The evening world. Newspaper, March 2, 1908, Page 3

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4 PAN AT FUNERAL OF SUN PRES Leo Heinrichs, Murdered on Altar by an Anarchist. 100 PRESTS TAKE PART. The Great Congregation i Tears as Dean McNulty Pronounces the Eulogy. 10,000 MARCH IN ‘The er Leo Hein- fichs. in priest who was] e@ssasvinated by a arc! at the Elizabeth's Church, In Denver, on 2 was held to-day from the Church and Monast | 6t. Bonaventure, in West Pater: The interment was !n Holy Sepulchre topic escinded, rdinary casket At the conclusion ¢ services it was tried from nh h on ‘the shoulders of six Franciscan Brothers and doposited in a hearse, The Catho¥c societies fell in behind the hearse, and then followed the crowd or 10,00 or more on the march to the } cemetery. half a mile away. Through i) the pouring rain, over the muddy roads, the immense valcade yround its way 1 to the crave. There the cere: i Wore brief and simple. The crowd stood ; raving as the coffin was lowered into grave, and Mngered \ the vicinity for hours after the mound marking the final resting-place Gilet had heen formed BY the raves imwers. } COURT AGAIN DECIDES FOR HARRIMAN IN ILL. CENTRAL, CHICAGO, March 2.—Judge Ball to- day denied the petition of P. W. Leman for an Injunction restraining the vot- dng of 21 ares of stock held by Union, Pacitic Ratirond and. the Rane fond Securities Company at the anni Meoting of the Iiinols Central torday Remarkable Tribute to Father | »| regard. THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MAKCH 2, | Left Hand and Half " Rubies and Pearls Are Merely Side Lines Indexed and Tabulated in House | .in Great Sartorial of Arbiter It is a question if Solomon in °* he was fully dressed up on a state occasion—such as adding to his col- \ lection of wives—as is James Buchanan Brady, of New York, fixed up} even in his working clothes. With half a million dollars’ worth of jewels| background for the gems, two hundred and odd suits, several hundred w istcoats, bales of cravats, shirts a! shoes to equip a small army. His penchant for precious stones has earned for the ponderous but} graceful Mr. Brady the soubriquet the “Rajah of y Out to strangers a with his own ideas of harmony is M Brady's house, street, is given of Mr. Brady's big safe for his are kept, nicely d indexed, and separated 7) suits of clothes are kept in cases with sliding glass doors. He has te floor ht storage has a In Mr. over te clothes, He ere spats and hats for every sult. nlets are kept busy caring for He orders thirty suits at he lays out a the | shoes pparel, Each morning dress ntricate as a melodrama. toilet articles are stones, His nd garter buckles ar aid with diamonds, ‘The buttons of his pajamas are studded with jewels. | At one stage of his career he had ferules of his a time BENS as enic plot © of Mr. F set wit su ender buckles {diamonds set in the anes. For one who goes in for all manner of valuable scarfpins, ext ry and ‘ watch fobs and the like Diamond Jim” 4g singularly short on He isn’t exactly short at that, wears more than two— The reason for unjust discrimination hands may be because and when one's fingets to- |rings. jbut he rarely one on each thts seeming! against his they are fat, |are rather short and close set gether it would not add to one's Ken- eral comfort to have them cluttered up with a lot of jewels. hand But the first cousin of the Koh-l- worth any man's left ha is A back memori of his ne of the glass knobs on AMshion mahogany sideboards. ‘There 1s a rumor that once when the Pinkertons were fighting the pool-room ace-track Mr, Brady sud- nat the y waved h Jesse Lewise caused a s hand ina ¢ n and the flash from disc of such upon a little diamond to be refi jancy bri hill just outside of Belmont Park that detectives thought it must be a the to the pool-room people and be- signal fan looking high and low for the con- federate within the course. ‘An inventory of Mr, Brady's dia me s and other jewels would make rare reading, but would require a spe ciai edition of The Evening World He has long held the record in this respect, but at the last supper of the Frare, at whicn A. L. Erlanger wa. the guest of honor, ‘Diamond Jim’ broke even his own record. Besides the salmon pink waistcoat that at- tracted all eyes, his ample being was Mberally punctuated with such a col- lection of gold and precious stones that no one was surprised his double-body guard, considering these perilous time: when burglary and holduppe! are two of the most popu- lar professions. “piamond Jim” {s not entirely in- spired with a desire merely to wear more jewelry than eny other man. ‘here Is, on the contrary, considerable claes to his assignment of the decora- tions, and his daily distribution of the baubles over his person shows him to be a man with a nice taste and some reeard for the effect of color scheme. For instance, he always wears cuff links, shit studs and waistcoat but- at Like This! Like this you may go To work every day, And at the week's end Draw plenty of pay, If you send to The World, Without further delay, A “Situation” Want Ad. Do it to-day 1 ~~ The Surest Way + | When in Full Regalia of His Position as New York’s Richest Clad Man. |\HIS 200 SUITS OF RAIMENT | TAKE UP ENTIRE FLOOR. sociey belle has better facilities in that direction. | Cemetery and ceremonies attend- ing the funeral we the most im I 4 ie dic a i ; | mi vatavaraieiikinuewnieries! , at his disposal at any hour of the day or night, Mr. Brady possesses, as aj St. Bonave s Church is a spa- cious edifice, but ‘t coul commo- | wa 4 n he n e crowd y ince noon yesterday, when the body was placed on a catafalque in the aisle of the ehureh, more n 20,000 Cathol ad passed and said a prayer, and t were 12.0 more on bh an hour be- fore the ceremonies began to-day Big Crowd at Church. new *» ‘The various sccleties of the eight n Wi ‘ fishes of Paterson were g ven t e ence tn the seat rrang nts. $ 8,500 people F » ero to th fy ed LN : whurch. Outside ‘ 00% t 7 tween £9) an ther: t fhe men with un reads, To many of the » ng thousa rw. Fether Leo was ily known. 1 twenty years he had worked as a priest | » | @mong them. He was sent enve: only five months arity | sceni es a priest « man, wit 2 the unprecede F Y ed his mur -} e | funeral servic Kable &. @nd solemmty The altar and 8 the church | parts of y f | ; this oity ’ h | | : which | dward Blecke, Pr y a t ciscan order in th Int t A an Congregation in Tear: | : ‘Tee venerable Dean MeN Paterson, who ty made only a rehy guard eeainst the spread o! “The peop! the he said, have been d we may from a platform. abolish to lect anaipaneint His First Cousin to the Koh-i-Noor. Noor that he wears on the third finger ing glance at St brings nversation | | Wears a First Cousin of the Kohinoor on a Pech of Diamonds Collection, Stored, of Elegance, all his glory was ever arrayed, when nd socks, and a suff nt quantity of | of “Diamond Jim.” He is pointed | Broadway.” \ Dressing in accordance} t. Brady‘s fad, and no prima donna or ,tons to match. The day after the| | Friars’ supper he wore cats’ eyes, set | | with chased virgin gold. ‘There is nothing small about butt links and studs, either. set that he wears with his dinner is formed of nuggets of gold set w: these One t h diamonds and rubies, Another consists of perfectly matched slabs of turquoise matrix, each fully three-quarters of an inch in diameter, and the effect of these startling blue stones in a double row on the portly front of his pearl xray or salmon pink waistcoat, as the) case may be, strikes the beholder with | awe such Garnets he likes very much, and | things as aquamarines, topazes and sapphires he has in abundance. i Gold Heels | Mr. Brac wonderful. | ble fs a figure of a horse galloping, sald ng the Ines of Gold | Done in Diamonds. 