The evening world. Newspaper, March 18, 1907, Page 3

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— any THE HD BIG ~ [WER SEARCHED *Th $40,000 in Jewels on Board America. Mys. Dealiry: Tells of Expe with Smooth Crooks Under Arrest. : a ass of several sensational London robberies, were arraigned In the Tombs Court to- ‘davon a charge of grand -larceny, the time of thelr arratgan night the news-qf-the capture, , however, to secure arregted by tho — cust charged with smurel ome They dectared to-a ctstoms officer on boat ship yes- ing dutindic terday that they had no! Aux thelr possesion. Law ‘O'Reilly and “Maurice Mey! 8 counsel for the prisoners. Denied They Were Thieves. Tho prisoners denied that th ‘thieves, ty Magistrate Jow tha and hind bousht tho fowals inn legitt- mate + ss transaction. — Aselstant District-Attorney Johnston asked that thelr ball be fixed at $1500 each, as each man had in his possession when arrested about #2,(00 worth of atolen (gems. The Court corpromised by nam- ing the bail nt-#10,00 each, In default ef which Green and Rohrer were rent to the Tombs to await further exam- Apation, .__‘Dhe two handsomely gowned women who were #0 charmed by the smoota manners of Grecn and Rohrer on snip- boart?that they were much in their company did not appear in court to- day, They had el to the entire eaAtistaction of police that tiey Har- i “| the had never latd eyes on the two men until they embarked on tne Amerika, {hey continued to donounce the officials ——-for- having -subjected-tham toa weATCH: When they proved their reapoctuottity to the satisfaction of Mulberry street j{ due apolory 1s on her way to violt h pokane. == Green-Lost-a-Ring. * Mrs. Doaltry sald to-day that after sho met Green sho noticed that three very pretty ri: whe ve retty rings. “One day,” she eaid, “he missod one of these and ____Paleod an awful rumpus, ‘Understand then why he, who callod ¢Rimself a millioneire's sun, should ‘be | 20,awfully anxlous to recover the ring. But he was, and kicked #0 peraistentiy that the captain haa the entire shir 1_couldn't SS er eae ee OOOO LIE ss wd, wut the Fine could nd@ bo ) found, ‘TE wan really sorry fo: weemed to feal so badly, ma Pua his_mother had given him the ting Por ® birthday present many years ago and that he would rather have lost a thou- eand- dollars than the ring. I admired one of hia stickpins He-enla-eticteotns Wers Mie KG AKA pulled out of one of + hla pockets a bunch of diamond rings, Fe would allow me to try them on, but was vory careful that wo didn't, drop wore @ little In aight Ho aid he was ® man of leisure, married and had a Deauttful little daughter called Glenna. ‘Mr, Rohrer also said he had a beau- tiful country place and owned race horses. He was not as congenial, how ever, as Mr. Green: THough We was at tentive to Mrs. Wilson, lio seemed to haye romething. on his mind. 1 was , convinced that both were gentlemen + and all they represented themaclves to -be.-gntfl -the--dotectives came énto the cate We were having. a-eort-of ___Atwas only a 17:1e time back that ‘Tiffany & Streeter’a great London jew- elry: house was robbed of jewels sald to be-worth noarly $100,000, Immediately the Beotland Yard detectives set quietly about to catch the thieves. Commis- sioner Bingham recetved a long cable- gram with a description of the men and thelr plunder. » When tho Hamburg-American: liner Amerika left England a week ago Ar- thur Preston Green was the most inter- A WORK - DAY “WIGGLE!” Do’st wonder what o> AtMwiggle’t is? , Ws Just a verse Y That, lke a “wiz,” _.. Presages Just ae ¥ What you should do; This “wiggle” says * 4- Read World “Wants” through, 20,753 . ‘Separnte advertisements were printed im The World during last weeds six More 'tian tn ANY TWO OTHER New York newspapers PUT TOGETHER! The Weld ‘prints moro ‘Wants’, every en Tried to Smuggle CHARMED TWO WOMEN. Arthur Preston mand Charles) Pierre Rohrer, who ‘were arrested on ‘the Hamburg-Ameridan liner Amerika yesterday with $40,000 worth of stolen xema in their possersion, tho proceeds ~ cotiand “Yard tewisinheseabint ast Ho_was oMcials ond rherchants L-neyer-mw-a moa tat my Tite ——Whd_was_so_laden with jowslry and em-Laden Thieves Captured on Pier and Woman Dramatist Detained for a Time on Suspicion, ANTZTEX Prepecow GCLLLN esting man aboard. Mrs. Denltry was looking for light on fascinating charac- tera because of her intentions of pro- ducing another book. Green strolled about the decks in agylich that set off his manly figure to Kood effect His Ught brown by the best of Lon Tuatacha was and ed w a curled. The eye of Mrs.-Dealtry fell on him. They met. When the Hamburg-American ) ship hed Quarantine » day In: McLaughlin had Det Sergeants Georga Leeson and George Aikman tKere, Socretary ‘Treasury telyou had E Agents J. Q. Vilson, Parr and Gartibal on Dae griticinantyereoks Rad a drink for everyboay. time heipgomed a ttle uneasy, Thon céme the tme to dactare their-prop- erty to the custom officials, Green denied when the sleutha approached him that he or Rohrer had any dutladle articles, but as he was jedto_ his_stateroom broke down and owned up, His ope fear was for the two women he had met. “They must not be: made tq suffer for this." aald, “for they A 1am so aorry. for tectives shook the diamonds. his “pal amiled fain’ belne done, Mrs, Wison—and—Mrs—Dealtry—were aearched--by—the —women — Inspectors. They were hysterical when they heard of the suspicion they weee under, “Joke on Kit,” He Said. ‘At Headquarters the two women were sét free. “I have my lesson, Mr Wilso: “No more stranger: ever! ‘The articles found on Green and Ro- —One_broosh,with_ square emerald. in veritre. surrounded by twelve large and twenty small diamonds, One 7 ‘arf pin, with pearl and two diamonds, ‘One stick pin, grean stones. One diamond brooch, Ave loops, two stones-in-each-loop, -and-single-dlamong t_stonn (not a diamond). i, with eh Swe bracelot, with i. diamonds and Pearls. + One sapphire ring. ~ A single stono ring (diamonds). One diamond ring, with two stones {nlald with two smaller stones, One crescent pln, with diamonds. One pair of opera glasses. One pair of diamoba carrings.~ One bar pin, with eleven diamonds. One double chain. One pin, diamonds and pearts. One thirteen stone diamond ring. ‘One watch ang chafa, with, diamond locket and pln \and knife and clxar cutter attached. 7 One Aye-loop pin. Prisoner “Arthur Preston Green, who has risen rapidly from 4 mero shop- Ufter, doing his little bits on the island, to the first rank of international crooks, has served terma in different States, In 189, at which time the police took his photograph, Green, under the name of Charles A, Parks, was arrosted for robbing Brooks Brothers, clothiers and tallors at Twentleth street and Broad- |way, He got @ year for that: Te 1900 he was arrested for robbing Brill Brothers. louthe, Police say Green and Roher. oc- coupled “adjotning “staterooms. + Mra. Dealtry occupled!.ong: opposite those of the two ren, and Mra, W: hi two decks above, A ore jt-oabin pecoen gers. t the addresses Mrs, Dealtry gave in hth avenue it was said no person that name lived there, CHANCELLOR DAY IS ~ SICK WITH THE MUMPS. —Frem hie _hose—and clothes the de: | ite and| to while It was) i | Three | atroyeds | “SJB STERNBERG |. The foregoing ‘| extrem! JEWS SLAIN IN W MASSACRE NEAR KISHINEEF Days’ Slaughter Reported From Across Roumanian Border. mfanncre aince ‘Town totnily he Jewish pop hounes ton are r luged, We .ank for h patch was recel¥ here yesterday Podthilo, Mouma-} nia. Tha men whd algned St are lead-| jing merchants of the town, which has a Jewlsh population of 4,000 and contains $000 persona TH all —Podtsny <la only thirty “miles from Kishineff, Bessarabia, Runsia. There any Hebrew fam= les In New York with relatives In the stricken community, and they are filled with dread and ho} Manhattan Lyc street. to ral sufte Prominent heard, Different: ltou- pe there In bodiies, n, at Nov} a fund tol mantan socte aditta—adimned: for the ate Prominent Rd: while Choy matin than spatch, are of th. from the agricull infor- yntained in the Me- opinion that petaants Al dixtricts attacked the place, and t} ney were, perhaps, alded by soldiers, who nc mea ahare With the peasants the Just loot. which follows such massacres, It is known here that crops were jshort In Roumania last year, and sthe country han been. jn an dition, with tho pesaants bre in w small Way frequently and ptunder- Isolated ilttlo Jew A despatch from Bu {peasants there aro continuing thelr dep- redations In reve ‘Mol- davia, and_thatt great Cistress, Thy have appealed to King ©harles and the Premley to give them protection. janian Hebrews here say. that t as for-their fellow: nid from. th k who pian mv them an man who would not aa Uiey Were in the for a ty of need. (LLED ASSALANT UF LITTLE BOTHER Slender Youth Interfered when Big Baker Was Pulling | Lad’s Ear. | | | | 0-4 | John D. F. Hoffman, a wel manufacturing baker of East y-| fourth street and Avenue L, Canarsie, died in St Ainry's Hosp! trooklyn, b Teceived in an altercation 1a night with David Schaaf, of East Nine- ty-fifth-street-and-Avenue-Ly The baker was annoyed last night } by a gang of boys who were playing with a dilapldated wagon jn front of | his home. He ordered them away, but aes siedhauling..the wagon up| and d street and shouting with | great lec. Tho fingleader of the| youngsters wis seven-year-old George, Schaaf. He sat on the srat of the wason, pretending to drive. Hoftinan-a!—lust—became 30 enraged! that he dragged young Schaaft down | from his seat and pulled Mla ear, Daved | Behaaf! came along at this time and) heard hia brothers cries. When he! told the baker to release the boy he ways that Hoffman struck at him } struck back and the baker went down, | ftrking his head oni ee curb and trac: | turing bis skull, = When the baker was taken to the ho Jin! Bohaaft was arrested. Ho ts twe “Bld and Of wTender bul oftman was a big man, twice his ai When he was notified In the-Carnarsie | atation today-that-the-baker had died | he broke down. and sobbed. He was | later arraimned in the Fiatbush Court and held by Magistrate Gelamar witn- out ball. ——— COP WHO KEPT LIVERY STABLE PUT ON TRIAL, Dill, of the Boiler Squad, Also Ac- | cused of Attacking a ee t > Woman, Policeman Thomas Dil, of the botler squad, wax put-on trial to-day before Deputy Police Commissioner Hanson, charged with engaging in other bust- ness’ than police’ work and also with assaulting a woman and makings an Mogal arrest..> It Is wleged and admitted by Dill that-botween, Aug, 3,-1905,-and Septe: ber, 19%, he ran a livery atable at Nd, 31 East Bleventh strest in conjunction with a man named Greenhut, to whom ho eventually sold hts Interest for $1,000, When thé policeman was tn the livery ‘Dusiness alllof the horses used by. the detler equad were boarded in hi» es- tablistiment. Occasionally, according to testimony adduced at the trial; Dm would hitch up the police horeea to 4 victoria and drive his relativesin atate through the Park, The clty was made to pay lberally for the boiler squad thoraes’ board, mae ‘In behalf of the aocused policeman it {SAVED 300 FROM TAKING OWN LIVES. ND,, March 18—Miss Eva ander of the Salvation Army, delivered two public addresses-in the Colonial ‘Theatre here yesterday, ‘Arionigother—thingw—sne—toid~of— the great work the Salvation Army anti. Aulcide bureau, opened in New York on Jarch 1, {x doing. iain New York,” she sald, “three hun- ‘dred persona Who were so Welghed down with troubles that they no longer cared to-itve-elthar. camo..to..us. personally. to talk the matter over or friends or rela- Uves told us of thelr cases and we hunted them up. Theso persons were CLEV: Booth,—¢ ‘trom all walks of life, from highest to lowest." ie ses Hela NICARAGUAN-WARSHIPS —~ BOMBARD TRUJILLO. WASHINGTON, ‘March is —Trujitio, Honduras, js reported to have been stormed by the Nicaraguan vessels avhich—have—been_cruleing nang the | 4(Oiduras comm tor nereral- ears: ‘A despatel received by the Stato Department to-day from Philip dt. Brown, secretary of the American mi aion-o-Honduras_and_Quatemils ho is now, at Toxucigalpa, tondul dated March 16.-aninenood ue_re ort was in eireutation ¢n that city that Krujillo waa belng atormed. = foo ace PN TO HELP SWEDISH TRADE. \ Papers were fled to-day incorporating the Swedish Chaniber oY Consmesce “ot Now York:iThe object of the organtza~ Top fa tO" Teerer-pad-proteat. trade ber tween the United States and Sweden. ‘Among the Incorporators are Alexan~ dtr. Jonnaon: the Swedtah Congul- Generad,. 2d, Charles, Johansen, editor of the Sivedixh North Star PHOTO IN ROGUES GALLERY BY CHANCE Unjustly Accused Prisoner Ex: plains His Plight to Police ” : Magistrate. “Joseph Black harged with stealing furs valued at $525 while tmpersonati a driver for the Adams Express Co: | pany, proved his arrest to bo a mistaite {KILLED LIKE MAN 18, 1907. CTT HALL FLAGS FLY IN HONOR OF CLEVELAND Mayor McClellan Orders Ex-President's Birthday Celebrated. Mayor McClellan emphasized his friendship for Grover Cleveland and at the samo time established a precedent Hoe ordered aj y Hall fo" be at a celebration of the ex-Presi- dent's birthday, to take place thero to- day provided Mr, teveland can, be found to accept the, hohors {t 1a, pro- poses to pay bt Quito a celebration has been planned by“ the-untrrratty-and-personal- friends of the, sx-Prealdent, Dut he wha away from'home up to thls morning, and no wont had been received of his Intention, to attend, He was on his regular pring hunting trip to his South Caro: na Club shooting grounds Urgent telograms were sont to him, asking him to be pre ¢ the celebration planned for his birthday, but no anawer had been récelved. - Mr. Cleveland ts the only living ex- dinet-n—inepe suit | President, but evenet that it had never | customary to. pay honor to the of any ex-Presli a and Lincoln, of flags on the City Hail ts a new de- parture. THRONGS FLOCK TO SEE JAMESTOWN FAIR-GROW (Soectal to The Pventng World.) x LK, Va, March 18 —Althor the Jamestown Exposition has nat!been opencd_as—yet. throngs visit place daily, 5,00 being on the nds yeateriay and a Jargenumber One of the most novel shows falr will be painted oyster ~ot-excepttonal alzes J. J. prominent in politics, is originator of the Idea. One of the firat. big ahells ta he finished, was packed in a handsome asllk-Hned box And sent to President Roosevelt, with Mr. O'ieefe'n compliments to-day, enteexhibitemt-the-falte WeooM: National Commiastoner to the . arrived tn. Norfolk to- siibita have alre been nil nt least ted Mr, 1. Springman, Charles E, Thacher and Dana White, gro —-—_> WHOSE JOB HE GOT. ELMIRA, N.Y. ago Walter CG walker, be rellaved what —he—was killed by, @ fast train, Lewis H, Sherman, who succosaca Casterline, had finished his work last night and sat down on the track In the same spot Casterline. met “his Geath. Sherman was deat and did not hear a traln— approaching. le wak . Ins. tantly. killed March 18.—A wer ine, an Erle track was waiting near Chemung to and member of the Board of Al-| To prepare for to Installation of the ||) car-loada | Gedgen PIANO Special Sale — 100 PIANOS. Greatest Bargains Ever Offered! | We will sell this week 100 good Upright Pianos of] different makers, all in perfect order (some only little! used), at extremely low prices, very much ‘less than their actual value and on payments of-only $5 Down\and $5 Monthly | KENNERMAN, Upright Piano..,.. .....$40 AMERICAN PIANO CO., Upright Piano 75 SMITHSONIAN, Upright Piano........ 80 | NATIONAL, Upright Piano. Se BS as FISCHER, Upright Piano........ ESTEY, Upright Piano.. WAGNER, Upright Piano... KRAKAUER, Upright Piano JACKSON, Upright Piano. WAGNER, Upright Piano.. SCHUMANN @ SON, Upright Piano....145 SHONINGER, Upright Piano........150 GUILD, Upright Piano................ -.155 BRIGGS, Upright Piano,........, 1 NARVESEN, Upright Piano.... |] CHESTER, Upright Piano..... CHRISTMAN @ SON,: Upright Piano. ...180 HORACE WATERS, Upright Piano....190 SIMPLEX, Piano-Player................125 STEINWAY @ SONS, Grand Piano......190- |and; over 70: other pianos, all desirable styles and at jequally attractive prices. A stool and cover included ‘|'with each piano, and no charge for delivery or boxing and-shipping:—also-no.charge.for-interest-on_payments: Now is the Tiae to Get a Bargain.” © | | | | 4th ‘Horace Waters @ Co, | 134 Fifth Ave., near 18th St. = -§ 127-West 42d St., near Broadway, eee STORES 254 West 125th St., near 8th Ave, | i Hatiem Branch (Open Evenings), | The Above-Named Planos at the Fifth Ave. Store. i. ee — | | SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK | : ! MONDAY MORNING WONDERS. + in the Jefferson Marke: Court To-amy, | He was then permitted by Magietrate Bweeteer to have inscribed on the court cord the manner In which his picture 9 to be in the Rogues’ Gallery five ra ago, although, he sald, he tad Peter been accurea of any crime unui the present unfounded complaint. S “Let me tell you how my pleture got " ery;tt pleaded the wld Magistrate Sweet ago I went'to the bic Ure and met a They nat who had something. jim,That_ same summer while walk- ing down Broadway I was arrested and taken {0 Headquarters, photo- Graphai and the next: morning taken fo court where I was releasod -without even being accused of anything.” The detectives did not dony the xtate- “ment made and It became part of the record. LID ON STAMFORD