The evening world. Newspaper, July 23, 1901, Page 8

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“INGO” SHOUT GREET MILNER. —— Boer War Advocates Give Him Big De- monsitration. LONDON, July °-—-The presentation 2 tho freedom of the city of Lx Lord Milner of Cape Town at Guildhall to-day was mate the occasion of another Jingo demonstration In favor of the war in South Africa and the pol- dey of the Governmi Joseph Chamberlain, the Colonial Sec- retary; the Duke of Devonshire, } dent of the Council, ani ether Bfinisters; Lord Croner, Pritts binet Consul- General in Egypt. and Sir Cinude Mac- | Donald, former British Minister to China, were among those on the piat- form. Lord Milner, in a speech, raid the} compromising of the settlement of the Gouth A‘rican situation by injudictour concessions must not de thought of, nor ghoul the risk of popular rising be Fun by treating doliberate and orém etained treason as a venial offense. | ‘The speaker s there was an immenme @ifference batween the stout old burgh- ers of the late republics and the “rv. ing raMans" harrowing thelr fellow British subjects of Cape Colony. While {t was resolved to treat burghers, when the war ov the old with fairness and even gencrosity, convincing |‘) then that thoieti they had lost their independence they had not lost thelr freedom, continued Lord Milner, tho loyalists in South Africn, who had ghown such splendid devotion to the Exopire and the work of reconstruction @iready colne on, stwuld not be alle eed, LET HUBBY’S POCKETS ALONE! Magistrate Says Wife Has No Right to Search Them. “Xo women has «@ right to go through her husband's pockets any more than a husband has any right to go through his wife's pockets," said Magistrate Crane, in the York deciding @ case in which Selma Relch- ert, of No, 98 East Fighty-fourth | % Stroet, had been arrested through her | husband, Ernest. Retchart {8 qa shoemaker at No, Third avenue. He claimed xhe had stolen $57 and priva! Bhe admitted taking the papers, but de nied getting the money. Sho was finally discharged, “Your Honor,” ead Lawyer Levy, “I Bever heard of such a thing as a wo- man bdelng arrested for going through her husband's pockets, A woman has every right to do such a thing.” “I don't agree with jou, sald Magis trate Craae, “No woman has that vight.”" “This man claims he had $57 tn his pocket. and get he siys he haa not enough money to pay his wife her $7 @ week.” ‘This truck Mlagistmte Crane ns mod evidence ani he discharged Mrr Beichert. He Girected Ruichert to pay hie wife 37 for the pasi Ween and he 44 wo. Bald Mugiatrate Crane later: “My wife nover gocs through ets and I never go through hers. World Wants Will Aid You, So Do Not Hesitate! a Paid Help Wants i ¢ (52 in this Morning's r World sr ter ‘ BUT Pald Help Wants in the $3 other New York papers combined. vf 38 yt ot QOETS ..... PARTENDER: BLACKSMITHS BONNAZ . POOKBINDERS .... PorLenmaKkens .. 3 | prrene fors ; Sonsty GRASSWORKERS MACHINE BRICKLAYERS . 16) reir |Dora Me Court to-day, In} papers from his | cont in his store yesterday afternoon. | of Dora Traub, striking factory girl, of No. 83 Chrystie street, is the story of every day of her life. It ts also the story of all the girl strik- ers in the sweat-shops who went out yesterday. ery, of unceasing struggle,of watch- fulness that the hard-earned pennies may go as far as they possibly can. It ts against the placing upon them of heavier burdens that over 60,000 | people are striking. ¢ Dora Traub w: 125 Bleecker s' work another bo! “Then I would mal 218) Park and just off Boog Traub’s Daily Drudgery Typical of That of Thousands on the East Side Who Are Now on Strike. DORA TRAUB'S MONTHLY ACCOUNT. Wages Woard (12 cents a meal)... 10.80 Total .. Savings .. Remainder for outings, cxtrs, ents and inctd The story of one day in the life The life is one of constant drudg- the shop at 12- ne works from & orning to 6.9) o'clock at lock in the Fo WAKES avemge 16 a Week. is striking because they want her to aud; * bisa pretty 5 1 bls brown ¢ Whee girls me Rooms, she was wearin virt walst at had a ve And white tle Her 1 ted about tt, anil ed a watch In wore tan shoes was the frst day since the fH sed down for a ume tt had spent A single he described! Wishes to giv rcidentals. 8 IN dows lay beginw at6 o'clock for Dor tuy This is to give her thne to the marketing for her mother, to. buy rherseit. tof BARGAINS BY BYCK BROS. nutever aie may need Neetisenestee and to allow half an hour ta wk to the Bleecker : r-fare Sev factory to nave inely to VW Marketing comes tirst, By 6.15, before] ‘The she his had breakfust, she ls out on the] clearing et. Ig the neighborhood of Jackson ang] street, hundreds her early in the morn: esters THE WORLD: TU § ONE DAY'S TOIL IN LIFE OF TH= GIRL GARMENT WORKER. INO Bocooooon OOOO OOOD) |Miserable and Suffer- ing Firm in the Be- lief They Will Leave Their Woes Shrine of the Mother of the Virgin—Testi- mony of Men, Women and Children Have Been Benefited This Ix the sixth day of the novena, Church of St Venty-mixth street, and, k idea and arrows on the whrine of the good Saint Anne, are larger than on any of tho proceding. The nine days’ veneration of the Anne which began laat Wednes- will ond on Friday, but the relice be exposed each day from 6.90 in the morning until 6 ening, under the aus- o'clock in the kuankan of the sacred relics, miraculous cures through faith and the influence rellos has been told from day sand splints and supports and 8 8 8 8 8 tory of the Relic under the immedi: nf Key, Father L. rder of the Oblate Fathers who {x also pastor ph's Chureh, Lowell, : ry of our good Saint ‘ening World re- Llessed Virgin, who was born to her fless when 3t selght years old. : saint mentioned in the O Her body was ted near Jeru was performed when Charlemagne, of the Franks and Emperor dixging for a chureh or the restora- moration of his and Vandals of Mohaminedanisn 4 was pleased to falth of the whosafing te Bip and got the extermination youth only fourteen years old, a . who had deen deaf, Itaron of Caz ily he pointed to the men to remo steps of the sanctuary on which he | at Apt” Firat Cure. harlemagne's order | me upon a tl each morn ralvel this stone COOXING HER BREKHFRET DRESSING Anne, mother Mother of God, y found it | dis A shrine of cypress was from a lamp secretly placed tn the |consumption—allanxlously — walting, ND IN THE LIFE OF A FACTORY GIRL. THE DAILY G MAY LIVE TO FACE! WOMAN MURDER CHARCE: SCENE IN COURT. Her day begins at 6 o'clock. first work ts to go bargaining among the hucksters for the food he factory, where she sews tr hour she has during the lunch Parents of Ida Depuy Say Treetz Shot Her, Then Himself. K she leaves for rt walet and linen skirt to her work, Herman Treetz, the Staten Island boy wounded on the sloop who wan fou 1 alive, and the physicians at the Smith Infirmary say that he has his statement that the girl shot her- ches home her for breakfast ard man indicate that he no sueh marks in the cabin of the worka, nor do any Letters found in the sloop ref that she did not the ukirl'a father, DEAD IN HARLEM RIVER. Man sabuaty Aman ¢ nderwear, was f had to pass along a lonely INE WRECK weighed 16 js Taplexton, hale ay y this morn. fof his clothing at the 4 of the Brooklyn Bridge Nalf-Venrty whe. Cloaring Sale Heian’ B nit te years ago, neglected his prac: nd gradually sank lower, until re- y he hax been a part of the Bow- He made his @ drug store at No. 61 th xtores, at the race ot Fulton and Byck Thos. wil he tne , Twonty-ntth Kurated in both of thelr stores to-| EAat ‘These sales have ling everything from a table-| become features of Now York life and will be open until One Hundred wil start the male at 8 The uptown ° OrTOe, to-morrow mornin; SDAY EVENING, JULY 23, 1901. VENA TO ST. ANNE BRINGS OUT FAITH AND HOPE OF THE AFFLICTED. POOCLIDS SOOTEOEr shrine by Blessed Auspice. first bishop of Apt, when he hid the relics there. “The young count was given his hear- ing, speech and sight by thia miracle, and for centuries past miracles nave heen wrought by the relies of the saint. “In 1892 M. Marquis, of the Province of Quebec, secured one of the relics and brought it to Quebec. A man fell tn Hlepsy and was cured by the appll- cation of the relic-the first day, where- upon M. Marquis returned to Rome wer relic, taken from the bone of the forearm of St. Anne, for the benetlt of the plous in New York. Another smaller relic cured that year by the Rev Tator, pastor of thix little church, and the venerable Canon Petit, who came vit from St, Denis, Paris, and has been here ten years secured a third, a reite reely larger than the Up of my little —but Just as potent in healing many more of these fini he sick. Ho relles of St. Anne there are in the world 1 do not know, but the body still Hes The Daily scene. When the sexton comes to open the urch of St. Jean Baptiste at dawn we he finds a dozen patient the wooden steps; the lame, he men shaking with women gnarled and twisted atixm's cruel wrench; sad- he t p. ay faced supporting frail bodied wive thers carrying twisted and ed children in thelr arms; per- sons with sightless eyes, and others with ears that hear not, The hunen- back Is there and the wasted victim of SLIOGOGLOD kel siorer PGPIQODODOIDHOHGO BLESSED BY RELIC OF ST. (From photographs made especially for hoping, praying for the good offices of the good St. Anne. By 8 o'clock the church ts full; tho crypt Is full; the paved court yard back | t of the School of the Sacred Heart tx fuli | kK of supplicants for help from thelr nffile- ning World.) in pairs or threes, work tnces- B r-ending procession, ver hantlly, and ever of the holy office, the giass, through en, and then deftly K Spot Indicated by ‘athered many crutches Applies it to. the kneeling o The little church will seat 30), Wethavenit crypt about the same number—yet 10,000 | Satin, devout men, woren and children, each | Pale of crite with an ache or a pain, or a deformity of the body or the brain, visit the scene of the novena each day. | while the white-hatred |{n_ mourning. n hia tiny office, almost under the atalrn In the crypt, tny relle to one of who: feet of the healing saint, Non-Catholics There, elegantly dreseed, thou an Evening World they had got great benefits from “ for a rheumatls affection of her hands and the other for Keneral weakness, up ‘a_ special prayer In Latin, the. other ‘Tathers, MADE A Kate Joyce Attacked a Policeman with Hat Pin. Kate Joyce, twenty-seven years old, of 17 West Sixty-third street, ar- rested during the night on the charge of drunkenness, created a disturbance in the West Side Court to-day by at- tucking Patrolman Kerr, of the West Sixty-elghth street station, with a hat e shrieked and fought and called on apectatora for protection. Two policemen had difficulty in re- ning her and carrying her out, She Was quieted, and, on being arraigned, wan held in $4 bonds for her good be- havior, ‘The police say the woman has been arrested at least thirty times and she has attempted sigeide twelve times. The Joyce woma® nppeared at ‘the ¢ Hotel, at Sixty-titth street and Broadway, at 2 o'clock this morning, saying a man Jay In the gutter at Sixty-second atreet, and that his watch and chatn had been stolen. Policeman Kerr, who was near by, went to the spot with her, but no man was to be econ, The woman got excited, then and when sho had shrieked a good deal and refused to be pacified Kerr arrested her, She had to be carried to the station in a patrol wagon, Saas AGED MAN DROWNED. Wore New York Cloth 4 Drifted Ashore at Narragansett, NARRAGANSETT PIER, July 3— The unidentiNed body of a man drifted ashore on Matunuck Seach, just south of here, to-day. ‘The body had been in the water forty-olght hours, The man was apparently sixty years old, He was dre ina black worsted summer coat, light vest and gray mixed trousers. ‘The clothing bore the mark of Brokaw Hros., New York. The man welghed about 110 ‘pounds, wan 5 feet 6 Inches tall, had chin whiskers, @ gray mustache and gray hair cut close. A Grand Army. button was on the lapel of his coat, Itia believed he met death by drowning, and perhaps fell from w Mound steamer, ‘The stream was encountered when New York Atbletic Club butlding Ans It caused a loss to th tractor of $0,000 by underminin: damaging foundations. that, the stream would Mela Building the architect anv ntractor figured on it and performed thelr foundation work ous loss has occurred, ——<—— rnment Receipts Small. AN UNDERGROUND STREAM. 150 Gallons n Mimute Pour Into Excavation Near 50th Street. excavating for building of the Mela Realty Bitlding be encounters tn such a way underground stream which flows under that part of the ofty. The water flows Into the exca- vation at the rate of 160 gallons a min- ute and {# pumped out and sewer pipes in Fifty-eighth street. Rothenber ¢ & Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Promptly Refunded. West 14th Street. Remnants of Wash Fabrics. Another Sale of 5,000 Yards of Remnants-of Lawns, Dimities. Batistes, White Striped and Checked Lawns, soft- finished Cambrics, Ginghams, etc. 1234c. and 15c. yd. values at............eeee Shirt Waists. A Great Clearing Sale. 600 fine Percale Waists, pretty stripes and new colorings, turn-over stock, bishop cuff, pearl buttons; worth 50c. and 75c,; to clear at........ Government recetp 4644; miscellaneous, $211,150, Exp 6%c 25c Chambray Waists, surplice, vest, sailor and tailor-made. styles in rose, oxblvod, light blue, pink, green and lavender; perfect fitting; tucked’ and turn-over stocks, bishop cuff; $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50 values teduced to....... 19¢

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