The evening world. Newspaper, July 4, 1905, Page 8

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Schoolteachers at Asbury Park that " Button-Sewing Educa- ion Is Not the Right: Sort of Training for ‘Twelve - Year - Old Boy! , and Refers to the! * “Three R's’? of His Youth. 0 —_—_—_ at ‘the meeting of the National Bau. | ational Association Convention’ at As- Yury Park to-day Mayor George B. Mc- Ciellan ‘was the principal speaker and ‘proval of the “Frills and Fads" methods ‘by Superintendent of Schools | “Thought Waves Th-ob. =. A's in droves have landed in aoe Park the past two days, end fast night there wos so much higber education crowded under the Auditor- ‘tam foot for the first formal meeting “@hat! you could almost the stay os iter throb in big thought waves. from every State in the “profeesore" and teachers of A eset wee vaulted thought Nectual hair, which thoy mysteriously useful twelve-year-old boys, even the stmplist Eng- ‘Yate institutions, you will find that the ast majority come from the little crose- pupils. “There is nothing elther disgraceful or undignified about the three R's, Many to read, write and reckon ‘There is nothing. disgrace: in teaching them. And ire they taught!” women teachers thought i wae toasts, absolutely nothing at As- N. EB. A's. Even the of July celebrators have had a pie lo take a back seat for these promul- Schoolmarms In Swarms. Up at the Casino thero is a scene Mayor Tells Conventionor BRAINY SCHOOL MARMS AND PEDAGOGUES of varied Interest, as the schoolmarms and the men teachers have to file past the different tables to be tabulated. First of all they have to be regis- tered; then they have to have their tickets validated, and then they go to the department that assigns them to hotels, and all this happens after they have been met at the station by recep- tion committees with yellow badges, who send them on their intellectual ways up to the Casino from the depot. And such a commotion at the station! Querulous schoolmarms from Port- land, Mich., and Winona, Minn., want to know this and that; obedient profes- = — i—] = mm Eo —) ON RAMPAGE IN STATION Naked Giant Armed with Shovel and Poker Sav- agely Fights Police. Stark naked, screaming insanely, Gnd armed with @ shovel and a poker, Anthony Rela, thirty-cigst years old, @ big Barbadoes negro, prisoner in we West Yorty-seventh street station, fought Doorman George Dorsch in bie eell early to-day for fifteen minutes be- fare aid came and the negro was over-} powered. | When he was subdued the negro was the Ears, Drive No Curb Put on the Sounds That Assail Away Sleep and Make Life More Burdensome to Persons Who Tt was not many summers ago that la man sat down and wrote something Uke this: “T have led 2 sort of irregular life and the great beyond may mean the echoing halls of pandemonium. However, after put in a patrol wgon, placed ina strait- |# summer in New York, I expect to find Jacket, and under guard of three officers feken ‘was confined in the paychopavnic ward, Reid was arrested late last evening @t Forty-second stree: and Eleventh @venue by Patrolman Allen. He had been amusing himself and frightening | the tenants in the blodk in Forty- Second etrest, between Tenth and Blev- nth avenues, by fmequent incursions nto the back yards, where he would wlimb the clothes Old shoes, empty ‘ker: ead ng. lee ths ver’ fenante ‘sould think of to drive bin y failed Wtterly, “Alien chased ‘jim a poles. bottles, fire-crac! a ie = reserves. At when Doorman Dorsch went into the ofll' corridor to awake prepars rest'and quiet amid the clamors of Ere- to Bellevue Hospital, where be! i...» ‘Then he took « powder and expired. Now, this man was something of & stole, But had he lived along through the baimy days of this summer he would have found greater justification for severing his mortal co!l. more sounds this summer to the cubic yard of atmosphere than can probably be found in any other metropolis in the world. the din, - lears fiuts and dwellings would drown the bursting of Mont Pelee as the bray of an 983 would smother the sigh of & gnat. Ja There a Quiet Neighborhood? The Society for the Suppression of There are Every day adds a new noise to en- nd a composite phonographic through the open windows of and | Noise has yet to be organised; but Y) and the neuro | a fara rg. mn he alo "at uel et .|would it be worth while when authorities that are would smile be- | ti nignly upon @ herd of bulls of Bashan | fit; let loose on the city strects? Is them ;any quiet neighborhood within |reaches the the of Manhattan? What police- man ever interfered ‘with a barker of greens with a volce like the crack of doom, a push-cart army in full cry or © pack of flat-house hounds baying in the airshatt? Immediately New York opens its win- ows the roar gets up and makes it- |?) self heard All @a@ darkers are training thelr Jungs in rawmills and boller factorl are reserving. their yelps and howls, the cats are dreamily composing new sonatas and b | trolley gongs are deli tuplahed up, adjustod — with equipped with extraordinary ela; All winter long the phonograph flépd ohafes at bis inability 40 entertain jis Winter the hawkers the dogs © medleya, and the new washers) und INE) the ‘pew. Yoatds he Das nein dlagane ‘and It 1s no joke thet the| | totally deat are blessed at this season of the year. \ ‘There ts no ourb nor restraint on noise in New York. Rather it couraged; récord of all the sounds that assall the Are Ill, and before the blossoms fly they let- er-g0. The Evening World last heard of a musical block in’ which there were sixty-four pianos, double tho number of phonographs and enough Other instruments to equip three sym- ony orchestras, The paper thought Kt had made a discovery, but, bet summer baby blocks, and nelgnborhood: aside from ‘the street sounds which their vibratory force to help split the wellkin, ‘The street din-makers get in thelr first yelp at dawn end continue until within & few minutes of the first fherect that condemn ¢his sort of music. when you come i it down to fi hand Gren Selly a8 ey chance. ais is very at you can hear one Unlegs it is backed up against your ront st The retalier of farm truck sees this. “the ole clo” man gets In his miulas ‘ory monocry, the children on the block wel up a tin-can band and half. the women on thi ing, the ‘here are some aici h As It Is In pie Bit in your window on a evening try and. plok Out ty uot usual bars of sound that ary Atmosphere to pteces. market place is tar from 34 long-jawed they ing theli ~ ndissimo, but it if ‘onty in get it, ce, and you cal mi every street Is plage beskie Which the Belgitn’s hage holee-ereator 1; dreamy and slumberous, ‘Thero the police maintain some wort of order ang uulet where there are und dwelling places, are utterly complacent: lew pights ano house wreckérs began’ tears down buildings on Fitth avenue, Tike Syetis tn the Waldorf-Astoria. Fa dn ite bor awet, pau meme YELL RRS TENE RY es Ten Ts eet a SWEPT 13 BY OCEAN BREEZES AT ASBURY PARK.| sions vane | U the OCFAW LHL TLACKIRS FIAVEWT VEN TURED, VIET: sors, with their wives and cntlaren, | off to that riotous Asbury Park. ‘The | important questions concerning the edu- | cheap rates have ‘been gone over, and|cation of American redmen was dis- |g. crowd to the baggage window, anxious- ly Inquiring about their trunks, to get Willie's jacket or Flossie's cape. Wives Wouldn't Stay Home. In all the aggregation of culture, in- dependent , womanhood walks alone through the path of intellectual pur- | suits; but don't ever imagine that mere man, with the bulging brow, has any such luck. Ne Of all the be- [honed Waves Waves Throb in Unison with the Pulsa- tions of Father Nep- tune’s Billows at the Convocation by the Sea —Schoolma’ams Vote New York's Chief Exec- utive a ‘‘ Lovely Man”’ Elderly Female Edua- cator Shocked at Brief Meter ot Bathing Cos- tume, Plainiy, as @ Sather from the beach, who was not a N. E. A., marched non- ohalantly past the informatior. bureau in the Casino clad ony in a scanty bath- ing sult. The schoolmarm ¢urned her head and binshed. You don't see snch sights og that