The evening world. Newspaper, March 5, 1906, Page 5

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——— BLOWS OUT HS BRAS AS CAP FYOMERATES HM Russian Accused with the Priest Leader Kills Him- self at Meeting. ST. PETERSBURG, March &—The accused member of the Father Gapon lavor organization who committed sul- elde while the scandal involving the charges of accepting money from the Government was being investiented was mamed Sechoff. He enjoyed a high standing among his fellow workmen, “who are much depressed as a result of the scandal in the organization. It now develops that Father Gapon was himself present at yesterday's ses- sion when Secnoff dramatically killed himself. Father Gregori Potroft had charged Sechoff with obtaining $2.500 from Falther Gapon and with having ac- companied a member of the secret pollce fm the search f or “M Press agent and counsellor of the Father Gapon movement, who fled with the organization's funds. During the progress of the meeting Bechoff made an !mpassioned speech in which he declared that he could not support the infamy {nvolved In the charge that the orxanization had been in league with the Government nor the obloquy heaped on himself, as both he and the organization were Innocent. Sechoff then called upon Father Gapon to declare in the presence of his fellows whether he, Sechoff, had re- eelved a cent from the Government. Father Gapon arose and exonerated Bechoft, whereupon the latter sald: “I will now clve you supreme proof of my honesty." and drawing a revolver, he blew out his brains. Matushensky, | TH E WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, MARCH 5, 1906. pa te rpeeo HOW TO ®™" "N THE SUBWAY AND SURVIVE STEEL TRUST Employees. * WIRED TO GO IN AND — DISINFECTING PASSENGERS AFTER THE RIDE, | \ COLLECTING (ez MICROBES FOR JAA SCIENCE STUDY. By F. ANO THEN ‘TO Go 1 INSULATED COPPER WIRE. a. GET FuLt OF STEEL DUST LEADING TO AVOID BREATHING POWDERED STEEL RAILS Long. INTOOTHE a) Pan THE PATENT MAGNETIC NOSE - * GUARD IN THE SUBWAY AND BE BOILED DOWN AND CS STEEL RAILS ~— AGAIN! ANTI-MICROBE NETS Romeo into- | SECTIONAL VIEW SHOWING HOW IT WORKS FOR SUBWAY WEAR. INGTHII PRIEST INVENTS ELECTRIC CHIMES The Rev. Milo, of the Bronx, Has Long Displayed a Mechanical Genius. n Milo, of St. Roch's $ Kast One Hundred f 1 street, fs working on a new Invention, the latest of the three-score contrivances that aro the fruit of his mechanical genius. The clever- 88 Of the little Ituian priest ts known to his parisiioners, for in constructing the courch of which he !s now tho head and which was opencd a year ago he did all the steamfilting, plumbing and wasfitung, Now he has nearly finished @ set of electric chime bells to be in- Stalled in the steeple, But the latest contrivance ja some- thing of which Father Milo {s unwilling to talk. He was in dus Uttle workshop at No, 932 East One Hundred ang Fit- tleth street, next door to the church, when he was visited by an Evening World reporter to-day and asked aout this plans, All about him were models in all steges of construction, In the centre of the room was tie now in- vention, which ¢o the lay observer fooked Uke a framework ooveras with bells and wooden bails, Falher Mulo Would say nothing of this or of its purpose, “I intend to apply for @ patent on It within 2 week,” he gak, “ant until then [ think it best to let it remain @ mystery. 1 have found by long ux- perience that the inventor seldom gots the frult of his iabors, and 1 have come to entertain a suspicion of unany pateut lawyers, You see, 1 have been iven- ing things ever since I was a boy." Father Milo is more than fty years of wome of his inventions he was as modest as a youbh who has just turned out his first plece of original work. Oh," said he, with w deprecatory ges- ture, “inventing has been @ pastime for me. Religion is my vocauon and my | mechanical work bas been @ form of relaxation. Now, for instnce, 1 have mot more than an hour or two a day for it You see, { Lave my parish af- fairs to attend to, and give only my ume to my little workshop here. “I came to tius country from limy twenty yeure ago, aud before that L had invented among other things 4 lit- ‘tle mechuvical mouse. 1 suld it to a nan for 32,! learned that since then he has made 97,000,000 on it, for he ‘has patented it in every country where, there ie a patent law” As he was talking the reporter no- ticed a lurge pig behind a table. in- vestigation proved that it was not a but a very good model of ‘his proved to be another of Father Milo's inventions, By putting @ cent in a slot on the ik and pull- ing the tall. a piece of chewing gum dropped from its mouth, A coin dropped in @ slot on the side with a pull on the tail caused it to play rag: eid, but when pressed for a description + ) and I have! “FRIDAY NIGHT" BURGLAR CAUGHT Thief Who Laughed at Pistol Shots Charged with a Hun- dred Crimes, (Special to The Evening World.) PHILADELPHIA, March 5.—The cax reer of one of the most daring and cun- ‘ning criminals with whom the police of this clty have ever been called upon | to cope ts brought to a close by the positive Identitication of Patrick Shea, @ former policeman, arrested on Satur- | day, the aotorious “Friday night who for many months has plundered fashionable residences in | Germantown and other suburbs. | Shea was identified by policemen of Cheltonham, at whom he had repeat- edly jeered when they were pursuing and firing their revolvers at him. The clothing that Shea wore had been stolen in his dering raids in the sub- urbs, For audacity few criminals have ap- proached the “Friday night burglar.’ The pol.ce put him in a class by him- elf. He had no confederate, stopped preme contempt. He seemed to bear a charmed life. A domen times citizens and policemen shot at him, and when the revolver of the pursuer was empty he stopped and taunted him. A eeries of nearly a hundred robberies bore distinctive marks of the same adroit: thief. He was never known to use force in obtaining entrance to a house, A window left unfastened was invariably his avenue of entrance, and he took guly what he found unguarded by lock and key. ‘Another pecullarity of the thief was his custom, apparently bravado, of leav- ing his own hat and coat behind and taking others from the house, whether he got better than his own or not. —— Pini Newport Chef, Dead. NEWPORT, March 5.—Armond Pin- ard, a noted chef of New York and Newport, died at the Newport Hospital yesterday. He was recovering from pneu- monia and was expected to leave for New York in @ few days. His wife was at church when news was eent to her Of his death. He was born in France | And was a cousin of the Pinards, for- | merly_among the leading caterers of |New York and Newport. time, while by a twist of the tall it Wi Sorby ‘ather buen he made this several years ago, the cost of construction ‘was 33, “I was Cffered $20,000 for It by larze manufacturer of ohewing sum,"' te satd, “but by the advice of friends I aid not SR a Aa nates fo"b et jaring slo! es to Sevices, so T would not seit’. = Among other examples of /ls work are a self«winding watch, a pedometer that listers one's steps up to one thous: Braet iene. fie resots itscif, and a mechine for pamphiets and loose manuscript sheats, CHEERF ULNESS! WL AL E> 1 ¢ Wa ig at no risk, and held policemen in su- | SUBWAYITIS P |Evening World’s Confe: Observe The Evening World's first ald to subway riders—the magnetic nose- guari—recommended to \..e public as {certain preventive against nulmonaris subwayitis, the new disease recently discovered by Dr. O'Hanlon, Coroner's Physician. This ingenious device, designed by a conference of medical and physical ex- perts convened by The Evening World, js «uaranteed to positively protect the lungs and air passares of the nearer from the malignant vortex of steal par- ticles ‘thrown on by the friction on the thind-rail. For these inskivous splinters of steel are the direct and dancerous cavse of O'Hanlon's disease or subway- itis.) Taken into the lungs with each breath, these microscopic pests clog the vital tissues and put the innocent breather out of business more quickly than even the subway carbon-dloxide or deficient oxygen. Observe The Evening World's first atd Indeed, Dr, O'Hanton's discovery has | made it obvious that every person ven- turing into the tunnel Iterally takes his life into his lungs and exposes {t to the attack of the agents of the fata! disease, | But The Evening World magnetic nose-guard has come to the rescue, The Reason Why—Because. With this simple and inexpensive vizor in lace no «ne neols fear tht each breath {8 transforming him into a re- poritory for steel securities. For each wily molecule of tron that attempts to sneak up the wearer's nostril, down his innocent bronthial tubes to find a final resting-place in the comfy, spongy lung, 1s caught inthe net of manetic lines of force thrown out by the nose-guard and drawn close to the aldes of this trre- sstible apparatus, ‘This is the reason why: ‘The working principle of The Evening World magnetic nove-guard {is that of the temporary magnetic power induced 4m a soft-iron core from coils of copper wire carrying an electric current. Get that? Tt sourds like the olf school days, and {U's bona-fide sclence—a football nose guard done into a magnetic nose cap. You see the nose ruard prover ts soft fron—not eo soft that you'd notice it if you ran against it in the dark, The metal ts carefully shaped to fit every- thing from retrousse to Roman etyles of nasal architecture. A thin sheet of REVENTED BY MAGNETIC NOSE GUARD a ooo rence of Scientists Pre- sents Plan for Saving the Lungs of the Tunnel Passengers. the iron turns slightly back into the nostrils, On Your Own Trolley. expansion of iron cores that run through closely wound colls of copper wire lying And tnese coils are con nected by a wire with a pocket-sized trolley on wheels that follows the wearer of The Ever'ng World magnetic nose- guard faithfully along the thind rail, Seo? It's perfectly simple: Thind radl—to gupply the electric cur- rent ‘Trolley on wheels and nose—to trans- mit same. Induction colls—to conditions, iron nose-plece—to do the rest. Uc is suggested that women adopting this safeguird against subwayitis have the insulation of the wire in a color to match the oostume. lor men black in- swation ‘is recom a. Owner uses of the nose guard are at one suggested to progressive people, In crowds the guard Js unequalled for nosing one's way pasi helpless passen- weis, ‘Tho nose xitard might easily be employed as a locomotive's oowoatcher for cle®ting one's tracks. 1f used to the physical detriment of others, tho nose guard might eusily ovcasion dam- age suits, So the wearers must be cau- tious, ‘ Is Free to All, In putting this valuable scientific ap- tus at the use of iis readers The vening World is prompted only by the most pillanthroptc moudves—a hu- Mane desire to protect gulleless Sul way passengers from the terrific on- slaught of O'Hanlon's disease, ict ed by that malady’s Columbus. The muganetic nose guard is not vrokected by induce magnetic Patent, and the d ners have been ‘enjoli by The ayers World from a ne thelr plans at yn for This ehnanth ‘This cart lc owe tended solely’ for The delightful ‘of this magnetic 6 8 rotsotor fies elmplictty, Any clever or girl can make one {t home, ‘he raw materials are an iron roast- fmg-pan, the insulated wire from any ald apartment-house electric bell and a child's metal fire-enzine, The roasting-pan, fashioned with the je DeneAt of the tom over any "rounding “surface, "such ne face, guch as a panlor chair leg, forms the guard it- self. The fire engine, from which the driver, horees, &c., have been removed, ‘supplies the trolley truck. And the wire cut from the electric bell system completes the apparatus. ‘BLEW OPEN SAFE IN was one of the heavy butcher wagons, and went to sleep again. When he went downstairs to open the saloon at 6.45 this morning he found the place littered with papers and his tin cash box, empty lying on the floor. SALOON, GUT $400 Burglars Chose. First Sunday Night in Years that Frey Had Not Thousands. Burglars looking for @ good bunch of Beef Trust money entered the ealoon of John W. Frey, at No, 105 North @ixth street, Wiliameburg, early to-day and blew to smithereens the larywe and handsome fron eafe in which the whole sale butchers of that section generally leave their Saturdsy eqles money over Sunday, But only about $12 of meat money was in the age, while the sa- Yoon-toeeper owt $409 ena.a lot of Jew- ‘The back door of the saloon had been forced and two emall holes drilled in the nice hand-painted door of the large safe, Through these the men had poured some high explosive, blowing the otitey ey: Teis the frst time ta mont ey ‘3 is the first time mon! the safe pot had! thousands of dollars in it over Saturday night, 327 HOUSES SWEPT AWAY BY TIDAL WAVE. PARIS, Qfurch 5.—Mintster of the Col- onies Clemantel has received a cable «message confirming the press reports to the effect that the French polony. in Ooceantca was devastated by a hur ricano and tids] weve Feb, 7 and & Tahiti was particularly affected. Whree hundred and twenty-seven ~ eae alzaster dhe ‘Tuamotu iotands Now, the scientific part of the whole! thing is this—the nose-plece 1a really an '2 the head. BOY SHOT DEAD BY HI PLAYMATE Agonized Parents Could Only Watch Ten-Year-Old as Life Went Out. The fates were against Louls Fink, of West New Brighton, Staten Island, liv- ing longer than ten years, the anniv eary of which was celebrated at birthday party Saturday, Yesterday, standing in range of a rifle aimed by o companion, Louis received tae. H @ chanco of saving the lite | but ali communisation with Tala, and thy aessest doctus were Way irom thelr otfices. ‘Lhe pareria of the victim were cumpuiud tu stand by. E athe life of we saftorer ebb 47a; little | Manuel Prociado, dfteen y | a playmate ot the lead boy, w up, charged with the killing. He be- caine hysterical, Fink was standing in his backyard at | 4 o'clock yesteruuy aitevn20a When he | felt a sharp pain ‘n the bask of his head and feu lo the ground. Boys who were in the street at the tie of the shooting sald Preciado hi exclaimed, “Watch me hit. ‘Finkle, jand had ‘taken deliberate aim at. hi Owing to the flooding of the centr: Jetation of the telephone company on the island, which tled up_ the entire | service after midnight on Saturday, It was impossible to get either a physl- |clan or an ambulance tn less than an hour after the shooting, A messenger |had to. run to the S, R. Smith Infirm- jary, miles away, to get an ambulance. | M’LAUGHLIN RAIDS STREET CAR “DIPS.” there were twenty-two men in the “line-up” at Pollce Headquarters to- y. (he greater part of them were onneffs," or enst side thieves, Among those inspected by the detectives were | Alex Rabinowitz, of No, 231 Eldridge street, or No. 9,437 In the Rogues’ Gal- lery, and Morris Goldberg, who is No. 2,268, Together with Harry Levine they were accused of stealing $100 from L. Wgniano, of No. 44 East Thirteenth street, while he was ing on a Second vente car at Twentieth street yester- day. i day ‘6 elwaya a buay day with //Sopaay, te, a ie pockets, and ene of victims who suffered heaviest wus Biizel ‘Sparer, of No. 4 Bast Lighty- fitth street, who was robbed of $150, In !a cnr at Fourteenth street and Aven Later in the day the detectives a ‘Meyer Soloinon, who {sin th weaiety as No. 8.204 tn connection with ‘shoe | the crime. STRONG AS STEEL ‘Tho Kind of Nerves That Can Do Things. A young athlete writes concerning the method by which he acquired steady nerves and also of some good missionary work he has done: “About a year ago,” he says, “my nerves began to grow unsteady and I found myself troubled with sleep- Jessness, I set an inquiry on foot, and became convinced that the coffee I drank was the cause of the trouble and determined to quit it right there, | “So I got a package of Postum Food Coffee and Mother and I pre- pared it. We did not boll it long enough the first time and were not much impressed by it. The second time, however, we followed the dl- rections carefully and were more than pleased with the result. “T ean sleep like a log now, since I am using Postum, my nerves are as strong as steel, and my muscles, which used to tire easily, are hard and enduring as tron. Heavy ath- letics no longer give me pain in the ie and chest as formerly, "I have brought our whole family to use it, aud it has done every one of them good. My father has found his asthma almost entirely relieved since he gave up coffee and began to drink Postum. Name ven by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Th @ reason. Read the little Pred “The Road to Wellville,” in bust) at the WOMEN JON GENERAL FIGHT | W SUB CHR Draw Hatpins During Riot Started by Gang of Toughs. | | | | A nent, in which several women used 'hatpins and @ score of men swung their fists and biack-Jjacks, caused consterna- | tion among the passengers of an “owl train’ in the Subway early to-day, and | resulted in a call for police from nearly every underground station between ‘Twenty-eghth street and the Brooklyn Bridge. Abvut thirty members of a Brooklyn ltullun Soclety boarded a Broadw. | train at Maniatu in Har | Fhey had spe tin New Je wey and Wow nibs aviie, evident that ut iuuge Ue en ie | drinking excesalveiy. ‘Duere Ww | in quvh ih the party several children. ‘They crowded into the front car and gang Itallan songs, jostled other and made musi Hulse, but thelr rougn- fess ind tmervy-iwcing wits re | themselves, and others 1 car racer | enjoyed the spur 4 to it At the G ation, iine between eighteen aud twenty youths, | years Old, boards had been drinking ‘One of them jus laps of tWo of t | party and the tis was buckat up j Squa i a of the car, tue doors of teh locked, . ‘There they were attacked by several There tey inthe iulian party and of the men fists were flying y Thirty-third street station Phe conductor called to the to telephone to the stations ahead for the‘poltce and the train pulled out with bie: ight or bad been many men, most of them escorting Womes, who Awere embers of elther faction In the hot menmese women sereuued andr ty fear cars, followed by the men. to the rettywo of the woinen w.th the B contingent removed their warted for the members hats and eesquad™ with the hatpl: Aieay were held back by the men, One litte woman in mourning, al- though she had been the gayest of the fhougm gged one of the men away from 1o Gornered youths and with appar- the come threw him to the floor and ent oat m. He bad displayed a biack- face and waa trying to reach the fy en. young feo or three of the young men ne mered to fight, but even they sub- aided when the men of the Brooklyn Rttacked them. For several sia fhe youths cowered wn the front ena of the eat, vainly seeking an exit oo nie train stopped at the stations. tne excitement continue! unt) Worth street was reach There whe motor- man opened the front door, pushed th | terrified “traffic squad’’ onto the plat- fenm and closed the door hefore the lItalians could follow them. When the lTtallans tried to follow by the other door they found that {t had been jocked against them, ‘Phat practically ended hostilities, and the remaining gerents left ‘he 't Brooklyn Bridge station. | party There OLICE CLUB AUDIENCE AT THEATRE DOOR Reserves Leap Into Crowd at Majestic Awaiting Entrance. Poltes Commissioner Bingham wil to- day order an investigation of the action of the police reserves from two stations tn clubbing the orderly crowd which Sought admiasion to the Majestic The- tre yesterday afternoon to hear Mark Twain lecture, It was suid that charges would be made Inst Capt, Daly, of the West Forty-seventh street station, it had been advertised —_ that the doors of the thentre would be opened at 8 P, M., and two policemen Were detatled far the occasion, Two minutes before that hour Capt. Daly chanced on the scene, and, observing that the south side of Columbus Circle Way packed with people, notified Mr. Lawton that the doors must not be opened until he had summoned the re- serves, a Galloped into Crowd. There was an excited commotion when the clang of patrol-wagon gongs was heard. One wagon, filled with re- serves from the West Sixty-eghth eet Sluuon, Came Lurouga brouuway Aye Carty lig yusce- we LUE Wye OL) -pev eu LL (uuon, rallied Uhrouga iipuue LxXpiessane of resentment were oearu ai aides When le policemen led wut. “Dida 1eeling Was lauoed inte anger A mmoment liter wien Mounted Police- 4G Oieet galoped Lis horse into te sowd. Men teil back. to escape the Horse, Whose rider pushed through to Ue sidewaik. Olsen lad been ordered to ride to the very doors of the the- atre, whore h was greatest. cemen made a flank movement to reach the doors, seized those pressed against the en- trance to the theatre. A gray-halred man whose silk hat was knocked off fgined {2 an officer and shouted Charged with Clubs. Panic started. The rear ranks, closing in, threw a tremendous weight’ againat those pinned agalnst the theatre en- trance. A plate-slass window In one of the doors gave way with a loud crash. The glass hurt those ‘nearest the door. Three men received slight cuts, and thelr cries made the erowd frongied, wenty policemen charged straight |toward the sntrance, swinging thelr clubs above the beads of the crowd. ‘The cry went up that the police jubokig, “Instantly “the crowd “was hunt on resist nunclatl nd. mm jovhing | Grulsed. 288 . “Hats torn and arms an The police used their clubs rere no policemen there either, Bis luce her figure. Here is a simple remed | the common sense of every Its ingenious devices p' | heretofore possible in other the abdomen sotetfectivel the first timo the skirt from four to five inches. mous sale within this short It is not expensive. most artistic taste, | Now a word about the It is unquestionably the ‘Tt has all the meritorious f Supporter” as a valuable addi long, slender waist. or your favo and its ady KOPS BROS., Mfro., ADAM, YOUR FIGURE IS GREATLY REDUCED. This is the most pleasing compliment that can be paid the stout woman. spare neither time nor money; sho will sacri- fice her health and pleasure; she will undergo paveical hardship and even starvation to re- inexpensive that it must appeal xt once to | Wear the New Nemo Self-Reducing Corset with Relief Strap. $ perfect symmetrical proportions and reduces as to be taken in It was introduced last season and its enor- actually reduces her figure y Tho New Nemo Self-Reduci ridge at the top of the corset, fal, ‘Cellcloth'—is of great hygic This corset gives the greatest possible yalue-for the money. corset you hnve been wearing—whether it has been an e: ito American make—cast it aside and wear the New Nemo. ages will be strikingly apparent, It will make over your figuro—ive you the best shape you ever had; and for durability of wear and excellence of workmanship, it is unequaled. Model No. 515, made of French Coutil; all sizes; price FOR @ALE AT ALL CORSET DEPARTMENTS. HOLES DEAD MAN'S CLOTHING PUTLE POLICE Corpse. Evidently Fixed Up in Effort to Hide Murder. PATHRSON, N. J., March 6.—The mae thorities of thts ality are investigating the death of Carmino Carrafello, am Itallan, who ts supposed to have been murdered in a house on Straight street. Gaetano de (Feo. also an Italian, wos arrested early to-day on suspicion of ‘eing concerned in the man’s death. The case was first reported to County Physislan McBride by an undertaker, who asked for @ permit for the removal of the hody of a man who, he had been told, had died of heart disease. When the County Physiclan viewed the corpse it was fully dressed, and he ordered’ th undertaker to remove the clothing. A. discovery was then made which led the County Physician to suspect foul play. There was a wound In the man's stomach apparently caused by a bullet. All ‘the garments on the body were closely examined amd fioles were found, evidently made to simulate bul- let punctures. The County Physician reported the case to the police and an investigation was begun. lt was learned that Carra- fello boarded with Defeo In the Straight street house, and us the Intter did not wive a clear account of the death of Carrafello he was arrested and locked up at Police Headauarters, The supposition of detectlyes on the case js tha: the man was shot, his bloody clothing removed and the corpse again dressed. Just why the holes were made in the clothing 1s, however, not explained. t is said that the clothing of the dead man was burned and the gar ments on the corpse were those of an« other person. 15 Cents each, 2 for 25 Cents OLUETT, PEABODY & Oo, Makers of Cluett and Monarch Shirts. is prods. ‘Three men were knocket down at the theatre entrance, and were \lmoat trampled. ‘The rioting lasted for fully fifteen | mt before the doors of the theatre 1" nrown open at 3.45 P.M. and @ mad rush Inside started. "Men were !knocked down and several were teamnled. Jayne's Sanative Pills ] promote good health, RES She will 'y, so effective and stout Woman, roduce results not corsets. It gives that when worn period proves that the stout woman has found at last what she has been looking for—a corset that yithout the slightest discomfort. f 1g Corset is a great improvement over the old one, of which 2,000,000 pairs were sold in eight years, It retains the original ‘‘Self- Reducing Idea” to which has been added—the new RELIEF STRAP, the new GRADUATED FRONT STEEL and the new DOUBLE GARTER ATTACHMENT. ‘These new patented features are simply invaluable to women who are physically weak and to those who stand and walk a great deal. It is within the reach of ali classes and satisfies the Model No. 312, for the tall stout woman. Model No. 314, for the short stout woman. | Both styles in Coutil and Batiste, all sizes, price New Nemo Self-Reducing Corset with “Bust Supporter.” most complete and satisfactory stout woman’s corset ever made. ures of the New Self-Reducing Corset with the new ‘‘Bust tional feature, This “Bust Supporter,” which is the latest novelty in corset invention, gives perfect support to the sides of a well-developed bust, bringing it more to the front dnd avoiding that unsightly This gives the appearance of a tall figure with an extra Still another new feature—the abdominal gores, which are made of the new porous mater- alue and gives additional support to the abdomen, 35 West Third Street, NEW YORK snsive imported model $3.00 No matter what Try it, $5.00

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