The evening world. Newspaper, August 7, 1908, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD, GAL LAOS WA 0 IY TTP BCTON OF PU We Will Fight to the End,” & Pretty Lillian Duretsky ld Declares. | | F MANY DISPOSSESSED. Strike on Paying Rent for Houses to Be Razed for Bridge Approach, | | | “Fre are going to fight, fight, fight! | ay landlords and the city needn't think | @aey can order us out of our homes and that i do as they say. As long as I have breath in my body I mean to urge the people of this district to fight against the we will calin! ijustice that the rich aro. in| poor fn evicting us from ow 1 shall fight them with all n vgth up to he last gasp!” This declaration came from the pretty Mps of seventeen-year watsky, kr t cess of the Ghet oorstep of her Forsythe street egiinst the New have been or trict to make way Imttan Bridge A thin! “Princess of the Ghetto,” Leader of the East Side Poor in Rent Strike leader, w wavy ha around her which snap of the end ac 5 Uttle Miss Dur wrongly named the pre Forsythe street Many Out The strike, Miss Duret her ds ar action of edict of City Mars ‘and his deputies t in the tenements cx to be razed next mont pay rent up to Sept. 1 wou face with aE att IM y Ag Mr Calmly overefour —TANges Business Affairs, Knowing End Is Ne in the Street. | Trumbull an families with ave family, Yesterday Cit ee shaar's deputies ser dred dispossess no r last hours hy a work went on as sp the white eat th In this. poverty- month before her poor families with th ath and inc ed her with the ' were can g on the rms of Mrs. Trum- | the deputies bad the wif Jessional golf player, Uttle homes many a family w Yat he “| Baldwin, fused to pay rent fc st month Mrs, Trumbull, as On nearly every str e disease devel- h markable as crowds had gathere claring that t for August and sa: a the elty should 1 f her ag 3 r tua- remaining four weeks, he tene ised, to usband and ments are padly in need of repe a pr repeated suppilcation unsanitary, They'll Stand Together, On the stoop of No. 7 Forsythe street "Princess Duretsky, surrounded Admiring throng, told World reporter all We do not mean um calmly, for it is ‘if we are, forced yesterday, when Coroner | Mtv should at Tatum, in Hempsiead, L, 1, / nonth’s ri 1a pe fort n of PRC UST MOREY of the wouan, had died! Ashes to Scotland. GEES CANE Her ashes taken to Scotland I,ly way we can de an’ buried in the | yard near t termined to do 1 t vh + hus isl ) show the city of ah aaneate eg CONn TE vor slum dwellers were s Ra | py by. and see in accordance a promise as old as teated, We mean to figh the! enewed by her] Sie Jwith o8 when she | ‘ a terrible STAMFORD CHIEFS TOO ie sven a Ntariel SWIFT FOR HARLEM. ‘ ve 2m clipped. buried In her nose. eeth “Please don't say anything about It," | Woman in Convulsions: Bnaree BF al y-fifth street sta | cat's dite developed until two week Se ee manson the elgars | 125, when Mrs, Trumbull was atri ‘ad. ‘ith nervoue prostration, " Policeman Helms oaught an rutomo- | RUN MNO Leena ane bile at One Hundred and bicventh | treating her for a stomach dise street and Morningside avenue after a chase of four blocks. ‘You are going at the rate of twen- ty-two miles an hour and you'll have | to come to the astation-house,’”” | sumed, tt was said yesterday, that was responsible for her collapse. grew weaker dally. Just #t dawn on Sunday last Mrs. sald) Tram 10 had been sleeping only Helms. | ateuliy, aroused her household with a “Pardon us," exclaimed Chief Bren-| goream, When her husoand reached nd great beads of her forehead and | jan, “but you do not know Look at this, Payer le who we are. | he and he displayed a badge than a foot wide. “And tl sald Chief Parker, playing its fire badge. “Pardon me, but Stamford ts a long way from the Bowery,’ sald Helms. “You fellows are elected to go to t station-house. Eltas Peabody, the driver, was tho | only one arrested. Magistrate Steinert held him {n $100 dail, her bedside t standing on dls- ft wae terrible,” moaned the | “Tt must have been a might- I thought the cat wis cn mv mare. face and tearing {t with all Its claws. Dreamed of the Cat. “It waa only a bat vream.” | | | sald Mr. Trumbull and, after qutetine lis wife ——_.__. as best he could, he telephoned for Dr Fi ar, a DOUBLE PLAY AT BULLETIN.) when the ohvatctan arctvod he was compelled to administer an opiate, Af- fanter’é Watch Caught by Pioke | pooket, Who Is Collared at Bag. Aa Edward Santer, who lives at No, terward the woman {d she felt ensier, | yot she complained every now and then of sharn palne in her limos. ‘ce tent only a fow minutes Sunday nieht. and Tl Willoughby avenue, Brooklyn, stood | the dawning of Monday found her in watohing the score of the hal! samo at | Convulalons, @ dullotin board in Centre street, he! Hypodermle injections were admin- x felt ha wateh and chain leave him | tered to Mra, ‘Trumbull, with the idea abruptly. He told Policeman Jamon Bul} | °* topping her agony, but Dr. Fletcher bout end John Murray was arrested | MERE # Well have given her #o much @ the charge of nicking Santer's pocker, | Water: As the convulstons went on they q According to the volleo Murray's host | becaine more vivient. Onco the woman ae | broke the grip of the men holding hor fae bah nd smashed a bureau, In (he succeed: micking, He ds thirty-Ave yeara| inm paroxy: jas Epnia and they terms and wave his addr Ne Soon afterward he bi one ovat ots a ls address she broke two chairs evens Sener she beat around on the . “NL BB ST IMPACING AFTER ATTACK oe ia) His Temperature Normal and}, All Danger of Complica- tions Has Passed. ROME, Aug. 7—Cardinal Gibbons 1s very mu and the worst | of his | tion has dis appeared. He slept quietly last night and ¢ morning his temperature was ormal, nformed of t BAER AT PLA HAS EXPEEI WORTH RELATING, hee After from Condition that Had Become Deplorable, Hippolyte Bonnafoux, head baker at the Plaza Hotel, and residing at No. West End avenua, New York Ct lates his experience with the prepa | tions now being Introduced In New York ! i = = : be laid to ges Heads of Police and Fire Depart.) °f 8 es i wae est as Mr. Bonnafoux called at the Riker | ments Found Badges Didn't | Mrs. Tr f et mee . cad store, at Sixth venue and Twenty- Permit Auto Speeding. jw aan sana one Se ce tacked | {ING street, Wednesday, and sald he had owned f ‘ ttac SS op aR AaTY Chief of Police Brennan is it. The animal ed at her have ICS ES cael Thiet Parker, of Stamford, Co veeeratemilesed sttjzand <torve part ot | ue Meee neces Lot 2 ; Bade Pes “4 bag ees un t oman with its aS ant a8 © New York to-day.on wings gecond clung to the woman every particle of food I took meant pain and misery afterward. Gas formed my stomach and distressed mie terribly. I had frequent spells of di; on at such times would frequently hav to catch hold of sornething to avoid falling over, I got very little sleep rest. What little food I did eat afforded no nourishme: and nervous wreck, I many ent physictans, but fafled to derive any benefit. I became utterly dis- couraged. A great many times I have on the point of giving up my po- as 1 felt unable to keep up 2 work, and lost ali Interest in ‘oundings two months ago I began tak- pers New Discovery. 1 don y 1 dought it, It was not be cause I had any great caiti in it, put I had heard so much about it that | finally concluded that I would take an- other chance. I am extremely happy that I did so. The first ten days [ failed to notice any appreciable {m- provement In my condition, but after taking the medicine for about two weeks J began to have a little appe- tite and did not suffer so much a eating my food. I continued the trea ment and noticed a steady improvement in my ¢ WA the thing | desire and suffer no ill effe I have tio gas_on my stomach, no digestion, and feel bright and cheerful, Delleve 1 am a perfectly well man y, but a continue the ja listle longer, as [ have n found a remedy that’ has worked w of callers meet 1 his assistants dally a Sixth avenite and T stroot. His medicines are Ing a tremendous aale, and their mo are becoming better known evary day. Tho Cooper remedies can be cbtained | ° Eight Years Relieved, nd! ae station, and and I was a physical | tried a great | medicines and treated with differ- ‘) was a pupil LOVE SCOR TRIES TO KIL FOUR OF FAMILY | _s Daly Wounds Sweetheart Then Turns Gun on Others, (LITTLE GIRL A HEROIN L and Ignores Peril and Grabs at | Revolver and Destroys Aim. To a combination of bad revolver and bad marksmanship Mrs, Catherine Nin- nie, her daughters, Cynthia, sixteen; Tessie, twelve, and her son, Tom, ten, of No. $12 West Thirty-seventh street, owe their ives, John Daly, arder in the family, was arraigned in the West Side Court to-day on a charge of ehoot- ing Cynthia In the right shoulder. Hoe spent the night in the Wost Thirty-sev- enth street police station, smoking cig- ling and looking at a ple ture of Cynthia, whom he shot because she refused to marry When arraigned Daly declared that he had been driven wild by too much He said that both Cynthia and the moth in love with him and arettes, whi him, love r were constantly quarrelled over Bim. Their quarrels because of thelr love for him. and jealousy of each other, he sald, had driven him to drink, He did not remember the particulars of the shooting, He got home in a surly mood and when they began to argue about mim, he sald, he drew a cun y blindly, Ho was veld in $1500 bail for trial, The young man safd that until recently he had heen emploved as a clerk at the Hotel Imperial Tesste the stster, toward saving the rushed brave! at held the deal she did a great family, for up and seized the hand the pistol, destroying alm as he tried to fire his last shot c nthia pretty brunette er a year ago at a pienic. nthe ago be became a boarder in family. Mrs, Ninnte frowned on er ebo revarded her daughter gto think of marriage uted me with his atten- declared Cynthia, “If he asked © marry him once, He was always I'm sixteen, and think I'm too young t oget married \ Threatened to Kill Her, “T went around to dances and Coney = FRIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1908. ais WIFE OF HANGED MIAN DECLARES He TRIED TOKILL neh Taxed Her With Loving An- Says Mrs, Lubarsky, \tter Reading Letter, FOUGHT FOR HER LIFE, other, Awoke Later, to Find nest of Man Suspended By “a Sheet, | An Investigation by Evening World reporter of the death, by hang- ing, of Morris Lubaraky, a well-to-do real estate operator, at his home, No. ® Osborn street, East New York, de- veloped the fact, according to theman’s wite, that he had tried to smother her shortly before his death, an Mrs. Lubarsky 13 a pretty, dark | woman, tall and graceful, and her story, notwithstanding the man’s brothers, Charles, Abraham and Benja-, min, say they belleve he was mur- dered, ts regarded as true by Police Captain Isaac Frank and by Coroner's Physician Hartung, who held an @u- topsy to-day | Jealously was evidenly the inspiration for suicide with Lubarsky, !f the state ment made by his wife contains the facts of the case—and neighbors bear out her account of the quarrel and ruggle at 3 o'clock Wednesday morn- ing. Taxed WIth Infidelity. | “T had been tn the country.” Mrs. Lubarsky said to-day to an Evening World reporter, “and I came home Wednesday. I noticed a change !n Mor- ris's manner to me and in the after. noon he told me what was the matter | He became terribly angry and I crew] afraid of him, although I was Innocent. ‘Here {s a letter to your lover,’ he said, showing me a letter I had written and not sent. ‘My cousin found {t tn your desk and gave It to me, What have! you to say? | ‘I explained {t to him,” continued the woman, ‘It was simple. I have an old! aunt in South Africa who !s very poor, and who always calls on me for help, I had given her all the money I had,! so I wrote that letter to a young man I know—an old friend of my