The evening world. Newspaper, November 25, 1908, Page 3

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= THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1908. «BOY WAS SHOT 0 DEAN GY ANOTHER oUt Young Tilton Stirs Toms River, AIMED COOLLY RIFLE, Victim Declares on Death Bed pyeir - That Steigert Threatened to Shoot Him. (Special to The Evening World.) TOMS RIVER, N. J., Nov. %.—Willle Bteigert, aged sixteen years, shot An- drew J. Tilton, a boy of about the same ~ Seeming Deliberate naluaiie StsVinp of Young Wetmore ( | | age, who died during the night from | rifle bullet wounds in the groin, Stel- gert is in T. fail ms River Tilton was h ing about the and was driv- his father, wit ry |to young Wetmore, who is a cripple stopped at t Stelgert fo nd young Tilton went round 1 28 see if they wanted fish. When he came back Mrs | and young Steig house, the latter with a rifle In his 1 and. Jackson Tilton heard M gay “Oh, no, he wou Young Tilton clambe and sat down on the fish father started the horse, cracked and the Tilton tb "'m shot pop, I'm si Tilton drove up to the next farm oc- eupied by M. F. Rhoades, who took t! wounded boy into the house and sent for a doctor. The physician had to come from Toms Hiver and after try- ing for half an hour to locate the bullet decided to take the boy back into town and get another doctor to help him, he was oro:ght to the home brother, Jacob Tilton, in Toms Ri where he died during the night The murderer is small for his age and stood on the ground. His victim was sitting on a box on the wagon so that the bullet ranged upward Into the ab- domen. The doctors thought the shot had been stopped by the muscles of the back and did not consider that Tilton was in immediate danger. Stelgert bears all the marks of a de- generate. His family moved here from Jersey City about three years ago and have been in collision with the law ever since, some having been arrested for chicken thievery and charged with sim- flar crimes. When arrested the boy de- nied that he had fired the shot, but ut up the remarkable story ‘hat he joaned Tilton his rifle; that Tilton fired at a tin can and the bullet glancing from the can performed a boomerang curve and hit Tilton in the back. Jackson Tilton, however, shows the bullet hole in the back of the fish wag- on to show that his boy was in the wag- on when he was shot. Young Tilton be- fore he died said that Steigert threat- ened to shoot him and he appealed to Steiger's mother, when she sald that Willie wouldn't shoot anybody. NEW TENDERLOIN CHIEF ARRESTS SIXTY WOMEN. iO'Brien Cleans Up Sixth Avenue for Seven Blocks With a Squad of Twelve Men, the West John J nall repeating Ss. Ste! pot you." the wagon | box and the when a rit : d out he's shot ir The new commander of ‘Dhirtieth street station, Capt. , O'Brien, formerly of Brooklyn, startea clean up Sixth avenue last night be- tween Twenty-seventh and Thirty-fourty streets, and as a result all the ceils in the new police station were 4 to overflowing with women. O'Brien, with twelve plain-clothes men. arrested sixty women for loitering along yenue and for engaging men in conversation without the formality of an introduction, The raid caused conster nation along the avenue {n_ resorts where men and women congregate. All the women were arraigned |» the Night Court, where they Were fined or gent to the Island. —— NEGRO BLOOD FOR ALL. im Blake Expc « Race to Be Tainted in 100 Years, Mrs. Lillle Devereux Blake created @ sensation at the meeting of the GBoclety for Politica] Study In the Hotel ‘Astor last evening in a disoussion on “Criminals” by saying, after reference had been made by others to the record ot in ‘criminal annals: aig juppose that a woman fn this jroom has seen a real negro. In one hun- [dred years from now I don't suppose ‘there will be one left, and every- body, broadly speaking,’ wili have a train of negro blood in their veins, T feannot gay that I will regret it,’ There were others who didn't take nd the stir was consider- "KILLED BY FREIGHT TRAIN. V !¥Yeuns Brooklyn Man Meets Death at Crossing in Syrac SYRACUSE, Nov. 2%.