8 scarfpins are many and | jte be modelled al Heels, once “Diamond Jim's" |racer. Another pin h cart or coach with tandem, all in diamonds, One of his most unique trappings 1s \the chain to which is attached his key- ring, pencil, d which s. By comparison the Naulakha necklace of Kipling’s story resembles a string of cranberries on a Christmas tree. Of course, all the appendages of | uils chatn—the penknife, key-ring, | matchsafe and so forth—are of gold, and | nearly every one has the owner's mono- The pencil he | favorite! is a design of a two horses penknife and cigar-cutter must be very nearly two feet | gram set !n diamonds. carries might make a fine walking- | | stick for Major Doyle or Adolph Zink. | |Tt 1s of heavy gold, and tn one end there blazes a deep, glowing pigeon-blocd ruby fully % karats In weight—a stone said to be worth more than twice as | much as a diamond of its size would be. | “Diamond Jim's watch fobs are al triumphs of the jeweller's craft. Nearly every one bears some design reflecting ) the wearer’s fondness for the sport of racing. He has jewelled horseshoes, whips, bits, jockey caps and Heth | horses in diamonds, and when he ex | tracts his watch from his fob pocket it | Jewel encrusted case, combined with the brilliance of the fot always adds 100 per cent., more or less, to the illu-) | mination of any room he may be in. | | The other day Mr. Brady strode into! lone of the brokerage offices in Astor Court, where he spends a great part of the day, and seemed annoyed. He wore a white waistcoat with six but- tons, in each of which a diamond of considerable size glittered. There was a small spot on the spacious facade ot| waistcoat. “I got that at lunch a little while! ago,"" gtumbled Mr. Brady. “Now I've got to go home and change.’ “Oh, that's all right.” eaid Lester Doctor, “you just stay here for a few minutes. I'll give you $1.00 to let me take that vest to the laundry, produced the bankroll, the waistcoat HITCHCOCK TAIL AGN POSTPONED and he but didn't get The trial of Raymond Hitchcgck, the comedian, accused of mistreating little | girls, has been again postponed, It wil) come up in the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court a week from to-morrow. When the ease was called by Justi: Blanchard to-day ex-Assistant District- Attorney Henry Gray, who sald he rep. resented John B, Stanchfield, attorney of record for the actor, appeared and asked for a further extension of time as Mr. Stanchiield, he said, is actively engaged in the lof a case in th Federal Court. which will continu through this we Justice Blanchard asked Agsistant Attorney Frank Garvan who | ented tl secution, if he ha to the extensio fot be Krant | When Justice Dowling last Monday | fixed to-day for the trial Mr |Garvan, “it was underswo © dni was stl 1 eat Would KK over. ere are two motions in. this ase be Your Honor to-day—one t¢ Inspect the minutes or the Grand J and to tr ‘This was agri to Justice Blan- chard and the extension was granted. l effort to sia’ i Cain OF GoLo. SET WITS DIAMONO 5 —e EmMeRatns nr {4 Ruaies fp) iy, 9%, roam Pay td PIN -CO4cH ANP TANDEM. QF O/AMOND: A@ND RUBIES PIN REPRESENTING GOLOH@eLs IN Clan MOnOS 452 Aa) a ‘ “Rajah of Broadway,” Long Known as “Diamond Keeps His Half Million of Gems Backed With Gorgeous Garb, Oyj GOLD KNIFE WITH MONOGRAM IN DIAMONDS 17-YEAR-OLD BOY GLAD HE KILLED BRUTAL FATHE Had to Shoot to Save Mother From Murder, He Declares. His Constantine Pellegrino, an undersized, sturdy chap of seventeen y was a) raigned in Police Headquarte One of the most remarka-| +, be registered as arrested for patri-| cide, following the Killing of his father, Nicholas. last night in thelr ho: at No, 198 Twenty-third street, Brooklyn. After the boy had told, simply, ingen- uously and unemotionally, the story of the parent's studied and uninterrupted brutality to his wife and children for seventeen years, and drawn the picture of the tragedy forced by the father's his wife, the police were shocked at his calm declaration: “I am glad I killed him. It was a good thing I did it."” Stunted by Terror. “You see what a stunted little fellow I am," began the boy. ‘Terror did that—terror of my father from my in- fancy. Beatings, too, helped, though he usually wore himself out on my mother. As I look back, he beat her once a day, every day, since 1 was five years old. Whenever we heard his step on the stairs we all trembled with terror have a brother, Nicholas, shrunken end sickly, He is sixteen, Alfred Is ten, a little stronger, but the heart been scared out of him. Our who! has been a constant struggl threats, My here after I father was a cobbler. was born. He ma well enough, but gave little to us to Hive on, My mother washed and my grandmother worked out. They did this so I could go to school; also so they could send Nicholas to Italy fo his throat. But Nicholas was sent back to us, and my father beat mv m orher terribly because she had spent money to eave the boy's life. He beat Nicholas when he came back because he was too weak to do anything. Boy Supported Father. “But I kept along in school. My | mother and grandmother bribed him to permit me to go on. I did well, and was the youngest boy to be graduated with my class. Then I went to the Clinton High School, and in the after- noon peddled leather to shoemakers. The money I made at this he took from me. At last he made me leave school, saying: ‘You know too much now. You know more than I do.’ “Then I got a Job as interpreter for a big contracting firm. I went to the hos- pitals, where their workmen were taken after falls and accidents, and got these men to sign releases. They paid me $9 a week to get these sick and broken men to sign away any claim against the contractors, “My father made me give him $7 of that money. With what was left I got my mother some clothes. He never bought her any, and she would have gone naked had not the people she washed for given her things “1 gold real estate, wee:s made $218, My father took every penny of this, What he did w (53 don't know, He had got to beating my mother twice a day lately—when he came home to dinner and when he came home to super, He charged us all with trying to poison him, and would not eat s we all ate with him, He made us te the food first Yesterday we waited for htm until; welock the afternoon en my jother said we should wait no jonger. Ve ate. and he came he aw that we had ¢ my nother with a piece H topped w he nels wohim and w out again lock he returned “He grabbed my mot Iragged her by it. ar He was dragging her towar room, and L knew what His volver was there. So | sprang fore him. T got it and t iron him trigger, don't know how tim [was shaking aud trembling, and wild with fear, 2 | | | | s to-day | ge Gorn DIA Jim” Brady, | CANE SET wire 1905- | HEADED : . Sly MONDSs f— SET OF 3 SHIRT STUOS. EACH 'S OF VIRGIN GOLD. AN INCHIN DIAMETER ANOS sé7T With DIAMONDS ANOS RUBIES. 6 GOLO BUTTONS with DIAMONOS AND JES. HORSE IN DIAMONDS WITH RUBY @NO EMERALD ove. GoLp SLEEVE , LINKS WITH DiAmonods AND RUBIES. fj dy THROWN OVER PARK WALL BY riOLD-UP MEN W BROOKLYN Two Well Dressed Highway-! men Beat and Rob An- other Victim. Charles W. Gallaer, of No. 803 St. John's pla Brooklyn, who! ad been visiting friends near Prospect Park, started for his ortly aft idnight. He passed e park wall and was turning t when two men suddenly upon him, e are in need of what money you hav one. Gallaer saw that both men we dressed better than the ordinary. wore black, well fitting overcoats and spoke almost kindly have no money,’’ replied Gallaer. “I have less money than most an body.’ He laughed as he walked on, A moment later the two men, both of whom wore rubbers, crept up behind him, and as he turned he was felled with a blackjack ‘The two men fell upon Gallaer and beat and kicked him until he was in- sensible. “I felt the two men raise me in their rms and carry me to the park wall, the next instant 1 was hurled space,” saii Gallaer, robbery to tio police. into in reporting the “I don't know how long I lay in the bank of snow, but when I came to my senses I began to yell. “I yelled until I was hoarse, and nm a man who was passing on the street came to m He assisted me to the station-ho: , and there I di covered that what money I had, which was not much, and my watch and chain were gone." ‘ Frederick W. Haynes, of No, 07 Washington