The evening world. Newspaper, January 17, 1908, Page 3

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Bas _ITHE EVENING WORLDAFRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1908. ~ WOMEN BATTLE |Mother’s s Fear of Harry Thaw’s Madness tn Childhood ls Now | GIRLS KILLED POLICE IN HOME OF Transformed Into a Hope That It May Sabe Him From the Chair WHEN FLAMES penrecy eee | Her Letter to His Teacher in 1881 Lik Evel n N esbit Thaw, Who Takes Witne: s-Stand | BRITISH Ph MI i te ide ae ce oe * To Repeat Her Lite Story tor Her Hu: Haas Sake SWEPT ACTORY Suffragettes Then Chain to Plead for Him. | Themselves to Railings INFIRMITY SO FAR SHOWN, One Met Death Jumping, An- | other Bugned and Others | Suffer Injuries. SORANTON, Pa., Jan, 17.—Two girls were killed and seven others seriously TORN AWAY BY OFFICE Number Taken Prisoners tol Mrs. William Thaw Will Take Stand in _ Court Refuse to Pay Fines Son’s Behaif and Bare Long-Hia- ‘sand Are Sent to Jail. : den Family Skeleton. e arrival of the — XS] [injured ina fire to-day in the building occupied by the Imperial Underwear | Factors. About two hundred girls wera employed in the building and there was a pinto whi alarm of fire was rounded Florence Watroun was aught in the burning building and #he met death in the flames. Marie Buck lev who with a number of other girls jumped from a fireescape, broke her | neck Those injured were: Sadie Cohen and Annie Cohen, sisters, F | Margaret Horan, Wate Whelan and Katherine Griffith. All Were burned on the fire-escape before jumping, and they are suffering broken limbs and internal in- LONDON, Jan 17. Ministers at Downing street to-Cuy attend the mee of: before mbling of By Nixola Greeley-JS mith. The strongest word yet spoken for Harry Thaw has been uttered. The strongest of Mr. Littleton’s proofsyof his client's irresponsibility on the night of June 1906, so far adduced, has been read in court. And Mrs. William Thaw should! be glad to feel that she has supplied Ne was made the vccasion of a onstration by the women The police ani large force was present, but @ucceeded in making their way ide | the residence of Prem ed trow fire is supposed to have been started by the upsetting of a glue pot in the warehouse of the Economy Fur- niture Company, located in the base- ment of the building. which was four stories, The flames spread rapidly, and most of the girls on the third and fourth floors fled to the fire-cacape. There got ax far as the second story, and from there they jumped to the areaway. Many of the «tris ran down the one harrow stairway of the ouilding. Ie their r some fainted, and there was @ Jam on the stairs which threatened serious consequences, but the firemen | were able: xet them all out aafely be merman and five arrests were made ul fore order was restored | Some of the demonstrams udopted a nevel manner to prevent being carried off by the ved attached | to tl s whic they suw the police about to iny ot on the stand, for though she arrived in New York last night, she has yet to testify. But a hand has reacned out of the Past, a voice from dead years has risen to save her son. And the ev quickly threw around + fe in froar of the bulldins | ad to break thes s e The poly Dy force Uctore they cou mon away The suffragisi« were s cee in fs those . raigned Ree 8. ae hand and the voice are those of the | fore the fire reached that portien of the n ne Bow Craik tae | butiding They refused to give sureties f deteadant’s mother. y ee een Gace) vn NIXOUA GREELEY-S*are No better plea for Harry Thaw Me wuld be uttered than that ir iSeelit ns tt ten in 1881, to Prot SARAH TRUAX TO WED. could be uttered than that in Mrs. Thaw’s lette ferrell eed a ea rene-|Beck. at whose ool he was then a pupil. ‘This letter