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od IRL THREATENS CTWVE IN H AVE. KILLIN a g¢ to Get a Gun,” Fiancee of Elevator Man Shot as Burglar, MISTAKE BROTHER S Believes Johnson Took Sleuth for Thief and Fatal Struggle Followed, Says AYS, A dark-eyed young woman who sald she was enga to Frederick Johnson, the clevater man who war shot and killed last night by Joseph Parise, a Pinkerton detective, in. the apar jouse at 61) Fifth ave. nue, announ to-day that she wo Kill the Plikerton man on sight. ‘The announcemen le while she was visiting John and father at thelr ave nue. "ie I had clared, Agi y she de- Tid Kill the detective, J'd like to kiN him." Pan! Johnsor emplo, the tra a brother of the dead man, house wii operat the pa was Paul who § the place six mo “Fred, said » “had been out of work f time and was engaged to ! He us in the navy ma place in ng the around 0 up through he freight ele- Vator ey night at £20 and collect the garbage from the various apart- ser ts did side the kitchen pened the door and e the ga doors he ge ; walked in and got it Believes it a Mistake *T suppose he opened the door of Mr Kemp's flat and on the de- there for alked | tective, who thought he w the purpose of robbery prob- ably thought the detec a thief, too, and ! H Par ’ Harbu er to the Tombs wit will be held on Fri erty, of the Realty Compa Which owns the Fifth shooting The top fo > Kemp, Kemp are in e of their housekeope: Suspected an emplayes; Jained to the superin- Mr. right, that robbed Similar com- om other ten- dito Mr, Tryon Pinkerton Detec- recetved f: on two ¢ ons plaints wer I rnitted by sald Mr. to-day, beries had been ec ployee of the ‘ou flies in the how! suspicion on any “T did not know some em- tleular person, he man who had been assigned to the case until Parise came! to me yesterday evening and said he wanted to hide in the Kemp flat, He asked me to keep the fact that he was in the house’ secret from every em. ployee. Parise says that a little after 8 o'clock, when he had been waiting for more than an hour, he rd a door open, Some one entered the flat and Parise, turning on tHe light, saw Johnson, the elevator man, Struggle for Weapon. Paris» says that he ordered Johnson to go to the ground floor with him and report to the superintendent. ‘They got on the freight clevator, where Johnson made a movement toward his hip pocket and Parise drew hig re- yolver, There was a struggle for the weapon, in the course of which it wag discharged, and the index finger of Parise's left hand was shot off. Then he got possession of the weapon and killed Johnson, shooting him once over the eye and once through the heart, oe DYNAMITE CRASH KILLS EIGHT MEN ON RAILROAD. Eight Others Injured When Explo- sive Scatters Force Unload- ing a Car, HE, O., March 30.—Fight killed and eight others Injured to-day an explosion of sey- eral hundred pounds of dynamite at Indian Creek, near here, where the Nor- folk and Western Ratlroad is doubie- tracking. A crew of men was uunloaging | a car of dynamite when it exploded. The dead include Charles Buchannon, Columbus, conductor in charge of the work train; Jonathan Floyd, Pride, O., an@ John Hayes, Antonio, O, cS ~ eas REWARD FOR DYNAMITERS, BOSTON, March 3.—A reward of $1,000 Was offered to-day tn the hope of ap- prehending any one imvolved tn dynamiting of the new Opera-Houte on Saturday night. The police authorities announced the reward. The repairs to | the bullding were nearly completed y terdgy, as the damage was compar Sige Seo CIULLICO workmen wer not | suspected the rob- | the fam- | vuld not fasten the | HtAD OF FAMILY FORTY TELLS UF HARD TASK i Sie Thirty-eight of Them Are Girls and Dressmaker Is Hired by the Year. SCHOOL OF THIER ON They Are ee and All) Are Never Asleep at Same Time, By Nixola Greeley-Smith, it is Beare superior to that France. Yet Now there {!s in York City a man who has reared to success- ful maturity a family of forty He is'a poor man, too; an employee of °C » and is known to his mates up at the Garden as "Do Kealey in New York w ne to bring up— for members | 8 are pr A special mployed all the year round Just to keep the gigantle family well dressed, Two costumes apiece Is the allowance for each member, but the clothes make | up in costliness what they lack In num bers, ranging In price from $50 to $1 piece, Seven hundred dollars a week a conservative estimate of the food | bills for the fami | Have School of Their Own. | It has a school of its own, with spe- celal tutors, The school is, of course, | Jed, beginning with a kindergarten | and ending with the bestowal of high school diploma. ‘The most re-| markable thing about the family, he ever, is at, although all forty mem bers are generally housed under the same roof, they have never be to be all asi J elephants up k through ne-or fire cannon, and “Doc” kK been their keeper and b friend for thirteen years, Mr, Kealey | stood before the long, leathery line of | his protegees. to-d where four men keep constant watch lest anything hap- | pen to startle the herd and send ton| on ton of destruction plunging through the tents of the mer oursed to me | thoughts and feel elephants in gener: in particular, “We have to keep the men on | intly to forestall any possibility of | stampede," he explained. “Elephants | are very sensitive. Even at night they | won't all go to sleep at the same time. | May be at some hour of the night only one will be left standing, He is a senti- | nel, and at the slightest suspicious noise | he will trumpet, and they will scramble to their feet, all talking at once, Cer- leisurely of th Bs and customs of | nd his own family | Pa tainly they talk to each other, Any- t that’s ever been with elephants | knows that, Some times I think they even tell funny stories, Twenty Are “Understudies.” “Only twenty of the forty elephants appear in the circus, The rest are un- derstudies, and replace the principals when they are sick. Thirty-elght of the forty elephants are females, The other two are ‘John L, Sullivan’ and ‘Baldy.’ We have only one baby elephant at the present time. We call her ‘Baby Boo,’ She is named after the circus home, Baraboo, Wisconsin, and she’s out there now. “Alice, over there, has had two babies, But she wouldn't have anything to do with the first one, and we had to bring {t up on the bottle. ft died after thir- teen months, The other one she killed | a few days After It was born, “You know we have a regular school for the elephants out In Baraboo, There's no way of telling an elephant's age when you get him. I was in the elephant importing business before 1 Joined Ringling Brothers, so I know, But the right thine to begin training him Is when he ts 4 feet high. For the first | two years all we do Is to accustom him to his surroundings, He 1s not allowed in the procession except chained to an-| other elephant. ‘That's the kindergarten | course, “In the next grade we teach them the easy tricks, like standing on a bucket | or roliing a barrel, After that they| learn to telephone ana to dance with their hind feet, It's easy for an el phant to dance with his front feet, Wilhelmine, our star elephant, can stand on two feet and raise up eight feet in | the alr, “I treat elephants just as if they were | children, I punish them when they are bad, and give them lumps of sugar when | they're good. There are twenty-five men | employed here just to care for them. And they have a special dressmaker “Their rainy-day clothes cost a 500 apiece, and their best con out 3, say, | $1,500, ‘They are very vain of them, and | y for all the good they did. About they are jealous, too. If one gets a pea-! months ago he was persuaded to nut the others have to have one, But| give the Cooper remedies a trial and on the whole, I guess they're pretty| procured a treatment of Cooper's New | good children, | Discovery Sa | "Now he ts well. T have not seen him : 7 look so strong and hearty in years. He Harriman Not to Cruise. feels splendid and eats any kind of food NEW ORLEANS, March 30.—The All the pain has disappeared, resence of B. H. Harriman’s yacht Sul- | a upbreclele onal Cospecao ne Hy tE rriman’s yac es | ee ply appreciate what Cooper's New tana at New Orleans ts explained by | Dis y has done for him, and having | Jultus Kruttechaltt, director of imaln-| proved It to be a sovereign mtomach medicine we do not hesitate to freely tenance and operation of the Harriman | Mommend it to all who suffer from | lines, who has arrived here to use the | stomach disorders Sultana for a cruise in the Guif. It had Cooper medicines are on sale at been reported that Mr. Harriman con-! aj the Riker stores, and can be ob- Hamed on the jined from druge. es lated @ trip to |Rev, dist Church in Wo. | Tenth street, New York, THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MARCH 30, Children Having a Free Coney Island Romp on Playground Roof of Waldort SO IS THE Wik OF TOWN GRCE ——.—_—. Charles W, Dane, Sued for Divorce, Said to Have Been Seen in This City. ening World.) March V of the Metho- to The B , Conn., Dane y, whose w has sued him for divore ble « Rey. s later Dane left Mrs. few ho} after 1 of the Mr, FP need that his wife and the Dane are togethe It Pr go to India “TREY HE IETALYE tor’s first wife | rs ago | 1a clerk He ction for a divorce, got it, and jthen married Miss Mardwell, of New Milford, the present Mrs. Proctor, A report to-day Is that Rev. Mr. Dane | and Mrs. Proctor were seen together in New York City yester y afternoon, Woodbury man who returned fron metropolls brought this tnformati¢ i t elope in his st brought SPENT E ONG MONTHS IN ANDERSON Civil War Veteran Underwent Hardships That Affected His After Life, One of the most Interest Hing experl- fences that have been received in connec: tion with the Cooper remedies ts related by Mrs, Henry Strattmann, of 2 East Mrs, Stratt- mann describes the case of her husband, a veteran of the cly!l war, who spent eleven months of his service in Ander-| sonvilie Prison. She says “My husband had stomach trouble for many years, He was for thirty-four vests employed in a sugar refinery, He 1s an old soldier of the civil war, and during that struggle was incarcerated for eleven months in Andersonville Prison. posed upon him at that time hi never had a healthy stomach since, has “During the past twelve years, how- | aver, his trouble gradually bec aggravated and for several 3 he has suffered terribly. He got so he ate very sparingly and seemed to have | no desire for food. u principal diet, as sol pained and distress me more 1 "rood invarlably “Doctors were co) but failed to help him. One doctor diagnosed his trouble as cancer of the stomach, and held out no hope. He a ‘hum remedies that ommend- saved his 1 have perally (hrough- . out the United States. Asa result of the hardships tm- | rs past | — PASTOR MISSING, —yaooprroog aw PAT WITH THE YOUNGSTERS Hee Await Announcement Another Playgrounds Association Party. All the Uttle boys and girls who were nough to have at tended the Parks and Playgrounds As sociation party on the roof of the Wal- dor! are to-day eager for the announcement of the next one to be held, The garden atop the great hos telry was crowded with children, who danced and romped yesterday after- hoon amid beautiful decorations and in the presence of women of the ‘'400." 1 national dances b ythe elder folk were ted by the tots, and a lusty cheer rang clear Fifth avenue as far as Broadway at the con- Miss Marte Hofer was in She had as asstst- &@ women con- work app) over eof the par you pmer Ely con r own josition. was the ace ent were Mrs, Frederick Wh. | Alexander, Mrs, Clare Richard Wat son € Van Ret tridge, Mrs. John E we Mackay, Mrs. Mrs. Alexander 4 B. Osgood Field, Mrs, James § r, Mrs, W. D, Sloane, ‘Mrs, Levi P, Morton, Mrs, Jacob H. | Schiff, Mrs. Charles Steel Robinson, Mrs, C. Grant (Char Marshall, Mrs. and airs, David Greer "RUNAWAY HORSE IN CORSET STORE Crashes Through Window as Wind-Up of Exciting East Side Chase, van, smashed !nto Miss Mollie Mayer's corset store, called the ‘Cosey Corners,” at Clinton and Broome street, to-day, and what the horse's hoofs did to a show case full of the Iatest style corsets (sizes 20, 2% and 4) was a plenty, | Louis Schnieder, of No, 78 Clinton street, the driver, could not hold the animal after passing a Clinton street sausago factory at the time doors and windows were thrown open to glye an airing, Leach—that's the horse's name, ; seeleted by a crowd of livery stable sports who are admirers of Leach | Cross, the east side pug—ran through j the crowded street knocking over push- cart wagons and raising a great com- motion. St ear-old Harry Schmall, Il, @ lawyer, was snate! he horse just in the nic of