The evening world. Newspaper, May 5, 1908, Page 3

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MANICURE GIRL {COLLAPSES UNDER CHARGE OF THEFT Denies Stealing $3,000 Jewels. but Admits She Supports Ex-Policeman. PATRONS MISS GEMS. Many Wealthy Flatbush) Women Make Losses Known After Ring Is Pawned. adie Papps, the Flatbush manicure who was arrested after the disappear- fance of thousands of dollars’ worth of Jewelry from the homes of her wealthy patrons, appeared to be in a condftion bordering on prostration when she wame to-day to Brooklyn Police Head- quarters to be examined before the formal arraignment in the Adams Stree: Court. With her in the patrol wagon @ former bicy- 310 Btate street, where she rested. The tall blonde girl, naturally pale. was as white as ohalk. Her limbs ghook 80 that she could hardly walk from the wagon across the sidewalk (0 the door. Once inside, she sank into « ehair. A policeman entered the where the two prisoners had placed. He was on his way to take a priaoner to court, and in his hand he angled a pair of handcuffs. Miss Papps caught a gilmpse of the steel bracelets as he approached. She leiped to her been woman kep had her ! ler and I sa Tearned. He except what Bed as hi @s a man for me cent on me have aver- m my work need was there had all the ack FOWN, Was 4 mode decorum, and her hi fined the wives and da mer t Three weeks ay of Benjamin Ku Twenty-stxth str Mrs. Kno Jewel Loser Vouched for Honesty Mr. Kn es ic 4 toa detective agency iW pu e cas 1 Lands of an ¢ 1 « ¢ neighbort 1 One the mar and Miss 1 Haus the J Mere earryine 4! | money on | Hausler } a voor an vorced { ough and overstayed: bis | sence, and Mercer said to-day that, In to Mrs. gn M ese women, \ @laimed, » patrons of Miss Pap; Se eS ROOSTER KILLS BABY. ) CHATTANOOGA, May 5,— | Max Crockett, jr. # months old, ied at Lewisburg vesterday of wounds { Inflected by a rooster, The child fell ) fm the vard and the rooster attacked | him. sinking his spurs repeatediy into] the child's head, need a Typewriter, need it right away; should get one through World ads.— U won't have much top That’s the Wisest Way feet and cowered in a corner. Shrank from Handcuffs. “Please don't put those things on me." she becced. hands Behind her. “i qwoul! die with shame ff you did that. I won't try to get The policeman laughed and walked on. A little later, when she was or- dered to face a for the Rogues’ Gallery, she fainted The photograph a@he had part! resovered before he could go ahead with his work. I ler, stolid accepted the up and the of the Heltillon _THE EVEN —Ss Diplomat Explains How Faise Report: That He Had Got Off the Cart | After Two Years of Total Ab- stinence Got Started. GUEST AT A A _FIRELESS MEAL. By Nixola Greeley«Smith. Wu Ting Fang has not fallen off the water wagon. He told me so himself last night at a banquet of uncooked food spread in his honor by Eugene Christian, the food expert, of No. 7 East Forty-first street, and Mrs. Christian. Moreover, he proved it by sipping a glass of fruit punch (of course, unfermented) at the banquet, and by celebrating the vir- tues of vegetarianism end hibition in a long and interesting speech, But even before we had reached the first course of the wonderful uncooked menu the Chinese Min- TOLL CRELLET. ister had to me privately and ut- terly repudiated a recent tale where in it was told that at Philadelphia at a banquet he had deliberately fallen | off the water wagon into a seething sea of champagne. | “It is not so,” protested Mr. Wu, in his precisely excellent English. “I| ‘did not drink anything. I have not drunk anything for two years. 1 requested that at that dinner 1 have only mineral water, but in order not to appear conspicuous, I let the waiters fill my glasses with champagne. I {did not touch it, but that is how the report was started. “Sull in China, many people drink champagne now. We even drink tt !n the morning, which !s more than you can do here. But that is one of the few Western customa I am sorry | some Spanish when I was tn Ma !rid. 10 wee the Chinese people adopt.” hen | Ik ts easy for the Chinese to learn other languages, for Chinese is the most dif- ficult of all. You know there is no re- semblance between the apoken and the written language. An uneducated man knowing only the spoken tongue would hewe difficulty in understanding a Chi- nese book if {t were read to him." pro- jas T knew he would, Mr. Wu turned interviewer. Wu Aske Questions. The guests of Mr. Christian's ban- quiet, some fifty persons prominent in the Iterary or commercial world, were! Just then dinner was announced, And standing about !n groups in the usual| the guests proceeded to « flower-laden stato ot before dinner expectancy and| @ning-room where for three hours or csvarvel more they unravelled the follow! Mr. Wu, so the c..nese Consul, Mr.| Mysteries (none of them cooked). Ho, who took me in to dinner, Informed je In to Twentieth Century Menu. me, was not In his official uniform. T at he had on: a smoke gray (Grated Pears une and trousers qf heavy eatin, with | Ripe Oltyee aren ts i) urge, loose sleeves of the d StuttadHrsae ote ys, We, Selene Hearts side of maroon satin, On his Peoan Meats ‘Salted “Aimonte was a ack si. skull cap with a gmnt red Wafers, y sot in the centre over the fore ober t Butter Uke a huge aster t Cake. more 1 had told Mr, Wu my age ay igi Wiercied and | ecorations at this dinner were ong I had bi vg for The W unusually charming. The desserts w all in response to questions—he s: excellent, but as I been craye women In a are so eet fort y for my fi | ail of you so @Poounter with uncooked food by a sever, ‘To 198 a sirloin steak just for a newspaper requires great DINE to the banquet, 1 don't really about the rest he thanks of a much-abused Pe the vegetable dinner there w: to the Minister, saying, ches, The toastmaster was Jc 1 pduced ine Mut I didn't think you would ay gracefully ¢ newspaper women. You Som & e Letter S have them tn China! | = peeches “Not pied Mr. Wu, with ap- Mr. Christian told the “Why parent nee, ‘but we have many joked banquet. In addi women sof grea nt. The far, nceen s have gone A atching up. She may to the Manche A e sald also tha fot a iu iwil be prson had bi ex} a dee tteharevara auert pected, but that the doughty Kentuck ane fan had taken fright at the word the wily Wu was not de cooked.’ Col. Watterson nad told mitted to the least eritieal word, |@ story of a meeting bein 1 he sald, “I think you have and some Confederate colone soul stopped polltely to walt for China to ville, at which the famous editor had sh tip. In the fable {t was different sed to » something on the The tortolse won in the end because round that he whereupon the hare overestimated himself and |colonel from Mississippi had denoum ne him in these te: ‘This was the first of several bits of | Sir, you are Sur aiplon Mr. Wu evinced throughout your cour fon cipe you know t utioned Kea eucnt isi rame ur Bib! onee, tha Sunilecty as talking to hice eee phe weet ! vanes ember of a millionalre family wa 4 Serkine Gilman f you ever been here before?” was the first question the milllo asked of he man whose name hi na house- held word since hls first coming .to Wak Washington years ago. al Suffrage Leng Mr, Wu gave no sign that he was the raw food festival momentarily in | rum the noise of his fame @ suffra by sayin) had not reached his questioner. He aus tuok away nawered blandly that he had been here Weman her cookst A several years ago, and then a man who pensatie H. ¢ little group made a re- the Chine had joined the and the t and Mis: mark comparing Japanese he Chinese are so much of "The Castle i mere honest’ he sald, to which f r ive interesting talks. Th ed: Elbert’ Hubbard, who made IL I know of thom ts that they are speech of the ¢ I hate to have to ‘They are so rules for keeping w 1 breathe. Infinitely more polite interview any Japanese. rude to wot i Perhaps, en hazarded Mr. Wu blandly hey are puffed up. ‘They have won| two great victories, It {8 natural they should be puffed up.”* j he work habit tthe study ha t toward us. They haven't licked ee ehallove habli us!’ I retorted in the vernacular, | at, Hbbard’ was: followed by, tin "No, but they are anxious (0 try." ligtor Wu, who talked on “Uncook said 9 famous Woman poet standinit Food.” near, -——>—____ idently we were getting on thin lee for a diplomat, for Mr. Wu became sud DEATH OF BABES DROVE a 5. ING WORLD. TUESDAY, 1905 Wu Sticks to the Water Wagon,and Even Banquet | (PE DIAMOND Of Uncooked Food Fails fo Loosen Grip on Seat GOFS Ti SULTAN | oJ FOR $200,000 French 3 geen Hs ost aly re ae Os > 5 lange MOS Sata es Purchases Turkish Ruler From Frankel’s Sons. Syndicate Gem for MARKET HERE. This and Other Deals Witl) Clear Financial Atmosphere | for Four Big Concerns., | | The fanous Hope diamond was pur- shared to-day from Joseph Frenklin's | Sona by a syndicate of Parisian dia-| | mond merchante for about a paarter of a million dollars, ‘The syndloate ts sald | to have made the purohese for the Bul- tan of Turkey, The Turkish monaroh was known to have ‘been in the market for the gen for several months. ‘The sale of the Hope diamond and | other hig deals In gems that were con- summated in Paris to-day wili cloar the financial atmosphere for the four | bla ew York diamond houses that were ompelled by thelr embarragsments last January to appoint truatess in liguida- tion. ‘These concerns are the Joseph | Frankel's Sons’ Company, Joseph vrankel's Sons, Gattle, Ettinger & Hammel, all of No. 876 Fifth evenue, | and E. M. Gattle & Co. of No. 420 Fifth avenue. Caused Their Embarrassment- It was atated at the time these four concerns were placed in the hands of trustees that the Hope diamond was| jem important factor in their embarra: ments. When Simon Frankel brought the gem to New York eix years ago E. M. Gattle went down the bay in a tug to WU TING EANG, LY ROMD TICKET FRANK GOULDS CHOPPER FOUND RECONCILED; Ah [EAD AT POS) AT HOMIE AGEIN le After an Argument with Two Passengers Who Escaped on Train. |cneet him and made an offer for the| amond, which was refused. The} price at which it was held here was | $250,000, Simon Frankel brought the Hope dia- mond to this country in the fall of 1901. He bought the gem from Lord Francis Hope through Adolph Well, of Landon. The purchase price, it was stated at the time, was $150,000. The Frankels offered {t for sale here to various American | millionaires for $250,000, but were unable to find a purchaser. si, . hy Hope Sold Gem- Milli 7 ue e | Why Aillionaire Leaves Hotel and| ,..4 wrancis Hope inherited the aia-| >tUrns ife | bond from his mother, to whom it had Returns to Wife and | been left by her father, Henry T. Hope, hild | well known banker of Amsterdam. Children, Tord Francis Hope, at the time he offered the diamond for eale, was said " to pe on the verge of bankruptcy. The The police of the West Thirtieth street! Frank J. Gould and his young wife, Fri eis heard of his pilght, ‘and police station are fnves om he has been separated for! simon, sireli went (toeLondoni tole: death early to-day of J several weeks, and who has served him! gottate the purchase of the world fam- ee on the downtown papers In an action for legal sep-| ous sem. Lavaslee aba eset : Cea CHE HAVE: vimere, The Hope diamond welghs 4 1-4 fib tan ae tg carats. It is of w brilliant sapphire | elevated rall-’ up." and to-day Mr. Gould