The evening world. Newspaper, July 7, 1905, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

FOUR BURGLARS CAUGHT BY POLICE 006, Terrier Barks When Passing’ House Where Robbers | Are at Work. “Joe.” 0 little fox terrier, the pet of the police of the West Sixty-cighth street station, was following Policema: Eberett Faber along West Sixty-fou h Street just before dawn to-dny when he} ory and ped In front of the thre ment brownstone reside! Benjamin 1. broker at police had haen Amermon and her housely fAdirondacks for the summer and Asked to keep a watch on the house. “Joe suddenly began darking and, | running to the front door, growled an- Brily, Faber Imew the dog's signal too | well. He hurried to the corner of ‘Amsterdam avenue and called Police-| man Benjamin Connor, who summoned Michael Wall and Patrick Phalen, both plain-clothes men, and three other po- licemen, ‘They then surrounded the house, some of them or Sixty-third Others on Sixty-fourth Other police- men entered je tenements on Amst dam avenue and, climbing to the roof, passed over to Mrs. Amerman’s resi- dence. They broke In the scuttle and started | down ver part of the ho when on rd floor they enco tered four men, Instantly the fight be- gen, The burglars seemed to ha best of the fight In dark. ey tore off the policemen’s clothes, beat them to the floor, kicked them and | pummelled them. The noise of the fight was heard on the outside. The front door was beaten in, and the policemen guarding Sixty- fourth street followed by the little do, ran up the stairs. Hearing them com- Ing, the four burgiars took to the oe gtairs and ran to the cellar, Here one of them ld In the furnace, two in @oal bin and the fourth covered him: with loose coal. ‘The policemen followed the burglars] to the cellar, and the little dog began| énifing about. First his keen nose} scented the burglar in the furnace. The man was pulled forth and fighting w handcuffed. Then the dog came upon the man hidden under the coal. Aguin @ man was drawn forth, and agaia there was a fight. the t Then the two men fo) the litle dog snap: ‘of the prisoners ns. and very r eighth str they were of No. rst 3 Murphy, twenty, th ‘stree McGowan, scl West of No. iis enteen, of No. , ‘buniatea up sil- and othe les of agian 1 jewelry thousands Mrs, the Rogues ened in West § Nis the u are made by eohistary of New DENIES STORY TOLD BY JUROR FOR ALDERDICE Declares He Took No News-|: paper Clipping on Case re are i it to Jury Room, | pecaeweaas | When JInme tenced vy ré ery Andre Assistan: Gary tion. dssued and m were being exam Man SAVED FROM STATE PRISON, Bosnector Vitus » Penftentiavy Sentence for Thtes, George i i “ AMilcox, was to-day + 1 Foster, in ' plea of ¢ q grand larceny, Ta 1 f 0 be { Stanley at wie Inanecivg, ¢micod bin |e the ed for | action. * Victim of cone » Habit Ee. Buse GRUBB. ‘MRS. POILLON’S LAWYER ASKS COURT FOR FEE Retained to Sue J. Gould Bro- kaw, He Says, but Never Got Any Money, James J. Fitzzgern man: to be carried |?" was ag sh then withe - MOTHER AND CHILD «LEP ON TRUCK Her Little Son, Found in the Street—Woman W. Once Well-to-Do and Respected. BIG CROWD AT | AT FUNERAL, Friends Fay bast Hovere 6 Detective Sergt, Weiltorty H ‘ ‘ ' Mt f w athro t r f " eld » of , oO ! 8 Bi bh and Broadw pher rousand per Add A by the police ‘baud, 1 BLACK HAND TERRORIZES WESTCHESTER with) Police Secure Evidence of Mur- , derous Brigand Society’s Existence in County. SIXTEEN FORGED CHECKS ON THEM Two Men Arrested in Jersey! City Say They Were Handed the Checks in the Back Room, of a Bowery Saloon, WEAVER GETS ANOTHER HEAD, PHILADELPHIA lore wy wil! Murphy | dying 1 denc Uiree lia deft the ets, plate and | jorses and carria | omains ths widow | \eath or remarriage the son F Gibb, gota the effects, With this an annulty of $24,0% ts beqara hed to her life or until she remarry. re ae esti ienaai | merly m ing ne nity of $6,000, It 1s}! Jto be in full satisfaction and dscharge | | fa {all claims and demands of fHE WORLD: FRIDAY MRS, E. BURD GRUBB AND HER FIRST DAUGHTER, GEN, GRUBB HAS NEW DAUGHTER Warrior Hears of Stork’s Arrival at “Grassmere” While He Is Awaiting an Operation in Philadelphia. i | (Spectal to The Byening World.) PHILADELPHIA, Juty 7—Gen. E Burd Grubb, in the University Hospital h a serious operation, of the arrival at! country place at Edgewater pound baby When the news was telephoned to the one of the hospital physicians ia was the best sort of tonic for m, because he had been hoping that it would be @ girl." Tats Is the third child born to Gen J, of a twelve- Grubb and Mrs. Grubb. The mrst, Ned, | is now eleven of; the second, | Margart, died about a year a halt ago. 80 bird comes as a comforter. tions by telegraph and | ing received at "Grass from all parts of the coumry | | and even from abroad i Grubb wus Miss Violet Sopwith, pus Scottish beauty, who was the Rose of her. hat_he was so much older ty-four oid Aid 5 £ don. in 1492, six membe ‘ty ‘Troop ma ally me Captain $6,000 ANNUITY 0 FORMER Wift | ’ Howard Gibbs’s inpers. WH Provides "| Income for First Spouse, Who |} Is Now Mrs. Mary Loulse Vernet. ty dated A Jited april a codicl ) Rossiter Gibb, house! old Mary Low'se | for ond dur- ath to Mme wife Vernet againet m otherewiae.” ret wife, now or my nf of the an- ne mothor's not to exceed =2e Atter the death of the widow the tes- | F bequeuhs fo her daughters for annuities to Irene, Beasle and | 1th Rossder, $1,600 each ‘The residue of the estate ts teft In for the yon, Howard and truss i I states that #f after the son be- twenly-Hye years of age the In- eviduary emate does not 0) per year the annuity to be decreased to bring to $15,000. After rho Gibb, capAtal and left to the children rer duary. 6 ot Howard ward V, W. Dykeman are trimtess odlell madi Rogsiter and William appointed executors two days efter the al will says: "I authorize and em- | r my exexcutors, In thetr disor to continue to employ my capital nthe copartnersiip doing “business Inder. the. firm name. of” Frederick Loesor & Co., oF in thelr discretion to withdraw therefrom my share of the apltal at the times and in the manner po tou, provided in the comartnership articles, that Is to say, It $8 to be discretionary with them to continue he partnershi Brito ‘withfraw my capitaee : Ina Pinch, use ALLEN'S FOOT-BASB. Ladies can wear ehoes one size smaller after using Allen's Foot- Ease, @ powder to be shaken into the | shoes. it makes tight or new shoes | feel easy; gives instant relief to, corns and Vunions, It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Cures and prevents swollen feet, blisters, callous and sore spota. Lt is a certain cure for sweating, hot, aching feet. At all druggists’ and Shoe stores, 26 of Ran to act as ushers. | | EVENING, JULY 7, 190%) RECEIVER NAMED FOR MRS. POTTER Society Actress Presents Her| as, | Own Petition m Bankruptcy. LONDON, July 7.—Mra. James Brown Potter presented her own petitjon in dankruptoy thie morning and the Court ‘appointed a receiver, The American actress lost heavily as the rewult of recent productions at the Savoy Theatre, and all her personal ef- fects and her home at Maidenhead were sold last week. BOARDERS ROBBED, SERVANT GIRL HELD Loretta McLuckey Followed the! Plan, It Is Said, of Getting) Employment in Families Where Valuables Were Plentiful. (Spectal to ‘The Evening World.) YONKERS, Y¥., July 7.—Loretta Melackey, a tty young woman whose hame is No. 62 School street, }4s under arrest on a charge of lar- veny. She followed @ system, {t ts Said, of getting employmen: tn wealthy families and helping herself to valu- ables. ‘The girl was arrested on the charge of stealing Jewelry and clothing at "The Pines," a feehionable French boarding- house on Dunwoodie Heights, She se cured employment there as a serve about two weeks ago, and the prop: tress, Maria Verloquet, ved plaints from her boarders immed! after the girl's arrival that clothing been stolen from their apartments. O: une 27 three diamond ri: valued at 3350, were missing. Miss oquet vis- {ted Detective-Sergeant Cooley and told yy began his inves him the facts. © tigation, and y Miss Mc- owed her to Mrs. Katznel- son reau, at Wa ton and South Broadway, secured another po ’ th an Charles Doty and a youni Max. They were not held Tre efrl recently came House of the Good Shepier nad servel a sentence for stra Peekskill four years ago ————— GEN, PORTER ON HIS WAY HOME. PARIS, July 7.—Gen.: Porter to-day left Paris for Cherbourg, where he will sail for New York on the Hamburg American line steamer Deutschland th ening, A number, of comiciais. and friends accompanied the General to t! train and gave him an on of esteem on che te hie lengthy official service as Ambasea jor to France. —<—<———_ LOWER CABLE RATES, The Commerctal Cable announces that on July 1 the rate to Corea will be re: cents per word via th jal Pacific Cable—that is C mulpo, Fisan and Seoul will be $12 r word beyond San Francisco, other $1.29 per word beyond Sap Fran- | Four times richer nary milk is ‘gwEETCLOVERBRay, CONDENSEDMILK Sterilized by special process and absolutely pure. It is guar- anteed to keep sweet in any tem- | perature or climate. The trade- | marks are valuable; save them ;and write for list of free pre- miums, MUFRAWK CONDENSED MILK CO., tess! Rochester, N. ¥. At all grocers, than ordi- Mid-year Clearance Sale Summer Suits Every summer suit, regard- less of material or cost. will be closed out at about 1 /y Price John Forsythe THE WAIST HOUSE 865 Broadway, 17th and 18th Sts. |DERS' OPERATION AVOIDED BXPURIENCE OF MISS MERKLEY = | She Was Teld That an Operation Was Inevitable—How She Escaped It When a physician tells a woman suf- fering with Ovarian or womb trouble that an operation {s necessary, the very thought of the knife and the operating table strikes terror to her heart, and | our hospitals are full of women coming from ovarian or womb operations, There are cases where an oper: the only resource, but when one con- Siders the great number of cases of} ovarian and nh trou cured by} Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege Com- | pound after physicians * have advised | operations, no woman should submit to one with first trying the Vegetable Pinkham, ‘, ee, Wis., Dear Mrs, Pinkham “Loss writes extreme nerv bh the pelvic nd cramps Vegetable quickly healed, peared ond i ous an Ovarian and womb troubles are stead ily on the in | all the bad symptoms dis- | jam once more stron, vis | fj essive—if you | ve pain or swelling low down in th side, bearing down pains, leucor . don't neglect yourself; try Lydia) AN iT Health authorities declare SCHRA- CANDIES absolutely SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY & SATURDAY, | without vacation. W. L. DOU CLAS | net 0: bird AsTth ata; 350 Sat ar. ad Bighth ay. BROOKLYN 08-710. Broadway, cor. “Tho ornton at. Broadway, cor, Gates ay. banks cor. Pearl st; 404 18 Newark When you tre of the Buseball digmond come to us and got a real (lamond. Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, Direct trom the wholera i. ively aave you the retaliers promt CASH OR CREDIT. No wanployere' Heference Reauired, cal OF write for 11\'d catalogus No. 44, L W. SWEET & co,, ihh® | New York. 7-39 M. Pivriane ‘ON Si., Broowlyn {To NEWARK AV Torey Clty. Out-of -town Patronage Solicited, OOK for this Shicld on the window when you buy cigars, Homt avcept any substitute. "Trial Neo Extra Ohnar@e tor It, i ——$—$ Pius was ‘eniae | iP by for oa sulse, Keep ue Whar 2 package FREE 0 a hoy, Oe Astress were i for The World ats "Bali | United Cigar Stores Co, 4 lalk, i since. ik adopted th can see the label orananb Filth Av. & 9th St., B’klyn, {CREDIT {CLOTHING OPEN MON, & SAT. EVGS, That's the keynote of our org: trate the “real _garments! ng of ‘Summer Suits For Men and Big Boys. $ Single Breasted and Double Breasted 4 The fabrics are ONLY of the most select and designs, and as we sell NO C inderstand that this is a m« DOLLARS. It’s Easy to Draw Nice Pictures— Easier Still to Make Big Promises. But to Give Real Big Values? } There’s the Rub. which are on sale at a price more than § anization, The pictures above illus- Style and character Coats Q Trousers § and i Full Suits correct of this season's HEAP CLOTHING you can readily pst unusual opportunity at EIGH Straw Hats. HW From the very be the une 1 ginning things differently. On J for straw h and that price has This week we price, $1.35, or ha —THANKS. You may copy of July,” but the values at no stocks from leid- ing hat jobbers who are getting anxioys — we bought them cheap. We will NOW S EE WHO MME FOLLOW? Negligee Shirts. A mid-summer clean-up of all grade @f foreign and domestic The Shirts bear the brand of one of the best known makers in the § world, Out of courtesy to the makers we de not mention the 80 Attractions are name, but you on every Shirt, Our big corner window tells the tale. Our Window __ Pronounced. They are Open To-Morrow Al ‘Day. All Roads Lead to Broadway, Corner Chambers. BROS. Freely Extended to All, For the Entire Family. $1Down &50c, Per Week ‘On Purchases of $10 Worth, Furniture and Everything for House keeping, ASIEST PAYMENTS At that time we introduced the special ‘ ts of every description in fine quality braids. { hatters and sellers of straw hats ever noticed that several prominent firms had Hope price, 80c. § Greatest straw hat values ing Hope Clothing Compa Oth we published our fi “Hope” y has done t straw hat price of $1.35 That talk § Ave come within a few pennies of it & the price, gentlemen, “after the 4th time. Now after the 4th come fresh sell them to you the same wa. America. Choice Shirtings, including the best fabrics in plain and fancy weaves. All the best cole ors and white in plain and plaited bosoms, sizes 14 ff to 20, Choose at 80 cents, becoming dail our 12 BEST Surface Cars, Elevated, Subway. City Hall Park— i'M. SCHWARTZ, 1 064-606 FULTON 8T., Corner Soul Filtott Pisce, Brooklyn. /RECORD BREAKING SALE OP SUIT CASES and TRUNKS | SULT CABES. ates! frarmea, Jocks and hinges ‘S1.15 to $1.65 200 LEATHER SUIT CASES, 24 to 23 Tachos. shir partitions ft $2.75 to $4.00. CANVAS TRUNKS, tron bouom, corners. two t ©, $4.00, $4.50, SINGS DURING THIS BALE. -@- NKS REPAIRED, “How Old Was Ann?” How many New York theatregoers know the birth place and birth year of their stage favorites? Cansult the 1905 World Almanac |:

Other pages from this issue: