The evening world. Newspaper, November 24, 1904, Page 10

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> HEH YOR NS = WTHANSENG Natlon’s Great Day Celebrated with Feasts and Hymns of| Praise Generally Throughout the City. TURKEY IS KING AND PIE IS PRIME MINISTER. Many Feasts Spread for the Poor and Hungry, and Philan-| thropists See that All Are Made Happy. + ‘United States (2 (tie only country yobs that has @ national day set tor thanksgiving. | down on your marrow bones and your prayers of thanks that ‘in this, the greatest country rhapsody ‘over-the country and at all hours | feclings day services are being held at hymns of praise and prayers of thanks are being sent up inte azure ‘blue of heaven: the inner sanctum of the and the Commission Deal- there are shouis of joy of peaine for the appetite of publlo that santturkay to 4 cents ‘ ‘king to-day—but “beet and” ‘wi be-woki on the Bowery and in the poorer sections just the same. \ Minch to Be Thankful For. Mow ‘York has much to be thankful for. ‘There is the subway, and the pos- @bMty thet tho (nartistic horrors that ¥ ‘his brand of beef extract or may be brought ‘walls they deseorate by ii} li eyly fifth floor, ej iss i i if ef #8 Z 3 g f i $ murde: And t tthe wee juloes start wisted of tu rolls, among them being Rose Froid, On Tuesday night Cramer went whist- “ urs the ladies of the mia known a8 “Diamond Tooth Rosie,” who| gio wel hard to keep the Hungry | lng home fepm his station and at the } much tme under the care| stomachs flled Whey succeeded 90] 4. o¢ hie home, No. 4 East One Hun- | Sf the polies, but never spont ‘Thanks-| admirably, Wal 0 Pu th tolkere (dred and Tihirty-eecond street, met a ; Giving Day in jail before, Another waa) %."\ gmail boy classically expressed i. |matronly neighbor. She was just leav. j Florence Coleman, a pretty eighteen-| They fled out of the mission house, ing, “How age my boy and git]?’’ asked : gmt who io charged with «| each with a bag of good things to take) A. 1 @ ‘diamond robbery. *| home in his hands. a sated via’ aon ahh iad , Michael Whalen in the esex| "Gee, Dut it waa great!" said Jimmy| "Your boys and girls ave all rig ag Market Court prison presided at a ain-| Murphy. ‘I wish nkselving came/answered ‘the nighbor with @ laugh. : ger to the forty. prisoners totnita; | every day.” ‘The second pale had just excived : ‘Gnder his charge over the holiday. He- +5 sides the turkey and other substantials | persona donated two bar- = ae oe 8 collection ot ples. wore *Y prisoners to serve With Thanksgiving ‘fare at the Jeffers " POOR FARED WELL IN WESTCHESTER, | (pects! to The Evening Wort IRVINGTON ON HUDSON. “x Dec. %—Miss Helen Gould, who has fust returned from a trip through tne ‘West, visked Woody Crest, her home |, for crippled children, to-day and saw | % that a fine Thanksgiving dinner was Prepared for the fifteen boys from Man- hattan who are belng educated there. Miss Gould also had turkeys presented to each one of her fifty employees. sat be oh, what joy, enough CHLOREN | ATA AST Little East Side Guests of the! Five Points Mission Eat Tur- key Until They Are “Just; Ready to Bust.” LED TO DINING-ROOM IN INSTALMENTS OF/300. “Gee! But It Was Great!” Said Jimmy Murphy, and that Ex- pressed the View of Every, One at the Feast. “Tolkey! Ob, my! enough for me!” | Mickey O'Hara, fianked on one side by young Angelo De Pietro and on tha other by Otto Schwarts, burst into, a expressed the of 9 children at the Five Points Mission, For it was a red-letter day in the lives of these little children, who have come under the protecting hand of the Five Points Mission, and the bic annual Thanksgiving dinner—the too wae the occasion of more joy tia) the neighborhood of the old Brewery, where the mission-house now stands, than has radiated from the spot for many moutha. “Dinner at d-exercises at 115." This waa the order, but long before that hour anxious little faces were peering in at the Rev. A. K. Sanford, superintendent of