The evening world. Newspaper, July 31, 1903, Page 10

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TROUBLE IS 1) CROWDED INE STORE ORB, Flattwan’s Passengers’ Rights Aaancintion Will Sunday Even. ing Mefuee to Pay 10 Conte for Midas to: Homes, THEIR CAR Wi. OFFE © the Conductors Put Them OF There Will Ge Mo Vintenee, but Seite for Oarmages wit Wrettt uted, je Then Revered toma of iene for the Memnw re Maett Trend “pany will be PAREN KHOR Cone round care at iat Bien Munday evening ‘The Fiathushmen campoeing these fends Wl) pay ton-cent fares gothe out Bot coming Beek wilt be another story, Ghd poseibly an eeiting one | The return trip t# caloulated to be an Sbjet-lemwon to the company thet « fiche! i* enough to charge from the Rolke of Coney to the slumbrous quiet of Fiatiaah. | Seer =27 FOUGHT FOR LIFE POLICE TO GUARD NEGRO IN PRISON PARKS MEETING PLAYS THE MADMAN Accused of the Theft of $40 on a Sound Steamer. Raises Pandemonium Jail as Insanity Dodge. hopes to teach To that end the sixty- seven members of the league will take) slong thelr families and ae many of their friends as they oan muster, For ammunition they will be loaded with Bickels and cards bearing their names and oddresees. ‘The conductors on the either. If they are willing to accept 5) cents as the fare trom Coney to Fiat-) bush well and good. If not—“My card, Please, and I dare you to put me off.” It may be judged from thie outline of the Interesting little programme that the conductors who will be obliged to Dandie this amiable excursion won't have the pleasantest time imaginable. There will be no violence, however. The Fiat- manners with them and spread them on thick when they come to the second nickel turn of the road on the way home. for They will crowd visiting canis—some of them engraved—upon the conductors, but they won't budge. No, sir-ree. They’! Gave to be put off. And when they are frurled into deep ditches and pitched headlong !nto the tares and thisties of their native heath, they won't even “sass back.” They wilt simply pick pebbles out of thelr eyes and remind their own particular conductor that they him their nickels end their home ad- @resses before they alleged. for the| of ten years ax Bert cawree coutteare) ei jam Bredford and John Curtts, bie to the highest point on the bank and drew Henderson proclaim that suits for damages will be| Youngs men festituted against the corporate body | °rsmen and belong to wealthy fam! For the past worked Iesrwtiicts the overworked) conduetore) ite four has been practising Cor «he which Js to take league, Lawyer Goodheart, will ecram- @re a part. “That's about the way we're going to) Long Island regatta, ie an officer of the league, | Place Seach atoms, who bas a aces started down the bay for a store at Fortleth street and Tweifth| spin. They selected an hour before har- @venue, Flatbush. ‘Taere will be sev-| bor or river oraft were astir Swirling Hddtes, el | ‘The boat was sent off by Coach Fred by either the Culver route or the! Piainted from the clubhouse and started akeboat a mile down the bay. at the crack of hundreds of us and we'll get on at rteenth or Fort Hamilton avenue @bout 8 o'clock Sunday evening. vf ith street line. We're working up interest jn the scheme, wanUng us But coming back we will refuse to pay More than 5 cents. If the condustor de- mands another nickel and wants us (o| water. off Sell have to put us off or have| squally femen put us off. We'll have our @ttorney with us ty tell ux Just whac| Staten to do. We're not afraid of the police, | point a, we don't think they will interfere. If we've put off we'll walk over and take another car, and then sue the com- so that the company will know where to find us if it wants tu sue us. Basico; “The people of Flatbush in bringing, biing swamped, called to the men this campaign are simply trying to gala| ship thelr oars and loosen the fasten- even ings of their siding seats. men were tearing at the oars and seate fant to ride three or four miles in|a heavy squall swept down wpon them ye thelr reasona- @ who live out here sup-| lines the year ‘round, it What they Die righ! the summer we are icquired to pay 10 gents and most of the'time stand While people living in Manhat Brooklyn have comfortable se, Gay it isn’t right to o for a short, uncomfortable ride, and|s nigh’ as 1 WORLD WANTS ..:: Supply Your Needs, | i 55 Paid Help Wants in this| morning's World BUT ‘ | sight 234 Paid Help Wants in the J3 other i a New York pavers combined. — | voices were drowned AGENTS. tees T | HORSESHOPRS ABTLPICIAL, ARONERS FLOWERS . JANITORS vAKERS JANITRESBES #ARTENDERS JEWELLERS 3 YONNAZ .. KITCHENWORK 18 sOOkBINDERS +8) MACHINISTS of JOOKKPEPERS . sen 4] See ’ 4 u BRASS WORKRES 3 PRRATORS PAINTRRS . | PAPERHANGERS . HANDS... | PHOTOGRAPHERS . 4) PLUMBERS 3... 6) POLISHERS . PoRTIRS PRESSERS Skewers SEAMSTRESSES STENOORAPH DRS, TAILORS ...... TYPEWRITERS USHFUL MEN WAITORS ihe WAITRESSES .,.. we Penna a tli: [IN CENTS 7O CONAY ISLAND AND TH/9 WIND OF IN THE NARROWS way back will be given thetr choles of] QHtton Boat ‘The crew of the Clifton Boat Club's @und: four-onre’ shell had « Bushmen are going to take their Benday | 0 thelr lives for nearly an hour to~dny the Narrows desperate Nght of in the whiripooin Fort Wadsworth were caprized in 0 feveral minutes every ounce of strength In thelr frames to direntangle themselv: thelr oars and the sliding seat After that they pelled to cling to the tissue-like frame work of the shell before they were scen from Fort Wada- und rescued ve| pletely exhausted. ‘The crew was composed of Dr Arthur) Will attempt to ‘Thomas, stroke, a fainous Yale athtete previous meetings the followers of Parks have filled tne place wid carried things with a rush. they fought tiny boat union, thinks he can beat Parks in the meeting. As the hall is gmall and will | hold only 9% persons, und there are | 4.00 members of the unton, both factions worth John B. Cornel], Will- | tronworke: to return to work. ‘The National Agso- elation of Bridge and Structural tron Workers, of whi Bridgemen’a Union ts a local, is in favor of signing the arbi Construction Company and at some amall jobs. President Neidig feels that do a People as possible to go. ‘The men got under w. “Going out well pay lo ce ts, as we| a pistol and started off at a high stroke, @on't want to have any trouble then.) jor the first half-mile they had the cull swing of the tide with them and smooth They were protected from the away from the walking delegate Is to jand hills. As they Wadsworth, a serles of swirling they encountered eddies pany in the name of one or more of| stroke but dashed bucketfuls of spray us, If we stay on we'll furnish cards| over the low sides of the boat, wain, realizing the danger of | The signing by the and men ¢ gle of whirlpool amid a tan- stren: '# enabled them to were going to say it In a body Sunday | preak the fastenigxs which held them tumbled ™ [nto Henderson his feet and arms In the tiller rope swallowed to his rescue Overturned Shell, as the tive men freed the: 1 shell and held on to the pol- were| ‘phe Cement Laborers’ Union of Brook- infle from |1yn Js on strike fur better conditions, and fa general strt RY: and whirlin 1 !n a narrow r won all the ymerked Chem in drenchin | El levances. the roar of the ‘or nearly an he | waters about them: the efforts growing more feeble ev ute. whelmed w were worth, who summoned assiatanve lifeboats were put og from the fort Men Faint When Rescued {gue and despair | re ‘The sight of assistance roused the last | of the waning vitality In the oarsmen, | by them | } y were as limp as seawer to be dragged bodily Henderson, the tainted was nearly an hour before the other | men recovered enough strength to sit up. “Five minutes more," to-day, “and we would all bottom. My whole body seemed dead, and how T hung on as long a did 1 cannot explain, offered up what we thought would be our last prayer.” The Clifton Boat Club ts a very ive organization, numbering among its members, besides Charles M. 8: and Sir Thomas Lipton, the wealthinst residents of Staten —— Rush to America to Find Work. BUCHAREST, Lack of work in Roumania is causing a and it} | the apartments of Mrs. Margaret the I am sure we all ol THM WORLD: PHITHSY EVENING, JULY tf, foRT, (Re CIR Tithe FLAT aH ME SPER PLE Cate ON THE LIN e@ el Four Final Struggle for Walking Dele- Capsized and Entangled in Their Shell by a Sudden Squall Off Fort Wadsworth. gate’s Control of House- smiths’ Union Comes To-| Night at Its Hall. | “Sam Parks haa the tent of his off unds to-night If the Howusesmiths and Bridgemen's Union at vf tte meeting in Maennerchor Hall dectles to sign the arbitration agreement Parks | nd power aa walking deleaate of the | will be a thing of the past Borh fac- tons, to say nothing of the employers