The evening world. Newspaper, February 12, 1909, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

CUNEO ANE CHINESE SCRPI ON JAP'S FACE =< Lee Chee Mate, Who Chinks When Could Lick 50 egan on Him, Objected RESTAURAN FIGHT IN ‘Honorable Steward of Army and Navy Club Beaten But Undaunted. By hls honorable mustache (elg hairs on a side), Foshiyuki Moto, a diminutive but mil nt Tap, was still of the opinion at 10 4. M. to-to™ that be could Hek fifty Chinanen. ( fully propped and ried agat the bench of the Yorkville Conrt, blinking: one fiery fittle brown eve out of a five- — ‘ply turban of bandages sured Ma ate Herr only got half a sche he could clean up about two-thirds of a province of ‘the Ding Dong empire. Then he went on to say t whom he charged with assault given him an tnflnitesimal margin opportunity before he (Lee Chee) jumped on his (Foshivukl’s) hone neck began carving him up with ‘geveral dozen of the sharpest knives in | the world. hat Lee Chee, » hadn't of ‘able Clash at3 AM. | This Shinto-Mongollan clash occurr at 3A. M. in Lee Cheo's restaurar No Sixth ave The Hon Mr. Moto Is steward of the Arny Navy Club, After he had wound duties In the elu early this tng he met his } le frlond, Miss Loulsa Brown, Miss n has halr o the ho: yellow tulip blend, a very ‘pronounced complexion and soulful eyes: dered in her up res In t class, Mr. sealo ofa How rir La W was leaning on arm H Chee's of 3. were also in Mr, party Mr, Wilvon, bookkeeper of the Army and Navy , and Mrs, Wilson. After Mr. Moto had bowed M Brown into her chair he loftily sum- moned Lee Chee, who is tall and slender vand very handsome as to queue, having nine feet eleven inches of the same. Bending courteously to Mr. Moto, Lee Chee deferred that he would probably ike a large bowl of new brewed chop |# suey suMctent for four Foshlyoki nodded stiffly that he had | iguessed right, and added that the light was very poor in the restaurant Wanted More Light. “Lightee alle same good,” 1s what Lee Chee should have replied, according to Hoyle, What he did say, with a smirk | at Miss Brown, was: “Forget it. The | light’s good enough all right.” (Lee Chee has heen serving chop suey along Fixth avenue for fifteen years or so, fomehow he has shed his pigeon Eng- ‘Mah.) However, what he enid or the manner | of saying It angered Mr. Moto, Getting | up from the table he scowled darkly | upon Lee Chee and demanded more Meht. “T will turn {t on myself," he cried, and sprang to a switch. “Cut that out,’ cried Lee Chee, ‘This fe my restaurant and Ill run the lights See" He walked threateningly Mr. | Moto's way. Mr. Moto drew himself up to almost four feet nine and Informed Lee Chee ‘that | h efwas looking for trouble he could get it from a new and original source “Beware,” Atty Chinamen.” Started to Lick One. “You couldn't lick anything,” retort+ sed Lee Chee, whereat Miss Brown be. he sald. “IT can lick gan to faint. She executed her first sfaint as Lee ( s que and snapped It Moto's eva, Thi ‘roused Mr. Moto’s battle mood to a st den white heat, and with a fierce “Ban- jzai!” he hurled himself «: one of the itty Chinamen he was capable of ex-| ‘tingulshing. But_somoho: les Chee failed to ex- ‘ting. When Miss Brown came out of her } second faint she saw Lee Chee drawing from the folds of lls Karments various short and long knives with which he ‘ proceeded to operate on Mr, Moto. The Ohinaman was sitting rather at his ease | on Mr, Moto's chest. Mr. and Mra, Dit- fon had departed in search of constabu- lary. Having produ {hegan to design divers. sin }legends on the honorable @r. j features, Over the littl ‘right eye he traced one 5 Song of a Shirt” {n the or ‘Then with the point of anothter knife he cut several collar and cuff receipts Son Foshiyok\'s cheeks. His Work Artistic. Rousing from her seventh faint, Miss ‘Brown saw Lee (| still solemnly en-! aged in recording Vagrant thouglts in “hinese characters on her escort’s fea- tures, Deciding not to drop off Into an} eighth faint she screamed and was still acreaming many minutes later when { several policemen were prying apart the short and the tall Orientals, As Moahi- yokl was all bound up in Lee Chee's Queue this was no simple task. ) "Thoroughly carved and brulsed as We was, Mr, Moto still proclaimed he could Hck’ fifty Chinamen. He reasserted it to Magistrate Herrman. Novertheless he was firmly convinced that Lee Chee should go to jail for at least one life for having desecrated his person. with Chinese character Ho, Foshlyoki, ry, Lee Chee} ple Chinese | Mot J the ent a al would be acarrea for life with Chinese ) script. f Tho. Court expressed its sympathy / with Mr, Moto, but thought 1 1 been a bit loo aggressiv: ve Leo Chee was disel re « Rrown re adjusted Mr. Moto's haydne sand help {pltttul, ‘of work for | more chance, If only you will give it to | course, Two Hundred Voluntary Lincoln’s Birthday Is Selected As an Approp Awarding Their te Time for to the High- est Bidders, TO WEAR MASKS AT AUCTION IN CHURCH. Oo of One Despairing Man . O'Loughtin OuL From Others or Homes at Any Cost. y sy Br FE By Ethel Lloyd Patterson, This year Lincoln's birthday will! have been celebrated by an auction | of 200 able-bodied men, In the Park- side Presbyterian Church, Flatbush avenue and Lenox Road, Prooklyn, at they mount the block one after the other and be knocked dor slavery to the highest bidders, Grim 8 o'clock this evening, will - into voluntary srveying their future masters black masks, 200 American eftizens wil! sip their should- ers beneath the yoke that Lincoln gave his life to lft from the “Tam awa freeborn Ir black brothers ed, appalled, numb, be- of these 290 Ives!” ex- claimed E. T, O'Loughlin, secretary of fore the traged; the Park Slope Board of Trade to-day “I feel ax though T had titted the td and caught @ glimpse The of hell a of the human autcion ortgt- O'Loughlin, The date Lincoln's Birthday at 1 auce with Was set on Bestion, and he will be the tloncer. “But after thls is over T want to drop tt completely," Mr. O'Loughlin an- nounced, "I feel as though I would nover be able to sleep again if I kept ft up much longer. “It all Started with one little adver- jent fn the papers and one m luck story," Mr, O'Loughlin The first man was one I knew me to me and told me that he had been otit of work for six months and could not get anything to do. Things | were getting desperate at home. They | had sold or pawned everything they! had thatwas of any value, and food! was beginning to de scarce around the| house, Sold Everything but Self. \t “Well, I tried to get that man a Job! end I coultn't seem to land him, He} used to come in and see me every day In| opes I did have something for him One day he plumped himself down tn} one of my chairs, ‘Well,’ he says, ve sold everything now except myneit.’, Then he paused, ‘That's an idea,’ he ‘Why don't I sell myself?’ ll, he kept hammering away me,"" Mr, O'Loughlin continued, “un he finally got me to thinking that was practical. Anyway I agreed to try| {t for him. I was to put the advertise- ment of his eale in the papers, just like} you would a horse, and people were! to apply to me ao that his name need | not be known. I wrote the a ment and took St over to a etre ot! ew York papers. W T took it to! The World the man behind the desk | didn’t want to take it, He thought it | was a Joke. ‘When I got home that night tere] was a World reporter walting to wet| the facts, I told them to him, and the paper had a full half column the next, | at| 1! ‘That's just about the preface to the Story. That article started the letters! from all over the country; the most heart-breaking letters any men ever reag in his life. At first they came two and three in a mail, but they scon climbed up to forty and Atty a day; pleas, prayers to be sold, ! “One man wrote: ‘I had about made up my mind to kill myself, but {f only you will sell me, maybe I can live even yet.’ “Another one sald: ‘I have been out fifteen months, and I am starving, I made up my mind to be- come a burglar, but I'll take this one me, “L wrote to them not to kill them: | selves, not to do anything desperate, that 1 would try to help them. Received Twenty-Two Answers. “In the meanwhile I had had about | ‘twenty-two answers to my first adver- tisement,” Mr. O'Loughlin said. “I had picked out the one I considered most suitable for him, and I had left, of twenty-one persons who were willing to ‘buy a man. “But I really didn't want to go on’ with the thing. It seemed to me that this was work for the charity organiza- tions, not for an individual, I didn’t know the men who put in applications) for me to sell them. I was afraid that I could not be sure of thelr motives, “Then the letters began to get on my nerves, If I tried to put them out of my mind, tried to think I would ignore them, they simply haunted me. It ended by my sending what I considered the most deserving cases to the persons who had put in an application for the rst man. So I started what looks Ilke an endless chain to me, Things rolled up 80 fast that in spite of all T could do [ finally got about two hundred men t la when the idea of to e. "A church ed him out Into the sunifgit where ha hed the nlace to give It | parle after the ter Tie Chee 4 |in, so 1 advertised for a church, There { challenge to bring around not only his |j> one on almo , ener | Relatives and friends, but his anceators, |!" One ON Alinost every corner in our | He, the Honorable Mr. Moto, would |#cletborhood, but 1 only received one Ulok them all Lee Chee only grunted |answer to my advertisement, and that ¥and continued to sinite |was from the Rev. Dr. John D. Long 2. | Dr. Long bas become very mash Inter OLD THEATRE MAN DEAD. ested and agrees wiil me that the date John W. Athaugh sr., actor, theatrical | CBOSeN for the auction may aid to spur Manager and theatre ownes,” died pecple | terday at the home of his daughter, MV t co cretiliay J Frank EF. Henderson, No. 31 York |, of Course ree Ane ‘atreet, Jersey City, He was born in | Hat Tam gett it, and where | j Baltimore seventy-three ve ese men ar exhibited after vived by a can John W. it, [ got into it without meaning to. ! (sad wo daughtera, 1 simply heard the cries for help and i | they came to me, j Court, t ' THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1908. RL “L” AGENT White Men to Be Sold Into Slavery in Brookiyn To-Night White Man Aadvertises He Will Sell Himself as Slave BALTIMORE, Fob, 12—The fol tisem « Thomas BE. Swann, @ adver| appears in @ native of tim State of Washington, ore ne who has spent six weelts In re toying to find work. Ho MAN, 27 years old, wil weil g e 1s driven to tals by y y sg of hunger, He suys he care whether there are any laws against slavery or peonage In i , and that no other ent In nurs e If pTaced in the same tuinor surglea! he finds himself. He ts to care for tne willing to watve any lega! conditions case: am total s ag any kind; 5 ‘ Swann was employed tn the Nor- lodging and man wh ubmitted the ads I'd nore them, o be less than human to ig- BX like a horse, down he will go {nto an ante-room with When he has been knocke] Hit on Plan of Masks, | the man who bid him in and a secre- ‘And there isn't any chance he, will take off his mask, question being an ady nent these nen, either, F ¢ first, when {it was understood be- igreement that they may see > between them. tween us that I was not to betra that most of the men stipu- | That wast reir] “About al identity. 2 one hitea in the as their price is a decent place to) fdea of the at Tien we thought! cloep, enough food and comfortable of the masks. lothing "The man when he s ip on thel “And a ction Ja over," fin biock will wear a black mask that com-| ised Mr. “L want a com- letely conceals his featu 1 will tel] mittee of citizens appointed to carry on Certainly lot the work that he has previousty dono, | M*_Werk, It cannot | dropped. And y F jie age, aud all the resi; sell him sane we libs certainly clita s Of these, I venture to ray, that 6,000 to S00 were Megal, unwarranted and un- Justifyable by law, by the pollce of this rests be- e they are afraid of their supertor officer, for the reason that the Commis- sioner has gone to his deputies, the deputies to the inspectors, the Inspect- ors to the captains, and so on down, and given orders that peop! arrested where there Is no justification and where a mere warning to a man} would do; for instance, on car tracks, blocking the tracks, and | people leaving thelr horses turned thé | Wrong way, all are unnecessary arrests, Magistrate Moss Comments on Arrest of Man for Carrying | Sram viaatreats are made fecauss ‘the men are afraid of charges belng His Own Overcoat. | preferred against them, or being trans: ferred if they don't make them. bara “It ig a shame and a disgrace the way | these arrests are made they are un- stified and unwarranted and the | magistrates realize it. Look at the num- Ler of homes that have heen invaded at CENSURES BGHM FOR POLIGE BLUNDER Magistrate Moss, {n J fn dis-} it hours of the night by burglars that y, a long Island! er been arrested! — Let the fs rnigstoner pu Inding homleldes, bur- 5 sarge and other atrocious pawnshop vercoat on] crimes that ha united in the another o n t al t vear, where nave never pprehended, and th 3 would V4 large that’ the publle would. be »paited. “This de the detect! | tourth street, ti he migh be ic jiuiest the dete ndant says that he aT » to go with him nin Manhattan, in 0 er that ified, with which re- ive declined to comply, e coat ; clined £0 ischarging yo aud here he is, paraded the news: | "In alseharging you ipers on suapicton that he Is In pos: Greely, said the Magistrate sion of n coat that wus stolen, wher at the dete A to ich a course wag entirely unnecessary there are MACE. Iiece [letedeorherethisimanccould hava given unwarranted, 1 do not tisfaction that he was all right with blame the as their] very little trouble, Tan) golmg to iy viably discharge this defendant,” uperior offic t ok at the burglars.” he went on; own Is overrun wi then In my elghborhood we hay thirty in a Many legal Arrests. e all sleep with revolvers | “The statistics given out by Police pillows, and yet the Com: | Commissioner Bingham on 6, Tat, has a fad that citizens should | show 244,022 avrests In the year 1908, Of not ih allowed to carry pistols.” ‘at her head | be | Finger Prints Like | \n thelr classification, | a year ago was arrested on susp must be | people driving | ;ghway robbery | N IDENTIFIES TWO ASHCLOAP MIEN irged With Station at Capture Pair Cl Robbing Pistol Point, Younger is Arrested Year Ago After Black’ Hand ( eee Detectives of the Fifth avenne po- Brooklyn, captured two were later Identified Nee station, men to-day who as the hold-up men who choked and robbed Miss Grace West, the B, R. T. at the Fift!) avenue and foket agent yontieth street “1.” station, night be- ‘ore last. The two men are Joseph Piretnt, tewentyesix years old, of No. Int Twen- tleth street, Brooklyn, and Alphonso achetti, twenty-seven years old, of 151 Tw at atreet, re arrested to-day by Detectives Henne, Fenton and Owens Both pris oners have records of previous arrests, and Peretnl has long aines been sus- ected of being a Bhick Hand operator. Ry taking an impression of his unger prints It was established to-day that he was arrested for muriey a year ago Girl Identifies Prisoners After Pirctni and Giachettl had been brought to the police station Miss West was gent for, The detectives als sum moned Frank Lupinsky, of No. il § enth street, Manhattan, who arrived at the “L" station just as the threo high waymen were rushing off with thelr booty. Pircint was lined up with half a dozen other men and Miss West was brought Into the room. She Instantly pleked him out as the man who had gripped her by the throat and held a revolver From a second tne-up of half a score men she picked out Gia- chettl as the man who had gathered up the three bags of money while Pir- clni choked her Similar (Wentitications were made by Lupinsky. He had passed Pircint and Glachet! on tho, stairway of the “L" rospective maater and enter| station as they fled with thelr plunder Later, when he heard the cries of Miss West and learned what had happene he joined a vain pursuit of the rob- hers. Following the Identifications the two prisoners were taken to Pollce Head- quarters, measured, photographed and thelr finger prints recorded. Murder Suspect's When Pircini’s finger prints were teken they were classified and compared They duplicated the finger prints of a man who tolon of having shot to death Frank Cerrucel, of No, 22 Union street, Brooklyn. In exactly that cage the evidence had been insuffi- | clent to establish his guilt. The police also unearthed records of! two other ar sin which Pireni had figured. In those cases the charges were But the youn; man escaped conviction, as in one caso tie evidence was incomplete and in the other the complainant disappeared After the records and meatuvements jot the two men were entered they were larralgnea in the Fitth Avenue Court, wwheng Miss West and Lupinsky ide fied them again. They were charged with robbery al In ball cash tor examination on Feb. 18, Dr. Lyon’ S aCT ‘Tooth Powder Cleanses, beautifies and preserves the teeth and punties the breath Used. by people of refinement for almost ___ Half a Century AUCKING STARTS AFIGHT; Hh pe ete Wamer, Retired Fire- wounds James Kier- nanand Charles Winters, Fred nian SON HAD KICKED DOG. Young Man Expressed Regret, but That Did Not Satisfy the Owner. James Kiernan, who once had quite a reputation as a prize fighter, but now keops a 106 Canal street, Stapleton, Staten Island, was shot twice in the abdomen and probably fatally in- Jured, and Charles Winters was shot | twice in the right efde In Washington to-day by Fred War- | a retired New York flroman, The pon at No. Park, Stapleton, ner, shooting was the result of a fight that originated in a kick that Warnes’s son, fa pollee sergeant attached to a Manhat- tan precinet, gave Winters's dog. The Warners went over to Staten | Island early to-day to look at a motor | boat which was advertisad for sale. They were examining !t at the foot of Bay street when Winters and his dog— a big white bull-came by, The animes niffed about young Warners's legs and he gave {ta kick, Winters was erraged and told him he'd better apologize and make haste about it. Warner is a pow: erfully built man, Not wishing to start nny trouble, he told Winters he war sorry, Winters wasn't satisfied. He walked rapidly up the street to Klere nan loon and got Kiernan and Fred Ingraham, a deputy sheriff, who was in the place, to come along with him and give the Warners a thresiing The three men met the old fireman and lis son a few blocks from Wash- ington Park, They walked behind them Jeoving and trving to provoke them Into a fight. Finding that the two men hed to he paarenb'a Ingraham hit young Warner a swinging smash in the face, The elder Warner then drew a pistol an dimed at Ingraham tolling him to get away from his son. Kiernan and Winters dodged in behind the old man and knocked him down by both jumping on him at once. The younger Warner rushed to his father's assistance, and while the men were all struggling on the ground | Warner’a revolver was discharged four | times, tracted a crowd and the reserves were summonde from the Stapleton poll station, They arrived just as the shoot- ing hapened. ‘The Warners made no ffomt to escape. The e'der one held out his pistol to RipElcaman and point- ing to the wounded men on the ground, sald: “I'm afraid they attacked wu Roth the Warners and Ingraham were (era and charged with felonious assault hot those men, but HOW I TOOK MY WRINKLES OUT After Facial Massage, Creams and Beanty Doctors Had Failed | OFFERS REMARKABLE FORMULA FREE By Harriett Meta Troubles, worry and {ill-health brought me deep lines and wrinkles, I realized that they not only greatly marred my appear- anco and made me look much older, but that they would greatly interfere with my cess, because @ woman's success, either socially or financlally, depends very largely on ber appearance, The homely woman, with deep Ines and furrows fn ber face, must fight an unequal battle with her younger and better looking #i I therefore bought various brands of cold | cream and skin foods and massaged my! face with most constant regularity, hoping to regain my former appe: ice. But the wrinkles simply would not go, On the GF trary, they seemed to get deeper. N went, ‘to w beauty apectaltst, who told me "the ly rid me of my ‘wrinkles, 1 paid ia ih money and took the trentment. Sometimes I thought they got | but after spending all the money I could afford for such treatment I found I still bad my