The evening world. Newspaper, March 5, 1909, Page 3

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& = had 7 HIS HA ARS TES Vil Uh S28 a) 1 i | pn +++ | MMA" ARIAT. Wite Did Noi Make Him Quit the Hui Hb Alt Prize Ring—He Quit Because | Mounted Policeman Dashed to He Was Tired of It. | —_-< Rescue Without Pause aaa rg ee “HE WILL FIGHT AGAIN IF bivep tHeouci pax, HE MAKES UP HIS MIND TO” to Dismrount, peu Badly Cut by Glass, “Jim's Never Cross; lAm Sometimes. upped Cook in Rugs * and Put Out Fire, 1 Think of Him as a Baby I Love and Want io Take Care Ot.” | fant Thomas Lynch mounted eman, rode up the front steps of Sa ass ve the home of Jesse Davis, at No, 2 eave By Nixola Greeley-Smith, | “Jim? Why, Jim is my baby!” said Mrs. Jeffries. | Through the ps feres of Mrs. Jeffries's bed-| Jersey City Wetzel, the cook, from burn- ted po s ' Her room, which showed the parlor of their sulte at the ‘i ae a ay get Hotel Albany, [ caught a glimpse of Mrs, Jeffries’s [ithoviames apcenttat “baby,” the undefeated champlon heavy-welght fighter ran through of the world | { windows Mr, Jeffries, In a flowered dressing gown, was slowly | ee oming to”—from what I will leave his pretty little German wife to tell you, SREELEY= The press agent of Hit Lincoln Square Theatre, where SMITH. Mr, Jeffries will “act” next week, was reading aloud a very ambitions interview with the fighter, which the latter quite evidently heard forthe first time, Asevidently Mr, Jeffries approved of the interview, and bur through the walking. He and saw Jos the blazing iis. particularly of one sentence, In which he was made to refer to “the physical 1 forward at deg, of a decadent race.” | “Gee, but that’s a hot one!" he murmured with admlratton, Meantime, | heels in iided’ the horse” stralaiit ; 1 kar p the Davis a pretty Httle brunette woman clad in a white sitk kimono, caught by a! st I ne ts buck to the diamond. butterfly, beamed from a distance and told me all about the rail of the poreh and trom that leaped training of “bables’—otherwise husbands, h. a A rryung sh, om” 1 . n 1 wit an ieiprokerinte He's a pretty big baby!” I hazarded. I'll confess I was rather awed the by the champion’s bulk hoon f Fee toning. The Best Husband. [the evening he gore to the window and Ste cat He es, putting ya only 2%-pound baby on record,” | ™s u es for Jim to come home. © fre (ive ex aii 24 - e Ive about twenty-five blocks S were is hands, by > glass replied Mra, Jeffries proudly. “But thet'® from a railroad, and that dog actually through which he His ql} Jim {s. And the most good-natured knows the difference between the sound Ha Is r and His halr was ¢tiow in the world, and the best hus- of an automobile and a train. Some- alnged. uathecaredinntiie times Jim Is late and I've gone to bed An ee down the band But Teddy never leaves the window curtains and stamped out the flames In I'm sure I did not look incredulous, for When he hears the automobile coming them t of the , aid not feel so. Yet Mrs. Jeffries he knows {t's Jim, and he jumps over i ll - but so quick- jo ned forward anxtously. on ine pea ane paris CLD ee OD ud ppened that 1t was i ait you've read in| .E Wish I could have brought him ‘ ! wDonityyouabeley ess : me. You know, this theatrical Sergeant Lyn t to the the papers about Jim,” she urged. “IH business is kind of hard on a dog.” City E f When fealty d ry little.” I remembered that I had often thought {tw {ved, Jos found “nnon neta not a bottle baby?” Tvens the S. P. C. A. should get certain shows | to W had in- that were tried on the dog, and 1| ha and Ww burned all tured ‘s augnea, | *8reed with Mrs, Jeffries oN s Jeffries laughed. | apy, 1 e: \ \ 1 to go ¢ No, he Mrs. Jeffries laughed:| “Do you belleve in woman suffrage?” f ‘i Aes cae a Last night the "DOYS | T asked suddenly, ot ould be ar » may have Fa “No,” replied Mrs. Jeffries. “Tt don't ‘ \ a tor Eu Me ry think polities ts a woman's place, 1 > t 1t ate ne aes atte ‘ne Dave lots of women friends in Los An- a can't blame geles and none of them want to vote perfe CAR RUNS DOWN POLICEMAN, h 2 M satistied to look after my t and — Egan dnjered tn Assisting an f ss, [am somet The baby." I supplemented, as we Aged Van ally think of him as just sald good-by, Pe Charles } f the Trathe Oa my way out Mrs, Jeffries tntro- e« ting ¢ F 1x duced Mr. Jeffries to me. ‘Th c 1 ontale tty uncurled a coy tist from ti ‘ re ye GU HRS gown, gathered about his