SALOONS, STAMPFORD,\'Uonn:p-March=—sisvery: saloon in Stamtord e wbout anty—wi ed by the police yesters pebis ance} y four} Don’t Agree Experiment and sec {f coffee ts the cause of your trouble. Try leaving it off 10 days. Use POSTUM FOOD COFFEE { and {f your jails begim to disappear Ireep {t up and get back to comfort and health again, ; | bone, STUCK TO IT Yor ¥ears, Dat Finally Had to Gtve Up Coftce, Our habits of cating and drinking stick to us Iike a hungry pup to a We can't always break loose even when we know we ought to, Coffee does certainly hurt many per- sons, and they know it. But It Js one ‘thing to khow It and another to devise some way to change the habit and still have a warm beverago, at meal, time. Thousands of persons all over the world have found it easy to quit coffee because they use Postum Food Coffee. tf “For years I've felt the harm of! drinking coffee," wr! fi lov woman, “but I liked It MET spuck to it until about two yearn seo Equip coffee and-tea too, and began to drink Postum, ‘fT made it, not Ike coffee, but) bolled it according to directions on the package, and the first time we had it we all liked {t.. We have it now morning, noon and night, and all feel healthier and happler for the change, “I never have heartburn nor indi- gestion any more, though my husband and I uged to suffer that way and with nervous hoadache a grent deal of the time when we drank tea and coffee. “We c&ati't say enough In praiso [for Postum and-for the good-It has done us." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich; » Get the book, “The Road to Well- trom the phx. ashes ass fll pee ui Romne ter ees vA t t i with double bones and double steels, inaking them practically unbr¢ of trimming, style and workmanship this corset equals, and in many respects to the most expensive French imported or the best of ojher American-made corsets, We have proved to your entire satisfaction that because of what this corset accom- pilshes, and its wonderful wearing qualities, that’ a Nemo Self-Reducing Corset at $3.00 a much more economical investment than threé ordiiiary corsets at $1,00 each, 3 Model No. 312, for the. tall stout woman, 0! Coutil or Batiste, ail sjses Model No. 314, for the short stout womang Of Cottil or Batiste, for the tall stout woman. Of White Brocaded Coutil a for the short stout woman, Of White Brocaded Contit, all sizes Model No. 515, with Bust Supporters, 0! White Freeh Coutit, alt sizes FOR SALE AT ALL CORSET DEPARTMENTS ufacturers, Model No. 516, Model No. 518, Kops Bros., Man 6] STOUT WOMANS Economy] Nemo Self-Reducing Corset is responsible for the imp ment in the stout woman’s figure, and that, in addition to its] wonderful reducing qualities, it gives to the wearer comfort, health and style, < corset can alone-accomplish these resnits;-and- why the Nemo} Self-Reducing Corset is in a class by itself—without a rival. qualities, to the superiér material used emart styles Reducing Corset is undoubtedly its shape. does this corset reduce the abdomen, that, whert it is worn for the first time, the skirt will nave to be taken in, over the ‘ abdomen, three to four inches did before, i she ever had, and is a correct, foundation for a well-fitting extraordinary wearing qualities, the material, high-class materials, pecially made to combine iightness'and flexibitity with ex- traordinary strength. SELF-REDUCING €ORSET “AT % ©, 15 CHEAPER THAN THREE | ~~. ORDINARY CORSETS AT $1. We have. proved in our preceding statements that ‘the | We have also shown why the patented features of this We now cail‘attention to the corset’s velous wearlig , to its perfect shape, | and-careful workmanship the most-vaiuabie-featur of-the -Nemo- Self- So successfully # One’o: o fou in order to make it fit as it It will give a stout woman a better shape than Dressmakers recommend it, sets are famous the world over for their Every one is made with he patented “Triple Strip Re-enforcement,') which means hat each bone-pocket is provided with triple-strips, making t absolutely impossible for bones or steels to cut through This means long wear. Tho Nemo Self-Reducing Corset is made of strictly The Coutil and Batiste we use are es- are| boned th kable——I The Nemo Self-Reducing Corsets beauty iperior $3.00 $5.00 ~~ New York § ines Corner 4th Ave. and 12th St..

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