The evening world. Newspaper, August 19, 1908, Page 4

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i 4 { RIVALS OF TAFT TO TE STUMP —_—¥_>— Hitchcock Announces That He Two Policemen Taken to Hos- Boston Society Woman Pays Expects Defeated Candi- j dates to Speak. HUGHES IS IN DEMAND. Nebraska Wants Him, With THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1908, ALLCOWVENTION TROLLEY WRECKS SEIZE $80,000 I TRL LR HE “OLY NUR pital and One Will Probably Die. CRASH IN THE DARK. Driver Turns on the Track in Front of a Car Speeding ART OBJECTS Ct MRS, JACK GARDNER } ——— | $70,000 in Fines Imposed by Customs Men. HAD BIG COLLECTION. Bought by Woman Agent, and MINISTER, SUICIDE, FEUDISTS MAt FOUND RANGING = PAY LIVES AS QUT OF WINDOW RESULT OF DUEL —_—~——— Rev. James D, Phelps, Treas! Men Fought With Knife and) (reo nk snemye aide” Atossino Pistol and Then Sons Started Battle, urer of Syracuse University, | Shoots Himself. i UTICA, N. Y., Aug, 19.—Rev. James Tn a duel, fought with a pistol and a ® Duane Phelps, of Syracuse, shot nim: | gruge, on the second floor of No. 24 self in his room tn the Wurz Hotel, on | magt Seventy-Nfth atreet, late this after- North Genesee street, this city, some|noon, Frank Agoazino revelved a stad | man Livingston durst Into the door. time during the night and was found | ound in the abxiomen, while A. Trap-| Agvzzina, the police say, appeared mirrying a revolver Peppitone svatohed up a shoe knife with a keen Houble edge and about stx Inches long "he women of both families shrank back against (he wall and crouched to fear as the two men faced each other {in the mtddle of the room. Ag@ozaino, acourding to witnesses and | the police, fired two shots In quick suc- {ocession, both of which went wild. | Peppltone reached forwant and with @ Agozzino fired again, and this time the bullet passed through Peppitone's neck. Tho pain of the wounds both men had re- \cetved only angered them the more {and they olinched. In quick succession ‘Pappitone plunged his “keen knife Into) | ole antagonist's stomach and was him- uk over the head with the butt + the recolver. Both men staggerd nd fell Finish him row!" as Patrol- him! one woman just reamed In the meantime Cassio and George ——<-— Wouldn't Believe Them Under Oath and Judge Promptly | Mr. Dismisses Him. James Hamilion, of No. 184 Van | | Buren etreet, the Bronx, an insurance) broker, was dismissed from the tury | lbox in Judge Malone's part In General] LOgS ‘of. whom. are twenty. | Sessions to-day for avowing that he : jas | nen on the second floor, wher the Ag: | | pretuaicn feninst the testimony of po- jomminos lived. Ho struck at one of (ne [Hive officers? | Agozgino children, It Is alleged, and tne Said the furor T wow ldn't, haleve youngater hurried to tell his father. one of them under otth, Thavea etrong and shaking is cried | "You are not a fit person to sit in J on your ¢ y man An j t a e. e against any cree: . udiee against kind.” police teatimony of ted Judge repeatel ap » Court bristle at the juror 1 Anger fit to be a urge A policeman ts a sworn officer of the law and jurors hound 1o belleve their testin t Is contradicted You are ex ni further attend ance as a fu vithout the thanks ef the Court,” Hamilton from the tribunal. CsESe aT Tes "LUSITANIA SMASHES RECORD FOR DAY’S RUN. made a speedy exit a Total of 650 Knots Sec- ond Day at Sea on Present i | Agoazino, both Senator Borah, to Reply to Small Valuation Put on It |earty to-day hanging out of his bedroom | pon was shot in the right side of the four. years ld, had ARE UE te 2 | Would not batieve # policeman under | Voyage 7 i the sam . A Ses Tow: Jamaica. —Sej in Chi window, evidently having fallen off the|neck, Both men were removed to the| !” te forms of the elder men. Liv-joath. In dismissing him Judge Malone a Speech of Bryan. ard Seized in Chicago, |sil after the shooting. Preeuek TARTU HOUR IEAINI A Tall Avtiog eoeel Inctomieod Natistvel Gretareennba then a eR ea ag “ Hen blencurblnen Du ae ask, . | Rev. Mr. Phelps went to the hotel yes-|attion. Pedo Caswlo, a son-in-law n7| dashed back