD, All Atlantic Const, Shivers the Rale Way From tem WASHINGTON, Aug. 31.—Summer'a frigid spell was spread to-day o the Northern part of the country from the Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic cr Southward well into the ult States, Warmer weat is in prow pect to-morro: Lowest tempera- tures: or Pree d in August were report Bureau, gen- erally from the Ohio Valley, Indiana, | rola, Hastern Missourt and Texa ht ‘frosts occurred during — th night In portions of Michigan, Indiana and Ilinots. In the Fas West high temperature, continued, | add @ 10 per a nee —o—- Brooklyn Mother Gets Shock When She Goes to Mahopac to Identify Missing Girl Tee bey oe Maboper, NY * whe wande tate lant ole found themerives made much (fealed as cheriehed @ ont citimene of the © good te toa learned the reeson £ hompitaiity They did « Mire Adele Mievens arrived from Brvoklyn om (he muon train that one f them War supposed to be Afieon year-old Viola Bievens, who left ber home at No #69 Hancork Street Brooklyn, to go on @ bike tu Arisone studying nature with sixteen-year old Martin Goodman of No. Ti Kast orn Parkway, Brookiys Principal Cullom of the Mahopac Migh Behool, Justi the Peace Ay ¥. Ganong and Constable Beheliner had the two scouts in charge by turn from the moment they were pointed out on the streets ax the pair for whom Mra. Stevens had offered a $600 reward, All three sent messages to Mre. Btevens telling ber te to Ma hopae at once nh the mean time the youngsters were only asked “if they would mind | waiting until somebody who was com ing to nee them arrived on a train No embarrassing inquiries aa to their identity or their nex were put to them. Mra. Blevens wan taken to view the two at the constable’s home on her arrival. She almost collapsed with disappointment at not finding her daughter. The boys were respectfully silent until she left and then burst Into whoops of glee. Meanwhile the most promising in- dication as to the direction of the jour- ney of the sclentific eloping children is the postal sent from Phillipsburg, N. J, Aug. 30, to a chum of Goodman in Brooklyn signed “Martin” and ap- parently in Goodman's writing, say- ing they were stealing rides on freight trains, begging meals from farmers, intended to cross into Pennaylvania at once and would write further regard- ing “their honeymoon.” Though young Goodman flourished an $1,800 check before the Stevens family @ week ago, saying It was hin fee for the discovery of « chemical dye in his laboratory, the best info: mation of hig family and friends is that he had but $8 when he atarted on his romantic journey of research. The Goodman family never heard of the big check, — DROWNED IN VAIN EFFORT TO SAVE HIS COMPANION Son of Theodore H. Friend, New York Lawyer, Meets Death at Hunter Lake, Word was received here to-day of the death by drowning at Hunter Lake, near Middletown, N. Y., of Les- lie A. Friend, son of Theodore B Friend of No. 1807 Mount Hope Ave. nue, the Bronx, @ lawyer. He lost hin life in an unsuccessful effort to save the life of a companion, Paul L. Han- mer of Middletown, ‘The two, in spite of warnings that the water of the lake was unusually cold, went in bathing at dusk from the Friend bungalow, which Leslie Friend had been occupying all suim- mer, Hanmer was taken with a cramp and when Friend reached him, dragged him down by his struggies. Young Friend was preparing to en- ter Columbia Law School this fall. Hanmer was the son of Health Officer J. T. Hanmer of Middletown and was graduated last June from St. Law- rence University, Both bodies were recovered, _—__ WOMAN GIVES $10,000 TO AEROPLANE FUND $7,500 Flying Boat Also Contrib- uted to Organization Develop- ing National Air Corps, The Aero Club of America, No. 297 Madison Avenue, announced to-day the receipt of a check for $10,000 from 4 prominent woman and a $7,600 fly ing boat from a sportaman as con tributions for the Nation's aeroplane fund instituted by the club for the purpose of developing aviation corps fer tho militia of the various States The money im to be used for the purchase of an aeroplane, the train- ing for two officers and two me chantes and the renting of hangara, 4&c., In connection with the Aviation Corps of the National Guard of New York, 501, Two courses of instru fl boats and tion, valued at $16,- 0, have also been provided, Emer- son McMillin, Wall Street banker, will ent, bonus to all pub scriptions up to $500,000. a nd tn Want Riv y of @ man about fifty-five ae Body Ko be years old was found off Jefferson Street to-day, Im hin pockets were two letters addres to Robert K Gordon urd Kk, City Home, Black= well's tai An Was b foet 6, welghod pounds, had gray hair @nd mustache, There Was a scar near He wore @ bluck suit of blue outing sbirt and socks, the left eye, ING WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 31, 1915. amt See Spreckels Will Imitate Ex- Wife He Obtains License to Take a New Bride, Daughter of Ranchman. SAN FRANCISCO, Aum. 31.—J Spreckels jr, son of the California capt taliat, took out @ license here to-day to wed Mine Bid) Wirt of Garden City, Kan, Spreckels's former wife was married in Honolulu inst week to Frank W. Wakefeld of this city imm diately after ber divorce from Spreckels Spreckels ts (thirty-three years old and Miss Wirt twenty-two. She ~ here recently from New York. Wirt ts the daughter of the late ‘ard L. Wirt, who was a ranchman and cattle owner of Kansas City, She was in New York for several months this winter studying music. On Feb. 6 she admitted she was e waged to Sgreckols, although his wife’ divorce had not then been made final, —— BUNDLE HE KICKED CONTAINED DYNAMITE Labpan Found Two Sticks of Ex- plosives at Office Door When He Went to Open Up. When James Labpan entered the dim hallway on tho second floor of No, 682 Sixth Avenue this morning to open up the Herald Square Bi ployment Agency for the day he no- ticed a crumpled Gr nowspaper on the floor just outside the door, He Kicked the crumpled paper amide, toward the open bannisters of tho stairway, Tho paper unfolded and two odd-! looking cylindrical objects rolled slowly toward the banniaters, Labpan picked them up. A moment later, in the full ght of the omce, he discov- ered that euch of nis hands held a large stick of dynamite, Carrying the explosive and shaking with fear he made bis way gingerly down the stairs and over to where Patrolman Downey Was on post. Downey relieved him of them and took them to the West Thirtieth street Station, The dynamite w marked with a red label and bore the name of the Keystone National Powder Company of mnsylvania The word "Dunger” appeared in large letters on each atick, and they were | marked "No, 11," Labpan cannot under: tand why the dynamite was placed at his door, One theory advanced is that some one stole the explosive for the new wuddenly to hide from the excavations subways and was the stuff before posing of it ‘This theory was dlaproved by an Investigation mado by an Evening World reporter who learned that the dynamite used by the contractors in the vicinity Ix manufactured by the Du Pont Company po ee FORCED TO ROB, SAYS BOY. ph Kolin, fourteen years old, diy e total amount of subseriptions | appeared from the home of his mother, Mra, Mary Rella, at No, 320 Bast Sev entysfirat Street, Aug, 15, At the same time @ gold watch und other jewelry, hh $68, wore wh Detoottve r found the boy last night with Robert Finkenauer, twenty-two years old, of » 404 Bast Seventy-fArat Street Hefore Magistrate Breen In Yorkville Court today the boy confemied having obbed his mother. He sald Finkenauer had pointed a revolver at hin and threatened to Kill him if he did not tak the valuables, Finkenauer gave hima dollar for the lot, he sald told him thy price of & confession Would be death Joseph was sent to the Children's Court as a juvenile delinquent, Finken Javier waived examination and was held for Special Sessions in $1,000. ball Vianecee Killed, Chas, O. Craw Lima ly with the De trott club of the Amerivan League, and his flances, Miss Blva Leonard, of this clty, were instantly killed here to-day when a train on the Lake Shore Rail- road struck # bugsy in which they were \ ridlog. o'clock, when the W Hundreds Pursue Man Through Brooklyn Streets After Accident Aficr bin wagon hed ron over eal erriously injured four-year-ol Araghe Francont \o from! of the chid’s tom a! No $62 Navy treet, Rrookipm, to- doy, Hater Ravepres. « driver, Gee came Cightoned at (he uproar arouped | by the aevident, pred op hie heres and sought to escape, He was pare ued by & crowd of men and Sore some of whom bad police whistles, which they biew continuously. ‘Through Navy Mreet to De Kale Avenue, to Fulton Street, to Boag ‘Street raced Bquepres, whipping Bie horse, with # growing crowd behind, | Al Livingston and Mond Streets, Pax |troiman Michael Murphy joined the chase and fired two pistol shots at the fleeing driver. The bullets missed | their mark, but Murphy cought que. } Atlantic Avenue, The driver was arraigned in Avenue Police Court and tater charged, Young Franconi is ia jiyn Hospital with beth shoul blades fractured and internal in, besides, Bquepres asserts that the | litle fellow ran backward between the horse and the front wheels, He tried to get away, he sald, because he was afraid of being roughly han« died. MISS SIBI WIRT. — VICTIM OF AUTO FEARS BLOOD WILL SOIL DRESSES Man Run Down Protests Against Trip to Hospital in Car With Young Women. Though injured ao badly that ond operation was performed morning in an effort to save his Estley Rothachild of No, way, when run down by bile on the Boston Post Hight, protested against to the hospital in the machine struck him for fear the blood his wounds would stain the dresses of two young women in the car, “It was just like him,” sobbed hie mother to-day, while awaiting sews from hin bedsid ASHFULNESS MADE YONKERS GIRL ELOPE, HER FAMILY BELIEVES Miss Ella Lowa, Missing Since Saturday, Supposed to Have Married Secretly. Mins Ella Lowa, twenty-one years old, disappeared last Saturday afte: noon from the home of her fathe: William Lowa, No, 44 Caroline Ave- nue, Yonkers, and members of the family belleve she was secretly mar- ried to Paul Bartmer, an automobile dealer, Tho ascribe the supposed slopement to the girl's dislike of There was no objection ite the injured man's protests, Clayton Haviland, a bookkeeper in the White Plains National Bank, whowas Lowa 1s dark, of medium | 4tiving the car that hit Rothschild, height, with large brown eyes and a | ‘sisted on taking bim to the Mew graceful figure. She is an excellent | Rochelle Hospital. The Misses Mary swimmer, golfer and tennis player.| Gedney and Hazel Forschner of When the Yonkers lodge of Mika| Berth Street, Mamaroneck, Haviland’s offered « $300 diamond ring last year | cuests, made Rothschild as comfort- to th t popular woman | ablé as possible during the trip. she. won 46 by & liom ieee The victim of the accident 1s com= . vy. nected with the L. H. Rothschild Miss Lowa met young Bartmer at! Company, tailors, at No. 1536 Broad White Plains, where she was xt way. Hin condition being still critt- boarding school, four years ago. The| cal, Haviland is paroled in the ous- two were instantly attracted to| tody of the Coroner peel ate AEE EE in each other, He was in the automo- 5 vane Gaal, bile business there, but he gave 't (From the Buffalo. Expres.) up to go to Yonkers and become a| “My but Jimson is sardaatic ! partner in her father's automobile] “Well, it's a farmily trait, He's pe lated to the uy who called a Pullman agency, The firm prospered, Bartmor | (irl, ‘oom was taken into the Lowa home to live, The young mon had @ chance to open a selling agency in Utica two years ago, and he left Yonkers with regret, For a while he and Mise Lowa exchanged letters, but of late, the girl's mother nays, she has not seen anything from him, The family took » extended trip through the White Mountains a fortnight ago, and Mra, Lowa thinks her daughter may have Hartmer thon, for they know he hax a cottage there. Mins Lowa left home after dinner last Saturday, saying she was going to seo some friends in South Yonkers, Nothing was heard from her until 6.30 ern Union called up Mrs. Lowa and read to her this Florence Walton mesnage “Have just been married. Return cing in ** hf to New York next week. ELLA.” dancing in “Hands Ua xuess Ella and Paul were too | hele ® now 76 bashful to have a formal wedding,” London Feather Hat suld Mra, Lowa to an Evening World | reporter to-day, “We expect them | i woon and they will get a warm welcome.” —_——— | FIND “DEAD” WOMAN SAFE. | Attorney, ¢ nd Detectives. | A trifling cut on a woman's chest, for | which whe was taken to the Tombs Pos | Hee ton a charge of attempted mul- | elde, sufficed to-day to t In motion all the m nery of the District Attorney's omic ice, the First Cov ATERNI TY Branch De! live Bureau and the am- scientifically constructed bulance service of the Volunteer Hoe- | Se teuy free, meee pital | The woman was Mra, Anna Garbo- | linak!. Her huaband dashed Into the Oak Street police station with the announce- ment that she was dead, with a wound in her breast, The police ran to No, 336 Pearl Street and found the woman quite well save for one serateh, It was sald that Mra, Garbotinskt and the other tenants of the tenement house hud been at odds for a long time and thet some of them stamped part of ceiling down on her last night a wide variety of styles, from the to. the “Most elaborate ‘male «Lane Bryant ii."gt The Specialty Howe of National Reputation, BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackage provesit, 25c at all druggists, j World Bullding, wil for thirty days. Advertisements if The World's Advertia telephoned. Cal! 4000 Beekman, BrookiyH Office, 4100 Main,