Is sald to Pe 071°" out “cusnion shaped,” and ta] road. Glennon was twenty-eight, and at his home No. $34 Fifth avenue, with! 2.0") one incn square, with slightly ised at No. 774 Ninth a Pere eae cee Se York trom Touried comera, Its color ts unrivalled Jennon’s death appears to have been Ings, Va waere he went two #mong the Jewels of the world, and for of a century verlous by the excitement due to tere had been served with the} thtee-quartera oe have coveted It. the strenuous | It was stolen during and cult| : days of the French Revolution _tielsete to-day [ four sicnes, the larger 1 was coming in, Wich is the Hoge diamond. ‘Th Pirie | diamond and the Brunswick diamond, e latter owned by the Duke of remember what t oked tike, ile saw them hurry corner, and then he he E a PE UIE CR MA ere a tera Si Ors SB Ese, a Sneath . wel mm the criginal stowe rent 1 the new tick HH j ankels lave held the gem aud. x fh country many millfon ut as the troubi Ne sotiated for ity purchase, A cea wld be ed upon. ie j witb, J) HIN, ex-sen- aay a : A. Clarks J.P! Morgan erly and the tra } other wealthy Americans A man who had been a 1 with t nkels over ad up to Kirk's win { - of the diamond from time that Ucket choppir 1 famous ene with whi ours Ving he sil; mond. taket rank are. t vok hin over y i, Dudte nan. San ah, Im-| ‘© Woman Draws Butcher Knife and Jaogers thine the Lt and e, By that pished. 1 Across Her Throat and Falls an huddled at t a > ‘ t of three steps 1 Dead Running: ping box, He did ne — is aking him, found ingen than the Kohin: a CHIEF CROKER HAS MAN ARRESTED, PHILADELPHIA from temporar th Met sulelte ¢ rs KILLED HIMSELF FOR ue umitted SAKE OF HIS FAMILY. Nossal star: In. ey nasths THEN LET GO Se fe r throat wh 4 butcher Knife he was getting too old to > circumstances: Fire Chief Croker was too bu an ong Vin supporting hits yc 5 BOF ERGs nye sWering alarms of fire to-da appear wife and two eluldren, John Wild deatanate wae pth Saree Peter Fearon, of No . efferson xLTeCt, ee ae er Anslaw,: wh motorman of an Elgt t himself througn the heart “N08 sik ochys eth) car, who blocked heard her get out As he ‘i to-day. x ie ; ihe mobile late last nigh Wilde had been tn bad } a sviectee U “ y peeding to a fire in the mor it a Hy) i ra “Stores Company, at ww a oy ay ed te mee he vadway and Forty-second street, and Woundr Ne His wife nS Z EF he asked that Fearon be discharged much younger tha and there ei undeed xa Is, Mrs. Me- i a omy dropped dear fivat vat shiet ¢ liomy on iday made a ALS LSA REL ET er ‘siste op: Croker started from his quarters 4 r wiltoll site ¢ ned stre ghth street @ troll Ilys elry among her nie a by despe t t a Witteh to be kept 0: y, and. by despera fight the family did not belle ollisi Hee commit sulc y enough to call to Genly, ssed ina framed phot. graph | WOMAN TO SUICIDE. on the manteiptece | co A i ‘Ia this your pleture?’ he | se invesih When I gave a nogative answ aera Melee ung. gravely continued his catechism. LT getab Aico Nat taal PSA APEC RE Melek, of No. 1208 Avenue A, who com- ‘No, I went to a. conven! mitted suicide with strychnine last They teach well in convents, You | DIN (he pollee reported to-day th |know we have now tn China public §rief over the dente ot ner teres a | wchools where boys and girls go. lEng- Mrs. Melek's third child, a baby, died Iish $s taught, Many people In China| a few weeks ago. Since’then she nas heen do:pondent. The husband Is 89 speak English, I learned English in] been depo y his wife's death that he, China and afterward perfected it in’ too, threatens to take his life and he England. I know some frenoh, I learned tn being watched closely. ! ——_—— Mebonough to arrest ta VETERAN BANKER DEAD. { KILLED WIFE AND HIMSELF. \ Bartana AUBURN, NOY. May 6.