The evening world. Newspaper, March 6, 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)

BUNGO MEN LOSE $10,000 VICTIM Telegram to Train Put Mr. Wadsworth Wise and He Got Off at Albany. STEERERS ARE NABBED, Pair Arresied on Ottawa When Reached City. Tip From They When the Montreal express, the Grand Central @olock, left Harlem this morning bad aboard Detectives Dale and Detsch, who had been sent to One Hundred and Dwenty-fifth street to rescue Joseph Wadsworth, of Ottawa, Canada, from @ pair of bunco steerers. ‘They found the alleged bunco steerers, but Mr. Wadsworth, of Ottawa, had apparently found them out firet—at any rate, he had quietly dropped off the train at Albany. Inspector McCafferty, of the Centr Office, had a telegram from the Chief of Police of Ottawa early this morn- ing asking him to be good enough, please, to get Mr. Wadsworth, a well- known and Influential business man, away from the two crooks. fur- ther informing him that Mr. Wad worth had on his person €4,000 tn and letters of credit for $6,000 more His $10,000 in Peril It was presumed that Mr, Wadsworth would be separated from this $1 very soon after his arrival In New York Station at 7.30 either by the wire-tapping Kame or by the process known fn the West as “the Big Store,” clasitied here as “the sick engineer trick,”’ and pr: ed with great success by the er Mr. Lawrence Summertield, sonie time of Sing Sing and now of Detroit In this game to put i the an bunch the erating “auc will be it great advance on the “ig er’s price. Of course, the “securities are always worthless, and. th buyers disap it ‘BUCKE em. oN, Ts sald a mar # this morning, a ) Meinert In Yorkville Court aud are raigned them as suspici ‘The first sald and came from asserted he did not field, who ts also st. gan clty at the urgent request of Board of Pardons of this State, let him out of Sing Sing a month e on his promise never to come back to New York. The other man sald that he was W Mines was recognized as one whose picture {s In the Central Of tion as that of one who has carri wire-tapping and other swindle. Magistrate Steinert res there was no lawful excuse the prisoners ar missed them with the cordial sugses that they go back to Canada. And stay there. CHURCH CAN RAISE Allows Mount Olivet Baptist to Mortgage Property to Pay Debts. Supreme Court Justice Glegerich has mo! the Church may put a church property to pa ments to the edifice Gilbert, the paste which has been fn a turmoil rome months, cannot, however, any of the funds of the church for legal expenses of certain officers of the church in actions at law which hay been brought against them individually, Jn this vexpect the decision says “After the present suit and other Mts sare terminated, It can better Le determined whether it is permis- sible or not to use church fu for ying the legal expenses of such age on Dr, Mathew of the ct Ww r use rs. » Mount Olivet Baptist Chureh ts ’ ed In West Mifty-third street and fa the largest colored Baptist Church in Now York. SHOCK KILLS LINEMAN, <Velght Meets Death While Levair- Vroken Cirenit, Ww. lineman, employed by the and Electric Light Company, while trying to repair a broken circuit at Avene C and East Eleventh street, Wright, an electrician and latbusn Gas was Killed John Flatbuah, this morning at 4 o'clock CN ROAD HERE due at} | it -\n fam Buckingham, of Hamilton, Ontarto. CASH, COURT SAYS decided that the Mount Olivet Baptist | for Improve. | THE EVENING WORLD, SATU RDAY, ARSE 6, 1909. e+e Adage of the Savage Applies Equally | Well to the White Man, De- | clares Woman Novelist. ‘MEN HAVE NO MORE RIGHT | THAN WIVES TO BE OUT LATE. No Use Trying to Reform Hubby— Must Caich Him Before He Is 27 Years Oid. By Nicola Greeley-Smith, “Lam some times inclined to think that the sayi only good Indian is a dead Indian,’ husbands,"" Such was the startling statement made at a meeting of | the Legislative League by Mrs. Margaret Holmes Bates dur-| ing a discussion of Signorita Huidobro's recent assertion) that no questions should be asked of the husband who! strolls home at 3 A. M ying, ‘The applies equally well to I asked Mrs. Bates to-day what she meant by it. For, if mounereeury= Ont udge by appearances, there is no milder or more) mime feminine woman within the city limits than this latest "| husband baiters. Mrs. Bates is well kno 1 as the author of several novels, the most vet ides being very prominent amon, “Silas Kirkendown’s Son,” ' She laughed when [asked her If she really believes shat the only good hus: band {s a dead one. ‘Yos, Tsatd that,’ she admitted, "but | ~ ft was after the regular meeting, and 2 W talking a lot of nonsense. serous opinion ts that the average husband of my acquaintance ts quite al to the average wife. I think < Huldobro’s views are behind however, Have Equal Rights. that a husband has out til 3 A, M. ere all ROW BY SUFFRAGETTES he only reasan why "t ask bn) anetling | C . | nut Where he has been ts bect | cession to Run Down- | won't tel rthe truth Buc at | ania inton felt by a con-| town Tuesday, | | ie silence. Then tt does no good to put him ; through the third degree?” I tnterro-| Armed with Chinese lanterns pated dled with saffron sashes, | vo, {t only exasperates him," shriekingly yellow “Votes for Women" " ‘ wv of one wife WhO. transparenctes ulaeeaenin in teat lined! tol'ko parenctes, and occupying half a ; ; caller CO#8 big automobiles, tee etotiea will invade Park Row at Afraid of ftragettes 2 A.M. next the goblins? Not | Tuesday, ata cer-| they of the crooks telegraphed Ottaw t o—t lode, + The sortie 1s said to be alded and| “You're under arrest,” said Dale y do you know?" he inquired. abetted by several gentlemen of Suf- "y e om Iw the street about 11 P. M.,| fraget Proclivities, and {8 direct Butt 5 it no curtains, and I saw mainiy at the unregenerate unbeliev- ewe t plied Jers in the newspaper offices, ERC MUNEGE Vw t do you mea running | Once arrived tn the centre of the news- iodalandine uuek that hour? ed the | paper district the leading auto will| Arrested as ‘Suspicious. of the Tribune But Hever tndibany (enaeesilvealitoow tne] red fire and ladies concluding See eer ni ewinealOnl Go amneTRUAte of the Pulitzer Building, and from the depths of the property car a portable platform will be produced When this 18 establisaed Mrs, Borr- matin Wells will mount and cry aloud to the Ilstening stars for a ballot. She will de followed by Mrs. Lydia Com- mander, Mrs, Olive Pierce, Miss Heleny Murphy, Dr. Sears and Dr. Glasgow. The National Progressive Woman Suffrage Union, as the Suffragettes are | funity, But him, made him worse. eam of pro instead of rst into a § heing Bates concluded, "there | 4s no use trying to reform a husband at all. before he ts ts that, Your only hope ts in catching him n, because after fad habits, he 1s per- her. if he hi Qu daughter T would say to onal eee ine we Y 0 known on their visiting cards, ia now Mer aE CONE aaa ed out /t82 lmmediate protege of Lady Cook |e ts under eee a ne int; She has returnes to this country to iia push the voto for " ter Is really the most important thing, | means in her power. Hi If a man has a good mother he will Suffraxetes are sald have make a good hushand o four figures. If the early A Model Mother. im Not prove tco raw the ye best mother I know—In fact, af Chat’ It accompany | model mother—!s Mrs, James 8, Sher-|the (dere, Under her auspices an Al- wife of the new Vice-President. na companion to her nds them, She is not | ma bany branch of the Sutfragettes {s about | to be organized. i SS sentimental and does not gloss seam mea cue QFEKS WIFE AFTER HE THAD SUE = That is the w Goldman, Who Did Not Die in California, Turns Up in Brooklyn. She has | sons “Her with anyt! should feel, One generation of good mothers d solve the husband problem, For aracter of the | utd bring | grandchildren in her | wor the mother children and ey up her boy with mand he must not be romantic or sentt | stand that she will answei tion he asks. ‘That is the only way to | gain his confidence.” “phen if a girl catches a husband «in- even who has had a good ‘she may hope kes, the ¢ mother st mental When Isaac Goldman fell sick and the doctors told him to go out to Callfornia rs, Bates replied. “But don't undertake to reform any two houses to his wife and transferred to| that age. Because ifa man has) i rch sya indian, you ef name nearly’ all the money he had !n UII he dies, DANK, ‘They lived in the Brownsville sec- 4 + 9 tlon of Brook ming in at 3/"in the mild climate of the Pacite slope Goldman recovered his health, but his funds dwindled and he wrote to his wife for help. Why she didn't | respond isn't told, but she didn’t, and! one day a despairing letter came say- Ing he had decided to Kill himself. The er had been found in Los Angeles | at the place where he boarded, and had | for a change of climate he deeded his, over once star to be may be sure he'll stay on If he has the habit of « | A.M. there ts nothing a wife can do to | atop him, and there's no use in proving him a Mar by making him answer Jquestions when he does arrive. “The only thing to do if you want to | be happy fs to select him properly and, all, study his mother and his or toward her, ‘That is the finul | ot | above man val ——>—- been forwarded to his home {In Brook- | lyn at je disappeared. TRIP COST HIM AN EYE. Announcement of his death was pub- * ished in a Brooklyn paper and soon — after Mrs, Goldman took her children | Southerner in Washington for In- and went (0 relatives In’ Brockton, | (as auguration Hit hy Negro. _Paill G wT be an the ‘there carn WASHINGTON, March 6—As result of a dispute with a negro wal- came Jseae . y ‘ ry. He had ter, Dr. Lonnle Robson, of Charleston, Hes Watidering about alitort i S.C, who came here with the Ger-| made hie way back home by doing odd man Fusiller Company of the National jobs and coming across the inent Wright was on a pole about twenty | Guard of South Carolina to attend the PY pasy eiMeee il ta day [oat i rom the wioune wh | tna iguration, will go home mnus. one to Aer 3 over with the wife who shoe nd with the sight of the other Giant vd tricity. | He fatto the seriously Impaired. ee — | vat eels ‘hen an kmbul y | The trouble occurred Inst Thursday BURIN BEING TODAY, i . night tna fashionable restaurant here, : | Pont eae ect amd Noctrand | the negro striking: Dr, Robson's eyo- lived at Clarkson street and Nostrand avenee, Brooklyn. —_— ing don't simply pause you ca more delicious tea, if ‘talads,” %* ure only The Feast of Purim. gindites' day in lasses and driving a portion of the : fense into his left eye. Dr. Robson all the year to Jewiali children and was removed to a hospital, and yester-' revered by thelr et will be. cele day the Injured eyeball was removed. | evrated | The right éye also is in a serious con- dox throughout dition ‘The negro escaped and has inemorates the d not begn arrested, 480 B.C, from Persian ‘bond beginning to-d the by the ortho- U | woman who 4 “Only Good Husband Is a Dead One, Like the Only ‘Good Indian,’” Says Mrs. Bates AR: LOLI Z IN, BATES. CALs GR THEE, OST NOTHING of Josephine Rapp, Former- ly E employed as Maid. Although admitting that she had lost nothing, Mrs. Mary Reynolds, a wealthy | woman, appeared tn the Flushing Court charge of theft app, a& young ly employed by her as a mald, and succeeded In get- ting Magistrate FI! the risor in. $1,000 ball he Grand Jury, According to the story told by Mrs. Reynolds {n court to-day, she em- ployed the girl about two weeks ago, to-day and mide a against Josephine R was fort ho to hold D8 \ but that after three days the girl left. On Thursday house the girl returned to the d asked for her trunk. Mrs. say# she became suspicious Reynolds and opened the girl's trunk and found ome of her own wearing apparel, all- She accused ‘ec girl of attempting to steal the things, but this the girl de- Reynolds sald Miss Rapp the house. The woman re- fed ported the matter to the police. In court the girl wept bitterly and de- | nied that took anything belonging to Mrs. Reynolds, but her former em-| ployer pressed the complaint of theft, and } trate Fitch, to the astonish. nt of those In court, held the girl in 000 ball. —————— TAFT INVITED TO TEXAS, STIN, March 6—A resolution was offered in both branches of the State Iature to-day, and Mae ora inviting President Taft to v! and to make as long a stay He is asked to addres: e, should it be in sess For Bread For Pastry or Cake as the SAN: for the action of | | N LOST PULPIT AND 7A.ML RAD ov pack BUT ADMATS SHE | HOME FOR LO OF “APFINITY’ ete Special Torchfight Auto PrO-! Mrs, Reynolds Causes Arrest /Pastor Thinks He Is “Better Qualified to Serve the Lord,” but Is Ousted. CARUTHERSVILLE, Mo., March 4.— The Rev, Lyman F. Jackson, pastor of the Methodist Church, says he {s will- Ing to stake everything on his love for ‘Miss Cora Short, a school teacher and church worker. He has been expelled from his pastorate The Rev. Mr. Jackson has a wife and family, Mrs, Jackson with her three Mile, Duhatme, “but I aide with nelther purty In thts affade,"* When Mile, de la Motte was testify 4 Mt was a duel of wit and brains be- tween her and Labort HER DAUGHTER vor! read to her a letter which Mile Uy silts Waaeat ye atfootleevahe sald Dra lMurechnls Geotrey, Saint Hilatre ae eh Marie Bassot’s Strange Story | CHILD HOUSEWIFE MORTALLY BURNED Ten-Year-Old Girl's Dress and Seglas, all noted physicians, testl- fled that Mile, Bassot Is in perfect pom. Catches Fire While She Cooks Breakfast, seasion of all her senses; that he in Khiy Intelligent, indeed, Hut, the ged that she la not ontirely normal, hearing of the case was ad- ed until next ‘Tuewday. Other inent persons wal be called as wit- nesses, Told in Court Interests Paris Society, IN INSANE ASYLUM, PUT To Separate Her From Mlle, De La Motte, Head of a Religious Retre PARIS, Mareh 6. toe this week to catch every Society Has heen on Trene | No, 139 India street, Hess, ten years old, word Mrs. Babst | wite of Gen, Basaot, one of France’ | most eminent men and a member of the) }) Academy. iy Mile, Bassot, room, old, accuses her mother of kidnapping her to a Swiss asylum for the Insane. | ine q rug about the child's body, The case turns on Rassot's al: ty jer agony the Iittle girl broke away legations that her daughter has de- ang ran Into the hall, still on fire. serted her home and faimily that she | Nelghbors caught her then and tore the (ouening clothing from her, They put ak(ast, when her Icothing got ablaze. » ban sxereaming Into her aunt's bed- afire from head to foot. who fg about thirty years Mme, may live in a religious retreat, tho |* e the fire that hi tart Mrs. Milnani (Sociales “condlictedi byl Milan |Grmetraeie. wie ime mentee an mare Lefer de la Motte, Mme. Bassot de-| When Surgeon Joffe came from the clares that Mlle, de lu Motte has « /Partern District Honpttal he matd that : A he feared the girl hed Inhaled fire and powerful and mysterious Inituence over Ne feared the, AnaE ne oeedire: aia, Mile, Bassot, which Is harmful to her hospital. Her aunt wae also attended cally, by the surgeon, having suffered severe burns avout the hands and arme, Incarceration and Release, | ——._—_—_. Only part of the strange story was} AUSTRIA’S HINT TO SERVIA. ; narrated in court this week, but It | veloped that Mme. Bassot abducted daughter tn the most mel ner last summer, alilng in every ef- fort to coax her daughter home from! the Matson Sociale, she employed de- tectives, and they selzed Mile, Bassot while she was going to mass and car- ried her, shrieking and struggling, to an automobile In which her mother was walting. Then the whole party was car- rled at top speed over the border {nto Switzerland, Mile, Bassot continued to , morally and phy: r Attitude and Assure Peace, VIDNNA, March 6—Count Forgach, the Austro-Hungarian Minister at Bel- ‘grade, has been instructed to inform the eryian Government that owing to the maintained by Servia for the nonarehy, to Ita regret, has not a position to submit a renewal commercial treaty with Servia, shriek for help, but the detectives made ‘hy explres March 31 for Parliament: signs to those who halted them and mation, Hungarian Gt Ae Fire citrine OK Newweaien Austro-Hungarian Government, showed an inclination to ald her whlch Pormaow lla! Inatructsdmtor aa ing ¢} plainly Indicated that they were d with a lunatle, Mile. Bassot was placed in a pri vate asylum in Geneva, but she con # the confident hope that 8 {9 weneraly \nderatood ance with the advice of the sclded to via, In Pow- change her polley