The evening world. Newspaper, August 30, 1901, Page 5

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MILLIONAIRE CHAUFFEUR PRISONER, William H. Barnard, of Silk; Fame, Is Arrested for | Speeding His Auto. LET OFF WITH A REBUKE. Pride of Policeman Who Captured the First ‘Red Devil” Here Turned to Chagrin. PODOGOOOOCOSOODOHSGECSHSGGISGS William H. Barnard, the mililonatre silk manufacturer, who lives at No. 38! < East Sixty-elghth street, was arraigned before Magistrate Zeller in the Harlem | Court to-day, charged with persistently) racing through the roads above Central Park In his automobile. Mr, Barnard owns and drives one of those big French machines popularly known as “red devil Bicycle Policeman Edward Dobson, who made the arrest, declared to-day that the millionaire chauffeur has raced on his post at a speed of fifteen to thirty miles an hour every night for weeks past, unheeding all shouts to ‘slow down. ‘At To'clock last evening, sald Dobson. he was warned of the approach of the “red devil’ by {ts snorting, roaring racket as he stood by his wheel at Ninety-elghth street and Fifth avenue, He quickly mounted his wheel and pre- pared to do or die in an effort to cap- ture the mobe. As It came near he yelled, “Stop! Slow down!" and. thee it whizzed by unheeding, he gav 4 3 8 ® chase. On the down grade he caught up at One Hundred and First street and ar- rested the millionaire, who, he sa: roundly abused him. At the East One Hundred and Fourth street station the silk magnate ts al: leged to have threatened to “break” ) Dobson or have him transferred, while | the captive “red devil” stood panting and snorting outside. avers Mr, Barnard lett a $20 deposit in Mew | Elisatets Prati, Lottie Sor BABIES’ FRIENDS & THE SUBSCRIPTIO. Previously. acknowledged $2,116.68 a and” Renay and o:hers, of bail, Dreoktya AT 50) In the Harlem Court to-day Mr. Bar- county, Ne Yess 5.00 nard told Magistrate Zeller that the eae nnighiae Copp and AC arrest was unwarranted; that he was not golng nearly so fas: as fiftcen miles an hour, or, if he was, he didn't know It. The Magistrate said he believed the Policeman, but he let the millionaire reprimand and a warning not rouRht, M. Miller and’ E. Lovejazer 4, i ete 4 The Chagrin’ of Policeman Dobson, who had felt proud of being, the frat to cap- | sic} ture a real “red devil’ in Manhattan, was great, ACCUSED DRIVER GOES FREE Mias Grace Decker Falls to Press Charge of Cruelty to a Horse. Misa Grace Decker, the school teacher of No, 49 East One Hundred and Twen- ty-third street, who caused the arrest of James Moore, colored, thirty-one ne Kcope of t ter of th of Wh jmany phas medical t chief and most understood only by describing what the important, can fund doctors do tn thelr daily of the tenements. Two of these phases ave set forth In the following cases re- years old, of No. 23 Lawrence street, for {Ported by two free doctora, The first beating his horse on the head with the | ePorts: Se: + el "The other day 1 found a mother | butt end of a whip, failed to appear In the Harlem Court to-day and Magistrate Zeller discharged the man. Moore was arrested at One Hundred and Twenty-fitth street and Amsterdam avenue by Patrolman O'E West One Hundred and Twe eireet station. —— industriously applying an ointment an abscess which had Just burst tn her child's armpit. I explained to her that n ointment was of no benefit In such but that the wound needed to with an antixeptic wash 1 her now to apply tt, day the mother was very much pleased tobe able to report that the child was nearly well." The other doctor's report {s as fol- a Arm. o lows: Walle carrying 4 carbay of acid from | '0N Serer . nh a rickety tenement in Norfolk the shop where he Is employed, at West | street [found a family of four living in Two bables iay’ on the he Broadway and Reade street, Benjamin | one small room, a bundle of raga called thelr bed. Acid Explodes} Nearly Severs Doy’s Spellman, seventeen years old, had his o re iit an all stove right arm nearly