Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
oe SEEK THIEVES OF RELLY GANG WHO) SLEW PAL Sleuths Hunt Three Who Shot. Man While Firing at Policeman, ‘Said Novice, Being from Ken-| tucky, Sees Pure Feud | Show. THOUGHT IT MAYHEM, |Face Altering and Plucking of Fea-/ tures Incomprehensible at. First,” BY IRVIN S. COBB. | Until very recently I'd never seen a football game and I'd never seen a pur- | ple cow. Maving seon the football game, | T have lost interest in the purple cow; | a’on though the talented creature might } give bluing instead of milk. | Down tn Kentucky, where ao much of | the landscape ts standing on end that a | | profile map of {t looks like the edge of @ bandsaw, football isn’t popular, A ONE SUSPECT CAUGHT, Diaver might get shoved off the feld and fall in the next county. Besides, in the | perpeniicular portions of tne State, the | ea Capt. Cenise Says Paul Kelly Is cies in acceptable nubstitute, trun | Protected by Powerful -Politi- cal Influence. FIVE FLEE FROM COP. ‘A‘l Detected While at Work Breaking in Door of Store, the percentage of mortality in feuds! may mot be as great as in football, but | then you've got to remember that our |fellowa haven't the opportunity for pre- Jad liminary practice that the football fel- ‘by Capt. Cruise, the commander |lows have, of the precinct, all of the plain clothes | It was late when we got up to Amert- men in thy Bast 10th street station|can League Park Inst Saturday after- @nd aa many patrolmen as can be|noon and several very attractive casual- apared for qpectal deta! «0 to-day |ttes had already taken place dn the game bunting for the members of the Paul ‘between Pennsylvania and Columbia. Kelly wang who attempted burglary put learning that nothing of really ma- om Seoond avenue early yesterday, and | teria intorest had happened excepting | who killed one of their own valt in 80 one shoulder dlade and pact of a| sbtlled wh the policeman goain, we felt consoled and entered lea cil OTBALL POSSE WITH DOCS PURSUE LUNATICS |Man Trap Set in Woods for| | Two Fugitives from Asylum, Demented Men, Once Caught, Es- cape from Attic by Means of a Rope, Brookhaven townshtp, Suffolk County, L. L, tin @ state of terror because of the nightly depredations of two cunning Junath's who escaped a week ago from the State asylum at Kings Park, Port Jefferson, Strong Brook, Setauket and | other country communtiies have re- ceolved visits from the escaped couple ‘and several young women of each place have reported tranagreseions on the part of the lunetica which conaisted in the latter suddenly appearing before the Young women on lonely roads et dusk and attempting to embrace them. Byron MoClelland, who conducts a hotel! at West Setauket, encountered the maniacs in his stable yard Satur day night and induced them to enter his barroom, where he olied them with | cirink for the purpose of rendering them helpless, The hour being late, and aselstance then not available, as MoCielian's place is remote from any BS Mr. Tofrey, When Upholstered, Inmate of Maud Ballington MANIACS SCARE WOMEN, ACCUSED OF BURGLARY, | Flushing Folk Say Crime Has In-| i] the presence in the town of Maud Bal- Ungton Booth's home for recently dis- ohanged convicts, when John. Kerrina one of the inmates ef Hope Hill, con- fessed to having attempted to burn the new house of Theodore Foulke on Sun- day, fire, whtch did $3,000 damage, wea ourring every forty-elght hours on an wverage for the last month, and Kerrina| ma been held fc§ further examination in| Tite, WORTD: MONDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 27, 1908. EX-CONVICT BUILT BONFIRE IN PARLOR Booth’s Hope Hall Confesses, | creased Since Home for Pris- oners Was Started. | Anger of the residents of FYushing, L. I, was greatly tnoreased to-day against to fires that have been oc- the hope thet he may confem to a knowledge of them, | Hope Hali (s located o nBroaddway, Flushing, only three city blocks from | Mr, Boulke's new house, which te al- | most completed. Kerrins sald he was | tn the house Sunday and stole « kat of mnson's toola which ho buried tm the