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

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Op ed Celles Dead. | QUEBEC, per aa De Céllées, of the is teen Of Near Buffalo. gh egy salen Ay hepaag @ shot ns. reports that shall relmburse ; ‘Fatal ‘Street-Car Crash. Bn evel ONT., JULY &—A broken4| roken! @ crowded street- mere into hae efi aa last a bight, | 17 : nes | Because Joseph Diggillio, of Mount Car- ook One of a panty of card-players, ard Game. Recalls Murder. ont s Murder. 3 MICH,, JULY 8—The of W. W. Dimock, of Milwaukee, | found to-day lying under a pile of Masonville, with a bullet-hole the skull. Dimock was last ‘On that date, after ho Mangonville saloon, a shot dang a cry. JNted, Killed Girl. INDIANA, PA, JULY &—Maddened ‘the refusal of-Anna Jenjlek, his six- Eel “ the girl and then tiled to énd his e Ufo. He i now in'jail, Ponsion Examiners Meet. CHICAGO, JULY 8.—National Associa- ot Pension Examining Surgeons !s gonvention here, with 125 pension ex- , Fepresenting 4,500 members of boards, In attendance. The devoted largely to reading on diseases peculiar to old _ Drowned Old Man. INTAS, ARK, JULY 8.--Ea- Sea Confesses that he and @ woman whom he sgeee the eee Bank Wrecker Convicted. BT. PAUL, MINN., JULY §—rhomas B, Clements, President of the First Na- onal Rank of Fartbavlt, who was in- Gicted on twenty-seven counts, cha arg embezzlement, misapplication of funda aud maicing’ false reports to, the Comptr: of the Currency. has been found guilty in the Triton rete Dise trie! irt On twenty-four counts, for Head Elk. UIBVILLE, KY., JULY &—Robert Bros Chairman of Board of Trustees of the Order of Blks, y for Buffalo. He Will resign it 1s understood he Higsition for the office of grand Soolety:ol Deaf Officers, . DETROIT, MICH., JULY 8.—The Fra- ternal Goolety of the Deaf at its cios- Ps euanion yeeterday votéd to rase the b tt f eet fram Si 10,320. Nations) ved ‘from C ‘Detroit. The following Raicare CLOTHES AND GO! PA.. JULY 8.—Angered | oity g| The Chinese replied that an escort wai Westchester se Cliahy. the Soene’ of Renewed Operations by Bandits, Blackmailers, High- waymen, with Many Victims. ‘The Italian blackmafiers and nsvas- sins who terrorized their fellow-conn- trymen in Westohester county last eum ‘mer by their assaults when their de-) mands for money were not complied with, well-to-do merchants, a saloon-keepers and con- Black-Hand Colony. Into the midst of this peaceful and Prosperous community, a gang of ex- Perienced Italian swindlers moved about ®@ year ago. They operated at times asthe Black Hand and at other times under some other equally mystic name. Before many weeks had passed they made themselves thoroughly feared. Marking a victim, they would send him word that he was expected to con- tribute @ certain amount of money to the Black Hand. Death, assault, ruin or something equally cheerful was the usual alternative. Sot in oan every case where the nored switt action fol- reat by Be dle Men were ineensibllity on lonely mins nv others were stavbed oF shot as they ‘went to and from work, and in several cases in their own houses by Ebilse wuperviston in this part of the ‘olice supervision in pi hecessarily, inadequate, to get evidence ai jbrigands, A few arrests follo |no convictions were secured. \blackmatlers boasted of thelr immunity und plied thalr trade with greater ac. tivity than ever. Levied Tribute on All. point wrs saan ey last summer where aliaort working on the Croton ‘dam Fifi “other big works Westchester was giving a ri tage of his to the awindlers. were fasesai a heir means. ‘Bun tone escaped.” Bucy ‘ess made the thieves bold. Men who had refused to stand the outrageous levy were hold up on the toads on their way home from work on pay days and relieyed of all thelr money. is a matter of poll more than one obstinate Roane vis- ited in his home at night” n with Hifes, "who gave bim the alternative of ra us, Detroit; First Vice-Grand George Hansz, Detroit; Second _ Vie Grand Master, Patrick Doolan, Louls- ville, Ky.; Third Vice-Grand ‘Master, ©. P._ Coker, Lttle Rock, Ark.; Fourth Vice-Grand "Master, E. /1. Holycross, m, ,0.;, Fifth ‘Viet-Grand Master, John O'Rourke, Nashua, N. H. ‘record that Wore clected: Grand Master. J. J. 2. ing Secretary, Steve O. aes, east: raw; Correspondin, ing Sere a. 4 Christian, Chic: sais mane | corel A. M. Martin, t ock, ‘re urer, Washington Barrow," Bat Creek, Mich. Sunk in Collision. PORTLAND, ME. JULY 8—The three-mested schooner Sarah C. Smith, of Boston, stone laden, was sunk off Portland ‘Harbor. ean to-day by the steamer Governor Dingley. No one was lost or iniured. Russian Minister Coming. PEKIN, JULY 8—M. Pokotilof% thi Russian Minister at Pekin, has‘left for Washington. Prior to his departure he requested the Board of Foreign Affaira Superfiuous and refused thelr conse: Russin is apparently desirous to emphi size the fact that the Llama ts under thelr protection, Author Kittredge Dead, MANCHESTER, N. H., JULY &— Walter Kittredge, poet and author of “Tenting on the Old Camp Ground," died at his home at Reed's Ferry to- y. Death was the result of infirmi- old age. Mr. Kittredge | ved by a widow and one daughter, Alderman Moest Dead, BUFFALA, N, ¥., JULY 8.—Alderman Heury Moeat, who was injured in an levator at the Clty Hall on Monday lust, dled trom bis injuries to-day, Roasted to Death, BOSTON, JULY 8&—The body of Augustus Hossert, watchman, was found to-day in the ruins of the fire Which destroyed extensive lumber yards Wwharfage property the south and end Dead at Age of 102, ‘ORT PLAIN, N, ¥., JULY 8,—At the #xe of 10 rs David T, Timmerman, | the oldest man in this sect | 1, ana his wection of the in country ere tor FIREMAN HURT IN COLLISION. | Captain's Bi uy Hit Fire Truck, uring Driver, } While running to a fire at No. 24 Court street, Brooklyn, early to-day, the bugsy of Capt. Thomas F, Short, | of Engine Company No, driven by Fireman Joseph C. Welsman, of the | same company, collided with Truck | No. 78, at Court und Warren streets, aman was hurled to the street aot eut about the d and body. Ne cation Resorts the warm suns and cooling will paint a picture of health city-paled cheeks, will be to-morrow through one else Was burt. ‘The fire was in an awning and was put out with small damage, eee .¥.M,N.U.TO MEET IN ALBANY DANBURY, Conn, July &—Rey. Wal- ter a Pg eri oA heed a. Prensast ot * | hin place on the bench, an ng tribute. or having his head {r"ls eaiimated that tne blackmallers thousands secured’, thousande and, ‘thousands ot steppe th “Degah” to” hunt “them down. the rows which followed he Biaokmatlors were driven Se, 18ce to there were several pitched Salen “Ri mumuerof them were shot, one was killed, a alee dozen, srs sent to jail, and {ise man_who was known the feader™ ot the Black Hand, were riven ‘out of the caer fo binckmailing came to an end and for months the Tealians working tn the county were free from the outrageous persecution they had endured for years. Return of the Black Hand. About twp weeks ago there began to be signs that the blackmailers had re- turned. Black Hand letters began to Arrive for prosperous Itailang, but they |, as none could believe “pwindiers ‘nad returned after the dose they last summer. But they soon learned thelr mistake, and the events of the past ten days have proved beyond a doubt that in Westchester County to-day thete is as evil’a band OF shee Gosperate swindlers as there babs he there last summi Last week John Guizzito, who ts ‘a rous shoe dealer in Tuckahoe, and ruck "res there, got a letter de- im He was told that unions the money was forthcoming he wouid be shot. He paid no attention to this and subsequent letters, and finally got ‘his. ignored, and red ai inthe store just in time to Ket @ second charge from the gun. He was Now that Judge Is a Member of the Pardon Board, His) Voting in Favor of the Woman| May Give Her Liberty. The friends of Libble Garnabrandt, the Jerscy murderers who Is under sentence of death in that State, and whose exe- cution has been stayed from time to| tlme by the almost superhuman efforts of her attorneys, fird a ray of hope for the woman in the appointment of James | B, Dillsas a Judge of the Court of | Errors and Appeals. As'n judge of this court Mr, Dill be-! comes a member of the Bonrd of Par- Gons, and. curiously enough, the vote of the man whose place he takes on the | bench was the ong yote that prevented | ® commutation of the Itallan woman's sentence the bist timo ‘her case was be- fore the board. If the case comes up again and Mr, Dill casts his vote in favor of the commutation of the death sentenge there {s no reason why the lite of this woman should not be saved. Such a result would follow a reopening of the case, proyided the rest of the board standa as it did the last time and Mr. Dill casts his vote in favor of the woman, There is no doubt that the anooint- ment of Mr, Dill will cause the friends him. "His brother | fi a Black Le ete Sheed for drinica, get them, when Sle euddenly whipped out a knife and stabbed him/ several times. pun and blazed ‘Caputo reached for his wey at the men. He ki! on, the spot and wounded the other two men, but they to xet away. The ‘police are now after them’ Capute te tn the hogpital in a dangerous condi tion from his stab wounds, bi been exonerated for Wiling “Big Pe by the Coroner. Giovanni La Barberrl, a wealthy baker ¢ Mount Vernon, ves he is now an attack. He has tenored two letters. threatening tlm “with death if | he didn’t give up letter, 2 man of bad reputation, named Glovann! Fott!, called on him. Another Brigand Shot. Fotti had @ gin and was about to use tt on the delinquent. when La Barberri grabbed his own gun and filled Fottl with buckshot. [pital | A Jetter. from the blackmallers warning him that he will surely be laced for alning: his hand in resistance | to a representative of the Black Hand has now been received by La Barberri, and he ts expecting at attack at any time. ses show the reign of terror (ckiate in Westchester County xt esent. The blackmallers up there, un- not badly ‘injured, but Gulzsko was ter demanding $100. He ignored it and very badiy hurt and may ald got anovher, telling him he wo yd pr: Felepeo’ Veolona is belived to haye| shot If he didn't give up the money. He Br the’ city ; been the man who fred the shots. He| Paid no attention, but did load. up jMikce Write threatening letters, carry out | fhotgun, and kept It benind the bar in| s plac heir threats when their demands are Wednesday night three men came tn | Known 2s a Blac Levert mnored. fel has ai Five hundred dol- has Deen aottered tor his Ice are unable to cops with pupae bat nothing seen hig store, Caputo recognized one ‘of The pol mn the shooting," of) them ‘ss Pete,” a man of great (the situation largely ecautse most of Pie Caputo, cote a saloon az| prosperity, who has néver beon known the Italians are too terror-etricken to talk at Mamaroneck, go: a Black Hand let-| to do any ‘work and Is generally regard- WILL J. B. DILL’S VOTE FREE LIBBIE GARRABRANDI? JODGE AND WOMAN WHOM HE MAY FREE. of the Garrabrandt woman to use every effort to Rut the case before the Board} of Pardons again. Mr. Dill is known & very amiable man, but at the same | timo a man with the highest sense of | duty. The best proof of this Hes in his | retirement from private practice to take | a place on the bench, a financial loss ot considerably over a quarter of a million dollars a year to him, Mr. Dill's attitude on capital puntsh- | ment.for women fs not known, He hes | never been quoted on the subject, but Uhere ix enough clement of chance In the altuation to cause the frends oF Libbie Gastabrandt Ww leave no stone unturned (9 et thle Innucnoe, Another case whi ieee tas of Mr. Dill to the bench ‘yl revive in- terest’ In. ts f \t to the front a8 soon as Bes | ‘Sonweauentiy on the Board of Pardons, there js 10 | doubt, pa Eaki glad IRISH BAND FOR CHARITY. The Monagh Men Will Have Novelty at Their Festival, A real Irish band will be one of the features of the Monaghan Men's fes- Uval at Sulzer's Harlem River Park next Tuesday ovening. ‘The band eon- wists of thirty performers, all of them born in the county wateh 1s to have the jebration, A stand of colors will ue presented ‘to the by len Haften, of the Bronx. Btate me McNulty. of the Ancient Order fpberniana will be in the chair Sixicie yptinnal and @ unite com: a My Pete” | Atter the rst | there were three children, two girls and | Fotti 4s still in the hos- | matter, but the records show that Neld- 1 +} Sunda; vailed ROR NEIINGER THE MOST Vicious OF CRIMINALS Dastardly Career of Degen- etate Accused by Hun- dreds of Girls, ONCE NEARLY LYNCHED. Faced Murder Charge When His Baby Was Found Strangled —Wife Appeals to Police. After @ career planed acrors the low- @at strate of criminoloky, H4ward H. Neldtinger, accurod of being the most viclous enemy to soclety, ts to be tried on charges the penalty of which will net him tn the méntmum of at leas! forty yeata. The accusers of this worst criminal of modem times are Uttle chil- aren rariging in years from nine to fourteen, and they number in the hun- dreds. Only yesterday there were forty | ready to tectity against him, and ac- cording to the dain obtained by agents | for the Children's Soclety he has fol- lowod the same life of immorality since he was twelve yoars old. He is now a Uttle more than thirty. A study of Neldinger as the worst of all criminals ts not interesting to those who delve into the myste:fes of aura action on the brain, psychic phenomena, wb-consclousness or (ual personality, is 18 not a disease, accordins to the | best authorities consulted by the officers | of the Children's Society, Parents Were Drunkards. Men learned in diseases of the brain | agree that the symptoms point to a solute viclousness developed under Guise of religion, although admittedly Bowing from a germ of inheritance. | This is the history of Neldingor: His father and mother were drunk- | ards, hia mother died in the alcoholic | | ward in Bellevue Hospital. At that time | | | the boy Edward, then twelve years of age. ‘ With the death of the mother the father disappeared. The chfidren were turned over to the Children's Society. | What became of the girls is of litt lnger was sent to the New York Juvenile Asylumd and from there to @ farm in the West. ¥rom that time until 1900 there is 20 trace of him, but in that year he turned up in vamost ¥., and board with his Sresent ‘mother-in-law, Crosby, then a widow with a , Bells, thirteen years of age. in the ‘Crosby home Neidinger in jail was forced to marry the child, who althony his wife to-day refuses to} lve with | Baby Died of Strangulation, Afterward the trio, husband, wife and mother-in-law, went (o Warren, Pa., where a baby was born. There Nei- Ginxer almost put bis head tn the bang: man's noose. His case puzzled the en- .tire community of Warren, and if his history had been known then it is likely | that ‘he would have long ago among the vast inhabitants in the world} PaVnile in Wren. the baby | of bis of child- ‘under Was acquiticd for lack ee evidence. in hig release Nel walks and ng from Seffring us an Induoement study of botany, of Yo cents @ mon le mel, abou t the botany club from pares Of children | members, that the Police forced Neldinger to disband he kept under cover Dretended to. be interested in Shuren All the while the brain of oe Shinai was, at work spinnin: Md peel Scheming snares for innocant c and victous mind work fais the old ambition and soon the police rete again on his trail. dust Escapes Lynching. From Warren he, with his wife and ther-in-law, was driven to Buffalo ¢ police. Tetras nom ac bere venue, Tear HB Agali Sicather a tpn on speaker 228 Un pee oon nk Bais at he Sry disbanded. He Sava nas of duration. Soon he invaded the homes Li part of town, a: it nm Seen foro gonservative ‘Bement { in th los of Buffalo saved ite by pecrotly getting FRESCOED COP WITH MUSTARD Rowan Resented Checking of His Beverage-Seeking Pro- pensities with Deadly and Very Yellow Accuracy of Aim, Ger ducked, but the big pal ror behind the ber coukin't and waa shattered. Lange hotfooted for a policeman and found Ergerich, Rowan was dallying with a big mustard pot at th ob souaeey woen set returned. ne yt e@ zr t the 2 tf Pee aa “] “al aie uel 48 it fe, fee eee test ee se pleases he “0 vocal ners Phen ‘i fh atheved mower ie Ihe ataneat a wan told tants te Cornel) ty oH jfotn end ia the pelaonet 2 ep When Patrolman Ergerich, of the Alexander avenue police station, ap- peared in Morrisanta Police Court to; ay to testify against John Rowan, of No, 206 Het One Hundred and Firth strect, whom ho had arr charge of malicious migohlet, arin appeared on the faces of ¢ clates. ‘Tho cause was Ergerich's unt- form, According to the polleema: corroborated by Ernest Lan prietor of a saloon avenue, Rowan entered Lange's place | last night very much the worse for a progressive bour with John Barley- He asked for # drink and was fmonan Wars, Buy a, o, jrrapiyedg=e eee Be aed rd raged a lpm ramiited u story, town and out of the clutchos oe angry’ parente and brothers of little baud Buffalo Netdinger drifted Farnham, N, Y. Farnbam's chief ciaim to ite ‘exitence, is a Ria EES. Neldings ‘end wife od ao FENTOAY LAITY PRY PENN TI Naren's flower club for stile Seria, | 6 1 wi complaints came to the police | fit, into Into HARD WORK In New York, DOES IT WIN? Correspondent of The World Points Out Two In-' stances in Which Hard Work! Has Won Substantial and! Honorable Reward, but Bal- ances the Scale by Showing the Potency of the“Pull.” Does hard work win? A writer recently tn these colamas satd it did, and told why. Then seberal men wrote and emphatt-, cally differed wtth. the first writer. Here is another reader of The Zbentng World who be- ltebes that while hard work does |win in business, it ts **palf?*” that counts in the ctbil serbdice This ts what he says: New York City, July 6, 1905, To the Editor of The Evening World: I wish to say in regard to your question “Does Hard Work Pay?" that in the firm which employs ine the two highest moen—the mariager of the business and the superintendent of the tactory—were hired eleven years ago—the manager as office boy and the superintendent, as general errand boy. The manager ‘to- day 13 only twenty-six years old and the superintendent {s only twenty-nine,! Both are recelving very high salaries, This shows one case where hard work did pay, for If these two young men had neglected their duties they would have been discharged instead of hold- ing the positions that they do to~day. I have several friends employed m the Civil-Service and by what they tell me and by what I read I think the only, |Place that hard work doesn't pay mw |in the Civil-Service, but of course there’ are exceptions, Some time ago a fireman took the examination for foreman. He was told |that he had passed. Later a person, went to him and said that he would get the position If he would pay him, 41,000. The young man, being honest{ and upright, would not Day him the! money, 80 the remains a fire- man to-day. Here is where bard work There ate man; ard, work does pay f ‘To the Baitor of The Evening World: Having read the various Uons upon the question, “Hard W New York: Does It Wint* I wial) to! state ¢hat I emphatically disagree with 2g | the various writers. I ean say fom. actual experience work nor lute Ot that neither =

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