—A young men, thought to be Jacob Kelchner, was run down and Killed by a freight train on \tile New York Central tracks on the jgutakirts of thw city, at 2 A. M. to-day. Letters found in hit ‘pocket disclosed his pany, of Now. Ius-l4 Alluntic avenue, Diciyn. A WATCH? A RING? AN OVERCOAT? A POCKET) (00K? SOME KEYS? VALUABLE PAPERS? Those are questions that are answered every day in the “Lost and Found” ‘columns of The World, New York’s first news GEN ATNYC SiN In Love 600 Times, Mary MacLane Still Awaits Right Man SAYS HIS RIVAL SEEKS A DUEL culls on Po- lice to Protect Him From Reyburn. drste] Eixth. vf Philadelphia’s Ma Jit Hand of Fair Vi ginian Loved hy Other S WASHING Wetmore, Rhode Island, hi of Washington Willlam burn, —Rogers K enator Wetmore, of appealed to the police to protéct Rey burn, son oi of Phtiadelphia, who, accord’ has challenge 1 fight a duel at some point tn Vir- ginfa, where duel!ing {s not looked upon as such a to vert us fracture of the law. Both youths are prominent in Wash- ington society, and untl both became ntive to Miss Georgia Maury, wao mes from one of the videst familles { Virginia und who 1s now i | gon avenue, friends. That the: & of the ways caused no end of gos- p in exclusive soctety, should have reached a poin and coffee were due caused a sensati Wetmore had the police intercede in hia behalf several nights ago, when he at’ this city, were the best of ere pis two has received word that the Mayor's son, was threatening to kill him. Both young men have been summoned to court, and there they must explain mat- | and the detective force here has | ters, | been detailed to guard the Hotel Ar- ef lis | }ington, where both are living. Wetmore and Reyburn were members | of the Taft party on the memorable trip jname and the fact that his father, | Israel Relchner, Is an employee of the |General Insulate and Machine Com | to the Philippines. They formed a friendship then that was supposed to be of the life-long sort. in his complaint about Reyburn the son of the Senator told Lieutenant of Police Peck his life was When a detective interviewed Reyburn the latter raid he had made no threai, However, Reyburn and Wetmore are not friendiy, and the story goes that if the Philadelphian can get the man from Rhode Isiand across the Virginia State line he will draw a bead cn him. Migs Maury 1s one of the most popu- ler young women in Washington society and one of the most beautiful. SWINGS HIGH IN THE AIR TO SAVE LIVES OF SEVEN Fireman Lowered by Rope! Keeps Family From Leap- ing to Death. Frank Engine Ccmpany No. 4, space at the end of a rope seventy-five feet from the pavement in fro’ five-story tenement house at No. 321 East Seventieth street at 5 o'clock this morning, his wife and tue live uyneh children, when they tried to dash themselves to the street. All through the night the families in the tenement house had been smelling smoke, They searched for fire, and then came to the conclusion that there was none, but that they were deceived by the fog. A baker came to deliver bread this morning, and on entering the hallway was driven back by a sheet of flame. He yelled fire, to get from their rooms by the hallway, but were forced back. Engine No, $4 was the first to re- spond, Semple saw on the top floor front the Lent family, husband was trying to keep back nis wife and children, Essie, twenty; Mary, eighteen; Edward, nine; Julius, sey and Archie, @ baby, in his mother's | arma, Semple grabbed a rope from Truck . 16 and ran through the haliway ur . 319, closely followed by Shaw and Hlroy, the policemen. Thr three men made the roof and crossed over to tho burning house. Semple handed one end of the rope to the policemen, and, grip- | ping the looge enu, lowered himself to the window where the Lent family were bendins out for atr, Miss Essie Lent stepped to the wi dow sill after forcing back her fathe: 4nd was about to leap when the fireman | fume his body against her and pushed | | Was so Ww her back Semple kept up the fight until the hook and ladde: company raised its tallest ladders, Then he lodged himself in the window and handed down the Tent baby After the baby the mother and children and Lent were helped out by Semple. “Is all right now," yelled Semp to the policemen holding the rope on the roof, The policemen let go the rope and Semple caught the Indder, ak from vod hea he would have fallen had ot other fre- men grabbed b seeeeceninereenene DR. C. W. WALKER DIVORCED, Justice Blanchard awar ed a divorce fecree in the Supreme Court to-day to Mrs anne OM. Walker from Dr Choude Walker, to whom sie was married Jan. 2, ltd, because of a visit fo,glias Slay Siow, in Wilkoabarre, Pa, him from | Mayor Itey- | in Ore- | houtd have come to a part | but that they | of al e14 fought back David Lynch, | and the tenants tried The father and! | BOSTON, Noy. 25.