Into the room to stop the Proaching this port wi \y men from fighting. He was ; fuer, eae vearac ton tk In fq collision between @ trolley cat] GHCAGO, Aug. ie_tini |terday morning and secured a room In| Perpitone and George Agoztino, son of | SOHR oa ny “the excited, janbering Ment f0 serve aa a ror CE TREC RINTEHE ‘That every ona of the candidates for! and a loaded truck at Myrtle andl, "ANE: B—United States! ing third story, He was not een again| Frank Agozsine, wore arrosted, Women, who seemed to he analous that) Juror HamiMon, who le forty-elght Cape Race last midnight hei copia hil the Presidential - nomination whose | wooahaven avenues, Richmond Hill, at | melas here have selsed tapes-| during the day or evening, and it le| The famtiles brought thelr mutual nac| the hattte should be fought to a final) vears old and posscased of a savere,| Bent a hia Maia e valving | name was presented to the Chicago con- ae tries, paintings, statuary and rare {supposed that he killed himvelf about |tred to this country with them from) Selon stat ot the pa,| frowning countenance, was sworn to Brown, che Cunard Late axe vention, will speak during the nationel|1% A. M. to-day two policemen and her dail Queenstown, Aur. 16 9 noon ne 2 o'clock this morning Italy. A short time ago the Peppltones| serves, under Acting Mipt. Raymer, | serve in tho tmal of a pleicpocket | venty~ ventel the younger men from | 4 De Fargo. Aaristant Distriot- He left a note that was written on|moved into the Seventy-fifth street| that preventel | fame the paper which had been used to| house, only to find that the Roser | pttouly {nJuring; each other ‘Attorney MeGuire had heard comments : volv' ] Since then the fre on Hamilton's attitude in the jury | SME 0) his avera, wrap the revolver in, and he gave as a Also lved there 3 rate of reason for shooting himself that he did {has smouldered, awaiting only a trining| BATTLESHIP FLEET room, his fellow jurors charging him | she logged the mig | leaving \ pleces of armor, valued at $99,000, the Property of Mrs. Jack Gardner, of Bos- ton, which was bought abroad for Mrs, Gardner's palace in Back Bay Fons, The goods, the customs officials Campaign in support of Taft and Sher- men, {s the expectation of Frank H. Btehcock, chairman of the Republi- ji gan National Committee, He made this announcement at Re- the trolley motorman were mortally in- Jured, and the truck driver was badly burt. The most seriously injured are: ravelial at the but tn. peed up to 26.06 otal of 450 knots - : he next twenty-four hours, up. to ' el thing to call {t forth in all its fury. with the responstbility of many dis. jin the nev) nate Ww slight Publican headquarters in the Metropol!-| Andrew Stefert, forty-three years old,|!°8* Were brought Into thle country as| ot wish to live any longer. MGs Wark Gheabht tO a Raed in| SIGHTED AT SIDNEY. ggreaments. Soo ae dasa theta veraxeccenliate } tan Life Bullding to-day. The list tn-|o¢ No. 172 Stanhope street, Brooklyn the “household goods’ of Mra, Emily | Rev. Mr. Phelps was treasurer of the | ing Syrecuse University, and he had been| afternoon when the children of the two and the total for the families, who shared somewhat of their Before beginning with the trial Me-| to" 2.21 knots, eludes Vice - Prosident Fairbanks, Ang. 20,6 AM |Guire turned to Hamilton and sald day ' Speaker Cannon, Senator Knox, sen- Rockwell Crane Ohadbourne, of this clty, @ friend of Mra. Gardner, on which |connected in the past with the North-| up to noon yesterday to 631, he best previous record for a’ day's & policeman assigned to the Glendale SYDNEY, N. § @tor La Follette, and probably Senator Foraker. Tt ls said that Senator Foraker, who fs in New York to-day on business, fools resentment because of the failure of the men in charge of the Oh!o cam. Palgn, to invite him to speak at Youngstown. The Senator admits that, he is not satisfied with conditions in his State, and says he may not attend the meet- fng at Youngstown, when the State campaign is to be opened. He said also that he did not expect to @all at Republican national headquarters fm this city. Tt was etated here to-day, however, that Chairman Hitchcock and Gen. T. Coleman du Pont, who ts the director of the Republican national speakers’ bureau, will avail themselves of Senator Foraker’s services if he will ocnsent to | peak. The Senator's friends do not antici- pate that he will refuse, and {t {a likely that he will be used in several big} meetings in the East. | Chairman Hitchcock declined to talk station; broken right arm, back crushed and internal hurts. He will dle, Fred Wolffe, thirty-four years old, of No, 12 Enfield street, policoman aasigned to the Glendale sta- tion; chest crushe¢ and Internal in- juries. Expeoted to die, James Degnan, thirty-five years old, of No, 181 Palmetto street, Brooklyn; right leg broken and internal tnjurios. Condition critical, Adolph Rirgeloth, a driver, thirty-five years old, of No. & Beaver street, Brooklyn; probable concussion of brain, Trolley car No. 4,46 of the Myrtle avenue Une was coming east along Myrtle avenue at breakueck speed, A soore or more of policemen who were due for roi] call at 2 o'clock in the Glendale station were In the car, while Biofert and Wolffe were on the front platform with Motorman Degnan, Think Driver Was Asleep. The trolley car was eastbound and the truck with which it collided was going In the opposite direction, of the Ohio eltuation or Senator For- aker’s relations to the management in| that State, saying that it was not in his jurisdiction, ‘The first speech to be maite by James | 8. Sherman, the Republican candidate for Vice-President, will probably be in | Tiinola late in September, and from | then on he will be actively engaged in | #peaking until election. | He will make a tour of the West in| October and wind up ‘the campaigs ta thi t. From his appearance yester- | tiea, when he was notifiedof his | tion, it would seam that he has fully recovered from his reoent {il health and l¢ able to stand arduous eampagning, Vermont Repubiteans will listen next week to Lesile M. Shaw, former Secre- tary of the Treasury, Senator Borah of Idaho and Benator Burrows of Mich- fgan. There will be speaking in nearly every city, town and village In the Stato, for the week precading the elec- tfon on Sept. 1 At Republican Headquarters to-day & demand was recelved from Nebraska for Senator Borah and Governor Huxtes to be sent to tho State falr at Lincoln early {n September, to speak in reply to an address that will be made by Mr Bryan. These two kers, one from the extreme West he other from the extreme Bast, are in great demand {n the middle West, and they will be lged wherever they have time and will consent to go. George Bruce Cortelyou, Secretary of the Treasury, conferred with Mr. Hitoh- cack to-day ‘at considerable length ——_———_-—— DROPPED DEAD IN SEAT ! OF RAILROAD TRAIN. A man who {a believed to be Law- fence D. Burns, of Elghteenth street, Manhattan, died on a train of the Can- tral Railroad of New Jer Communipaw etation this morning, He Was seventy years old. ‘Was about to start a brakeman walking through the cars Q There was somet way he wag hu however, and gently by t might be sick There wa and the, bod A ticket for pocket, Newark was Help Wanted To-Day! ' As Advertised for in The Morning , World’s Want Directory, AUG, 19, 1908 +1. 14 Housew Hands.. 1 Horseshoers Total vceeseeese eee see The World f day 8 Help Ads, 486 move than all other y at the When the train , , licemen, It was owned by Minck Brothers, of Beaver street, Brooklyn. The police think that Ringeloth, the driver, had been asleep and that he waa awakened by the noise made by the trolley cay which, as usual during the early hours of the morning, was going at a high rate of apeed. Thinking that @ car was approaching from behind he started to pull out of its way. Instead he pulled over onto the other track, directly in front of the fast speeding car, Degnan, the motorman, had no time even to slow Jown, and the car crashed into the wagon, demolishing tt. ‘The vestibule and front platform of the car were smashed and the motor- man and the two polleamen, who were riding on the