The evening world. Newspaper, March 2, 1908, Page 1

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r 4 q i | LINER STRENDED WN FOG SPRINGS A LEAK: TO PERSONS ABOARD Pumps Kept Going on the Coamo, From Porto Rico, Aground Oif the Jones Beach, Long island, Shore. [Hidden in dense fo nd Porto Rico | fhe big ship grounded early to-day Capt. F. J. Dalton did not know the| Pocation of the vessel. He sent a wireless message to the company’s office| and blew a signal of distresgfrom the Coamo’s whistles. ers and a crew of fifty aboard, g high, the Coamo.is lying on a bed of to be in immediate danger. ' enger steamer Coamo, of the New York Jones beach, on Long Island. When ne, is asho 1 There ; ‘ Altl and and is r The Coamo went ashore at hig Bucethe Passengers. i engers ure aboard | Christie ey fra: | ry the ¢ Ee An em ba Baby! Wrcutt, as the bay ey, = Peabody Moon, SH di Mrs Moon, Ship Is Leaking. | Dr. 8.8. Graber, Capt. Dalton sent the following htt page to the company's office lecon i = rs, FB. Porter, “Coamo went 1 p ies Bee Miotire r. so. 2 A Jolin son roadside ¢ No. 2 1¢ > WH Jonson t s no| Bishop and Mrs. L. B, Wilson. ipemps Miss Wilson. rrury. Aitken and Biay and party, dones Beach ers along, as it steamer will have fore it can be st pat of edout a mile ea r statiot th , Bach's Inlet station Heratey. Beach, wh between Jones Jones ean rly end of enters hand the mainland. SENT TD PRISON FOR EIGHT YEARS Two Terms Given to Dawkins, | Who Helped Rob While in Uniform. the bay the entrance to New York harbor and sicamed northwestward — twenty-five miles out of her course before she truck the beach. Formerly a State Liner. The Coamo rginally built for the Allen State Line, and was knov:n' as the State of California. gow on her maiden trip Aug. Bhe was built by Alexander 8 Bons, Glasgow. She is « mild steel, is 400 feet all, beam and 32 feet § inches molded deptn, with a gross registered tonnage of 4,500 | fons. The dead weight she was de-| signed to carry ts 5,300 tons. The Coamo is divided into eight wa- ter-tight compartments, the bulkheads of which are carried to the upper deck, Bo as to assure the greatest safety in was ove the event of accident George Dawkins, convicted of bur-| The saloon accommodation is situated) glary and grand larceny, committed emidships and provides for 260 passen- While he was a policeman in uniform, gers, From the main deck the saloon attached to the Adams street is entered by doors on each side of the deckhouse, arranged with vestibules| was sentenced by Judge Dike, In the from the entran Steerages are| W48 sent to Sing Sing for “ot less than fitted for about 700 or S00 passengers and not more than four forward and also aft of saloons on both| years and six months, on the burglary the main and lower decks. charge, and for not leas than four years Stranded Once Before. on the grand larceny charge. Un eC aTS GRIER Pee a TOGO Gers 34 Inches, 6 Inches and §% inches | eet Dawkine in- March, 1907, enlixted fwith a stroke of M4 inches supplied with| the aid of a thief named Scott Ryan steam by three steel boilers, and held up and robbed John Farley, a On Feb. 26, 1900, when known as the|.stereotyper, in a saloon at Myrtle ave- Btate of Gilifornia, the vessel struck] nue and Gold street. This was the -| basis of the charge of grand larceny. Iand for Liverpool. Hor two holds filled Alded in Burglary. station, four years Ram's Island Ledge, after leaving Por and her furnace room was flooded. | There were one hunilred persona on|, The evidence proved also that Daw- Dourd and although the se ce nigh | King, while a policeman, on Jan, 37 last Rael wares allitakan hore tnte e got Ryan and another thief to break eargo, consisting mostly of perishable | 1tO & hardware store at Myrtle avenue stuff, was destroyed. She struck the| Std Duffield street for purposes of rob- ledge atern first and swung with, a| Cro), Dawkine, broke the window srtg wind ama coment Wate nee ow | trough which the two grooks gained U mission to the store. was shown Bit the rocks, It was thought for a quring the trial that Dawkins had bee! time that i would be impossible to a suady charactor ali bis fe and anould |managem: i ONE a BY BUFFALO BILL. CODOCOOSO GOTO OS The Open to All.”’ “Circulation Books Who, Attacked, Furr shes Big Surprise at New Orleans. . (Speet NEW ORLD Despite the attractio: rade in town to dr \ 2-1 of a Mardi Gras of the the wo omany tors, the crowd at opening of the meeting at Grounds to-day was strong satisfy the most optimist’c members of the Crescent City Jockey Club. The card offered no particular feature, even the daily handicap having filled The races were framed along good Ines, however and they drought out in several instances horses of consider- able class, The best race was a six furlong affair that enlisted several very one of the good sprinters, J.C. C most prominent candidates, had to be excused because of his having contract- ed a fever that has reached such a) point as to cause his trainer to fear for ne life of the hort tia: tried to force the The p back In the betting system held out to ute, with the hope that s night be Instead of booths, t 1 stools were In use, hey h t this track a The irty= boc big ring, besitg the two fielders, mary Race.—Purse ASH AHHAAS SAD DARTS THY AAA HNN OHO N HOM MOMS CHICAGO CHIEF KILLS MAN SENT TOSLA Y HIMAND MAYOR TWO-YEAR-OLD WINS RACE AS 75101 SHOT McNally, Ridden by Skirvin, Police Chief Shippv, of Chicago, , Kills Anarchist In L., Columbus, Little Mose also ran. AND PETTICCAT BY second; Avyaunteer, 107 (C. Koer-| "50 to 1, 10 to land 7 to 2 third Time—1.06 Arby Van, Felix Mozzes, Hasty Agnes and Ben Strome also ran. ——<———_— SMELTING DIVIDEND ON THE COMMON CUT. Second Race.—Purse, $400; three-year- g; five and if furlongs H ll to and 2 . H2 ¢Brui h 3. second; Truro, 109 (Power sto land 4 to}, third. tPackle, Albert Star, Contant Apple Toddy, ..maiaya, M Canada and Mystifler also ra RACE-—Purse three- 1.08. Our Bo} Gregor, THIRD year-olds and up; five and one-half fur- 14 (McDaniel), 6 to longs.—The Bear, 5, 2 to 5 and out, won by Chucked Policeman Undor Chin and Wanted to Kiss Magistrate Breen. invasion of the Harlem Police | | y anon The Directors of the American Smehing | and Refting Company to-day declared (Court to-day by little Mrs, Isabelle f quarterly dividend of 1 per cent. on; Schultze, seventeen, chic, pretty and the ‘company's ‘common’ stock: This) possessed with two extraordinarily ¢ with a quartenty dividend 0 ne last previous quarter. The directors| parture from the usual entry of pris- to-day also declared a quarterly divi- dend of 13-4 per cent. on the preferred stock, which is unchanged from the! lest previous quarter. | oners. Policeman Nachbar stood at the gate, looming like a human Gibraltar, and frowning. The dainty little lady _|ehucked him under the chin, patted him on the cheek and said in a chirpy voice that was audible in the remotest never have been appvinted to the po- lice force. corner: When he was called up for sentence |. int you the handsome lark, though? to-day, his lawyer, Mr. Reilly. made a| pq just love to kiss you! plea for clemency. He said that Daw- SAO iE Conant: fp ann kins had lost his wife, his position on the police force and h's citizenship, te. Passing ned a languish. | over th fell almost through the aisle she tui The plea had no effect upon the Court. l sf ‘this man,” sald Judge Dike, “used | ing glance on an elderly lawyer that | his position as a policeman not for | made him squirm an eel, Reaching the protection of the people, but for] the bench, she cast another Janguishing look upon Magistrtae Breen and cooed; “You lovely old darling! I could hug you!” “111 fine you for contempt of court If | you do,” spluttered the Magistrate, | wriggling before the soul-kiss glance of the prisoner, | Calls Magistrate “Nice Old Man.” | “Um, um, but you're a nice old man,” | hia own profit. He was a jallbird and an associate of crooks. He used his police uniform as a sileld to conceal his operations as he preyed upon the community. Put Taint on Force. His Offense is the more serious when. it is considered that he has not only put @ stain upon the records of the but has im- police foros ot Uileaaity, ran on Mrs. Schultze, at which the, paired the confidence of the people in Court hammered his thumb with his tie integrity of thelr police officers. | gavel and ordered the case to proceed Fortunatel, cases suc as this are eo rare. I know that the good men of Th clerk) tried 50 toad ne < hares [Of OO ee tient cane tne {grand larceny, whereupon the prisoner prisoner adaquately