The evening world. Newspaper, January 23, 1909, Page 4

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JANUARY 28, 1909, 4. : aint ere THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, VOW LEDER OF BAKER TES) rt SAFE BLOWERS IS. POOR THAT HE 1 STILL AT LIGERTY LET OUT OF JA Police Believe She Disposed of Justice Erlanger Convinced He the Gang’s Loot Cannot Pay $1,200 Ali- Pawnshops. mony Due Wife, FOUR PRISONERS HELD. CALLED GOOD FE Captured After a Desperate Only a Few Years Ago His In- Fight in Shop on the Was Stated to Be Lower East Side. $50,000 a Year, LOW. come K Moo escoc Charl # H. White, a banker of No. 82 street, who was to the Street Jail for contempt of Although the well-dressed wom: was with the four safe tured after a desperate fight In office of David Meyer's paint shop, court three weeks ago In falling to pay 6 First avenue, last night, has not been to his former wife, Josephine B. White, | caught, the police have an t | $1,200 arrears of alimony, description of her and expect that she |} will be behind bars hefore night falls n who ers cap: | Liberty sent the No Ludlow exci {9 enjoying freedom again to-day. Although known as a “good fellow” The police belleve that this woman |.” avg oe rere ed thea ees was the leader of a gang of “yeggmen" with y nobiles and other lux- and dteposed of thelr loot in pawns #, the (referee yesterday reported When the four to Justice Erlanger raigned in police court to-day te not cannot pay the sum | looked as though they had beer a cider mill. They we head to foot, and t of $1,200 which he wife for alimony but he sum to owes eut however, ald not any person. and swollen, They, Justice Erlanger then ordered White's | look much worse than the three detec- release, saying tlves who captured them. The seven “Tho record shows that the plaintiff {s had been treated by s ans from St. | living at an exp apartment house Vincent's Hospital. In the last two months there hi bean @ dozen or more burglaries in because of any contumact various places {n the lower enst side. The | put solely because of the fact that he Police were convinced that an organized jg unable to pay the sum required.” gang was at work, but they could get) “['m not affected hy his release no clue to the identity of its members. | condition,” said Mrs. WW} Ite at th Last night Detectives Horton, Landers, | sonia. T have my doubts Wertheimer and Hickson were passing | he's as poor and is not in want. I @ the defendant {3 not ream m satisfied that “MOTHERS SPR s he ma q out. I'm not | y H 8 coffee saloon in Stanton street, when |renily dependent on his almmans, tony oH A [| they saw a man inside who answered | have an {ncome of my ‘ | | | the description of a burglar known a8| Mrs, White av > in June ! “Skinny Jake.” With him were three 4p Tt was charg h tained a home in New R Sleuths Follow Suspects, nie J n, who had t They watched the party until §.99|T@pher, and afterward o'clock, when three of the men left the | ment at Port Wa place, followed by Horton and Lande: It was ged that two children were men and a well-dressed woman SAYS I PRD Then the woman departed and w porn ee eM, Ro pene ae | Hees aa Hickson tere ae Josephine B, White was No. 782 West ke onvicled Poisoner, Sentence Werthetmer at his heels. The two de- | Pid avenue. The wife alleged she dis Commuted, Declares He Will tectives followed the mon up Stanton {covered “the other woman” by seeing | \ ! ; to Allen street and then to No. epitn nen iuabandidrty Ade Prove His Innocence The suspects entered the hallway and | atk. Later, she aba i : disappeared. The detectives went to S@rted her entin > was grant he “L" station platform and waited. ey UEaC al wet He eee ‘te | CHICAGO, Jan, %.—Gov. Di inst| Ne ‘ About 9.39 o'clock the fourth man ap- * : ade ig ay peared’ and’ stcod In tront of the bullae | He. RSS Rent to Jail ; yeeeaats Coch eeutonce CHWHITE. ing. The detective who had “'s .; Last Aug nother chapter was ads | Herman illik, the polsoner, to tm- la = ieee him joined his companions on the 1, |2¢4 t0 the troubles of the Whites, when | i sonment tor life. This is a stgnal| White sued ironmaste that M ot his, station, ‘They noticed that whenever a UB UaL AY train rolled past the lookout took off his hat and waved it, apparently as a signal, About 11 o'clock Horton and Werthelmer descended to the sidewalk and seized the lookout, Horton then went through the hall- way to the rear yard, where he discov ered that three tron bars had been sawed from a window sawes rt y. Drawing his} revolver he stepped through the win- | dow and called out Stand still or I'll shoot to kill!” victory for DJ obtained thre niicated that BIIik was Fal the Paullst Father, the Rev. BL DUN O'Callaghan, fortune teller, fak No one answered, so Horton advanced to the front of the store | Suddenly the revolver was knocked from his hand and some one selzed him about the neck and threw him to the Amounts. removed in the Varal was later ft was hel suicide from rem ; trill ead from poison a lice Discove Blazes and Rescue Separate Two 1 that she wrse committed will goon reach th IN ONE STORE a ATHER PARDOW, SUIT LEADER, DIES IN HOSPITAL Rector of St. Ignatius Loyola Ill Only a Few Days With Pneumonia. WAS BORN IN NEW YORK. | His Lectures on Divorce, Blam- ing Idle Rich, Aroused Much Discussion. After a brief illness from pneumonta, the Rey. William O'Brien Pardow, rec- | tor of St. Ignatius Loyola Church, Park | avenue and Elghty-fourth street, died | at 345 A. M. Vincent's | | Hospital. Father Pardow was sixty-two years| old and a prominent figure In the Tenuitt | order, He contracted a cold last Sun- day and had a but kept up his| work until yesterday morning, when he! was unable to leave his bed. His sister summoned a doctor, who ordered the | rector removed to the hospital. Father Pardow was bory York, and in 1964 was Gil the College of St. Fran the degree of A. B he devoted him: to-day In St. in New ted from els Xavier with For several years self to the long course of Intellectual training aster t te Join the Jesuit order, spend years In France and England wdasee He was president of St. Xavier from 1889 to 1893, and from that year until 1896 Was a superlor of Jesuits from New York and Maryland, In 1908 he was made rector of St. Ignatius Loyola Church, Lectured Extensively, He lectured extensively for the last | fifteen years in th country, France, | England and Jamaica, His sermons tn 8 at St. Patrick's Cathedral on "The alle Church and the Age’ aroused |widespread discussion. He deprecated the conditions which made divorce a common occurrence. In one sermon telivered at the Sacred Heart Convent, on March 12, 193, Father Pardow aroused comment by declaring at the ev f both race suicide and me from the bad exam. a jal pres. 8 rested Stopping the di. | { people and that upon the: responsibility of © evil rriage {s not a mere contract,” he said, “a pound for a pound of flesh, drag, arriage away from the tity irch many thousands sen ' JESUIT RECTOR OF ST, IGNATIUS, W. HO DIED TO-DAY, NEW CANCER CURE IS GIVEN A TRIA INR. BULL'S CASE Joseph A. naa Who Is At- tending Surgeon, Said to Have Made Discovery. Injection of a lymph fr an animal {s sald to-day ye a new treatment for the arrest of cancer tried with success in the case of Dr T. Bull, who fs tll at the Hotel Piaza Dr. Joseph A. Blake, who has bee attending Dr. Bull, is said to be the dis- r » patient at ca lve, 4 the lymph agreed to try used, it is sald, the can: appear, and had plications be fail i legrading it to the | level in counter, [ing in his lower limbs Responsibility of the Rich. | When tne lym oh treatment was “The resopnsibilty of the ric continued the cA 8 educated ¢ es cannot be too muc water so th law am ng t runs down Four Hundred | spreading | Pardow 8) ake | re the Daugh- ect being He said, wrong for the woman man, and viee vers, consider herself a n the creation of Ifa, y of matrimony,”” is one of six Jesutts | floor, Then three men jumped on him Mrs. Nieman, a eet Vers ; fl States | Horton managed to throw the three men | vareed Families in He t popes Ite off him and began to strike about | The b ad W ex —EE | Baronesa de blindly. All the time he was shouting to d, Stryehr 1 arsenle were} " form then fun ; his brother detectives to come to his ald, a | 1 Al organs of all five 1 ee ea pc cotceniaie Maye He drew his billy and with the first at he was Int ertain a Q Vanco ath ———.