avenue, received similar treatment from, probably, the same two men only a few nights ago. People are asking where are the po- Hoe? and in eighteen FIRE MARSHAL PROBES INTO TWO BIG BLAZES. Loss to Street Railway by Car Barn Fire Placed at $2,500,000, Fire Marshal Peter Seery, under or ders from the Commissioner, is invest nat dest gating t s barn of the New York © Ninety-sixth street and Se and George Grote’s One Hunared and Si the ast River, Saturday 1 3 ste oted: game time in the ca barn while tie paint fact ere atory paint factory Was $125,000 THRE MEN FAL NTO STEAMING TANK OF BORA {All Terribly Scalded by the! Liquid and Are Likely to Die. Three workmen—Joseph Wassag, Jo- seph Salsag and Joan A. Washan—fell {into tank full of borax and hot water Jin the Calmo Borax Company's factor lin Jersey City to-day and were so ter- |ribly scalded that it is not probable I they will recover. The tank brimming with steaming liquid, the three men were working {mmediately over !t on @ Wassag, who was the and }piank s retched across. is twenty-eight years old, was the first to lose his balance. In turning is foot | slipped over one side of the plank, and i tumbled into the decry he tank, the water closing over his head. with a lou | His two compantons, horrorstruck at | }the sight and lis disappearance into lene scalding fluid, lost their composure. | and that, they were valance. Grap Turning this way una to k FELL TO DEATH AMID CROWD OF WORKING GIRLS, Window Cleaner’s Body Grazed Young Woman in Fall on Fifth Avenue. THRONGS FLED IN PANIC} Horror at Presbyterian Build-, ing Sent Many Specta- tors into Hysterics. When Fifth avenue was,crowded this | morning by people going: to work, girls | and women principally, Michael Tracy, a porter, fell from a window of the fourth floor of the Presbyterian Bulld- | ing, Twentieth street, striking his head | on the pavement and was killed. The accident was seen by hundreds of girls, and thoy became so hyster- | fcally excited that those who did not) attempt to crowd around the unfor-| nate man’s body ran screaming in| every direction. | Tracy was cleaning snow from the sill of the window, which has an un- usually wide ledge and which ts on the Fifth avenue side. He omitted the vi caution of using the strap for window- cleaners, an} it is supposed he slipped on the snow. The porter fell over backward and plunged head first downward. Miss Clara Hoffmeister, who was passing on her way to work, was grazed bv the falling man, and when she realized what had happened sho rushed screaming into the buliding. Ther ste told the Janitor of Tracy's fall, d when they went out on the street they found Po- Noeman Scheffler having great diffl- culty in keeping a crowd away from the man's body. Dr. Foucar, of the New York Hosp!- tal, sald Tracy had met his death «q@ guickly that he probabi er realized what had happened to him. Tracy was thirty-five years old and was married. He lived at No. 457 West Twenty-seventh street. os FERRY-BOAT RAMMED BY TUG NEAR SLIP. ‘The Fulton ferry-boat Clinton was rammed amidship by a tug to-day just after she had left her Manhattan silp. Her dozen passengers got a bad scare, and the teams she was carrying started f& stampede when the crash came, but there was no damage done to her hull or upper works. The tug, the John Worth, dii not come off so well. Her nose was badly broken, Capt. O. Benjamin, of the Clinton, | said the collision was the tug captain's fault, as she failed to give him a clear way as the Clinton left her slip. ao FATAL CRASH OF ICE BOATS. WATERTOWN, N. Y., March 2—In a collision of iceboats running fifty miles an hour upon the St. Lawrence Ri opposite Clayton Roy O'Brien, aged eleven years, was almost instantly kil yesterday, and his comp Ho Roswe Snerman, thirteen years of age, was badly injured. ae ——— Solid Gold Eye Glasses $1.00 a Pair Generally Sold at $5.0) pling vainly at each other and at the plank, they fell screaming after Was- | ag into the tank | The men’s cries brought othes work- men hurrying to the tank By means of hooks and ropes the three men. | unconscious and horribly scalded, were! drawn out. They were taken imme- diately to the City Hospital. The three men live together at No, 229 Pacific avenue. | nS | HUT BISCUIT Kina of Breakfast Passing Away. The old-time hot biscuit played a prominent role in the breakfast bill of fare, along with fried potataes, and eggs, and coffee. seth whiter and lighter the biscuit the more nleased the cook, which w: usually Mother, who did the best she could, with her understanding of the matter. But most people have learned in yous that white flour lacks the nourtsiing elements of the entire wheat perry, and many cases of im- perfect nutrition follow its use, In Grape-Nuts all the food elements of whoat and barley are used, and this largely accounts for results sim- to hose given in the following etter: : “T wish to tell ef the health and rengih-giving properties of Grape- recent Nuss. Lam years old, and had for years been afflicted with indigestion and other stomach troubles, brought on by eating hot biseult, white bread land improperly cooked cereals, | “Noticing ah advertisement stating the benefits. derived from cating |Grape-Nuts, I was sceptical because iy had tried so many so-called ‘health! Hfoods.’ I thought it would ve useless to try Grape-Nuts. “put during the Inst etx months I have been eating It, my stomach has the best for years, my mind . my nerves quiet and a feeling goyaney pervades my whole t ing. “This T attribute to.Grape-Nuts, as T have lft off using medicines. 1 now firmly believe In the brain-clears| eadying and muscles ties of Grape-Nu ier than T have been 180 Ibs., which is ame given je Creek, Mich, 1d to Wellville, For This Wee every partic tracne "sw only $110) to pas, t h glasses are universally eold at $5.00 pair. And I also guarantee that the glasses you get from me will be absolutely. « ect In every particular For more than 20 vears I have been fitting thousands of the best people. in the elty with eyegiasses, among them. many noted physicians T have more than 50.000 letters from people for whom I've made & thanking me for the benefit to their si thar my qlasece have given them. “These [tere will be ehown to any. one on re: Quest. "My ‘ocullsta will examine tas tyes and give you advice without oharge, Stores (2) Stores near 4th 106 E. 23D ST. vxe" NEW YORK 54l Fullon 8). teetav.**!° BrOOkIyn Patterns | are now on sale at the store of Simpson Crawiord Company where every style pattern we make may be had. ALL 10c. EACH No others so good a* any price. Other stores wanted in localities where we have none. SEND FOR OUR CO-OPERATIVE PLAN May Manton Pattern Co., 432 to 142 West 27th Street, NEW YORK. | i] BORDE:! r |Style A—Waters Upright An artistic piano of the highest grade, celebrated for fine tone Jand great durability, one of our leaene and most popular styles, only _ $250 |$10 down and $7 monthly until) jpaid. Also 'Style 85—Chester Piano 7'5 octave, 3-stringed, over- strung bass, fullfiron frame,ivory ‘keys, fine tone and handsome icase. Warranted six years, | $190 on payments of only | | $5 Per Month without interest. Stool, tuning! and delivery free. | | Send postal for catalogue with reduced prices and terms on the! Waters 3-Year System giving you three years’ time on} a piano without interest. ‘Horace Waters & Co, Three Stores: 134 Fifth Ave, near 18th St. 127 We.t 42d St.,nr. B’way) Harlem Uranch (Open Evenings) | 254 W. 125th St., nr.8th Ave.! BORDEN’ PURE ILK 8 Cents Per Quart BOTTLED IN THE COUNTRY From heathy cows, properly fed and cared for, in sani | tary surroundings The milk is safe- guarded at every turn, transported in refrigerator cars, delivered in sealed glass bo'- | | tles, and reaches the consumer's door pure, rich, fresh and wholesome. One Quality —The Highest. "S CONDENSEDMILK CO. “Leaders of Qua:it EST. 1857 SY H. NIELAND Co. 67 WEST 23D_sT. SLIP COVERS. allowing t Suits in ection, If une n with samples FLATS & APARTMENTS TO LET. improves theap. WORLD WANTS WORK WONDERS

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