puniehed, turned such a hewitching pout on him that his tongue seemed to trip up and y Steinbruck and choke him derburg and Laughlin, ‘atrolmen Wen- who worked up Capt the case against Dawkins, were highly| “You must stop this go0-goo busi- complimented by the Court. ness,” thundered Magistrate Breen, —_—- where is the complainant?” MANKS_DENTIOT : he complatnant appeared in the per- | Gun Aven 8 'W. Cor, 1a) Bt, New York #0 on of Otto Hallberg. Otto deals in |nand for a mpment vutter and eggs on Si avenue, ts fat and has the face of a pink cherub, He was {n such evident distress for a moment that the Court went to his assistance, t did she do to you »o-gooed me," burst from Otto's nouth gooed you?" gasped the Court cried Otto. "She goo-goved me out of a watch and locket. It was somehow like this. I was putting up egg when she looked in the door and made suc an eye on me I was bewitch- he hypnotized you, you mean t quite so much as that," flound- ered Otto, “It was ordinary sg00-go0, lke notice now. Make her tum her face around, Yonr Honor, or I can't talk. I get a feeling that makes mb foolish. It was so that day m Novem- ber, She come in to me and makes me break a dozen eggs, 1 didn't know nothing under that goo-goo, She says to me. ‘Ain't: you cute! chuckles my chin, Then she takes my wateh and She s locket away, and I let her, ‘Ti bring it back to-m: don't get It She £oo-goe ey out of me, I guess I'm like a from all that o0-00. No. Should Be in a Foolish College. The Court hid too. acker his: face bel and shoc ‘Phen the bewitching little his nt chill spoke up. 2 with ny bridesmaid’s mother nth tight ne: eggs. 1 thou he was just anything, so rosy and pink and fat. He took me out walking on ne drive and gave me $40. He suid I like to give you all my w you look at me like t rowed % back from think use, Jud charg again be in a foolish co “What did you do wit snapped Magisuate Groen “Why 1 just pawned it got $9 on it” “And my locket with Lena’s picture. added Otto, breathing heavily Otto's too cute f¢ me. this He ougat t n his wat for fun and ‘The Court was about to pronoune judgment, when @ tall man w w Ing beard rushed down the aisle to ward the gate “Vait me ried the new ar-{{ rival Phere's a petticoat mit ruftes.” n, see who's her p prisoner; “and his breege-c too. “pilenc Court. roared the after he (Continued on Second Page.) 4 MARCH “HOW IKILLED MY FIRST INDIAN” First of a Series of Twenty Tales of the Plains InThe Evening World To-Day ‘ Circulation Books Open to All.”” Rain to-ntght; Tuesday fatr and colder. RESULTS EDITION PRICE ONE CENT. 2, TURKISH BATH LUNCHEON LTE ~ FAD 03 WO Mrs. E. Sankey-Jones Enter- tains Friends After Clean: ing Bath—All Don Kimonos, Turkish bath luncheons are the latest ad of the York Mor are out of date, clubwoman, Teddy and now, if you want to be really chic and swell, you must give a bathhouse entertainment New key dinners bear teas too, Di siete coment Io Shippy Attacked in His Home, Fights Desperately and Riddles Anarchist With Bullets, After His Son and Coachman Had Been Shot. MAYOR BUSSE AND HEAD OF POLICE DOOMED BY PLOTTERS. Assassin Sent by Group of Anarchists to Mur. der Both —Dragnet Out for Guilty Ones and All Street Meetings to Be Prohibited. CHICAGO, March 2.—George M. Shippy, Chief of the Chicago Police Department, to-day shot and killed an anarchist who invaded his home, wounded the chief, shot the official’s son, Harry, in the lung, and day started uy presidents ind bathe with » George bath- rooms were the scene of the r and there tn kimonos fair femininit ieid revel. Tt wns really a x- clusive, a8 well ag novel, affas, for every swel udies came fo the | annual 1 | a lea guest and t her to the frotel. Here they Kkly disrobed, donned kimonas, and the Turkish Bath Luncheon was on er immersing in the tub for a they asnembled in aining- room, where a dainty line was wore lee- ead. Bot be wed to ea ured on an woman to a rew verely he Amer! unsing bath. Mrs. nkey-Pones, in a Kimona of heetle hue, stood in the centre of the room and toll how to r th forty to kimonaed bepuffed guests: fitsu ai mutions came next, “Mrs. Sankey~ in a sheet, owing her listeners how to shed this too, too solid flesh by a few simpli eretses Among the Mme. Von Countess present were oness Von Ryline Margaret Riley, Miss BE Mrs Sara