____ swing felt It etrike a man and heard |” oO Jork ) s t Irug t - him fall Then a biow vent the detece| 100 Much Work, Monotomy, |i fat sim: Seman kn 8 ue eae BOOM CRANE FOR MAYOR. tive to the floor. Ie was up in a mo! Worrying—Not Enough Art, | willing to teu Van Siclen avenue, Brook —— onerét ihe burglars tect hopain Musi rrageudton. (a ; pacanylelel yas cae | 0 this ing i sana. THF Republican Distrtets Favor we at rosa the ‘room, Cc, Rec A \; e et eeu f eeal| Magistrate's Nominaion, Baged the detective in {front | Billik, He lectured "rane $3 the ne struck him from t | aetiteitel ei ‘ une DEN ES went down ag CHIC, ), Jan. 23—Miss Alice Law, 8 his boom hast his chest and 1 when the door was ! ver |OWeNtY Six years old, employed In an detectives, editorial y by the Myron Clark Bluecoats to the Rescue, | Publish y, committed suicide In the dimly lighted place the detec: | by inhaling 5 na fives could not tell friend from foe. | The burglars were us and long Jin juncture ‘tw the Fifth s was n graduat. and was sald to have a strain lan biood. She | into the fray 4 To may they soon |) Irgl to | enain wus terms, b y Bean [ere ee? cut and with an 1 A 1 and L bell q S tO) to end m s too hard, There { took more th wounds of th tectives’ room look ard tn had ‘Ants egos FOR CRIPPLED CHILDREN VERDICT FOR ‘PASSENGER, Gets $1,000 In Suit Growin; Out of Detached ¢ het. Willam L. E r Red Bank, N J awarded a verdict of $1.00 « $ t was e and M a the Central Rat ad of New Company for caus Sonth Amboy after a vers s the conductor of a t \ jline is so good for children, for growing boys and for tranaportat itl we \ Purd girls, it’s a pity to keep r. Edwards : t mus and ° ark to Red Bank tone most it from them, ductor a detached commu n tect 1 en- Conductor Ridgew a; j lished by the Clark All Drugaists the ticket in the absence or the mutation book. { no engegem \ g, according ate in te night In a caucus held at One ed and Thirty-fifth street and nue he was indorsed by thi an Anizations the Nines first and Nstriets and Fortiet! ech an as me ‘Twenty-third West street, made a every time the tioned there was s from di de similar spect rsement went through | One © breaking of the |* but subsided when the trea umed, At intervals it has s esumed with good results thinks the air of Savannah | | will allow the treatment to become con tinuous, and for this rengon it is in- tended to take the patient South. It is predicted that at the proper time facts at will star je rid and remedy be made 1 ee eagpee Hin Claae (Brom the Louisville © ‘You ved me j candida FOR 61 | Head —& Catarrh USE Omesa Oil Pour a ware oonful of Omega Oil in a cup of boil ing water, hold the mouth and nose close to the cup, and inhale the arising steam, The steam carries the healing properties of the | Oil into the throat and lungs, givin, uick relief. Also rub the nose an forehead withthe Oil, 10c., 25¢. 50c. we rals Wiliam | ¢. ul 7) tl i sent the following letter to yous nef Mr, Gould at the Hotel Plaga; ROT! id My Dear Mr, Gould: I have ben =’ | Informed by a gentleman friend af the court that you are desirous pt taking upon you the responsibility of acting as a probationary officer under my direction, in the criminal Magistrates’ Court of the City of ’ ! | to appoint you to that position, If i ‘ New York, It would afford me great pleasure you feel that you can lose the time to perform the duties of a probation- ary officer, which are not very hard or arduous. The only difficulty wouté be that you would have to serve It Would Seem a Safe Bet! without pay, ne i have no way of a A Fe A protecting anybody who serv | That Young Man Will Not T shall perelad to mest you La this - Bea Probation Officer. $a. Yours very truly eee D. B, FINN, | City Magistrate, , rr Q vA V4 Mr. Gould YOUTH NOT TALKING, |torias'® Mote yas quoted tm rose | What Gould Sad_Yerterday - city as my probationary officer, leone ‘hen ith matter is omoielly, bey we >} H efore me all accept % ; But Father Freely Discusses Ibelleve that Nevis portetiy sectenet Est his offer and Lam equally serious in ace) sting | the Offer Made by Battery |< He says that he wants me to: serve as shall be very jing to assume the duties as soon aa It conventent to the Magistrate, ery one should be schooled tn nloipal affairs, A knowledge of om | can only be gained through experience If young Jay Gould dons a blue unl- and the best way to learn about theee form with brass buttons, sticks his sil. |things Is by studying them at hand, in a court. I am now studying { | ver-mounted revolver into his pocket, Jaw. It is to be my life work. “T have always been interested in the provides himself with a palr of hand-|children’s Court In this city and th cuffs and a billy, and fares forth as |Citles of the West. ‘Those courts 4 jin the majority with purely moral | Magistrate Dan Finn's probation offi: |questions, having no experience the sterner problems of the law and ite th! cer, he ts likely to come Into conjunc: jenforcement, ‘The juventles who fed |tion with the paternal slipper, figura. | Pent before thelr bars AUAGOECD aes plvelys {f not literally, must be there who will fll that capage For George J. Gould, father of the! jow of the duties of interesting and ambitious young man, | %,Dr°b bE te ie tsed N ‘ Dan Finn, ne magistrate in ra of moral deline aenc y rather than of habitual eriminale s the po! "Nay"? to the proposition. Mr, | Gould is In what fs some times desig- | says to make or une a serious task to that of being In» the itizens, g man, nated a towering rage at the plebelan suggestion “Rot! Rubbish! Humbug! Buncombe! Ridiculous! Nonsensical!” These are some of the scintillating words used by Mr. George J. Gould tn commenting on his son's reported de- sire to brighten the dally life and | of “Battery probation officer was taken from him by Com- ner Bingham to show how mad ne latter was at the Megistrate, Mr. and Mrs. George J. Gould and young Jay Gould were at the Metro- Op Ouse night, and ad all read the evening papers. | “Rubbish!” Tommyrot!” Mr. conduct of but, havin fense res| some of though [am a you ed my majority, I shall be mt the position it T-can quality: atta lighten the arduous labors | Dan.” whose f e i reward of Two Hundred and Fifty Dollars will be paid for the arrest and conviction of any junk dealer or other person guilty, under the provisions of Section 550 of the Penal Code of the State of New York, of criminally receiving any props erty belonging to either of the undersigned Companies, $50. Reward Fifty Dollars Reward will be paid for the arrest and conviction of any person “It's all Gould re- Simply ridicu ung Mr, Gould nothing, looked worried: and reporters were son on ak to my n Of this thing, | 1 won't say another word about it.’ | Jay Gould stared into nothingness from one side of his father, and made no comp When any one attempted to approach him his father stepped in and | vetween, Poor “Battery Dan.” who maliciously injures When “Battery Dan” was told yes f Or interferes with the t that the embryo young million- lines of either of the alre was will} to become his proba- undersigned Companies, tion officer without pay, the warm- NEW YORK TELEPHONE CO, and THEN. Y. & N. J. TELEPHONE CO. _ 15 Dey St, New York | JOHN H. CAHILL, May 1, 1908 Vice-Pres't & Gen'l Counsel hearted Magistrate was in the seventh heaven of delight Any kind of a probation officer would be acceptable— | but a millionaire probation oMcer was something ne hadn't even hoped for, | “My, my; how nice!’ he said. Then Bilious Troubles A Bile causes no end of trouble. Sick headaches, bilious attacks, jaundice, constipation and many distressing ailments arise from an excess of bile, or from obstruction of the bile duct. eace ty sedentary occu- 4 pations and indiscretion in feeding and drinking are bile blunders that need to be guarded against, When the liver is disordered the best bile correctives are BEECHAM’S PILLS because they relieve the overworked liver, and gently stimulate it when it is sluggish, These pills control the flow of bile, restore its right ¢on- sistency, ‘and work for the immediate and lasting benefit of the stomach, bowels and blood, Whenever a furred tongue, dull, yellowish eyes, nausea, or headache indicate bilious conditions, use Beecham’s Pills at once, to correct the bile and Regulate the Liver Boxes 10e. and 26c., with full directions / uo 27 Song by Clarence Lucas, Published by arrangement with John Church Company This Song, Words and Music, Free with TO-MORROW’'S SUNDAY WORLD. a

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