The evening world. Newspaper, February 21, 1901, Page 7

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HE LIES! REPLY [INDIG TO DEATH ORDER Fillippelli, a Condemned Murderer, Defies Judge Foster. Luigi Fillippelll, of No, 2242 First ave- nue, was to-day sentenced by Judge Poster tn the Court of General dessions to dle during the week beginning April 1s. Fillippelli. shrugge’ hin shoulders when he heani the sentence. “The Judge led," he told the inter- preter. “For has not my lawyer, who knows the law better than the man In the woman's drews, told me I would go free?" AG Fillppell! killed Marco Caraflelia, of No. 24 First avenue, on Oct. 2 at One Hundred and Fifteenth street and Fi avenve because Caraflella lapped Uppelti's wife's face when she asked him to pay a board bill of $80, which he owed her. “It was right he should die,” Filippeli! eaid to his lawyer, the veteran William F, Howe. “He insulted my wife.” The fury found that under the law he was guilty of a premeditated murder and deserved to ret as a punishment death. Tis wife sat In she’ rear of the court room. A deputy sheriff led the convicted man to the counsel table. ‘The:court-roum wag crowded with countrymen of the accused. Assistant District- Attorney. Plerce asked that the Court pass judg- ment on the prisoner. “Ask him,’ Clerk Brophy told the interpreter, “if he hax any rengon why sentence of death should not be pro- nounced upon him?" Filiippellt started to talk, and it was some time before the counsel xha’ the court attendants could suppress alm: “The defendant standa mute." repled Howe, “except to make a motion for a new trial on the usual grounds." Judge Foster dented the motion but gTanted an exception, which means that the case will be taken. to the Court of Appeals. ‘There was some commotion {h- the rear of the court-room. ‘The prisoner's wife had arisen and leaned forward, anxtoun to hear. friend pulied her back into her se: ‘Dhe crowd of Italtans fied out of the court chattering like parrots. In thetr midst was the condemned man's wife. Near the door she stopped and, waving fher handa above her head, sald: “Dio lo perdona.” (God forgive him.) Friends took the frantic womaf in, charge and led her out of the building, ‘The conviction of Fillippelll 1s che first for murder in the firat degree since R. B. Molineux was found gullty of the murder of Kate Adams. COURT FREES VICTOR IN FIGHT Bruns ‘Gave Caswell “*‘What He Deserved,” _ Said Crane. “You got what you reserved. Caswell, and I dismies you, Mr. Bruns.” Mag‘strate Crane thua disposed of al case In the Harlem Poltce Court to-day. A. strapping -six-footer, Bird G. Cas well, peared against George Bruns, of No. Wi East One Hundred and seven- teenth atreet, charging him with assault. Bruns, who js a travelling aaleeman, went -aome unexpectedly last night, and found hin wife, a_young aud attractive woman, talking to Caswell, who says he is a detective, and who lives at Thorn- ton's Hote:, Third avenue and One Hun-| Gred and Twenty-ffth street. ‘The husband pitched into the big de- tective and gave fim such a thrashing that both eyes were newrly closed. Mrs. Bruns, who sided with Caswell, accoumpanted him to the Eaat One Hun- dred and Twentyesixta street station and urged hig to have her husband ar- rested. Bruna was arrested and locked up over niga! Caswell (nad Bruns arrested a year| ago for thrashing him, and Magistrate Crane was then sitting in the same court Mrs, Bruns, who is a second wife, told the Magistrate that Caswell was “just like a brother to her.” After his discharge Bruns anked that his daughter by his firat wife, seventeen years old, be committed to an institution for waywan! girls. SAVED CREW OF WRECK. Steamer Has Men of the Schooner Kerlin, Tne North German Lloyd steamer Werra, which arrived to-dmy from Ge- noa and Gibraltar, reports that on Feb, 18 she spoke the British steamer St. Quentin, from Savannah for Liverpool, which signalled “Report American schooner Isaac N. Kerlin