McDonald, Nifred Brook# and ait. « ed ladies n on ere troc Japanese were se air, while guests made es of Nippos. Turkish bath luncheon ‘ing as well ns novel. — | THRE BURNED TO DEATH AS SCORES is here, cle ESCAPE FLAMES | Fifteen Injured in Leaps From Long Island Dwellings De- stroyed by Fire. | | | PORT WASHINGTON, L, I. Mareh Jand fifteen others injured at destroyed three yarding-he |shore of Manhasset Bay several miles ) | from this plac Although the men met | thelr deaths yesterday . were | Coroner Weeks, at 0) place Lo0n r dead are Raffael Giulemelo, ployed. by in the sand banks at aboret ora dissing struc- nd floor, in the cent on the gr tw ue 4g Of the ot the whom y asleep, | the majority bad to jump from the |second story windows, One man break his back ald Sustain serious lives t > Bet he house in a injured taken to in ashes before the spot, they having a long miu over bad ' roads, ‘The cause of the fire ls not known, severely wounded the family coachman, James Foley. Harry Shippy is seriously hurt, Foley will probably recover, and the chief was stabbed lin the hand, his wound being trivial. The assailant was subsequently identified as a member of a group of Anarchists who have been holding regular meetings in the Ghetto district in the west side of the city. A friend of the police who attends the meetings in order to get information recognized the man when shown his corpse. He told the authorities that the man had been selected by lot and told to kill Chief Shippy and Mayor Busse. A box of lozenges found on the body of the slain anarcnist bore the name of the Trowbridge Confectlonery Company, Meadville, Pa. The candy in the box was sent to a chemist to be examined for traces of poison. The police believe that the assassin had provided himself with it as a means of possible suicide. Int view of the plot against the lives of Mayor Busse and Chief Shippy, the Mayor, it is reported, will issue an order prohibiting all street meetings in the city of Chicago. The order will be made general and include religious, as well ag political gatherings, it being asserted that in- flammatory speeches are often made at gatherings held on street corners, under the gufse of revival meetings. By making the edict sweeping it is thought probable objections to it on the grounds of alleged discrimination will be forestalled. i The assailant entered Shippy’s home while the chief was alone in one of the rooms. The man handed Chief Shippy a letter, but the chief was suspicious, grabbed and pinioned him while he called for his wife. There was. struggle, and the anarchist broke away, drew a revolver and fired $ Harry Shippy, who had run into the room. The boy fell to the floor, Foley, attracted by the shooting, rushed to his employer's aid. As the servant entered the room the anarchist aimed deliberately, and shot Foley twice. SHIPPY RIDDLES HIM WITH BULLETS, ‘Again tke Chief closed with the man and the latter turned on him with a knife, Shippy attempted to grasp the weapon and received a deep cut Some of the Exclusive Features of Yesterday’s Sunday World. SPECIAL NEWS ARTICLES W. 3. Bryan admita to Mssimino! leg. || Hlenarkable conclusions by a German Isiators the authorship of the oharse t that man as ortginully more felatore Ue tte inaking to bribe tae pant rere that an ativliieleaates 70 Denver obedl Hoowevel’s plana, to South ee cornorations. werabling: aie t to the comes ucla, Catia, American |Oriental Hank's beauty who fascinated the Shah of | testimony plow me Persia. iva friend, “Pat Garrett, who [John D. Rorkefelier's aa tiy, the, Kid,"" hot Head, Audion’ Tess up of the National Works in Brooklyn, Horace White's prediction that cuinmercial distress will soon ond Blowing “| tive and the world: THE WORDS AND MUSIC to “What Makes the World Go Row great song hit in Sam Bernard's new musical farce, “Nearly a Hero, 6,195 Separate Advertisements. The most comical and up-to-date “FUNNY SECTION” now being printed by any newspaper. A MAGAZINE SECTION, in colors, containing more than a score of filus- trated stories. HUMOROUS CONTRIBUTIONS by Roy Mc ers. A complete resume of the week's happenings in social, theatrical, figancial and sporting circles 72 Crowded Pages. Cobb 3 d oth- ardell, realty, u———_ .

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