and polte at the meeting A heavy force of officers will be on hand fon pect there wil be “trouble” | Hobert Neldiq, President of the “pnek" the place. At Neidig represents the majority of the who, he says, are anxious 1 the House: mith and ation ‘ugreement ‘The followers of Neldig say that Parky does not care & rap Whether they get work or not The jronworkers known as the Parks men, about $00 in number, who helped fl the uall when Parks needed votes, are working for the Fuller the only way to make these men break compel them to give up half of thelr Wages to the tronworkers who are idle. Should Parks be successful in lls fight to-night in preventing the ap- polntment of a committee of seventy- five to meet the employers, it will hinder the Neldig following from ¢ to work, as 700 of them have signed ta- dividual agreements with the employers und will report for work Monday morn- ing. There signatures were obtained through the ultimatum of the Iron League giving the union until Aug 3) on him. to accept the arbitration agreement, men means that 1 Whom the House. from 10,00 Co 20,000 m: TRANSIT steward and} been robbed | volnted out a medium-sized pas- when he was turned | searched, but} Md be found in iis poe h was made of his hat, | was found the missing money it than the prisoner dashed from | pen door of th | n making his escape. In the main | statlon-house, Department who grabbed Hunt had a lively tussle with him, padded cell, but he howled so there that 1 to have him one of the steel cage cells. or was opened the man Willlam Lunberg, tussle followed, in the row, As the cell a roat and tried to strangle him. men came to the rescue, into the steel ‘Phen began a the exhibition cus that would rival of a wild gorilla, howled and | swore, and began emashing the fasten- Ings of his fron bedstead on the wall. ‘Yo subdue him and cool him off a line of garden hose was brought to the cell door and a stream of water was thrown He saw the preparations and As the stream appeared to enjoy off all his clothes, of water hit him } smiths have kept idle by staying oul | will have a chance to resume labor A stato of affairs in the building tyades In Brooklyn atmilar to th whith led to the shut down of wo in the Boroughs of Manhattan Bronx is fearc and an employe caught | formed It was learned’ that this as-| persons tled the other end to the cell edge of his bunk associttion for ‘Brooklyn has been sociation sent a committee to the Building Trades Employers’ Assooi |Mon to suggest amaigamation, The) and dropped hls | provised rope to draw It taut beneath [hia chin. ‘The potter In the meantime there is sald to be! seelng thi trouble in Brooklyn over the | Gifferent clayses of laborers. Te plas- nd | Manhattan association, if was ‘sta would not have Ume to take the mat= tar up until next week, plenty ter laborers there have’ threate to strike, 1 is alleged, ty have been sent there! trot Manhattan Has bee ordered by the f Walking Delegates acts of PB. J. Carlin Brooklyn Be that boro! on account | 0! — “| SUSPICION TRAILS THESE BURGLARS. | First a Woman Pursued and Lost Them—Then a Detective Meets, Suspects and Arrests Them. Charged with burglary, Charles Far- \ years oli, who says he Nyes at One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street and ‘Taint avenue, and Henry haeffer, twenty years old, of No, 281s spectavenue, were held tn $1,900 bat! Magistrate Haier, In the rigania Int to-day, for examination The mer accused of breaking Into ane O'Donnell, of No, 61 St. Ann's avenue, yesterday, and stealing $100 worth of allverware, Two men were seen leaving Mrs. O'Donnell’s apa ts by Mrs, Sarah 6eear, who Ives in the house, As Mrs. O'Donnell wax out at the time Mrs. Seear bx of the two young men, who were carrying bundles under their arms, and fouowed them to the station at One Hundred and forty-ninth street hey boarded a southbound train be- fore she got on the platform and got me susplc away, On the train, however, Pollee- man ‘Danlel Ryan, ‘of the Alexandoe avenue station, becdme suspicious of tne men and asked them what they had in the bundles, Schaeffer replied that it Was asliverware they Were carrying renewed exodus, ceeien morkmen ite America. grants are ass! and oth: his father, but Ryan arrested thom when the train ched Houston street and Jate last night the owner of the alive: ware was located. sd on him for five Then a fit of anger selzed the prisoner, who swore that he woukl kill! heen left for the hungry mouths while Tearing his qhirt Into strips, and (N8) he tied one end of It around Nis neck, The hose was play | minutes. door, stood upon the Jet him hang, and, use laborers | Was Co throw a fit, ‘Then he Jumped apon his tron bed and insane dodge about the cell and running up the sid | Various! ve Was found a hohe bad writ- card gives his address ax 1713 ul-| Where thelr fath —$————$_—— COURT CLERK HERO SAVES A SWIMMER. | Stephen Teiana, North Beach, Fights! Rescuers in His Panic, but Lives to Thank Them. chief clerk In Magis-| third street, was dts Long Island his friends for | City Court to-day rescue of a drowning man at He 1s on duty to-day from uis long struggle in though sick atternoon ia aire, a life-saver, Mrs. Noble pointed to a man turning som- ersaults in the water. suore to James C| The men saw jumped in to save him, ‘The drowning man struggled flercely | and almost exhausted both overcome and but} City, to-day ashore. The him for ap before he was revi Stephen Tejana, ninth street, Manhattan. Soon after ‘Telana was revived Noble otf No. M4 West Thirty ‘ene ve + STNG FAMILY WANTS EVICTION now Glavin Toatus, Whe Mae Worked for fine Weeks n Searah of Work Writes Plan for A DOES NOT GARE FOR SELF Mave OWeye . mreande of * Penole Thue Fae” Me Oe we ved A mandnant Thaw Galt Not Stent! put « 1 huehand to ae ood a woman Am ever draw breath They a ary alm ‘ ' thd ow we a flene viniees eome Kind Ariat comer to their reseue, An for myself. Loare naught Ast anid, hunger and ptivation know no law: To have oveved the manda of the peaple thus far, also the com: mandment “Thou shalt not steat but how much longer 1 voew tte If, 1k ne turn eventa n » dog. Tao mad and some one else's I that the Almigiy ye with my little ones and my wife. 1 am be coming desperate. My children look up at me when | get home, and thelr eves ask whit their tongues dare not: “Have you got work reply to their avking eyes, yet.” Cannot some one get me a posi to T care not what it Is, es Tam healt ¥ and strong, when in right oo but at present am down and oni, «o much so that | fear longer ek employment at my trade, I trust some good {ndividual wtll lend me a helping hand. that L may not #« ny Uttle ones fn the streets, whist: Hu be so in three days from to-day, Yours, awaiting a lifting hand, A FATHER AND HUSBAND. 8 Glenmore avenue, Brooklyn. A Home of Poverty. A visit to the home of the writer of this letter guve every Indication tha just such an unfortunae condition ex- late there. It Is on Glenmore uvenue, almost out to the city line of Bast New York, Both father and mother gone out for another day's struggle to tind ork, leaving the eldest boy, who ts thirteen years old, but who looks more Uke ten, to care for the little ones. A bright little girl of four, stay, al- rected ‘The Evening World reporter to the entrance at the rear, explaining that Itallans lived in front. corn and a vegetable garden in the little adjacent lot told of days whan there were brighter progpects for the late summer. ‘The apartment consisted of three rooms in a lItttle story-and-a-halt frame building, While the boy watened hig little baby brother of five months crawl on the floor, two other mischiev- ous Httle chtldr sof two and seven | years romped with the bed covers and a fullagrown Newfounddand dog, which was tled to t bedpost. Wille's serfous face beamed wits smiles when asked where the missing one of the six children waa. a" he sald, “he has just got work with the coffee man I used to help. He holds tho horse, He ts nine years old, I have nothing to do now but to look after tha babies." Six little sauce plates placed around the table and one dish in the ceatre with marks of huckleberries on the edge showed that this slight provision had the” ‘vere left alone. . Leonce Charles Testus, the father, ts a job printer. He ts about thirty-three and was formerly employed steadily, but, although having many promises of places, he has been searching In vain for many weeks and not getting enough to more than keep alive, ‘The wife has been almost as unsuccessful In ner quest for family washing, but has helped a little, And now the prospects for the family are more dismal, as the owner of the house, obliged to move timself, and get- ting @ lite impatient, has told Testus Liat he wants to occupy these rooms. ‘Nhe little wnes praktled and pointed proudly to the growing corn, beans, to- matoes and melons, which gave sight promise of giving any return for the labor In tie Ume of greatest sed, either of tie older children c. tld tell r had been em, .oyed. but the landlord, whose name is rm, spoke well of Testus and sald he was not a drinking man, SHE SAVES BROKER GORDON. |Pva Horn Swears Ue Was Falsely | Accused, sisters who sell newsp: trate Connort th wullty of any wrongdoing. de dismissed the prisoner. —————— | a Brooklyn Express OMee. | Hiram Eng this elghtee ty the ca {il as a result of his. violent exertion. He was taken to bis home. + trial ‘all rowa of | Willlam B. Gordon, the Wall street |broker who was arrested on a charge sworn out by Eva Horn, one of the in Twenty- harged by Magis- » in the Long Island Miss Horn went on stand and denied that Gordon was nt. Darey,ywho followed the couple and made the’ Arrest, went on the stand At his own request and gave evidence|at Pilong’s face, which which incriminated Gordon. Miss ‘Horn lared it was false and the Magistrate] quitoes, CACHE OF RUBBER FOUND. he was drowning, and/Stxteen Stolen Cases Discovered in cases of Para rubber, valued at $7,000, which were stolen from Mid- jdleton Bros., No. 29 Spruce street, while |ruined and the loss is estimated at in transit between that address and a[erai millions of kronen, wt Ni steamship pier, The goods were stored | koutz and Bucovina the rivers In an express office in Sullivan street, | HILDRESN OF LEONCK TESTES, WHO (= @TAINVING POR LACK OF WORK > SINTEEN, SHE SET. BOY YING WITH OUT FOR EW YORK lice Station to Inquire the Way and So Was Restored to Her Friends. | | | Pretty Mabel Frances Brown, the atx | toe No. 860 Martin street, Kilzabeth, No J, is safe at home to-day in consequen: of having chosen a police station for | making Inquiries how to reach New | York Capt. John F_ Kelly was sitting In the Seventh street station house, Jersey City, late Inst night, when a strikingly handsome brunette, scarcely more than a child and stylishly dressed, entered the station and asked to be directed to the ferry. What part of New York do you want to go tot asked the Captain, part will do,” she answered. for a more definite reply, and ne, the girl replied: | Brown, any olf name will do." | She appeared to be very nervous, and [began to cry. City Physician Peter | dotman said he thougat her mind was Libec led. | Persisient, questioning finally drew from her the admission that she was | M Brances H, and that sie | liv homas Carey, at |N lizabeth. told Cape lel cluded she would go to see the Flatiron Bullding and other sights. < || She suid she didn't have any money, walked around New but 10 cents for m: jaodas, With the 10 people Calking about a free band co: cert and got off to hear the muste. When it was over she wandered into the peronatation and asked the way to sw York, Mr. Carey was notified and went to |fersey City and took the girl home, He sald ig niece's brain was affect as the result of sunstroke a year or 80 | ago. He was pleased to find her. Mabel crled because she couldn't see New ork. HATPINS WEAPONS OF WOMEN ROBBER Two Negresses Held Up Fort Lee Ferry Cashier After He and ice cream the Day’s Collections. old, of and got $1 fer but paid no attention to them. pins in his face and thr choked him with the other, found two $50 notes, a $10 and a $2 bill. sald. xeon found the money on the woman, he had been bitten by —=—_- GREAT FLOODS IN AUSTRIA. Elghty Houses Sabmerged itn One Village—Cropa Destroyed. VIPNNA, Austria, July 31 overflowed and have submerged eighty Brooklyn. Engel {s under arrest. Five. houses and destroyed the crops, infllot~ acoomplices are in the Tombs awaiting | ing immenge loss on the poorest classes owe OF the population, 4 eo ee Fortunately She Entered a Po-| Man Accused of Beating Him and Causing the Injury Is Williamsburg) Without Bail. +A sixteen-year-old boy supposed to be dyin 87 Walworth street. ear-old niece of Thomas Carey, of Chauncey Dentke, twenty-five ve without bail to awalt the result of the On Wednesda to his brother (Callahan's) peated the remar He found him on Wa so the podve say boy repeatedly, knocking him down, and then kicked him violently. Kalseretto went effects: from Mabel King, Mabel Smith, Mabel phyatcian and they agreed that the boy's nis} education and no prospect of nequl y a was hardly one ia 7 police. were Informed | Pands, A Kelly that she had! nded a picnic Wednesday night In! Bligzabeth, and yesterday morning con- | chance of ree, a thousand. and Denike was arrested. Lee Avenue without dail. Dentke denies the police story of the He says that he merely pushed he was heid jbut walked to Newark, where she pawned (wo gold rings for $1.50. She} rk and spent all) says he did not touch him after he had $7,000 IN PLUNDER FOUND AS HE SAID Prisoner at Police Headquarters Reveals the Hiding Place of a Big Lot of Goods Stolen from a Spruce Street Firm. its she rode into ey City, On the car she heard some ‘By the arrest of Hiram Mandel, who, Inspector McClusky declares, 1s a pro- fensional thief known by “Little Hi,” Police Headquarters detec- tives have recovered $7,000 worth of rub- ber which was stolen from the firm of No. % Spruce the alias of Had Left Ferry-House With street, a week ago. Mandel is twenty-nine years old, and says he lives : well known to the police, his picture being In every Rogues’ Gullery in the to Inspector Late last night he was arrested by Detective-Sergeants Cronin and Hen- nessy on Catharine street as a suspl- cfous person, When taken to Headquar- tera he was put through the “third de- gree, with the result that the detec- where Middleton Broth- ers’ stolen property was hidden. When Mandel Emma Leonard, twenty-seven years No. 14 Gay street, ‘and Kate Cherry, twenty-one years old, of No. 118 Weet Third street, nogresses, are the firat highwaywomen to utilize the hat- pin as a weapon with which to succeas- fully hold up a victim. ‘They tried it on Frank Pilong, of No, 5% West One Hun- dred and Thirty-first street, early today tives learned Pilong, who js cashier for the Fort Lee Ferry Company, had just made his collections and was passing out of the ‘y-house at One Hundred and Twen- ty-ninth atreet. He noticed the women, first questioned de vehemently denied that he had any- thing to do with the robbery, declaring that he had overheard several crooks He told the detectives the stolen property was in a junk shop in Sullivan street, Brooklyn, and when the headquarters men went there they found that what Mandel hal to.d them The $7,000 worth of rubber was located in a reputable where, the detectives said, mown that the stuff was plunder. day OM I Hed was returned to Mid- eton Brothers, nie police say they ‘believe Mandel had a hand in the robbery. the Information he gave them other ar- rests may soon follow. STABBED A FELLOW PASSENGER IN BACK, talking about It. When he reachai One Hundred and Thirty-firat street and Twelfth avenue the women Jumped on him, jabbing hat- tening to put his eyes out if he made an outcry, The Leonard woman searched his pockets while the Cherry woman stuck a long hatpin in hie face with one hand and In one pocket the Leonard woman “I've got the roll; let him go," she The women started on the run down One Hundred and Thirty-first street, fol- lowed by Pilong, who yelled for the police. At ‘Tenth avenue they ran Into the arms of Policeman Lavender, who placed them under arrest and took them to the West One Hundred and Twenty- Mth street. station, An ambulance sur- erry In court Magistrate Zeller held them in $1,000 bonds for trial after a glance oked as though n army of mos- Two Men in Car Used Knife on One Who Objected to Their Line of Conversation, ‘Thomas Ford, of No. 93 Nassau street, ed to the nature of the two other men passengers on a Smith street car in ¢rom Coney Island early to~lay, and wae stabbed in the back by one of them, Ford was accompanied by a young woman and several umes had asked the two men In the seat dack of him to re- {rain from thelr vulgar expreasions, but |office fixtures. You can buy & ti writer, a desk. a cash oe Brooklyn, objec’ conversation Continu- A young man of Jersey }ous heavy rains in many pante of Aus- revealed to the police of |tria are damaging crops. Already most che of the sixteen of the | serious floods have caused great havoc In the Jaegerndorf districts of Silesia. Buildings have collapsed, crops are ev At Fifteenth stree! anc Nintpye vente tie! (Wo. man, startes @ , bY Stic shoved’ the blade ot n pocket: |to go in the butcher business | lanife into Ford's back. at eaveral men pursued “the 8, bul ey escaped. tier street police |tal, is sought. Fifty toame to: onton earth embankment ts @ nifejcall. ‘Thus the list continues, « back was not serious, ignored him, fugitives a few block: rd went to the where an ambulance surge was called ¢rom the ans MOTHER” JONES WRITES PRESIDENT Sones Latter Mequested by Sage rotary Garnes ae Appeal to Mr, Roosevelt far Hearing tor Children “CITIZENS OF TO-MORROW." fhe Pointe Out that Mone of Nation Lowe in Generation Now Growing 4) ke for Fever Up and tion to Protect it toler oo hee meet oo Prete teen + iW amen! (hee ° pene Aewietint Ranretnet “ toeter Ray thie monn ne ane * fer be rent to the et Maat Jones will ve sat ie nt New Vouk ” ¢ Hon Theodore Re sevel Pree t of the United States Ove May, tat Your Excetlency Tw fore |awe I writien to you requemting an avdienew that To might lay my mission vel have your advice ina sours upon the welfare of the whole nation ailing to receive a reply to either stlof the letters, | went yesterday Oyster Bay, taking with me three ef | these children that they might plead @ you personally, Secretary Burnes ine formed us that before we might hops for an interview, with you we must fire® jay the whole matter before you in @ etter, He assured me of tts del.vey o@ you personaly, and alno that (t weul@ receive your attention, “Tae child of to-day in the man oe woman of to-morrow, the one the citizem and the other the mother of still quture eltizens. 1 ask, Mr. President,» what Kind of citizen will be the child whe (ols tweive hours a day in an ume nitary atmosphere, stunted mentally} and physically, and surrounded with) often Immoral influences. Denied educam ton. he cannot assume the duties rue citizenship, and enfeebled ~ cally he falls a ready victim to eae verUng intiuences Which our pri vconomie conditions have created. f “I have been moved to thi President, because of actual expe! ence in the milis. I have seen ut ebildren without the first rudimenta have seen little children wi ngers and other parts of th bodies mutilated because of their ch: ish ignorance of machinery, “I have with me three children have walked one hundred miles, servi as ivi proof of the truth of what say. ‘Secretary Barnes has assured me an early reply. and this should be e of the Ashiand House, New Yo! y Very respectfully _ your: “MOTHER JONES." —=——__ CRUISER NEEDS REPAIRS. \ The Chicago to Sail” To-Mowwend from Lisbon to New York. LIGBON, Portugal, July 31.—% ts ported here that the United cruiser Chicago, of Rear-Admiral ton’s fleet, will sall for New York morrow to undergo extensive repairs. Lost a Chance to Boy, | Thomas Bailey Aldrich, in wri of his old home town and some of i ancient characters when he was boy, tells how one of the old-time! resented the advent of the telegrap! as follows: “Nowadays if your son or you grandfather drops dead at the oth end of creation you know of it in tem minutes. What's the use? Unlesa you are anxious to know he's you've got just two or three weel more to be miserable in.” When this man received a telew gram, which was rarely, he made af point of keeping it a while unopened« Through the exercise of thie whine he Once missed an opportunity buying certain goods to great vantage. “There!” he exclaimed, “if the tel@ egraph hadn't been invented th idiot would have written to me, ani I'd have sent a letter by retu coach and got the goods before found out prices had gone up in C! cago. If that boy brings me anot of those tape-worm telegraphs I’ throw an axe handle at him!” If this old gentleman «tater visit the earth and see the Inte: taken in the “For Sale” columns The World he would be reconciled the telegraph and telephone as wel mediums by which many of these ad~ vertisements reach the office. In this morning's World there 46 For Sale advertisements and Business Opportunity adverti: @ ments, each one either a bargain an opportunity for profit. Offers made to buy out stores for cashj Other stores are offered for You can buy a candy store and di cateascn, a stationery store or i cream saloon. A lady going to country wishes to sell the equ ment of an elegantly furnished vate house. A specimen Business 0; advertisement from this ing’s Worl $25,000 CONFECTIONERY for sale at reasonable price) years catablished; largest ing, retiring allowed before buyiag} no real tate or auctioneer neod nicate. Apply by letter to KIONBS, 1187 Fulton at., Brookl; Another advertiser offers a set of scales or a bicycle. you is a controlling interest offered $300. A compositor, with $600 It pays to read World

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