with to Bosnia and Herzegovina, will | trived to pass a note to a p/ nt, Wh tify Vienna of this wise resolution as telegraphed {t to her lawyer In Paris,| well ag of her Intention to maintain and sie was soon re peaceful and neighborly relations with | Mme, jassot AS soon as this notl- | Austria-Hiing red to negotiate the ques use pending between lawyer Maitre Lab an whe ns to be ont {a Mile. la Motte, a striking looking woman children has left for her parents’ home about forty years oll, dark complex- jin Wichita, Kan. Aa she told Jackson joned as a Spaniard, obvlou good-by at tho train she wald: “Hus-| possessed of extracrdinary band, If the time ever comes that you | Maitre Labor! read, in court letters can live with me as you used to let mej which Mile. de ln Motte has ten to INDI E. 7 know or come,” other young women of the Matson So. G. ST. ON The minister says he kept his wife ‘informed from the beginning of hia affection for Milas Short and that he has not deceived her. They both, he says, have decided that the old love of \their early married dayq ja dead, and verware, and other things, which be- that it te better for them to take sepa- longed to her, and valued in all to about | rate path Pastor Jackson h publicly con- feased that his heart has wandered from his wife. He « that through the potency of this great, new love he {@ better qualified than ever "to serve the Lord.” His first confession to his parishton- ers was made when a self-constituted committee of women members of the ‘churoh waited upon him following ser- vices recently. He admitted without nesitaice that he loved Miss Short, rted that Mrs, Jackson had been told the facts and denied that he had done wrong. ————— CRIME TO SWEAR OVER 'PHONE. AUSTIN, Tex., March #& — The bill making {t a criminal offense for a per- son to swear over the telephone has assed both branches of the Legisiature a arene ib veneure of the Gov- @ The obacene language Is sito *rohtbites ty the bill. Milled from \ i cream No other FLOUR has the Quali HECKER-JONES-JEWELL MILLING CO. Wew YORE clale; letters which seemed that she possesses remar over them. She 1s nominally secretary, but practically the managing head, of the organization, which fs under the control of the Roman Catholic Church “Slater Mercedes.” Labor! read other letters which Mile de In Motte signed "Sister Mercedes.” “You read only fragments of my let- ters," angrily cried Mile, de la Motte to Labori, "Tell me how did they come in your possession ?”’ | “They came from Lavorl calmly. "They Gen, Bassot by were touched were sent to Rom Mlle, Duhalme, sprang to her feet “Those letters should not be she cried. “I sent them to Ror demand that they be returned to ae. you sent them to Rome that they ht be used in a lesal proceeding there to end the e re of the Maison Soclale,"” retorted Lavori, “Yes, | Am For the Church,’ “Yes, Lam for the Church,” exclaimed to p Why not start now—to-day—and ¢! and Indigestion? j food ; |ache and Diazin with nauseous odo Pape's Diape} , and your food w' ach in five minutes, stomach and intestines, and, besides, Rome," answered stomach would do It. were delivered to| 1 persons who is pleas. The letters by Mile, Duh i who was in up: eat will do you good. Absolute rellef from all Stomach ‘you decide to begin taking Diapepsi court, st Those who suffer with di iousncss, nausea, flatulence, organs, should use the best moans Probably no other remedy wil ao naturally ¢ equally beneficial in chronic cages 0 They gently stimulate the dig effect upon the liver and bowel gestive tract, Beecham’s Pills r Oh, dear! The ne hy oh, Another signal victory that Wor For Articles 1 city 4 living at} £ Brooklyn, with her| of the remarkable story that !s belo | aunt, Mrs, Matilda Babst, was mortally told In court tn the sult which Mile. | burned about the face and body to-day, Marle Jeanne Bastot has brought | When her clothing caught {ire from an against her mothor. Madamo 1m the | Overheated stove has been sick several weeks and the child was preparing her The sick woman Jumped out of bed and at- | ternpted to quench the flames by winds | odramatic man-| Hopes King Peter Will Change His vernment of the the YOUR STOMACH DISTRESS AND A dieted stomach gets the blues and grumbles, good eat, then take Pape’s Diapepsin to start the digestive juices working, There will be no dyspepsia or belching of Gas or eructations of undigested no feeling like a lump of lead in the stomach, or heartburn, sick head- Beecham's Pills immediately rel | greatly fear | never will get bac cklace that I lost last night. Just then a stranger entered and i STOPS DOG FIGHT WITH AMMONIA AND IS ARRESTED ‘Savage Bull Pup Comes Out, of Fracas Blind, and Court Discharges Druggist. Louls Scher, a druggist, of No. 80 {Lenox avenue, was arraigned before, Magistrate Herrman, in the Harlem Court, to-day, charged with pouring ammonia In the eyes of a 00 bulldog | belonging to Dr, Nauen, a dentist, of | No. 52 Lenox avenue, ‘The dentist sald the druggist used the ammonia while his dog was fighting with another dog and asa result his dog: {8 blind. The druggist admitted that he had Poured ammonia on the dog, but olared that he had been requested ta. do so by the dentist, He denied thag? ammonia could destroy a dog’s sighty! and a veterinary surgeon backed ug, this contention, Furthermore, the dee, fendant proved by witnesses that @, small boy had thrown mustard inte; the dog’s eyes, “That dog," sald the druggist, “hag, been a neighborhood terror for months,, He has killed six dogs that I know of, He Is a savage, dangerous animal. At, the time complained of he was killing, another dog and Dr, Nauen requested, me to throw ammonia on the streed under the fighting dogs. The bottle slipped from my hands and the ame, monia showered over the dog's head.” ; "You were entirely justified in doing, what you did," sald the Court, adding: that he oould not understand how @ complaint in the cage had been ma ee COLD FELLS BEAR HUNTER. Compantons Too Weak to Care fos Him When He Collapses, 5 RIDGEWAY, Pa., March 6.—Willtang! F, Schil, a travelling man from Lanef caster, Pa, was brought to the Effie! County Hospital here last night suffers ing from the effects of an experience taf the woods while bear hunting. Schell with Claude Lobaugh and William J,” Ryan, expertenced hunters and woods. men, started from this place two daya’ |ago to walk to Stowart’s camp, elght | miles distant, where bear tracks had been seen. Tha party planned to bet away several days, Two miles from camp Schell became exhausted. Ryany was weak, too, and Lobaugh attempted” to carry Schell, The themomoter was at 10 below zeror and after a struggle for one mile, Lo«, baugh left Schell und with Ryan shut-— fled to 4 woodsman's camp. The woods: men found Schall unconsectous, buts rubbed his limbs vigorously and applied anol tll his body began to show signs | of lite. ENDED FOREVER forever rid yourself of Stomach trouble Give it a {ll not ferment and poison your breath, 1 sin costs only 50 cente for a large case at any drug store here, and will relleve the most obstinate case of Indigestion and Upset Stom-, There Is nothing else better to take Gas from Stomach and cleanse the’ one triangule will digest and prepare for assimilation into the blood all your food the same as a sound, healthy, When Diapepsin works your stomach rests—gets Itself In order, cleans and then you fee) like eating when you come to the table, and what you” Misery Is waiting for you as soon as in, Tell your druggist that you want Pape's Diapepsin, because you want to be thoroughly cured of ttn eee OR: Are You Troubled? 3 after eating, loss of appetite, bil- other derangements of the digestive to get the stomach well and strong. | restore you to health so surely and |BEECHAM’S PILLS e acute dyspepsia, and are f indiges tion and stomach weakness, tive organs and have a wholesome cleansing and toning the entire di- ave the weakened organs, establish healthy conditions, improve the general health, create appetite and Strengthen the Digestion In boxes with full directions, 10c. and 25¢, Ah, me! Alas! alack! { the precious jewels returned— A rid Want “Lost” ads, had earned. ; ost This We Use Sunday World “Lost & Found’’ Ads. To-Morrow, , | | | |

Other pages from this issue: