The evening world. Newspaper, February 28, 1906, Page 4

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+ RACE RIOTERS; ~ FIGHTING STOPS Mobs Who Attac! Attacked Ne- “groes at Spring- field, O., Halted. SPRINGFIELD, 0., Feb. 28—Facing the bayonets of troops who to-day pa- trol the mreets of the “Jungles,’”’ in the _ Megro section of the city, the race riot- fore who al! last night held full sway | @re now at bay. Militfa companies B and B, of the peapire Regiment, Ohio National Guard ‘and two other detachments of troops * @rrived here shortly before dawn, and) fn quiet order charged upon the mobs nd sent them scurrying. Whe rioters who. to avenge an at- tack on Earl Sulkins, a baseball player. and Martin M. Davis. a brakeman, by “fewroes burned and battered the homes / and business places of the colored ele- ment and defied the police, seemed to | love. all their fighting epirt in the rush “ot the-armed guards of the State. There are knots of men in ugly mood @t Alfferent points to-day, but no show | @E dinorder has been made. They are kept moving. and with the soldiers in ‘rel and the ealoons still closed, the sguthorities say they have the situa- lon well ‘In hand and do not expect mereurner further outbreak. | JOSEFINA TERRANOVA. “THE WORLD: WEDNTSDAY eter FMT APY BERTHE CLAICHE, BERTHE CLAICHE CUNNING, JOSEFINA TERRANOVA IGNORANT HAE MONTHS FOR : PHOTOGRAPHED IN THE TOMPS pHicOn BY AN EVENING WORLD STAFF ARTIST. THE FAKE JUROR) Tillinghast, Who Confessed How He Had Deceived Courts, Is Sentenced. William H. Tillinghast, the profes- sional juror, who was arrested after he had impersonated 4 furpr before Justice Diwyer in the City Court. was sen- tenced to three months in the peniten- Uary by Justice McAvoy In Special Sessions to-day. The man confessed that he had com- mitted many similar offenses in the in- terest of the Metropolitan Street Rafl- way Company, but owing to tho statute of limitations he could not be prosecuted | tor them. CONSUMPTION A Successful Specialist: Throat and Lung Diseases. The success which treatmen| Consumption. Asthma. Bronchitis and Cotarrh places him foremost among American Lung Spe- ¥ Gtalsete, and is the rect result of his DR. ANDERSON. apility to Pry consumption and any other throat or jung disease while they are in their earliest stages and when they are curable. BERTHE CLAICHE'S FACE SHOWS DESIGNING SPIRIT. _Nixola Greeley-Smith Compares the Young Woman on Trial for Murder with the pe Bride Who Killed Her Uncle. BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. Tuesday morning I spent a half hour -fy the Tombs with Josefina Terranova, ‘the sixteen-year-old Italian bride who KUled her uncle, Gaetano Riggio. be- eatse, she says, he had tuken advan- _ tage of her ignorance to make her un- worthy of her husband's love. Yesterday I sat in the court-room ‘where Berthe Claiche is ou trial for killing Emil Gerdron, the stalwart six feot of French putridity: who Ilved on the wages of the young woman's sin. Both these women have Killed. Brdm poth of them Justice stands ready t claim the Biblical tribute of @ life for a life. And yet they are Wastly different as Untir faces tes- i | The Terranova girl is ignorant, densely ignorant. And hers is the ignorance that chance directs to good or evil. As things happened, !t led her to murder a man who had wronged her, ‘Dut it might just as well have made her the respectable mother uf a dozen). ehildren with about $9 a week to feed nd clothe them. "The face of Berthe Claiche on the con- trary speaks sophistication—knowledge that understands and chooses—in every Une. * As I saw her, there was a dark flush fn the features which those who have followed the trial say are usually vry pale, and her emall head was lifted ‘with a hint of resolution and defiance. In Nan Patterson's Place. She sat at the same table where Nan) Patterson sat. The same able lawyer was beside her. The same Justice who had presided at Nan‘s first trial which | I\had attended was on the bench. The} pdise reporters ‘were groupe’ about the table scribbling rapid ‘copy’! that walt- ng messenger boys grabbed and hus- tled to their offices. And the attention of all these men— | ef all the hundreds of curious onlook- rf straining wo hear every word of the unspeakable testimony—was focussed on | Yone miserable street walf—“Poor little pat!" was what I thought, “Poor little + You can’t help thinking {t any more ‘than you can help feeling sorry when | you see the actual squirming rat in the trap you have set for it, Sometimes you are so sorry that, though you know rats are vicious and enemies of law and order in your household, you let it out, And it t@ that feoling, maudlin as it may be, which will set Berthe Claiche free—if she goes free, For there can be no illusions about Berthe. Thouxh your first glimse of her found her on her knees in a cathe- dral, you would divine that she be- longed on a street corner after dark And if vou were tender and symia- thetic and womanly—or tried to be—you would wuspend judgment until the quts- tion had Keon answered, “How did she Ret there “ipimil’ Gerdron took her from, her honest work as an embroiuerer und put her there, and she Killed tum.” ‘That is the answer of the defense. It is al- ways the answer. !" slghs the sentimentalist, who does more harm with his foolist doctrine of the finaliay of what the melodramatist dishes up as her “first than any other one man 0. ity. of physictans in our @ that our most deadly nes are caused by microbes, There ome. however. who claim that the mierobe ts an effect, not a cause. Microbe of Society. Berthe Claiche is one of nulllions of microbes of society's deadliest disease that men tell us is neoescury and that | we don't understand, At present, she 4s the microbe under the microscope and phe looms larg: and out of pro- portion to the million ojhers, She committed "necessary" sins and ‘“so- clety"" stood for them: But possibly. presiiming on her im- munity, she picked out the unnecessary ain of murder—very few of us have a fancy for murder—and she is now on re for it. Berth mowed a lack of idgement on Ber IEE Won't speak of the fack of morals. ‘hat would be untair. The gir) began | In the Paris gutter; ended on, the New York pavement. Morals dog't get so far down. And under the cir¢umstances It would be IMlogical to regard her as having fallen from anywhere She fs mmpty a little rat of the city's sowors, that 4 upon one of the other rats 2 brought up to the level of those of who are fortunate enough to live on the @unlit surface of things that we may ait in judgment upon her. And that, of course, brings an un- pleasant atench of sewers to OUr nostrils and some of us will wonder If society ough: to hay eowers. Berthe Clajehe has more réason than ‘ &. Altman & Cn. DAY), MARCH FIRST, AND SPRING MONTHS, nis ' ANNOUNCE THAT, BEGINNING TO-MORROW (THURS- CONTINUING DURING THE THEIR ESTABLISHMENT WiLL REMAIN OPEN DAILY UNTIL SIX P. M. NOW IN VOGUE. INITIALS EMBROIDERED. WOMEN'S UNDERGARMENTS, BRIDAL AND TROUSSEAUX ORDERS, @. Altman & (in, ARE PREPARED TO EXE- CUTE ORDERS FOR BRIDAL SETS OR COMPLETE TROUSSEAUX OF WOMEN'S MADE OF DELICATE FABRICS, COMBINED WITH . THE LACES AND EMBROIDERIES WHICH ARE CRESTS, MONOGRAMS AND (DEPARTMENT FOR DOMESTIC UNDERGARMENTS) UNDERGARMENTS, She knew of to hate Gerdron. There Is that In her cold, calculating ttle face, THAn ate Was Mee iniieaten eel abe at she Was, that indicat she 3 lg very thrifty ‘and might have saved | Nan Patterson sat al Pres the money Gefdron took from her if she | different—like some fat, sl had @ cpance and gone back to France| And you knew that whatever 3 with a dower and married ang becom: tor € On the respectabie oeatilex. re aa thas her money helped to ‘She undoubted\y has shrewdness and Intelligence of a certain sort. The Ter- Tawova girl has neither. But there island behind the set stare of her iar: an {naocence, a simplicity, a childish-| row eyes there Is the look of th ness about her face that Berthe Claiche| heunted thing—of the rat that he probably lacked when she was ten| heard the spring snap behind It. A yeurs old. seoing it, one thinks, despite T can imagioe the litte Italien girl doing pretiy nearly anvt eo wKs told” Hut Derine Clalche'a Mace is not weak, Whatever she has done, she his thougat about and ‘weighed. She does rot look lke a creature of impulse at oe don't know what the world's great- est tragedienne will think about tt, but suppose Herthe will be, pleased | to that her tse e ae rofie that of Sara Fofile, by the way, Is Gatinctly “plquante. 1i_is only” whe oer Took her straight bekween the ey that her past stares at you unpleasantly Berthe Clatc! lesting than Nan Patterson's. Her de- in -the di mobility, the express! ss of b killed— Poor little rat! or To Italy to pe Black WILKES-BARRE, Fy enallo was so badly a. about tne I 8 face Is more inter- WOULD PUT A STOP meinor in court is more Interesting. Sabbath Society Wants All Man- eam and the ne fire, “Clniche's” face has ithe all the testimony about the other rat that she | was shown in General Sessions to-day | pal when Lawyer Perry, of the Sabbath So- clety asked Jud, — Vincent frightened by jack hand letters received last wesk aemanding that he place a large sum of money In a secret place or suffer death shat he has fled to Italy. He lef: Sun- day might after notifying the police term in Part I given a chanes to file thelr ans: could not Lavyer Perry said he would present it on the opening of the M. His wonderful Anderson X. looks directly into the body. solutely correct diagnosis any direase of any organ By examinat{on with his photographs side the body Light Dr. An- derson secs Immedately whether the lun are affected or not and what stage the di ease Ia in. He loses no time AT THE START, and from the very first diagnosis each patient Fecelyes the proper treatment suited to his individual case, and for the exact disease he is suffering from. while his original : germicidal vapor Inhalation treatment car who would observe the | rles the healing remedies directly to the seat ae . | of the disease and kills the tubercular germs. ; oping thestrical perform- | Sno" time is lost In belng treated for the ® sleep not while the wicked rage | wrong diseasé, and the thousands of enn tients are iving ofoots of Dr. Andetson'r Euccenstul treatment. These facts are hot the result of n tow experiments with a dozen patients. but are the result of & success of nineteen years perience as a lung specialist and” ninc Years as the only expert X-Light. Lung Specialist in New York. Examination and consultation are given without any charge and cost of treatment Is no higher thay that of the family physician Consult Dr. Anderson, 50 West 224 st Sth ‘ave.), New York TO ALL THEATRES, agers io Show Why Licenses Should Not Be Revoked. ioMahon for an order trical managers in New o show ciuse why their Hconses ‘1 not be revoked. Judge MeMahon said that ends to-mor y requires that the defe entertain the appli te Juvige O'Sullivan will tours FRAZIN CHICAGO STORES Jol STAVE STREET, TO THE PUBLIC: Manufacturers’ ‘sin RNA MADISON §1 GOR VAN BUREN B DEARGORW STS. Department Store next Saturday, March 3, & M. OPPENHETM. EXECUTIVE OFFICES Reazany & Openyeming, 18T! STREET & 6TYAVENUE, 21ST STREET & GTHAVENUE, 260 WEST 1257! STREET, NEWYORK, February 28th, 1906. PHILADELPHIA STORES, COR CHESTHUT-@ 117s STS, 129 NORTH Gr" StACET’ 1906. The necessity for utilizing the space on the four floors of our building at the corner of 18th street and 6th avenue induced us to make direct coanectione with the leading weavers and manufacturers of America, to take over their surplus stock, overproductions and mill ends ata tremendous saving in price and distribute them to the people of New York and vicinity. This new department store will eliminate the middleman entirely and bring the goods direct to you at a lower figure than you would be asked to pay at the factory if you purchased at wholesale, From mill and factory there will pour aconstant stream of bargains of reliable merchan- dise at irresistibly low prices. Having 16 stores in New York, Philadelphia and Chicago, we occupy a foremost position among the shoe merchants of the world, Every statement made by us is rigidly adhered to; fulfilled to the letter. the values impossible to duplicate elsewhere. method of conducting the Associated Weavers’ Department Store; put the difference in the bank. every promise is You have tested this store on shoes and found Get acquainted with our and Manufacturers’ . learn the prices; see how much cheaper you can buy and Our new departments will consist of Dress Goods, Cloaks, Suits, Waists, Hosiery, Underwear and mill products. Watch Friday evening's World for Opening ad.