The evening world. Newspaper, May 23, 1903, Page 10

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' t ORVERY HITS AT EW ALL AROUND Stops Work at Club-House of the “Bugs” Long Enough to Pay His Respects to “Gas- House Murphy.” CALLS GRADY A “SPOUTER.” Gen. Greene, He Says, Wants to Rob the People of Their Rights and Mayor Low Shouid “Chuck Him Out.” William Stephen Devery, with shirt sleeves rolled to the elbow. was dominat- ing affairs at the club-house of the Bugs to-day when he delivered himself thus; “When the people get out and fight they are irresistible, and that's no joke. You can't stop them, and the people are out to fight this fall. That's no faise alarm. They don't care a snap of your finger for politics or politicians who in years past have pulled them around by the nose, ‘The people intend to teach these political tricksters of Tammany HAI a lesson this year, and the people 2 this d’strict have already started thelr schoo) of education, and it is our Bugs ot Greater New York club-house that going to be the institution of learning. “Tammany Hall has grabbed our écks and is jumping on the laboring classes without the laboring people knowing it. If they want to know some thing about it let them come over to this district and we'll give them some object lessons. This aristocratic and ex- elusive administration ts the clearing house for Tammany Hall, although the public don’t seem to catch on for a cent, ‘Well, it will before we get through with ‘this campaign. “The people are going to make thelr move on the political checkerboard mighty "soon, ang when they get down to the king line they'll take mighty good eare that Tammany don't try the bunco act and steal the whole board. A Crack at Grady. “Bay, sport, I've been looking up the record of that silver-tongued spouter of Tammany Hall, Thomas F. Grady. Why, that feller, instead of making speeches and riding around in tallyhos, ought to fhe farming up the State near those hay- peed legislators that he hobnobbed with ‘ap at Albany last winter. His flute tones @narmed thom fellers on the farm, but they don't go with us. “And then there's that feller Murphy— Gas-House Murphy—the leader of Tam~- many Hall. He uses Grady as his mouth- plece, and he needs one, and that's no joke. Why. all Murphy does is to walk round in those funeral clothes of his'n nd talk about putting people on ice, That's a new gag of his, playing the undertaker. ay, sport, if there's any icing to be Gone now's the season for it, but I guess there'll be others in the planting line be- fore next fall, when we'll have plenty of fee and we'll put Funeral-Faced Charlie THE-WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, MAY 23, 1 INTERIOR OF THE NEW CLUB-HOUSE FITTED UP BY DEVERY AS A PERMANENT HOME FOR THE “BUGS OF GREATER NEW YORK. ‘veware of the ice gang trom Fourteenth street. ‘hey got the Up in me, and Charile the Undertaker will have a hot time trying to pull these Independent organizations Into line. “Now. while Iam in the humor, Lil tell a few things about Mr. Police Com- missioner Greene's new beer order. See what he's (ying to do. He wants to rob the poor people und the great middle class of thelr rights. The Evening World Ia right when it says he ought to take & brace on himself. ‘The people of this city won't have ‘thelr personal rights trampled under foot “They want the rikht to sit alongside the surf on Sundays: and spend thelr nickels for a glass of beer to wash down thelr lunches, They can't afford to register ai a hotel, pay for a Foom and order a tavle, de ‘hotey or a curt blank repast. It isn't up to them to do it, elther. | They go down to the surt to get a breath of free alr that the Almigaty gaye them . 62, und) perhaps ive a good thing that the’ politicians or Greene can’t put @ price on the alr, Not Lawbreakers, “These people of the middle cl not lawbreakers. They don’t fil J ‘They obey, the jaw and pay for enforc the law. They pay their share, an, to take thelr personal rights away matter to be slighted over, 4 for is no ‘o down and{ PAP ‘ 4c) e Reading The Foor | DEATH OF WOMAN WHO LEAPED BEFORE CAR, Mrs. Ida Salochaf, After Fighting Surgeons Who Tried to Help Her, Expires In Hospital. Mrs. Ila Salochaf, of 515 Stone avenue, Brooklyn the young woman who, crazed by the hi yesterday, en- 903. WHEN IS A EAL NOT AREAL EAL Commissioner Greene’s Numer- ous Changes of Opinion Have} Aroused Much Anxiety at the City Seaside Resorts. WHAT FAMOUS MEN LIKE. Devery Takes. Corned Beef and Cab- bage, Fromme Beefsteak, Simeon Ford Pie, but What Will Bé Ac- cepted as a Raines Law Meal? What js a meal anyhow Commissioner Greene dbesn't seem to know. One day he announces that a sar¢wich {fs not a meal; the next day ne atiednces that a sandwien isc whole six-course table d'hote. ‘The people of the city don't care to eat with their drinks. The up-State voter fs the man who saddles the meal onto the Raines law. The sandwich for each drink law has never been looked upon seriously at the seaside resorts, which gives Commis: sioner Greene pain. He believes in en- forcing the law whether the people of New York City belleve in it or not. Inasmuch as his views prevail, while he is in Mulberry street meals must go with drinks. Some police captains will continue to| hold that a sandwich Is, sufficient,! whether a man eata ft or throws It| away, Others will not be satisfied un- less they see people eating beefsteak and fried potatoes with their drinks on Sun~ day, Differ as to Menis. Prominent citizens of New York vary wide! in thelr opinions as to what is an adequate feed for the purpose of causing a drink, What ts one man's | meat és another man’s poison, There |are men who would eat a shellacked | Raines law sandwich. Willam 8. Devery never drinks while he has a campaign. on. He will not this summer. If he was drinking ym nad to heve a meal with his glass it would be corned beef of wine—or bee ana cabbage for his. Col. P. J. Cody would clamor for | greens and pigs’ feet, belleving these to corstitute the mo: satisfactory meal extant, and besides they jibe well with h whiskey. Booker ‘T. Washington takes a glass of wine occasionally Should he be at Coney Island on Sunday and want a arin, he would prooably order possum and sweet potatoes. The higher educa~ tion does not serve to eliminate the taste for possum and sweet potatoes ‘yom a negro, Chiich Connors would take chop suey beer or I for his. ‘There ¥s a lot to be said in fayor of sop suey from a temperance standpoint. A man eating chop suey| wouldnt te able to drink much, John D. Rockefeller never drinks. | ‘That 1s why e has so much money. But) he might fall into the swing of Coney WHAT MAKES A ' MEAL FOR THESE * FAMOUS MEN. ‘Chuck Comners BEER GARDENS BLOCK PARKYAY Park Commissioner Willcox to) fm cold storage and keep him there ag @/ “gay gport, it's now up’ to | deavored to end her life: Uy throwing souvenir of the campaign of 1906. Mayor Low.’ He ought to kow" tint | herself ‘in front of a’ Rockaway avenue| Uiand 1€ he could tear himeeif aves! “Our demonstration was by the people|Greene hus overreached, himself In this trolley car, died today in the Brad-| Sunday, Should he desire to drink| Bring Eviction Proceedings =the voters. They turned out with a/\t05, {o ger a matisfactory explanation | ford ‘Birest’ Hosplial, ‘Though the| it would ibe neccegary for bing t) eat ; will, and thejr cry is no surrender. ftom Greene or chuck him out on his | 9 , soda crackers, His doctors refuse to al-) Against Them So that Park- “Bay, here's a bit of straight news for| head il young woman was terribly Injured she| (°°* (CUTE eume anything else % is ay |.’ What's wanted in his Job Is had ‘fought dosporately against the | ts {you, I'll be an editor myself somo day,| eng natte "nnd not ane Arietecrsy ay Of Marge ai ion tiey leieatarbarto re: he Famous Beef Eaters, way Work May Be Started. ‘and there won't be nothing doing with|clubman. We want a man In his p . Id. do for Ik these professional political guys who try| wbo can place a iberal construction on =e Move her sufferings. pero ibeetoreak arceld don toy | Te é * the laws and who understands what per- | that Mr, Croker has deposited the $10,-|, Mrs. Saloc who was twenty-four ‘orgme, Former Mayo! Beciicmeities tent cuaries Murphy soon nec Aen a CS) CROKER STILL IN BUSINESS. | iii sin’ con and in-ensn.” mars old and the mother of a two-year-| ‘Tommy Dineen—it Tommy Dineen would) park Commissioner Willcox, ét 1s sald, . em: rie: phy | so pe} a nicipal owne ——_-— joha “roke entloned 3 . : 7 ae if tara the other day that independent aoa eee RUIN ELte Wins Bllbkig ain bs |Him Son Invests 8100,000 with Bro-| ‘ MO ake ruler Mentloned 181 oid boy, selected a moment when the| 90 far presume as to insult good quor| win) ask the courts to remove two sa- abs like our own—the Buge—were or-| at, Balm-reading proposition, sport. |7% 00m | etue® te elk It ia understord that he wettally | streets were filled with pedestrians and| by, (aking food Wit Ma. gop |loon-keepers and thelr ulldings in the ganizing In every district. He got the} [eeeherte Ants te Rewynsee Ween t: s his father, the Squire othe trolley cara crowded: with passen- | me rman Rivamsen, Chatles ‘LK. Mii-| Shape of aummer gardons from that por- i tip by wireless or the subway and wired jprahot Blechard Croker; former leader: of : " “st \qeve to end her Ufe. She had been suf-|ier and. other, distingulsied :Teuons| tion of One Hundred and Tenth street ‘Tommy’ Smith to call a meeting of all HURT IN A RUNAWAY. many Hall, ‘still retains persona: oa i fering from the heat for several days| Would cal ‘or Vkellner” and put aw@y| needed for the extension of Cathedral , ——_— wa Inter In this efty became Wiener Schnitzel and. sauer Ira: : the Tammany leaders, and this is what| : i CAPT. HARTMANN ACQUITTED) ana toid a neighbor she could notstand| "Abraham ievy ought to call for ham| Parkway William Stephensoa Thrown Out of y thieugh the fling of a pulsed: sit It any longer. Asking her to care for| and beans, While District-Attorney Je-| This property, belonging to the city, be told them: of partnership of the: stock Tome coull make a meal off wan leased to John Sonntag and Philip poker chips fa Vehicle on Riverside Drive. ‘The verdict in the| the baby for a few minutes: she left POLICEMAN UP. FORA $5 BIB Charge Against Langdon, Ar rested Yesterday, Is That. Hi Accepted Money from a Soft ° Coal Engineer to Keep Quiet INSPECTOR HEARD OF [t’ Result Was His Arraignment If Court on Extortion Charge and\ Subsequent Release on $1,000 Ball. for Further Examination, Tolleeman Martin Langdon, who wA arrested yesterday by Inspector Wa‘sh, with in Harlem Court to-day in charge of Capt. Halpin, in w he had been paroled. Max Kahlert, of No, 13% Fifth, avenue, furnished $1,000 bal! fo: ne 2O- cused policeman. ‘The secrecy surrounding the case was lifted to-day and the nature of the. charge was exposed. Langdon is ace cused of accepting $5: from a ‘factory. engineer whom he discovered burning soft coal, ‘The name of the engineer is Fellx J. Rush, of No, 17 East One Hundred and/ Thirtleth street. Langdon, «who hag! na policeman for sixteen years, wag, ently assigned to the Sanitary Squas with headquarters at the West One Hundred and Fifty-second etreet® station, The factory was in his district, e engineer aszerts that Langdon visited him on April 6 in the engine: charged extortion, appeared ose custo? | 4 room of the factory and after a Itte tak said that he knew that soft coal was being burned. He yoluntecred to keep quiet about {t for $5, and the ene gineer gsserts that he paid that amount, In order to recover the money to his' private account he reported the affair to his employers, with the request tha they reimburse him. One of the em- ployers happens to be a friend of Acting! Inspector Walsh, and told him about! the alleged extortion. Inspector Walsh began an Iinvestiga- tion. He says that Langdon knew tnat! evidence was being gathered, and was) arrested because tt was feared he would! decamp. So far as Is known there were no wite| [nesses to the payment ‘of the one Langdon, of course, will have nothing! | —= | {Sonntag and Dietrich, he says, show ‘no disposition to ge: the place. Another thing that is worrying ‘Commissioner is the fallure of the Way contractors to clean up the m end of Union Square. He has written], ‘to the Rapid ‘Transit Commission com ‘plaining of the condition of the plac 4nd asking that somotiing be dons. | on INF EILL BACK ON POST. Polloeman Who Defled Devery Am wigned to Eldridge Street Station, Policeman Edward O'Neill, who irs dismissed from the force for talk’ to ex-Chief Devery and secured his reinstatement throuh an act of thd Legisiature, was restored to duty t da¥ and assigned to the Etdridge str station. Before receiving his shield O'Net) signed papers relinquishing all claim on the city for back pay during ¢ interim between his digmissal and \ instatement BIG HOUSE FOR NEW PLAY. 4A Working Girl's Wrongs” Goer Murphy's Warning. | broken firm off Camn ‘ 7 couple of crooked faro boxes. i sald, ‘Charlie wants you| William Stephenson, forty-three years aes BANG aera \p | countima Sapt. Carl F. Hart-|the house without coat or hat. Ae she| $Peyot Low might order a couple of lady| Dietrich, and last vedr they were told | to Acniemy from Third Avenue, { ee cea rttntin tadependent organi. ( 018 was driving along Riverside Drive In| chistes ‘I iteate appears the names of mann, of the Signal ¢ charged] yeared Rockaway and Newyort avenues | Angers, and I. piivate secretary, James| to get out, as their leases had expired | Arrangements were made to-day fo Beoin cach of your districts, Charle|® runabout with another man when thel a.veni..atin attests, Chatlen/-Ln, Cant- | ciger ran tonornuln cenahtl en ieee ad Tustin along Rockaway ave- Reynolds xe sid butea chocolate ecinir | ed the property was needed, pedals chi dlenad Roi oC) XS gays they'll grab off the balance of| om ran away. HeaW edn SUNDUSRIRSER A VOnTSSEC UAC TERE ee ee aman Hug at full speed. ia watehed the| Simeon, Ford and Job Hedges would) | ‘Phey refused and the Comptroller eug-| Music, beginning next Monday night, ¢ an ButeL NS , aithel of No. 231 Wes “fourth | ——- She stopped a minute and watehe ; 6 : tg ; “ ‘a W: . ower If you don't watch out, seet'| Jn front of No. tide Drive the! Street and Richard 8, Croker, of No..5|/ The trial of Capt. Hartmann, as an-| ear apprin mninute and watched the | enii. joud calls for ple, An onion sund-| gested as they were paying rent and) “A Working Girl's Wrongs,” the Hy p y runabout str throwing tne +308 {12 ar approneh. | Th t any sign| wich woul. di for Eddy Foy, but Rich- fhe| Reid pl Govith said something about the leadera| Weupraty fut, Stephenson had’ both ot | Last Seventy-fourth street, who te regis-| nounced from Manila May 3, wns een) of her Intentions she rushed into the| tig sansfeld would, be content, with iia) Doras amt9/ 065 $09,000 0) mma tbs 18 eid Suiits Thisd Avenue erek ee Utting around under bamboo trees aad] his ankles broke mn and was taken to the! tered as asspecinl partner gational, the defense claming that the| street 4 nu thee, harwelt 5 Sirsetty: i nothing stort of noeee beet with treet was not ready, they edie res V iireenee Sy eeteaomen nel ue pair ono: works and he toinedl then ‘an ‘enped, pes pepitale: nes uaknona a Aven une 00) che em aiiariear Tuna | charwon aga nat iene AOrane Fer by the fender for forty feet and| fron: this d Swit be Seon that lots. of Heel iter exrettoree matte Seren toa Walle Groneer, blew ie nares Katy “Well, I got next to this proposition| Stephenson lives at No. 471 Amsterdam to Seen ee Eee | AUT a as trosecution: of iae| all her ribs were broken and her face, | times a Teal 18 a meal when it Is not a) he ind I sent out Word to all the clubs to] avenue Rd i. camman atates | tlmidation: . reef In-| Mims and legs terribly cut and bruised: | mot. ‘the widening of the street in July. But|Mame Malloy, the working girl, TO-MO ARE YOU SO RICH YOU CAN'T REST? Some People in New York Are in That Miserable Predicament. Simply Slaves to Their Money, Others Are So Poor that They Can Enjoy Themselves, We'll Tell You Something About’ Both Kinds. ame Nod HE DIARY OF A R ‘Inside Workings of the Notorious “Valet Trust” Exposed by a Member. T RROW’S. SUNDAY WORLD. woe OGUE.’ The Beautifully Arianged System By Which Rich Men Are Made the Victims of Thieving Male Servants. The Pathetic Story of Al. Adams’ Millions. The Ill-Gotten: Fortune ofthe Policy King Which Has Brought Anything but Happiness to Those He Intended to Enjoy It. on. False Ambition. “You Must Bow to Buddha for Beauty,’’ Says HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. How the, Fashionable Woman of To-Day Is Turn- ing to the Attitudes, Poses.and Genuflections of Pagan Lands for the Development of Suppleness $300.0 And a Long Life Mrs. Osborn Says ‘About Fashions for Women. The “Click” Heard "Round the World. Marvellous Story” of a A Place in New York Where Telegram. Every One Falls in Love. ird Millennium Sight. How Peace Has Been De- ed Between the Milliners the Audubon Society. The Cafe Cupid. » The Reaping of Wild Oats. A Romance in the Life of Lord Lionel Sackville West. —e R HUMO ey Ni ¢ ¢ % By eS i Who Will Get Strong. A Small Fortune in Prizes A Startling Commentary] Given by The Sunday World’s Free Physical Cul- tureSchool. (SeeSunday Magazine for Particulars.) Most Puzzling Will Ever Written. 0 to Those . See if You Can hg:

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