was in response | Stanley Albert, attorney, left’ Minne- tition of polls to-day for Chicago, wh omplaint of the boy's strange conduct upolis to-day for Chicago, eon Parliament s toa oe laint of the hoy’s strang rs Saturday ne will marcy Miss Saran telged the residence of e mother wrote: fruax, the actress. p Samuel he mi Tote: Fallows, of the Reformed Episcopal | Church, ‘will perform the ceremony. Mise x hae givey up the stage. Her last ance was in San Francisco on but were unable to for tance, being driven awa TO REOPEN WAR I did not think him capable of such behavior, and bgein to tear it may not all be badness and rebellion, but that his mind is more ot, however, before several fiat Noe, srialanedmuncernarrent or less unbalance vou think there is any danger of that? been placed under arr r less unbalanved. Do you think thy ss 8 SIXTY YEARS A PRIEST. ————. They then marciied to the Parliamen The uncle to whom I referred as having become weak-minded was, sHST ae | E Mindi ciarek iRovc Hinde Te Melee SHEE TAT EUG MUR TEARS EhieUronenlcutureaklagTlemperciand’ (here: ROCHBSTER, Jan. 172—The Right | RE-ELECTED REDMOND. mined effort to get inte the House of i ble feel f dread. Deal gently with | Rey. Bernard J. MeQuaid yesterday cele-| DUBLIN, Ireland, Jan. 17.—The Ireh Commons, After several skirm! fore, I cannot help a horritle feeling of drea Gate brated the sixtieth anniversary of his | Parliamentary party re-elected John E. Redmond as chairman and indorsed the omination as priest. He was born in | |New, York City eiehty-five years ago, | United Irish League resolution approv- And ds still attending to a Bishop's | 1m his action at his recent conference duties. with William O'Brien, 2 ———— With the police, in him if possible—for my sake as well as his own, His father will be | ef the women was 5 | home on Thursday and can help advise me.” | number suffered bruis ape 4 o y they were routed HER FEA THEN, HER HOPE NOW. weveraliot the Suffragettes were prac In 1881 Mrs. Thaw feared for her son the madness which it 1s now her tically dragged to the station-hous». 4 iy When areca fe court they Rowe | greatest desire to establish, since thus only may he ve saved from death. 5 That “horrible feeling of dread” has become a hope. And I think nothing Some Relatives of Late Head. Gay, refused to pay fines inflicted. | S * fal re of them in their a! ai) went to Jail, where tiey served out |could better testify to the agonies she has endured than this stmple fact of Eronihuney Garis TAS CHALHEReNadine (SHULIBRURSER EMA oERe NE thelr terme. Much has been written’ of the sacrifice made by Evelyn ‘Thaw for ner Of BroadWay Savings Insti- | nenerie or any ar'the employers we ules Sutras alten moxemens husband. But the drawing of the veil from her blasted childhood was tution Likely to Act. to thelr Ienow marked strides tn the last 1 . : in need of fox many of England's mos surely not such an ordeal as that which tho elder woman must traverse Bonwit, Harris & Co. | ! during the present trial, when the Thaw family skeleton, ao long proudly Executors of the Will. j @nancialiy and morally, until the Lon-|gcreoned, but now articulated, labelied and hung up in Justice Dowling’a A!howeh two Brooklyn ‘grandninves || Hornce F. {litchinson, of No. 314 Clin. Broadway—CO'RNER 21ST ST.