--a page of sensational bargains--the like of which New York has never known. Yours respectfully, SES TNS We herewith announce the opening of the Associated Weavers’ and oh pts Corner 18th street and 6th avenue, 5 | New Model Broadcloth Suit A remarkable offering in Women’s Broad:loth Suits (Harrow coats) trimmed with soutache l22.8 braids on coats, belt and skirt, coat lired witb silk, Value $30.00; Thursday. Misra /stelse ° : Women’s New Spring Gite Long Coats, made of light weight broad- ) cloth — loose models — yoke trimmed with ; $5.00 taffeta..... Sead css Coats all lined with Taffeta, yee Bo‘h coats are trimmed at neck and cutis with wide silk braids. New Separate Skirts in panama and new gray mixtures, circular 5. 00 plaited. Value $7.00, Special for Thursday... } (third Floor.) Spring Waists—New Models | 25 dozen Waists—lace trimmed, elbow sleeve— ) | value $1.65 each; special at. He aBORGONS 1.38 | 25 dozen Waists— embroidered front, long sleeve ) —value $1.75; special at........ Facade ph. 00 | 20 dozen Waists—front and b: of embroidered : | fanels and lace—vaiuz $2.75; special at........ ph. 98 | Jap Silk Waists—lace yoke, eltow sleeve—value : | $7:50 each® speciatiatiascss as cis cae. ss cer fo. 95 Black Lawn Waists—bu'ton front or BACK. cose wesecensssecseces seer f9BC © 1.98 (Third Floor.) Muslin Underwear Specials. (Second floor.) Corset Covers—!n white, lavender, b'ue, rink and black, long sleeves, open back or frort. d:ep cuff, lace and insertion ‘finishing on neck and Sleeves all sizes,......-...-.--. bogies Corset Cover Extenders—Made of cambric, | with three lawn hemstitched ruffles across front, t 59c t finished at neck and armhole with ruffle to match. i Drawers—Of muslin, deep emtroidery ruffle, | finished with cluster of tucks-—value 75c each, 159 | Special at . 59c Gomns=or nainsook, muslin and cambric, } long and short sleeves high, low and V-shaped | | | yokes, trimmed with embroidery and lace cag. | { 1.50 ings and insertions. An extra good value, at.. || Hosiery & Knit Underwear | | Children’s fast black fine ribbed Cotton Stock- L | ings ; SZ “e | Women’s fast black Hose, double heels and toes, Special value at }25¢ | Women’s Lisle Thread Hose—allover lace, lace | boot, lace boot embroidered instep; also sheer ae 135¢ | and medium weight. Special at | 3 for $1.co. | Women’s Ribbed Combination Suits, low neck,| with umbrella drawers..,,...... ‘t 596° H | Plain colors and novelty stitches, suitable for golf- ing, outdoor sports and travelling. Special at... } 1. 48 ‘} Sc Women’s Ribbed Vests, 2 for 25c., Cites vie Others at 25¢. and 35c. Women’s Ribbed Corset Covers.............. Value $1.75, $2.50, $3.98. (Second Floor.) Perfumery Specials for Thursday ibber £09 pairs Women’s household rubber Rubber Gloves— i) Pairs site red and tray. Special ate | 39 Water Bottles—Goodyear 2 quart Hot Water Bottles, regu- H 39¢ larly 49C., at.sse.seveees Powder—The celebrated brand of “Riviera” ’ Pere Tafcum fume Violet Talcum Powder, regularly [19 25C., at..... a id 5 Violet Ammonis Qui ot of good guy Vl Am |g, }59¢ Listerine—The sraule Listerine Mouth Wash, regular $1.00 size tee eeer ees woenng cane Lord & Taylor Silks and Dress Goods. Special for Thursday and Friday. Sixth Avenue, 20th to 21stSt., N.Y. Crepe de Chine, 8,500 yards; in a complete line of street and evening shades, on sale,... at soc. Dress Goods Dept: p8-inch Colored Albatross, 1,800 yds.; in desirable colorings; also 1,200 yds. Figured Challis ; Il to be on sale... Wash Goods Dept. Printed Mercerized Eotieyne, 5,000 yds.; afternoon or evening wear; extremely dressy handsome for summer dresses; value 50c...at 2 5c. at 386, yd A unusual valuet! for and] yd Broadway and Twentieth St., Fifth Ave., Nineteenth, Sti: iene

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