severed from tls budy |imade up the remainder of the furniture by the explosion of the fluid. Spellman CHAS MURDKY AGNES MURPHY rounds {© © THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, AUGUST 30, 1901. CARING FOR THE BABIES OF THE BIG TENEMENTS. NAT SHDOOOOOOOSGOHODO RALPH Munpry IN THE CATSKILLS. of the room. The bables had been i weeks with Umi her being out of work. hac buy them any medicine t blew t {butions to thie charity nhould addressee to Sick Bables’ Fund, cash of World, city. od THE CONTRIBUTORS. rookiyn, N. Clara Cop) r Annie Petersen Vest New Brighton, §. Inclored you will fad ‘1'20, cottectet by nue A. ase find $1 for the Sick abl re earned by a little entertain | feat's ara rd Baybett ne Meteaite, e add our mite to Mich abi 1 do some Uttle ore hoping It 6 fre x Boay H. Coleman, 10 years. 22 Wy inte Pollak. M1 yea! mai DEGOSOOGOOOHOS int been nd supplied all raised by the energe ic ph Murphy, the the exSuper of New Yor of a fate helt at No. 87 Fo noping it will aid some one of the alck tand in front of our heres and some PRETTY CIRL OF DESERTED BY HER FIRST LOVE AFTER TWELVE DAYS. WDOHOGOGDIOGIOITOS) Got One—Now She Ia Held for Trial Pretty seventeen-vear-olf Frances Jansen, of No. 29 Highland avenue, Newark, was held for trial hy Juatice Maes, tn Jersey City, to-tay on a charge of bigamy. Bhe got Into Albert: Joseph Colyman N. J. on Feb. 18, 190 uUried H. Stoecker, whom sie had marrted on July 2, 1900, In Jersey Clty, had left avr, “IL know I have done wrong,” sald the pretty prieoner to-day, “but Tam not ar wicked as they would paint me “In 19), when Twas foolish and only sixteen years old, 1 marri Strecker tn Jersey City. He cared only for my good looks. He soon tired me. After twelve days he left me and went West “A year paased and I became very lonely. I longed for a good, true hus band, 1 met and fell in love with him. I love aim yet. I did not tell him of my living hus- band and when he proposed marriage I connented “A few days ago he became very Ill. I thought he would die. I didn't want to have that awful story of my frat hua- hand on my mind any longer, s0 1 told him about my first marriage. “Oh, Iam sure Al will relent and not marrying Beller ite trouble by of after G ( OF OF ‘Three Hoye Rob Freit Stand bat Go Free. MeyerGabler fell aslerp on a chair behind his fruit stand at No. 34 Norfolk @|street, and when he awoke he saw three (@|!ads helping themselves to his frult “What are you doing?" them. “Eating,” the boya replied, ‘We're @ | hunsry after walking all the way back S| from Coney Island.” He seized the © fads and handed them over to a police- he shouted at ‘They were Henry Wallach, of No. m8 i] Rivington street: Samuel Delansky and Samuel Germansky, both of No. 541-2 1 | Lewin wtreet. . ithe weak Market Court to-da abler withdrew his charge and Mugi: tne Pool pa clashareedsthelbe the boys, Re Pulltzer Bullding, New ork WORKED OVERTIME AND WERE LOOKED IN. Fire-Escape V Thirty Feet trem und, bat Brave Policeman Solved the Puzzle. in rk Three blushing maidens tn distress stood on a ‘re-escane in front of the building at No. 78 Franklin street last night and begged a crowd of sympa- thetic onlookers to suggest a way to get them down. They were shirt walst trimmers in a factory in the building. They had worred overtime and had ben locked in by the watchman, who had gone home. Soon appeared Roundsman Lonigan and three policemen from the Leonard street station, The altuation was puz- zling, ‘The Iron doors of the butlding wer locked, there was no ladder on the Hlre-ercape, and the perch of the girls 1 win thirty feet from the ground. An idm came to Lenigan. He or- lives at No. 358 East Second street. He was taken to the House of Rellef in a serious condition, ——+__ THE BUTLER STORES. Kable Business Career 1. ‘This City of James Butler the Gro Who Started in a Small Way. One of the best object lessons sho’ ing what system and industry will do is afforded by James Butler, who thirteen years ago established a single grocery store, dealing In the nec ries of life, PLAYMATES HIS PALLBEARERS. Ey JOE NAAB, WHO WAS DROWN- ED, MOURNED BY MANY. | AR HICcOUCH HELD FOR TRIAL. ViCTIM IN COURT; HER ALLEGED ASSAILANT I8|knocked one of the bluccoats off his dered his men to make a pyramid of dry goods boxes, of which there were fcme in front of the store. The pyra-- mild war bullt with all the boxes avall- . but still a distance of ten feet iniarvensakverweandihe top of it and is fire-escape, Lenigun ortered two heavy rolicemen to the top of the pyramid and told the wie to jump Into their arma. Two got down without mishap, but the third, a irl weighing 2) pounds, insecure rest. Luckily, he landed on his feet wher he struck the sidewalk and scaped Injury, but who now haa establishments of a of Torture Rendered Her So wre girls hastened away without giv- similar character in all the boroughs of Weak She Could Barely Sti ing = their mes while the crowd New York, in Jersey City, Hoboken and While Teatity! cheered the resourceful biuecoats. in the adjacent towns of New Jersey. by Police. 5 SEEEEEEEEEESEan EEE They are all supplied from one large wrholeesie horns of /mnich he’ ia) the]sole | 7c hal Gamer ie wnisesllontet Jersey | aiinnle | Goldatein,..whoy hasi) been FAMILY SAW HIS SUICIDE. je 5 m4 sound development is a system by which| burial of little Joe Naab, who was Tia Ae A ara Me and Children Looked On. low prices are given to the consumers. | drowned a few daya ago, anit for whose | JNCDRITU IAN Tole aon | Frank Perrine, a barber, 0: Middle: The profits of the middleman, the ex-|death eleven-year-old Frank Karlaziin-| (O08) ON Une Ulek \nnne rout 2" | town, a few miles from Redbank, N. J., penses of selling agents and all the other | ski !s now held. whom she accused of attempting to] Committed sutclde to-day at his home ‘The funeral took place from the Naab home, No, 35 Morria street, and the boy's playmates, Ittle fellows in knickerbock- nesunt of money; and, more|¢rs, acted am pall-bearers. They were then this, the standard of quality is| Andrew Anton Kosciusko, mavntained, with the definite guarantee Nicholas Nadosky and Ivan Holman- ohne buye athe tky. fa dealing F6e Young Naab, it ‘s claimed, was tn- nd. thoroughly. comperént by the Karlsz- qe wnoms a that he fa not only et Re eee aoe EE Be ods in the market, * Ning them at the ow When the latter got him into the prt and "sone eon tious’: his patronage Morris Canal, it is charged, he shoved where wel rake Principle "a, \pasteetly Naab out Into deep water and let him d coste which uPtimately come out of the consumer are climinated, and the buyer —the wage-earner, the workingman— gets me largest amount of food for tha tores knows respon: con- put simple. It a iN been recogniz applied. to| drown “Just for fun. pitny branches of business, but it has| ‘The accused boy denies that he had remi or Mr. Butler to adapt It really to handling and providing the ats pe articles of food for all classes of m tle example and experience aur paler ox of the thoroughly eatapllaned principle that, after all, it is personal My, and brains mone’ it win in the long run. En Ywed with clear perception, exec! tyes aie force and industry, he has le to develop the business, which peetmart colossal in tte proportivns, an which demonstrates not only the sqund- of hia theories but the excellen which are anything to do with the boy's death. — Suicide fur a Consideration, G, A, D. Maltos, have not recently been ful he could wish, He hi succe! tores, other elties, are supplied from the great shphae at Greenwich | Hees is not profitable. jer, and will a WANTS TO SELL HIS BODY. rather than| Maltos Reported Willing to Commit of No, 32 Willis dj avenue, tho Bronx, has been unfortu-| nate and his efforts at making a living; Way. the guests, dressed only in their night tried selling| clothes, but on the arms of a few were er New York ‘and In| needles from door to door, but the bust- ) now jonere. to sell his body to the}! to deliver. ainative assault her, and yesterday, when applications electricity stopped the convulsions. During the days that she was rack with torture ahe lost weight, stand when giving her against Baitz, He was held for trial. a - FIRE SCARED HOTEL GUEST: 1 Many Sleepers. Guests at the Metropolitan and V. torla hotels, on Broadway, early morning e rudely awakened clanging fire-engine bells. Windows were well occupied valuables and heuvier clothing. occupied as a phn, : soilahment | 2 phi fe sexilngulah acter ‘ecltg 5.09, 5 ae! {right caused her to begin hie- her »paams continued and to- day was so weak that she could harily testimony © on Upper Broadway | Gorn this Bome excite- ment prevailed. They feared for them. selves, and many began making plans for a descent to the street In any old{ sane are wae) on the top floor of No, patos one i iret sasiaie by shooting himself in the of his wife and two children. fastantly, Mrs, Perrine could assign no respon for ner husband's act. The man was thirty-five yeare old. SHIPPING NEWS. ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY, esence He died of ed Sun riaes., 5.24|Sun seta. 6.36|Moon rises. 6.59 THE TIDES, Ss. High Wi kaw Water. AMP AM Bandy Mork are fist 800 81S + 953 1011 336 Hell Gate Ferry 3 tee PORT OF SEW YuRK, by ARRIVED, Karamanta Hull + Mayet OUTGOING STBAMERS. SAILED TO-DAY. City of Nabteenle dp her Ydus, Sas Boralma, Syrecuea, North Beat, Tile Gra INCOMING STEAMERS, : DUB TO-DAY, St. Cuthbert, Ani by a ‘| (TA BICAMIST. Longed For a Good Hushand, and | } them Al Colyman at Bellevilie | THUGS RULED A RIVER STEAMER CITY -OF TROY’S PASSENGERS | SPENT A BAD NIGHT. Open Gambling and Fighting on Roard and Several Persons Robbed. When the steamtoat City of Troy. of the Cluzen's Une ched her wharf at the foot of West Eleventh street to- day men, women and chiliren, many of returning from their summer out- inks, hastened ashore, glad to draw a | free breath and be released from thetr Sirroundings, for the trip from Troy had been one of termr from beginatng to ena Just before the steamer left Troy last evening over men ani women from Sar. KA boarded the beat. They were on the way hack to New York from the race meeting, aad in a jubtlant mood When the steamtoat started down the iver trouble began. A dozen crap Mex Ktarted among the colored stable boys and rubbers attached to the racing stables. Thea a dozen or more of pro- fessional gamblers opened shell games and lette wheela were whirled for business, while red and black, banker and broker, honest John and other games of chance were started ta vartous parts the ateamboat tn defiance of the officers and crew, who protested in vain, Soon the men began to combine drink- ing wiih gambling, and then fighting followed, Men chased each other over the boat cursing and swearing. Not a passenger could sleep. Men and Women arose and fled from their staterooms, fearing that some disaster had happened to the boat. inally the bar was ordered closed at 2 o'clock in the morning, but the gam: bling and fighting continued all ni Several men reported that they naa not only been fleeced of their money by the gamblers, but that they had also been robbed of their Jewelry by pick- pockets and thieves who travelled in the gamblers’ wake. When the City of Troy lanéed at her dock at 9.30 o'clock the gamblera and othera were the first ashore, and they did not wait about long for fear of ar- rest. Among the numerous passengers were 1 men whose faeces bore evidences of the brawis and fights that took place between Troy and this city. Several passengers declared that they would file protests with the steamboat jee __ GIRLS, IN O0D TAKEN FROM =| PLIGHT, RESCUED) MISER MOTHER. REMARKABLE TALE OF CHIL- DREN IN NEGLECT. How Woman Lite Lived in One Room, Wallowing tn Fiith, Agent Te! One! Agent Fogarty, of the Children’s Ald Gociety, appeared before Magistrate Mott In the Yorkville Court to-day, hav- ing in his custody four childrh Mrs. Diana Dreyfus, thirty-five years old, who had rooms on the ground of an old tenement-house