all hands a {s presumed from this that the Isaac Kerlin has been Jost at sea and that ie crew were picked up by the St. Quentin. Tie schooner Isaac N, Keriin, Capt. Steelman, left Jacksonville. Jan. @ for Baltimore with a cargo of lumber, SAW INSANE GLEAM. it Wa Eyes and fhe Called a Policeman. Charles Miele, a cigar-maker, of No. 126 Becond avenue, was removed to Bellevue’ Hospital rly this .morning. ‘He has ben subject to spells of periodic insanity, and) his wife feared that he would kill he She awoke thig morning, and, sec:ng the Insane gleam In her husband's eyes, made her escape from the room'by +trat- €xy, locking him In. ‘Then ste called Policeman Finn, who sumoned a Bellevue Hospital ambulancé.| A}. * ys ways LOOEOHOHGODOODGHOGSE SHES: INDIGNITIES WHICH WOMEN HAVE BY ZONA GALE. Yesterday afternoon I crossed Brook- lyn Bridge. at twenty minutes to 6 o'clock. For the twenty-five minutes Just preceding I had been swaying about the platform trying to Ket near enough to @ bridge train to recognize It as such. And I finally emerged on the Brooklyn side with my best hat on an awful in- cline plane, and a gnawing desire to be an Anarchist and amash things. It 1s about as much as a woman's life {s worth to cross the bridge during the rush hours. It seems to be worth more than her clothes are. The dreas bindings sacrificed weekly in that mob crowding to its evening meal in Brooklyn would wo far toward establishing a clothing relief society. But that tan't al The indignities to which she ff} The! crowded bridge trains are sum- cient to make any self-respecting wwonan think twice before she attempts to leave the New York alle between & and 7 o'clock any week day Not Gentlemen. In any. crowd there are always men ne are not gentlemen. The officials ate a large black and gilt sign yarning you of pickpockets, but that is all they can do. And that leaveg at large .a goqd. many from whom you would tyrn to @ pickpocket for protec- tony Now tn the car in which I crossed the bridge there were cleven young women whom I took to be shop girls. They Were quiet and tired. Three or four of them nad seats,-the rest were holding to straps, talking among themselves, or saying nothing. None of them laughed loudly ‘Ikere were five women who were ob- viously shoppers, and had made the fatal mistake of (trying to cross the bridge with parcels.’ These, with not a ingle exception, talked most of the way acrcss about the extreme inconvenience of the crowded cars, Not one of them attracted the least attention, or evinced |‘ Any Interest save to reach the other side in approximete safety. There were mx other women who night have been teachers ov wonten re- turning from a club meeting. They were - well-dressed, like the shoppers, and like them they were Ia lies, ‘There wan nothing about any woman} passenger in the car to call-for anything but respect from anybody. And yet four of them,.in. thatraingle Journey across, the bridge, were, subjected to peraistent annoyantes ‘which’ would have been nelther: suggested’ nor possible had the Brookiyn jd; Transit Company run} its cars with the slightest regard to the number of One of. the shoppers was obliged to leave her seat and make her way across the car. She’ was middl ances need nof be enough to say that this refusal of the company to provide for’ the convenience and against the annoyance of the people who port tt has made it a most unpleasant matter for a woman to cross ghe bridge in the late afternoon unaccompanied. Besides all this {t positive struggle to cross at all. Everybody runs for the trains, dropping his ticket In the box as ‘he goes, and everybody dashes to the edge of the platform next the train. meptould rather walt an hour, ax so any do; for a bridge train than to, be onthe edge of the crowd next the train before It comes to'a standstill and the worat rush begins. ' It 1 do to keep on his tet. It is atmply luck when a woman doe: Big men tear through the struggling mass and Jam little men