tn the inland States. A group of high-browed school teach- ers stood earnestly looking at a huge Poster in the Casino to-day. The poster bore the likéness of our old friend James Corbett. “I.wonder what he ie profesor of?” aeked one of the group, “I don't find his name on the programme here. And he J@ so handsome, too, I’m. sure it must be something very eotentific.”” Many Distingulsned Educators. ‘The national headquarters are at the Coleman House, but the different States Gre scattered about at the different ho- tels. . When the delegation from Kansas and ‘Wisconsin arrived yesterday there was consternation at the station when a sot of prim-tooking schoolmarme let go of ome piping rival university yells. California, who has come into the fray with the determination of winning the national convention for San Francisco next year, has a large delegation. Salt Lake has brought ‘on a few too, for It |‘ the secret hope that the convention jwill go to the Utah city. There are many distinguished educa- tore at Asbury Park and they are the centre of attraction for the glances of admiring schoo! teachers. Among those geen in the national headquarters to- |day were W. H. Maxwell, Superinten- ox York City schools; Dr. flags Ibrarian Columbia es. | University; ‘The tntee Commissioners of }edpostiee: of the State, Howard J. | Roy Edwin Goodwin and Augustus pwning? Albert shields, Henry Jen- she and the children have accompanied |Cussed, but for the greater part the |kins, Assistant Superintendent Al; er Mc. Professor to the convention; so| teachers were scattered over the park. {non 8. that vast assembly, which the registration department says will sur- in all |paes that of Boston, where it reached | 80,000, there will be lots of embryo in- tellects and feminine assistants, There was a meeting yesterday of the National Council, when Mrs. Higher Education has refused to|4nd there was a meeting of Indian Ed- e ‘at home while father has gone|ucators in the Beach Auditorium, where Bather Shocks Schoolmarm. . Everybody, including the New York | over Mayor elegation, who ¢rrived } on account of the headquarters in New | day York not closing until ta: Howard J. /on hand, and there were great sensations spectacled professors, you could count|Rogers, First Assistant Commissioner | jn store for many of the school teach- the unattended ones on your fingers. |of Education of New York State, talked, | ers from the West and North. A middic-aged schoolmarm from Ne- braska was horrified, and showed !t O'Shea, Edw Gi ee) Davis, Grace C. and Le McCh "Ss @peec! ate yeaterday | pected it will Noch! fever heat on Fri- the day of President Roosevel ‘s idreas. oathere ien't’s schoolmerm in the crowd panne belore “Pra will pass the 30,000 pes fore —Who eae ieply Aedfo tam eae ieeat only 10000, sore nt of the Bre going to be disa; pointed. pdileagd et night, was | NEW NOISES ADDED TOM FOLEY SEEKS TO GREAT CITY’S DIN ANEW BUSINESS} | Has Sold Ore of Hie’ of His Two Liquor i Stores—Some District “Wise Ones” Believe He Will Become a Contractor. Tom Foley, he of the big heart and generous impulses, Is to retire from the liquor business. He is authority for the etatement himself, and produces for the benefit of those who doubt it the deed of sale of hiy South street store to Conger & Bennett. Mr. Foley's other saloon, at Franklin and Centre streets, 1s on the market algo, and, It Is agserted, will he sold to @ syndicate composed of u former An- nt District-Attoracy, an ex-Police Captain @nd an ‘ex-Warden of the Tombs, ‘There are many who belleve the Tam- many leader of the @econd has made @ fortune in the lquor business. in years gone by the South strect store was a “mint” Jong before Mr. Foley n id |S0t #0 prominent tn politics, when he | devoted all bis time to business, “I want to get out of the business,” Mr. Foley sak to-day when interrupted jin the act of distributing to the | youngsters of the Second District sev- eral hundred dollars’ worth of fire- | crackers, ‘‘for the reason that I at tured and sick of it, “I have been in the Mquor business nearly torty years, and st de about time 1 got out of it and took up something else. I've made my share of money and will put some of it in @ new business.”* It was hinted in the Second that the contracting be cal with another Tam- re ay the boas knows bread the Ratton poe goes jin —— SHIPPING IPPING NEWS, sii re ens ents a0 district, ‘and 1 mice side of the’ bees Sertinge'e Hell Gass Wilvinw arieston INCOMING BTEAMBHIPs, DUF TO-Day, lanria, Naples. | iawurs:to, aes een. ur Martadua, OUTGOING Br CTAAMSHIPS LW, ger vn popular lender intends to go into the | Pondgm: Raid in (Special to The Evening World.) PHILADELPHIA, July 4.—The far- | reaching effects of Director Potter's spec- | tacular Police raid of last Saturday night are just beginning to be felt. The city Is jn a turmoil of fright and ap- prehension, Famiiles will be broken up. homes wrecked and gsoctal stand- ards shaken, while the Tenderloin. of Philadelphia is showing signs that it 1s really to be cleaned up in the series of raxie planned to follow, at the ex- pense, probably, of many nearby cities, Many of those leaving the city ax ja result of the raid have gone to New, York. Numbers of the women taken in the |ratd gave agsumed names, hoping there- by to escape detection by husbands or mothers. who believed them elsewhere, and now relatives of missing women are thronging to Moyamensing Jail, hoping, yet fearing, that their last ones will be found among the women held there for want of ball, The Mats of prisoners give no ‘clues on account or the assumed names given, and in most without looking in the pen, believing that they must hunt elsewhere. ‘This will not save many of the guilty ones, however, for the professional on bave been subjected to too close a scrutiny as to the collateral of- fered and have slunk away, leaving tho women to find bail elsewhere, and hun- Greds of friends are scouring the city. lenges for bail for women. who walt the crowded jail, . Exodus Sostters Vice, A goneral exodus ia in progress .trom| cases the relieved seekers go away’ EXODUS OF VICE FROM QUAKER CITY’ ‘Disorderly Element Flees Philadelphia to | Seek Quarters it This and Other Cities ' as Result of Most Remarkable History. getting shy, He knew t houses, To have “h>so then duestion Hevienants only sw, Police district disorderly hous vasies and gambling Jjolats teurlshed almost within the shadow ~~ TKILLED BY FALL; BURNEDTO DEATH ERS CMIBS Little Girl Watching, Celebration; :: Window—Boy’s Clothes Ig- nited by Bonfire, While watching children in the street below playing with fireworks from the window of her home on the fourth floor at No. 281 Monroe street, Rose Rogosky. , pe Spt old, lost her Ppa on the and fell to. the ‘walk. Sho nay on her head and eutered a frac- ture of her skull, which wus Instantly fatal When ber ¢rantic mother rec! dead. hatin zeny speak station- del end why thay 68d | into cs valy closed them would not) girl's Goeth vats the list of those whom the feel! ea board of inquiry could exanune als) would prominently ‘into palic gain votes for the reform next election, Law and Order Society's Aim. Wh teceaed ini) aibbons int Hepp Pa ot ring the di view party Tumbles from Fourth-Story ate | Western aeronaut, peilar off his ship, and bru'sed himself SCORES SCHOOL “FADS AND. FRILLS"S6.000 Jewel THEFT 1S KEPT CLOSE SECRET Banker Higeinson and His Son Refuse Details of Robbery Even to Police, Bix thousnd dollars worth of jeweiry was stolen froma desk on the sssond floor of the residence of James Jackson Hiexinson, banker, at No. 18 Bast Forty-first street, some time Friday evening, and in spite of the efforts af the police détectives and Pinkerton men not. the slightest trace of the thieves has been found nor a clue as to how thieves got In and out of the house without being detected. There is must mystery about the en- tire affair. and one of the curious things about it In that to-diy, when Deteot- ive Sereeant McCafferty, of the Cen- tral Office, who is one of the best men In the Bureau, went to the house with & request that he be allowed to foake @ thorough investigation he was « admission, Mrs. Higginson said she Was fot going to have any more de- tectives in the house, and Mr. Itigain- son's #on also objected to the presence of detectives and to any ‘Information about the rxpbery being given out. ‘The desk in which the Jewels were Kept is on the secotid floer in & room agyoining that occupied by MM eyine gon, there is no way of telling Just is Tut Hi gon was in the room at the tme or not. But one thing is cert fina that is ec Was tainuiat With the exe a of the jewelry, as he went Ww the arawer i pried it open withe a screw- ea) was kept, Griver belonging to Mr. Higginson and having the initials “J. on the Bandig. ‘and disturbed nothing “else, ow he goc in and ouc again is « mys- tery. ‘tigre Ja a good deal of silver in the Higyigson house and lots of other vale wablex that a professional, thief would hantiy overiool yet these were un- fouched. “The Niet reports of, the rob. Dery placed the loss of the Hii @t $2,000 and included in the stolen property @ great many wee Were not stolen at all. is inson said to an Evening ‘World reporter to-day. she stolen property is valued, at 96,000. It might be a little more than that, but 1 hardly think so, fe was taken from a desk, not a sate, as was iaofires reported. -'the desk ts a stron substantiai one and the drawer was ce- curely locked, It never occurred to vs that any one would know where we kept the Jewelry, eVen in the remote posai- bility,/of “ahy one “getting up in the ‘oom. eae ae MRS. CHAPMEN’S GEMS AND LODGER GONE It became known to-day by the offer of a reward of $50 and no questions asked that on June 2 the apartments of Mrs. Jennie E. Chapman, at No. 145 ‘Weet Forty-eighth strect, were robbed of diamonds and other Jewels valued at more than $3,000 airs. Chapman keeps a boarding-house, ‘The ui floors of the dwelling are decupled by roomers, while. Mra, . Enae tean herself jives onthe Nest hpo pendant brooch ued 800, a cltetes $185, a solitad Ee | orth several valuable Jewell brace! ‘When shown ai ek of & grou} jewel thieves in the Rogues’ Galles ire. Chay identified the photogra Kid von as the young man wi had so suddenly disappeared. ‘AIRSHIP, AFTER FLIGHT, HITS TELEGRAPH POLES. Succeseful Quarter of a Mile Sail a¢ Brighton Beach Followed by Slight Accident, Aftter ‘Making a successful ascension in hie airship, the California Arrow, at 'Brighton Beach to-day, Leo Stevens, the smashed into two poles, tire the pro- wireless telograph ‘Btevens took the ship oP from his aerodrome between ighton and Manhattan Henels at rig o'clock, a arent crowd performance, went 2 fet in area wd ane sailed ‘away verter D2) jeanse of vise for the past Ave yours, administration Gibbone: 1 was never able fovsceve pia ete: of Ty Ripper make use of hand abd, utters sont cra sreave who was keen { is ne cas ch Saturday night’ h set @ raid f ehiatelal esa! fo. jot the ive of otter mn bh Pottor in record for make Gibboney saw his chance lo eo warrants, Potter ted lad to pe ite suyor Se is Seer jo Sand Fig Ma oharacter of 4a) vhounes igs hyd inmates tha! wi Wipe Out All ea A Reali the Tenderloin, and the women are pack-,| wos: ing and moving their belongings. Hun-| thi dreds have already lett the efty and) hundreds more will leave ‘to-day, as there ts a general beliet in the declared, deturmination ot tor bps to keep on’ raiding the disorder! until Philadelphia te too hot for rises. _ ‘The impetus back of. the . osat of the polico’ dragnet. ie ent. It falls naturally under es! | Firet—Mayor Weaver's deu'in to his hold upon the reltsinus element Philadelphia a and effort to pavers a self for a wideropan red-Uaht under Davy Amith, Uoster’s prede: and Weaver's former confidant. . > Beognd~-Dimcior Potions anxsol Jon of more polite beats, sn cntey into oMise not a day hie mae eee, some patrainitn, 2 ‘(eee es ty houses! ay) nit ar rhs nf Aiioidilg were gi DAY ‘WORLD printed ROAM, as ee ed near the taken back littl rye ok He Injured | a EN a ee =

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