The evening world. Newspaper, August 26, 1895, Page 2

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turn met his bart near-by tenem : One Glass of Beer, — fier, te aretering hosts, Another officer bought worth of writing paper Goldman at 17 Canal str "| Magistrate Deuel held him for tr Ignace Weissherger, a khoe dealer, of | ‘ 6 Catharine street, was Recorder Goff Shows No Moroy | showing Poticoman o'Conn Madison street station, a 1 to Excise Offenders and bers. ‘The polleeman arrested him tthe Wine ant Liquor | Supreme ¢ 4 ta vore on] Writ of ‘To-morrow nig Raises the Ante. Dealers’ Assoziat the Executive Committe: a resolutio to keep all saloons closed J MANY MORE = INDICTMENTS.) "cx! Sunday. Morris the resolution will b« to show that then fzation are liw-abiding Roosevelt Pleased with What He! 'o prejuai ’ Terms the Driest Sunday He Andrews on a Nike, Cc issioner Andrew: ne oO Ha Ever Known. piopeey marca ye ie ‘ws wir out on his of the Excise law, He trieka bed August Buchmiller, keeper of a ren | {teks pf iil taurant at 706 Columbus avenue, was|Fifty-ninth street to I put on trial before Recorder Goff this |#4ld the Commissioner aiternoon for selling Policeman Conway, | way properly patrollioas of the Twenty-fifth Precinct, a glass of beer with a steak on July 21. cease onnonite t By Suchmiller had no license, He claims | yoatarday. att Present of it to the policeman, tomanner: onan be Suchmiller was found guilty this] manded.” afternoon and xentenced to thirty days ‘Thomas Reilly, of 1084 First avenue, and Terence O'Brien, of 190 Park ave-| some Arrests + nue, and John Munff, of One Hundred and Twentieth street and Third avenue, were fined $75 each. O'Brien could not pay his fine and , ‘was sent to the Tombs for fifteen dayr. j The Grand Jury to-day indicted for q violation of the Excise law George ; Stegmuller, saloon proprietor, of 43 q West Thirty-eighth street; Philip Nohi, | 7 walter, 28 Grand street; John Sullivan, warkeeper, 496 West Thirty-eighth street, | *4Uon, had t and Matthew Foley, barkeeper, 156 East | Ue! Sandwich, and a One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street, | 4 4 Recorder Goff raised the fine to-day in |AWBK!" askud the saloon cases to $7 instead of $50. A] thing to eat afier tat? | number of men who pleaded guilty were | You wanted so arraigned for sentence this morning, | §¢ te gluse of b James Brennan, a bartender, of 291 Ave- hats 8," nue A, who did not appear Friday, when i i his case was set down, sald his bonds- | hold the defendant te men had not been notified. His lawyer | was arrests s ; asked the Recorder to fine him $9, as} pchulem, of the g he had so mary athera on Friday he Maxintrate anid wh th “Vigilance should be rewarded,” nald| men dee Magistrate Deuel, in of the Eldridge str mo in the City Prison.” drinking. Mrs, Sebi q Brennan paid the fine, the Magistrate had di John Bweeney, a bartender, of 275] Ald, crind for + Avenue A, who said that he wan out of restaurant of town Friday, also paid $75 in preference | berry str to going to jail fitteen.¢e: if George Frischeim said that the Dia- trict-Attorney made a mistake in his mame, He was present Friday, but was | “9s. Awostin The Recorder let him off with charged, Peter Caffrey, a bartender, of 307 Third |, Pollccman Kel avenue, sald he was sick since Friday. | Jer, Butler. Ia bar The Recorder fined him $0, Martim Hammer, of One Hundred and Forty-fifth street and Eighth avenue, a bartender, couldn't give a good excus and was fined $75. William McLaughlin, a bartender, of | 6 Tenth avenue, got off with $50, Samuel Lay, who liv One Hundred and Seventeenth street, when arraigned told a pitiful story. He|empt sald his saloon was not open, but a| others friend was taking dinner with him, and | 1%, he, his friend and his wife had a glass| keeper, ‘The ten. were of beer. On July 22 he was ejected by | burs, of 7S hind &@ brewing company of Brooklyn, and | pwerd ties mutchased ty apr Magist mindia, At booth in © men cross the st ALL WH the ex ad to sunport his family, He said he would] ‘The not gf into the saloon business again, | AERNSE them of violaty had no money to pay a fine and would |a~ julie | have to go to prison, He sald that if | Missed the « he went to prison his family would be | gon ay Madan iat without support. The R Jeniently and sent Lay to the Tombs |? IAL ee Mn Ave dave, of Westcheste Contin in igh GI the success of tho police yesterday in keeping poor people from obtaining | Amd Saw I Bunday beer, while hundreds of hotels De and clubs were wide open, Acting Chlet | sp. Conlin laughed as he talked this morn- | comet in eRanKt T never saw anything Wke it in my | Jann whole Mfe ax a policeman,” he said “Almost every saloon was ¢ tightly as a drum, 1 know it, for I made a personal inspection “Twas all through the west side and 1} sew curtains drawn and bars exposed as §f made so purposely for the police, 1 vinited the Twenty-eighth, Twenty-tifth, Twenty-first, Eleventh, Nineteent Twenty-fourth and Twenty-sixth Pre- 4 cincts and the same gratifying result was to be seen almost in every saloon, ; Police Arrest Very F a : “The police made in all forty-five ure |e wee eatin ae Fests for excise luw violation yesterday, | eattier as compared with seventy-two the pre: | Uruse with a siden vious Sunday, satisfactory showing, |{hv Saloom (in fou ud Tan sure, But 1 shall continue until | RAR" |S Rot cne saloon is open on Sunday, From other sowces It was ascertained that the police employed numerous cit\- Otfcer nt in Yorkvi inh Ss interfer re ywe toll Ma — family entrance bad ealoon, He was | the doorway wher the hy the door zen spies yesterday, and that many war- | i nn, Wh Farts will be asked for in the police | wurtet f courts to-day or to-morrow. ; Roosevelt Is Jubilant Vt President Roosevelt was jubil when he arrived at Police Headquar'! this morning. The enforcement of the Excise law yesterday, evidently was a source of greet satisfaction to him ! Dammever, "There jo practicelly nothin guew Fanne T 1 pay,” ne said, he facts relati a the enforcement of the Excise law y terday speak for themselves, Words: from me are unnecessary. Saloon- Roundsman Tierney, President Roos te vel's handy man, Was out on Exese| |, duty yesterday, and reported to his | Frederick Bauch ehief this morning, the names of four | © K saloons which were doing business, | $2") Wl for trial in uy “L have turned these over to A Sie beni, Chief Conti jd Mr. Roosevelt, “ant mext Sunday these four fellows will find it hard work to do business. They er Hau charged Policeman Tapper eighth st Tappen lance.” Vate entrance a Dennett Arownd. policeman said arrested on evidence obtained by Angel | abdomen Dennett, of the Parkhurst Society. | aged that Lappe west tt Dennett bought a glass of beer, notified and in the at wicicle he wo policemen stationed, outside and| Kicked the ‘policeman they arrested the propriftor, allowing | Ment was corroborated » Sie bartender who served the beer to go. | held him for tial, ij THE WORLD: MONDAY SULZER WILL CONTEST. His Barkeeper Held for Violatin the Excise in $100 ball i} — Morris Quinlan, who keeps a saloon at - 18 Park Row, went to the give bail for O'Rourke, and on his re Jor In custody of two policemen, ‘The officers got in dur ink Quinlan’s absence and @ | bartender selling beer. ne A Crime to Sell A policeman saw Thomas Coughlin, August Sochmiller Sentenced) soir Pict ee a C nt-howuse, Not considering ice a thing of necesst caught his Kiver Park, was held for examination In Harlem Police Court 4 wilh ‘violation of have been arrested no his saloon f a hotel license. the aire Hed to the park f from Cohn, but picked up the Was servel with beer, Cohn wan aya he will carry the ca urt if his walter is WANTS HIS BACK PAY. | Dreyfonn Saya the Bourd Had No Right to Reduce Hin Sw Howard P, Okte, on behalf of Dreyfous, applied to Judge Bee and arrested manuel man, in| Wed Her Lover He Found He i o-day for a ’ jandamus to compel the Boart Couldn't Bear It. pay him | what he claims is a balance due on his —_—-~ polnted a clerk 19 the | FAINTED AND THE ROPE SLIPPED. Tu 18) his salary was reduced mbers ¢ itizens, and not} public opinion against more | liberal excise legisiation Dreyfus claima to be a veteran, and, dx that hin salary reduced’ only for cause. 4 your since 18 ax back salary, MORE DELAY FOR EAKINS. Honers Will Not Pans Unul Sept f the Police Board this} haired Danish Knight of the Lugubrious Commissioner Andrews an-|Countenance, who failed in an attempt had been| to hang himself to the balusters of the Eakins, | third floor of the ter ivel_ were to submit briefs to | Fifty-third stre nmissioners the admissibility don the trial, The case was put over until Sept 4, | taken to” Y je Police when these questions wil be decided. "| stremocy Oreille Police Court thts EXCISE AT LONG BRANCH. Men Likely to fe Haled nee |, Chistiansen’s sutetdal effort failed fore the Grand Jury. LONG BRANCH, N. J., Aug. 26.—The n of Long Branch, West End|and Mrs, John Scanned, isury Bay, who yesterday served| tourd him at thelr guests with all kinds of drinks.! ‘There was a bit of clothes-line per= are speculating as to whether they will Law | stal jer men had “spotters out yes- taining eviden vking for violators many patrolmen are again at Ing on the corner and talk own Eighth avenie fro At a meeting nd durtig that an adjournment hers were standing on th ron arty nd Central noon and drank a glass the beer came out of a box which he |of soda Water with a policeman at my ow elbow. I took his number and he bas pad for ie Own se (S86 Ne THES en auinthoned to, apbeas decile evi- |b fa ths panitonte oe EXCISE CASES IN COURT. Cour: to-day, disposed of a number of Excine cases. Acting Capt, station, arraign Henry Weltlauf, the bartender $40.00) saloon at Grand Bowery. The saloon has a hotel live trolman Barron, of the en served With a corned ested Weit “You went to the place Kod the Court, out nefore the | them In a closet off the h which | A falr-haired woman, who said she arly In Sep the irinks to thelr guests | her husband on that floor, told Poll yesterday on the advice of thelr counsel. |man Abe Phillips that. th: SAYS HIS SON IS SANE, order ‘some It was not that nt for trial.” Henry Kletn In Crany, of Ward's was Pleas corpus Ignatz Klein, who alleges his son is unlawfully de- tulned as an a 4 Klein was tak: by Batrolmen (ridge stre fe t was madi rlared they entered the silo i the Recorder, “Hie should have been|the rear, and saw nothing ; venty-five doll: SiVON aWay, There were here, Seventy-five dollars or fitteen days] $1V0u), Away, | There were on a writ his father, mer, rged her hus his mental m author lunatic, |Christanen, We returned at a litle Policeman Finn yesterday saw in. the Ward's Island the Court will when ar expert test y held Toceo in $100 for Special fes- raying Prohib Jeremiah Sullivan, bartender for told his case was not on the calendar, ris Quinlan, ri Tas park tow, was dis- A crowd of Prot tered the salon followed their 1K on a Window UniblstanlNts eee Would tell when the ons on te head borax” Fatal to MeGinty, in. ettia for a Blass’ of beer et with, mind Hoard prevalent "x booth the nty opened o} tents, vt aereNt and arrested and in auch © ‘The | and whe: are being brought street, ting an end to tuber since then he said he had hard work| and gave It to the Malian to eure for jeeman catered rrving intoxicating Nquors.t forred ty the Agetcultural Department, k, The Magistrat Wentworth held for bert Mebona PATRON ne of Mtteen liannock In corder dealt /of Morris avenue and On mond Valley, | b Hrowning. wiya Teport |some and pros; vmiles laitan | taae, and when they were a the | prof und Mme, otto 2 nm Wan Stole a suit] WIth two of the soubrettes. atriel Klett, of ut First Violation of the Faxcise law, ed up as! Beater, of One Hundred wad whioh Eeehlimana. was nifited th had tt patented and Land Lexinus swith him in making Indiana fo Be Ready in October, | iy} pat, trate Kudlieh People going in and coming nwiructor Hteh | it Ww has returned froin an 4 Carge of Ma Turtle, A Isoattior with ar. SHIPPING NEWS, 6] veormattion about her | KICKED A POLIC PORT OF NEW York, TL he kegans ive dp tye M1 just wWoere, Ne refi t Yor md 3 aud V for Ass st Highty-fourth street INCOMING will be kepc under the closest surve:l|of friends were hovering a MeN away, When Maven Dan O'Rourke, of 153 Park Row, was by ithe throat and kicked Port 1. ‘mon STEAMSHIPs. SAILED TO-DAY. TO SAIL TO-MORROW. sSouthamptog” and his wise whe commitied aulcide by taking eet Justi sim HIS WIFE’S Himself Because She tf Loved Another, HE CONSENTED AND REPENTED After Telling Her She Could to 0] 1," |A Story Which Rivals the Wildest Jalms $500 Imagination of the Noveli James ©, Christiansen, the yi low- ment 160 Kast In the early morning had re ered dn the Hellevue Hospital Prison Ward sufficiently to b afternoon, Back of this is a remarkable romance, if not a pretty one. because he fainted away and tumbled over the balusters to the floor below, where the tenants of the building, Mr. and others A, M. haps two yards long dangling from the srail above with a slip-noose in its en, The would-be suicide had removed his {s}coat and vest, hat and shoes and placed way was Mra, Henry ( vie and Lved with unconscious man on the floor was her cousin, a baker, unemployed, who lived 428 West Seventeenth street, and was Dectare | twenty-nine years ol She sald his wife had been obliged to leave him because of his attentions to other women and that he had become despondent To an “Eventng World” reporter this morning she