The evening world. Newspaper, July 12, 1905, Page 10

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owe OMEN RISE AGAINS ST G CARD Discard and Sell Their Few Trinkets and Jew- els to Raise Fund to! Defend Berthe Claiche, who Shot and Killed Her Master—War Is to Be Waged on the Brutes, and Courts Stand Ready to Visit Full Penalty on Those Who Lure Vic- tims from Foreign Lands with Golden Promises. (Continue from * @ifioate of graduation whe nonly eleven | Pears old. | > Page) ( wl ERT q Dy VFL NEY LG oi A WHITE SLAVE CF NEW YORE NS WHO ENSLAVE GIRLS I Bor two years she kept house for her | mother, and then went to work as an had to do, that you were afraid she @pprentice at embroidering. For a year | would see you! @he worked without wages, and later| “She knew she had to," raised her wages from 2 centimes to | irl with a shudder. ‘V francs a day. gen me I would “Did you"love Emil at frst?” “Were vou the on ‘. “First; not after the beatings.” Bt “When did he begin to {1l-treat you?" | “In three months. As soon as he got | Ft sald the poo! "Hut if she had ed."" ve me hero away from my mother. Incur | Were ‘pin 3 q flat there weuld often be so much nolse | Sent up to e 14 with his blows and bad language and iln't caten F ; il that people would rush to my door | for him 1 and try to break in to save me. Ife made me s0 sick that the doctor said: | Live with him one year more and you ‘will bs dead.’ ” Beat Her for Everything. “Why did Gerdron beat you?" “Because I would steal away to see! resiral @y mother, around in Seventh avenue. | witness, Emil would find out. He knew how and w @he wanted me to run away from him.| memory. Then he would beat me bucause I dit Defied Girl's Mother. ot bring in enough money. Then {£1 |) ewny did your mo le. ot ‘pinched’ he would beat me Worse +5 be near you than ever. | 8. AS soon “Sometimes he would make Me £0 yeace ago, and I ext, even in the afternoons, because Tot, ioen Ga not bring him enough. I would 7° Oe cry and say, ‘Oh, no; shame, my p) Some '0 mother will see me. I could not bear bela it’ But I had to, just the same, and US. T cou then out again at night. And there are |finding me o lots of girls living just as I had to. nd yet Ia “Didn't your mother know What you) Berthe ¢ as w saw mot haranly 3 i 4 ee vide for a substantial defen: girl the greater part of this sum having been furnished by other haplesa womes, laiche to commit murder. ory of Emil Gerdron's brutality ile Parisian has awakened a for her wretched fellow- fs 0 develo} purpose wage Ww other to pun- to Gerdron! h jem for thetr crlin n their victims from thelr vicious mastery past year and a half two d efforts were made to Kel ‘phat is break up organized traffic in young | |sirl slaves who are brought to this | city from thelr peasant and village jhomes of Europe. Distriot-Attorney thelr few Jerome spread consternation among | de Ger- to prison cing milder re sentences upon others. Jacob Schiff, Jesse Seligman and a number of thelr associstes in philan- hrople efforts, aided by Capt. Stephen McDermott, of the Fifth street station, nd attaches of the Dis t-Attorney’s office, conducted another crusade a for nga! hese leeches last spring, but d with murder. |somehow they got wind of the move- m and fled. A score were arrested, however, and {a sald, hun- | to free dreds of dollars have been ratsed to pro-|sent to fall for terms of aix months | numbering now many score, agree to of the|under the Vagrancy act. This served | ma to frighten their kind for a short while, but now they infest a dozen neighbor- hoods, and their victims are recorded in the police courts by the hundreds In the Nineteenth Precinct, especially {n that section bordering upon Seventli avenue, from Twenty-third street to Thirty-fourth street, a new order of is creature has taken root. For ths they have been plying thelr trade er an organized ays tn open deflance of the police. y have gone so far as to have their own