gigantic Rireatetocon yen henmam nants ength like a Roman toga, and we shook © cart iby the hands, t of ‘ , 1 remarked a kK ! lea nlaveandld T mpion grinned bland! fell on Carr, in confided his candid wif kc i rf S goes,” he aa | Dr. MeClure'to believe t, but I eat lots more than he } York Hospital ies are no " serious © NOt does | Daeg ea Just here a Vets ca tg very HEINZE PEARLS, TRIP 10 FUROP young girl came inte ah Hi a WHICH HAVE BEEN UNT that h I marrie Jim," ted Mrs. Jef ignorin he interr on. was g Jim to-day It used to be a ome “My cousin,” sald vay introduct! “Her name 1s See an ess tion. er FOUND IN OMAHA. smith alse ‘That's what she sa called —— | e through the portieres, Her name's on to ny t you belleve It. cont treat to me just to walk over here and And see the houses on the west side, now here T am in this hotel New York Business Man What She Looks Pikes : e ‘ ee ore unlike your {deal of Found Surprise Awaiting ters wife than Mrs, Jeftries n ' en cor T nagined Him in Native Land. She {a small, weighing perhaps 185 or 140 pbunds, She is gentle In manner and very soft of speech, with just the slightest hint of a German accent, © very pretty brown hair and ver ned from a trip. tender olue eyes, I had heard It stated very positive that she is the ‘boss’ of the Jeffries household, so I asked her about it. “Oh, no," she laughed, "Jim does as he likes and I do ag I like.” are enga business, recent of 1815 Park avenue, ain the plumbing abroad, w d several spe- clalists tn Th ¢ seribing his illness and subsequent re covery, he sa “For two y sear rs IT was afflicted with stomach trouble of a very sevorechar-, “But you told me he was your | | acter, I experlenced the usual symp-. ‘baby, I objected. "Sometimes ba- | toms—poor appetite, indigestion, gas on, bies want to do things that are not good stomach, sick headaches, nervousness, | for them.” | distress a eating, &e, I> addition] "Yes, I know," Mrs, Jeffries acqui- }esced, “And in that case I always talk to him about it, and ask him not to— to this T also sufte of blood poison, Lo from an attac! $ falled to re- lieve me, and my condition steadily | but nicely, as a wife should. | grew worse until I became generally ‘Some of the papers have sald that | run down and debilitated Jim would fight again on my say-so, "On the advice of doctors and and that he left the ring for my sake. friends I made a trip across the ocean) That isn't true, He quit fighting be- in search of relief, It was hoped that) cause he ‘was tired of ft, and he will the voyage and salt air would prove fixht again if he makes up his mind to, beneficial, but in this case T was dis-/ That's his business, | Appoint Ww in Bure “I haven't anything to say about ft. | sulted a number eminent ts,| I realize thdt Jim doesn’t belong to me atieal Pa BLE) Gi) -| He belongs to the public.” Shortly after returning my attention| Mrs. Taft could not have made the Was directed to the Cooper medeines, | statement more proudly about the Pres- at that tre New t | i) ident » | ned “I didn't marry Jim because he was | i} a fighter Ours was a genuine love € ve love ch other ne (teatime of Crone o Naw: Die [peat h AGMA CHM CAT i ¢ has made a new man of me.| Mrs. Jeffries paused a moment. Then, i We ualities of this medicine; with fresh enthusiasm, she continued are Ha Wet, Nome could be] 1 wish you could see my home in| I have felt 80 Well Los Angeles. It's beautiful. I have a| do now, My. stomach ig in ex-| flower garden, and in the morning I tell | siiape—appetite se | and Bo Weer aetleocin the gardener where to plant things. 1 the plano, Sometimes [| go to a and t mptoms have dis-| Play of my friends come in | matinee or distressing appeared | ; rhe medicine seeins to be rapidly | for afternagn coft | | See te any Ae vunauR eee ‘T have the dearest Uttle dog named | | A only” add| Teddy. He's a fox terrier, and he sleeps | | ut anyone Wh my stomach | with us on our bed. Teddy won't go to | er medicine a ; y trying NP | sleep except on a silk counterpane. The draving, made from the Tiffany remedies are on sale at He Watches for Jim. design, shows the exact size of the! leading” orumaive ou see, I've had him since he was necklace, which has a total weight of CVSHY" |g little puppy, aad I've cuddied him. In 690 grains and is valued at $1404 A AIRS THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MARCH 5, 1909, VGEPFRIES | “jim Is a Big Baby, ” Says Mrs. Jeffries, | But Adds, “He Is the Best of Husbands” AREARN RESEATED GALLY, SAYS APPELLATE CUR ABDUCTORS G LONG TERMS FROM JUDGE MALONE Removal by Governor Final, | Woman and Three Men Given Aldermen’s Act “Not an Election.” In re-clecting John F dent of the I his remo on cha the Mrs, Jeffries says ste Isn't the boss,” | Acted illegally, according to a de [handed down to-day by the Appellate! and | Division of the Supreme Court, Borough Presi: tdered to make answer decision, the days to the him from ¢ The decisi ever, Justice Laughlin and hee, 1 from office by Board of Aldermen within {Is not unanimous, how- Scott, Laughlin affirmative and Justice Ingraham, Me- being in the Houghton dis- senting, The latter Justice favors dis- missal of the action inst Ahearn, Justice Scott, writing the majority opinion, says in part Ahearn presi-| sion | and In the| One nt Is or-; tion, worked up the case and supplied | and the fact that he separated only one twenty | ‘oceedings brought to oust | | Sixth street Mr, | them to men Maximum Sentences Ag- gregating 24 Years. An aggregate of twenty-four years ) of Manhattan after | {n maximum sentences was Infllcted by Gov, Hughes | Judge Malone to-day upon a woman men convic assault, The Children's Soctety Detective Costuma, of the Hast Hundred and Fourth street sta- and three dof abduetion he evidence, Margaret Dlatr, a rather comely woman, the mother of children, Nved at No. 308 ast One Hundred and Costuma learned through child he met on the street that Mrs. Blair was in the habit of Inviting Itt- tle girls to her flat and introducing He made an tnvestiga which resulted fn the arrest of Blalr, Frank the son of tion, Mrs. Idone, The statutory provision as to the|the landlord of the house in which removal of a Borough President is that) she Jived and agent of the property; he may be removed in the same manner as the Mayor, that the Governor, to whom has been moved official is unfit to continue to hold for the remainder of his term the office from which he has been removed. “Phat the people can lawfully re-elect a removed officer for a succeeding tern, if he is not otherwise disqualttied, is not doubte question now solely to the ¢ officer to be vacancy during same term. but ore us, wh wibility of appointed to the that Is not the h relat removed fll of the remainder “such an appointment, although made in the present case by a yote of the Aldermen and in the Charter denomin- ated an election, is not an election, but an appointment within the meaning of those words stitution, Ar fice implte as 1 10, Section 2 ho more than th in th to, physically occupy a specified room to exercise certain powers and to re- ceive a preseribed gee emolument.”’ MR. PRICE EXONERATED. Arrest of Maunufacturer Whowe Place Was Burned an Injustice, Moses Price; a manufacturer of shirts 0, 87 Broad an asst at Mr was rovers business, District years and Is th tion with a fire ourt that an investigation h District t who arrested fire marshal in had deen dis tant Attorney Ware At GERTRUDE HOFFMAN ENJOINED KANSAS CITY, Hoffman was Court here ye Salome ground that t puolic morals, March §.— trude he Circuit presentin is obnoxious to the | John Lippo, a coal and tce dealer of We are bound to assume | the neighborhood, and Antonio Longo- barr!, a plumber. confided by the Constitution the sole| The eveldence showed that Mrs. Blalr power to determine whetler charges | never paid any bills In cash. Idone, the have sufficient proof to warrant re-|agent, collected no rent from her and In | moval, and are such as should be fol-| return for the fa he introduced him lowed by removal, will exercise this/ to little girls. The same line of com- important duty ly and Jawfully. | peysation was followed with the tce “When, thy jovernor has! man, the plumber and others Jexercised his power uf removal, his act | Only two girls could be found whose {8 to be taken as a final and conclus-| parents would permit confessions .and ive determination by the officer to attidavits to be m Q whom the Constitution has committed | Mrs, Blalr was eed to Auburn the power so to determine that the re-| for not less t 8 nor more p Kot from six ars and and Longobarri onths to four than seven y years and six mor six months, from three rs and six mon FOR A COAL CONFERENCE, WILKES-BARRE, March {.—Pres!- dent Thomas L. Lewis, of the Mine Workers’ Unton, will be here to-day for a conference with the anthracite leaders regarding the demands to be submitted to the operators. Lewis had a conference in Philadelphia yesterday with President Baer, of the Readin| and it is believe that arrange- ments for ao h the opera- tors was made ead of the | anthracite leaders | MINE OFFICIALS INDICTED, | CHICAGO, March §.— Indictments | the Federal Grand gainst officers of the American-Mexico Mining and Develop- ing Company, a $30 corporation, It is charged that $250,09) was paid out of the sale of capital stock at $1 a share as div As were returned bj Jury yesterday Superfluous Hair | Destroyed (L Kill the Hair Roots) Let me do this foryou. Igive you all the benefit of my ten years’ ex Pererices I remove hair from the face orarms andit never grows again, Remember, every patron of my office I treat personally, and I guar- antee satisfaction. Call, ‘phone (2126-38th St.,] or send postal for information. JAMES B. QUINN Suite | 103 Monolith Buliding 45 West 34th St., N.Y. | tntormea of a decrease in the price of “This has been bronght about by pro= | posed tariff changes and the action ot the little Independents in cutting prices, IVERED GEMS SUT With an ‘ease in the price of steel, wages rose, As the price goes down Never Lost Hope of Getting: Inevitable Result of sack Prices Forced by they, will consequently full, Will ¢he Lower | wages be cut at the Bethiehern plant? Magnates, > | That I cannot say until { have gone jover the ground, | Phat the di | great as formerly |that the steel Is not wan’ hot be used, It ls due entirely to a | stringency tn the mon arket, Even $12,000 Necklice st. 3 Months Ago. : , | ee = et 0, We must not look th Hurope as the IS FOUND IN OMAHA,|BLAMES INDEPENDENTS. | fit, i vigh Gere In ont Sem eoute | try.” Never Played Baccarat. Former Sweeper He} Violated “Gentlemanly Agree-| Mr, Schwan, was, asked it, there, wae any truth in the report that he had Tost | 1,000 franes a minute for sixty minutes While playing baccarat. ment’ With Trust in New dewalk It Up Froms never played. that game in my | ; aay cae Tay life” he replied. ‘It te very wrong o} at Hotel Knickerbocker, Tariff Issue, people to linagine that I gamble. You |-— know L am called the ‘ r of Bethle- hem,’ and that has a religious signifle | cation wh precludes the idea of There waa no bappler woman In New! Charles M. Schwab, former prestdent vbling.” ; \ si lava Ca HTE Siete SIG ee iking about his friend, Charles York this morning: than Mrs. Otto € of we nited ates Steel Corporation Morse, Mr. chwab reiterated his einze, who was rejoicing ¢ the rr nd present head of the Bethlehem | former statement that ihe belleved MCE a 8 HL MD ne ease } Mele | Morse had been made a goat of, very of her $1200 pearl necklace In Steet Company, returned from Europe [to Nene that they are out now, [do not Omaha it woe found dn the nos: to-day on the Lusitanta, brimming with ' bu ete ie of G arco orakontimin avaaldithat vine ce Was entirely sexsion of a man-of-all-work |optiminm. He said that he had not yet tence Was eta ‘i omplowed at the Hotel Knickers) familiarized himself with the steel vere ida: money for Thee ha ere Mea, Holnute dost the situation here, wherefore he could not not kleking. Did any one lowe any orker, where Mra, Heinze lost the Ay iy nny. 0 ney In his bands? J think not. He mere arnt iatevan hEROta NOUS TUNCET iss It in any of i Intimate phases. | timniy loaned money to dummies for pet Hut as to the steel future,” he said, | pimself, All this came at a time when Psatat the breakfast table “vou know Lam a grat optimist. My |the public was aroused, | Somebody tt {haat nity [belief in the future of the United States /h7 |) be the woat, and Charile bits | and teamed on a rame | 2d of the steel industry 1s boundless i : Dt AAS RERINEU ON KLAN cement went into the steel. busi epalin ‘acinnavacatterellaround) her (chal 0,000 tons, In 1907 the output was | - —— “Of course ['m lad," she sald to a ) tons, and within the neat ten| SALINA CRUZ Mexico, March Get it Hvening World. “Uthas| years L expect to seo it inereasnd to | The gunboat Presid which constl- | tutes Salvador'’s whole y, has satleds een a worry to me for four months, | 10,000,00 tons ‘ f 5 0°, : ‘om Acajaita, as passengers from there the loss of that necklace, You ase, 1] Wages Sure to Be Cut. Sete Ae antag nerieray ever doubied that either our elty poe!) ope and for United States steel) —t presumed that she is to bombard or the Pinkertons would sooner or! greatly exceeds the de , Nicaraguan ports, as the troops of both 4 hae an demand for steel) Muntries are being mobilized and war ater fd it But four monthe If a) made in other countries, { have wen | fg deemed Ineviuahe | Was Valued Keepsake. | — “fast night we hod a message from |the Pinkertons that the pearls had seen found in Omaha, (Um just enya; the detalls from these news: papers Siphe necklace was worth muoh more valuation of at i-no, aller's to me than the lit, Tdon't want to say what It was giv a fri ‘Mr. Heinze A an | eg es Chic Top Coats $ r 3 not dear friend, and 7 $8-$10 Values but a ver Mr. Heinze and I both valued it very | } mich indeed for its associations.” SATURDAY SALE | | Mrs. Heinge sald that she was going ‘ fi , | Heicinstaicethimnenanietendian The most aristocratic collection rN) Ce Ge ALN 6 of sprightly, dashing top coats tification of the property and recover tt. | STRAT EGHEO ILE i triritaltn Bedell has ever shown. ovember she missed them as she as crossing the sidewalk to leave the hotel. She was very sure she had lost them fnside. It never occurrad to her that they had dropped to the side- walk, Plain & Striped Coverts Black English Cloths Stunning Large Pockets Ya Carried Pearls in Belt. John Savis, the Greek who picked {them up, was employed as. sidewalk man, keeping entrances of the hotel | neat, and he and the carriage starter | were the only employees who were not Positively the newest models in New York, cut and tailored questioned by the detectives regarding § i : uae | the necklace with a jayntiness which is in- | Savis left the hotel a few weeks ago separable from the genuine | and went to Omaha as interpreter for ‘ rT d | a band of Greek laborers. He took one English garment- ~collar an } earl to a jeweller in Omaha yesterday. The Jeweller told him It was worth about 9 cents, and kept him haggling until the police had been summoned Sayis pretended he thought the pearls re imitations, but his story does not [square with the way rried them collarless effects—single and double breasted—black or tan —superbly satin lined—English seam and sleeve innovations— Saturday only $5.98, Sale All Three Stores, Alterations FREE (Alb West 14th Street Fe NEW YORK ) AG04462 Fulton Stree BROOKLYN \ 6450651 Broad Street ¥ NEWARK 3 LARGE STORES. ee ea eee a aon Hit" that’s already made a noise was our LATEST prompt cash “buy” of one of the snappiest lines of Drummond's famous Spring- weight worsteds ever woven in Eng- land! The close figure at which | of them for his first attempt at a sale, | ‘The others were in a belt fastened about | his waist, | ‘This is the description of the necklace sent out by the Pinkertons with thelr ocer of $0 reward for Its rec i “One necklace of sixty-three pearls, on silk cord, largest’ pearl in centre weighing 1812 grains, graduating in size to diamond clasp of 7-8 karat, set in gold and platinum, Total weight of | pearls 440 grains J , ——>— NIGHT OF PRAYER FOR TAFT, Five hundred men, representing the Brotherhood of Andrew and Philip and various er Protestant brotherhoods — “ ity, gathered in room of the Broadway nacle last night, and offered pr ers for the esstul administrat of President nghout the tho | [SODA Cracker } Anuther Biscuit L SODA CRACKER }y | LATEST PRODUCT “ANOTHER SS‘ PACKAGE” AN OLD FASHIONED SODA CRACKER ‘Another Biscuit” ASK YOUR GROCER we bought lets us tailor them into ‘16 WORTH DOUBLE Suits to Order —nothing but the Morrison quality and tafloring, and nothing but the Morrison exacting Moish and fit; 5 to $30 is DARD price for such n ! weave nd The Only Co. of Its Kind in the World! sven gar. Baggage Repair Specialists the hint? and 665108 FULTON:ST, TA Mutual Milk. = Pure & PROMPT HE ONLY PASTEUR. IZED MILK DELIV. ERED TO YOU IN SEALED AIR-TIGHT BOTTLE, $2.90, $3.85, $4.95, $6.85, $9.50 and up. Wardrobe, Dress, Theatrical, Fibro. Gents', Ete. Big Lot of Short Trip Bags, 81.80, LARGEST STOCK IN NEW YORK, THOUSANDS OF BARGALNS. sa LOOK FOR THE MERGENC BAGGAGE REPAIR CO. 25 4 29 RAST LITH STREET, 1 Door from Union Square West on 14th st. \PEST MILK to give to CHILDREN and to use YOURSELF, it's GUARANTEED pure, | As Gutie | Rent | gruohn = 2a (|| Mutual Milk and Cream Company order, | | Main Office 214 £, 22d St. ‘Phone, 9346 Gram | steal, but do not know just how great & | |eut has been made or exactly what |arades are affected, ~

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