at No, 208 East Sixty-third street. According to the Society agent, the woman {s a miser and lives by begeing from her neighbors. Several yeara ago her husband, Jullus, deserted the woman, and since then her brothers, who, {t 1s sald, are wealthy, have heen contributing $3 a month to the support of the woman and her chil- 4ien. This money she would never spend. Mrs. Dreyfus rented three rooms, for whic she paid $7.0 u month. ‘Two of the rooms were boarded up and the entire famuy slept and lived in one room, which was without furniture, the place being fithy and the floor covered with all kinds of refuse. This morning at 1 o'clock Fogarty Went to the house and took the children away, telling thelr mother to appear in court at 10 o'clock. Bhe did not appear, arg at the re- quest of Agent Fogarty the Magistrate committed ihe children to the care of the society until to-morrow. ~ DEMAND FOR SALMON. Senson’s Cateh Will All Be Us Home. VANCOUVER, B. C., Aug. 30.—It ta said that so great {n the demand for canned salmon In the United States that no shipments will be made of this sea- son's puck from Puget Bound to Eng- land. The English market practically will be left to the canners of British Columbia. —[—__—__ Music in Hroma Parks To-Morrow, The Park Department announces that, owing to the Inclemency of the weath last Saturday and the consequent tn tality. of the bands to render music In the parks of the Bronx, the pr grammes sent out for last Saturd: will be given to-morrow in the various parks. Sidney Nussbaum, of Newark, the eleven-, old boy who was Injured by the falling of ludder on which he was etanding yesterday, died in St, Michael's Hospital to-day. Carrie Talman, fifty- two years old, of Paterson, who was knocked down’ by the ladder when It fell, in In the Newark City Hospital in a serious condllon OUVER, B. C., Aug. 30.—Active peor on the construction of it te expected the I! donatrncteds within a year, -_——— Trackmen’s Strike Settled. MONTREAL, Aug. 3.—It is officially announced that the trackmen's strike on the Canadian poone Railway baa beep settled, et UY Now! ap Last Chance at Our LZ Greatest Semi-Annual CLOTHING SALE. We can’t go on selling $20.00 Suits for $7.50 indefinitely— meres; reduce, Men's Neckwear. much us we would like to. The losses are too great. We in- augurated this sale to clear our counters for incoming Fall Goods— and we have almost succeeded. Only a few ‘aes Suits left, but many of the very best values are still here. Think of what it means—§20.00, $18.00, $15.00, $12.00 and a few $10.00 Suits for $7.50. Nearly all are suitable for fall wear—in both weight and color. This week will be your last chance to buy. Black Cheviot Suits, Dark Silk Mixed Suits, Blue Cheviot Suits, Fancy Cassimere Suits, 50 Blue Serge Suits. 3-piece Flannel Suits, Fancy Worsted Suits, 2-piece Flannel Suits, e Foreign Tweed Suits, Boys’ Clothing Reductions. " Knee Pants Sults, with Youths’ Long Pants Suits, sizes 13 to 19 years, from Mansons coats, sizes 6 to pure woollen fabrics, consisting of blue and black years; Blouse Suits, sizes 3 to 10 years,made from strictly all-wool blue | Cheviots, fancy tweeds and cassimeres; f4 fancy cheviots and fancy cassi- nobby cut and form fitting; good ii perfect fitting and well tailored; | trimmings, well made; reduced from from $3.50 and $2.50 to.. | $7.50 and $6.00 tO......e0eseeeeeeee Our Entire Stock of Boys’ High-Price 50 << Washable Suits reduced to....... (e \ r} e e Sale of Men’s Furnishings. We're clearing out our Summer stock, and at these prices it won’t take long. It is offerings like these which have given us our reputafion—New York’s greatest value givers. : Negligee Shirts. Half Hose—Big Sale. 2 00, 7 {S0c. Neckwear, Four-in- The handsomest stock of SOc. Half - BAY Neca ea 80c ands, impersand Bows, 2 5 Mose: ae a ee of Lisle Men’s Underwear. ’ cus Soe. talbriggan Underwear, Ay Meni, Belts: Men’s Straw Hats. both shirts an rawers, season's handsome ts, Every Straw Hat in our stores epplaln‘and