family—and asked him {® he could help my poor aunt, That was all, He was not my| Morris seemed satisfied and that! | night went out with friends. “T did not sit up for him, but went to sleep and was awakened at about 2.30 o’ciock by a terrible smothering sensa- nd with other bovs and Daly used ton, Morris was holding a pillow over to threaten mo avery time, (ne ster |my face, 1 screamed and stromgled, wav, Thav let him) stay. on at the (and it wae long Umoe before he) would house because they thought he was foot. |Stop; then he picked up a flatiron and ing h get over it, Ho sald he would brain me if T ata not . Cy, cla Keep still, but I was so frightened that | | or Inaw better? I continued to yell ‘Murder!’ | E Wednesday night Cynthla went to Found Hanged by Sheet. [Genes Srele ni) Wii Anolnen ZOUNe Manis minally one wenucut ot teicvom endl When she came home Daly was walt: ia, there a while, afraid he would se A Se te aaa se come back: but he didn't, and 1 fell) Para SHRM SUe err Tate eiel|ieslespa Ladld nor ime kenundly a) Bathe isughedcand’ went tort i : morning, and when I went Into the! BE Ue ST ReL antec calneae imine DE tron! counah nel iad nasiged) Blip: new sult he had bought to get married in. He pawned tt for $3 and exchanged the money for a pistol. He reappeared at the flat about 7 o'clock last night and | |found the family on the stoop. He | called Cynthia out to the curb, Wounded in Shoulder, he said as he drew the pistol and began shooting. The first bullet struck her in the shoulder as she turned and ran to- vard her mother. At the same time Mrs, Ninnlo ran toward him and he jshot at her, the bullet lodging in the door jamb two inches from her head. phe third bullet was fired at the group and went wild. Tessie had run to her sister's ald by this time and grasped the madman’s arm “Let me go!” he cried. myself!” The Ninnie girls are popular in the | nelghborhood, men who shoot at “T want to kill | Women are unpopular, so by the time | | Policeman Thompson had Daly by the {nape of the neck there was a |crowd pressing In with the intention of |not handling him so gently. The pris- Joner was hustled away in a tax cab to thla had her wound, serious, dressed in Roose- hich is not velt Hospi en 4 felt weak and tired tor want ot LAST SURVIVOR OF CONVENT | | CLASS DIES AT 94, ST, LOUIS, Avg. 7-—Mrs, Marguret | Casteng, ninety ir years of age, who irecetved $15,000 threa years ago as the veauit of a unique compact entered in- to by sixty-five girls in a German con- vent school more than ny years ago. died at the home of } ughter in this city last nix ‘Seventy-five years ago n a cony Mrs. nt ne: “If T can't have you nobody else can," | re? | lives In the apart- next to the Lubarskys, sald he! the struggle and the screams at| 3 o'clock Wednesday morning, and John | Kantrowitz, who lives around the cor- | ner, also heard the noise and cries of | furder’ and ‘Police in Yiddish. | her of the men went to see what the disturbance was about, “Tho man's brothers,” sald Coroner's Isidor Kurarok, wh ment heard physician Hartung, "say they believe he was murdered because of the scar on| neck and the finger-nail soratches «face, The scar on his neck was on t plainly catwed by the loop of the noose | Of the sheot with which he had hanged himself and I am positive that he stretched his face his struggles as he Etec ee te GOULD SCIKDAL WITNESS B LD |Miss Fleming, Who Told of Perjury Plot, Leaves Tombs Prison, Miss Julla Fleming, who confessed to partleipataion In ® pl lot to secura per fured testin in the Fr Gould ed from ¢ bs on 1 had been {n_ prison ever sin est, Mrs. Ben Tral, tH pwn stage 1 Charles Mousley, the pri- who ¢ with me Mr nat of gart, Germany The girls agr t Bess ie De! before they graduated to pay a cer | tain number of marks a year into a a ae to sim ana | Al Berlin bank. and the en hount was n ny to go to the last survivine member of ' vl | 8. This, ted, was paic lyn, who is a the class, Thin, as stated, was paid avenuc, a eae NEATH REVEALED WHEN HE FAILED TO SEE SWEETHEART Phe Even 14 L.A The body a New York yo! day by Cant. Charles Raynor, keeper of the bathing pavillion, Moore we bathing Wednesday afternoon in channel and was not miss night, when se on hia ance "Phe body, which was « omer Neur, af L: ina bathing tall the Rikee atores or from any other | sult, ps sy toa morgue and Cor- | drastic *. yaprook, nolited. The young woman left the Criminal Courts’ Bulldng with hers! and | would make no statement | POPE GIVES AUDIENCE TO MEN FROM NEWARK. offering ‘Wom | Jeloped with his wife, and set out to | xo, 69 West Forty: \tamsburg wore similar to garments worn an Who ‘Says Husband Choked Her Before Suicide; Their Baby PRETTY Gla Ih AUTO CAVE Th POLICE A Chis Wasn't Trying to Escape, but Lost Control of Machine After Hitting a Man. Mas Jeanetee Rut, af No. 458 Tomp- | kins avenue, Brooldyn, came out of a bench of trouble with dying colors while driving her asstorgobdle to South Ferry down Broadway, Wiret an olderly gentleman, after suc- ceaatuliy dodging a car, got in the way of her machme and was bowled over. Then when Patrolman Fetscher, of the Churoh street station, tried to stop her she lost contre! of the stop lever and it loowed as $f ahe was trying to gst. away. Go the policcman pursued, all the while rapping for help until six police. men and a Heutenant lined the way Just as Misa Ruhl was expecting the mtleta to begin whissing bout her) head she regained control of her mae | caine and stopped. Fetscher turned over his prisoner to: Patrolman Koenig and went back to look atter the injurea man. He foumd/ the victim sitting up nursing a laces ated iaft arm, but when the policemen: suggested the hospital the man wouldn't Usten to it, He also refused to give, his name ‘or to Indge @ agalnst the falr chauffeur, ter graciously receiving Miss | murmured spology he boarded @ car and disappeared In the auty with Miss Ruhl were her r, an old gentleman who refused) |to give his name, and a chauffeur whet wasn't working, ar was numbered M3 N.Y. ner belng registered a3 Arthue! | 8. Doller, at St. George, 8. I, Th Reet U | llce will Investigate t ofind if Miss Ruby Y, MRS | has a chauffeur's gense, Deere MANY BENEFIT BY WILL BONFIAE MURDER 10 DEATH U! S ELOPING WIFE fer tax appraisers’ report on the estate of Dr, John Ordronaux, of Roslyn, was | Staten Island Man Declares Three-Year-Old Joseph Jost v3 — ‘s “) | He Identifies Part of Wanders Away From Mother | filed in the Surrogato's Office here this | morning and disposes of an estate of the Clothing, °'' | and Is Crushed. $2,558,000, which is left to institutions, relatives and friends, A ter of Dr. Ordronaux is left an in $10,000 and $0 outright. Two othe 5 with the first, are left the re- siduary estate, The three ers at Florence J Bringus, Clara Molan cae Memortal fi $6, nf University of Vermont, $1! Trinity College, $10,000; Old Colony |torfeal Society, of Taunton, Mass., i); Morton Hospital, Taunton, $6,000; Boston University, & yal Diocese of New Helen West Ridgby, § ranging from $25,000 down to $1,900 made to a number of relatives | Ho | the whoels of a four-ton tr crossing Eleventh street near First aye- PERFECT nue to-day, and was crushed to death ‘he boy was one of three children of Tooth Powder Joseph Jost, who runs a laundry at No. | % East Eleventh street. As the eldor| Fe na ew snp very early and| Cleanses, preserves and works very late ho sees little of bis} beautifies the teeth, and family durin waking hours Th saath haa long been the custom of 3frs, Puribes the breath A superior dentifrice) for people of refinement Jost to take the three golden-halred Established tn 1866 by What the police regard at present Three-year-old Joseph Jost, of No, s the most promising clew that has /uis Bast Tenth street, wal under Dr. on’ ok while | yet developed in tho effort to solve the Greenpoint dump-pile mystery came into thelr hands when Frank Lefkowski, a gardener of Stapleton, Staten Island, turned up at the Greenpoint Morgue and asked to examine the scapular and the bits of charred clothing that had been taken from the body of the young wo: an found in the blazing bonfire on the banks of Whale Creek ten days aso. Although Lefkowsk! seemed almost certain that some of the least had been worn by his wife Maria, are= children to the shop each morning, ; ‘The father was waiting for them to- day and had prepared a ittle treat in| who ran away from him months ago, jy. shape of a box of plunis, Baby Joe | there were certain discrepencies be- jaized @ handful, and oblivious of every. tween his description of the missing | thing ele tut the plums, toddled ate Mrs, Letkowski and the description of | into the street, munching blindly at the the dead woman that the detectives | prust, could not ignore, At the same time| jug: then @ contraotor’s supply truck they took the precaution of looking up| was slowly moving eastward along| the man whom Lefkowsil said had | pleventh street. Tim J. Kemmer, of eventh street, Was ‘The truck ls owned by Rutus investigate the latter's account of her movements after the rightful husband driving. Darrow & Sons, of Forty-seventh street Bol 44 ond) lost trace of her. and Twelfth avenue, and laden with) e harat sr\ Several Discrepancies. cement, sand and bricks Wedding Vlage gu se salty. Kommer did not see the boy as he stumbled acrom, 1 asphalt, fell under | the hoofs of t. inside horse and thon | tumbled beneath one of the great steel- tmmed wheel. The truck had passed | on 10) feet before the driver was warned of the tragedy, Then an urchin danced {n front of his truck, seized the bridle | of the horses and screamed, “Get off. | You run over @ boy.” | Kemmer turned round and saw two Le teat carrying the crushed body | by Joe into a drug store Then 50 to Quality Rusranteed, No extra chi ae for Letierii Artistic Marrlage Cer, tiflcate riven with Ring. When Letkowsk! returned to Staple- ton ihe sald the damaged waist and | other articles that he had seen tn Will- by his wife. He also sald that the miss. ing tooth In the upper jaw of the dead woman corresponded with a tooth misse | ing from his wife's mouth. There was | one striking point of differenc we | dere between his wife and the mur- ered woman, and that was the color of their hair, Lefkowski ald that his! wife had much derker hair than had ther, still In her husband's laun- the victim of the bonfire. Nor had his with ne} two other children—Elsi¢, wife ever borne children, while the eo one Wilitiern one he au: opsy showed conclusively that the FA from. tho slop, a woman. Lae woman was a mother, Also, he . “It's your boy. had never seen his wife wear a scap- had been wil d ular. However Letkowsk! was positive on this one point—he gald his wife had a jong scar under her chin. just such a scar on the body that old man James cued from the blaging rabbis Kowlsky is Arrested nought enough of Latkow- to invest! Before the drug store In a swe No de ation was n0 stood by was id nest stock of relies and Jewelry ew York, references required Call or write for Mlustrated Catal 37 Maiden Lane, N. ¥, | Fulton at. yf responsi ft \conceded event s who surged abc lidly. He wa York ‘Phe police t ski's statemen he: i) Stapleton with 1.20 o arrested and | up In| GERMANS HONOR DR. HILL. the Stapleton Police Jan) yeREIN, Aug Kowlsky, of No. ¢ His pleton, wc Sassen } : with his wif aan : een) ways since his return alone a few weeks | ; HilicA | ago refused to tell what became of her ‘ , All he wot the husband when he) ma a elec quired was that he had left her tn. Ii ft ua hieal Kowisky worked for- p storia pok Porth Am works sphalt mal ¢ he bonfire, joint, Creek, found sround to A Pol pos hem ! Gr fape- Nuts | UTA ReE ReOMTAE Lae aOR RETR TE K r sod ' Ae ee i e@ story of the G “There's a Reason, hs 198 : Pate . See ext Sunday's Ward Want winiog

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