—Fifth Ave. don Parliament {a in daily dread of court, is exposed, that experts and lawyers may ‘lemonstrate upon it her 82d a nephew filed objec Veter of the fi being stormed by sev 1 a: of th " b > ‘oadw erre: e: y several hundred of the) on's insanity, and so save his life, probate of the COC Kine of Now Mt M: navn ere | By HI OR RK a B 6 est Sev nd street, Were named as ex i , ior sae Sale of High-Grade | Ave7yPNTAhoOW aes \ followers of emanc!pation for women. ent . Evelyn Thaw has possessions which not all the contumely in the world, Whe died at ASML ISS. Half a century ago no married wom own a dollar's wo: can deprive her of—youth and beauty and a valiam soul. Whether her April 3 et the contes . and none could collect valor be displayed in good or evil cause I don't decide. go by default, the will being admitted ERiiee Real Gas Petien expend the wages she earned withou |to probate by Surrogate Thomas, it 1s field, N. J., signed the her husband's consent. Susan B An: | MOTHER WILL HIDE HER HEARTACHE. eee, thony, {n the van of the ‘rage move- B der Mri w has none of these. She is ta ‘ay-haired, w: mepes Maer TUITeL UNI tsatlSlaren Mayenne ‘The elder Mrs, Thaw has none of these, She is tall, gray-haired, with the content in Aaragonian Against the equal rights of {@ Sort of arrogant serenity, She will walk to the witness-stand when she Peter Cummin w confined almost wholly }is called to testify, exactly as if she were going to open a church bazaar of the Broadway Savir i a nunepias [Pontiff Suffers Acute Pain Men’s Suits, From Gout and Has Swell- {ins to the probate “din behalt of ag jas y are about to reopen | Institution women Gy EL in suffrage, brought about | for one of the many clergymen with whom she loves to surround herself in Coon i i j con . at was ing of the Knee. Overcoats and “ty eae persistent, efforts of the eX! piteburg, She will dwell on Uttle details, she will condescend, with a simu putt) Rares ' jonenta of wor ighis } 70,00, e f \ a Vnammencine with munttpal suffrage (sWeet gracioushess, to the court, And all the time she will pretend to the) veteran banker sa niohblest 7 Aneecolsoron aes CUR hn PORE Pere aaa rs in 1869, England | hundreds of eyes gazing at her that there is no hearbreak underneath her, The will bes SMe on the same) calm exterior. uponiay boats ofa rele oF termsjas man the full’ except the | At the last trial she wept adittle. And, [ confess, In all my life no tears| wey eee a oe fee ho ae Parilamentary vote: This last obstacle in| nave affected me as did those of that proud old lady. (Guess ech RT . the way of equal rights has ca fey he af The elder Mrs, Thaw is one of the type of women to which the sixteen} $10.0 to Horace scenes of disorder marking ons | CINE ga Wctetss i ERLE G7 ie that the Pontiff go to bed, and to thie Choice of entire stock, yank, and $13,000 t ohie son and BROKEN | DRAWBAR TIES UP | '" pationt conseniea comprising the newest winter 0 Mrs. Ostrom, an The gout c s pains and a swelling , 2h elting tie'tonaie ov, BROOKLYN BRIDGE TRAFFIC. |or si ies models; some all silk lined. Hos ning of his ilInes#, the Pope’ to widows and s now grants to contestants may reoner n the Supreme ( obliged to suspend his audiences, He . & hen seen was visited yesterday by his private ‘ LO BS Yeas Physician, Dr. i wel, who ins! + bequests of | son, who about the of Parliament recently “| year old Evelyn referred when she wrote of her schoolmates at Pompton ° tl re oO » c th hited Luh! years ago in no part as ne United “They will grow up to be gooc wives and mothers—nothing more.’ ieiaat tate: ere women extended the right . “ vi SEAS States wer men ig I have heard people say that Harry Thaw’s mother was not altogether’ of suffrage. Gradually they have been | Kiven more privileges, and in some blameless of the tragedy, because she had left him too mueh to his own Btates now enjoy equal rights with devices, furnisned him with the money to which they attributed his ruin, Pa uine room or Ithe cars of a local bridge train to-day eas ELAN Fexprsssey 50 men, i ae ‘Their answer is written, 1 thins, in her hopeless suggestion to Harry and use of employees und depositors |oaused a sixteen-minute block on