time by Policeman Willlam §. Win- ters. Other narrow escapes were re- corded. Young Schmall \he was riding was sm: Louls Zeltner, a Jour: ; picking up the "Cosey wrecked corsets. w the propriet rt ordering a fon of Isaac Sch | from under Winters arrested Schnie- who works for Wolf ast Third street —-___ S|INAUGURATION COLD FATAL, Edward MeRoberts, Prominent | Staten Island Polltictan, Dead. Id contracted at the tnauguration of Taft at Washington, to-day pana | President of Edward McRoberts, | dent of Tompkin biican leader of Staten Island Mr. McRoberts was fifty-nine of age and single. He was a brot! | Hugh MeRoberts, at one time Rep: leader of Richmond Borous a Mfelong resi. ean Quarantine Commissioner. | ——__~—— DIRECT NOMINATIONS TALK. | ALBANY, March 90—Senator Daven port, of Onelda County, announced to- | day that he had accepted an { to speak on direct nomination thet of day evening. Isidor | § mpunist on the) In the group of patronesses pres- | A runaway horse, hauling a moving | resulted in the death from pneumonia | ville, and a well-known | RSON PUTS A BAN ON Tit IRLS WhO FLIRT ee rageet Chief of Police Issues an Ulti-) matum and Says Town Must Be Good. A moral wave is sweeping athwart Chief of the city of Paterson, N, J Police Bimson h sued ar inst naughtiness. the citizens of the fai of Hackensack proaches of the perfervid gayety a milltown back nd for world the re- outer anent her Tam going to screw te tel 5 Rimsc nd by the| time I've got it on se there won't be anything doing in this : outside of chureh soclables and sewing-circles, If w got fl { left they are going to be snuffed; lit there's gambling g got to quit.’ Not a Bit of Hot leh The Pat not going to sit bac town become purer, present determ| olved tn geysers of hot alr, He de- to im this fact particularly |on women of doubtful standing, Indiscriminate flirting, he ta got to stop. If the dance halls and other places of entertainment where young women unaccompanied by chap- Jerones are wont to go do not establish sharp and rigid rules of conduct for thelr patrons they will be vistted by a flying squadron of patrol wagons. “I'll raid 'em—every ono of ‘em," threatens Blmson, "So they had better watch out. This cab-riding ‘round town later than It's proper has got to quit, Females who've got no shopping or other urgent affairs to attend to have got to keep off the streets at night. Fact {s, they better get out of town, The Paterson chief will give ine rson cl wath Ho promises that tion Is in no way the} | sires has the ‘moths time to pack up their tinsel and feathers and depart to other climes, Ban on the Butterflies. “This butterfly fame Is, under, the ban," was his concluding phrase, “and also the Wasps has got to quit.” Bimson includes” all degrees of gamblers under tho title of wasps, Paterson has been stung by them long enough, so they had better be on the wing. ulette, klondike, faro, chucka- luck craps and every other brand of sure-thing amusement wjll become for | Paterson a thing of the past. The big gamblers and the pikers had all bett take {t on the run if they desire to es- cape from Bimson's dragnet. Paterson | §s going to be purged and purifled until | it resembles some old matd's sleepy hollow in the mid regions of no-license Vermont. pene ee ZELAYA RAISES NEW POINT. | | a = | Emery Concern ts English, | Not American, | WASHINGTON, March 0,.—Secretary | of State Knox has received from Presi- | dent Zelaya a communication which puts | Says 1909, ‘FAIRYLAND SOLD AT AUCTION. summer regort until last year, when the season proved a vreviowe to eee this the firm of M shulthelser Paterson Amusement Park Bought, |! been dissolved the Fairyland Amusement Compan 8 organized to by Mortwanee, carry on the resort tensive improve- nents Were made in the park last sen- PATERSON, N ., March @.