anid: “My husband, Henry Gable, who ts Janitor of the Brevet Hall, East Wifty- fourth atreet, and 1 went at 2 o'clock n to Hellevue Hospital| yesterday afternoon to Coney Island. bn | We left our little boy with my cousin, after midnight. My cousin was de- apondent and he felt so bad that when he left for home I went as far as the corner with him and saw him safe on to in a Fight. | a cable car. prohibition | “About 2 ote} T heard something fall t]in the hall, then the voices of the evangelist en} neighbors, I went out and found James exprize there, unconscious on the floor. Later the reporter learned that the man tried to kill himself because his wife was to be married to-day to an- other man, At noon the reporter found Mrs, Gable, who 1s a slender, yellow-haired man Beings | Danish woman of twenty-iive years, In company with a bright-eyed, handsome young man, whom she introduced as it in| Mr. Gable. ct the dis] “When ts that marriage to take place the reporter asked. We are not going to be marrledto- day," was the reply of woman. “We are Kolng to get a mutual divorce frst My husband, Mr. Christiansen, gave his consent yesterday, but now he has changed his mind.” To questions Christine Christiansen replied that she and James were mar- ried eight years ago in Denmark, Ga- ble was a neighbor the A year York and went to She Uked the hand- iable better than she did her long, bexrdless-faced hus- veering as xander, pre ltdigitateurs, at Worth’s Museum, sh discovered that he had heen too frisky cane to board with thi ye taxed hitn with 1, and he owned hen gut “ very Gable, and the wedd ranged for toslay. ‘Then he ¢ his mind and tried to kil himself “Prof, Otte nto agree to let her Was ar anged wal Ht was all as his wife added, “1 know now salla pu Job. Gable got me ver {to got twa sitls out, and we were alt now Trogether sald he sunt y wife | h quaint helpless- On, ‘Tried to Drown Herself, The young woman y 1 urtay evening sought to end her ifo by wath he pler D3t ob Wert ay wen Vp morning 3 afternoor Ne after er of the court and in alf Aixtieth steeet, New ¥ Christiansen Tried to Hang wants him she ean baye him, but Lwant |} onda’ Bodies Unclaimed. Charleston . 3h—The bodles of Louis Ham. the American Houre tant week. 9 They will be aw Femain there two or three days longer, wher * not clali ichman Found Unconsctoun 1 the Milllonaire'n House, w Thomas Doyle, forty-two years old, a watchman in the employ of Collis P. Huntington was found unconscious, fonalre's house at 2 street, early this morning. Doyle 1s what ts knowh as an inside watchman. There is another watchman employed on the outaide of the house. His name js Martin Finan, Both men have been in the employ of Mr. Hunt- ington for a number of years, and are regarded ap excellent men, Last night Doyle reported for duty. He said that he was not feeling well, but thought that he would be able to Dull through the night. Then te took up his station on the Inside of the house. Finan, the outside man, saw Doyle at Il o'clock, and he wan then f: ing bet- ter, At 1 o'clock, the time when both watchmen were In the habit of eating thelr lunch, Finan could find no trace of Doyle. After going through the house and not finding him, he went around to the watchman of Vanderbilt's house and told him of the occurrence. Both watch- men then started in to hunt for the missing man. The last room they went Into was the servants’ bathroont, In this room Doyle Was found with his head in the bath-tub and the water turned on, ‘There was about six inches of water in the tub, but the stop was out, so that the water flowed out almost as fast as it flowed in, ‘There were evidences about the room as if Doyle was !Il. It appeared as if Doyle had leaned over the tub to wet his head, and be- coming weak lost his balance and was unable to recover himself, Ie stayed in that position until he became un- conscious, and was found in that con- dition, He was taken to the Flower Hospital. HANGING IN THE WOODS. y of an Unknown Man Fon Near Ma The body of an unknown German, apparently a%our thirty years of age was found this morning hanging by the neck in the woods at the rear of the whiting factory at Maspeth, The body had not been hanging longer than twenty-four hours ant all the circum- stances Indicated sutetle The deceased man was dressed in blue striped trousers, black diagonal coat, striped shirt, red four-in-hand tle wore a fedora lat. In the pocket a buneh cf keys, an open-face silver watch and a letter written in ierman, ‘The contents of the letter not been made public. The Coro- sald the writing was tilegible. Coroner Haslem’ had the body re- moved to the Newtown Morgue to awalt identification, peth, rtment Attache'n Sulcide, PITTSHU Pa, Aug, 2%6—W. W. Kittell, fan attache of the War Department, Washing- ton, D, C., shot and killed himself in his room at the Hotel Willey, about 9 o'clock this morn- ing. A note he left oaid that no one would clan hia remains, The only other writing found on the body was a acrap of paper on War Dep Which waa writen ina femining mand |“ Revepy promine Uiat Twill never ask you to take Rywiiere (slated) U. Ac Wolier, Anvexe| 100, the order onier receipt for mone furnished (ie only defuite clue to the Vouts of the suicides friends. Kittel Was about thirty years ol and weil dresse Albert Hriggn 0 Sutcide, BRIDGETON, No J, Aug. 2 —Albert Mrtags, ar, aged fifty-five yea iyged suicide at his home ta Cedarvitie late last night. Mo had pondent some tine bevause of faancial ind had thivaten ake his life, Me er In the civil war STRUCK HER WITH A SHOVEL. Fallon Pat Out Sight of His Wife's Eye, Richard Fallon, a tall, powerfully built Hongshoreman, was arraigned — before Magistrate Jefferson Market Volice Court this morning, charged with beating his wife, Jeannette, He w nt to (h dr home, 823 West Twen. ty-fourth street, imioxicaced, Saturday night, and struck his wife on the head with a coal shovel, Her sealp was cut) open from the hair to the left eye, and she fell senseless, Yesterday she went to Bellevue for treatment. The surgeons examined hi ought that hi skull was frae- c was also found that sh had Tost the sight of her lett eye tshe suid she had been. struck when she was told that ed she confessed that wwband who had beaten her, The surgeons notified the West ‘Twens station polic etectives and Schaefer arr alton. In-court th ning to make a complaint let him go, Judge. He never Lwasn t'struck, 1 fell.” he detectives had # certificate from hospital doctors, stating that Mrs. Falio s were of such a serious he might fall unconsetous pment. SO the Magis for examination” to-morrow nT he, Aus, A wholesale elepien Coan wee wards of the county Jall was frustrated las: evoning by the acckdental a svheme Une which the ty regan hiberty. Found, ners had h tous vane) Wako: evel the men Woull have to thes nin the dayiime while the ve la in tat de. a Insane Mother Drow PORTLAND, Ore, Aug verow, & Weiletodo farmer, Living 4 Her Hoy, endense, near the Lackiamite River, arose be. ere of (he family were aw was quickly rescue, tough seed whe told how she had taken her renwers with desperation, Wt was vice bathing pool, and although my feck aad Berge! me nat to T held Nie bead unter wacer, w ie thovgnt to be ina, Policeman Murdered by Rough HALTIMORE, AWE 2%.—Patroiman John J Yeilev Was mhot this imoraing at an early hour ugha, and no hope is attempted upon by the diy, one of the cers revolver and shot hin back, the bail going through the kidneys, Nongherly, who uid the sbooting, aad two | kicket suimpanions bave Leek arrested, ed to be buried In BROOKLYN NEWS ‘NEW TROLLEY TABLES. — Latest Time Schedules Go Into Effect cn Many Lines fis head in @ bath-tub in the mill- st Fifty-seventh Increased. Time Reduced. Very Little Faster Now Than the Horse-Car Time, time tables went Into effect to- trolley lines of Heights Railroad Com- schedules have been constructed, according to President Ro! siter, with a view to giving the public better accommodations. ning time has been reduced and speed of the cars increased, Mr, Rosst- | ter declares in no Instance does the new system call for a faster rate of spt than ts permitted by the clty crdinance modified time-tables which are into effect to-day on the different lines of the Brooklyn Heights system,” he said, “do not in any case exceed the provisions of the speed ordinance, and the majority day on many of ‘John N. Partridge will be Gi ri While the run- | Lieut.-Gov, Saxton. Col | President of the Macyland Society, Sons | of the Ameri consumed by he change is simply one of @ dozen other improvements which have been put in effect s.nce the first of July, in order to give the public better ser- | George C. Paerre, Gen. Horace | Gov. Brown and Lieu | be given’ the 3 undergoing with most beneticial results, the free transfer system, the increased number of cars on many lines and new together with an proved fender, which is being attached as rapidly as they can be constructed, oncealment these figures, and they were made after careful consideration. routes opened, which goes Into eff ows it require et to-day," he This Is ac: four minutes longer than car sysiem minutes. to table reau.res four minutes more than unver the horse- Flushing avenue on that day she was Induced to tr yame speed it to Hentil in exchange for two butld- the digs in Myrue avenue, Nos. 1049 and 1991, table requires creases the race of speed one and a haif trom tne Nits Bushwick avenue | there is the same On the Union avenue line the som “On the Myrtle avenue line the time | cai dolng when she signed the deeds, rosystem, and on tae property Subject to two mortgages for $13,300. She ‘Yompkins | says her divorced husband ass fa minute shorter. | Hennt in defrauding her. Grand street ites shorter, avenne line It ts hi On the Fulton str utes shorter. line it is 7 minutes longer, nam avenue line It is 1 minute longer, ourt street Ine it is half a Flatbush a 10 si do her up." Also that he said: done her up lovely." y the same comparison. seen that th of electricity cannot bring to Brooklyn Tapid transit than lowed under the old horse-car system, so long as the present speed ordinance continues.” Rossiter said th introduction fenders ordered being received, ned to the curs ‘The Crosstown sine would be 4 within a few days will be the first equippe on other lines wil expects to have every car in tha elty ipped within a few weeks. Rossiter sald was spending $30,009 tn painting box cars He will place lights on the plat- forms of the cars. JUMPED TH payable co GW. Rittell, ‘of Bartone, | ROUGH A WINDOW. Olsen Fled to Escape a Husba Oscar Olsen, Cherry street, New York, w twenty-nine days by ‘Tighe in the Butler Street Police Court, | Brooklyn, this morning pr attempting says she was lying on her apartments when she Was startled by « man pushing in the threw her on the who was working next doc seream and rushed in, He had a pain and jumped down the fire-escape, erning he did not know he Was intoxi- window and ra He said this was doing, LIVELY STREET FIGHT. nex Corbett, a neighbor in| Stleks, Stones fight at the corner o* B. hought he Wir areeiien thought her sk Weekomt st Michael Morle cobble stone j Island Coleg & dislocated Hospital, s after ate held | street with Gwinnett street. Charles Howard and George aad John Roundtre iB In the opposlie ids, It 18 claimed, the cul-| sticks and bottles flew through the air, thinking he was kill quently arrested in the Butler Street Pe urt held the men for examina- a ee THROWN OUT AND STABBED. | Woolt have been left open tato ihe core | The wite of James » Bogenspenger, twe ty years old, Kirooklyn, was held Police Court din Joseph Pogen- s and grew out of and his son first ew a knife and stabbed Paucer in the taken to St. Hogenspenget Kicked to Deatht ontused black and blue mark on the lett side of the body of Gerard Irwin, the man who was fount dead tn an open lot at Bogart and Scholes Williamsburg, early yesterday morning, mer to belie to death, AB inquest will be held A MONUMENT TO HEROES. Six Hundred Marylanders to He Drooktyn's Guests To-Morrow. Gen, Stewart L, Woodford, Chairman, and Col Price, Secretary, of the Citizen! Reception Committee of Brooklyn, have completed the arrangements for the coming of Gov. Frank Brown, of Mary- land, to-morrow, with 600 Marylandar: The visitors wil unvell a beautiful) monument in Prospect Park, erected by the Maryland Soclety of the Sons of the American Revolution in memory of the guard of Maryland soldiers which aided |Gen, Washington so materially and | wave their lives at the Battle of Long | Island on Aug. 27, 1776. Gov, Brown and party will be met at | Jersey City shortly before noon by a sub-committee, They will come to Brooklyn on an Annex ferry-boat, and will be escorted to the Montauk Club house, where luncheon will be served. At 290 there will be @ par je. Col, Mare United States regulars and sail- the Fourteenth Regiment, N. G. 3. N_ Y., and several patriotic societie will form the column. The parade will form at Fourth ave- tue and St. Mark's place and move through Union street to Sixth avenue, ors, | fo Herkeley place, to Elenth avenue, to li Lookout Hill in Prospect Park, the site “gov. Morton will b nted_ by ov. Morton will be represe! it.