In the dostway: and walk on all: seated: people within. Little men dive and duck and tread on others—good naturedly enough, J admit, but that’s thelr bringing’ up. an 4 Rat 10] we ransit the cred:t of the Rapl ‘Com- pany. ‘And when no more than the, outside ease ores hari form filled with ple into place, the big Soors elk “and the train starts and you are left the width of the platform from another train, and with more people coming on the run. A Pathetic sight And'the wonen! Hatd over thelr’ other peopie’s: umbrellas thrust Ip“ faces) tram} pol now of no more arimt iittie ‘club. woman who eps on the New York e! ond of, u lives thr ugh jh the a and emerge! Mf you ‘are dining Brooklyn these days, ani brevets the cars, wear your rainy, skirt: cand an ex-coat, al oan, a} Hi oe wag armor like thai that h dinner and a at thought of women when ¢ m1 others protesting miMly, others indig- nant, and Some few patiently “re. net to being delib. t the same sre Ie the erush at the almoat imporsible to kee Ss Thezie. Wand, ba street—It's ‘awful for the girls who ha to) erodes every) day Just when the rus! is the lack of cars rest of us are comp Ought to try to crows. from York shes #ome night just af o'clock, Tt really ‘was’ worse while tats weren't running w Mrs. Ward, 583 Baltic stree! indeed 1 will give my name. Hever. put up with stich is Emmi Ne ttn who ha the crowd every night dread it all day. | It's as much as sour life is worth to throw yourself into the crowd taking the bridge cars. np: becomes of the pe and keep tt going. If it were ust dia- comfort we could stand It, but that Isn't he: tes as they have In this crowd at the bridge in the rush hours. night; bendy pushes and m be three Umes as many cars, espectaily for the locals. ninth atreet—Walt till some’ Vanes Tel often thougke that tt asiy {were to’ faint she wouldn't stand rmyllent show of getting of those crushes alive, Teast attention to anylao ty Mis: j Wert ‘ie simply. awfin rapld enough when vou but you waste more tf theme wis ap bad ne Wt narsle—I only wish T never hal co he bridge again. It's th have to go through night. si gon't ieee. how anybody can s | sewvi It's re ulartorture to have to go to anh from ‘New York every,day in the rush Neos} al aoa Rough it zo uungry y fied land (tatkedrwitrnoneraglihe m Mmp, lustretess-eyed many of th tely made Women the Worst Sufferers. Miss Annie Schreiber, fare the worst suffer- fest. offs Hate Ryder, (22 oth bervet— the venth street f Miss. vanete) Boyd, tow wouldn't @hink it could ‘se to look at the cars now Hacom fe very night i. Palmetto street to come home ‘in Always Late. agaKement in the Te more apt to be tate tuna Moore, M0 Tenth street— iny doesn't seem to care what ¢ who support it hes and tt is dans t destroys our ¢ Sonntage, Glendale Station—i “heard a good many women have never suffered auch jirdien Jontlen, nount of the matter ts there ought nit Seth, No. 12 Lith nd t don’t Jt up before enth ellie Byrnes, No, 265 Nine atreet—The Rapid Transit. xervice. 1x Abominable, It York and to Broo} disgrace to New Sugwes' dilay Floren erederick, Wel Fifty alehow ay that we wilt ten, you the inj Mins Tlsle Motdens” No. Bes Futth Swoman’ faints 1 is’ tremoled. in. tne « they will make . c out M. Dolan, Now xcomiort is ory ent in er knew ni: irvine to get home, Miss , 1, No. 104s Putnam Rapid 1 iw a fok you would if serv le ar to ia goles Birra Copeland, Nolan s Lage, ¢ inob every Calls the Service Dreadful. Blas) Anple Hedder, 203 Twelfth treet | u toe Is good. It is simply dr MacDonaki, <3 Forty-elghth Aliss atreet—I do hope something ‘will be done to get some sore of wervice over here. It doesn't « it is) taken up by people outside the grensit spmpany: ke as if it ever would until 254 Bixtleth street—It's ect dreadful tt tniatime every day. 5c Need _THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENIN NITIES ENDURED BY A WOMAN IN THE BRIDGE CRUSH. Frightful Ordeal of Crossing Brooklyn Structure Described En en Graphic Style—Victims Tell of the Brutalities Endured in Awful Jam. welock Li the a And when vou try to yomuch worse {have to tight to xt ff the bridge w Overy Might after Thay ng 12 Miss Sadle Tennet, 29 Sixteer t eno: tally 10, “he. compe: ars. Every Night Fitty-tirst} hint atroet= tu pany through such ry Eapoctally When the te doesn't geem 10 iva You don't know an for Br poklya. Wood, tf doons are opene 20 Twelfth at hever attempt to' curry any ing over the bridge whi i “never Know wi 4 Mias Sarah Wilsher, 693 Union oe Ron't they mean to ‘put reeme ‘to get wor Nineteo . It's a hundred’ times worse mal New right to complain that he or she [suffering front to ol I absolute ty no need to suffer--Mun- ‘to tell the sufferer that thls ts an ab- = Gnd. Rheumatism. There how bad it is tf rary them quile 1 permanently c but thats nothin could find Misx Mary Sullivan, we Ibis effort to. Ket orn glad somebody has ta Miss May Itobert, ~The people enough don't have to croma on them thin 1 bridge train come tn, athe Uthin the. women of Hrooklyir who have to ‘cross the uridge every day: ought ‘te hold. an Upuisnation meeting are not to vie Anis longer. Any Brookhy woman, who has ta cross o! name May Cause Reform . 216 Stoddard street— pect the people to put Bnet satnedity and then we'll " thorouxhly, Rive n toe night fy ma, a ant fought th scramble from the U y EVERYBODY'S for March PLeady' te has never been s 0. S64, Eleventh sort of a pante mani people sinply ta, Davtdaon, OUBME to be a cure aK (Miss Charlotte Suppose the The magazine brimful of good things—easy to read, and nothing to skip, cats “do run every, half minute across the bridge that isn't enough they ought to No. 123 Fourth ave- eRUlar kcramble every night layin work its aeking a impel You to your own hom fins May. Mew don’t mind. m mind gecuing home from 1 You|hoiden what it mane when. yourrelt ence:| tired ‘to have to go through Kevan 206 24"40 i. and Gramercy Park. ware FEBRUARY 21, 1901. NOTHING EQUALS IT For the Cure of Catarrh. A phynictau now + but who still keeps abre speaking of the advance fro the last ten y | moet obatina | very comm Nasal omach, bow common, but the sute ts omething ele than for the wrong 4 Tho beat and moat su ‘or any form of catarrhy ¢ by internal remedic nd the safest ‘ uart’s Cata f have seen many resulting t tablets. whi livers driving out of the system throuxt hannele “ had orca nd found the opiates. acon darmless anttseptics lke I afacol, blood root, ¢ At any rate, I have k tarrnal headaches wh arts Catarrh Tats (ness hay of the throat were cured medy, ands alven and powde: acomfor!, | that every: | When I see a man limping with Rheu- j matism, T feel that he needs a gnardian to itt) Soree him to yet weil-MUNYON. A min or woman in all yor vicinity who haw a J < ¥ E she ‘5 nothing for the services of T will examine you honest opinion, and tell i eT) attention or load, G1.N5 red in Horotgh ft resth Ey where acconting to. Wise wicks, at 3) cents a eack New York. Offico: Lawyer | GOS H loth st ‘Telephone 1617, 18th St Branches: to the beat f00d for dogs. |Poison Oak, practice, sin n medl One of tho diseases Ls the {be forced out of the blood before you [ean expect a perfect, permanent cure. to analyze these yan of severe ca Jet and catarrhal asthma and catarrh Vo stomach speedily show great beneft otter a fer days’ use of the remembered how bet ie than 1B: at this new preparation ipplant all other reme: Poison Ivy re among the best known of the many dangerous wild plants and shrabs. To touch ov handle them quickly produces. swelling and Inflammation with in- tense ttehing and burn- ing of the skin. The | eruption soon disap- = pears, the suffe: hopes forever; but Inost as soon as the little blisters and pustules appeared the polecr |reached the blood, and will out at regular intervals and me in a more a ‘avated form, poison will loiter in the system atom of It must WILL CONVINCE YOU. 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