wrin- Kles, So I gave up In despair, and conelud ed I must carry them to my graye. One day a friend of mino who was versed in chem- istry made a suggestion, and this gave mo a new idea. J immediately wont to work making experlineuts and studying every- thing I could get hold of on this subject several long months of almost num- and discouragemente I finally | discovered a process which produced most | astounding results on my wrinkles in a/ single night T war delighted beyond expression. I tried | my treatment aguin, and, lo and behold! my wrinkles were practically gone, A third treatment three nights tn all—and I had ho wrinkles, and iny face was as smooth as ever. I next offered my treatment to some of my Immediate friends, who dsed it with | aurprisiog results, and I’ have now decided | to lot the public benefit by it is will sand further particulars tn regard | my wrinkle remover to any one {ntert td absolutely, free of charge, will also send you, absolutely tree, special pri- vate fortiula for a remarkable hair propa- ration which stopped my hair from fal ont when all else had failed, Tt also {mme- diately relieved all traces of dandrutt, pro- moted a new growth and restored tho soft, aliken lustre #0 much desired, To my mind thiy preparation is unequalled for growing hair on a bald Bead, stopping hair from falling, curing dandruff and restoring gray hatr to ita original color, Any druggist can {ill the formula at small cost, My writkle remover !s an entirely new discovery of my own, and the process {8 40 simple that you can use It thout the knowledge of your most Intimate friends You apply the treatment at night and go to bed. tn’ the morning, lo! the. wondertul transformation. People often say it sounds too good to be true, Well, the test will tell, Miss Gindys Desmond, of Pitvsburg, Pa., writes that it made her wrinkles disappear none night. Mrs, M. W. Graves, of Hridgeport, C wrinkle left u., states! There ts not a my friends say [ look twenty | ears younger. { consider your treatment godsend to womankin Mrs, James! Harrs, of C ‘al City, 3. D., writes: “The hange ts great that it seems more a I positively used no cold face steaming and so- There is nothing to tn x to injure the « ork of magic me to y the Vienna Jt lars in regard sent nelose sta & areiett Address NAY The noise of the fight had at- | nag oG5..8 N SHOT & *) Superb Spring Skirts § Real $10 Values §# Waa Exactly Like Preiure Women's and Misses? This $10 Novelty 98 Mixture Skirt, 4 An elaborate showing thoroughly Tepresentative in its character, introducing Spring's smartest mod- els of exquisite French worsteds, hair lines stripes and light weight broadc'oths — blacks, browns, | greens, grays and blues. Saturday Only---Alterations FREE SALE AT ALL THREE STORES. 14 Test th Ste saul Has sire 645 ngolB “ea1B Brat Stet 3 LARGE STORES, NEW ilipsborn pI JUTER GARMENT SHOP. i West 23d Street This $10 French $4.98, Panama Skirt, Dashingly smart new models with the freshness of a Spring morning=soft chiffon Panamas, self and button trimmed French mesh voiles finisued with silk bands. New French flare and theath models. Splendid Waist Opportunity 1,000 SAMPLE LINGERIE WAISTS, DAINTY NEW SPRING MODELS, Regularly $3.75, $4.50 and $5.00 A prominent maker's entire sample line of mg At *2.90 batiste Waists, in dozens of various models, {rimmed with effective lace, beautiful embroid- ery and lace motifs, None worth less than $3.75; some as high as $5.00, Boys’ ®& Children’s Dept.—Broadway at 13th St. CLEARING ALL Boys’ & Children’s Suits & Overcoats [BONG Overcoats, in * Tourist and Box Back stvies, for the large boys of 8 to 17 years, Also Reefer and Russian Overcoats and Norfolk and Double Breasted Suits, for boys 2% to 15 ys Formerly $8.75 to $15 $ EEFER and Rus- sian Overcoats, Sailor and Russian Sui s, ali wool fabrics, in sizes for boys of 2% to 15 years, Formerly $6.75 to mmr a rN Spring Rain coats ated ry dese nolude Ry of Momen'a BOBUE RIZED SIR | RAUNCOATS 25¢c | ° |COFFEE od "(he Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co, 4 OOK aye N tores in the 1 u ) Jee vs | 831 Bway ria . ’

Other pages from this issue: