The evening world. Newspaper, August 2, 1907, Page 2

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elves that Carter was a very barmlese ‘Proposition.. Hig remarks convinced hem that be amply nourished a mis- guided ambition to be a sleuth. of the “Mick Carter variety. He was taken ‘Pack to the Harlem Court later in the ay and discharged, -At-the-eame-time-Fourth Deputy. Po- dice Commissioner Arthur Woods ad- Miltted there was no actual proof @gainst any of the other three suspects, He confessed that the police were all at fea and simply grasping at straws in the hope of finding some tangible clew. VAt the East Fifth Street. Station, however, the precinct stouths were in- ~ €lined to place some importance on the rrest of tho Messner woman, although they owned up thoy had secured no ice _ngainst ji e ‘=Bome credence was also being given ‘fo an unsigned letter which reached e Tietschier family thie afternoon. known writer gave the name of & man employed by a grocer in First ‘avenue, a few doors. from where the Obid's—bodywas_found, who _was_al- eed to have made a practice of giving jes and candy to little girls. It was Suggested that {t might be well to ques- jfion this man. Bauer took the letter i€o the station-house, where Capt. Shaw sed to make an investigation. “The woman prisoner ts of the stolid mort, plear-eyed, comrse-featured and ‘expressioniess face. She looks neither ubning nor revengeful, but hoavy and Stupid. The detectives learned that the 2m- wn has been known under various ames. At one time she was called Goulse Epstein. She readil~ admitted Bhat she had been on intimate terms “gwith Rippolone, the cobbler, who has a oe adjoining the building, in which murdered gri lived. and also with Rose? one of the cobbler's em- Had Made Threats. ‘Zhe womah denind positively that whe of the murder or that ‘she had the child from home. Sha made “Put New York under martial law.” ge the way to check New York's crime ayo, is suggested by the Rey. Dr. C. Camprell Morgan, pastor of the West- “yminster Congregational! Church, Ton: fon, who has been making annual vis- ft to New York for twelve years pas‘. “Then reoraanize and clean up you! UR, tao a rr |The Rey. Dr. Morgan, who is at thi ‘Murray Hill Hotel, is here to deliver a piven permons at the Fifth Avenue ian Church. di tt te amasing.”” he. sald, “that the wpreat city of Now York, with its yaunt- 44 police system, its reputed civilization, ‘te alertness, is powerless to stop ‘these crimes. But criminals of this type re Wearthy ard clever, —amt—even a feell-rexnlated police department will (—-_pot supuress them. Summoa your mill- fied. "and th dition of m er an 901 G t lower part of the boty. was, Indecribas dle. The child had evidently been dead ie oases of a week when discoy- “Put City Under Martial — ! _Law,’’ Urges London Pastor _ Detectives Hold to the Belief That Crime Was Result of the Hatred of Anna Messner for the Father -~ of the 8-Year-Old-Victim. - (Continue@ from First Page.) “Mauer was’ simply made in a spirit of j other mtatements which after Inveatiga, tion proved untrue, She sald, for one thing, that she had been Hving at No, | 208 First avenue for the past month on the first floor of the squalid texement. ‘The detectives learned’ she had not been in the’ First avenue house more [than two weeks. Before that she lived in & room.tn the Tistachler flat, at No. 9 Fast Thirteenth street, When ‘Karl ‘TMetsohler, the father, learned the sort of woman, he-had taken into-hts home ho ordered her to leave at once: ‘Phat the woman threatened dire ven- Beance on the Tletschlers, when evicted, hasbeen proved. The detectives learned also that the woman was frequently seen with one or the other of the Ital- fans now under arrest. Policemen indifferent. ‘There is a good deal of criticism the Way the polloa went about finding this Httle gir If they made any sort of Feureh {t- wax haif-hearted_an¢-stupid:, ‘They didn't question the father and they didn't Hsten to his suggestions, though they knew that he was search- ing night and day for his little daugh- ter, They just looked their wisert and smiled their blandost while the distract- a father went from tenement to tene- ment, questioning men and women he met and enlisting much sympathy but few volunteer searchers. When he first reported her disappearance they told him soothingly that she had probably been drowned. Dead a Week. After Coroner's Physician Lehane had Onished his autopsy upon the child's boty to-day he made this statement: “In twenty-five yeara’ experience I have never seen so terrible a case of mistreatment. There was a compound fracture of the left side of the skull, the head being literally caved In. [am of the opinion that this injury caused desth, probably almost instantaneously And I believe that the fatal blow delivered after the Iittle girl had mishandled by her kidnapper an before. 1 fOwine to the, condition of the body am le. ell whetheror not s! fomled. Tha leet carm wad badly been swarming through the streets weeks ago. “Over there the soldiery stands back of the police, Criminals fear them, for the bayonet has ahown no mercy in the past. You have good laws here, but they are not enforced. If we make a law that a caloon must close at a cer- TY TdT, WW Sloaea. “We no oor~ Tupt police to baralyze the arm of the law—not that your police are corrupt, but that aeems to be the impression we act at home. when the potice have a doubt of their ability to enforce the law. ‘SuUIL we haye no undeoirable for- eee as you have here. We get a -few—of—them; tt put “London dogs ‘not attract the lowly Beara ot Burove-av- dee New York. “Your im: migration laws appear to be jax, Yau 7 tary. Only thet will end the dally hor] sre Im part tw viame for admitting, oo fers. - i “Make fun of the English bobby If jyou will, but with a few thousand, of “them there wouldn't have been a crim- imal in the metropolis in three weeks ind such @ wave of crime spread over <“Qaendon. It would simply be impossitbl; Londen, The military would To-Day ! FRIDAY, AUG, 2, 1007. Harness Makers. Housework . Horseshoers Ironera , Janitors ‘Janitresse: Jewellers... Kitchen Help Laundresses ‘ Machinists . 4 Neckwear ‘ Motormen very ry Manicures .. Millinera , Moulders . Nurses. Operators Ostrich Feathers, Photographers ... Palntera .... .... Packers .. Plumbers ,, SBwte Satna eeieeabeuceamaen pelnaateaSuueene . Roofers Balosiadion , Selesmen fign Painters . Boliettora .. Btablemen .... .., Stenographers (0, Stenographers (F), ‘Tinemithe 2... 4, ‘Typewriters (CF) Winders ..,, . Walters 2... , Waltresves .. & Miscellancous neath teens ree 1,82R Bowne iw Sia- ge | Forty. week, month and year, The many foreigners of the 1 Once’ here they are given the privileges of the same APs, Of American cltizen fgoked on with so much respeot in rope. 'The dregs of Euro or pethapn rather the wcum Riana after a failure to civilize. seom to te responstble for many of these crimen of depravity, Men of this class fear the Put soldiers on the streets Irten, = loose | ra ‘ York's reign Our elty would be rd oe Wer Grier i Irvansey Weald, be rid of the criminals See MOB BEATS MAN WHO LURED GIRLS. A mod of angry me; mn ADA wi + cluding 100 workmen from. the artow Busi, “at Ulmer Park, nearly Killed « man last evening who was detected while miatreating two lttle girl i ybhe man, John Garin, forty years ola, King on Harway avenue, near Bay venth street, enticed Alva Ol- sen, ton years old, and Alice Anderson elght, away from thelr homes on Har. way avenua, and led them to the ash dumps on the Coney Isjand swamp, An hour or so later the children ran home and told their parenta. They sald that he wanted to meee them Again {nthe afternoon, Mr. and Mrs Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. Olsen told the children to keep the engagement. When the ttle girls sturted away from: their homes thelr pufents arouses the “nelghborhood ‘and more than ia men «nd ‘women followed tham.” > Anderson Went to the Marine Basin and told the workmen what had h 2 pened. Immediately 100 ‘nen quit, Cae and) poling, wticky “and” boat hvoi started for the Coney Island awampe. Fortunately for Garin, Polleentan Charles Woods, of the Bath Beach Sta- on, saw tie mob hurrying toward tho swamps aod, without waiting (o Jearn what had caused the! demonstration sent a call for the pollce reserves, : The crowd swept down upon Garin who tried to foe. He was pounded and {avian with eubs and boat hooks une nioch of hia body was with: the pollee reserves they had to use their clubs to Arie’ the angry men and women from Gart who was hustled into the patrol wacad and taken to the. police. statin, “8% The police believed that Garin might be the man who attacked litte Olea Schramek, of Dyker Heights, recently, Dut she said he was not her assailant, jLater the prisoner was removed. to tae Norerian Hoapttal, where a. sy ook many atitohes in ind: On Garin’s tane and head) Ne Wounds DANGER! REAL SNAKRB It Raymond 1, Ditmars ‘ expert, tellin napa New THE EV ENING WORLD NOMAN ARRESTED IN GIRL MURDER CASE WON'T REPLY TO CORONER'S QUESTIONS 8- Year-Old Victim of Outrage and _Woman and Man Jailed as Suspects BROOKLYN GAME (Continued trom Firat Page.) Biricklett beat a bunt. Al- pamman out, Abby to Nealon. NO Leach fouled to Bergen. Clark out, Wagner out, Casey Jordan to Strioklett. to Jordan. NO RUNS, Burch moved both with a bunt, Jordan fited to ‘Abby, ring. Maloney filed to Clarke, FENING WORLD AACE CHART TWENTY-FIRST DAY AT BRIGHTON. Sheehan sacrificed, Alperman dan. Abby scored when Bergen dropped tween bases. Phelps singled, ralon took third on the scoring Nealon, ald wut Alperinaa. to Jordan, send- Anderson walked. TRACK FAST, ing: Phelps to second. throw trying to get him at second. An- RACE—Mahlens; dergon stole second r—Oakiand Sta five and g halt furlongs. + by Armetha IL— each out, Casey Ninth Inning. Lewis out, Sheena: mell batted for Bergen and fouled Ritter batted for St lined to Sheehan. ATHLETE'S MUSCLE SAVES — HIM A FRACTURED LEG. Meat Wagon Runs Over Henry Neimand, But Does Not ~ Hurt ‘Him Seriously, loaded meat is _“‘Then_the_soldiery_ts_alwars —reedy-|- rad trex i eee et leet td fched—Melzar, Chorugu: ra querade will Improve; race HACE—Handicap; short course. about two filles 1. “Winner, b. A horse attached to by Judgo Morrow—Unknown, delivery wagon, owned by James Mc- Dermott, of No. 2 Washti yan Away In Tid aye gton Murket, an wagon collided with seventeen years old, of Ninetieth street, ber of the Pu Nelmand was His head { tof -harm’s way. asaed over nis lett lee. Policeman Ollver detained the driver, aeodis siveoi, but > told by A doctor from the Pressyterian | 642, Guardian #194 Judge O'Gin prrere leo toc following the pai the front and won galloping. tn the last half and was an then came again and was ho. squirmed = Sa by King Erie Jockeys, Open, Heh % East, One Hun. refused to make any complaint, KseotSeencnas} alach! Donohue, a captain tn stopped’ tile run- 0 a yyon aa hie rider aposed of the fast-tiring Tony. WU over that distance of ad'at head of the atretch a yas Rood ree and eaal —————— TWO OF BATTLE-SHIP CREW STABBED TO DEATH. and a furlong, chief master with two other sallors from the battle- in the Fort Garret Walsh, a: firat- class freman. waa justantly killed, and a first-class no\ dangerously Hospital to-day Carthage, Racinw If, an “around the upper turn and, takin) improved race and, Muon shine Was coming at was paintuily cut In the left shoulder, Maddox was thirty-flve vears old a h plenty to spare. FIPTH RACE Ink, $000 Added, six fuclong: Walsh eniistea Indianapolis, twenty-four years old. nan whi did the ¢ He ix 9 #paniand. ——_—.__ BIG TUG RAISED. Butfios. Cinchona, takiix the lead He had plenty “of specd ari King From North River Bed, after fhe start nover In trouble. Voorhees ran @ good race ‘under ® poor ride Merritt-Chapman the Monarch to-day in Hfting the ocean-golng tug Ico King IXTH RACE-—Selling: two- i y Bannockburn— “Tockeys. Opin. Hi where she wan sent several, days ago @ collision with off the Lackawanna piers in Hoboken, The Ice King was towed to| the foot of Fitty-elghth street, Brooklyn, where 4 beached preparatory, to repatr- |” Poughkeepulo fs, ADE AUGUST 2, 1907. _ SAW STRANGLER AND HIS VICTIM LEAVE “L” TRAIN Conductor Gives Important Clue in Ninetieth Street Mystery. ALIGHTED NEAR SCENE Pair Who Met on Car Got Off at Eighty-fourth Street’ ” Station. A story tad by @ Thind avenue “L” conductor to the police to-day may hrve fome effect is solving the mystery of the younx woman who was found stran- gled and mutilated in an areawhy at No, 24 East Ninetieth etrest Tuesday fdorning.” The conductor's atory leads to & suspicion that the worian was an habttue of Chinatown and met her Mayer on an “L" train bound from Chatham Squere to Harlem, The conductor was in oharge of a train that-left the City Hall station at 1. o'clock Tuesday morning. It was boarded at Chatham Square by two woman, one of whom closely resombled the descriptions and pictures of th: Ning@leth strest tragedy. The other woman waa a pronounced blonde. I They were followed trom the train at the Etgnty-fourth street mtation by a man with whom they bad appeared to hold some conversaticn on the way up- town. The conductor believes that the blonde left her female companion and the man on the station platfors. The Elghty-fourth street station of the Third avenue “L” ta only six blocks Trom where the body of the young wom- @n was found,and the conductor fixe the time the woman left the train at 290 o'clock. A policeman found the body about 4,30, z The frst surgeon who examined the corpse after its discovery by the po- iaeman sald that the woman hau » @ead not more than two hours. This point alone is strong contirmation of the story told by the ovnauctor. On the north side of Ninedetn street, stretching away to the eastward of Third avenue, is a long row of brewery bottling estabiisnments and stables. The block is quiet and lonely. The de- tectives have discovered that on the morning of the murder the eiectric Lgay ac tue Loira avenue corner was not burning, and wat the gas Jet In front of No. 2s, two doore trom where the pody was found, had been turned out, e murders and tis yictlm may have started down this dark, quiec biuck, ‘The gloomy areaway may have attracted him, and he may have per suaded the woman to enter it, Wh the body Was found the woman's shoe! Were. near by on the stepe, side by side. She may have removed them in order to make no nolse as she entered the area. As soon aa the news of the con- ductors observations fTeached Capt. Martens/ of the East Bighty-eighth street station, he sent detectives to investigate the story, They were or- dered to take the Conductor to the Morgue and show him the body. Other Getectives were sent to the Bowery and Chinatown’ to see, If possible, if any one could be found who might tell of a missing woman from the dives and oplum’ join: me = ctinr of: the - murderer wes on opium fiend, the ebseno» of food in her Bomach may be accounted for. Sno gay baye been on het way Uptown from a prolonged opium debauch, in the course of which, like a true slave of the drug, she had no desire for 100d. = is John Kusnicho, the Russian, who admits that he was with the woman fast Sunday in a Vacant house at One Hundred and Twenty-ninth street and Hroadway, will bo held in Harlem Coat pricen unit te-morrom when he will be called into court with the two Grenier whos are held ag -witnewvey {a disposed to great ii fhe “Li oonductor, ax tt In the first that has been obtained that tends throw any light on ¢ movements o! the wonan during the few hours pre- ceding her death. —>—____ MAN GROUND TO DEATH IN THE BELMONT TUNNEL. Rock Car, Propelled by Electric Motor, Crashes Into Italian Laborer, The life of a man was ground out be- neath the wheels of a stone-loaded mo- tor-cak, 115 feat trom the earth's surface, in the tunnel at the foot of Mast Thirty- | shira stueet this afternoon, The victim Monousco, thirty-five years old, em: ployed rock man by the United En- sineering and Contracting Company, who are boring the Belmont tunne! Motor cara are used for carrying rock from the shield head (where the tunnel work being pushed out under the fiver) to t mouth of the tunne! where the stone !s removed on carta, Charles Dontaten, of No. 307 East ‘Mnirty-fourth str the car that killed Moncusco, did not ave the man step from behind two cara that went atesd of his car, and did | under the can not know the man wi untll a muffied scream was heard. Dr. Eraline, on the wor! found the min dead. Goroner Dooley and Capt. Carson or- dered the motorman, who quit the job, to be fouhd. He ts wanted as a wit: ness. ——_—-—_—__. i EARTHQUAKE PROPHESIED IN-URUGUAY NEXT WEEK. MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, Aug? 2—A perilous earthquake is prophesied to take place in Uruguay on Aug. 6 Every-day good health Grape-Nuts | FOOD portance tO he tesUmony of the motorman of | LAWER ONS. RUNS AWAY WITH VIRGIN BELLE Former Assistant District-At- torney Adds New Chapter to Stirring Career. WED IN __ CINCINNATI. Miss Noma Ashby His Second Wife, Member of Wealthy Family in Culpepper. . (Aoeotal wo The Brening World.) CINGINNATI,,; Aug. 2.—Henry! Shack- elford Davi: Prominent New York lawyer, formerty connected with the District-Attorney’s office In New York City, eloped to Cincinnati with Miss Norma Ashby, ‘of Culpeper, Va. yee- terday. Although an effort was made to keep the. affair quiet, It is khown that the ceremony was performed at the Grand Hotel last evening, The hotel attaches professed to know nothing about the affair this morning, but Rev, I, O. Hartman, pastor of Christ ME. Church, admitted that he performed a marriage, ceremony in the hotel parlor last evening, though he would not give the names of the couple, gave his age as thirty-five and his place of residence as the Grand Hotel, but he ts not registered there. The bride's age was given as twenty. and her residence as No, 22 W Fourth street, (his city, Inquiry at that ad- dress disclosed tat 10 person of that name ja known there. of marriage licenses to women not residents of the county in which the application js made, It {s said the new Mrs. Dawa is not of legal age, and that her parents are wealthy. A dispatch from Culpeper says they knew noth- ing of the marria Henry Shackelford Davis was formet- 1y an assistant In the ofMfces of Diatrict- Attorneys Fellowa and Oloott, in New York County, and later a member of District-Attorney Backus's staf in Kings County, His home is No, 10 Co- lumbia Heights, Brooxtyn, He 11 nam avenue, Brooklyn, in 1902 His riage set aside on the ground that the was Insane, irresponsible and incompe- tent to enter into the marriage rela- tion.” His fnother ls a lawyer, David was sued by his wife and aho obtained a divorce, ‘His brilliant work as prosecutor of arson cases attracted ention while he was in the District-Attornay's office. He was arrested in June this year on a charge of grand larceny In the sec- ond degree. on complaint of Bara Mar- house at Riverhead, The case fizzled out, Davis wrote several noveln, of which “The Lost King’ {s the best ee uhwres. offices with Michael Del- juin Delmas, the estwhile Thaw law- Pon ih the Equitable Building, and ts well-known {in ¢lub life and literary circles, COPPEE_AND-ROSTAND IN CRITICAL CONDITION. Each Afflicted ~ With — Intestinal -Trouble-Aggravated by: an Abscess, PARIS, Aug. %—The World corre- pondent lmrns to-day that Francots Coppee, the eminent author,—and—Ed- mond Rostand. the celebrated play wrt Academy, is now In a critical condition. ‘Both are suffering from an intostinal complaint complicated by abscess, CAMBO, Southern France, Aug. 2— Edmond Rostand, the and. piay- wright, has a palvic abscess, but: his yhysicians ard oh condition tis. factory And think no operation willbe necessary, Dr, Pozzi, an’ eminén French surgeon, arrived to-day. He summoned by Madame Rostand, Tr-apptying tor the ticense Mr Davis, ‘The Ohio law prohibits the tssuance| thirty-six years old, Davis married | Miss Harriet Ramadel!, of No. 758 Put-| mother brought sult to have the mar-; young bride abducted her son while “he | vm, the safemaker, who complained | the lawyer hed stolen. tools from {of Recetpis for destraction of members of the French | Krew WOISs Way aud each | he tate Same Cotter ant proter a Jee WANTE! CARBUNCLE DRIVES RAILROAD MAN TO SUICIDE. STEUBENVILLE, 0, Aug. 2—Ed- ward L. Perwar, city ticket agent for the Cleveland and Pitteburg road for twenty years, committed gufoide nat night, bis body being found this morn. ing. Before shooting himself Perwar vered an artery under the Jett knee Perwar had « carbuncle on the neck for months, Suffering from it caused him to lose hope of recovery. Eye Troubles Take Flight when the RIGHT glasses are pre scribed. Bring your. “troubles” to us—not to a clerk or salesman who “must sell you. glasses.” ' : ‘We give you double service .at one cost—the services of skilled op- ticlans and: of our_registered_physi- cians who are OCULISTS -and whose advice is FR ‘Kyeataseck as tow as B1—fitted with the | ARNIS SUCTION CLIP, WA Kons Ocaliste and Opticians, 54 East23d St., near Fourth Ave. | 54 West 125th St , near Lenox Ave. 442 Columbus Ave., 61st & 82d Sts 489 Fulton St., BROOKLYN. Opnesiie Abraham & Straus’ The Only Ce. of Its Kind in the World. YOUR OLD TRUNK or BAGGAGE MADE GOOD AS NEW TLL TRUNKS & BAGS Boucht. Sold. Exchanaed, Emergency Baggaye Kepair Ce. 28-29 ¥. 14th Be. Ret, Tih Ave. & * MPRS' SAMPLES. ODDS AND ENDS. THOUSANDS OF BARGAINS, \ O:f Hetall Trices Guaranteed. TRUNKS. CASES. . $5.00 Monitor, | 82. top, BJ 7.09 Star, Wardrobe. Norark. Engitsh Cases, Sole Leather Boas, SHORT TRIP BAGS, 50¢.. $1.00, $1-50, $3.00, $3.90, MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED, Tents, Stools, Slesping Ba; Chairs, Camp Bows, ey Air Pillows, Yacht and Launch Supplies, Boats, Dories, Royal Marine Engines, 2}; to 15h. p. in stock. Exterminaior of momyuitoes, mots, flee i every otber pest. Used alvo In laundry; plants, “molatening tobacco, &c. Gol: everymhere, 250. each, or 8 for 60s. BOOK ‘or peste Fri & Co.y 531 ath a with Sprayer. Hav Y. Agents wanted. COTTER At Mle _peeitonee—a9¢— Bast | th at. New York City, on Aug, 1, 190%, WILLIAM J, “beleved: ean of Putrigk end miab P, Cotter and the late Ellen 1a-Suly Avan. of funeral herndtter, HELP WANTED—MALE, ASDA PORN iS — Trduy lous, and conscientious JEUNE Mon ka Attencunte ii private sae ‘aria aaoly ny pero Lethaia eters ences a character. Combea's Bante tarium, Flushing. Lt sce cd ALMONDS: . . POUND: 9 atiiver 2 to 20 IDK, for 300,'1n the ows ing. tereito! ‘Battery. to “PENNY A POUND PROFIT” Demonstration Butter Peanut Brittle, 10c Pound . AT 0734 = $0.30 4 Poutds No, 1 Spanish Peanuts 34 Gallon Open Kettle New Orie ———Motasees +--+ +5 ter eeee 10 Pounds Granulated Sugar---- %4 Pound Creamery Table Butter 111 produce 16 pounds of the finished article, on wich tor peper boxes, tabor, elling expenses, cic.,weadd »45 Penay a pound profit, +18 SPECIAL FOR THIS FRIDAY | SPECIAL fortis SATURDAY VANILLAN CREAMED 10c ; IE “ SPECIAL FOR THIS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 19 C Special Assorted Chocolates (cs) powro STRAWBERRY WALNUT 19 Cc | 9 Park Row store op-* sveninge until 11, o'clock, i “$1.62 ingecta

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