The evening world. Newspaper, October 5, 1908, Page 8

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¥, “TLL BESLAN,” LABCRER'S PICK et | | THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER MATHEWSON 15 Joiity, resolved to pour the contents into an unappreciative rower, Tho | brewers and distillers and champagne | agents may recover thelr empty recep- taclen later by due process of law, Tt fe quite ikely thai Sheriff Lane POURED WINE INTO HE SAYS, “IF NOT MAKES VOLCANOES) SEWER AS THROAT =:s22sssrosios crus PUTIN PRISON” UT OF AANOES ARCHED MEN WEP Louis Poggi, Who Killea ‘Kid’ * Twist and ‘Cyclone’ Lewis, Asks for Sentence. | | \ GANG SEEKS REVENGE., Followers of Slain Men Have | » Sworn to Murder Poggi if Acquitted. | | Louis Poggi, the nineteen-year-old doy | Who killed “Kid” Twist and “Cyctone” ewis, gangmen, on the Coney Istand owery last May, declared to Justice eudder in the Criminal Branch of the | Bupreme Court, Brooklyn, to-day that} if he was tried and acquitted of the two} kiilings—as he knew he would be—the ny he was turned out of court he would ye slain. | Therefore he urged that the Court fecept a pica of manslaughter and send | him to jail as the only place he could be safe from the pals of Kid" Twist | ad taken an udder fuanslaugbter and the y fended until Wednesday Was re- sentence. el, John 8. Be . gave the emarkable accoun of the that had been mapped out for Pogs!. Were Gunning for Him. “There is no doubt,’ said Attorney Bennett, “that my client is innocent of and that he would be c tried. When he went down wo C Islanc on that night of May M4 ‘Kid’ Twist and ‘Cyclone’ Lewis were out gunning for him. He got Into!” lg place, or rather was lured into a place where they were. And when he got in there he saw that guns were being passed around. “He managed to get to the doorway| of the place and have his gun out, and! when the shooting began he shot purely | in self-defense, though with deadly aim. He killed two men who would! have killed him and accidentally Wounded @ young woman—Carroll Terry,} “However, if my client were tumed Out it would mean certain and swift death for him. He would be murdered Lofore he was out «1 jul twenty-four ours, | “When the men he killed lay in thetr | Goftins 150 of thelr pais and followers | took an oath to kill Louis Poggi. Thev Swore that they would kill him if they | had to trail him across the continent. They swore thet if they could get their hands on him they would take , to some secret place and kill him jy inches Safe Only in Prison. ‘There is no doubt about this, Wot the only way to save this boy's| ii will be to send him to jail. 1 wi mira Reformatory. where ae tour years or so. Then, by | {s released, nis enemies wotten thelr oaths, r nad, SD aultetly “awa het away to he can be safely hid- er ay ‘egard the killing of ‘Kia’ Twist more in the light of o pattie Bervice than a crime He was regarded ° worst type of bad man. that | K has ever produc-d, Monk | and Panl Kelly are classed | mannered toughs compared Ikid Twist. Hie was arrested | tines tor homicide. but always | clear himself with to an | ist had the name of a terror with | ® =n along the Bowery, and was held | in high regard as a “bad man” in the | Cherry Hill section. He would go ground the east side bullying every- body, wrecking saloons and stores and forcing all the storekeepers to lay in a stock of a tonic he was interested in. If the storekeepers didn't buy this tonic Twist would send his gang around to wreck the place, | EE | REGISTER TO-DAY! | If you don’t register you can't! | ents can be gotten at any drug store. vote! Pope's drug store, on the ground floor | One Touch of Steel Point Brings Eruption of Flying Things on Broadway. ay Michael Gillen, who lUves at No Hast Seventy-second street and is a laborer for the Edison ectric Com-| pany, was half in and half out of a manhole at One Hundted and Twelfth street and Broadway to-day doing things with a pick when something nappened. While he was endeavoring 0 get some bits of loose stone out of| the side of the condut the p ot ot | Gillen's pick went through a tube tiling and hit a strand of high-power cables There ansued things of an électrion nature which no m layman cc 1 hope to understand, he coud appreciats them at a glance, For a man burdened with stiff overalls and a y pair of brogans Michael Gill@a| ‘ made probably the best h a standing start in the bh teur ath s. He enferged from the} manhole with a singed person, just one-) eightieth part of a second ahead of a} at flash of blue flame. Manholes Became Volcanoes. { manhole at nanhole the at voleanoes, whi trolley slot in where hot uit the ¢ | rail of the s into ied went thi igh into the air and unh a window of Miss Parrish's parlor on | the bird floor of the Devonshire mts, where it landed harmless- fa. fraginen| e big plate glass front of McKea & of the Devonshire. The Ostend and the Claremont, two other apartment) houses, had many windows vrokeu by the concussion. The fire ov the channel rail burned itself out in ten minutes, without doing | any miaterlal damage to the motive stem of the car iine, Traffic wae hour. It was im. came from the Edison works how much damage Mike Gillen had done to the underground wir thingumbobs until they had followed | he scorciied and blistered conduit to end. RUNAWAY HITS BICYCLIST. Horse Scared by Auto Engine Sert- fously Injures Young Rider. Frnest Hene, eiehteer vears 14, of} No, 697 Union aveune, Bronx, was run | | | } | over and serlously hurt this morning while riding a bicycle across the Willis Avenue Bridge a vac ven by Jacob Hess, of No. 131 vee Hun- | dred and Sevent; | An automobile wa on the | bridge with its engine ng, and; as Hess's horse passed i © animal | took fright and bolted. Young Hene/ was riding his wheel from an opposite | direction and the horse ran him down. | He was taken to the Harlem Hospital BREAKS A COLD PROMPTLY. The following formula js a never- | tailing remedy for colds: One ounce of Compound Syrup of Sarsaparilla, one ounce Toris Com- d one-hal? pint of good ; mix and shake thoroughly each time and use in doxes of a ta-| blespoonful every four hou: | This, if followed up, will cure an/ acute cold in 24 hours. The ingredi- | ™SHBURN CROSBY WASH BURN now have better. things to ° - CROSBY'S GOLD MEDALFLOUR was slow work - r ne yam agency of cups, tin cans or derby|pagne, The thrice-accursed prisoners, hats. The dest the thirsty epectators| sui belne familar with the overation ot | could do was to stand around and in-|opening wine, fumbled long over the | nate. wire fastenings of the corks. The man with the hectic beak discovered that | the Westchester County Fair and Horse| was out, because the wi | Show from a misguided rumseller eno) jane onmmen hata fountan pat BE aboas operations, no matter Veen ES ful, must come to Privonere tn the jail, Those men were detailed to open the bottles and jue And pour the contents thereof Into the trough. One of the prisoners whose beak denoted frequent and agreeadie| sessions with the outside of bar} ‘wept continuously as he went about his) berrivle task. Sheriff Lane Not an Expert. To have preserved the fitness of things Sheriff Lane should frst have; estroyed the cocktails, then the| whiskey, then the champagne end fi- nally the beer. Any competent dlspen- | ser of liquids would have followed that order—the cocktails as an Pesta Cocktails, Whiskey and Beer in Quantities Also !uth- lessly Thrown Away. There was a lot of deep breathing ex- ercive along the Grand street front of the Court House at White Plains to- day. From a point close to the Court House wall to an opening tn the wer at the curb line @ long wooden trough had been temporarily erected as a chute to transfer to oblivion, by order of the law, 1,20 pottles of beer, seventy-five jurs of whiskey, weven cases of cham- pasne and five cases of gin cocktails, Down the chute for nearly three hours the whiskey as a tempter, the cham- pagne as a satisfer and the beer as a chaser, Evidently the Sheriff is un- famillar with the proper sequence of | Nquid refreshments, for he started with! the beer first. The beer was removed from the lar a chee at a time, and tho unfi nate prisoners were forced to open it a bottle at a time nad let it clus-gins into the trough. Then the whiskey fo! lowed, being poured from earthenware jugs shaped like teapots. Sy the time this stage of the proceedings had bee by and kept ng White Plains devo- cpu fom making sudden dashes iment through the | Last of All, the Champagne. | The cocktails wer of and last came vie outck ax tees This swiping refi and Seized by Sheriff at Horse Show. ration thus legally Sherlff Lane at | by holding the neck of te under his face could = the contents into himsel The Hquid exh! wasted was seized & and the White P! | ended short! ful eyes and great assen Lane would have the trough County t issued an order on Satur- Sheriff to destroy the other Judge Pl day directing the firewater and the bottles and receptacles containing i Because of the existence of a law for toothpicks made his oppressed priso carry it | which forbids the wanton destruction| into the cellar and si inteeane | of bottles, Sheriff Lane, to avoid Ma-| furnace. —P. & G. Naphtha Soap. It is whiieand is enclosed ira blue and white wrapper. Read and follow the directions on the inside of the wrapper and satisfy yourself beyond question or doubt that «P & G.” is the best naphtha soap; the best laundry soap; a time saver, a labor saver, a money saver. When you have done this, you will— in justice to yourse/f—insist that, hereafter, your grocer give you P. & G. Naphtha Soap; and none other. Remember the name—Procter & | Gamble’s Naphtha Soap. | But if you cannot remember the name, remember the descrip- | tion: The white naphtha | soap in the blue and white wrapper. 5 cents a cake~all grocers. ey nmpson C7 Fourth Ard LPS 49° 7020" STREET, NEW YORK, Portieres to Order of Finest Doubie-Faced French Velours $23.75 pair && Fourth Floor. e 4) | We believe this to be the lowest price | ever quoted tor reversibie Portieres ot this / most popular tabric. Because we secured ¥ several thousand vards in the best shades jof red and green this offer is possible. ) When this lot is exhausted this low price will be withdrawn; once. At $23.75 a pair we will measure for, make and hang Portieres for any ordis nary size door in Crreater New York, Jersey City, Richmond ani Hobo’ en. Call, telephone or write, and our representative will call with samples, Reupholstering 5-Piece Suite Regular Price *60 $29.75 Atthis remarkably iow price youmay eh ose from #5.00 Silk Gobelin Tapestries, $3.50 Silk Moire Damasks, $00 imported Silk Armures, £5.00 Hert Verona Velour, $2..0 lines: Cashmere Tapestries, £4.00 lmported Silk Damasks. This price istorourusual high-class workmanship and includes all neecse sary findings, such as moss, gimp, webbing, springs, ete,-~also of ing of frames and putting of furniture in first-class condition. NOTE: This priceis for the work complete—no extra charges. therefore order at ' 4 |Fans Taking Great Interest in| With the Giants on the last Iap of the) pennant race the friends of the players are getting busier than ever in collect- | Ing votes for the one who tn thelr opin: | ion is doing the most to land the pen- | nant for the Giants, the trophy being the handsome diamond studded medal, awarded by The Evening World. Bresnahan and Mathewson are slowly drawing away team maces, look out for Mike I Ginnity. | ed tie beer, the whiskey, yeached t vere ominous 1 eee event of a tle for the pri \ person gurgie ee hiskey, the reached there Re phimous mutterings | ed will receive @ prize similay to Jt You don't register you can't cham and the cocktails, Vigilant aa Rivaceeriteric) Cn cnecaOUL (heather fubety \. 'soret a three additional deputies. LASS Noo disposed | C= —— 5, 1908. HOW THEY STAND IN EVENING WORLD VOTING CONTEST. GAINING IN BIG MEDAL CONTEST Roger Bre: Christy Mathe Joe McGinnity . Mike Donlin John J. McGraw . Cy Seymour . Larry Doyle Fred Tenney Geo. Wiltse Luther Taylor . Al Bridwell Arthur Devlin Jack Barry Charlle Herzog . Leon Ames Thomas Needham Otis Crandall .., Harry McCormick Rube Marquard Louls Durham . George Paige . Dave Brain Fred Merkle Fred Snodgr: Josh De Voe George Holmes Roy Beecher . Catcher Wilson The Evening World Prize Battle. from the rest of their | but it is just as well to some of the dark horses, n is getting close to Joe Me- | ho has held down third place r since the contest started. in the REGISTER TO-DAY | © RESTAURANT G nitjord, Ca Tf. 19°70 20°STREET# NEW YORK, E Our $25 Tailored Suits | ta Third Floor. | We believe we are showing the best $25 Tailor- \ made Su ts in America~not only the best, but the largest number oj m: dels to choose trom, embracing every style that comiorms to the tashionable require- ments of tie day. Tailored Suits at $25.00 Ten uew models, comprising new semi-fitted effects; hip- less, mannish styles, plain tailored models; new ideals in close-fitted skirts; new de- signs in sat. or . raid trim- ming. Materials are Broad- | cloth and striped Chevrons, i in all .he new shades. Coats lined with guaranteed satin. Very special. Dressy Tailored Suits | at $45.00 Directoire model of imported Broadcloth in newest street shades, artistically irimmed with satin and fancy vesting, Dresses, $42.90, for sireet wear. Princess Empire Broadcloth model, Filet Lace yoke, dainty self- | colored embroidered panel; | in all the new colors. | | i i Women's Smart | | Women's Coats and Capes, $18.75. Long dressy Coats of Broad- cloth for street or evening ! wear, Empire effect, beauti- } fully trimmed and lined with satin; $23.75 value. Charming Evening Capes, $25.00. SIMPSON CRAWFORD CO. Misses’ Sample Suits 43 Third Pioor, Sample suits secured from the greatest delineator of Misses styles in America—principally high class Broxdclo h Suits, exceedingly smart mo”els. In many instances there are only one ot a kind, The reg- ular $89.75 Suits at $29.75. Misses’ Tailored Suits, $22.50 Three up-to-date models, including the new 36-inch Hipless Coat, trimmed.in large velvet moulds and large pocket; new skirt. | Junior and Misses’ Suits, $16.50 Three piece Suits of Cheviot, attractive Princess Dress with do inch sermicfitted Coat; large patch pockets, seif-covered moulds; sizes 14 and 16 years, SIMPSON CRAWFORD CO. Dressmakers’ Supplies £2 Notion Dept. Mats Fioor. Noteworthy savings on all ot those needful requisites—a sale that lasts 8 days and comes just in time to meet the demands incident to your Fall sewing. 400 yd. Spool best Machine Silk, 25c; doz..... 12 yds. all silk Soutache Braid—gross $1.20; plece .1lUc Warren's Sil Gros Grain Featherbone—12 yds 0c; yd...5¢ Genuine Whaebone, 36 in. strip—doz $1.15; each..,,15¢ 500 yd. Spool Kasting Cotton—doz, 456; spoo} 5¥ line all-silk Tatieta Binding—doz. pes. $1.40; pe Milward’s Sharp Needles—any size 2 papers 5 inch Silk Tasselsdoz. $1.50; each. ‘ All Brass Hump Hooke—nickelled und black—gross Hand-macde ( rochet Buttons—large +izes—doz, Papier Mache ust Forms, jersey covered. Complete Forms with reinforced wire skirts Clark's O. N, ‘I. Spool Cotton... . dozen spools 45c | Large size Pearl Shirt Waist Buttons; doz... Lage l’ad Supporters—-25c va ues. 5e card Washabie Collar Supporter O. M. O. Dress Shields, sizes and 4—pair. . Princess Guaranteed Dress Shields—doz. $1; pair. Satin Buttons—anv ai Star Brand Dres»make Targe Roll Cot on Tape... Kins Lustre Twist, spool. Elastic Shirt Waist Beits.. Kirby Beard Dressmakers’ Pins Ib. M |b. Kirby Beard Diamond Pins, box $3 | box... Button Moulds—auy size—gross.,...... : Skirt Gauves—extrs well made and heavy........,...29¢ Lorgest Hair Nets A ; ... @ for 25e | 50c¢ Wire Hair Rolls, with combs attached. . eee BOC | Imitation Shell Barette ; SAAN -»- 10¢ A8e Shoe Trees, adjustal'e to size, all sizes; pr......,.50¢ All Fancy Beltings at :evular priee. i i i a a ee SIMPSON CRAWFORD CO. ' | before he vanished, fatled to secure his | nna him held for trial Monday, He Court j Martin's lawyer contended that a con ) Vietion in Brookiyn would prevent b day his appeal is argiied and cause h! os bonding compar ty forfeit the guar | antee. Mr, Clarke quoted precede jto show that Martin could Former Lawyer, of Brodkyln,| iiune Asks Freedom to Save Bail’ | 4,)"86 Shete: In Philadelphia. not be in do he would t Meantime Marvin was + turned to jail LONG ISLAND RAILROAD TRAIN SERVICE POR THE AUTOMUBiLi RACES Motor Parkway Sweepstakes } SATURDAY, Ot. 10, LV08, release from jail on a writ of habeas! § Hi corpus to-day. a The writ was argued before United | jarlar ca States District Jadge Chatfield, who |} yo go reserved decision. Marrin is on $7,500 (5.00. 8.10 ball from a Philadelphia tribunal while fa. pap an appeal is being made from a con- vietion of swindling there. District-Attorney Clarke alleges that Marrin has so mis-mannged the affairs | of Caroline Ba’ an aged Brooklyn recluse, that her estate had undergone an unwarranted shrinkage of $9,000, He first arraigned Marrin before Judge Dike on charges of forgery and the Barry and Frank G. Marrin, a Brookiyn lawyer, who disappeared fourteen years ago and whe was arrested in Queens County two weeks ago on indictinents | for forgery and grand larceny, | found Distinctive Millinery £47 Second Floor. Created especially to express the higher thought in smart Millinery styles that are thoroughly in ac- cord with the real reigning tashions approved by close followers ot style. This Smart Hat at $8.50 Made of fine Fur Felt or of Satin, trimmed with finest French fancy wing: and ribbons (see filustration!. A Marie Louise Model at $8.95 Satin top, velvet underbrm with extremely stvlish trim- ming of large wings, big wide flat bow of ribbon and buekle. The Lady Blanche at $8.75 An extremely becoming side roll for felt hat trimmed with Freneh wings and fancies and rich quality ribbon. The Lucille at $4.98 A Stylish, medium size hat with entire trimming of satin ribbon. Hundreds of other Stylish trimmed Hats for Misses and Women at $3.98 and upwards. SIMPSON CRAWFORD CO. Exceptional Waist Showing £m Second Floor. Bringing out the new styles in Dressy Waists, preserving those exclusive fashion lines that dis- tinguish the better grade ot W aists, Messaline Silk Waists, $6.75 Very dressy imported b'ack silk Waists, yoke and collar of Val. Lace and silk medallion; fancy Mousquetaire sleeves The New Net Waists, $7.95 Very dressy Filet Net Waists, yoke and collar of fine German Val. Lace; front, back and sleevestrimmed with real Cluny ; silk lined. Tailored Waists, $2.98 Black Brilliantine Tailored Waists, trimmed with cluster tucks and taffeta bands, button back ; long sleeves. ‘Women’s Coat Sweaters, $2.75 Single brea:ted, mannish weave—front pockets; solid colors or combinations, ‘Women's Coat Sweaters, $1.98 ted, front pockets—in oxford gray So SS S-Di ee = OC - es s—iC S— !C C o OC OC SIMPSON CRAWFORD CO. House Garments A or Second Floor. 98c. for Dressing Sacques—ot ripple eiderdown, in red, gray and blue—large Sailor Collar, satin hound; others with crochet edge, finished with buttons and loops; regu arly $1 25. Eiderdown Robes, $4.95 { Robes of best quality ripple ciderdown, red, gray, pink and blue: square neck or*Sailor collar; trimmed with applique; others bound with satin ribbon, wool girdle, regularly $0. A SIMPSON CRAWFORD CO Skirts to order $1.50 4 eS a oF Main Poor Regular churge is $2 and $8 for making these Dress Skirts, at $1.50-—skirts to be made trom materi on our main floor on!y. 20 models; fit guaranteed. For a limited time we will take orders s bought

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