Jane yicolers) well 25¢ seine a 8 CaS 25c is now reduced to........ 25¢ $3.00, $2.50 and $2.00 Alpines and Derbys— Men’s Hats. S Hats. manufacturers’ samples. Every one a big bargain at 1.00 Byes OUTFITTERS B TO MEN AND BOYS, 279 Broadway, near Chambers St. 211 and 259 Sixth Ave., bet. [4th & 15th Sts. 47 Cortlandt St., bet. Church & Greenwich Sts, 125th St., corner 3d Ave. _ Dentistry? ~ WATERBURY” For Sale. MCREDING WITHIN CONVENT WALLS. Mise Jorda: Tales of the Olois- a New Field of Literature. Clothing tor women and -hiliren at lowest DENTAL PARLORS, In “Tales of the Cloister’ Harper Easy euiy ot ihe Payeoath & Brothers) Miss Elizabeth G. Jordan reues ako bax found an abyolutely unworke! eein| otk. vAtsOnT ME: istan on 54 West 23d St., New. Yorks s BETTER, TERME PASIER Tha (Oppralte Eden Musee.) WANHATIANT CREDIT CO.” 414 & 4i6 Fulton St.. Brooklyn. ews Stn A SAAD ote. Cpvn every | (deeand deer west of! trahim) a) Strate) ____ | TEETH POSITIVELY EXTRACTED AND FILLED CREDIT "Sexson: WITHOUT PAIN LY OUR NEW BOTANICAL npunlag yeu (saat Cloaks, Jewelry, and has made such use of} it aa to weil warrant the discovery With the sombre walls of a convent for a background and a set of char: ters largely composed of black-robed runs and convent schoolgiris, there seems at first glance little matertal for such excellent stories as Miss Jordan has Incorporated In her book. But, with consummate art, the author ¢ thin same colorless atmosphere of Mterature, DISCOVERY APPLIED TO THE GUMS. Clothin, m tell strongl(y in making “Tales of the Cloister” what {tls The strongest story, by far, In the col- lection ts “The Woman Who Was," the For CREDIT at—clothing, Everybody. | cloaks 404 jew: | story of 4 convenNbred girl who goes, innocent and wondering, Into the world, drinks Ife to the very dregs und creeps home to jle under the shadow of the crons, every. story: in the book is good. We mitted for the frat, time ta, fetion re o the real lif walla—to the heart traged! beneath the lack: go wned, exterior of the ascetic rs. The result is a book that fs destined to make a mark of !ts own on the Iit- erary annals of the day. ZACK PHELPS DEAD. Noted Loats Lawyer Who Drew ups al League's Agreement, LOUISVILLE, Aug, 30.—Zack Phelps, a prominent lawyer of! Loulevitle, ied last. night of pneumi complicated With heare rouble: Ae Phelps drew the | en-year agreement of the National Baseball League. He was very prom- jinent as an Elk. A widow and several | children survive, —_—_. by Died of Nurns. ar-old Pietro Lup! died of burns to-day at the home of his parents, No. 3 Baxter street. $2.08 i "OUR Sh int, de te ofes old rouse and teeth to, Faia: ; DANCE. tation Pree FOR YEARS. : IN ATTE! ALL WORK ‘GUARANTEE al bal SYSTEM fi FURNITURE. $30 WORTH, $1 DOWN, Si Reale THAN EVER. ae 190] WORLD ALMANAC The Reference Book of the T—Watches, Diamonds, 61 down, $1 fect satisfaction or money GLOBE CREDIT nA Nepresentative will crit per Week OOOCCOCCCe People. ele The Business Man's Desk HOS UpUFOd @ | suis wit srs a. : ae Companion, Ps WHERE KNIFE _Lawyers. The Faot Book of the New. Century. $80 satire expense, Lawyer FAILED. 7 Thos, E, Wood, 818 17th St., Sacramento, Cals—“‘One 50c. box of Pyramid Pile Cure per- manently cured me of piles. For 30 years I suffered; under- went a frightful operation, nearly died, but failed to cure. Iwas unable to walk when I BIG IN VALUE... . +.» SMALL IN PRIC —_~_ 1901 World Aimanze ° 2 9 8 A releren: book of ever pases, LOW topics and 10,000 fag * 9% udstantially bound ies tip graph board covers, with sewed) bai on Friday E etary Graham, 4 DIVORCES Seo noDINGON. "99 Nunse ; Elections and Mostnge 3 ‘SPECIAL MEET i Hel Wanted—Male. tried Pyramid Pile Cure. The MASONS WANTED—Apol) 202 1 first application relieved me.” City, af onnclty, All aie Bye it, Book free “A ore 3 Sere by mail. rand Co., Mantall, Mich, Drug Co., ‘Help Wanted—-Femaa. GINA WANTRD os rary on Naat adhe us rire rit = Cony 1M aves & 39D Oh

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