the| esire to nurae him Values Up to $40, e on prert eh y ten chins four eal janaw's teacher when her son was hut ten years old | of the savings institutions Brooklyn Bridge Indisposition of the Pontiff con re eutiegs See cus eries a A|| “[ really do not know what to suggest. How would it do to | The will was executed Nov. 11, 1904. A xs an ‘al fealty mani A nt in Q vie he audiences arranged for to: | eas h rt ° i on and was filed by Richard B. Kelly, an] the Manhattan end of the bt SU Le coarse i ian Sati ticing him in any way for one da | ae a ' cme onc Blo susp Rights League, the New York que! ayoid noticing him in any iy for o} day attorney at No. 170 Broadway, and one] o'clock A. M., when a drawhar ear iictide Rights League and the Willian Liosd | Cy yp pA THY FOR WIFE AND MOTHER. of the executors ot will I No, 98 broke just na the train was mak: [0 Garrison Equal Rights Assoctation Peter Cuiin ‘ Myelinereurvolabthalatationinlatfonnilt 3 miming asked to be buried [ing the cur ® p ae 4 - . . Under the auspices of these organiza- I cannot write of the elder Mrs. Thaw without sympathy, and I share) beside his wife in \ireenwood Cemetery | WAS 8.17 before the broken bar had b i ta3. reg t tions many of the lish agitators of | feeling which is common to all the women whose professional duty takeg| 4Md bequeathed $1.00) "to the cemetary, | taken out, All t raing on the bridge John Later Oo. wi al I 1S O the movement, including Mrs. Coblen A @ interest to ed in keeping his| were tled up, Hundreds of the passen jot F yg ° @anderson, Mrs. Borrman Wells and bnrialesian worden clambered from the trains others. have aroused much interest In ( | Bequests in the Will. do! to the promen the militant suffragette movement of Robert Louts Stevenson once satd that a writer “should recognize from) ‘this follow ibenuevterorial Ay and walked Aut Man England and drawn great sumbers of jthe first that ls has only one tool In his workshop, and that tool ts sym- to Agnes Crawford sind Mra, Marsarel sted and thes Nor: vere a: clupwemen at ints 'mto | pathy, I agree with him so thoroughly that I can even feel surry for men Sinclair, nieces, at Edinburg, Scotland, |erowded, had to tt sympathetic bonds with the Amazonié ale . "| who find it necessary to make a living by ridiculing women—by aaaing to | M2 1° & broter-tn-law, Rev Be forces which are causing the police of aah SPHEATE HARK the sorrows, deserved or undeserved, of the wifs and mother of Harry Thaw, | These rdinal Sa- | . who js to make a report to them io the Thaw trial, and who have, because of it, been termed the “sym- pathy squad” by one or two of the men writers. J | broken to} normal conditions w Broadway—COR NER 21ST S1T.—Fifth Ave. London to use force In dragging them 3 son, Kar Hartley; $00) ea away from the front of Englands leg- | ‘The defendant's fate is with his jury, But I think it is a fine refuta-| to Mre. Jane Mooney ar istative hall: h cum Ministers. tion of the venerable charge of woman's inhumanity to woman that the! ming, Broo niece and nep SUIT AGAINST LINDERMAN. | | ) 5 women at the Thaw trial have almost unanimously said the best word for) Aft’? {hese follow = : PHILADELPHTA, Jan. 1 | iim harsandehis rites | ‘ro my friend, Horace #, Hutchingon, | PHTt-D REET. oe a ban O S O 1n Chicago’s Oldest 3 $10.00 eeiGincas Doctor Tells How Ostrom { atter, a lawyer, to defend her. irl absolutely denies that she to Prolong Life SHOPGIRL WANTS \sraireeiace ausrea canaries “Lwe sanely and moderately.” Jmits that she lad the purse that was { “Be temperate in your habits.” 2 EET ere Otiet ny noe | Say how she got bt. | Reep tnter sere’ ti vOut Work | This matter said Mr. Alter, ind his daugt ONTAINS the natural in-'|| Norfolk and Double-Breasted Suits. | iredients to make lasting Ages 8 to 17, Former Prices $6.50 to $8. strength, vigor and energy, Zoe | and intuses the glow of health || Sailor and Russian Suits. L 3) 75 jinto every nerve, muscle and Ages 3 to 10, Former Prices $6.50 to $8. ° fibre of the body. ae ily Brows $3,000) iby Williamson, No. 814 West “Be alive to the thinus of the [have a different complexion when it t Miss Jonnette present.” threshed ont in court. We have wit- Af cube Seventy: 1 G3" | otela, Revtaurants, Sa Boys’ Russian Overcoats. ' “Reep sweet.” n nei nesses- among them the girl who ate 12 wards, widow | National va Be S ———--- -— Ages 3to 10, Former Prices $6.50 to $7.50, J These are prescriptions tor pros-| |Says Girl Accused of Giving: tends the candy stand at Ketth Mise and” the “By-Coungy Mortgage 5 $6.50 fo pe Breeere mone. (oF bros: f Se : rector’ Fifthe Avenue Theatre who yen. : ai Bota bp De BIR Ahailard) Oniceeo's Poisoned Candy to Mrs. | wit ey BY Ca) not seapon jand to heck ey, Norfolk and Double-Breasted Suits. oMest physician, upon the eve of his Fox Stole Tt | At the close of the court proceed: |side, at" No Ages 8 to 17, Former Prices $8.50 to $10. ‘ox Stole Them. |ings Eva Fried, a little shop girl om. | street, $5.00) and 4 . ninety-second birthday. Dr. Millard is a refutation of the Osler theory andi also admits that he is a bad II luatration of the evils of a lifelong affects Ith all my CLEAR THINKING MEANS SUCCESS | ployed in a Sixth avenue store, stepped | up and spoke to the Magistrate, It ap- e pretty girl who ig (Beate tat Alice Moses was employed | ‘ & to $8 at the store durine the holidays and We trust uny honest. person, Boys’ Smart Overcoats. | Business confidential. One price Ages 3 to 10, Former Prices $8,50 to $10. —) th Alice Moses, ) of the following | now in though moderate use of tobacco, The J | accused of robbing Mrs. Fox, of w appeared with Misa Pried’s twenty- | 20" In {08 Pevdlesun brainot « ~ eee i 0 h root of Roc after the latter had en} fve-dollar set of furs. Witten tl eed your bral a : k ae eemneirerioaee nae st candy in a theatre last Nilce Was wearing the furm when x an, OM a Large Boys’ Overcoats. Ages 8 to 16. ht . Cy Was arreste ednesday night, and th y, , i third prescription is proved by the ernoon, was arraigeéd In police took possession of them. Little | N No employers’ references re- In this lot there are values as high as $15.00, | ia ares, aN 7 it ee He inte etoile Sia Gansta rape-Nuts SPN work is our est sis Lie a 7/ = Pecradunainerevenviuniitelareaten tl (otitherliiness Pox the hearing |!f, ‘he police hold them as evidence un-| remain ritaoaCa lon wetteltor Lluetrated Boys’ Smart Suits. Ages 8 to 17. | and even now takes pleasuré in pre adjourned until nex ivetanlllaeauont a ti TeAnUE Gere ae food, made from ‘atalog No. ! In this lot there are values as high as $15.00. seribing for alling friends, pri was sent to jail she gets a chance t ear them. But and barley by a. spe. 37 MAIDEN LANE eee ist i she will have to wi E 3so Fult St, Wkiye a re tran Dr. Millard was graduated from | ¢),000 ball Harvami in 184 He was. born The parents of the girl who tiv a cial process. Tr 8 The third Bolleau Girl Art Calendar, in| |!!° re t On eB GR ebsites cous » Rronx, are broken-iearted over tie © executors. of this. . vt a Millard Fillo 4 naa Brens hace pa er ast A Ey tengolors, will be distributed thronah The n ae ane dite Sry with 4 gras aughter has brought x) F World in Greater New York next | or beds $0 long as thoy or a survivor o » (eee jugon,then...Theyhave,ensesed Mark them shall live and I would make spe- Boys’ Knickerbocker Troe Ages 6 to 17. 65c These have been selling for $1.25 and $1.59. “There's a Reason’’

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