-Gov, S43 vor. We, R. Grit, n Revolution, will pre- sent the monument to Mayor Schlieren, who will turn it over to Park Commise sioner Squler, Addre: Will be delivered by Col orter, “Gov. Saxton. At the conclusion of the ceremonies at the park the visitors will be taken to the St, George Hotel A banquet will Marylanders In the even- ing. en WANTS HER PROPERTY BACK. Mri Olnen Claims that John Hennl Defranded Her. Lawyer Henry B, Wesselman, repre- [senting Mrs. Mary Olsen, of 502 West Pifty-sey | tained an injunction from Justice Gay- |nor in the Supreme Court, Brooklyn, | to-de disposing of certain property In West- chester County and at Bath Beach; also $1200 in promissory notes, ob- th street, New York, restraining John Henni from Mrs. Olsen in her petition says that pricr to July 1§ last she owned the Bath Beach and Wests rr nsfer ester propert she says that Henni represented to her that the houses were worth $30,000 and the receipts for rents monthly were S40, She says Henni induced her to drink liquor; that she became Iintoxi- and did not know what she was Sie cla:ms that the Myrtle avenue not worth more than §% Mrs, Olsen wants her ‘property back, Herman Frankel, a saloon-keeper, of i? Myrtle avenue, says he heard Henni in us place: "I had to, draw the last $600 I had to e ‘The suit to set aside the deeds will be tried in October. —— DID HE DROWN SCHOOF? You Snyder Accused of Pushing + Him Into the River, Frank Snyder, fourteen years old, of 164 Prospect strect, Brooklyn, was ar- rested th and Patrolman Gillon, of the Fulton street station, on the charge of pushing Henry Schoof, seventeen, of 19 Jay Street, Into tho river at the foot of | Bridge street Saturday, Schoof was | drowned. morning by Detective Gray Schvof went to the dock for ice, After ting It he stcod watching some boys in, bath.ng. tis alleged that Snyder, who was on « dock, called to Pairick Haley, of 257 Gold street Let's chuck the Dutchman over- tis a 7d not agree to the scheme, but leged that Snyder siipped up be- i Gind Schoof and gave him a push, Murphy, of 477) Schoof did not come to the surface. It ilicks street, on the afternoon of Aug. ||* supposed that he struck his head A, against some object and was stunned, His body has not been recovered. STRUCK HIS AGED MOTHER. Gilesse Knocked Her Senselesn with alt a Bottle. John Gilesse, a truckman, twenty-eight years old, was held for examination by Justice Goetting in the Lee Avenue lo- Lee Court, W: iliamsburg, this morning, Las night Gilesse demanded money for drink from his aged mother at their home, 6 Kent avenue, When she declined to give him eny he Bottles Were! picked up a buitle and knocked her | senseless with a blow on the forcvead. ~The old woman was taken to the astern District Hospital, where it is 1 is fractured, SHE SCREAMED AT MASS. / Twaddell's Mind Unbalanced y Her Wretched Condition, Mrs. Agnes Twaddell, a woman whose mind has evidently become unbalanced from wandering about the streets for the past three days after being de- | serted by her husband and dispossessed from her home, went into St, Anthony's Church at 7 o’cloe! and commenced to yell and scream and dance in the main alt mass this morning Father O° le. couldn't quiet the wo- man and finally called tn a policeman, Justice Harriman in the Cour her sanity, ven Street held her for examina ety GOT DRUNK AND RAN AMUCK. Peddler Trayin Cut Two Men Heads with Grass Shears. Dominick Travis, a peddier, while under the ‘nfluence of mixed ale ran amuck among the Italians of North Second 8 o'clock this moraing. vet, Willlamsburg, at 1 He swung Tgnt and left a pair of graracuctigg shears and cut two men the hew OM ustice Goetting sent him to jail for ten days. Chinamen Afraid to Prosecate, Justice E, Clarence Murphy sat for Justice Marr! Avenue Court, Brooklyn, thts, morning Chine Iaundeyman, we ste Fulton acres, owas charged wish tug 4 gambling den. Charlie Fook claimed yy Out of $24 in fan tan. When the Fook ait not fad be Mt he prosecuted the case, Ling Sing was discharged. cate Graves Gesecrated. HICKSVILLE. L. 1, Aug. 26.—Frank Marrs, a welleki resident of this village, has offered a reward. fo arrest of the person or fone who desecrated tha graves in @ plot o During ad, pulling up were ou the graves by the roots, threw into the walks. The ead not who broke into the jall, battered dow the cell doors where the four murderers were confined, and dragged the men {nto the yard and hanged them all from @ ral which had been placed between two trees, of lawlessness which has re valle thin part of the country “for sees months past. Spinella, and Catald to.d Spihetia to go away and mind ms own business, Cataldo in Tombs Court in elub on the General 3 LYNCHED BY NEGROES, Murderer ~ Hlarrson Lewis Strang Up by a Gang at Springfield, Ky. ALL OF HIS OWN OLOR, They Broke Oven the Jail and Hanged Him to 4 Tree ‘tin the Court-Yard, HAD KILLED A FELLOW.NEGRO. His Brother Barely Escaped a Like Fate Two Weeks Ago for Assaulting a Woman. SPRINGFIELD, Ky., Aug. 26,—Short: ly after 2 o'clock this morning a mob composed of about a dozen men took Harrison Lewis, the negro who mur- dered Joe Brooks, also colored, from the Jail here and hanged him to a tree in the Court-House yard, When the mob reached the jail they called for Jailer Smith, but his wife iuformed them that he 18 not at home and that he had the keys to the jall with him, This did not daunt the mob, however. Going to a blacksmith shop near by, they procured some sledge- hammers, and after three hours’ work succeeded ‘n battering down the jail door, Lewis was found crouching in his cell and begged piteously for his life, but the leader ordered ‘the men to make short work of him. He w quickly seized, and after pl. ing a rope around his neck was dragged to the nearest tree and strung up without further cere- mory The mob did its work in a quiet, erderily way and seemed to be thor- oughly organized. It is the opinion of many that it was composed of colored men, After completing its work the mob quietly dispersed. The murder was 4 dastardly one and the negroes have been greatly worked up since its occurrence. Friday night Lewis went to Brooks, and calll ing him to the door shot him down on his own threshold without any warniny Harrison Lewis, the man that was lynched, was a ‘brother of Matthew Lewis, who narrowly escaped lynching here about two weeks ago for an assault upon Mrs. Murray Shields, and who was taken to Louisville for safe keep- ing. Laos MOB LYNCHES FOUR. Quartet of Murderers Hanged in a Jail Yard at Yreka, Cal YREKA, Cal. Aug. 26.—Four mur- derers confined in the county jail here— Johnson, Semler, Null and Moreno— were taken from jail by a mob at 2 o'clock this morning and hanged in the Jail yard, The mob was composed of 250 men, ‘The lynching is the climax of a Tolan in everal CHEWED SPINELLA’S FACE. Cataldo Defended Hin Girl—Other Itullan Fights, Pasquale Spinella, of 61 James street, yesterday went to the apartments of Vittoria Catallo, at 49 New Bowery, to remonstrate with his sister-in-law, Who had gone to live with Cataido as his wife without the formality of a marriags service. ‘The woman refus 1 to go home with with many oaths, A row resulted, and Cataldo threw Spinella down in the hallway and cheek untl Spinella's face nibly zacerated, Spinella’s sht Policeman Rohrs to the scene. He found Cataldo hiding on the Spinelia's wounds were cauterized, 48 held by Magistrate Crane 50) for General Ses- ello, of 216 Bilzabeth t last night to 249 Mulberry see his girl While wa.ting for the maiden, Cameilo was set upon by Gluseppe de Carlo, woo runs a sa- loon in the basement of 210 Mulberry Street, | There was a statement made tn court ‘hat De Carly had his saloon open and thought Camello was a spy. At an rate, De Carlo beat meilo with a d 30 severeiy that four stitches were®necessary to sew up the wound. Policeman Kinsler arrested De Caro in a bakery adjoining old Mawistrate Crane that mello had threatened. him with a r, but this Camello denied, Magis- te’Crane held Le Carlo in $1,500 for sions, Franeo Fetbald! a funk dealer at 215 Hester street, was beating his wife yes- terday afternoon when Nicola Iras, who lves In the same house, interfered. } baldi ceased pounding his wife and s, ing a chair struck Iras In the forehead, causing a cut which required tive stitches, Policeman Sweeney arrested Fetbalai, In the ‘Tombs Court to-day Magistrate Crane held Fetbaldi In $1,000 for Gen. eral Seasions. “DIAMOND SAM” FIGHTS, Plea that the R pm St, Samue Castan, known as “D‘amond Sam," applied to Judge Beekman in Supreme Court Chambers to-day for @ writ of habeas corpus. Castan was acquitted of grand lar ceny in the Genetal Sessions and sub. sequenUy Was arrested on a charge of stealing 782,600 worth of diamonds in Bt. Louis. His counsel sald Castan was held on a Missouri warrant on walca a requisi: tion had been issue: 2 not having been made theriy days after the warrant was issued, be sail, it was Mlegal, as after the expiration of thirty daye vie warrant was Vu: Judge Beekman said he would ser~ the case to a referee to determine ti date on which the warrant was issued ard the date of Castan’s arrest. of Good Health ts Pure, Rich Blood And the surest, best way to Purlty your blood is to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla, HOOD'S PILLS ore wild,

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