The evening world. Newspaper, June 5, 1901, Page 3

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THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, JUNE 5, 1901. ORB GIVE LITTLE “PAPA” tt inimimicinimin CS St Cate -MRS. COE Evening World Arranges a Telephone Talk Between the Brave Boy and His Benefactor— Lad Deeply Grateful. Shin “The Kids” Happy at Joe’s Luck, but Want to Live With Him Again. — = = “+. “Good-by. Joe will come to xee you on him, broke up his home, toole tle, Nidthekreprtectontlen sine v#istera away ifr and locked alam? iad’ came faintly back as t Foclosed nehind the little anes. | ttn. despite his p JOE PHILLPS—Hello! Is this Mrs. of this, and Gov, Odell, who hae ine gram of inquiry: Cre? in Mttle Joe jit to indtoate tha ada hia] ith my act be Seer erry Took Them, { MRS. COE—Yes. What is {t? hwo the public HOW BRAVE JOE {oN said the Gerry 0= JOE PHILLIPS — This is Joo,| tea: of all, Joe will be permiterd to] Maml” continued the Masts BECAME FAMOUS, |" so mux paiilicclacy aa israabe = sec “the kida’ ax often as the insti. [yy oO ie tonal ire M M feces a Sea as you have acted. Why, you = You ought to be ta | back to your house. will alow. And it Ie not over-sanguine | itty tettern | received from MRS. COE_Is | propnecy to say that nome day Jow WIN! cuit thee had read at ta G thie of | Your” owns inl av position! to) take hemi intel’a | Bvenine World and dealredt free will? Uke of wi ny have never |OUt one offered to edus home the Uke of which they have never | pul, Oe offered to educs record of what Joe Phililos hen confronted with an emergency record of what put him in an 4 to the reformation learning as fase as I can,” sald “My boss teaches me. I can. | JOE PHILLIPS—Yes, ma'am, 1| cven dreamed about. ory and paupers write, fo The mother of the children 5 tbh eneaged ina fight x an beat me making change) or. | wanted to tell Magistrate Pool that UT] pees! a determination Sr auERn Cite theveost¥ ori qrocerteawl Ma wanted to go to you, but he didn't} #hatever action Is taken by lived J vt hnow it, but he might as, aa Pool, and with the care of h ACHR eer ee i led to the Brooklyn Msten to me and sent me here. ones off her shoulders she will be en-! 2 MRS, COE—Well, Joe, if you'll be| ahied to live far more oomforiably than she bas lived heretofore. try agents took him \yy to the ble building in Fourth aves nue and cooped Aim in a room with: tred windows. They iook his clothes away from him and tried to make inv wear the Uniform of the society—the uniform that is worn by the bad boys New York who are put away £08 t | & good boy you may come. Mrs, Coe, who ts deeply Interested tn | JOE PHILLIPS—Oh, I'll be a good | little Joe and his welfare, sat’ Evening World to hoy; honest, I will. | lt 55 “The offer of Dr. Coe and myself to| MRS. COE—I don't doubt that.ttaxe the tittle fellow and treat him ar} ihepateeeus Joe. We will treat you as our OWN} one of our own holds good. He te an! lam golng to | boys are treated, educate you and do| unusual child and there are great possi- find Fou) Ay he all we can for your happiness. If you| Pilities in sim. If ae will come willingly [25th de. = z 5 x to our home we will do everything in + mMsire to go to the Catholle church | 54, power! for’ bint | we will not oppose you. There is a] wit} Joe go willingly? He is crazy | a that tite better f duuld zo even to the Protec 1 a edueatton, to The} my ver to his mother, and thelr combine mes Ken, the little family f fort mother went away there wis in the house, the rent was and the situation would hh tid nov understand why he had been much older anid experience ed. He had done right ye Paty Rut he rose to | as bi ished for it, but he with charac courage and deter He had heard.in o¢ Phillips rebelled. He rom and Mr rs. Phillips has told. the ndant ation { the : fine Catholic church right near our | to go. who has her fn harge in the Workhouse we eg Hie rithy palate 4 home. You must send word to the| At frat he held out for his releave,|that, if, some man or woman of good Me Rented na Room, : fies ay aes the release of * tds" | reputa adopts Joe she will never x : eds Magietrate now and he will have you | {* felease of “the kids" and a return | fofner the feos He saw that he could not pay the lerared tt. Joe did not know of the power to his work of guiding Zetsa the blind | ster rent demanited by argent of the ten- released and sent down here. | man, But hla sound co ny eh { ~~ JOE PHILLIPS—I'm much obliged.| convinced nim that it ts useless to cing, VOE'S SISTERS Mrs. Coe, and I'll get out just as{to his desire to work for the kids and ARE HAPPY NOW. quick as I can. take care of them himeelf. He sees The above telephone conversation |"°* ‘at an education and a home are of the Gerry Society, cme fe knew that at No. § Gi 3 Menta cattle manele tes Me did Know, nowever, that in some way i wreet he could rent a furntshed re for fa week. Takin and Lilly, byt to the Grand. stre a mn his little sisters, hand he led house and pullding was a deg one who had committed no: tore up the trousers, hurled it of the barred windor teat for hi beat for him. possession of between Joe Phillips, at the Catholic! “From what I know of the boy." said pie £0. eT ener ST haven't_got any money now." he hes that he Protectory in Westchester, and Mrs. | Mrs. Coe, speaking of Joe's incl opreperin told th Mlady, 3 Mary Metauley, ee; s two girlish faces that al Henry C. Coe, at Bayshore, L. 1., was | “!f he made up his mind to come to me| ready shone with the virtues of soap arranged this afternoon by The Even- | 20, alla of the protectors could not} and water. They were Mamie and Lily ing World. It settles Joe's fate. He Phillips, aged respectively nine and will be educated and brought up tol POOL WANTS JOE | Sueriencak ieee ‘Taken to Pollce Court. the all right. ind his little sisters were: taken if a He had a sob that he had Just se-| poe and {arralgnedibetore ured—a« strange Job it was, too One| against this boy?? S| Adolph Zeiss ts a blind saleaman. He = the Gerry, Bo= ut Uy Job youll you b J of whom he alwaya speaks as ves tn Brooklyn but his work ts ta |e: sin ha luck and hone fight his way through the world and lds." aah orhincanedenn i 1 jack get a home for “the kids" he loves, 1 OQ BE EDUCATED.) The iris are in ine convent of tne matinite cndlotehetrite ; ctually ered. 50 well. ——— Dominican Sisters, In Sixty-third street, a is Magistrate Pool talked at length con-| between First and Second avenues, * ‘HOME AT LAST cerning the case of Joe Phillips to anj Nhere an Evening World reporter was Fvening World reporter to-day. Me-| ed to see t y 1 eS is ing tut FOR BRAVE JOE. | ctrine to the telerram he recetvet trom | yen oe oe ave a home, after get an education great man. A Gov, Odell, he said: Hecoming at once father, mother ovide for the little sisters, Joe <a Governor's Kind Heart, ¢ £ 5 | me and see you (out a routine of He was The Evening World | cleared | The Governor is an intimate friend all r, up every morning at daybreak, He! * re re wos des e the path to a home and an ednens| of mine and hin telegram was merel liven 1CF 100) Kindicd a fire, dresned and washed his | F neorrigibie tlom for Joe Philips, the boy hero, | one of inquiry. I have answered it an ‘i oe is old enough and is |e little sinters and cooked their breakfast ‘ AML that remains action on the; shail write a letter to-day giving the | earning lots of money.” x for them. Then he washed the diehes, NO or. sae Rulltay Joe rt of the authorities of the Ra- | Governor a complete history of the case} (72h. Tim so wind’ they choru: ¥ put them away. cleaned the room, made ity on every count,” was the ree n Catholic Protectory discharg-|™Y coneluniona about the iad and some (ce, sald Mamie succinctly, amiling “PAPA AND “THE KIDS" HE LOVES. p the bed and turned the little alts | ply ea Ing the boy from the Inatitation, | %UReeationa as to what T think should | u hite-capped alater.’ raphed for The Evening World.) over to the care of the landindy until wistrate Poo! < Prec! nodding her little | be done with him. it should be Ume for them to go to Ber Rb icicieiebiciceieieiei-i-t school, | nontst: ead. ald you rather live here or with Ne will then he welcomed to the summer home af Dr. ntetnieiet se a ee Odell was a struggling youth | himeeif at Joe's age and hia heart har | Jo: All new-comera to the convent are |» we allawed tle tuft of a bang. It gives her al Just when Joo was beginning to see Rayshore, L. L, to he been touched by the history of the brave Vd rather ive with Joe," said |iated for fourt va before emseiven int look, but. withal, a quaintly | hig way out; just when he had bought eat to anotner. treated aa one of Dr. Coes pwn | boy's struggles, It was thin interest |Mamle. ith wn breath permitted te with 1 he or fearned that Acca rena omolencedal agresd Liss corps” of walt Ison opr . mates had suffered with | neetied new and the Gerry. some, Magtatrace Pool te in favor” that prompted him to send me the telee The girls are still “In quarantine.” measure to prevent the spre iilathes the Gerry: Society swooped down p and at it early! Here’s a Reduction Sale That Means Consider- able to Mou. ‘Read the Details. Swift, rapid sales are important factors in modern storekeeping. No slow methods, no waiting here. Now’s the time when stocks are brimful--when varieties are largest rj —when every man and boy requires Summer Clothing. So, instead of waiting till Sum- Ay mer’s most gone, we begin to-morrow a reduction sale of [Men’s and Boys’ Summer MN Clothing—Shoes, Hats and Furnishings, A sale astounding in its magnitude—all profits thrown to the winds—all business precedents upset by this early reduction movement. The best, the very best, and newest merchandise will be sold at sensationally low prices. Prices so low in fact that all roads will lead to this great store—to this big reduction sale. Sale Begins To-Morrow (Thursday) at 8 o’clock. | STRAW HATS. 1] Reductions in Wash Vests, 75¢,, $1, formerly $1.50, $2. | SHOE REDUCTIONS. || Right at the beginning of the sea- FURNISHING GOODS REDUCTIONS | ain poargsives are rightly mad: and | son—these prices for the newest H straws : | Never Known at the Beginning of a Season. T5c, for the $1.25 kind, | Do You Grasp the Importance of This? " 6c! NEGLIGEE SHIRTS. | Ha | Over 10,000 new Madras Negliee secceeeees SOC} Shirts, beautiful designs and white | Silk finished ‘ voids, parate reversible ‘new, beautiful shades, the oc. Leather Bells go at..eee....25¢} olds, separate reversibl new, Peautifu , ae ea a culls, $1.00 quaiitics,to goat DDE | $4.00 knd goat, per suit HELIS | 75c. and $1. SLO Abe eeees The swpllest Negligees [Natural Wool Gossamer and Gauze | Washable Summer Suspenders, | plun | Underwear, tegularand short | 25c. kind, go at. colors, stripes,2li new combinitions | stout sizes, $1.30 kind wo at 9OC $1.50. $1.50 Pajamas go at... and white: s ———— - arate and) attached | Embro dered Hal: Hoss, beautiful de | | Ta $0c, and 7$c. Neckwear, all | cuffs; worsh fre 1.00 4-ply Linen Collars, every n: Underwear, 48c Underwear, Twenty-five hundred pairs of $2.50 Bal. and Oxford, Russia and Black Calf Shoes | will go at, per pair, | to 98 |ltstenssiasee toa sescualitles’ 19¢ | j isles, will oat, per pair, new shapes, 38c.; 3 for, 00, all Koa fo. Sh | $2.00. Over 5,000 New Reversible Narrow Four-in- Hands, Bat Wing Ties, Wind- 3 | ONGre'Bard Hows, Artist Ties in New Silk Effects and Grenadines, to Goat '1C. far SOC. | < All our celebrated Se a Tenant ay 7 $ “TROPHY Shoes is to any at oe 95. REDUCTIONS IN Me |MEN’S AND YOUTHS’ SUITS. | | FAST COLOR SERGES. | The Newest and Best Wollens, + $5.00, $7.50 and $9. St Boa @ Bicycle Trousers, Golf Trousers, Serge Coats ewart Building, V/; CO Stewart Building, Office Coats, Striped Flannel Coate, Broadway, Cor. Chambers St. (4) }} 7/7. < Ry See FLANNEL SUITS — = AT ABOUT HALF PRICE All the tan and brown Derbys that sold Tall. Fer country and seashore, golf, outing and general com- jor $2,00 ani 00 are fort. New, natty, stylish and correct, to go at Lhe ORT: ononoded 1.00 ( ] In fact every cloth, shape and s $7.50, $9.50, $i! and $13.50. | Not a suit in this lot can be | : Striped Flannel Trousers, Broadway, Cor. Chambers St. matched for doubl: our price. a RSL Sa A i Sa i ER at a A i ie

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