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np a ne PEO Ss “THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, JULY 19, 1908. WOMAN FALLS 4 Y Between 150 and 200 Men, SCENES AT THE EVICTION IN GOERCK STREET, ‘ (Photographed by an Evening World Artist.) f H Women and Children Were - Thrown Out of Homes. —— Harbor Police Follow in Pa-/Secretiveness of Lawyer many years the east ide has not . . 3 8 kaown pci an eviction. of tenement trol Boat, Arresting Makes Case Mysterious Ua- tenants as that which has resulted from i the Goerck atroot rent war.” Between | Mate of Tug. ti) Police Investigate. one hundred and fifty and two hundred | el men, women and children and their Ss household goods were landed in the After a chase down the Day to Setn- | ies atte Uurinuur,, who Won Tou f) street, and if Samuel Cohem, the land- burne Island to-day tho harbor police | go, Might ia the yard uf the Jord, whose increased tariff these people SY MATS Won ie. aeeeee wie | upartineni-house Nu. Bites ene ls refused to pay, had put in an appear- A ReLaUTE i sievilaniignen e reports inade by” the police to= ance while thelr dispossession was In RATE? ei at se as TREES Pe nls They cleats she/tell cons te gress, it would hav one hard with Ig e 8CO radley, ‘seerson Is ry he bi whet d him. a Ih Roosovelt Hospital, and the phy- | 82" Svefesme by the heat while. a ° Mr. Cohen “dropped out of alsht? siclans say he will dle from the result | Was standing on the root and pitehed when Marshal Ullmhn and a force of of blows inflicted with an iron bar. Tt {tothe etd Mason the family of the f twelve movers, armed with warrants | 1s alleged that Healy was the man who | qdad Ry ea . from the Fourth District Court, en- | wielded the bar in a row which oo- Was counse 8 tered the big double-deck tenements at | curred at Thirty-fifth street and the taunily. Roe ate N 109 and 111 Goerck street, North River, He Miss Cettinger's We broke his windows the other When the scows in charge of a tug Potty CORA ROS | Ota yes { night, but we would break neck to- bound for the lower bay touched tho | day,” said one angry wife to the pler at Ono Hundred and Thirty-ffth marshal, and then she took a position Street to-day Eggerson and the man, Md ‘on the opposite side of tho street from sald to have beon Healy, jumped ashore, - which she cried now then to the Eggerson was knocked down, and his Cohen partment on the ascond Noor Tine i ballavea tbo uroven, waea| HOW TO FIND OUT "Come out and we'll fx you." Behin (hes APNE Wa Cover (Hellotiier! Gan) eae a @ flapping blind was a woman, and she, leaving Egwerson lying on the pler, pottle the passersby wero told, was Mra. went aboard the scow Matthews, and gout AEN GAB CiGE Jiosane Coates vane work made the tug ateamed down the river. four hours; a sediment or settling AC RSD a _ The police telephoned Pier A, and @/indicates an unhealthy condition of | Patrol boat was sent in search of the | the kidneys; if it stains the linen {t upartments t gounds surrounding the house, The| tow, Off Swinvurne Island the tug was|ig evidence of kidney trouble; too 10 sooner would th Hied “women made ‘several efforts | overhauled, and Healy, who was aboard | 4 jest 103 i than a van or e wagon t were Prevented by the | 1 Shewa Wal tak sara requent desire to pars it, or pain In jasell’ way “withiithen’ ¢0 acnew imped at them. They had | the Matthews, was taken on board the | the back! 1s also convincing proof would roll away with them 1 narrow escapes. Once the dog | patrol boat and brought to the city. | = home. The evicted ones had prepared ened his teeth In Mrs, Smith's skirt Healy tv t Nol i Beat Twenty= that the kidneys and bladdcr are out 0 belong to a class of | FASTSIDE EVICTIONS ne door, Ceara a ey eee a tegernon at No. 69 Busn | Of Ter y tor | sida (eal melon aries What To Do. 06 thereby bre ht down trouble on his wi landlords are tellt hi Ow % street, Brooklyn. tf profits for the year, ing that | wint . which i us me and | 5 55 ; E fe haa fo ake more “money for, hie | for renteraising, and then i would | | MISSED FROM HIS Swamp-Root, the great kidney demands Spe Ctriea tg in Order to) Rech nia Ua6e | evel paun, pocbey for tnGse oad tern SASURE BOAT. | remedy, fulfils every wish in curing ce ernie raised his rents ang who | Hove Water with the mortgages on the | Rot be tmposed on to have found o:ner | i, Come i PLEASURE BOAT Meee lata baie ta. the babeeeeiae a : 5 oklyn, and a rest t peniily THES i $$$ _—_—_____—_ | Brooklyn, and a at neys, liver, bladder and eyery part lessness, stupidity and ignorance manJ- | ‘Waist a wealthy mining leperacor off tothe rescue. ‘The dow ata sppDLE HADDAM, Conn., July 12.—| of the urinary passage. It corrects fested in their work. | Colorado, have become public. porn when RY arrived and snapped| ‘The Aunt Comfort, a pleasure boat, | inability to hold water and scalding ‘Thelr failure to do their work prop- Hansen was alive "Watson's, attorney icjously at the policeman. | gq | Dut in here to-day and reported to the | pain in passing it, or bad effects fole erly, {t ts sald, has been discovered in i] in a sult she instituted against the |. It fell over | Medical Examiner the loss of her owner, | lowing use of liquor, wine or beer, the work of veritying the card index) mining man for $390,000, and says he |t 1d 1 ¢ MN, bell | Mr. Robinson, of Springfield, Mass., who | and overcomes that urpleasant neces- of voters and bringing it up to date| |was to have 4 per cent. of what money | LAO raseea ecto ena eee l{s supposed to have fallen overboard |sity of belng compelled to go often jeince the last election. | she obtained. The lawver. says The animal took refuge int during the night. during the day, and to get up many. | All the inspectors charged have been) Watson became acquainted with W of Mr. Collie, No, 29 Victor Mr. Robinson was last seen about 11| times during the night. The mild peace to) appears a5 Mi Sotoresnie! of2) |when she was sixteen years old, and| SBlie Weckedl Him, Ae ae roe o'clock Ivet night when he was in tho|and the extraordinary effect of —_—_ + at No. 27 William street, to explain was brought by Walsh to this country| ——— im, 90 other residents. c ne-room talking with the engineer. |Swamp-Root is soon realized. It what, In many case: | —_>+— | him, so other residents of TFimhurst | ¢ngine z i Superintendent to Re oteuanl nee |\trom: Paris, At the time she was an are likely to make the bulldog’s When the boat was opposite ‘ils piace | stands the highest for its wonderful + Supt. Morgan Calls Two Huns | sive oi the ‘part of the inspedo's Lawyer Seeks to Recover 40) 212M living on money tert to ner, Maddened by Heat He Took t#i=snce berore the summer is over | ne has missed, and ue it aime: | eures of the most distressing cases. ay | With IMlegal voters, by her father, | —— eae ethort. distance, bu: no| [f you need a meilicine you shoul dred Inspectors to Explain’, Fity,of tuese inspectors trom. Brock: | Ben Cent, of Money He Be-| iiss Watson itved tn tuxury in ents| Possession of the Front Porch Doth the Same. ee tea hamer Ie Ma "| have the best. Sold by druggists in Carel or Worse in endent, yesterday and others were be- i country for several years. and thi . (From the Milwaukee Sentinel.) After reporting here the Aunt Comfort f¢ty-cent and one-dollar sizes, ’ arelessness fore in last week investigation | tigveg Young Woman Received | ‘ore was a disagreement. ‘The sults and They Had to Phone Police, seaxs—wnat did Staixer, the trage- | \0it fo" Muddicwwa 0 ot spparates 19r) You may have a somple bottle ot / Records of Voters. CRON UEea eee te erent coca against Walsh were for $259,000 for al-| r Relief dian, do when those bad eggs structe| fa Swamp-Root, the great kidney Z to carelessness, though a few remain| from Rich Mining Operator. | 1esea assault $100,000 for his failure to or Rellet. Peake—Kopt right on playing. - junmenlondue: remedy, and a book that tells all to be investigated further. keep an alleged promise of marri Beaks—You don't say! " oon NGckGnicecnr ewan about (t, both sent absolutely free by and $10,000 for ais failure to prop: Peaks—Yes: he's so bad himself that vour| mail. Address, Dr. Kilmer & Co, Nearly two hundred members of the) Degenerate Times. BUDpOTE Re and Inter al | 4 pumtoe evereme ty nent ana) Ne Hever notices a little thing ike that, | | Slmkins—Are you Boing to take "| Binghamton, N. Y. When writing be boards of election ectors in the) (From the Philadelphia Bulletin.) Through a mutt brought by Lawyer | Pie sults were pegun a Rr gilS; frothing at the mouth took possession | a = Ta os re ae Going to emrmain.| SURE, CO SRE hat you read this meronaiiien district have Nordy—Here’s a cashler loots a bank | petit C. Hansen for $156,000, which he | Ls of the front porch at the resdenco of Sarplyand Demand: Pimbing ANG ses ore eo ae generous offer in the New York = and takes everything but $16 Th |W i his of Snis | Richard smith, Orchard avenue and (Erormb the | Washington star) at home and” eniosy, sil the lenalires |e. World. Don't make any Glspleagure | Cf. Btate | wager generation The | neiteves x 40 per cent. of the amount his agreement with | © i Oe zS6 “Are prices regulated by supply ana |of_rural life at half the cost, Evening World. Don any fendent of Elections George W.| {OUngerSoneration seems to be less . Second street, Elmhurst, L 1, and| aemand>™ ‘simkins—How will you manage It? | mistake, but remember the name, at Jo Gsutte=Alag’ ‘enore” “oarele: of money Violette Watson received from irope and !s.a co-re- nl_held prisoners Mrs, rtainly.”” ered the trust dic- | ‘Timkins—By putting a few bricks In| ¢\omp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Morgan, according to @ statement tssued/ aoiiargs was looked upon os oe eee Thomas F. Walsh, the story of the | rder f than th Lonel woman fronds: for)}itators Y byw. ¥, Supply we choose | the i treme, pero ying te Dy acrsens | Root, and the ad s, Binghamton, by him to-day, because of alleged care-| picking up twenty years ago. young woman's charges made against fo dog patroiied the porch and the| we choose'tomakes’ “never demand \piy of vanned meats and vegetables, |N, Y,, on every bottle, : Harlem: Downtown: ‘ 4 arst St. & 3d Ave: Chatham Square | 2226 to 2234 gd Ave. 193 to 205 Park Row Cowperthwait & Sons i | tablished Chatham Square 160 24 : | ) J if 4 tS * A Sale of Summer Fuprnit That Would Tickl Old Dutch Gob A 1 | Q ah |All ff TT. ' N: Qu F uartered en Oak Chiffonier, wenty Per Cent, egular »ices to Clear for ‘all Goods The Nansen Ice tiartered Golden Oak ressers, $0. $4.40 ; <a ee : $ i $ t * ]* inaugurating this great July Sale Cowperthwait & Sons could well deal with superlatives, Per haps not the greatest bargain ever con- | Box, 4. 98 Sideboard, 16.50 ARTICULAR emphasis ts given to summated on Manhattan Island—for there was a time when the whole island was sold for 60 guilders—or $24. = ee the fact that this chiffonier is But the very special values offered here are ACTUAL special values representing an ACTUAL 20% DISCOUNT. The real | y “all oak. eee a to clear out an entire stock of Summer goods. The time to fill up the establishment with Fall goods is at hand and cannot | y layed, The annals of old New York tell us that Peter Minuit, the Dutch governor who came over from Wesel, in Westphalia, urchased the whole of Manhattan Island—what is now Broadway, Fifth Avenue, Riverside Drive and all—on May 4, 1626, for $24 worth of glass Pa beads and gewgaws, . Cowperthwait & Sons like to indulge in historical reminiscences of New York, for this house itself hegan figuring in the history of the city in 1807. It is a part and parcel of old New York and of new New York. No special sale is ever advertised that is not in fact a special sale, Accustomed as they are to the greatest possible values for the amounts represented by Cowperthwait prices, the thrifty lousewives of New York recognize in these sales—with their 20% discounts—opportunities occurring only when clearance time arrives ; Annual Summer Carpet Clearance-=-One-Fifth Off Regular Prices OMING down to the very floor itself, liberal price concessions have been made in Rugs and Carpets. In every instance the floor coverings are of bright, up-to-date patterns and colorings—mostly this season's productions. | There are no “extras,” as we MAKE, LINE AND LAY ALL CARPETS FREE OF CHARGE. Brussels Rugs for Country or Town ps the “Nansen" tce-box this sultry | Rich color effects—eminently suitable for city or seashore houses—equally useful in town, weather and notice how it will re- P ILL swell HE work of construction alone Brussels Rugs, 9x12 feet, regularly $27.50, for $21.50, Brussels Rugs, 9x12 feet, regularly $23.00, for $18.25, | duce your ice bill, Every ounce ULL swell front, superbly made and would cost more than we are ask- Fresh, bright goods that cannot be surpassed. | of ice that goes into the “Nansen” does ingl pe BINS } Posie § NE of the best values we have shown’ finished. Swinging mirror, 18x30 Ing for the piece completely fin- Tapestry Brussels Carpets effective work. From the moment the O Gls seasons with the Crap aiartneae inches, Brass mountings upon | ished. Swell front top drawer of quar- Extremely handsome styles in great varieties, in room, hall and stair patterns, box becomes cool there is a constant SN ive in her dintig-room, | Bevel ] drawers, which impart an additional | tered oak; brass handles and brass knob he customary $1.20 quality, 89 i front ton drawers and spacious Closet bes : b bs ret ‘ WTY BI2O QUAY, BOO, , ‘ ; current of cold, dry air reaching to all | front, top, drawers and spacious closate | q beauty to the polished quartered oak, | on top drawer. Bear in mind that these reduced prices enable you to take advantage of the making, lining and laying, which cost you nothing, lee ASN Tlorguanly Rearoned, tnd Went” polished SU B PU f, i Fine Porch and Interior Furniture, Useful the Year Round | cl 20 Per Cent, Off Reguiar Prices, tilts, { mun J ULY is the great outdoor month of the year. It is 4 month given over to the porches. Down vy the foaming ABN Ht billows, up among the balsam-scented mountains or out in the courtry, by day and by night, the broad, airy 7 f verandas are the favorite retreats of the house, One likes to while Away the Summer hours therz, Porch life is doubly fascinating when the Furniture is appropriate, comfortable and stylish. The smart bungalow, the uristocratic prairie grass, the substantial reed, have a useful as well as an ornamental existence. During the month of July all such furniture may be purchased here at a saving of 20 per cent, j A This means a clean-cut discount of 20% off all former figures. The cu’ in price includes not only Porch Fur- $8.40, Regular Pri $10. niture, but the attractive Library and Dining-Room pieces in the Mission Furniture as well, This decided concession q 7 0, Negalar Prices $10.50, $12, Regular Price, $15» $8.40,Regular Price, $10,50. \s made that we may close out during the present month all such Furniture tr) make room for Fall stock, $10, Regular Price, $12.50. 38,80, Regular Price, $11. $12, Regular Price, $15 \ 9! Ma Rewstows: Everything for Housekeeping--- : thing for H keeping--- Zaist St. & 3d Ave, Chatham Square 2226 to 2234 3d Ave, 193 to 205 Park Row _ Cash or Liberal Credit Cowperthwait & Sons