—Edward,H,| DENVER. May 5—Durten Koch, a Tehascarenentey avery, for half a century prominent In! momber of the city Fire Department obile wo fright banking and ¢ cia! circles, shot and kilted his wife, Louisa, wound- aot himselt “and wed early to-day In. his -titth| ed Mrs. Matilda Motley mother, | supped. ont oF therspers year, He was of the o: committed ide ea to- | Re See rhe! ‘Department, to the mie Aubura Was May ra, Motley in aitempiing to) poitce station with the request he Aa Wy ate alpector: an Deiter received a alot in| poles station with | | {fporations and at the tme of his the left lex. A divorco was granted | "saron [oe (eMATEOE | on game the National rg. Koch in April but later she re- death was president of turned to her Bank of Auburn. aged. husben% | and ushe: TURKISH RULER WHO BOUGHT THE HOPE DIAMOND. Abdul Hamid Sultan Of Turkey: ARMED CITIZENS JOIN POLICE IN A FIREBUG HUNT Williamsburg Incendiary Starts Two More Fires in Heav- ily Guarded District. Seventy plain clothes policemen, under command of Capt. Bernard Gallagher, |. i+1, |patrolled the atreets of Williamsburg | last night watching for the firebug who |; has been terrorizing that section of the | heari city, and about midnight, after the in- cendiary had put the toreh twice to a crowded tullding, hundreds of men went from thelr homes and foined the policemen as vigilantes. All through the morning hours the policemen and oitizens walked the streets, and to-day every house had a watcher in front of It. Thirty fires, all declared to be of in- cendlary origin, have started in a sec ton of Williamsburg in the past few weeks. After the incendiary fire in Flushing avenue yesterday the fear of the people was such that few went to bed early last night. It was agreed In every ten- ement house in the gone in which the firebug has been working that some man would remain on wateh during the night. One man would keep watel inti] relieved by another Morris Kramer was on guard in the hallway of No, 220 Cook street, and the twenty families in the house depended ipon him to protect them, It was weli ent some of the home- tion Mr. Gould has been | #uropean mona i sp 4 we ae t use Hing at the Hotel Maza, It ts said} Lord Frnncis Sold It. Ne eee lee cet i Cre eiarits xpetyrday cand he Hope famity would not hear of ital 1%) COUERTOE Oe Oe on the groune early morning hours, home. Business requi ene He ne. x EATS) ote asleep in thelr rooms on the ground nye. dled: ma bi that ran | aalo until Le Ope wt INtO) oor, when shortly before 10 o'clock ‘ ; . and ie attic wing hin le went to his flat to see that all was Jumped’ s Wein! uddressifrom the Pluzu tw 3 pi] tase Bay geonorand) subsea ie well, He was gone only a few minutes. a viold gument with Mim enue, AY yore! » Duke of Newcastle, brother| Wien he returned he was met with « s f: ts sald further that he ‘phoned prevented the | cloud of smoke, ‘Phe incendiary seemed . ome friends j anna nond during the period|.o have been walling for the enanee answered the ‘phone there t man's $nfatuation for the /and had started a fire in the hallway : no are ett tim. actress. He was powerless to keep| kramer smotiered the Hames and de ; one w thea telephone number) the diamond in the family latterly: cided not to alarm the other tenants Kirk that some specu up) Sinep restored cons splendid sione was stolen from) He Was still on watch an hour and a n iyeddway” that t atly ple AL PAN, Gamera nof ant raja early in| half later when suddenly there was y ould’s famuy, and a Mrs. Gouid's teenth cen In 162 {t was! curst of flames from the second toy: dwa France by famous trav- | jailway. Peter Kolinsky, who lives on frst ay It then 2! that floor, discovered thia fire. it he i et office ti rune hy Naaedo aie een freshly lighted, and all about the downtow orm is out of HRY! are PEO SCD Me ee Ba collar of the | hail there was kerosene oll. paper nes box. which | decilied tu siwak for pAiioation n ihe walls nad been saturat Gem Stolen in France- Kolinsky tried to put out Wie ttn but fulled and began to yell "Fire! ants came from every flat at the firs and of alarm,‘ ud too nervous to sleep anyhow, and when they > met with volumes of smoke and jeat In the hall they closed the door ed their families to the fre- escapes. ‘The engines were called and the fire was exUnguished. Then the Mre Mar- al and the police began the ust stigation. How Incend: got ty the second floor no one could determina th BABY ASLEEP 1S SAVED BY UNCL? IN BURNING 110M]; Epstein, a flye-months-old wh) Sleeps so soundly that water cannot disturb hts one bit the worse to- t, when was carried from his burning ymour rgster, and No, #1 West One Hundred and ninth strec The house was all in flames Mrs. Epstetn yelled to her brother 1. Gabriel: oMy baby is here my to: Hi will be. kil Gabriel got to Mrs. Este agart and soaking a blanket in water 1 the sleeping Infant in it, Then his hrough smoke and nade and handed Seyi to his igther. ‘The baby ‘was lean: eetly The house baal NEW TREATMENT Bosse conus BUNIONS UTS cat uusts GLAD-PHEET Over - Night Remedy Coupon entitles : Bbndy to 6 days' free trial, Ask druggist Sheet of plaster and box of salve, 15¢ Send us name of FREE PS irugeists who DO NOT keep Glad- Pheet Corn Remedy plete treatmen Keene Co. 1) St, New York. free Klin DRESS- tenement | and we will send com- | | MAKERS ~ The nervous strain through which \dressmakers have to pass at certain jseasons of the year seems almost | beyond endurance and frequently {brings on nervous prostration, faint- ing spells, dizziness, sleeplessness jand a general breaking down of the jfeminine system, until life seems altogether miserable. For all overworked women there is one tried and true remedy. LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND , |restores the feminine system to a + strong, healthy, normal condition. Mrs. Ella Griffin, of Park St, | Canton, N. Y., writes to Mm, r) Pinkham: 3 “I was troubled for three years with * female weakness, backache, pains in my * side, and headaches, 1 was most mise ~* able and discouraged, for doctors gave me no relief. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- | * table Compound brought back my health and made me feel better than ever before.” ‘4 FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pimke ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregular- » periodic pains, backache, that ing-down — feeling, — flatulency, indigestion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don’t you try it? 1 Mrs, Pinkham invites all sick wornen to write her for advice, | She has guided thousands to health, Address, Lynn, Mass, t ” ities Clothing Co. 3 Stores, New York and Brooklyo, ae Dress Well on Our | €redié) Special Sale Ladies’ & Gentlemen’s Suits, “10 snr concern in the country |“ ler es or security. rs lone. from your heodsome new ma- terials, splendidly tailored, elsewhere 15 end ane, our price ....+ onfiden: Your Credit {s As Good With Us As Your Cash Elsewhere Lenox Clothing Co. | } 273 6th Av, near17th St. 2274 3dAv. nr. i 24th St. NY. Brooklyn Store, 1129 Broadway (Near De Kalb Av.) OPEN EVENINGS. 20th Se Summer Skirts ¥ YORK STYLES WL you ire ela non! wt_your td an you and bu 4a full aaving ‘ot one work fs masterful tn a” find our we give our promises in every, sb and Up. 100 Models. to y and fultt uner Skirts made from own material 1 colors, Newest Hi orders. r We mak AS houtes, HIGH CLASS Salat TAILORING CO. 56 East 10th St. EVENINGS UNTIL iited in, West of amaker's, 7.30, World Help Wants will quickly | ering to your docr the KIND @f workers that do things RIGHT. a " ’ at comeing yp esos

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