club-house, splendidly They have a secret society, a code of | peculiarly warped morals to sult thelr lends, and a grip upon thetr subjects that they seem powerless to shake off. Lured by Promises. With specious promises of marriage |and happiness, they send to Europe for thelr slaves, blinding parents and | triends as to their real purpose. Once the girls land on Ellis Island their masters take possession of them and | mould them to thelr purposes, some- mes by cajolery, more often by bru- | tality. | Hold Whip Over Slaves. | amis ts the method by which the Ger- drons of what has become known as [the French Tenderloin maintain their hold upon their slaves, The masters, tem, a ns appointed. | SRT ER Ent ABlaseal Giza . from home and drove her into the street and beat her when she did not thelr several slaves, ‘They are ever |PRiME, Hama, money enguan to, sattaty | at their heels driving them deeper into | ee fax) rand he was taken to St. their degraded lives, forcing them to | * is's Hospita earn for them comfortable incomes and | qi’, qurweons thought she would ie ‘no dollar of that income is /| ante-mortem statement. She told a ain a system of esponage upon u story that made Roe who heard it rien’ © ti Rasp at shocking character. Wlo- When one master sees the slave of !eand was arrested, and under the per- anoth ut to rebel and turn to the sonal direction of Mr. Jerome prose- Fy uted. He almost managed to free elf for his fellow-Gerdrons man- to reach the girl and threaten her police or some aid, he n® Kindly disposed for | summon ‘owner'’ of ortunate cre! vith Aeath If testified. who threate Magistrate Joseph Moss, who ts pe- itely b cullarly severe in dealing with such p offend ays that no great blame can | hy b | agal Some of that they jon thelr his w be lala upon the police for not prose- cuting euch creatures, as he has ob- sory | of these of them that they dare not testify, | Courts Ready to Punish. Magistrates Barlow, Cornell and Crane have taken hold whenever any crusade was started against the Ger-/| |@rons, always imposing the extreme | pena Mane Chey Se TeY, act Vey suggest that some specific or- ganization be formed for the single pur- | pose of ridding the city of this class. her se men are so prosperous | hire aldes to keep watch laves. They prescribe a fed boundary for their vic- and if y trespass without it ster punishes them. Some Despicable Example Aggray j cases have developed recently as a few mo: certain lmit t e as 3 ago, not to fies Barthe Clan Oniy,a concerted effort carried out pa- speek the Berthe Ciaiche case. | ently and sweepingly can bear fruit, udge Cowing. 1n General Sossions.| these magistrates say, and the entire | sentenced Arthur Wiegand, one of this bench and bar stand ready to punish si drastically the offenders. ‘Suggestions have been made recently that it would be to much better pur- pose for Commissioner McAdoo's vice squad to prosecute the Gerdrons of the | . ton imprisonment with ree weeks ago. He . & be wor a. His slave was Hannah Neubert, city rather than their victims, as is the | | teen’ years old, a daughter of a w case in the majority of police round- sale Wine merchant He lured \ ups. —————— ) DUEL LIKELY OVER RUSSIAN PEACE ENVOY Muravief{’s. Selection Starts a General Row and Even the Czar Grows Cold. GIRL WHG es ST. PETPRSBURG, July %1.—The newspaper criticism of M. Muravieft's fitness for the post of Peace Envoy ts likely to result in a duel between M Bkaalkoveky, of the Novo Vremya, and f Prince Oukhtomsky. editor of the St Petersburg Viedomosti. The former has not been sparing tn bia attacks on M. Muravieff, and yes- f terday Prince Oukhtomsky took M Bkaalkuvsky personally to task in the ‘Viedomosti, whereupon M. Skaalkovsky assailed Princo Oukhtomsky in a fash fon the Prince can hardly overlook. He says in so many words that Prince Oulchtomeky 1s a fool, but recalls Vic- tor Huyo's observation: "While every man has the right to be a fool he @hould not abuse the right.” Strong influences have been brought to bear on Emperor Nicholas t> induc him to replace M. Muravieif as peace plenipotentiary, although the Ambass @or has taken passage on Nor MUAY BE HELD c4e71¥™- ROCKEFELLER ROBBED HIM, SO | CORRIGAN SAYS Cleveland Man Bitter in Re- plying to Lawyer of the Oil Magnate. (Special to The Evening World.) CLEVELAND, July 12.—James Corrt- fan, who was the defendant in the famous Utigation in which John D. ler was plat rh of an art Miss Ida in ure’s Magazine, was r the statement Rockefeller's attorney, terd.s) at Mr. was paid but he con- nuations, Miss Tai ! is worse than one bas vut it, “It 1s all right for Mr, Rockefeller to squeal no Legally, I suppose, they wut the case, Morally they were not entitled to 4t, German Lloyd steamship wi “The money was gotten out of me by 3 helm der Grosse. sailing from Cher- crookedness, and Mr, Kockefellar and Dourg July 26. Iknow $t, ‘According to reports the Czar ts wa- there was no book vering, !f he has not already bicome h Was not convinced of the fact that his choce| you the 9 was unwise. Pees Sai The Russian newspapers whos’ Any information from eriticiam compelled M. Muravteff to re- did np ow what to Unguish the portfollo of Justice have attacked him with great savagene being utterly unqualified to conduct su important negotiations and the Fore q Office has all along been supposed to share a similar view. ‘The peace party at Court has done | utmost to secure the supercession ¢ M. Muravieff under the belief conduct of the negotiations wou | mure to lead to unfortunate complica- | tions if not to the complete wreck of the hopes of peace. The members of this party profess to believe to-day that they have won a sh vhie M W aly Tee t . a ee ‘waahicaton mics “at | Father of Missing Rose Levin Pokotilof€ (Russian Minister to ina), | : Q M, Wit right hand man, will ead | Thinks She Has Been the mission. They say the Emperor's @ttitude was apparent on Monday when Lured Away. he recelved M. Muravieff coldly and re-| marked that he did not believe bis a ' health would stand the strain of going! The p to Washington—and the Imperial tnti-| cacy tor 4 ace 98 of @ character not to be| ROOSEVELT HEARS MURAVIEFF IS OU are who who OYSTER BAY, July aroused, here to-da MM, Muravieff, former 4 tdoa, who recently design fons af the Russian plenipocents the Feace Conference, would n In was Myitelpace tn the conic ran Hl wkotlioff, one of the direct Russo-Cilinese Bank F to Obing, is stoud. Confirmation of the appointinent otiloff is not obtainable he: me, although it ts known that M Bealth. one ed not 1 Russian Envoys would not creato has been appoin His declination gray el IDAY WORLD WANTS Work school of ster i wiio Voice and plays we pli Bhe Was in great favor in the welghbor: hood where she ved. and the entire | MONDAY MORNING wonpERs.| Asst AND Ki Sok, my it with cloth. is : THRE the a SO :A8 WHAL, be Dae was y ENDL AUS sent to sw J Two room Chemi Wil be is ree dead sked one of the retor ame of vanauan | making Ss gaid Chem was an in- | telligent Lithuanian, about twenty- cight years old. He |s declared to ibe anie.” The Pittsburg Secret Service oMivials will investigate Chemil's record, and 4 then ‘blot corner of the tabl 'AHLE, SOCIETY PAPER'S AGENT, SENT TO TOMBS Man Accused of Trying to Blackmail Vanderbilts and Others Held. ' When Charles H. Ahle, the alleged blackmajler of prominent society peo- ple, was arraigned before Magistrate McAvoy in the Centre Street Police Court to-day he was remanded to the Tombs until Friday in default of $3,500 ball, which was decided upon after a stirltcd wrangle between the counsel Abe Levy and Assistant District-Attor- nav Krot “We find that this scandal is grow- ing every minute,” said the Assistant District-Attorney tn explaining his de- mand for bail high enough to keep Ahle in the jurisdiction of the court. “At the time of this man’s arrest we found in his possession a memorandum ook with the names of the Vander- . McK. Twombley, J. J. Astor, El- bert H. Gerry, Lloyd Phoenix and other prominent people, whom he has subscribers.” [as to wi ether the names were bona fide, Mr. Krotel sald that he was trying to learn under what circumstances they jhad been secured and if they were sim- "to those alleged to have been ai mpted on complainant in this case. hle was then taken to the Tombs, Be- re being taken to court his picture was taken at Headquarters hle, a solicitor for the Soclety Edl- tors’ Association, was arraigned on the complaint of Edwin M. Post, broker, member of the New York ok e, socte an and resident o' n|Tuxedo, According to Mr. Post, re represented himself aa In a position speak for Charles Stokes Wayne, g editor of Town Topics. Ho was ted yes day after Mr, Post had wnided $00 in marked bills, Scandals Suppressed, He Says. Able y was to pay for Mr, allty to prevent the publilcation in Town Toples in facta in connection with h 1 oh, Mf garbled, might made to appear as 4 scandal in high re, ‘Mr. Post says Mr, Wayne called! him up June 21 and asked him to see says the mc Mr. Ahle on @ personal matter, Mr. | Post said he told Mr. Wayne he did not have the pleasure of his acquaint. | lance, but Mr. Wayne 4d he would! nd Mr, Able to him with a letter Mr. Ahle came, He wanted Mr, Post to subscribe to the Smart Set edition | —— 0, Mr. Post declined, and then © 18 alleged to bave told him that oWn Topics hud Cer ucts about 4 Setudwo in Blumford that might nur iovK | we wei | Post Told Jerome, Mr. Post tempuriged tu slay mat- ters for & {OW days Und Loni 1nd Wise lie says (hey agreed that tue thing to do was not tw be use uf held up and “air. stuff, was abe # hi k ny re act nd Post to’ print — | Moth Angry, \ (From the Houston Post.) Wayne Able about Mr, hus ne story } "What 1s that poet looking insulted about?" “He has been mistaken for a football Dl PMB why te Zonder football player making ch a “He was mistaken for @ post,” knows nojhieg at] ‘400° ON LIST OF MAN ACCUSED OF BLACKMAIL This list of names, claimed to have been given him for “de luxe” subscriptions, was found on Solicitor Ahle, charged with blackmailing EL M. Post: No, 250—William K. Vanderbilt, jr., Grand Central Depot. No, 171—J. J. Astor, No. 23 West Twenty-sixth street. No, 300—H. McK. Twombly. No, 252—Alfred G. Vanderbilt, No. 299—A, Van Rensselaer, Eighteenth and Walnut. No, 168—Mrs, H. Mortimer Brooks, ‘0. 300—Lloyd Phoenix. No, 185—C, A, Pestloy, N No, 85—Bugene Higgins, No. 10 West Twenty-third street. 'o. 237—Mrs, Alex T. Van Nest, No. 31 West Thirty-seventh street. 0. 172—W. P, Thompson, Westbury, L. L No, 251—Reginald Vanderbilt. No. 173—Mrs, Bertha Honore Palmer. No. 138—Henry Barton Jacobs, No, 11 Mount Vernon place, Balti- more, Md. 0. 319—Mrs. George Westinghouse, Erskine Park, Lgnox, Mass, No. 109 vs. Linda Thomas, No. 2 Elbert H. Gary. No, 297—Harrison J. Drummond, St. Louls, Mo. SAVED A PATIENT FROM THE RIVER |_ Frank ee venty-two years old, |@ patient in Bellevue Hospital aince | Nov. 2 lust, was rescued from drown- ie in the East River to-day by the 0. 817 Fifth avenue. prompt action of Patrolman Reld, of | the East ‘Thinty-ftth atrect station and | George Lewis, better known as "Prot, | Stitch of Bellevu | Zolgler was walking on the wall which | protects the new addition to the hospital | from the waters of the ast River with | another patient when Reld, who 1s tem- | perarlly on duty at the Morgue, heard & cry for help. Divesting himself of Als goat aud helmet as he Fete the | policeman Tushed to the well and saw ; Mie old man struggling tn the water, | As he went down for the third tme | Reid jun dd in and managed to Ket hold of Zeigler, By this time Lewis on hand with a rope | waa on pe which he flung The poli man caught Lane ught the rope, and th the ald of several of the hospital's patients attracted to the pene by the drowning man's. cries, ‘hauled the two to the Morgue pier, When taken out of the water Zelglor Was in a serious condition, and {t re- quired several hours’ hard work on the part of the hospital physicians to re- store him. Zeigler Is married andq Itv ast Seventy-second street, appened to fall into the river Is not five feet high sur- the wall where he tumbled off. PANIC AT ‘BIG | Healthy and nutritious, it PENEMENT BERR, makes bone and muscle, daub tenuine si-house wt 8s Pye ind | B under the roof, yived the te Koapes and rhe tire + of $2,000, ns the Ants nade aq fren CONDENSEDMILK jis next to mother’s milk, and a| safeguard against sickness and | | disease, It is guaranteed to keep | sweet in any temperature or cli- mate, The trademarks are valu- able; save them and write for list of free premiums, MOHAWK CONDENSED MILK Co.," Hochester, N. ¥, At all grocers. a lo investag cause NEW YORK BOY KILLED, WILMI Le Es'en | Rawly, of “ra Tom ik t Ne | diay 4 freljint Jorn | Delaw the ¢ York, until to-day, dredn of children ase, sent into eis am from the far ie eee ev yy ohai stn one to. train aud kills, i ty of iltieen bays gent e fora week in the country by Hidren's Ald Society, ot Ne body was not identified At this time of year hun- week TET TET oxen ERTIES N THE TENDERLOIN TOLD IN FIC C1 URES—FROM. ON 10 A LIFE OF SHAME, in and again that the victims | junds are in such abjogt fear | They | w FEARING NEW MUTINY, RUSSIA DISARMS CREWS Sailors on the Cruisers Minine and Kreml Rebel Because of Bad Food, REVAL. European Russia, Being apprehensive of a mu authorities here ora of the Ru Krem] to be re! r arms. Berious discontent hus been manifest ed among the crews of the warships owing to the Quay of tu food sup: ply. The officer who {s held responsible for thia state of affairs bas been placed under arrest, 8T. PETERSBURG, July 12—The Nashashisn says that ReanAdmirel Kruger will leave the service on ace | count of alleged incapacity in connee tion with his treatment of the altuation created by the mutiny aboard the bat | tleship Kniaz Potemkine at Odessa. | The Admiral provadly will be court martiaied. At the Admiralty he ts known as one of the court “ | Admiral Avellan’s n ister of Marine, 2HASTOPOL |night that the Russian sq to Potemkine | that port to taki seemed ty owing: to that would break out shoul to sea. Tt was added that five anilors froz Who “surrendered. |on board different and w had among the crews and | there were fears of a IGED DRINKS cause 00% of all deaths ta hot weather from prostration, stomach and bowel complaints, congestion, sunstroke, exhaustion, paralysia, etc, Leading doctors say all danger can be avotied by taking Duffy’s Pore Malt Whiskey. It destroys the disease germs and i. the system cool and healthy. “Dufty’ an absolutely pure tonic stimulant, from fusel oll. In use 6) years. All druggists and grocers, or direct, $1 a bottle, Medical booklet free. Dutty”'Malt Whiskey Co., Rochest Y. tree jor Shops¢.116 Fifth Ave, — $20@ $25 for $15. New Naples Blue undressed worsted Suits that were $20and | $25 may now be had for $15. | Fashionable lengths in single or double-breasted coats with the | new lapels, collars a You'll find yourself poss five to ten dollars anda stunning suit, if you buy now. Atterlury System Clothes have all the goodnesses of the merchant tailors produc “Agk the Man Who Wears ‘Them, Salesrooms: 39 and 41 Cortlandt Street, Clothes, Furnishings Bole Agent, New 4! ene Also at | Uae CURES Every Time THE MOST Stubborn Cases OF Rheumatism Gout, Lumbago, Sciatica, Neuralgia, Sore Throat, Coughs, Colds, Pheu- monia, Appendicitis, Backache, Ear- ache, Sprains and Swellings, PRICE $1.00 For Sale at All Druggists’, Mailed Anywhere on Receipt of Price 13 West 26th Street, N, Y, marred by usine poor f you value ¥o ecoth akin. H0Rt edhe at Mental soup salad Arsen jon Arta exuod con plextont. [and Vebtcte tinpertact one bo Fe perfoet Khe ful bes oe: kab

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