—Falry- son and, the leading etimmer resort in Mey Yan Houten, tt Ie understood, wilt ; Ry ae endeavor to organize a new company to Northern W Jersey, and located at the park for the season” on Clifton. rt ‘ has been sold morial Da a JJ under the hammer to sat Judgments | a — f creditors The i which cost $83,000, were thos -thowas Van WOMAN KILLED BY GAS, Nonten for than $1,000, The amuse- Raaey ieee ment carina ny leased the ground from | ytog tary Trent, a drossmaker, Atty fr. Van Houten and he had a els years old, was found dead from gas to- . back rent A paint firm was also am " r mn od or y “Hy riveyeyst . ay in her furnished room at No. 4 German Insurance Men Got iin ; Ponte at athe x Fairyland was established four years” ytrs, Trent is thought to have turned hemvAtten Bavines SSO er srenseaatelvilla anal sonntienenliae sia cee aca tieealinaiaera kates Was Successt conducted as @ | last at Damages on Finvers -LED HIS POLICY, —— v ‘Sale of Easter Suits Pianist, Has) Rheumatism in Left Arm—Not to Return as $ i a Real *25 Values 7 $1698 pene oe Srecial, Wednesday w As rossed The spirit of Spring finds play n>- H n Toya pler on tt where to such advantage asin the aA Pa un a as | Bedell suit rooms. You will find anni acai sans tempt ng offer ngs there this week itwaanitanienharaainnlhaclictaines ~just a veritable wonderland of ad affected the ligaments in one charmag Easter Suis to choose dno longer play My hand is not affected at a Self Woven Check Serge. went on Tt ts my left arm An at rheumatism came eat Mil sof Ppa tpe Aiieapelon pe st aU ¢ New French Model, Ing ¢ ld pass aw 8 . . | Pe eae ae Tailor Button Trimmed. finally [abandoned y ton . . . Sen ase alstedent meet Gane Everything about them is of the ments and came back to New York, 1 highest clas, and the mcde! ilus- f am going now to my villa in Switaerland trated is particularly winning, made towa iT hay | will play once at Paris In May and once | | hy in June. Beyond that my professional plans are not yet formed it do not expect to return to Ame! entirely recovered 1 of a new checker serge, and tailored so as to bring out the best lines of a figure. Jaunty cutaway coat (satin lined), for, at tenat two years if Peery with deep points (exactly like orewskl shattered one of the picture), Inlaid collar of Benga- agented traditions of his persc e denied that he had his preci ‘8 insured for any great amount, or d for any amount at all 3 “he said, “If had ance of §: A German | company carried the polley and I paid | | Ine silk—new skirt design with inveried piaits in front, side and back panels — numerous buttons effectively placed, Smartest Spring Shades Ashes of Roses, Vigoreagr, Cafe au Latt, Apricot, Nattier Insur- [them in premiums about 49 marks a year, But after I had split a finger nail in Australla, which cost th $5 m about and suffered a slight tn y ina oad wreck hit Btalerwhieh coatit ee ; Nore, | Blue, Catawba, Gray, Reseaa, e Germans got wha you An > eee etal uandieaneaitea the | Navy, Blache Hae ft’ cP sistent | Alterations FREE away, ; ; SALE AT ALL THREE STORES Fre oe WESTON STARTS BEFORE DAWN! 14 tet tAth Stet | N.Y. March 3.—Kdwara | Payson Weston was called at 9.3) A. M | to-day, and half an hour later started for Jamestown, fifty-one miles away, | gous Bs ste BROOKLYN ere he expects to spend wv Ham $M, Abram ams, of th 64510651 Broad Street [Weston the ta F 3 LARGE stores. NEWARK dition than those covered Weston's condition {8 good and he js VG WSAFZ*?. Agee y 4 walking strong Burson Fashioned Hose will cost no more under the new tariff. Dear Madam: Do not believe that YOU will have to pay higher prices for stockings. The newspapers say so---but you won’t. . We positively state and guarantee that you will not have to pay more than present prices for Burson Fashioned Hose no matter what }a new phase of the contro’ ling of the Emery Compa fon to cut hardwood, Zel questions the right of the Unite to interfere in this matter |informed, on good authority | Emery Company is not toncern, but that the controll | bought by Englishme o that feature | oMr. Knox ts Inquiring | o¢ the case, Do You Like |Post Toasties Millions Do Delicious Crisp, Flavory, “The Taste Lingers” Popular pkg. 10c; Large Family size 15¢ Made by Postum Cereal Company, Ltd, Battle Creek, Mich action is taken on the proposed new hosiery tariff. Set your mind at rest! Burson prices to you will be.the same throughout the life of the new tariff as they are now. Not one cent more! Don’t let news- paper talk mislead you. Burson Knitting Company Probably the largest manufacturers otfjexclusively Women’s Cottor Stockings in the known world—Americanj made. \ { {