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x. STAND BRAS, 12 FALL 50 FEE: in the Air When Tim- bers Give Way. “& the Injured Are Beyond Recovery. tron workers were carried trot il £2. working on the new rPocter & factory at Mariners’ Har- to-day, one being instantiy killed. probably new factory is of what is known abit i H Several months. ‘The iron the third floor level that was ereoted days, It is maid ! : tew us f & | and. collapsed when the twelve or fifteen men was : i 8 2 i had no warning as ‘of timber crumpled up beneath and they were carried & tangle of shattered man who was instantly his head and recelved ture of the skull. An- fell near him suffered net die. Surgeons who could not recover, HHH i i inoent’s Hospital and SHEVORNE Ms JANITOR'S DAGGER Milkman Stabbed in Fight Over Bottles at Bronx Apartment. Charles Herns, driver of a milk wag- on, of No. 268 Webster avenue, wi removed to the Linooln Hospital to-day, after an encounter with Daniel Hon- nert, Janitor of the tenement at No SU Wendover avenue, the Bronx. He eS. hada deep stad in Bis rgpt ear and if te thought Me skull is fractured The Janitor’s weapon was @ long sorew~ 4 driver. Witnesses of the struggle say that the (wo men bad a dispute over milk bot ; ties, Herne acousing Honnert of not returning all the empty ones They told the police that the janitor ran to the basement and brough! out the screw- @river, Before Herns. could jump into dis wagon Honnert attacked him. Just ae Hern fell in thie street un- from his injuries Policema: @, Of the Tremont avenue station, fn arrested Honnert. in the or 4a Court the prisoner was hi ‘without ball to await the remult of tnjuries fatioted on his vi bis viettm. SIE CASE OF SUT FOR $109 . Miss Hochfelder Would Not Let Dr. Wolfram Place It in Office Mies mmma Ho Years old, of No. # Fant Through her a! Julius of Ne. 11 West ‘Tents street, sued Dr Philip Wolfman for $10.00 ‘ suultand slander. Dr. Wolfman lives et No M& Kast F ® house owned | futher, adjot wiatnt whe » 1.4) pound Te aaminat her refu Jotaing lot » Miss Hochtelder enid rhe a heavy safe would make the walls ov hfelder, twenty-two Fourth street, mmplaing tha W * se } perso Ue crow t ea and the ware be port " ton of Brooklyn, 1s ef North Beach, 1s Brooklyn. 67) the Ha lyn, ist: the Hudsor Stone. IM. the Jerne 1M; the Auiddietown of Mingola of bro at Jemey Cary, | Brookive, jas.” the Nats the Bi Uy eet, b toa fh ibs Giga hel he ao hamaian es a TRILLED,ALL HURT Structural Men Working High » _ DEATH INSTANTANEOUS. Surgeons Say That Several of to| Wes arrested at the tnmance of Charles me height of Ofty feet]. Jeffries, superintendent of the United | fatally hurt and the rest struction and has been jerpinning of the scaffold | nestum al Broadway and sixty-ftun | Umsede a, eee Jt is © mall club, but it has @/fecording ee WOMAN JAILED BY PLATTS MAN AS 2-CENT THIEF Building Boss Actually Found | Battered Cake of Soap on Widow. “T mournful eye Charged with stealing a cake of soap, |ffom nose to tail, waked these words the highest reasonable valuation of/@@ he came out of his kennel, four- which ix 2 cents Mrs, Hannah Polski, | Mights-up-and-turn-to-your-left at Ham- Of No. 101 Washington street, waa heid | Meretein's Theatre for trial by Magistrate Moss in the| Dan had none of the airs of a star. Tombs Court to-day. | natwithetanding the fact that he > Wien Morris Engel, « tanter, of No, | Dtn halled as @ dog-star of the fret 9 Aibany street, heant of the women’s | ™AEnitude since the opening of (he Pligtt, he went to pourt and furnished $900 adi, the wum demanded. Mra. Poleit, who is a poor widow, |!n an almost States Express Company Butiding, at No. @ Reotor street. She ts employed there as @ ecrubwoman. Jeffries sak he found her this morning with the 2-cent cake of soap in ber possenmicn. Profoundly indignant at the discovery, he hastened to the Church street sta- tion and demanded that the woman be arrested, Policeman John J. Murphy accom- panied Jeffries back to (he building and took the woman into custody. He aiso Gathered up Exhibit A, @ battered cake of soap. “This woman had the soap felontouaiy in het possession,” declared Supt. Jef. fries ponderoualy. “I admit that, Your Honor,” said tne prisoner. “I intended to wash my bands with It After working on my knees scrubbing floors for four hours I thought I was entitled to a: jeaat wash my hands.” “Don you think this ‘e & pretty mall matter to make a criminal charge off” asked Magistrate Moss. “I desire to make an example of her,” returned Jeffries. “There has been altogether too much pifering in the building lately, Why, I feel eure that thousands of dollars’ worth of “T am ® ohair the floor.’ Dan began to nee, ker et, @idn't he away from street. But I The memory wore.” them, It KILLED POLICEM nL IN DEFENSE, HIS PLEA Governale, Who Shot Two, Says He Didn’t Know Who They Were. fation. I beg eo wire screen. The trial of Salvatore Governale, the| Mat as it may Mayer of Policemen Sechier and Selleck, | PANY. You m continued to-day before a large crowd “24 Joy me and my policemen before Judge Rosaisky in £0 plead self-defense, aasert Nd on HEY call me a mut" Tt was more in sorrow than anger bitnktns baggy yellow hair roof on Monday nigh reeled into aucceas human comedy-drama called “A Hot Time in Dogville.” “And I suppose I am a mut.” on Dan, dropping his tail to told my father waa § my mother was Irish. away without leaving © as a clue to their identity, #0 you see I oan speak only from hearsay now {6 that I was born in San Fran- cleco and that 1 fore I was a year old perhaps you'd be more comfortable Ig you don't mind. by Imes B dropped on hia haunches. finding it more aiMfoult to speak tn this position soon ross to his feet And’gnve his tall free retn. Went to the Pound. “Ae T was saying.” look—It slang—ae though T was In the pound kicked out of a tenement south of Mar and weak anf hungry the next day that 1j ve strength enough the you'l I were was dog-cat caught sight of me | shouldn't ot Dan brushed a front ture-faking about it. himself in the sixth stage of the came @ 12 o'clock noon knew that nothing could eave nim from asphyx—asphyx- your word always chokes me” Stranger to the Rescue Dan lapped up a gia proceeding with his narrative. “I had given up hépe at when I noticed a man looking through He looked sympathetic alw aes | Gaudin, a eee en Grom the) eyes and walked nervously about the complaint, as this woman may be con-| oom for a mome: before settling | ears, he, other tnefte, though I] down to the story of his eventful lite samait 1 Gave no proot of ¢t. “To cut a long tail short,” he con- hold the satican: tinue’, wagging his stub in apology Court. "r hust hold her on & charge | for the pun, “I had only two hours to of petty larceny for live when rescue came’ in the form of to the Tombs, cha! Mr. Barnolé the gentleman who now of stealtn, # Cwo-g draws my salary. In the San Francisco Senator press com: pound at that time they had six prisons and every dog had ne The dog that found para and I did my best to catch afterward said that he was attracted to me because of my sympathetic eyes freedom for 6 cents neral Sessions Court. T had never been worth Lieut. Fogarty, ihe State's principal! (4 “Voce, 2 ie ugh, hard-hea | witness. comtinued the testimony begun iu ety pps woe (sade labels | yeeterday. Fe in the policeman, 184 and grateful that I jumped rushed hallway imime- | 44 nthe nose. after ale had shot 3 poor little mut!’ he _ Policemen jceman Ayres "The cross-examination by Governaie’e from that pou 2 couldn't have Scotch lawyer, T. C. Wa indicated that) eeen me you may well as I rr when he fairly ha resumed, paw across his as His Dan, rough covers hie the him own drunkard at they moved even eo much AUT died there be jut, pamion me in TU ait on) but again “it | 1 pardon the | in bad: You T had been eo lame and to get when he her lion, but that f milk before 10 o'clock his eye. He Ba needed syrn surprise ager boug, ¢ that we saw ft We on were ANTES TO DYING WAIN OPEN LOT H: tly S t Priest, Summoned t Runaway Aeckient, Gives | A MTS oe aa | sberhe Through | ; | Sacrament in Crowd, In Investigation 7 seueuimesoneess | Appellate Court | Thomas Maloney, Bayonne, N. q..| RIVERHE si " A t . omama te ce jhe wit ‘ n antice stered aah Titag af tien hes : r - . . y in | mv . ‘ 1 F , 5 . . ” ' enc . $ NPR i BOXING MANAGER ELMER DIDN'T VIOLATE THE LAW. day whe i , , Pang ee missed the case. The imeinu k | mere club are the paitone of his gym. | Koons at OL Ching whit TRUST MUST. ees BOOKS. Ser er sandy com) centry foned er from 4xdn't know, my printed or Uttle windows w I my at master’s ct att lexion and both of father's side. beginning I ame until I ¢ houses with od in a barn SHY MURDERER IS SANE MAN NOW ma Killing it to State Prison for His ering Bate 1 under are Dr Johneon and “ Merin ustons and that 1 reatses his ther mh after t the murdere nded his niece oammet musesd reves | CHEAPER LIGHT IN NEWARK, Cur 4 William | ox was seotes | company he Attyenires "ys pe Wit Sten # Foy he propos the mos tract with P ~ been the “Year Con- shown ahung « bead 7 (THE EVENING WORLD;1 FRIDAY. JUNE 7, 1907% Dan, the Dog Star, Telis How He Rose (CHAMPION BAD BOY from Gutter into the Heaven of Fame UF SCHOOL NO. 49 Fifty-Cent Canine Has Eamed $40,000 for Tabet | 000 "or ‘hie | and- out siAge | ith M “lays the Town Drunkard, but! Joe Seifstein Possessed of a He's Really a Prohibi- Devil, Justice Olmstead | : tionist. | Seems to Believe. jmear @ theatre that T had passed many Joe Seifatetn, sight years old. of Ma times. These are the houses.’ @% Second avenue, is posseased of the Dan ran over and put his paws upon! devil, accordine to an opinion to-day & Uer of boxes marked “Barnold's Dog | axpreased ty Justice Olmstead en the |and Monkey Pantomime Co bench of the Children’s Court. Any- Is a Prohibitionist | way Joa is the worst boy in Pubiic | “The windows have screens tn sum-|Sohool No. @ at East ‘Torirty-eiehen j but," he added, “I gues we won't) street, near Second avenue, and hes have to put them jn t year, It/tnjured at least two teachers doesn't look ms though there are golmg| The “Worst Boy’ 1s a champton | Sow days, does it? It's e0/ mpit-pall shooter, ang with a putty- dave that I can hardly get! plower or rubber sling-ahot he can do *yubjeot of | terrific execiition He spent the day £10 May that | shooting rudberbands, throwing Dlack~- art. but I must confess that tt 1s some-| ing ink on the foor and anoyins nis | | what degrading Yo a Who prefers | teacher Della Weimo, wio is} the water wagon to the patrol olf and ives at No. | Tam placed before the public In the inth scree ight of a ‘common 4 * fo use Trash. wae tin nald do nothing with him. law-abiding citisen of Dogvilie at whom the finger of ecorn In| Another jittie teacher tried to correct ihe and ge pinched her arma in severas ince. Mies Weiss fnal.s SEE bey co the Board oF Pave Nave ai. {heard of fi and with visions Jon. splat. | truang officer making him benave he | Lg ay Se | vowed vengeance | for To De eeteed | Mites Welss came atone Second a) unconscious that her pustl w | ing her like aq Indian when he sudde Jleaped. upon her couple who. slope with : der” Bul. to steal. Mr with an Indian war hoon when Policeman Mallon POLICE AFTER CIAL AND HER ABDUCTOR ccused | strong: fool lke go silpped out of jogly sooth! ad De Man, Twenty-Six, Is of Kidnapping a Maid of! Fifteen Pal Stande by Him “Tom and I are greet Dan, put neck He waa c rm ee bean sent Headquarters Dan made a A black | -rrest of Anthony Calichel. twenty fellow with jskers and clean- years of age. for the abduction shaven body ; » . ‘ 5 Jocephine Masel, fifteen years of age. ne'a from Sacraments, He | Both of them lived in tae same noure was a bum dog when Mr. Barnold tn Morrie street, near Duncomb avenue, | picked him up. I don't mean that he tne Bronx. | Was a bum inthe ordinary sense of the | ents: word. A bum dog, permit me to say, \etx years of a6 in a dog that does tricks in treet iis height, "168 po Sack is the walter &8 eomplexion, ; you In dark clothes and black soft hat Please | The girl is large for her Mfteen years, | @ark comp! wore & red si dress | Welwith lace a low eut rd, and all that we get is Jeather shoes, our grub and a little applause. I worked = very hard trying to make my {mitation And it was of a ‘drunk’ seem human really my own fault. you that. 1 Rocny tn Los ‘Anm noticed that drunken man every time I walk werd. That gave kw thet ea” we worked on it for elgnt months pefate| 1 could go through with It to the down Ta the five years tye r. Barnold I he'll tell you so" hh fiery | | That's not a bad return on a fifty-cent investment, Is it? — And yet they call me | a mut ~_ THIEF GETS CHECK FOR THREE THOUSAND Coal PTE Loses Satchal! and Contents While Ferry- ing to Long Island. oe ——-- LATEST BOWLING GOSSIP. There will be something doing in Parts this summer when A A. Troescher pee the star bowler of the B B.C team reaches the other aide Mr. Troescher 8. Thern, who introduced | | pects while in a Virginia coal operator with a New York office at No. % Pina street reported to the Long Island City police that he had been robbed of a patche! containing @ check for $3,000 and nu-| merous valuables while crossing on the Thirty-fourth atreet ferry last night. | —__—_ Herman Enler are said to | Butchers’ Workmen to Meet. | latbush’ avenue’ Brook: | A meeting of. the Butohers’ Workmen is going over on m pleasure trip, but ex- Paree to give an exhibt- tion at the opening of the first Ameri- can bullt ever laid in Europe. If they have any howrers in Paris who an beat this star, Riddell says he will alleys take over an all‘!American team next fall and do up the whole bunch. at Ward « “tive of which waa +t vf the Ollnton HM! lmprevement winrion, whhes wivwetd the ra wen a big Dillard o¢ North America wi!! be held at No. 2} of Brooklyn. has or Ward street, Newark, June ll. Ad-/ “) dresses will be made by Herman Rob- | inson, general organizer, A. F, of L.; Jobn J. Jennings, general organizer In- ternational Teaimeaters’ Br: mi ohne iH. L. Elonelberger, genera! organiser Amer- Gan Federation of Labor, ted Sonn F, mt Beet bad Proton Driverw Local of Jersey City, William C. Willman wtl!l preside, and the meet- ing wil) be an open one ‘The “Chauncey B thauncey B._¢ Teed 2 baseball te Challenge "0 aig the Greater bowl in bowling — an the opening — 0 the Greater City lowe, pre John | ten alleys and “ev Hundred and Bixty-third Bronx. and Doren th six tables and four ———-—_— ] KAISERIN AUGUSTE VICTORIA REPORTE N BABLE ISLAND, Hamburg: American oe VI Southampton and Chervo i enmnns. © York, was tn commun | i" sfdran, of Philadelphia against (he Lae here, when the vessel was about 190 he te a oalend miles | Boy's BODY IN HARLEM eT The dody of thirteen-year-oid Wi pees gece at CARPET & 1 Bown og iam River to-day. Tse boy wived (on he 204 Coloniai, of Kingaton a xy chia moored to the foot ot CLEANSING re. 181 sere © He fell overboard y dave MRLm NG, PACKING, JAMES MoGREERY & GO. CLOTHING, On Saturday, June the 8th. 84th Street Store Only, BOYS’ Yoke Norfolk Suits, with extra pair Knickerbocker trousers. Medium and light grey fabrics. Sizes 9 to 16 years. | 5.50 value 8.50 Play Suits, made of Khaki, Military model consisting of coat and trousers, Sizes 5 to 1a years, 1,00 Washable Blouses, Trousers, Over- alls, Wash Suits and Hats, Straw Hats, Thirty-fourth Street, er ae > So eee eee a tr 4 tage Sang 23rd Street. LISLE + MEN'S LADIES’ CLOAKS. ITALIAN SILK UNDERWEAR. In Both Stores: MISSES’ SUITS. JAMES MoGREERY & CO, 84th Street. In Both Storen 2 THREAD HOSE. On Saturday, June the 8th. 500 dozen Men's lisle thread half Hose, Plain, lace woven or embroid- ered designs, including black, tan and white gretends. 25¢ per pair value 35¢ to Soe _—_—— HABERDASHERY A large stock of Shirts, Pajamas, Neckwear, Fancy Handkerchiefs, Sus- penders, Belts, Robes, Bathing Suits and Vests, The latest fabrics, —neat patterns, In Both Stores, On Saturday, June the 8th. 150 dozen, French four-in-hand Scarfs, Made of English and American Silk. Light, medium and dark colors in stripes and figures, 50c values 7£¢ and 1.00 40 dozen Pajamas, manufacturers’ samples! Made of. cheviot, madras and mercerized silk. Plain colors, white, stripes neat figures. Military model,—low cut or standing collar, Small, medium and large sizes. 1.50 and value 2,$0to 150° as In Both Stores, Motoring or TravellingCoats. Made of cravenetted Mohair. Plaid, stripe or plain colors. 10.50 Tan Covert Cloth, Broadcloth, Pan- ama or Taffetas Silk Coat tae) Black Taffetas Silk or Po gee Coats. Full length, 45.00 A large variety of rubberized Taf- fetas, Pongee, Crepe de Chine, Shantung and Linen Coats. SnneEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEeee Ladies’ Italian Silk Vests, Drawers, Combination Suits, Under Skirts, Cor- set Covers, and the “Tante-ma-Til,"—a garment to be worn with sheer waists, Embroidered in floral designs or trimmed with dainty laces and insertions. Many of these garments made in workrooms on the premises. On Saturday, June the 8th. Italian Silk Vests, trimmed with fine lace. White, Pink and Blue. 2.75 In Hoth Stores. Suits made of light mixed cloth Pleated skirt. Semi-fitting coat lined with satin. 18.50 Taffetas Silk Dresses, Pleated skirt. Waist trimmed with lace or insertion, 15.00 Brilliantine Skirts. Pleated model with fold. Length 37 to goinches, 5.75 CHILDREN'S. 23rd Street. Made of Glazed or Dull Kid and Patent Leather” Full length “Box” Coats. Made of various mixed cloths, Sizes 6 to 14 years, 475 Gingham Dresses, “Jumper” or Dutch neck models. Sizes 6 to 12 years 2.90 Mixed cloth Suits. Pleated skirt. “Box’’ coat finished with velvet collar. 9.50 JAMES McGREERY & CO. 34th Street JAMES McGREERY & GO. Sale of Oxfords, “Court” Ties and Pumps, 3.50 Value §,00 This season's most desirable models, *