The evening world. Newspaper, December 28, 1907, Page 10

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FFALS, SO. CORNEGE TRUST. ACGHIND'TRES| WOULD CONTROL TOBIN LTO Ready to Put Up Sime of $1, _ ement in Which Their 000,000 Necessary for Sta Prey Lived. ~», Resumption. USED DYNAMITE FIRST. ‘PARKER A STOCKHOLDER “Blew Up Scarito’s Barber Shop| Former Judge’s Brother an and Hounded Him Out Officer of Concern That &ia Of Business, Wants New Business. ‘Angered by his persisent refusal to| Former Judge Alton B. Parker, coun- Be biackmalled. members of the Black|sel for the old management of the Mens society attempted to burn Salva-| Hamilton Bank, tt was learned to-da tore! Scarito, his wife and five children/{s a stockholder and director of the fire to it. To reap thelr revenge on this man who had defied them these Biack: Hand members risked thh lives of six- teen other families in the house. ‘This ts not the first time Scarito has been attacked in the dark by the mur- , @ering gang. He began receiving let- ters from the society in the summer of 1008. 4 us $500 or we will wipe out you your family," one letter read. ; (Bearito| was then a barber with a “good “business in S&cond avenue, be- tween--First and Second stress. He ‘turned ‘the letter over to Police Captain © * McDermott, then in command lof the Fifth street station,’ and was told to keep a tryst with the Black Handers. Whe next letter told him to meet a man \ @t One Hundred and Forty-ninth street And Tenth avenue and -have the money with hini. = Followed by two detectives. gcarito Kept the engagement. but the tin that he was to be followed leaked and the Black’ Hand men wore not there to meet Big That night Scarito’s bacber’ shop was, blown up with dynamite and his Rife and five ohildrea-had narrow es- from death. Continually hounded by tho gang, Brariio was at last driven out of busi Bens. Rocently he leased the tenement $@ Rivington street from Emanuel Itana- He had rented. quarters tn the $o_ other families, and Yn tho few months pbileved he had es- unis mornings fire was discovered b; Falllp O'Brien. a fire patrol man sta toneu at No. 3 Hivington atreet, where @ small blaze occurred several’. nizi O'Brien actea so promptly that} |for business. I have been pledged: to ve- feline, et the building pzaturated ‘with| crecy. What: does it matter, anyway, tittle headway. ker and his men found the can of oll Ba he inci stand, ek eit were the intended victim: Mt STAY HERE AND omnis or of Immigration’ and Clergymen Interest Them- | selves in Grace Lawrence. 4 Mins Grace Lawrence. the pretty Pe Wh girl who has been held as a prisoner! ‘ @m Ellis Island for two weeks, will prov. ably not be eported ufter all. She was 4 tohave been sent home to her wealt “mother to-day’ on Mauret. the Cunard line, but throumh the king’ Swiexs of Iinimeration Commissioner Watehorn. wlio too pity on the forlorn pile heiress, it 1s. pi iS ples wil] came out all Mins Ls arrived migit azo on the Lucania wit) heart, Jobn Henry Parro Englishman. On “bo Henown aa bis wits, 1 ‘en they atepped off the York authorities had: arrest Parrott on 2c! embezsiement in © turngt last week, ie the git “Jate,Ztor they hud ended to Tled a8 oon as they rewcned A Two days ne) the Hiri de pemenraseeredrem paces of the eac. Commissioner W horn pirsted ber in the cuntudy of the . Roy. Thomas MoCandlcss, dnleconst chaplain of Evis Isiand. Yesterday thie @ergyman took her to a spccialis rated on her ear, 4 v dine very) well, eat hh, <elfetn with t the dropped he bas 1 _ Stet beat an ” DYING, WOULD NOT CALL HUSBAND FROM DUTY, | ctadilehsscaamasdeneneeeedemetn of mines of the Tictus- wiy.arom his work 6 are mines, sires Aes RT ‘sigs, the Bi eo many 6 Ween at the mi helpine to earch fe to death to-day by saturating the big|Carnegie Trust Company. Ered H. Yenement in which they lived, No, 5|Parker, brother of Judge Parker. is Rivington strest, with oll and setting | S| Wentit, said Mr. Montgomery, “until 1 jinterested 1a the terms of any/plan by benking interests. Mr. Montgomery has | |deciinéa thus far to make public the| terms of his agreement with the bank-/ stands for Kangaroo, But a still better example of “cover- ing ground” rapidly, thoroughly and effectively is a Sunday World “Wa secretary of the Carnegic Trust Com- [pany, which is a Gomparatively new banking Institution reaching. out for | business. The cornerstone of the resumption pian for the Hamiton Rank is @ $1,000,- 00¢ cash fund to be supplied to the suspended institution by a syndicate of outside banks and trust companies. ‘The identity of the banks and trust ccmpanies in this syndicate had been withheld from Superintendent of Bank- {ng Williams and Attorney-General Jackson, as well as the pudlic. The proposed plan was privately handed up to Judge Betts, of Ulster County, Wy former Judge Parker. The latter is an old friend of Judge Betts, and his predecessor’ on the bench at | Kingston. Pledged to Secrecy. In the order ‘reopening the Hamilton Bank Judge Betis does not dwell at length upon the terms of the vian whereby $1,000,000 1s to be supplied | by the syndicate of banky and trust | compantes, He merely says that an ar- reby upon | the “securities of the.|bank,' $1,000,000 | ‘a to be advanced by a syndicate or) outside banks. To newspaper reporters some daz ago. President >William:R Montgomery said that the Carnegie Trust _Com- pany was one of the “big binkink {institotions ready to supply the $1,000,000 needed. He has since récanted, ‘The institctions wish fo conceal their after|the Hamilton Bank has reopeped | as long as our bank has the money Want to Know Terms. The asseth of the Hamilton Bank are ‘$6,124,971.69. The institution has 18,000 tors, | Of these 16,200 have signed an agreement to wait twelve months for thei? money in full. They are raturally which the gilt-edged securities’ of the Hamilton Bank are put up ag collateral for a $1,000,000 loan made by outside} ing syndicate. The Carnegie Trust Company's name End with Unique Entertamn- ment and Proville Clowns Band, ! BASKETS OF GOOD Supply af Provisions~ for the New Year’s Day Dinner. Members of the Produce Exchange have planned a unique entertainment for the year's end. Instead of the usual; frolic, they are to have a.circus. and} this ts to be followed by a distribution | of gifts to’ worthy poor familiel. Hundreds of little children from the lower end of the city will be (he cuests of the Exchange next Tuesday after-| noon, and aftér the circus performatce every child will tecelve a basket, which will contain presents and candies and food. Every meinber of the Exchange. trom President William Harris Doug- Joas te the latest comer, is enthusiastic over the affair, There will be hundreds of famliy bas- kets, full of good things to eat, inclnd- ing chicken, potatoes, ohfons, plun pudding. appies and oranges. whitu and brown sugar, condensed milk, canned | soup, coffee, bread, canned peaches aad other st stantlals. Each ilttle, git|'s basket will contain a pair of roller skates, a work-box and wold and lots of. candies and apples and oranges. The bors’ taskets will be chuck full of suo things as roller skates, baseballs, footballs. Jack-knives. apples and oranges and candy. too. Twelve hundred baskets in all are to be distribsted, and every ‘poor family | in the lower page of the clty will be erpplied if the Seenrous committve hay- Ing the splendid work In charge le nou- fied in tlme. Ruxiness management of 4 rare kind {a back of the distribution: and while ft necexsirlly must be lim!’ the effort Is making to pri for as mony As can he acc It's to Be a, Real Circus, Too. And what a treat Is in sthre for the little ones who are colng to wet tic for the circus! It is xoing to te a acighty Interes: sawdust affair, and real, too. The great floor of the Produte Excha: In to be covered with mats and sawdust, and tiers of pine doart seats ranging around the rtnz will xive the real cirous flavor. There will. be plenty of petnuts and red lemonade in the bargain, and Mr. Walted Beaven, who fs the circus manager. promises to [hare hin clowns, performing ponies trick elephants, ke monkoys, Jugxie: and funny tramps and Chinese men tll wound up and in fine shape for their Tespective acts Mr, Beaven, who has been a member of the Exchangn since 1857, has been a& busy as the proverbial bee, preparing for the great show, He has secured a group of the prettiest little performing ponles ever seen jn a circus ring, and won't was associated several weeks ago with a called massmeeting of depositors of |.the Knickerbocker Trust Company, held | at Carnegie Hall. The charge waa made) and substant/ated that an officer of the! Carnegie Trust Company had hired the! hall. President Leslie M.. Shaw denied |that hls company was beliind the move | Eng-' to capture some of the good will of the doctor shakes his head Knickerbocker Trust Company which| failed, eles IN DELIRIUM, SHE LEAPS 10 DEATH Brooklyn’ Woman — Jumps| From Window of Her Apart- ment to Pavement. Mra. Loutse Gill, the prother of pve! chilireny thy youngest of which was| born but five days ago, kill d_herse! late last night by leaping from a w dow of her apartments on the th flo; of No, 2 Harmon atreet, Brooklyn It was w mother was In a de- iirioun cond) attending n high consequent to childbirth that Mrs. Gil mitted the act which left her Uapies orphans—During the abseitée ‘or nurse from the room M {11 rose bed and ed fo Ue nearby the street. She sash. and, stop: ir to the sill, plunges | foremost ‘to the attest. © WAS breathing whon the neighbors er and red shortly‘after be- emaved to her bat Mra. Gill's hus fwas thirty-two y rs old, Who leaps a great distance, Of “getting there, Eli,’”' He's a yery good i insta [in the matter with the sic fa baker. She! %f Ye anguay-Ursaay, Borinua creo ‘Orieaum. Rarnia, Coton | Now “York, Horas. Na Routiaimptor, Livuan Maxitetanta, Liigriel the Mersey, Hegina Manuralie, another playin doctor and a third play- ling gurse? One of the po: the sawdust, as aick as he can be. Then the doctor pony coms in, and the manager says, “Are you a doctor and the pony shakes his head up own. “Lio your medicines kill pon the manager next axks, and the pony So, No,"? und | stampa one of Ma littia. hoofs Indig- nantly. Then the ana ef says, | the glocta pony places his i sick x stomaci: and neigns som: thing that sounds like ‘tummy. ache, Boys’ Band Will Make Music. Tha trick elephant Is funny, too, and | the clowns are going to have a lot of fun with him, The juggiera will do marvellous stunts in the ring, and the trick bicyclist and the tramps will « tertain. “There will be lots of the cir- cus, and the Catholic Provctory band pleces—the musicians ali being ya~will provide the mus Tt's going to be wefreat show, and al- terward—well, then the good “things to [eat and th wil] | sha toys and pia be h petss 10 distribution of tae 8 nen on the Fachange will be ng can be turnéd over to the chi churches, and ‘other organizations are attending to the circulation of She tlekets ong thore famMles to whon the bounty of the Produce Exc will bs most benefictal, Its a fine start for 198 the Produce nge 1s planning. a SHIPPING NEWS. La Provence a Alamo. |. Kansas City Kan Glerglo, Neapolltan Prince Sarator ‘ INCOM! L STHAMSIUPS, PO-DAY, | Touts, Sthan‘ton Pringles, ‘Orectan, Heraiuutan Venezia. Manchester! ay, ‘ e Bice, City of Ba Sixate Hastin \Savannan. Pons ‘fio Fried... Comanche, Galveston | Arapancs, Hamltton, ola Peli: Lanier Main, Big " Cicas in 1 Peotace Bilge qwith Children of Poor as Guests i APOLOGY ND | GUTAG A BULLET Members Will Celebrate Year’s and Trick Ponies and.Jug- . glers, with Music) by a Boys’) | THINGS AS GIFTS. Each of the Little Ones Will) Get Candy, Fruit and Toys, and Their Parents a Fine} : (Pate MASTER Garo.W, BEAVEN WILL PUY Wis Comic ELEPHANT THROUCN STUNTS TO AMUSE INE KIDS, WiLk DO A TURN. THERE wa OFA TRAPP. SUGCLER “WEN GUNNING Plumber Colbtina’ Fired and Missed, Then-Fell at Restau- rant Keeper’s Shot. Feoling he had peenthsulted by Liberia Lombard!, a. cafe-keeper, at Now 318; East’ One Hundred and Seventh street, Nick Colotina, ‘a scrappy young tumber, started out to compe! his enemy to make an abject apology to-day, and landed in Harlem Hospital with « bullet hole in tis: lungs. Lombard!. after fr- ing the shot tn’ front of his restausent, ran upstairs ¢o his living rooms and @ot out on the roof. Then he éodged the police successfully and got sway. His victim has # chance to recover. ~ The plumber, his wrath mastering him, had run up to the cafe. Colotina, armed= with « big revaiver, called Lembarit a dog, and invted him to come into the street. The challenge was accepted and the men ¢linched on the sidewalk. ‘Their cries and curses attracted’ crowd. Police- man Patrick Semmons appeared just a Colotina drew his revolver and fired. Tho bullet parsed about a foot above Lombardi's head. He returned the fre instantly and Coictina toppled over. Lombardi threw his revolver into the street, and ran to @ stairway in the rear of the cafe. He was out of sight before the po- Méeman got Inside the door. A call was sent to the Harlem Hospital and Colotina was hurr(¢d there in an am- bulance.” He was conscious, but de- clined to make any statement or com- plaint. The police reserves surrounded the block in which Lombard! was sup- tora took part. The cafe was Miled with Lombardl's friends. and they suc- ceeded in delaying the police until! Lombardi escaped. NUTHER HEAVY SLASH IN THE BANK DEFICIT - Hous | Favorable © Statement ib Shows: Big Loan Decrease. “Another slash was made in the bank . the Clearing-House y showing that the figures had been reduced $11,596), deficit statement requirement at $0, te this there was a 782,400 in {tems of the report were exceptionally favorable. . ecrease of 3@ he little ones laugh when they | specie, ‘ eq one, of the ponies playing sick and |Legal nae increase STOCKS FALL OFF “(N BRISK SELLING ‘ong, with the trading early market to-day Stocks were s! brisk, in th y Mining sold at an ‘advance of 31-2; Norfolk and | Consolidated G. wutnern ucific, large {rao.tona, Ja} fading eiised and until the’ final briak- ei nded at 1 o'clock, so that the big forced dren and thelr pérents, Admission will and be by tcket, and the downtown can Suge feaa Locomotive and Amer{: There were gains in U. Rubber! Srst_ preferred of 3 Bag preferred 1 Mee ferred 11 lowest and last p: nto. changes ai wit Senersaj's final figures are aw follows jamal se myner +1 ++ + elt +3 {44 +t RS +44 1+] » FEE FPS Seabezoysas PR FS Sot Pears RISKED HER LIFE FOR HER FRIEND Save Miss Kelley When Car Ran Both Down. The herolc but futile efforts of Mra. | Margaret Edwards, No, 14 West! Thirty-second sireet, to save the life of her friend, Katherine Kelley, were told| Motorman Charles Thompson and Con- ductor Harry Roench were arraigned, | and killed Miss Kelley at Thirty-second | street last night. © The women were employed at the, Park Avenue Hotel, and lUved together. As they were going home, a sout ound car ran down upon them, Mrs. Edwards saw the danger, and tried t drag her companion back, but M: Kelley becamg confused ‘and stepped p| directly in the path of the car. 37,300 Mrs. Edwards;then tried to push her both, hurling them down. Miss Kelcy's bedy wax tossed agains: striick and ‘knocked to the xround Ed- ward J. y, Of No. 484 Third ave- who was about to cross tie Bystanuers picked up the two un- conscious women, and Pollceman Huth summoned an jambulance from Belle- vue Hospital. On Its arrival the attend. | gurgeon said thay Katherine Kelley ‘@ fractured skull and had been in- stantly killed. “Mrs: Edwards, although she was knocked senseless’ and suf- fered bruises about’ the body, was not dangerously Injured. Miss Kelley was) thirty-five REIT old. CHRISTMAS PARTY HOSTESS ROBBED After Entertaining Children at Country -Hoine. (Thomas W. Hall, a leather merchant fant Se, ‘of this city, ta search for a $1,000 dia- ‘mond ring stolen-trom, hitycountry. horas} u feat New Canaan, Conn. “The ring’ be dest da ighter, © Miss. longed to his dren of New Canaan at Christmas S| me, cb While every effort was made to keoy the theft a secret, It Is admitted th day the famlly 18 convinced one of thi | suests of the house: stole it. The Christmas: entertainment w given on Tuesday this year, and o moro boys and girls attended. fad a good time and am they de- 44 + parted gave ‘three’ nearty cheers for theit Foaturses, Shortly after they had gone Misa Hall inissed her dia:nond ring and pin. ‘The servants wore ques. toned closoly and the. investigation taken by some outalder, AB they werg puzaling theif braina over toe. theft one appeared at the Hall mansion with the ising pin. She sald another girt Buaslbe wi Picitadelihelaroanae andl atd picked It uP. Bhe did Rot know on aid hot care to fg name the ri SCAT tas ines 10 MISS ETHEL AT OYSTER BAY. OYSTER BAY, L. 1, Dec. 2.—Miss Ethel Roosevelt, noccmpanled acday at rote Landon, visited the village ‘onan ‘Sagamore 2 ill, tte Mrs. Edwards Tried in Vain to of to-day In the Yorkville Court, when| | friend clear of the car, but {t hit them! saaressed to Sf an elevated plliur, and "rebounding Detectives have been engaged by| Winttred, who, with her mother and) sisters, have often entertained the chil- ised the Halls that the Jowelry was {of tho girls wilo had attended the party EXPRESS CLERK WANTED HERE FOR TREET CAUGHT | Ziezer Fled in Company With Strange. Woman, It Is Al- | leged, in Noyember. | Dispatches from San Francisco to-day thelr Third aveniie car having struck | notined the police that Leon C. Zieser, |twenty-one years old, formerly a cler) Urorlithedongiifslandl express Compa |at the Long Islan City terminal bf | jthe Thirty-fourth Street Ferry, was un- der arrest there, charged. with having stolen $1,061.44 from this|city on Noy. ‘37 last. | Bince young Ziezet’s er he has Jed the police a merfy chase. The \paekage he 1s accused o lidg was on & Co,, of Hemp- stead, It, was never seen after It went into his hands, 7 In tracing Zlezer the police learned hephad left New York with @ woman and a man, He was traced to Boston {ani then to Atlanta, He got tired of lth man, whom ‘he referred to as “excess baggage.’ He gave the. man $25 and then went to El Paso, Tex. Re- |ore he could be apprehended he and the woman had reached next heard of Ziezer was te awe Ot his arrest at No, 4St Fell street, San Fran Tt is sald that Zleser's downfall -wi due to a fascination for racetra women. He ke brought back | for tri COURT TELLS Hl TELLS HM. ul A SCOUNDREL Miss Hall eae $1,200 Ring] Halloran’s. Plea, Plea, of Too Much! Mother-in-Law. Is. Not —*- Accepted, / “Tis all too ‘much: mother-in-law, Jydge,” sald Albert Halloran, aswalter, ‘of No. 103 East Third street, to: Maxts- te Cornell to-day when arraigned on a charge by his young wife ot CEEABH and deaertion. “Jadge, 1 don't apeak German, but my wife and her mother doy and wien 1 go honie nights I get the Duteh from the palr of them while I am read.ng, and [can't for the life of me tell what they are saying. “They might,be calling {me names, for ajl I know. The moth- fer-in-law would butt In on ‘our «wn talks and gabber away,tn- Dutch to peat the band. I’ can get along with the wife, but’the Dutch mother-in-Jaw \{n too much for me. I can't shake tho | old “woman, «for my, wife won't live without her’ mother,’* Tintloran Is twenty-sIx, his wife being nedin ears hin junior. ‘She declared to tho Court that her husband frequently beat her brutally, and finally Jett her ithout. anyirerources. Sha "showed Leet ms whe sald, by her hus- and’ ae tae sou UR: as a stoundret, Hal- floran.” waid the Magistrate, “and I'll re- Wire’ that’ YoU pay -your wife $10 « jeok of eine You.0 to the Island, You must give @ bopil.” wah can't @et & bond, Judge," walled lalloran, an vol wo to, the Thland," was the penrintee orial Tuite atum, as eupren was. fa oway, ' ee GOLD FROM 80UTH AMBRICA, Faghty, thausand ‘$10 gold pleces trom tho banks &nd commercial houses of 234. Street ; SHIRTWAISTS, 1n Both Stores. posed to be concealed and started n/ zearch, in which hundreds of specta- | 23rd Street Models for Spring, 1908. Large importation of French Walists, The latest designs in Nainsook, French Lawn and Sheer Linen. Daintily trimmed with Valenciennes, C:.iny and Trish Crochet laces, combined with hand-embroidery. At, very moderate prices, ; Waists made in workrooms on the premises, Beautifully trimmed, suit- able for Southern or tropical dress. At the following prices, 3:85, 4.95; 5-50, 6.75 and 7.75 The regular stock includes Taffeta, Chiffon Taffeta, Messaline, Shah and Evening Waists, made of the latest materials, On Monday and Tuesday, December the 3oth and 31st. . One thousand dozen Fine Lingerie Waists. Ranging in prices from §5¢ to 12,00 value 1.25 to 15.75 LADIES’ UNDERWEAR.) 12 Uoth Stores, A complete assortment of French Underwear, of delicate fabrics, hand-em- ~ broidered and-trimmed with new laces, The latest designs, made expressly for James McCreery & Co, Chemises See nae nO 510 14.76 Ress 257) “14.75 Gowns..........., ‘45.00 Corset Covers... ; W aZiS Trousseaux,—from the sae to the most elaborate. At extremely moderate prices. Monograms and Crests embroidered, Domestic Undergarments in workrooms on the premises, Daintily trimmed with laces and embroideries. Excellent cut and finish. Considerably below usual prices. On Monday and Tuesday, December the 30th and 31st, Gowns.......95¢, 1.25, 1.50, 1.75, 2.00, . 2.50, 3.00, 3.50 and 4.00 Chemises....95¢, 1.25, 1.50, 3-75; 2.00, 2.50, 3,00, 3.50 and 4.00 Drawers.......§0C, 75C, 95¢, 1-25, I.50, 2.00, 2,50 and 3.50 Corset’ Covers. +50C, 75C, 95C, 1.25, 1.50, 2,00, 2.50 and 3.50 Skitts<.95<, 1.25, I,50, I-75, 2,00, 3.00, 4.50 and 5.95 A large stock of short Negligees, Vatious materials and colors, ” JAMES M&GREERY & CO: 34th Street us DEPARTMENTS.” Ia Both Stor 23rd Street Buenos Ayres reached Now York to- ns the British tramp steam a | Sttypera, willch was anchored off Teer ime all, wait dock JHMES MAGREERYAGO “McCreery Silk.” Exhibition and Sale of new Spring weaves and novelty Silks, suitable for Southern wear. Such as Mousseline- Bordtre, Liberty |Satin, Satin Messa- line, Taffetas Cadrille and Ecossaise. Many exclusive novelties for wedding gowns and debutante dresses. On Monday, December the 3oth. Sale“ of | Five Thousand Yards : White Habutai Silk. 27 inches wide, ci nese per‘yard value 1.00. 34th Street fi If you want your business _to become the talk of the town, tell about it teen a World “Want” Ad. >

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