The evening world. Newspaper, October 25, 1915, Page 4

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ee Ey ay MELLENS LETTER SHOW NEW HAVENS THE EVENING WORLD. 288i The New Washington Market Gaily Decorated _For the Opening That Took Place To- stone te Tee Gee! © hare hoe seee oeree ee seeeeeeene lee . Petting jum seough Bowmen ° ome on ht ie make up oe Sonne 0. Cieh, aetae ? get her bemping (he cee Bow! trary i tomery ot the Grand Centre! ; The Kew Pagiend cowde’ Peton whe ren emery Ob HF oor : ocean they bed aed they @antee tneeed Uke aivermem te Aentetemt fh: ; to send Celt Walle over another Sem Ainasam Gp Cece end cusubet 4 we The He ee — - ; \ wecouse to ae oe would be tor = the Witing piece ot GAN? af Sen ston — oo ol ter bette Mert | Siacking Tied About Neck of| melon 0.00 was te so SS igre, O60 for lewetry Gees a. City Officials Make vent a Former Railroad Head With | Younger Wamati May Prove ap ae om Po - ee | 2 the tn@icienee Piatabte Cne With Speech drawn as Witness to Get met ng| Fatal—Placed Under Arvest. | agi TSS iis Sia making and P Them Identified pnp, and Parade hens Mdentifie frereeerrcrrrrorro Stood i ompemhie® af the Ab 0601 Of gas in the hallway of an : - _ Ter — aa oe & 2 miles ot trent |aperionnat be a Weert >. go oo ; WA « « Melien, former ¥ . 4 fine 1 out of bumpene | Tw entio treet attracted the atten o S gPART IN HISTORY , New Hoven, ene allowed to New Ragland wee vie ele ltion of Miss ida Rappott ke uJ — ; t - stand for | opie seen deteed i tate bam ¥ before 11 o'clothk + Prepared—tionis Very | ii nd os wan a ove d oie traced it to am LAtthe, bet be Promeps, 3 reparéd to (sive bow ' . Digs amet » ond Uiteottve : Now Prepared to ¢ hood, ¢ J * Mary o : nine ? , sited Biaive D . rider over won enty oe yempe " vr for a Million of the Ci $ Wiliam Rechetetier and other ofa ee «eB Tapes cd Pranecs, ayer | oer re . ong % ome = ow | years 04, and wamarried | By making thie pint of old-time ov! inhabitants for rae) CHARLTON VERDICT Mise Rappolt opened ihe door, |AxTHP at home you wot yon oe Arty P Mussel, valuetion ” Which had been locked, and was al- _ -- oom with ready-made vel of the New Maven aysiom, was EXPECTED TO-WIGHT ren veracme wy the ruen of ar {Nite bat ras wil ale hare « mack mon | Tre wow Washington © reealied to identify @ quantity of Z he found Mrs. Cleary apes 6 couch, he P ey opened this morning with the pomp letters which B. f. Batts, James W fully dressed. She was dead, In am|thevet and chest colds in 84 houre—re- (084 aplendor of pamesn! becoming to Osborne and Vrank M. Bweeoker, eR | Pyponer Scored by Prosecutor—in- adjoining bedroom she came upon the daughter, She was lying unconscious 90 of Now Terk's eldest iwothations: rege onr ddl ceed inuates be Wed for Mone » bee for brenchitie, inex (80 cents’ worth d fil the its new dreee of Pee EEE EEeeEaas sone tree heroes Corte ee Pe RERSeEE OOS Produce os exhibita in evidence. upon the floor, A fox terrior was | bronchial asthma, hoarseness aad spar ‘The opening was just (he ewaken-| -- _ _ ee = ———- | There was am alr Of expectation Killed Wife to Get Jewels cleoping near her, apparently vi one poe ‘ 5 * ine of the old market io ie new - about the court today. In bis tes | harmed by the yas, and he woke up rom any drug store Pyro gl to include wholesale markets in con HAYTIANS FOUND U S timony at the last seanion, Friday,! COMO, Italy, Oct 25.—The tria: « | + O bebDimente, tn trol of the olty.” and rushed out, barking. bottle with plein . ‘ZEPPELINS KILLED Mr. Melien was telling the story of | Porter Chariton for the murder of Wy os _ bottle ‘The opening was marked by © par-| Hoard of Aldermen, introduced a» the New York and New England | verdict te expected to-night Police Station, and Capt. Burns and | good ste from the City Hall in which) t* father of the reconstructed 9 —-~ Kailway, the Haven’s only! ‘The Crown prosecutor, Signor Mel- Patrolman Marron hurried back to the | Pinex is a most valuable concentrated marched the members of the Marka-| "*t id that the work had been Ret : formidable land rival in Southern |itpi, delivered bis argument to the| qa Vii ee vu te Vine 1 bi | compound of genuine Norway pine ex Polke Market Committee; Mra Julian! P#US four years ago m he ao} lebel Leaders Had Told Them Bul- |New England. He had told bow, |jury this afternoon Signor Mellini | SY tine nad heen tied tightly about | act combined with col and other Heath; & committee of women from| BorowRh President had $42,000 put) lets Were All Blufl—Marines after making impalge |denied that Chariton was mentally! 1. Gaughter’s neck and knotted in ee py Arg the Housewives’ League and the fo-| #4 for the purpose, out of « saving 4 ‘ as general 1 wer in| irresponsible, even momentarily, atl rom, pr, MoCheancy waa called thy Giaty of Hxempt Firemen, City om-| (al yom of $n0n00 He had been MAYER nd, the New Haven had hired bit the time the ées8 wee committed from the New York Hospital and tho | appointment, dials, headed by Mayor Mitchel, rode! (i reo Suit ae | Meslntanee to Amerionn authority | a7 @ vice president (with no real work) The prosecutor denied Chariton had} ga uenter was hurried to the hospital, | ounces of Pines. e r . wae entitied to a full share of | in Hayth has all disappeared, acoord- to do) because “he bad be a guls-|hod provocation for killing bie wife,! viore 1: wae guid she would probably | thing else A ven to the Mayor was ce Groban Jing to ¥. C. Voight, untit recently al eet ance.” and insinuated he married her for her!" | A guarantees of abeolute gotlatection, ecrasion, for at it was Cumaladense of Public wore naipn | ber of the crew of the! = shin Witnesses of Bomlsardment, | ,,¥0 told how the New Rngiand hibit sevings and that he had appropriated! Capi, Burne said it seemed certain [this preperatic “in Th Pont Ca. F Used the same silverware that WAS] Polke also spoke A. tomer fy { COMME seul, and CM, Tenight, «pel , on the Sound, the two-mile railroad] her jewels after killing her. He con-| nat the stocking about the daugh. | {his preperatio used at the formal opening of the mar- a in the marine corpa, who arrived > m and docks of the New England Ter- cluded hix address with a demand for| ter's neck had been tied by herself,| . lowed Here on St. Paul, Deny Of- nd and that she had apparently tried ket « century ago. Washington Market teeme with to-day «) the steamship ¢ Naw ’ minal Company, had been bought and (tne ferest penalty provided by ond her n life and that of h Pure white dassied the cys and the! sociations of the early hisiory of New | M84 9% South Amorican and West! fioial Report of 56 Dead Put out of busless: alno how, through Italian law—tife imprisonment nother. The stocking had been looso- | | sieam of ailver reflected myriads of| York. 1t has been the clearing house Indies ports, , the friendly oMfces of the New York! Speaking in defense of Chari ly ond boo ppg hiro hy Cleary. waa 1 electric lights, Ice boxes, the like of] for business and politics, the meetin; American fo; o» were in comple $$$ Central the Hudson River outlet of the) A ney Catan maintained that | Soorenent store and the police ee | which have never been seen in any| piace of atatenmen ry balls Sl control of the tsiand when ve te Bio or ‘chvee hundred, inst ot New Haven (the New York andthe privoner wee an epileptic and) Ore, learn of any trouble that. | | market, arrested the attention and] vous for lovers, The present Car t| rg aNd pineal Pe . thern) had been closed to New/that he was totally irre e|might be responsible for her act. 1 i | certainly will make marketing a de-| Russia and the late King ed oi taing had surrendered, and the| Mfty-six persons as officially reported, pngiand traffic. Mellen told also of| when tho crime waa committed, Ht |, Detectives Investigating the ‘case || * i ight. Not one of the old tenants waa| when he was tring on we Hoy pad were apparently eiad to tay| were killed In the last Zeppelin rald writing letters threatening the New even if the duryi not wiak learned § ae Mehra Sedat npg Eyes Examined Without Charge | tinsiag, wor an vid employes. dhe} been among the gueste of the old {ates no Dias univin | henmeie tee who arrived 0 Fngiand, He admitted goin to Boxton | ince give iin fissent to'the claim that {where she had been employed tor the || by Registered Eye Physicians | Say sornere of the Old landmark | landmark. Hamilton, Burr, President | When the forces wore firat landed wol day, ‘The Mt, Peal est ic lave yen, | 10. tart 8 fult to embarrass the a it] ortiareaant was not more than past four weeks it was noticed that '|! "i, feature of Ehrlich service were lacking, however, for the light.) Lincoln, President Grant, President | found the natives had been told by | terg SOON AVAL bhip thom Oks [ees oes tel Waa In Gaaon Peed tea (eke ‘d that insures careful, rellable pouring in from skylight and side) Arthur were among the notables who | their leaders that bullet terday and in the frat ship trom King-) yo aid these things “to hurt the New| ¥#* In addition great provocation, | the past week. Before that she had | from Amstl- | ien4 since the raid | he h Re eae pe: Js soemed cheerful and without a care, || fitting of sinsena (IK needed). | windows, wan reflected to every nook | were entertained there. can rifles wi male pa hurt them, hat ‘Thomas B. Ad staw Wovid England” Mr ellen solemnly — on wei * A charge se baviag attempted suicide We charge for glasses only. | , they were -imply bi A OW Vole on 3. Adams, a New York au- ¢ mo Fr ry was lodged against her and a police- ‘ | aes onaie. Fhe city had Gone the big] ‘The oldtimers would have gaspod|leys, and wome dead Haytians cons| tomobiic mans suid he wen told heal re ; sould to help the |, WASHINGTON, Oct, 25,—Representa- | jan Was sent to guard her at. the || Perfect Fitting Glasses as low as $2.50 Werk of reconstruction, but the mer-/at the white city of to-day. Churlos|vinced them to the contrary, and *a| friend in the Admiralty that the dead | oc No Ed, What E could to hel ce ee ea oc uckentech Steamship | Hospital \] chante of the market bad spent thou-|H. Higgins had moved the tenants | #00 as the news that Am¢ d hon New Haven.” re 9Ehlich kSons | ae scenes {il numbered 300, sands of dollars in refurnishing their} back into their lets would kill spread about, resist- Others who came on Company of New York protested 40-day boo ‘The lant steps in the weakening and 4 Witson a Patron of Lonatel old home. fe quietly as he bed, moved. theen| zo” fl O@ amaninety:” the Bt, Paul sald they heard reports | capture of tho New England wero| ere creargg arisen awainat, frelght Parchase Movement. Eatablisned 53 Years % an he had mor them of 200 killed, while Frederick W. is ma Railway . Il ow 5 B tJohn St. | Qn the main foo contre mal ul for to-day. ‘The letters identi-| across the Isthmus while the Canal i WASHINGTON, Oct, 26. resident ||| New York: 184 B'way, a 8 the market a ‘iatbece pe neg hd ray cd hecpa g to make way for/IN COURT ON A STRETCHER,| wnitriage, President of the Third | anne Me. Runsell were seiged from | ioaed, Dy earth aliden Should the rater | Wilson to-day | #24 Sixth Av., 15th St. . on. Pecah i ; coted ‘and the four aisles converging if on the platform. Some of the as much as erchants had pent ‘were Giled with seats for | $26,000 in the fittings and furnishings The city oMcials occu-| of white ling, silv aluminum and nickel, and switch- All the sca’ Mayor Mitehel was introduced by! boards, even the typewriters, are in Matthew Micolino, president of the! white enumel. An elevator at the Market Association. He congratulat-| Vesey and We: Street sides of the ed the association on the completion building conveya the marketers to the of the market and gave credit to| mezsanine floor, where are the offices George McAneny for ¢! its reconstruction and the start of § work. “ET hope,” said the Mayor, “that the| Egypt, and Detroi example of the Washington Market| with the refurnished Plans of] of the market association, the res- taurant and public telephones. Only the great market places of Cairo, t, Mich, compare old landmark of ‘Wilt be an encouragement to the city! New York. It is estimated that the im carrying out ite market pians of the terminal cost of the the people and the in- e : & do by which tion to | throughout before we stop| supplies should be purchased, “The Tide— seems to be running strongly against coffee.” —says Printers Ink The first Postum was sold in 1895. years, Postun sales further increased i2 changes, with new equipment and their primary object | stock, cont $2,000,000, Tho brine, the Cont of living. | heat and cold and light are furnished markets we] the tenants by the cit, at cost, and the equipment ia most thorough for the feeding dally of 1,000,000 people in New York. The celebration will continue the week. Wednesday will be Suffrage Day. On Friday and Saturday members of the Housewife's ¢ will give instruction on how From 1904 to 1914 the Consumption of Coffee In this Country Increased 3.2% Victim of Mot on a stretcher to-day into Court In Brooklyn before ©0x. tin’ Livingston, Fenn Street and Hroadwa; $60, damages for He is suing to recover from Ma a furniture dealer at jed Jackson MeClelian the Supreme Justice Jay- y. Brooklyn, injuries received when Mr, Livingston is alleged to have run him down with his motor car. McClellan lives In Ba Street, Canarsie, He w his wife tr enger, Then a lay fragm was taken away, and he regained aclousness; but he has been pari He used ever since. to Ninety-sixth crossing Ful- ton Street at Nostrand Avenue, Livingston, driving his own car, when ‘uck him with nconscious for ent of ned make $28 a SOUTH BEND, Ind., Oct. Military Academy lost its troop early to-day, the sixt: being burned to death when be replaced. From 1904 to 1914 the Consumption of POSTUM Increased 120% After a marvelous grow!) © trom 1904 to 1914. Postum, made of wheat and a bit of wholesome molasses, is a d beverage. It is free from coffee and its drug, caffeine—the cause of coffee headache, coffee sleeplessness, coffee heart, coffee nerves, and so on. And people are finding it out! “There’s a Reason” for POSTUM 26.—Culver black hor: crossed wires in the barn started a fre which destroyed the building, The troop will nine us Avenue Railway Company, was told there had been 154 killed, There really were two raids, the Bt. Paul's paanengers waid, but the Zep- pelins made three circuits over Lon- don in the first ong. That began 6 P. M. on Oct, 13 and was over the heart of London. It lasted seven minutes, Then at midnight the Zeppelins re- turned, after bombarding the town of Woolwich and failing to hit the arsenal, This time they sailed over Lendon without dropping a bomb and apparently in an endeavor to ascertain what damage they had done. They returned again at 2 A, M. as if merely in bold deflance of the British anti-aircraft guns, which have been called a failure, as they dropped no bomb that time either, Four bombs wero dropped close to the Gaiety Theatre, where "To-Night's the Night” was playing, and on which building is the big Marconi wirele: installation, A man who was if the theatre, and who asked that his name not be revealed, as he intends to re- turn to England of Lusiness soon, said the windows on one side of the theatre were all blown away by the concussion and shrapnel from the ex- ploding, bombs. Not only the glass but the window sashes were torn to pieces, Then there were showers of stone from the shattered pavements, Despite the explosion, there was no panic in the audience, but several girls ran from thelr dreasing rooms to the street in nt attire, One man was carried into the thea- ure whose left leg was partly blown off, This man said he saw @ woman who had been knocked down and two in the street by a huge si! plate gli from next to the Lyceum Thi window thereabouts for blown out. A bomb fell ten feet from the rear wall of the Lyceum Theatre. Another fell close to the Hotel Savoy, Win- dows were blowa out of the Waidort Hotel, Another bomb struck in front of the Bell pets house in Catherine Street, the Strand, and killed several persons, Most of the bombs fell in the streets instead of hitting build- ings. One, however, went down through @ building in Hatton Garden without exploding, A great hole was gorn in Wellington Street, ripping open the gas main, and the gas caught fire, causing @ great biage until it could be turned off, Mr, Whitridge knew an old gentie- man who was walking in the Strand when @ bomb hit him on top of the head. “Damnable blackguardry." Mr, Whitridge sald, when asked his opin- jon of the raids, “I have been living in an atmosphere of death and destruc. tion, But if Germany is out to te rorize England, he haw a lot to de yot, ‘The people are as calm as a collection of oysters.” Mr. Whitridge said thot of the 154 he learr.d had been killed 20 were soldiers, who was staying with friends in ere gave the warning of the coming u of the Zeppelins, “The pheasants are very tame and come near the hi related. “They can scent the vibra- tions of the Zeppelin motors half an hour before humans or human inven- tion can, The moment the birds hear them they begin drumming, and keep it up incessantly, ‘The servants ran through the house calling, ‘The phe ants drumming, the Zeppelins are coming!’ ‘. . M, Cadwalader Jones of this! tril: |the New Haven files for 1901-1907. The eminent lawyers for the defendants| have not seen them and are mystified | | and apprehensive as to their contents, | They could only learn at the outset | that many of the letters were signed | by Mr, Melien himscif, Russell sald as much in identifying them. In the effort to get a line on the exhibits Richard V. Lindabury, De Lancey Nicoll and other attorneys for the de- fense made many objections, but with | small returns. | The careful questioning of Mr.| Lindabury regarding the filing sys- | tem brought out in time the informa. | tion that the letters had to do with the suit of Goldsmith, the Boston Hquor dealer, which finally wrecked the New England. J.T. Johnson, a venerable, gold- | spectacied coal black negro, Who has | been for thirty-two years doortender | and messenger in the oMce of the President called, On of the New Haven, was his way to the ‘stand Johnson who has been known as “Willlam” to successive generations of directors, stopped and shook hands cordially with liam Rockefeller, who returned the greeting with broad smiles, “Is this gentleman,” a Nicoll, sarcastically, Government as a co-conspirator? “You know very well he is no shouted Assistant Attorney General Stephenson, “Things indeed be; suggested a voice in to look Kyi rom a group Tn which were John G, Milburn, John Lindsay and DeLancey Nicoll, But | “William” went right on solemnly identifying @ mounting pile of copy books, bill | Mr. Mellen was asked about the ly affairs of the New York and w England, “I was not around at the start of the w England,” he said, “but I saw the finish, T was with the New | Haven when the New England die Despite emphatic and long down ot Jections by counsel for William Rocke- feller and the other millionaires oa | trial in the United States Court for trying to make a monopoly of the New Haven Railroad, a letter written in | the early nineties by President Clark of the New Haven was admitted to- TRY THiS FOR A COLTS FINE! “Pape’s Cold Compound” ends severe colds or grippe in few hours. You can end grippe and break up | @ severe coid either in head, chest, body or limbs, by taking dose of “Pape's Cold Compound” every two kegs until three doses i takes, t promptly opens clogged-up nos- ls and air paseagee in the head, stops nasty discharge or nose run- ning, relieves sick headache, dullness, feverishness, sore throat, sneesing, sore- ness. and stiffness, Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! Ease your throbbing head—nothing else in the world gives such prompt relief as “Pape's Cold Compound,” which costs only 25 cents at any drug store, It acts without assistance, tastes nice, and causes no inconvenience. Be sure you get the genuine.—Advt. § econ ae an pe RR IN se Ta com sch maa A am rn i iat consented to become a| of the movement be G nforced, the shipping men tol rivon, It would compel them. to | eh patron to purchase | 950 Sixth Av., ##d St. Mr dine inue' service between the two coasts he birthplace of the poet, Henry W. || 101 Nassau, at Ann St, null the Canal is reopened. Secretary | Longfellow, at Portland, Me, He al- {|i 17 West 42d Street. larrison took the question Under ad-iready is hononary prestd: the In- ||| Brooklyn: 498 Fulton St,, cor, Bond St, visemen| i 0 [ternational Longfellow Assoc Suits to Wear Everywhere HE suit which smartly clothes you for your formal and informal appearances —which has a dozen uses—whether it be a velvet, broadcloth or velveteen, fin- ished with fur and narrow braids, or a warm, practical wool velour suit, or even a Scotch tweed Norfolk, is the economical suit to purchase, There will be infinite variations of such suits to-morrow at the new Bedell fashion shop in Thirty-fourth Street, at $25, $30 and $35—the long coat styles with the newer silhouette, showing a slight curve at the underarm seam, and the equally smart shorter coat suits—while there are notable additions to the Russian skating styles, Suits such as every Autumn and Winter wardrobe demands, and prices which bril- liantly demonstrate the difference between intrinsic and fictitious valuations, New York Newark Brooklyn Pittsburgh Philadelphia St. Louis Nineteen West 34th Street, Opposite Waldorf-Astoria “The Woman Who Dared” UD FISHER B By Dale Drummond. Now Draws MUTT anp JEFF Exclusively forthe NEW YORK WORLD Now Appearing in The Evening World A Married Life Serial With a M for Husbands and Wives. wha ¢ \

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