—‘*Yes; marks of the lessons I've learned.” not help asking ourselves, Only hal? a dozen y hurled her literary bomb, Place in Butte, Mo The book heart and brain, unveijied by either Some proclaimed it the ravings of might call int nt and intentic her as a genius. Be that as it may, the sald, to have netted $30,000 on her lite whatever she made ‘s obviously gone | seclusion in Rockland p e Story ia | Out et Buiie Is Writing Another Book About Herself. in danger. | (Special to The Even 1 am writing something, and it will bear | ‘Eccentric Young Woman Who Came g World.) ys Mary MacLane. And we can- What is it that Mary MacLane has learned—now? | s have passed since Mary, at the age of nineteen, of Mary MacLan bare the innermost from her birth- workings of her lish modesty or reticence, a maniac, others dubbed It what you immorality, while still others hailed lady displayed enough sanity, it was rary effort, and maybe she did. But now, and she has come from her eparatory vo the publication of another book, NEVER IN LOVE, SHE SAYS. In her rooms i: that tr bea in love. a South End apar: of va s hectic statemei: “Perhaps it may be that the right man has never come along,” | vor,” she adds sadly, “it may be that it 4 you know—oh, about 600 times—but'never t “Sometimes I love to shock a you | boy of twenty! When they are older { any of them. Now the literary man, down and talk to you by th | atingly interesting you are of course. Some of my best friends are an | not in love. “But Iam fa ted right now by A fascination she has tor me shoes, it would glve me p because a Martini wit ambe incongruity. It Viclate eve! “T remember every s here I saw her about every «fternoon, | "I spend an hour or (wo every j What her home life has been, her, eve: | wh ure, I would wou! y artist! y expression was part of her wo hy, Alice Lloyd is infinitely more 1) for instance, or the artist hour, and then get up to go and tell you how fascin- y are poseures an Were I to see her drink a 5 light would suit her, sang and every tment hotel in Boston she proclaims | sts on her part sue has never actually | | says Mary, is not in me to love. I've been In love, Hy one great passion for a man But you can’t fal! in love with tis different—but I can’t seem to love They will sit de mong .he ‘There are exceptions, men, But, a'as—I am cmple, @ fireman attached to FASCINATED BY MISS LLOYD. dangled tn | lice Lloyd. I can't explain to you the iss of water, or tle her | drirk a Martini cocktail, A Manhattan would be an le sense in me. wn she wore, and while she was like to see he wondering about her, dreaming about her, what she is like off the stage. When I have seen ork. I wonder what ehe would be lke her expressions came in answer to the passing impulse. interes 1g to me than a hundred men. | Maybe it {: because I know men 80 well, understand them so well—and she ts the | ; unknown quantity.” LOVED HER OWN BOOK. oor Ma ohn learned? Her Embittered by the sh ment. me then that Alice Lloyd has now, shocked when I gave it tc And yet the shocked attitude of the publle that Ir yellow press said the next thing I did Was positively nothing in it thet ec ft, I wr Its sale was honestly laughable compa “Yes, my next book will be about me. authors thing it ts part of you.” 100 HOBUES RAID CONVENT K.TCHEN AND righ POLICE “I loved that book,” says Mary MacLane. uld offend grants who tramp by MacLane! How have the years changed her? What are the lessons | titude toward the public and her own work is singular. ked virtue with which her first effort was met, it is still with @ very Ittle smile that she speaks of that part of her past und its atiain- “Tt had the same fascination for te ft and loved it, and the public was the book had an enormous sale. It was emembered, thougn, and the things the was # most lody-like !'ttle affair, There nybody’s virtue. And nobody read ared with the sale of the other one All books that are written are about the You ean't put into @ book things you don't know, and if you know a to breakfast them, they fo the pantry and seize? what ers, who have been daily fee: n fifteen to twenty of the va- on the tracks of York Central, were powerlass mob, Led by the huski- the throng overturned ta- d Saucepans from the fire bles, enatel aud pilfered everything they could seize vther Superior alles up the Kings tage police stat fon and the re- > The policemen used their clubs, b sney « utnumbered, and $s nol Vagrants Demand Breakfast | $2) dhs Mere relntorced he § a sg Ration hat they tn rout the From Nuns and Loot Place |i: ™) The Polke loade. thirty-two. When Denied. It took the reserves of three police stations to quell a riot that started | the kitchen of Mount Vincent Acad my, at Two My and Sixty-frat street ard the River, today Almost a hundred hungry vagrar stormed the place early this morning and when they learned there wasn's ‘ Morrisania however, « ed to hppear ‘as complainant, fagistrate Hou id that he had no alternative but to let the men go. An additivnal farce Of police will patrol In the neighborhood of Mount st. Vincer n future. ae MAY CHOOSE AN AMERICAN, PAR nv There is reason to believe that France may sug that 1 American be made President of the Covrt of Arb ion to which the Casa: Lignow incident ls to be referred ting, SALOME-CRAZED HAD PUT BUG IN ODD DiLeMiiA Aroused from Doze, He Be- held New Servant Wriz- gling in Gauzes. ALONE “1 Don’t Care! as She Whirled Study. WAS IN HOUSE S! Imilator, in the Ww. Dr. A in his stv No. Nowfleld sat alone reading y in the Manit 221 West One Hun street, last night ter and the latter's theatre. Soon \ apartment ed and Forty- His e, his w sband had the to a doctor he doesn't: know how nly fling er look eses on his in his cha front of him with her hi fas but} low, lone ed by a right tn The up with a jerk, adju and then fe he was awake e room rina bratd ippropriat “B-bless my so! er eves fixed or represented e doctor's uneasiness pre second An “I Don't Care” Salome. "Go ‘way! he cried. e you pose some one should Salome," chanted ng on one toe. “I saw y do {t at the Alhambra. 1 care! I don't care!" Then the doctor ‘phoned Police quarters, and when Policemen McNabb and Mulholland came they had their hands full with Margaret Kelly. saw her unpack it and told me th ft contained was a lot of far stuff that must have L costume she was } jee and a hat 'ACCUSED, F PROPOSED DEATH. Charged With Arr Anked Her to Die Kosn) Tast ng Daughter With Him ty-six years ¢ M first street, was and | Was unable He Kosner. said the defendant w her appeared and Wall EUCHRE FOR ALTARS, A euchre and reception will be Lafayette Hall, One Tu held at toonight under the iome's Holy Name § S Dros romefor the affalr will be ue fray the expenses ineurred by the erectios several marble altars in J Chureh, of which the Rev. Donlin is the rector, “George cM OHA 18 An7rn n tu ns In False pai HD Vt en CT) VELEN UUL VU BOYS BSGHIEE Alarm and Fir For Five Fruck Driver Dashes Into Brunt of C Pole to Save Two Live Ie reported d Wild Nobody Badly boken Department Suifers Hurt, but Loss—( a it Held. prank of Charley 1 years old, In turning iarm of fire in Hoboken between 6 and 7 0! A was remoy bis morning when the for was t M est, came very resulting In ¢ ous Injury. to al fire and ty out the Hoboken Department one of it i the most valuable hors we 4 comra oF fused to put on any more clothes, and) The collision wi trolley pole when Dr. Tompkins came he found Wolfe from his seat, high ja th ‘two policemen holding a blanke: abou nd he fell on the buck of ‘ | But he was not inj nd sul protes ling th and Ming the of frightened horses Patrolman Hopper was put to work The girl is y and had |to find the person who turned in the jexcellent references. Monday she sent alarm, and by questioning on her trunk to the New! partment, | dren in nel aad BavaMs but it was so big that it had to be put Brae , 3 cate it in the attic discovered that Charley Fahle did it “But it didn’t hold much,’ Mrs, New- |The boy lives at No. 204 G street field said. "One of the oth him: J.realize that this is just an frre. sponsible child,” the chief s: an 1 do ae Lie te him, but there y ' Nex with ind M re MERVUR, L900, “NERVE REMEDY. 2 tire, Caroline Chandi and many f Concord, X wa les on the ld ire Depart M ured ta rev 1 Week® s Operas Take al the Manhattan. Paine the Ma 1 artlly se) the first ine send SPECIAL. )0ck Of melogd Ri! the most acie for posilively’ c these and all ¢ fects, Terme Forth Mou td Hal) ar Has Distin- re Of guished Patient the kroom. eth ven. Olio sily invalt Borne ich mental Drunkards Cured Secretly Any Lady Can Do It at Home— Costs Stage To Try. odorless disco eoretly by any lady. i inh, Dre ay Will De Haines’ It. t you by i Wt An fs y 1 hiank Ines below, and qmail tt atone 177 Glenn Build ‘ove to yourself how cun be used, and it will be to you. 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