platform, were caught in the wreck. ‘The policemen had just left their posts, having been relleved, and were on their way to the Rtchmond Hill station house, to answer roll call. Ringeloth was hurled from the wagon by the im- pact and struck on his head, getting « very bad ecalp wound. The shadea of the front windows of the car were down at the time of the mishap, and the passengers and con- ductor had no warning of the impending smash-up. The conductor, passengers and others net to work quickly to extricate the motormen from the wreck, and word of the accident was telephoned to the police station and to St, Mary's Hospl- tal In Jamatca. An ambulance and a patrol wagon were soon at the scene, e injured policemen were placed her two In the vehicles were he hospital, ital it was sald this morn- ert, one of the injured po- had a very slight chance of st 1s partly torn away re of the arm e, besides having an he neck, {9 suffering Degnan, sald to beh y was con the motor: ntern| een taken a ecking crew w , 6 OF YER ATEN 22 TMS BY BULL ot No. went trogan. this e, Joseph se home is at sa tertained «8 ware mugzlad and sent to Untonport, a} hurt, and he 1s also °°, 4 injuries and {s In a criti. \ Mulberry Mrs. Chadbourne, the Government of- ficials say, placed a valuation of $8,000, An Investigation was begun by the cus- toms authorities, and when the real value of the goods was discovered the tax of $80,000 was placed upon them by Collector of Customs Ames, Fines and penalties for alleged eva- ston of the customs laws were fixed at $70,000, which, ft {s sald, has been paid. However, it ts declared that $90,000 addi- tonal will have to be pald before pos- session of the property can be secured. Officials of the Customs Department |have turned the case over to District | Attorney Sims for further investiga. thon, BOSTON, Aug. 19—Mra, John L. Gardner, the owner of the Isabella Stu- art Gardner Museum, tn the Fenway, refused absolutely to-day to receive any | fowspaper men or to discuss in any way jtho report that art goods valued at $30,000 and imported as “household | goods” in the name of Mrs, Emily Rock- well Crane Chadbourne, of Chicago, had been seized by the customs officials at Chicago on the ground that an under- valuation had been placed upon them. Henry W. Swift, of this clty, who Is one of the incorporators of Mra Gard- |ner's museum, said to-day that he knew nothing of the matter further than the details of the seizure given in the news despatches, WE TRES TO BEA ~HISGAD W CURT |He Is Fined $10 for Thrashing | Her and Compelled to Give | Up Ten Cents for Food. | Mrs. Herman Miller waan't satisfied with the $10 fine which Magistrate Finn (handed out to her husband in the Har- lem Pollec Court to-day, She is a flery little woman, and displayed a |temper and a persistence that didn’t | exactly bear out her statement, that she and her two children hadn't eaten any- thing In two days. “He beats me Judge,” she said, brid- ling with anger at the very sight of Miller, ‘He's a brute-that'’s what he ‘sand yesterday he came home and treated me terr! AM said Herman Miller, six-footer, in surprise at the state- ment Just the other way, Judge. Bhe beats me, and rday handed me a wallop I thou I'd never get over.” ‘Oh. you loafer,’’ Miller and she crowd on the erled IIttle Mi: Ja rush through idge and tried he: g right hook on th ry jaw. Buta Police ue strong right arm blow, protecting the husband the prisoner $10," sald the e and then Mrs, Miler again ———>—— NOT BEATEN TO DEATH, On the allegations of Coroner Harbur- died from acute has been manufactured under c of father: his signature in black, peare on both sides The Kind You Have Always Bought, T™ is the caution applied to the public announcement of Castoria that er 80 years—the genuine Castoria, mothers when purchasing Castoria to eee that the wrapper bears When the wrapper ia removed the same signature ap- | of the bottle in re tie jern Christian Advocate, It 1 under-| stood that he had been {ll and was for some time at a private sanitarium, i] The bullet was fired into his mouth, and there was