woods balf a mile away, He then folt MAN'S BODY IN NORTH RIVER. | About Forty Years Old, with sen! Hair and Red Mustache, | Patrolman Dennis Sullivan, of the| West One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street station, to-day tound the body| of a man, about forty years old, in the North RI at the foot of One Hun- dred and Thirty-fourth street. The man was five feet nine tno In helght, weighed about 190 pounds, tiad dark hate, red mustache and blue eyes, and wore dark trousers and vest, | blue Jeans overalls and coat, black and | white striped shirt, gray underwear and) socks and laced #hoes Makers of Cinett and Monarch Shirts (ir in Although the season's on the who was pursuing them, ‘Duiike the abortive efforts of the) Mercer street and Fifth street station | commands to find Paul Kelly, after the | @aying of tho man Harrington in the @reat Jones street resort, Capt. Cruise fe going about the round-up of the three burglars as if his heart was in the capture, One arrest has been made, though the prisoner hes not been proved to be one of the number en- gaged in the attempted burglary and, the shooting, Considerable credit is due to Police- man Diorence Mosullife for his attack upon the five thus when ho was alone| and in plain clothes, The bulet that slow one of the burglars was meant for him. Burglars Fire at Policeman, McAuliffe was passing the clgas store | of Abraham Kaufman, at No. 2163 Beo- | ocd avenue, at about 2 o'clodk vesterdiy | | morning when he sww five men ene gaged in jimmying tho door, At fir @s he was io, civilian garb, they were | tor attacking him, but one of the gang | recognized him and the five took to thelr heels. MoAuliffe pursued them, firing his re- volver over their heads and commaading them to sunrender. For reply, one in the lead of the fusitives tumed and, while still running, fired three shots at | the policeman. John Cella, the man with the jimmy, was straggling ane | this pels, and one of the three bullets struck him in the eye, inflicting a wound from which he died « few hours later, ‘The chase led east through One Hun- dred and Eleventh street, where tie four burglars disappeared in a dark hallway. Reserves hunted the meigh- borhood for them in vain all night While the search was still on, Police- man Schiichthurnlein, on post at Lex: | ington avenue and One Hundred and | Eleventh street cabbed a fleeing man, | who called hipself John Smith, of N 0 Ea ond street, ‘The police announced telr belief that he is a member of the Paul Kelly gang and was one of the five en- greed in the attempted burglary, | heartily Into the eptrit of the occasion by walking over the persons in the It's pretty hard for you, if you are green, to figure out at finst what else, besides the pit of the opposition’s stom- ach the two teams are driving at As well as you can tell, a number of young gentlemen who have escaped from the mattress-maker {n an unfinished condl- tion, are trying to remove some un- sightly criss-cross marks of white chalk from the lawn with one another's per- sons. At intervals some person does a gum of addition out loud tn his head. He “Can't Do Thet Sum.” Mental arithmetic ts evidently being | neglected at our larger colleges. 1 ard, for example, a player make this SIN Ma Eowanos’ Figure 1s tw South, man againet the ground and sat upon his head, Others came also and sat til hb consented to forego his original on and give up the ball. He was ried away by four bystanders, It Wasn't Mayhem, man next to me, who appeared yw the game, said it was offside. | what I thought," I sald, Got une lobe of his he said! “1 ‘as may)em," continued the same ations—sometimes | metimes an etoow » be @ number ters in the two teams, d grab a rival play just see by the expres- B and you cor Z FOOTBALL IN KENTUCKY. i, " calculation: 4, 36, 8 45, “A moment's re, tell any one that the cor- Similar mis- flection will rect result 18 48—not 45. One Hundred and ‘Twenty-6ee- takes occurred repeatedly and each time | eran personal encounters followed in full view | of the spectators, Football ts a puz- zing game However, as time wears on you learn sion on his fa that he was saying to himself: “You have @ nice face, I'll just take | it back home with me and put It in my collectbn,”” Frequently the ball appeared to be lost eight of altogether, The players were so engrossed .n souvenir hunting chat they forgot ft, Once the Colunbia “\players advanced in a body, and, the opposition «rabbed ciem ' up and | slammed them on the earth and piled on them until the human pyramid grew _|to be seven feet high As the wounded were being removed somebody sacl there had been beautit interference by Pennsylvania, re. called what happened in the way ot ‘ence, back in 18M, at Getty the All-Sowherns, B , tried to buck the Penn- Lay “Ate 'Em Up" Literally. | Anyhow, along toward dark it ended. | When arraigned és the Harlem Cour | to appreciate some of Its fine points. As “he man who sat new. to me sald, yesterday Kaytman, the proprietor gf Wo saw Torrey, of the Pennsylvania aon nee simply ¢ abate up. She the place walen the gang sought trod, |) ao eallent: t6e certainly did — deviled Iidneys and , ree men who |team, pull of one excellent feature, It eormmnind brains and A” livers, | id, fled him as one of th had held hl 2p and bewten him with | a fron bar on the'night of Oct. 2 Capt. Cruise After Kelly Gang. | ‘rulse, of the Hast ost Yundred ana Fourth street station, declared to-day that jie will go on patrol duty himself and assist tus six| detectives in rounding up the thr members of the Paul Kelly gang. He says vhat he will also keep ggwatchful eye out for Paul Kelly, who Ts wanted | by the police since the killing of Har- rington in the Great Jones street re- 80 the precinct has a| Kelly,” sald Capt. Cruise; “the sar ytograph that The Evening World printed, It is a splendid likeness, and if he is in this precinct we will surely get him.” | ‘A policeman attached to the Bast One Hundred and Fourth street station, in spite of his commander's statement, dechired to an Evening World reporter | to-day that @ powerful political influ. | ce was being exerted over the police | peeves’ the capture of Kelly. He ry man in picture of Paul to eal | Paul Kelly Has Political Pull, | | “| was transferred to this precinct because I knew Kelly and because those | higher up knew that I copld get him. Other policemen have suffered in the eume way, being transferred out of the Mercer street and Fifth street stations, as (t was feared that they. would be too active in thelr search for this gang Weuiere is nothing In the report that Kelly has come to Harlem, 1 am sure | he has not left the neighborhood of bis | Great Jones street resort, and any po- Neeman in the Mercer street or Fifth aireet Biation could met him within a day's work, “Several policemen on the force, and I am one of them, who were too mucn allye to sult the politicians back of Kelly, are now kept under cover doing olerical work !n station-houses, They ate not even allowed out on active patrol’ duty, for they would know Kelly ‘oc sight and arrest /him,” re a a? re. Beet ‘or week end yYaveruned’ 6.01 cents per \symphony in baby blue padding who was an eyebrow It was Torrey who was so extensively upholstered yhat the opposing half-t mistook him for @ box couch and re- peatedly tried to make him up, About the time we reached our seats, a fine example of tufted light blue vel- | our, representing Golumbia, was handed @ leather spierold resembling some- What the now obsolete egg of the Groat | Auk, This was the ball. He booted ft up in the afr until tt looked no bigger than the albuminous output of a con- servative guinea-len, and {t was threat- ening to surink Ino a pecan when {t began to fall, A youth, weartng a rub- ber nasal inhaler and belonging to Penn, caught the ball and started down | the field with it, 1t was apparently his Intention to restore the ball to the | had kicked {t, but to this, for some reason, considerable opposition devel- oped. A Columbia player bounced the Penn But the Columbia rootars stayed cheer: ful unt the finish, They would make eplendid fellows to have argund the he after a funeral to cheer every. body up. YY. were sitll chanting their battle-cry vietory when somebody | the score of went over and told them thi to 0, and that they ig back to the Sub supper time, That wns the first they | |knew about Pennsylvant >| No account of Satunte ever brief, {s complete tlon of Mr. Bill Edwards, the Human Moving Van, of Princeton, who acted as \impire in an efficient ‘and gentle nnly manner, giving satisfaction to concerned, ‘Mr. Bdiwands could give satisfaction 9 James K. Jeffries it necessary. His legs appear to be on| upside down, but when It comes to side- stepping & ‘rush and tomeing playors | over h's head with one hand he's all, there. By the way, does anybody know why there's so blooming much arithmetlo fh wa | ger thout a men: football? Deacons presented elght —_apectfic charges against him to the pastor, Deacon Horace W, Smith reading them, GIRL AUGER Charges Multiply Against the Rev. A. B, MacLaurin, Baptist. Members of the old Sixteenth Street Baptist’ Church have made fresh charges against thelr pastor, the Rev, Archibald B, MacLaurin, to the Board of whiah Levi Springsteen After, last evening's ser- vice in the church ‘the Board of 1,032,993 |8 World Wants So Far This Year— (@) 176,582 |pastor does not enter his pulpit until One charge, signed by sixteen wit- nesses aocuse Mr, MacLaurin of having been’ under the Influence of Maquor on ane occasion lately, A second, charee fh that, having obtained money for one avowed purpose he has put {t to an- other. A ithird ds much the most serious, In tholr careful Investigation of the ac- cusations the Board of Deacons may summon before them a young and pretty member of the church, The Rev, Mr, MacLautin conducted morning and evening services in the church, , He thus demonstrated that he regards as trivial the charges which had previously been made against him by Mrs, Georgianna McPherson, No, 121 Highth avenue, Miss Kate Woodruff and Miss Blakely, of which The Evening World told, for ordinarily a Baptist such charges have been disproved, re MARRIED 63 YEARS. ‘Mr. and Mrs, Fritts Wi e an! Unusval Thanksgiving Day, Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Fritts, of Pot. | tersville, N., J, will on Thanksgiving Day celebrate the sixty-third anniver- wary of thelr marriage by giving a turkey dinner to their chilren, grand+ children and great-grandchildren, The couple were murried a \Wood- glen by the Rev, Dr. Hunt. Both are in excellent health, and take a lively Interest in affalra of the day. During thelr long married life they have neve: bad a misunderstanding, if N residence, he lugged the lunatics to the atdo and locked them te falfowdng” morning morning. time Constable ta prosecuting an active hunt Wanderers, and hte him to the When went to demented men the pri where in & dangling Ph, Dyke and "Sou tauket, espled the two night In a woods and but they escaped in growth. The woods wilt be entered to-dla; men armed and accompani: in the ho) Park fugitives vous in the woods, where they ha have been farmyards end making descents athe sald that ince Mrs night on hen roosts. James McDowell and James Donohue, | nephew of Comedtan Mark Murphy, are to-day preparing a man trap in the | matt woods with the expectation of ing the lunatics before nightfall trap consists of a hole In the ground covered with branches and leaves and | &% ® menace located in a narrow pathway known to! | be frequented by the fugttives, Convicts , | home-talent Thankagiving Day they would hiss the performers off the stare. then company to perform for them, homestretch, prices elsewhere remain unchanged, Already we've had two big bargain weeks, and we announce another, Most of this week's offer- ings are carpet and rug patterns our mills will discontinue making with an impulse to burn the house ,and he bullt @ bonfire in the parlor, He went back to Hope Hall, Barly to-day the fire was disooered after the lower story ‘wud beon badly damaged, The people of Flushing have long re- sented Mrs, Booth’s convict home, Only ‘the alate Rendcat the two | Wee kago Joe Kennedy, nino days |— the year’s end. We here suggest Aken, "AStroka Widow 00 | Soeit eter ee eae and @ Howe |T some of these savings eno. rokn window and | Hall guest, was arrested for attempt: BS. indloated that th | ob" Dora ‘shep | ng burglary 1 the tome of Bhomas | 3 Big Carpet B i | } . A year agp Mr. Wil t @ horse which ihe thinks was stolen by’ | arpet Bargains * Jayne, one of the Hope Hall “boys,” In three | Yours his house has been mobbed four | umes, A horse was stolen from Mr. | by | Poulke a fe in, intending 6 guthori ti mean judson hed been for the inv tion led ace of Mol id. ea0a ped, of Kast Se- lunatics last ursued the men, jo heavy under- well-assorted line, Every one : that Bod’ Hrussels ie the best car pet valiio In the tend, Ours ts reg- lar $l. quailty; now $1.00 Worsted Velvets of distinctively superior weaving, also beautiful in design, Unquestionably the big gest carpet bargain in New York Regular $1.15 quality, now... 87 Ke" Best- Tapestry Brussels, tho west tapestry, mind you—the sort you'll pay at least 90, for elsewhere, Our marked-down price !s only..67%¢ | 2Rug Reductions , WEB Mabe bd 2 AR Body Brussels tn the popular 9x12 ft. size. Just the thing to add cheer to the living room, Regular $26.00 quailty, now $21.50 Royal Wiltons, aiso 9x12 fo months ago, | | led by dogs, | y every citizen of prominenc of finally taking the Kings | has fered if some way trons the It {6 believed that the | crimes of the last few years, and Hope men have been making a rendez- | Hall, with its gang of ex-convicts, 1s looked upon as Uhe seat of trouble hed A sort of a camp. Th When Magistrate Conmorton held Joe | ubsisting on the products of | Kennedy for the Grand Suny last week, Jooth estab: lished the Hall in the town crimes of all sorts have increased, Mrs, Booth resents this and has been arguing the! | er through the golumne of ne ¢ captur- |gapers with Marion J. Vendery, pre ptur- | fient of the New York Southern Society 1) who belleves the Inmates of Hope Hall | tothe community Kerrins, the latest prisoner from the Hall, {9 thirty-six years old and has served a sentence tn Sing Sing and two terms In Kings County Jail. He Js charged with arson and burglary, and the detectives are attempting to fix lother charges upon him, eg Threaten to Hiss Home Talent Of the Stage, ra COLUMBUS, Nov. %.—Two hundred a ‘ conviets In the Ohio Penitentiary sent @ Perler Th Roosevelt. Fon lh ae touite ee tg |communteation last night to Warden 0,| PARIS, Nov. #7.—Casimir Perter, for. |] Renae ‘$28.50 uallty, now mer President of France, and other | * members of the Tuberculosis Congress have sent a letter to President Roose- John and James Dobson, velt thanking him for the Invitation to hold the Congress of 1908 in the Uniter | mm fff tf Strand S20 i , States. Gould, stating that If he gave a entertainment to them on The Warden hired a professional vaudeville New York. Philadelphia, Buffalo. -OPPENHEIM,GLLINS & @ OO eee ee 2 ee ee © re Ce Ge 0 Cee 5 ee = & | | | Have especially prepared and arranged an extraordinary Sale of Ladies’ Outergarments | of various lengths in Black Broadcloth and Cheviot for Street and Evening Wear, Also White, Cham- nit pagne, Red and Rose Outergarments, Fur Lined Outer- garments for Street, Evening and Auto Wear. The Greatest Values in Coats we have ever been able to offer $30.00 Black Broadcloth Coats, lined throughout, braid trimmed, 50 inches long, ,,,.........+06+.... 18.00 $40.00 Black Broadcloth Fitted Surtout, satin lined throughout, copy of foreign model,,,.........27,50 | $35.00 Broadcloth Semi-Fitted Coat, Strap seams, Shawl Collar, lined throughout 22,50 | $40.00 Black Broadcloth Coat, 50 inch length, | ~ Empire Model, trimmed with Braid and Velvet..25,00 | | about 50 Evening Coats of White and Champagne | | Broadcloth, Various Models, Values o $50,00.... 25,00 | Superior Fur Lined Coats $50.00 Fine Broadcloth Coats, Squirrel lined $55,00 “ “ “ 35.00 Broadway and Fifth Avenue, Corner 2st St. MERCUR —— ONCE TS & SOCAN | AMERY GY GRSETN IAVEE ED EMEA ANETTA e A Great Difference in Price— No Difference in Quality Is there any reason, outside of habit, why any woman should buy six-dollar shoes at the retail price? The Wo- man’s Regal shoe is sold to you direct at the wholesale price; it's as good as any six-dollar shoe in the world, and 30 per cent. better than most of them. Women's Regal shoes are made thro of the best materials that can be wear—and they hold their shape order shoes, And whatever your choice of last and leathers may be, your Regals will embody the smart and shapely curve-and-straight- line contrasts that make a harmony of the entire costume, Light, trim and dainty turned. sole models, or solider welt-sole shoes for every outdoor kind of weather —22 new and different styles to choose from in the Regal list, and ready in a full range of Quarter-sizes, at 1s mie oe, WO damehdy ot have nee oe ables us to built e pha ‘oul ages of the special materials (n ther Send for Style-Book ‘Twenty-nine of the 102 Regal Stores are exclusively for women, a of them in the fashionable districts of Greater New York t out pit into foot. ike made-to- @1 in Iioported Patent Leather, right through the whole iis, ts cial models at he lly new line of shoes # iodels over the $9. GREATER NEW YORK WOMEN’S STORES NEW YORK CiTy, 8 Sixth Ay., 8. B. oor. 21st Bt. "100 W. 0 it. cor, Tth Av, #1008 1 bet. Ditmare Dy AY, 06 Newark Av. it pp. Horald Bulling. 405 Fifth Ay., bet Qnd 11th Sta, EWARK—S41 tir at'St, opp, Central RR. JERSEY CITY oN) GREATER NEW YORK MEN'S STORES NEW YORK C! BROOKLYN. 10th St. and, 1003 Broadway Witloughby Av Av. bet. 10th and 11th Ste, NEWARK. N. J. 841 Broad St., opp, Central RR, of N, J. JBRSEY CITY, 00 Newark Ay and Sth § st St BAY, MARKED WITH A STAR ‘STORES ARE OPEN EVENINGS. (+) ape NO FIRST PAYMENT REQUIRED IF YOU CAN SATISFY US YOU ARE THE RIGHT PARTY, ONE DOLLAR A WEEK i OPENS AN ACCOUNT Our Terms Apply Also to New Jersey, Lo b and Conne: i WEPAYPREIGHT AND CAR PARE, Oak Chiffonter, 4 drawers, BOVE): ness gede in i Bolld Oak ser, lange meebo S698 tensa WN 16675, eels 18,60 ROOMS WRITE FOR OUR NEW BOOKLET ROOMS COMPLETELY ; of various outfits COMPLETELY FUR. Containing eto to start FUR. NISHED $75 MAILED FREE ON APPLICATION, NISHED $125 Panne Plush Parlor Suit, 6 Pfoces special for k 27.50 Open Saturday Evenings Until 10 o'Clock, S4th St. L Station at Door, MAKES WRECKS NOT CURES Thousands who have had their health ntined by Mercury testify that it makes wrecks instead of cures in the treatment of Contagious Blood Poison, While it may mask the disease in the system for awhile, when the treatment is left’ off the trouble returns with renewed violence, com- bined with the disastrous effects of this powerful mineral, Mercury, and Potash, which is also a common treatment for Contagious Blood Poison, eat out the lining of the stomach and bowels, produce chronic dyspepsia, cause the teeth to decay, make spongy, tender gums, aflect the bones and muscles, and leaves its victims complete physical wrecks, Another effect of this treafment is mercurial Rheu- miatism, the worst and most hopeless form of this disease, There is but one certain, reliable antidote for this destructive poison, and that is $, 5, 8, It is the only medicine that is able to go into the blood and cure the di vase permanently, §, 5, 5. does not hide or I suffered greatly from Contarions Blood Poison, I consulted physic who proscribed Mercury, Novhi me any good—in fact the tre proved more harmful than benoillo A friend told me that 8.8.6, had oor- tainly cured him, and ft immediately commenocod its use, ondin a short whil I could find no ai This was tw fully pay Bowling Green, Ky, 8, ed cover up anything, but so completely drives out the poison that no signs of it seen again, S, S, 8, is made entirely of ® ® © soots, herbs and barks, and while curing Contagious Blood Poison, will drive out the PURELY VEGETABLE, effects of any mineral treatment, We offer a reward of $1,000 for proof that $, S. S. contains a particle of mineral of any kind, Book with jastructions for self-treatment and medical advica without charge, {ME SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GAs “ THE PINK EDITION OF THE EVENING WORLD SPORTING NEWS OF THE DAY. t w ALI t CONTAI acted 2 AO haar