The evening world. Newspaper, July 12, 1907, Page 3

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| RATTLESNAKE BITE r LOVE OF SLANE GIL STARTS -—WAROF TONES Three Cities Represented in| Bloody Feud Which May . Follow. GIRU’S LOVER IS KILLED. + On Léongs and High Lings Ex- pected to Clash Over Chinatown Beauty. } one IMh Wong te a-itttle stave giri b who waa rescued by the Jove of Wonk / Ineck, an actor who playéd in the | Doyers street Chinese theatre. She is | eighteen years old. Her eyes_are | Greamy as Oriental skies, her akin te | moft as spice island sephyrs and her | fect'are little aa a kitten's. Ghe is held eaptive to-day at No. 2 Pell street, | guarded by four nquare-faced country: | man who belong to the On Leong Tong. | Her sweetheart {s dead, a viottm ef the j Yengeance of that powerful organtza- tion. Bhe may move away from Pett streot at any moment, for the Htp Bing ‘Tong men have whetted their meat axea_anq ofled thelr guns. Lack was | 9 Hip Sing Tonger. Obe's life story Se long and sedty | womantic. She was 4 boautiful child } and she Ss a beautiful girl in the eyes | ef yellow, Inundrymen. Up to ® short @me ago she was held prisoner in Los j this clty who told of her loveliness. | He wanted her, but her owners would't | eeli for ‘lesa than #600. He oftered LB. e The On Leong Tong decided they would steal little Ohe away. 60 they engages Actor Lack to disguise him- self and capture her. He was a low caste dog, they admitted, but he was | clever. Armed with a big gun and a | knife and plimty of money, Luck went | to California. He had no dimeulty in \ meoting Obe But when he laid his { slant optics on the gir! he felt a pang ; tn bis heart. Jick was dhrewd. He convinced One whe should make her escape and come to the great city, where the rich China- men lved. They escaped from Ohe's guards and landed safely here. Then {t was that Actor Luck took off his Glagutses and fell at the beauty’s feet. His love was returned, and Ohe went with him to e new and happy home in Hust Ono Hundred land Highteenth wtreet. They were wonderfully happy. But the On Leong Tong was in pur- wult. They found little Ohe quickly, and ‘with dig gunw at Luck’s head, made him promine to give up the girl fore That Is a hard thing to do when on. tm love. - Luck went aray, but learned where Ohe was held. Mrs, Nom Wah guarded her at No. 7 Pell street. He went there and arranged to be near the girl, and all was roing well till the On Leong Tongs caught hita. He dodged a dirk thrust and went to Philadelphia, whe: blast Sunday he was shot dead. His frend, Lung Kee, was with him. Lung ‘was killed, too. The police arrested Mon WMon;-of-No,1!-Mott-strest,-Manhattan, und Yung ‘fee, of Race streat. Puitadel- phia. That's all the Quaker police eare about It. Whe trouble hasn't ended. however, Oho sltx In the Uttle room crying for the brave and handsome actor Luck. Wer guards laugh at her tears and ex- plain the details af his cruel murder for her benafit: ‘The next thing on the programme ta for tte, Hip sing Tongs to avenge the _@eath of Duck, and capture the girl Telave: ‘They mean to do it, too, and thelr “kur men’? are waiting for an Ppening. ag Ohe's celestial beauty Is the talk ef | Chinatown. She could be sold for ever | more than $2,500), for those who wes her fall In love with her at once.’ Mean- time Ohe cries for Actor Luck, the one ‘man who loved her and “made her tappy. ‘ ee KILLS GIRL IN FEW HOURS, [Child Attacked at Play Dies’ in Agony While Doctors Work ~ = To Save Her. (Gpectal to The Evening World.) NOR Ft esd —18-—Phe—tour= feen-year-old daughter of John Bull, ef | Nowmarket, while playing in a clump of bushes yesterday was bitten by a attlesnake and died in agony a tew ours later, Physicians resorted to Fevery khown means te save-her, 4} = Mt might as well be YOU. $o, {f you'd like to hire me, Read World “Wants” Sunday néxt; f Beneath the “Situation Wants” "You'll find my Ad. indexed TH Reply Right Away. _SEND FOR ME! On, I'm # Jolly waitress ‘Who knows a thing or two; As 1 must work for somebody, THE EVENYI NG WORLD, 12, 1907. “My Husband Ts the Brightest-Man in the Army, FRIDAY, JULY ” Says Wefe of PLELOFEIGAMI Col. Ayres, Who Is Barred From West Point Because of a Row As to His Fitness, Why, He Was Pro- nounced Morally and Physically Perfect Six Months Ago, and Is Now. REAL HERO OF SAN FUAN HILL.) He Saved the United States Troops from Being Cut to Pieces, His Deboted Spouse Declares in Detatling Her Grievances. By. Nlxola Greeley--Smith. WO cannon sunk in the motst earth road mark the end of| the army ‘reservation “at ‘West Point. Scarcely a dozen feet beyond these mute iron sentries I! found a'little Highland Falls hotel| wherein Mrs, Charles G. Ayres looks dafly across the leafy distance to the academy grounds and buildings. that hold her twenty-year-old son, Fair- fax Ayres, and from which she has been barred by order of Secretary of War Taft. This little hotel ts the storm centre of the drama of army life vice and the newspapers for many weeks, and which has resulted in Mrs. Ayres’s exile from the reser- vation and the ordering of Col, Ayres before the Retiring Board, by President Roosevelt, for championing the cause of his wife. THE DRAMA OF THE OVERCOAT. After I had talked with Mrs. Ayres yesterday afternoon and had met the white-haired and handsome Colonel, it bocame clear to me that I and probably a great many other persons had not at all a clear idea of this} drama, which should be called, I think, “Much Ado About an Overcoat.” Mrs, Ayres was away from home when I reached Highland Falls, and Col. Ayres and I were seated on the veranda talking when she drove up. gi The Colonel's wife, who {s looked upon variously as the maker or the victim jof the West Point row, does not look in the least like a trouble- maker. | Sbe is a tall, slender woman with # pale and positive countenance, pretty blue eyes and a marked air of race that as much as the soft Mngering vowels of her speech betrays_her Virginia origin. Her ap- pearance strongly suggests that of a New York society leader, Mrs. Ogden Mills. “{ want you tell me the whole story of the trouble from the begin- ning, as if none of It had ever been printed,” I requested. _which has been the talk of the ser-|_ BABY 1S FOUND UNDER A BUSH IN QUITS als JOB TO HUNT FORE. Mrs. Ayres smiled rather wearily. SHE IS TIRED OF IT ALI. “Ym po tired of it,” she said. but prompting by an occasional ques- t!on I drew the story from her. 5 “Tt began last winter,” she gald. “When I returned from the Philip pines and found my son, Fairfax Ayres, a cadet undergoing an unparall- eled punishment inflicted on him by Col. Howze, the commandant. For speaking ‘to « ‘plebe’ in ranks he had been sentenced to walk the area four months and «half, and to lose one-month -and—three-days of the two months furlough which the cadets are granted every two years. This was the severest punishment ever inflicted for so small an offense at West Point. » “Walking the area,’ Mrs. Ayres explained, responding to my look of dazed inquiry, “means doing sentry duty from two to four hours a day three times a week. Fairfax was condemned to ¢o this for four months and n half, besides losing more'than half of his furlough, and for what? A plebe, named Lyman, from Hawaii, was in front of Fairfax in the “Phe —plebe--wax-on—the—rong side of —the—column;—and—my—son]~ spoke to him, about it, The plebe said he thought the order was ‘left what you thought, sir,’ said cadets;-I--esliod .the..matter, itention of Benator Blackburn, an old] apeioxies trend _of--mins, Senator Blackburn, | turned in thelr names got demerits, Gen. Chaffee, Gen. Horace Porter, Col. Aftront at Cadet Hop. constituting the West Point Board of Visitors asked the! ren continued Mre. ‘Apres, “eam Hapefintendent to reconsider the 60" |the final nop before commencement, It tence. He upheld Mr. Howzs. That Overcoat Incident. F MISSING BRIDE Collier Spurred in Search by a} Note Giving Hint of Rival. “CENTRAL PARK Its Cries Mistaken by a Couple for the Bleating of a Lamb, To™ find” and-win back” nts” missing | bride of two months, Hugh L. Collier| has left a good positien at Hempstead, | L. IL, and to-day is in New York con- fident the slust wife in to be found enty-eixth street. somewhere in the city, That she does They were walking in the park Iate| "Ot propose to be found, however, ‘s| indloated by the communications he has| ‘Shey | recetred—trom ter sures ter CsAp pear | ance. In one of these messages she told him she hoped never to see him again, and that search dor her in New York wout: be useiess. Colter came to New Yerk from Mu- oon, Ga, and met Miss Eleanor Ken~ nedy in a Convent avenue bearding- a house. Her mother ia dead, and she For 4 little timo nothing waa. heard. q W@* pot on good terms with her father, ‘Then vams-x weak ery that might hav {ae-twoomonths-age-Coilter-married hers} been made by a wildcat, a baby or He took her to Heinpstoad, where lamb, A ewe answered it from “the | Was made superintendent of a concrete sheep ‘fold and Mr. Lawless jaughed | Works at the Garden City. Hatates, and and started away, j their married life ran smoothly enough | His wife wasn't satisfied, bewever. | until Friday, when Mrs, Collier made a ee eee. and see where 4t %#,"" she|trip to New York, She returned at li o’elock, an breda ‘Aster a sedrch he traced the sound toljats Set meen ees onieeae, a spot oppesite West Bixty-sixth strect | A-bady girl, two weeks old, ts awalt- fmg a claimant in Bellevue Hospital te-day. It was found lying under a bush.in Central Park by Mr. and Mrs, Martin Lawless, ef No. 18% Weat Bev- sepfen caine the famous overooat: tn- Saents It was-droes~ after ‘Faster. At these parades the cadéts had Always loaned coats to the (women, ofMlcers’ ae daughters. (If was an old custom al academy. dudt a fad, you know—and fome ‘of the girla even owned the con! During the parade Col. Howse ordered that all the overcoats should be re meved from the young ladies, My @aughter Emily had one on. It was & bitter cold day. Undernoath she had & thin imgerts shirt rele ine in vet, this very waist I have fartjanoed at the Olmy embroidered garment and Mrs, Ayres continued: Defied the Policeman, t up to “, policeman with a Dilly wen! my anaehlar ‘and ordered her 44 remove the cout, omily refused, fer abe was ahtvering. ‘The policeman reported to Col. Hows, rho had secon the whole thing very plainly, 4" "Take $wo policemen and bring me that coat!’ commanded Howse, Dut Bm- not give ¢t up until Brig.- ce ipa, went up to her and sald, ‘milly, you will let me taka yeur coat oft tor you, won't you? “{ suppose," sald Mrs, Ayres, “the 8U- perintendent hind told Col, Howze to fesue an order dorbidding the Joaning bf the cadets’ overcoats, and he ne- plosted to do Ad till the middle of the parade, Other young «irls received aim~ fiar affront, and the evening of the af- fair a commilttes of the cadeto, one colonels return, We knew Mrs. Howse wea the hostees, but, ef courme, I thought she would not take up her husband's quarrel. I had said to my daughter, ‘Emily, bow and emile at Mrs, Howze. Say 00d eyentng and Paes on. ‘You need not sag her namo.’ The colonel and I intended dotng the fame, but when Cadet Hollybind took ua up to her, Mrs. Howse deliberately turned her back on us, )Bhe aid not simply turn balf-way rowed Uke thin’ QMra. Ayres rose and illustrated the movement), ‘she turned her pack com- pletely, squaring her shoulders and flaunting her skirts in our faces, Think of that! Mra. Ayréi blue eyes Mashed indignantly. oThink of such ‘an, insult to Col. Ayres, the brigitest man fn the army!" The blue eyes turned to her tus- band in wifely pride, ‘Now, my dear,” colonel, flushing, “I have nothing to do with Jt. It would have been the asme i¢ 1 had been a raw recruit.” But he is the brightest, Miss Greeley- Smith,’ emphasized Mra, Ayres, “Oh, {t's not because he's my husband. it wan Col. Ayres who led the charge up Hen Juan Hill and saved the United States troops from being cut bo ploces, ‘He has the moat beautiful letters from President ‘Roosevelt. I am eure the President Knows nothing ef Col, Ayres Aeprecated the from each class, went up; to Col, Howze's home to, ste dtm. He recelyed them outside, ‘They told Aim they con- aldered thelr mothers and syyretheurts eh heen very goérely insulted, 1 i \ | i idiiopoiidiaisais Wmauahia MASA naLaemnales ial belng ordered before the Boar, Six months ago Col, Ayres was examined in the Philippines, Gen, Leonard Wood being of the commis. sion, Ho: was geenowiced mentally Retiring | ¥ | Saturday they quarrelled and ne and found there a ttle bundle. It was niy hat and ett hona isi ae easel pee Wad Fotirned. “This time it was | Mrs. Collier who was angry, She was en her way to the train, and did not/ propose to be stopped. All the way to! Mineola he tried to persuade her to go! back, ‘but she was obdurate, Ho re-| turned alone, confident she would re-| pent, The next morning he went to the beach, and wile he was away Mrs, | Cyllier returned Jong enough to pack | upin few personal belongings and leave | @ farewell note that she wished never | to soe tim again and asking him as| Feng and wet: with: Mra, Lawless came on the run fant to the police station, whence it was sent to the hos- gomebody must haye forgetten it,’ sald the lieutenant. ‘rh Not leave {i ey surely would it out, there Intentionally,” et New York Woman's Jewols Stolen. PORTSMOUTH, WN, H., July 12—Mre, | ‘Aurelia Bathelen, of New York, a/ guest at a summer hotel in Eliot, Me., to the Portsmouth police to- repr re Sewels Valued” at foam hed Been ‘stolen from. her, trunk: between Ben eet New: York’ by express was sent from @ last favor to send her wunk te Long srived at Eliot late it Night and St tiiouk ripped off, A strong bes | Jeland City, Theida the trunk had been broken onen md the Jemels were missing. In addl- tion valuable gowns belonging to Mrs, 3 taken. Ratheten were & Be didn’t send the ¢ruak, but instead | began searching the hospitals and ether | places ho thought #hemight be, = ‘Phen the next day he was shecked | ly pertect. The new azx-|t2-find, when he opencd a jettor that ane rien can only, fesult the same | came that day addresséd to his wite sae that some one “lonsed for a Jook at her | _ And That's All, So Far, beautiful eyes, if only for a moment.’ iy think,” ‘eoncluded Mrs, Ayres, | H# Ceased searching the hospitals for . ber then, “you know all that I do about the mi He recelyed a postal card from her it against Col, Ho ter, My seandalode letters ho aor, |TSSMAY, asking ALM to moot her tn Laws Mit time, ‘Youcknow he accused mw | O8e Hundred and Twenty-third street of giving this matter to the papare,-.f| §US.P Mf but althougirhe walked fha } 1 Tenuta > « treet aman: he did polling. ot Be nee ay OnaLE “now | didn’t find bi Bince Hien he fias heard nora Ayres paurbd and then sudtenly | HORMRB taop woftened, the look of yearnin| her ferhood. succuning her biuy even “] saw Fairfax yesterday.’ sho said, “| Was oD a train, on my Way to Now: burg, and passed by him at a distance. LINCOLN TRUST CO. RESUMES, PHILADELPHIA, Jwy 12,—The Lins | coln Trust Company, of this. city, | He stew La coming and waved his bap al A eause of an Aveged impairment in ibe kh ae ean ETEE, oe4, Ayetered| capital. has resumed business, James at aseaat the ptern bronse Kuardsbe ee | 2 Cony femholns as. president of the Pub tnothers,. den trum which she 49| company, but the entire personnel of tassod by order of tho United Btacen | the directorate has been hanged. which suvpended three monthe go be- | & FIVE HURT AS AUTO SMASHES CAB IN PARK Big Machine, Victims Say, Was Coming Down Drive at —-Ferrific-Speed- A-huge touring car, driven: at terrific speed and sigzagging along Central Park West from one side of the street to the other, struck — cab early to-day and gaye the four occupants and driver & close call for death. All suffered painful cuts and bruises, and th Wee nor kiiet ta die more ‘Boed luok than to anything else. Willam Murray, the driver, of No, 2% West Forty-sixth strect, had heen to the Progress Club, according to the story he told the police, and taken feur passengers, Char! Shamroth aad Joseph Bchultz, of the law firm. of Bhamroth & Schults, No, Ut Masssu street; Miss Serah Rosenberg, No, 6 West One Hundred and Twenty-fourth wire, and Miss Hoxa Jansan,.No. 1d West One Hundred and Sixteonth street, who had all been to a reception, Murray was driving north on Central Park West on the east nide-of the stroot and as he neared Eighty-ninth street saw a large touring car darting down the car tracks, Jt swayed from side to side and was coming at.amazing speed. Thinking it might ba beyond the con- trol of the driver, Murray turned his Dorse.in toward the sidewalk But he was too late, and the automobile struck the cab, turned {t completely 1 the horse was knocked down and the ‘cad was pushed for fifteen or twenty foet j before the automobile stopped. Murray was knocked off hls box, atrik. ing in ® plot of grass, He was stunned, Dut Kot Up and went to the assistance of bly passengers, He found all four pinned dewn and covered with broken glass and wrecks ase. Miss Jansen was bleeding trom humerous }acerations on the face and head, and ‘all four suffered fronts cute, bruises 4nd. anock. Tie driver of the auto sald he was Francis E. Cremin, twenty-three years old, a real estate’ dealer, of No, 155 West Sixty-ftth street. “He machine had got bi skidded on the al and that the -accld that ne Was un ice records show the machine, A CREAM, guaranteed freckles, to rersove pimples, i tan, ef youth. Endorsed by thousands of grateful Indi: 4, Bee. $1.00, by your dryagist of sail, FALS TO S&T HER A QWORCE Justice Bischoff Refuses Appli- cation of Anne V, Price for Release from J. T. Price. FIRST HUSBAND LIVING, He Has Also Married Again} and His Rights and Interests Must Be Considered. Surely no soap is too: fing, too gentle, too wholesomelp good. for baby’s tender skin. ‘obtain’ a divorce Even the novel. plea of. tigamy to has failed to get Annte-V, Price an, anfiullment of her marrings to John T. Price, whom abe Matried three yeara ago; Just sixteen years atter she contracted tharringo with Edwin D. Bigelow, of Grand Rupide, Mich. All the parties to the suit are itving. In a long rulire in which he goes inte the legal principle ‘that a crime is never presumed, and “the presump: on ef {nnocence conquers all other presumptions,” Supreme Court Jus: tice Bischoff diamiased the warnai's complaint, demplte the fact that she declared ner second weMing way a digamous one, The story sets forth some remarkable matrimonial entanglements, tn /which the parties to a youthful marriage zep- arated and both remarried. The Court held that the marriage of Mra, Price's first husband was a factor In the can and that he must be presumed aa being innocent of any crime until proven Kullty, No facts were adduaed ta bring ‘There are particular reasons why Pond’s Extract Soap and Pond’s Extract Sorp only should be used in the little one’s daily bath. i 5 Pond's Extract Soap is a perfect cleanser.~ It gently and impurity, clears and refreshes, - But it does more than cleanse, s Pond’s Extrac _ Soap* —because of the Pond’s Extract |, which it contains—is a most ef fective stimulus to the growing skin, allays irritation and createa that soft firmness that resista harm. Nothing like Pond’s Exe tract Soap to instill the “habit of cleanliness” from infancy, Baby rejoices in the morning splash; emerges from it happy, crowing, Clean and sweet-as-a-rosebud, Orde? from your druggist, r ja, ro ores ‘The record of the suit shows that Mra. Price, when elgliteen years of age, mar- Tied Kowin-D, Higeiow. Five months after she left him and came to New York. In 1904 she married John T. Price. This is the marriage which sho asked the court to nave aprulled, although ahe says at the tlma of the ceremony aha pelleved herself free ta contract another marriage. In ble opinion Jus Bischoff holds: “The complainant usea her youth as reason why the court's gracious con- eration should be extended. The rrlage which she wishes anulled,oc- curred=in 194 wien she was thirty- tt her fornier marriage to Bigelow wus undiasolved."* The Court then quotes several legal milar to the ong In question, up with the statement that but for Bigelow’s ramarriege @ difter- ent conclusion might be reached. He holds that the family tles which Biro 1ow has since contracted make the caso one dn -whleh-it-la-not_fairand-fuat-1o bring the legality of Bigelow’s second marriage before the Court. Armour @ Company Makera of Fine Toilet Soaps Sole Licensees trem Pond's Extract Cm ee BELATED VICTIM OF FOURTH, Marine Feninno, of No, 28 Bast One Hundred and Pittieth street, wan struck by @ stray bulleton July 4 He was taken to Lebanon Hospital, where Dr, Justur removed the lead from his jaw. His condition exposed htm to pneu- monia, from which he died ¢o-da: Grand Rapids Furniture, W. 125th St. n'r 7th Av. No Conzection- with-Aay Bronx Store. STEAMERS-INTIN BOXES | |] BR Os at34,.98 IF DEGIRED.SO THAT CANDIES OF OWA SPECIAL SELECTIONS CAN WITH SAFETY OX CARMIED ABROAB VOR SEVERAL, WLENS | AND Of CHJOYED WHILE TRAVELLING ON THE CONTINENT Oy ders carehilly fibed at any obour Stars | rc CARNE for $8 Patent Side $4.98 Coach ‘Beds hho” eden bronzed malleable irou frame furalshed complete with famous National wire ving double turn-oyer denim mattress bolster; wed_as couch or largd, roomy, comfortable bed, ; Equally Remarkable Redactious All Over, ‘This derful Store This Weeks thoroughly searches ont every ‘3 rg ES?ABLISHED Eyeglasses may not te bought as merchandise. A hair's) breadth from right may cause serious | consequenctes, Our examinations are by REGISTERED PHYSICIANS, A.W. BREWSTER, M, D. 11 years Brooklyn Eye & Bar Hospital, EDW. JOHNSON, M. 0, Many years in private practice, MARCUM KENYON, M 1, $ years Manhattan Bye & Ear Hospital, M, LINDEROTH, M, D. Late Brooklyn Bye and Bar Hospital, Glasses Only if Needed, Always at Moderate Prices, _ Nearly so Yours, 223 Sixth Ave,, Below 15th St, 369 Sixth Ave., Below 22d St, 1274 Broadway, Below 334 St, Astor House Block. 101 Nassau St., Nexe Ana St. New Story ‘The Only iy -Co. of Its Hind tm the XOUR 0 Y TRUNK or ¥ BAD AGdD AN TRUNKS & Bougist, Bold Emerjenacy Baggage Kepar co CASH OR CREDIT. -$100_ WORTH OF GOODS $1,50 Per Week, We Close Saturdays at 6 P.M. During July and August, _LYDIAE. ; PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND, MOST SUCC! REMEDY FOR TTOMAN'S Tus Wf KS WORLD Sinrwhers, foc each, or D for goe pte for destruction pf all} HS ey wite Epravers “taveng 3 Oth Av. 'N, Ty AReEtY wanted, No- Batre Charme fow Me MYi'S SAN @ATIONAL TONLT COMPANY, Porte Toma S yy pada: Sam RES cena ei Lee ee es Ea Meee NS Serene is

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