the mission, ready to be on hand for| the 'Thankagivin’ tolkey,” Installments ef 300, When the exercises were over there waa a throng of children of all nation- alities in the class-room, but the Mis sons guests were taken by inetall- menta of 900 at & time and led into the decorated dining-room on the ‘The littlest ones were serv~ ed fire, and then the bigger ones, And, when the dining-room to-day to immaculate newaboy, * that wer, ig ‘neat to Mike,” to in that tnaleo Just totkey’e good & betillant blue dress and yel- | @eod on the threshold and | 1,000 HUNGRY MEN IN LINE FOR FOOD —_—-—. y, First of Free Breakfasts at) Bowery Mission Brings Out, Great Army of Unfed from} Cheerless Haunts. ‘ Banker Adrian lselin, sr., New Ps Rochelle, made a number of poor people| hollow-eyed from that city happy by having his agents uding ribs pi istribute turkeys and other g00d) mockery of the! things. John EB. Andrus, th of Yonkers and Co we away 4 num inners to the poor ‘Miss Pauline Hall @ained a score on the outskirts —o— “ALL GREEDS UNITE IN THANKSGIVING. millionaire, al giving prop line this m the he Bowery In that @ atic DETROIT, Mich. Nov “Uinitey in things necersary “ What is doubtful; charity In ail ( @ the motto for the day, an Interd Rominationsl Thankagivi held in the Dertott Opera-House to : wticipated tn by ministers of inc! Jewish rabbi, a Cath. | L° Congregational, | The Sai ir rts ok | WON OFF TO INDIA. ; tharktul fe ioe orn ree breakfasts rf ny 1 n known rid word had passed wut oe tha | | Dressed in rags, shivering in the cold, | pier nk tol? r F @ none the just tolkey.”” renal ot these hungry 1 of the the turkey and good things on the tablo, it menu at the Five Points Misalo: king 7. the eploursan wer mouth, key, edt has milk, cheese, oranges, grapes, apples, nuts and candy, “Just Ready to Bust.” k For the land that gave me birt For my native home and heart For the change and overturnin, Of the times of my sojournin taken; For an evil way forsaken; For cruel law abolished ; For idol shrines demolished ; fitty-fourth, Song “FAREWELL!” of Thanks. hy h; 1 #) sabre; And by free feet trodden under; For the world’s step forward) For the truth defeating error; | For the love that casts out terro’ | Por the truer, clearer vision Of humanity's great mission , For all that man upraises, I sing this song of praises. Wrought from broken gun 4 For the slave chain rent asunde and ry —John Greenleaf Whittier, THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 24, 1904. ’ COPYRIGHT, 1904, BY PARKINSON, N, Y. CITY. TWAS TWICE THS POLE Two-YearReoord of Member of "s:| New York Foroe One to Win Admiration of All Anti-Race Suivide- Advocates. Four cMdiren-én two yeareds: the: rec- ord of Polloeman Aneel Oramer, of the West Forty-seventh street station, and ‘tie young wite. ‘Twine twice, and in inetanes @ bay and a girl Dighteen months ago the first boy and @trl were bom. Cramer was the pride ot the force for a time, and his com- wades sertously thought of cabling Pres- Ment Roosevelt's attention to him. Race sulolde does not enter into the Oramer ealouletions. ‘murdering’ n Mt con- m, chicken, ple cake, MUTINY ABOARD THE | BLACK SEA LEET2 Report from Sevastopol Says} Revolt Was Serious, but Was! Repressed by Force, Several | of the Mutineers Being Injured 8ST. PETERSBURG, Nov M.—Accord- | ess, the) ing to a pr ivate telegram from Sevas- | ot ¢ of the 22, un revolutionary | was quelled veral the report Admiralty le at the —— MANY JOINED TO MAKE PATIENTS HAPPY, f the Lakeville schoo ah School an miributed. f Vogetables and trun, and Hi ums of money were reonved from friew!s of the hospital who. did not want thelr names mentioned. As a result of the many offerings Sai a ae day What have thankel ul mf the | ware TWO MONTHS WE WN FADS. Manufacturer, Found by His Father in Hotel with Bullet Hole in Brain, With a bullet hole through the brain, 4 revolver in the right hend, the body of Antonio Tufan!, a wealthy carriage manufacturer, at No. 214 First avenue was found early today in a room in the Palace Hotel, at Fifty-cighth street and Third avenue Tufani had been dead for #everal hours when his body wees found, He had been missing since Tuesday last, and his father, mother and bride of two months had just dis- covered his whereabouts whon he Killed hémaelf, They say he was tem- porarily inaane, ‘Tufant came to this country several years ago, @ poor boy, He left behind in Italy, his sweetheart, Maria Laabelle Petull. He was a bright, energetic dtai- fan, with some knowledge of the car- rhage-maicing trade, which he applled successfully after reaching America. Ho, made enough money to start in business for himgett. Wedded Only Two Months Ago, Then his father, who is wealthy, came here and bought the three-story brown- stane house at No. 315 Hast One Hun- dred and Ninth street, the handsomest house In Little Italy. Tufani went to live with dim, and four months ago sent enough money to bis sweetheart tp ‘ome here for the wedding. Maria Isabelle came here two months ago and the wedding took*place at once. It was solemnized in the Church of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, in Little Italy, and was. the biggest svcial event the colony had ever seen, The couple went to live with the elder Tufanl and were very happy, Cufonl began to act queerly last Sat- umtay, His physician sald he was suf- fering from overwork and advised him to rest for a while. Tufant stayed at home, but acted sely toward s bride that hie father sent her to 0 an Upper floor and would ni sge her alo’ He was nuld become violent. ther Hears Son Is a Suleide, | BLUE BELL’ HOME AND (SFORCIEN Body of Antonio Tufani, a Aged 34, Who Eloped with Boy of 17, Comes Back to Forgiving Husband, While Petie Is Condemned to Exile. “Blu home aifa been forgiven. © Bell’ has repented, NOTE FROM HME MADE YOUTH Ole Son of a Russian Farmer Ends His Life in This City by Hang- ; Ing. Himself After Regeiving | Bad News, returned| Herman, Abranonn, twenty-two’ years Petie” is con-| Old, a Russian farmer from Homestead, demned to exile forja year, during| Pa, committed sulcide to-day by hang- which he must earn his own living, buy| !ng himself with a rope made of bed- his own clothes and prove himself a) Clothes ¢o tha eas jet in his room, at man. Hochdorfer, seventeen yea: 624 Park avenue, and Mrs, Jennie Blsele, | thirty-four years o'd, living next door, who eloped together about a month ago. when they, eloped. “Pete” said pe couldn't live without “Blue Bell” and “Blue Bell,” sald she couldn't live wig Both So ends the romance of Peter left notes When she ran away Eisele left behind her two little boys. Blue Bell” began to pine for the boys] and the nice home she had left and} made up her mind to go back. night when #he arrived, and the husband 1 two boys were asleep. neard her knock and went down to the door. He ri ema. bem With or upetatr yoys were figured that It would be bet- | er to get back home with winter com- “une © tie conclusion ‘Pet ae On, wT] Bo eoognlaed her rT sobbing and laid her tears 8 eed his to asieop. ie » Duk pe ! his voice. Hat's you. with dh ar an we nead on his shoulder, caming from her eyes orgly room where the would be best to try bis father out r the telephone.firat. Potie,’ * Have you' a oud job got? “Father™ rec- 0. 12 East One Hundted and. Thirteenth . i) | street, old, of ‘No, i Abranonn's parents are well-to-do farmegs, with a big place near Home- stead. He came here about a week ago and went to stop with a fried, Jacob Brodsky, who lives at the address given, He had plenty of money, dnd seemed in g00d slightly ll for some time. He received a letter written in Rus- sian yesterday that seemed to contain bad news, although’ he made no ¢om- plaint that the Brodsky family heard. He was morose after’ reading the letter and went out. When he returned tq tho evening he refused to partake! of food and went to his room,' where he wrote two letters In Russian. They were not addressed, and are now held by: the Coroner. He tore his blanket “into strips and with them wove a rope.’ This he fast- ened in a noose about his neck and tied the other end to the gas jet in the mid- | dle of the room. The gas jet not being high enough for him to hang from, he leaned forward, his feet-touching (he floor, letting. his pot fall on the noose. He strangled to death, His weigit proved too much for the gas fet and fixtures, andvafter he had. been Mrs. Eisele; t “Petle.” “Petie” Mre. It was Her hushand held out his 1 crept Into and he led father sald No. Then > et and work at It for @ year, | dead for some time the whole thing fel) Don't let me hoary trum you until you| with a crash’ that "awoke Brodsky in ave done this and proved yourself a| the next foom. wet igan. You le witho to"eart Mr. time soon a rly | go.and look him up eerily to-day | Some time during the morning Tufant lett a aealed le Ws father, which was t hy the Coroner to meke the onfirmed h of his mind when he Palace Hotel, it was so Tufani copistered Tues but his ast night At midnight t midnight th k went 2 him, but getting nswer to called a policeman and t reed, Tufant was found bed. he hotel people ray that Tufant did pot Grink ai rf) during bis stay }thelr house, M very quiet and she no signe \yl mes! euge |! meat. German Consul-General Gets Bow-| Emp anxloy Bneng man ¢ day mi wrdor br. phyate clan. very menae bouguet Ne ny Ho that P w have out permission and | now you will have 10a. Goog-by, ‘Petle.’ * fer suld he knew ail the would afl the woman. —-—- BUENZ SLIGHTLY BETTER. quet from Kalser, yeror William Jovernment tn a an Consul-Gen Was filled last oue a F said padlt in tr was last eal. lan, crave of moerning the illness of Cart uativerof the Ger cablegtam to a promi- elty » be als Kiliunt, the attending day * Was somewhat bet! night, Mr. Buens had 4 very! #4 night. according to the: Pbysi-| and at times his condizien was | Emperor Wiliam t# being kept in- your clothes Brodsky velled for, the police and an ambulance from the Harlem Hospital brought Dr. Moeller. Abranoon was be- yond help. His letters and effects were sealed for the Coroner and word was come back | sont to his folks in Homestead. spirits, although he had been |? HIS OL ‘The Preacher Talks About| Usurpation at Albany During Thankgiving Sermon in Style of Orators in Campaign, There was a surprising uote of pés-| |simiam in the Thanksgiving Duy aer- | Won delivered by the Rev. Charles H, | Parkhurst In the Madison Square Pres- byterlan Church. He struck ont at what ,was called Odellism and Roose- | veltism during the recent eamnpaign, and | If the election were nop over he might | be accused of detiveri stump speech jin hie pulptt for Judge Parker and for Judge Herrick. He sald in pary: “It Is pleasant to exercise more power than ome C2 US all not fo case to exercine all the power which deer be jong to us, and mR te the joint oper- tion of those two tendencies that issues |ta the Impairment of popular liberty, and in the promotion of vligurchy, mon- archy and despotism, “As One means of protecting the vub- M2 against this peril the (ramers of the National Constitution, with an ap- Preelation of human falhbllity, and with & preacience of danger, devised a care- fully thought-out scheme of governs which should involve a bulaneed bution ef authority, ‘ences have to be put up exceed- ingly strong and high to prevent cat- Me in ‘contiguous pastures from ctop- “Or, to illustrate field, we know with what frequency in the State at large the Governor as- | sumes to be the State, treats Repre- |wenatatives and Senators as underlings, | | summons them to the Executive Cham: | from a broader ber to take lessons in Jegislation and Punishes them if they show them- selves indiaposed to learn the lessona; | and they, a considerable element of them—all of them, perhaps, that be-| long to the Governor's party—false to | neir own = prerogatives, — sasarieu tradtors to the constituencies that sent | them to Albany, under the gpbernator- fal lash, or under the spur of their) own political ambition, play the dull comedy of what they call legislation, | but which ts in fact simply the regis tration of the Governor's will; and) tlus one man, and he, perhaps, a very dubloys sort of man, becomes pract!- cally the whole State, as distiner a usurper aa any tyrant that ever of anywhere broke into the domain of right lying outside the frontier of his own proper responsibility, Only a part of the blame of thir, however, attaches to | the Governor, for the rights that he succeeds in assuming will be only those that the parties he takes them from do not care enough for to retaia, and despotism in euch @ country as ours oan proceed only from popular indit- ferenve to Individual prerogative. “Lnese are only the sly creepings of @ tendency that mean not so inuch but a tendency, so pregnant with eager vi- tality as always co be on the eage of slipping over from the blade to the ear, and from the ear wo the full corn in the ear, “Of course the nil becomes tre- mendously enhanced if for assumption on the part of the Chief Executive ot | the State you substitute similar as- sumption on the parc of the Chief Bxecutive of the Uniied States, When we speak of the Czar of Russia. we think of him as being himself R personally incarnated in one man (al- | though the Cuar ls learning some pretty | serious lessons on that point this week) hen we speak of Emperor Wiiliam, | we think of him ag personally embody- Ing the empire over which he rules, and William and Germany are synonymous, Do Not Want It Here, “Now, we want nothing of that kind hore that {s falso to tne entire genius of our Institutions, We wan: no man, however much We may esteem bim, and whatever admiration we may have for his personal qualities; we Wont no such one fo be the governing Impulse of our Ameritan life, the determinator of Amertoan policy, one mind acting In | Keu 0f- 9,00,000 minds. That js not ‘government of the people, by the pev- | ple for the people. : question ja: not. upon. the wisdom or the unwisdom of the policy which ex . The int and ing spirit of government that An American Pres’ pH goverpment t is not Intended to be the shepard of the poople; we are no sheep, C.6.Cunther Sons, Batablished 1810, FURRIERS EXCLUSIVELY. Fifth Avenue At 28d Street, New York. Germany 1s ‘ity, and yes- ordering an sent to the room. The that Cons although it} JAMES MeGREERY & CO, Ladies’ Corts. Third Fioor. ack Kers+y Cloth, Cheviot or Mixed Tweed Coats, Half .or Three-Quarter length, $14.00 avd $19.50 | Three-Quarter length Coats, made of fine quality Ker- sey Cloth or Panne Chev- iot, Finished with braid, Semi or tight-fitting back, $24.00 and $27,00. Broadcloth Redingotes, Lat- est colors, $39.50 Twenty-third Street, JAMES McGREERY & 00, « Fur Department. f inch natural Squirrel Scarf, lined with fur $9.50 Muff to match. ...... $10.50 65 inch, shaped Alaska Sa- ble Scarf. finished with TAG cccsesrccecver BIRD Muff to match,,,....$10,50 65 inch Sable Fox Boas, fine ished with Brush and POWs occ cece reece $1880 Flat Sable Muff..... $10.50 Four Skin Mink Scarf fine ished with 8 natural tails $22.50 Four Skin Muff to match $22.50 New model, 22 inch Persian Lamb Coat with roll collar, Lined with Brocade $95.00 57 Twenty-third Street, ———— JAMES McGREERY & 69, Sale of Silks. On Friday November the , asth In Dress and Waist Lengths, of four to sixteen yards, These represent the short pieces remaining from this season's stock of Silks, At one-half usual prices. sooo yards of Black Taffetas Silk. 36 inches wide, 75¢. per.yard, Value, $1,00, Twenty-third Street, JAMES McGREERY & C0. Ladies’ Sait Department, Third Floor, Broadcloth Suits, Long Coats. Pleated Skirts, New Colors, $35.00 Tweed Suits, Blouse Model ' Coats, Pleated Skirt, $20,00 Crepe de Chine and Taffetas Silk Dresses, $40.00 and $57.50 Twenty-third Street,

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