The evening world. Newspaper, January 27, 1906, Page 5

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\ 4 +t AST OF BRIDGE HOG; GENTLEMEN NOW IN RUSH Inspector Flood, with His Forty Picked Men, Makes the Busy Hour Crush Safe for Everybody. Fhe Bridge Hog has disappeared. The and infirm now elbow the vigorous of Brooklyn at the Manhattan inal of the bridge without fear cf The halt and tho bdilnd partic\- in the ridge crush with tm- ity. Since The Evening World the disgraceful conditions that ruled there to the attention of joe Commissioner Bingham, and the @ssigned Inspector Flood to rem~ \@y the evils, the Bridge Hog has been reened. ‘The nightly throng is now! ed by the etiquette and pro-| piety of the drawing-room. Inapector Flood quickly solved the| lem. So effective were his meth- that the Commissioner told him to! ose from the force the forty men he to look after the Bridge work anently. Many of them were) en men at the Bridge, but they were | of stalwart build and Intelligence, under the direction of Inspector 4 and Capt. Brophy they quickly ght order out of chaos, They were work again last night. How Order Was Resteted. SMThe conditions at the dy improved, as any one can see," 4 Inspector Flood last night. ‘There almost perfect order there now. Of there 1s bound to be more or erush in so great a crvwd, but Pere {2 no disonter. “The greatest crush on the Brkige is the stairway leading to the plat- for‘ outgolng Bridge trains, We twelve mon on that platform, with johue and Roundsman Sahul- They are all picked men and they 4 their business. ‘Now, heretofore the people have led onto thet platform and made a in for the end car. The policemen [oll goudpellaarn sheet eneecan ‘They have to handle the Sata there , because the trains leav & fifty-second schedule, @ policeman sees a man he has orders to call out that crowding.’ Now, when a fn uniform calls out to stop it 4s sufficient. At times, how- , it f@ necessary for him to threaten If that ts not enough he makes arrest. Sergt. Donohue and Rounds- Sahulka keep moving through the and they kep the policemen busy. ere excsilent men. Ot course Brophy is at the Bridge, too. But immediate supervision over the upstairs and down. \ Bengerous Polnt Made Safe. ‘S eerious met, lore the people end rH conditions are greatly !mproved there. We have stopped the people from tnvad- ing the north driveway and hopping on the oars. The greatest throng is at the four loops nearest to Park Row. Many men and even the women have made a practico of jumping on the cars before they stopped, but there will be no more of that. ‘The people have been. taught that they must all board both the sur- face cars and trains with some degree of order. Forty Experts on Crushes. “The men assigned to the bridge now are experts in their line. Commissioner Bingham told me to pick out my men. 1 had them all down here Jest Sunday afternoon and talked to them. I tol them I did not want any man who was Nt satisfied with the detail. So you see they are ali willing workers. We also have seven plain-clothesmen who look er thieves and other offenders. We have also improved the conditions the Brooklyn end of the bridge both Additional men and the con- Inspector Flood was asked if he did not think the police could ellminate the crush and disorder that sometimes pre- vails at the Bridge Subway station, “The crowd there is not as great as at the bridge ftself,"” ho sald. ‘You will remember that there was talk of put- ting policemen on the elevated stations, but Commissioner MeAdoo said he could not spare the men. The company ap- pointed {ts own special policemen.” “But the complaint now ts that the alleged policemen are used to jam pas- sengers on trains," sald the reporter. “They cause confusion rather than lessen it.” “Well, our men could not be used for piling the people on trains,” said the Inspector. TURNED OUT LIGHTS TO CHECK ENCORES. Miss Barrymore Grew Tired of Ap- plause and Adopted Novel Expedient. Ethel Barrymore likes applause, but too much of tt is taxing her nerves. When Miss Barrymore was appearing tn ¢''Miss Civilization,” at the Broad- way Theatre, for the benefit of the Actors’ Home Fund, yesterday, she and ther brother John s0 pleased the au- dience that the curtain was rung up three or four times, Miss Barrymore suddenly turned to her stage manager and sald: “Turn out the Ughts; see what effect that will have.” Immediately every light in the house was turned out. The applause gave way to laughter, and when the lights ‘were turned on later the performance “was reaity to go on, ey Praise from Cininnati. (rom the Cincinnati Tribune.) For many years The World Al- manac has been looked upon as a small encyclopedia which treats of current matters of the preceding year. The issue for 1906 well sus- tains its reputation, It 1s now an accepted authority in many lines, Year by year it Js added to the great Iibrartes of the country, and now that the serles is growing the old numbers have new value, It shonld find a place in private li- braries as well, In a few years it will be the nucleus of a set of most valuable books of record. at morning and evening. have been stationed the: ditions are vastly {mpro ‘$2,000 LOSER AT “STUSS,” HE SAYS /Alleged Victim Causes Raids | of Two East Side Places on Complaint. On a complaint made to the police of | the Fifth street station by Gustav A. | |Girard, of No, 90 East One Hundred and | Fifty-clghth street,five men were locked | up in the station-house over night on aj charge of having swindled Girard out of $2,000 In cash, a diamond ring, valued at $150, and a gold watch. valued at $50, while playing ‘stuss.’ The men arrested are John Hamilton, of No. 448 Lexington avenue; Henry Smith, of No. 4 First street; William | Barlow, of No, 122 Third avenue; George | Reid, of No. 661 Madison avenue, and Samuel Cohen, of No, 77 Ludlow street. | According to Girard, he had been | playing stuss in the rear of a cigar store on Third avenue nearly every $2,000 in cash, Then he pledged the diamond ring with the players, he says, Girard sald that after he had lost cash and the ring In the Third avenue place he tried his luck again at a place on East Fourteenth street, and was forced to leave his watch as security for his losses. ‘Then, he alleged, he discovered that the game was not played in a way to give him a chance to win, and he de- manded the return of his money and valuables, He said the men laughed at him. Late last night the police went | to the Third avenue store and arrested | the four first named men. Cohen was | arrested at the Fourteenth! street ad-| dress. All the men say Girard lost his money through hand luck. HOODOO JUMBLED UP STREETS ABOUT HER. Led Her Around the Bronx Until She Just Wanted to Die. Lottie Ross got mixed up with the hoodoo man in Rose Hill Park, Bronx, early this morning, and when she found how mixed she was she just tled her apron strings about her neck, fastened the loop over a picket fence and passed Into unconsciousness. But she didn't “wake up dead." Two Interborough Railway employees passed about 6.80. Seeing Lottle hanging against the fence, they cut the strings and let her down. With the aid of Policeman Caffrey they carried her to the Bronx Park police station, where she gradually re- covered. Her surroundings were go different from any she had expected vhat she was rather Interested, and ex- plained that she was a colored lady, ayed twenty-three, of No. 142 Cherry street; that she had started last night for that address in an “L’ train, but that, falling asleep, she had been car- rled far beyond her station, 3ecnuse of this she had found herselt wandering in Rose Hill Park, in the dark, with the hoodoo man all about ber, and with no friends to save her; so she had thought it best to pass in her checks. An unfeeling “sergeant held her for examination. a OWN GLAND KILLS A BOY. Thyroid So Large It Chokes Wal- ter Sounteck to Death, Walter Sonnick, ten years old, an in- te of the New York Juvenile Asylum jat Dobbs Ferry, dled from a peculiar affliction, He scemed to be in good health during the day and ate a hearty supper. Shortly after the meal he col- ae autopsy wae performed and di: cloeed Bie te Radi Ce taea clot 6, windpipe large it, ha nd than thie Soyie heart mane ho larger a. normal heart fe nina three years 5 THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, JANUARY 27, 1906. HERE IS THE FINE SQUAD THAT HAS SOU _ Every Man Was Selected by Inspector Flood, ana Ail Habe Been Commended for Excellent Work in the Handing of Big Crowds 4 = 4 LIS PECTOR F700D NEWARK BOWLERS LEAD IN INTERSTATE LEAGUE Another Brooklyn Team Loses in the Metropolitan Championship Series. Newark, won, jwon two of the three rolled against Bil) team in the Naifmal League, at the Tuxedo alleys, ark, last night. has a clean games won, with a record of fo! out of nineteen to its credit. Tite contests last night we epictal interest as the two were tied in the standing, Newark hay- ing woe twelve out of sixteen and the Buwoklyn champions of last season | Maier comter to beat him: “I ean beat elght out of twelve. A large crowd | him myself." By which {t would seem that crossed to Jereey to see the games, | Rothermel ts quite willing to try out the which were full of excitement. In the Opening game Lee Johni and Helita's poor score of 187—due to Several splits—gave Newark an viotory, Jinimy fob and Moped off 201, as the kids say, it the Brooklyn star fell off in the second and third games. Cordes <puld get only 128 pins Inta the pit in the second game, while Spaie 33 econ game to third e was close and excitini was nbt decided until the last and by Anchor Weingarth, redit of Newark. score was 208 to 24 by Haller. Johns's 203 also helped and Newark won by four pins, ‘The remarkably evan scares of the in the three games Newark team represented by the Tux- edo team that has been the wonder night for the past month, and lost the| of the local bowling world this sea- y Cordes's Brooklyn Interstate The Jersey team now lead in the percentage of Smith was onto the with 214° and put ) THE “HOGS” ON THE BRIDG MILITARY HONORS FOR GEN. WHEELER Body Will Be Carried on a | Caisson, with a Rider- less Horse. At the funeral of Gen. Joseph Wheeler. St. Thomas's Church to-morrow ifternoon, the military escort will be in command of Gen. Frederick Dent Grant, Commander of the Department of the | Bast, at Governor's Island, The Second Battery, N. G. N. ¥., will furnish tha ‘The scores: 173 180 216 14 2172-5, being feature. Connolly . see 108 Gaylor . Also see BM BO il 192 201 218 234 Totals .. =. 405 485 88. 8 Individual ‘averages: Connolly, 178: 189 4-5; Mertel, 187 2-5; Norman, 217 2:5, Match Game Talk. Billy Rothe: alley Koster at the Nonpareil, Brooklyn, te with a ehnilenge to roll’ Jimmy smith five out of nine or six 0} gumes take place on the Grand ( match on Monday evening, In selecting the Grand ( New- high scones of Norman, whoso average was partner of John of eleven mmediately after the Voorhela-Koster 5. tral as the piace raderless horse and caisson for the ri mains. The honorary escort will con- | sist of the Twenty-third and Seventy- first Regiments, and Troop A. After the services in the churah remains will be escorted to the Penn vania depot. where they will be taken to Washington. The take place on Monday in the Arlington Cemetery. SIX YEARS’ BIBLE STUDY ON BREAD AND WATER. Little Girl Who Was Kept at Scrip- out the for the contest Hothermel claims that as the! tures Daily on Slim Diet Is alloy ts to ieee down for she oi mate thoy Will be-as nour neugpal for al , tirteen | arm they) Will he as cnet ned foe a Taken from Grandfather. aes (he spe p chaclenme) co ee nite! ei ST. PAUL, Minn., Jan. 27.—Pearl Hall, re of | Which ‘Smith won, and it is sald the latter | ted eleven, who was adopted when a teams | tried to make rather more of his victory than| baby by her grandfather here, Anton the conditions warranted, Koster or the winner of tho match Feb. “smith Brooklyn champion. Tuesday nigh 8's 283 clover games. eee a distinct match—bdetween Rothermel pected for Tuemiay night Meyer | 4 and W. Miller. League, that Counen sie. one ames for $100 series. The Into tw ig and frame whose in. two contest being divided the Sumerba next nt the second Giana “Centrat “Feb. 9 There tea ‘Arcanum as well as other bowlers. in Close Race in Tourneys. Aa Smith has eon tajking of challenging does note need Tothermel has a hard match on for next when he moots Bert Allen at the Nonpat Division avenue and Clymer street, feturn contest of best alx in The firet contest—each being and Allen was rolled at the Grand Central and Rothormel was a comparatively easy winner Allen is sala to have {mproved since that match, and @ hard sertea of games 1s ¢x- Fred ite, af the Bushwick Council, T Fred White, of the Bushwick Council, 7 will roll a match of the best eleven Sonar e of eloven amos will which the first contest of el mes will ‘of ten eames at the reat eal of Intarest in this match amone Royal Myers, has spent the last five yeara of her life mainiy in studying the Bible, ‘|The chidi was also kept on a bread- and-water diet with an occasional bit of, boiled rice, Since she wis six years old her grand- father compelled her to read the Btble at all hours of the day. The girl would not even be allowed to go out and play and her health has been verlously affected. ‘The Humane Society interfered in her behalf yesterday and the Court placed her in another family. = to star, Monday at Thimn's Lenox Aca- demy, One Hundred and Twenty-fitth street and Lenox avenue, A dozen. work: men have been engaged for several days Ne | In getting the tourmument.alleya Into Rood shape for the opening: Games have been soheduled for ithe tt round as follows: Monday, Jan. 20-—Metropollian, Our Own, Artie, ‘Tuesioy, Jan. 30-—OCorinthlan, Kanawha, Metropolitan’ Life Wednesday, Jan, 81—Hickory, Phoenix, Spartan. ‘Thuretay, Feb. 1—McGtyney, Shamrock, perion which the highest was 953 and the low- of the mos Inteereeting tourna- eee ta tnetentirarat wes temtant | mamta Geawecs recmen Se ey ee eas, ier iemncner amd still further Mlustrated the pro-| being held at the Waite Elephant allem) stoi orne ' y) 3 flolency in team work that has made} 0") Woaing clubs in each rouraament | | Tucsday, Fob. G—~Algonquin, Victoria, the Tuxedo organization the marvel of | SM) lance “arswde of spectators cn bow!- | Casino, the stagon. The full scores. Ing nightie. \\ Said by the Bowlers. Newark. 1 In tie LAfe Insurance League the race | Meyer... » 109 dx between the Mutual Life, that has won, Duck-pin bowlers at the Riverslde, In Har: Pierson 14 nt Nout of twel our games, Mutual Jem would ike to make « series of match Johns 228 Tianetit, that has won sixteen ou! of twen- | contests with those who make their head Swan 190. Bitouc games, aed Pru Lolehteen Out ‘quarters at the Ainphion, In Brooklyn Wolngarth 181 Totals . OAT Brooklyn. 1 Smith Allen Cortes rel Haller . Totnla . Mets Won Two Games. In the three games rolled tn the Me tan champlonehip senies at the White El hant alley last night the Metropolita: wo from the Universalists of Rrookly: the fire: tn the series was by tho close mar. | gin of onjy five pins Te theZeredlt of Prooklyn tt may that the team was not the strong ora that will later be ween over the ble. ty: win dueat af form in the team roll i) evening am indicated tn the evenly balanced scores, no one man outclassing the ot the general averages. ‘The Mets pai up three ood scores, Deing the best of the ‘rerlen, second kame and honors, althourh there was a twent 1, wo Ames. i i tn Runes: ar ber of games. The Har ne ares In the say + National team . C. Meyer, Shor and dividual average of 292 tor ¢ team still neaintains of Columbus League, ne in twenty played. ¢ Urmament race 2: Cantitan, has won tropol ny be entd | znton 1toe t and St. Nich and lost two games, American 1 has the lead Companies’ “Leamie, having ing Inst won, here In| Cloven of fourtern «amen. played York has won ono in. twelve mA though members of the. tatter team their oe, the 27 amd hie! i ie hwegntytewo | the three-men tournament. soon ty begin we | nO years old, Pruaene, has | th ‘num- hew won ten of the eleven games played in the Rank Leather, hich ven macnes. 1-8, eleven in the ‘Trust fourteen and lout two games nnd also haw high ¢cam | neore of 1,028. ‘The Equitable team \ns won A final meeting of bowlers interested in Riversic hte will Sunday at 4 PM. Fiftean clubs will be represented in two-womon team tournament which star One Hundred and Twenty: Jerks! “Teague, “while. the. 8 National Cleria' League, while the Becond National | tre vaio Hour alleys of Sehn’ Csmmanne te the Nu‘lonal Bank of Commorce team’ with | Amsterdam avenue, Washington Helghts, nine our of eleven. R. Shotwell, Second | Montay Stiga s ‘auonal, has high game score of 240 snd Jimmy Smithy, a younger brothe: match game bowler. Provklyn champion. has ie who 1s doing well as a Opening aniex in the five-men champlon- ship at the Grand Central, Brooklyn. will e rolled Friday ove Corde fe M Moore wi the f « Veing With the Metropolitan, Je & Arps are giving a quart of e- bowler “maxing. the st in the open games at the Broadway Alleys cach week, OM, Farnum made the higa acore of 254 this, week are eet Hrooklynites will have the opportunity of ‘There was a large crowd oresent. thie being | willing to do better, A.M. Ostrom. Amore ‘on the Thim alleys. ‘The | fean No, 1, haw high weore rcort of mo | seoing the femous Corinthinna In action next fll scores and 1. Ball, United States Mortage, | Monday night when te first games In the METROPOLITAN dleh fiitvitwal average of 185 for sixteen | Metro wil be roll ‘ 16° any | sRives. ed by Johnie Hy. 200, Juveniles in Contest. is¢| The canton 101 | between a Kius ——| Je, for pions, bedny 8 Foo | A return {on the aly i cari NIVERSAL, 175 of the elder Kruse, tie avenue, Bast Now o¥rk, and the | 160} won the beat thr 8 KaMCS, Jerome street and Atlan: enlog World, (rl) Rowlers will orsar be held a theso alleys | interment will | yon mm an | Th the ‘first seriea,’at the Harlem clrole, | turnanient af a 42 TR 187 | Samuels won threo atradeyt Kamen A rons | Lorri Hall tt 201 178 «= 205 | up for solection of alleys for the third con. | No. SOT Heal 210 16T = 143 | tat. was won by Kruso and the deelting evening: a me eat Wil he volled on the Want New} iets ton lead In the Morningside | ‘Totals ‘ 873 $80 M13. | York alleys Sunday afternoon, ical yA vehi RNa: Saal fetal One of the most remarkable scores over |. PovOWInE thia march a obaiiengs to, the} Larva won ounimens | BiMlne Non al road wan that" mae bie ARnopa tin ast | winner Wi be made by “Aaa HATH, oe 0] Sat Nee 0G Orne tt ar gee game, when ho cpened with a atrike, followed | fure, Paleo! and iment osber, jr, | ean atiil holds the high todm score of G10 rate te the third frame, reposting: th in Frame, repeaalny throughout the «aime, . Matoh at the Nonpeareil. a Senet | all of wiom ate ‘anxious to compete " Shamplonsp honors, Lenox Opens Monday. an Sr rons rie ea tt ey is bie Three men have an average abov the three-men team | competition Morningal i Linden, 218; y NM set ooh aan hea ga ase re 4 i 4. 247, Thatta. ‘good oe {was while on a {that Mrs. Holbrook, died. BRIDE A FRIEND OF HIS DEAD WIFE Clarke Holbrook Weds Mrs. Payne Two Days After Her Divorce. Friends of Clarke Holvrook, a wealthy man who until recently Hved at the Avonmore Apartments at Broadway near Seventy-fourth street, were as- tonished to learn to-day that he had married again. The first Mrs. Holbrook died about a year ago. Mr. and Mrs. Holbrook are spending thelr honeymoon in Havana. The bride way Mrs. Mary H. Payne, Ywife of Harry Payne, of Jersey City, from whom she obtained a divorce on rriduy of list week. Mrs. | was formerly Miss Hendrickson, daugh- ter of the late J, Holmes Hendrickson, | one of the Wealthlest citizens of | ited | Bank, N. J, Since her separation from | ner hushand she had been living with her widowed mother in Red Bank. Mr. Holbrook had a summer cottage at Spring Lake, N. J., and he and his Arst wife Knew the Hendricksons and | Paynes intimately, Mrs. Holbrook and Mrs. Pavno were close friends, and it visit. to Mrs, Payne ‘After his wife's death Mr. Holbrook became a frequent visitor to Mra. Peyne at her mother's house. Two days after Mrs, Payne obtalned her decree of divorce, she was mar- tet to Mr, Holbrook, PLEADING HUSBAND KILLED BY INTERLOPER. Italian Confesses Murdering Man and Shooting Woman He, Had Fascinated. (Special to The Evening World.) COATESVILLE, Pa., Jan. 27.—Guetano Lavell! 1s the man who murdered Jo- Payne | HEALTH Beecham's Pills are the “ounce of prevention” that saves many a dol- Jar for cure. Keep disease from getting im, and it will never lay you out. The safeguards against all life’s common ills are: A Sound Stomach, Healthy Kidneys, Regular Bowels and Pure Hundreds of thousands—both men and women—keep healthy by using BEEGHAN’S PILLS a remedy that has stood the test for half a century and is now used over all the civilized globe. They puriiy the blood, strengthen the nerves, regulate the bowels, aid the kidn. and cure stomach troubleg, Build up the nervous force and ree Pa the ill effects of overeating, The best safeguard against indiges- tion, biliousness and dyspepsia, Take Beecham’s Pills regularl and you will maintain good healt at small cost. At Small Cost Sold Everywhere. In boxes 10c, and 280. DENTISTRY. near JAY, Oppo Do not mistake continuo . $1.00 per tooth, up. 5100, Continuous practice over 80 years, seph Barton Carpenter, the woman's young husband, at Bernardtown, Wednesday night and at the same time seriously wounded her. ‘The husband was trying to induce the wite to leave her Italian admirer, with whom she was walking along a‘ dark road, and go home to her child, it is claimed. Maddened by the Interference, the Itallan shot first the woman, then | the man to whom she was married, Layelli was captured in Downingtown by Chief of Pollca Gray, who says he confessed the shooting and asked to be shot himself. ‘The Carpenters are prominent. —_—_—_o—___ Walter M. Egginton Dead, CORNING, N. ¥., Jan. 27,—Walter M Egginton, a writer of fiction, died here yesterday at his home. He was thirty- Is your name in the Telephone Directory? If not, now is the time to put it in, Spring Edition of the Te'- ephore Directory goes to press Friday, February 2d. All additions or changes must be received on or be- fore that date. CALL AT NEAREST OFFICE, New York Telephone Co. CONTRACT OFFICES: 15 Dey St., 115 West 38th St, 220 West 124th Sv, 16 East 150th St, ALL WORK GUARANTEED, AVOVEDEND EDIE DERENETENINNNEeT ney, PUBLIC NOTICES. : R e EWART ls required THE CITY OF NW, Yo! MUNT Of TAAES AND Ass BOROUGH O. Mj BROADWAY, JANUARY STH will be. lon"on the Ut remain 1900, books ai nation and & ot January, a: DAY OF APRIL, tine that th open mado to be. real or ne corrected \oat the Mate € Taxes and Ag Office of in thy Mun Think ave In. the at the uftioe Gnuiiaing,” St make in Wchs must fice tient or Duals 3 of 10 A, ‘6 Capital, ‘Tetograph.) and Eo- library of jilica from cover to a vast quan. The Almanac din the pocket and ts thus admirably adapted to the uses of the man who wants practical knowledge quickly. It is not written beyond the understanding of any man and is properly described as ie active agent for the disseminaton and practioak knowles eyclo referer cover, tity of may bi

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