no mark or wound upon | his body. | SYRACUSE, N. Y., Aug. 1\—James | Duane Phelps was born in Lewis Coun- ty sixty years ago, and was gradu- | ated from Syracuse University in 1876. He studied at the Boston Theological | Seminary in 1877 and 1878 and was or- dained a clergymen of the Methodist Episcopal Onurch in 187%. He had held pastorates at Harwich and Malden, {Mass,, Uttoa, Buffalo and Rochester, N. Y. For several yeara he was prin- clpal o¢ enovia Seminary and Gene see Wesleyan Seminary at Lima. He became subject to fits of despondency | as a reault of overwork and was at Middletown State Hospital for nearly six years, being discharged as cured. He became pastor of Plymouth Meth- odist Wpiscopal Church, in Buffalo, where he was stationed until 1899, when | he was elected treasurer of . Syracuse | University. Prof. Phelps married Miss Veaver, of @lmira, who! | him, petesved Ae os HYDRANT BROKEN BY RUNAWAY AND STORES FLOODED — Crowds in Whitehall Street Have Narrow Escapes Dodg- ing Frantic Horses. ' A big gray team attached to an ic wagon of the Broad Street Ice Company ran away this afternoon In crowdeg Whitehall street. Frank W. Winney, ot No. 515 Hudson street, tugged at tne reins in vain as the horses plunged through the heavy stream of trath?, grazing trucks and narrowly missing pedestrians at every leap. In front of No. 3? Whitehall street, the ‘runaways came to a sudden stop, when jthe front wheels crashed Into a fire hydrant, Winney was pitched from his seat and fell on hia head on the side- walk. The hydrant was sinishod in the craah and a geyser of water shot forth which quickly flooded the street and aroused the tenants of the nearby dwellings. The owner and clerks of a shoe store in the basement of No. 87 Were soon ankle deep in water making ‘antle efforts Co save thelr stock, 4. O'Laughlin, a clothing desler or, had a similar experfence. 4 Water Department crew ar. | alf an hour later and shut off tream, every cellar and basement tn the block waa flooded and muoh! we had deen done. driver of the. wagon severe scalp —__»__. CARRIED HEAD OF DOG THAT BIT HIM TO PASTEUR’S SOMERVILLE, N. J, Aum 19.—Jacab London, thirty years of age, @ proaper- ous farmer of New Germantown, near 1ere, left to-day to undergo treatment | as Pasteur Institute In New York for, rabies. With him he carried the head yt a shepherd dog, which bit off the top of one of his thumbs yesterday | afternoon, ‘ld, EPERANTO BOOKS FOR BLIND.| DRESDEN, Aug. 19.—The Experant- | {sts, who are holding their fourth inter. | national congress here, have decided to | publish books In Esperanto for the blind | and to prepare proper exhibits to give Information relative to Kaperanto, the uber en of Chas, If, Fletcher for | W e respectfully call the attention | Parents who have used Castoria for | their iittle ones in the past years need no yore ok against counterfeits and t imitations, but our present duty is to call the atten’ ion of the younger gener- ation to the great danger of introducing into their families spurious medicines, | It is to be regretted that there aro nefarious business of putting up and ple who are now engaged in the | selling all sorta of substitutes, or what should more properly be termed counterfeits, for medicinal preparations not | only for adults, but worse yet, for children's medicines, It therefore devolves | on the mother to scrutinize closely what she gives her child, Adults ca: that for themselves, but the child has to rely on the mother’s watchfulness, Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of do | Cian feeling, commenced to fight in The American battleship feet has just, ‘This case rests principally upon the the hallway. Peppitone rushed into the| peen alighted from this port. [evidence of a pol Madam, do You Want an. Have you any run was O43 knots, made by this same ahip on July 6 last a Germless Milk? Here are the facts about raw milk, and the facts about Van Camp’s, It will take but ten minutes to read them—then you can well decide. Please know the truth, then do as your judgment tells you. The fact is this: Not a housewife in this city will use raw milk after she knows Van Camp's. You will never cook with half milk when you once know the flavor that Van Camp’s gives to milk dishes. You will never drink germ- laden milk when you know that Van Camp’s is pure. Is it not worth ten minutes to know the truth about something as vital as milk? Milk Breeds Germs, Milk is an ideal breeding place for germs. That is why it carries infections. A single germ, left in milk a few hours, will breed millions of others like it. Some cows are tubercular, and the milk from such cows carries the germs of consumption. Some milk cans are washed in water which carries the germs of typhoid. Some milkmen are diseased, some dairies are uncleanly. Some milk is subjected to foul air and to dust. You know nothing about this when you buy raw milk. You have no way of guarding your- self, But, when you use Van Camp’s Milk, you are absolutely protect- ed, There is not a germ of any kind in it. Nothing but Milk. Don't think of Van Camp's as condensed milk, for condensed milk is half sugar. Van Camp’s is nothing but milk. We simply take the richest of Holstein milk, and evaporate two- thirds of the water. Nothing whatever is added—no sugar, no starch, no preservative. Nothing is subtracted save water. We milk, in five states, 20,000 Holstein cows. Every cow is tegularly inspected. So is every man who milks them. Every dairy is sanitary. Every factory, where the milk is evapo- tated, is built without wood. We carry cleanliness to such an ex- treme that there is never a chance of infection. Then the milk is sterilized after the cans are sealed. The milk keeps for years as fresh as the day we milked it. Van Camp’s is Delicious For Cooking. Every woman knows this who has used Van Camp’s, But she may not know the reason, which is this: Milk that stands awhile sepa- rates. The butter fat rises and the solids fall. Then you get one sort of milk from the top of the can, and another sort farther down. You never get the whole milk from the milkman’s can. And, perhaps, you skim what you do get before it goes into cooking. In Van Camp's alone you get the whole, rich milk. You get 30% of solids—8% butter fat. That’s why all milk dishes made with Van Camp’s are so delicious. The richest of raw milk cannot compare with it. Once cook with Van Camp’s and you never will use any other. We publish a book of recipes prepared by an expert on milk dishes, You can have it free if you'll write us, A Kitchen. Van Camp’s means a cow in your kitchen, Rich milk or cream —all you want, when you want it, No waiting for the milkman, no shortage, no waste. Yet it’s even cheaper than raw milk. Van Camp’s is as thick as thick cream. So thick that you add one part water for coffee. Yet it doesn’t cost half what you pay your milkman for cream. Add two parts water and you have rich milk. And the cost of such milk, when you buy Van Camp's by the case, runs about three cents per pint. Then you have no waste—no milk left over. That saving alone is enormous. Best for Children, Immigrant babies, when they arrive in New York, are fed on Van Camp’s Milk. They are fed under the di- rection of physicians who know the importance of germless milk. The milk that is best for those children is certainly best for yours. Raw milk, like raw meat, is an unfit food, because of the danger of germ infection. Children will find, when they drink Van Camp’s cold, that the milk has an almond flavor. That flavor is due to sterilization. It signifies a germless milk. Chil- dren can drink all they want of it, without a thought of infection. They cannot do that with raw milk. Cow in the Those are the reasons for using Van Camp’s Milk. If you think there exists a single reason for not using it, it is based on mis taken ideas, Sold by all grocers in 5c and 10c cans, Buy it a case or two at a time—it’s much cheaper and more convenient, | | i ’ © te re i | | Van Camp Packing Company, Indianapolis, Indiana... York FS combned. | che Board of Health tor examébation. WR RO MALL HAAN ET I NEY ETE | “1 f

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