The evening world. Newspaper, May 13, 1911, Page 4

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THE EV MORTALLY SHOT BOY'S CHUMS WRITE GRAPHIC STORIES: Ct HOW JANITOR FIRED AT FM Eigiit Lads lve F Give Police Re-| markably Clear Description of Tragedy at Flat-House. TRIGGER PULLED TWICE. All Agree Bullet Sped on Sec- ond Attempt, and Hickey Admits the Shooting. ‘The eight chums of ffteen-year-old Bartholomew Peluso, who ts in a critl- eal condition at the Flower Hospital from @ bullet in the back which w fired at him last night by Frederick Hickey, janitor of the Donac apart ments at No. 30 West Forty-ninth atreet, sat in the West Forty-seventh Street station house an hour after the shooting and put down on paper, In thetr own way, just how the tragedy occurred. When they were brought to the station house they were all eager to tell their stories. ‘Now, you boys sit right down In the back room and write out exactly what you saw," suggested Lieut. Kerr, pass ing around sheets of paper und pencils, Mke a schoolmaster. The little fellows @prawied all over the big table in the back room and wrote thelr stories of the tragedy as they had seen it. Boys’ Graphic Stories. Here ts what young James Judge, fit- teen years old, of No. 60 West Fifty’ @ixth street, wrote: I was standing and Bollo Peluso in front West Fory-ninth street man came running up the stairs and told us to go away. Bollo did not go and the man, Hickey, pulled the gun out of his lefthand pocket and shot, but the pistol did not shoot and he pulled the trigger again and it shot Bollo in the back and he fell and rolled eround on his back and Hickey ran down into the basement again and could Rot be seen again. JAMES JUDGE, 4% West Fifty-sixth street. Young Judge was the dying boy's par- tleular chum. Fifteen-year-old Oscar Youngberg, who, according to his statement, was Not one of the party of young mischief- makers who had incensed Hickey by hurling an ashcan down the basement etairs, the clatter of which brought the Janitor up the stairs, made this atate- ment: I, Oscar Youngberg, was walking across the street of Forty-ninth sseet_near §th Avenue, turned and -» & man, Mr. Hickey, make a kick at a boy, the boy run, and somebody threw some kind of a wet fag at Mr. Hickey, who ducked, | then pulled a pistol and shot Bar- tholomew Peluso, who staggered and fell. Some pig boys picked him up and brought him to the drug- store. This was written by myself and my own free will. OSCAR YOUNGBERG. Gives Same Version. ph Rando's statement is as fol- lows: About £20 P, M. I was talking to a friend of mine right across the way from the auto garage. I seen Mr, Hickey chasing Bartholomew Peluso @way from the railing. Then I saw & little boy throw a piece of rag at Mr, Hickey, and then Mr, Hickey drew ® gun from his left coat and fire & shot at Bartholomew Peluso, Then I saw three boys take him to the drug store. Yours respectfully, JOSEPH RANDO, U2 W, 49th street. ‘This se my statement from my own will. The clearest and most graphic s\ mente is that of fifteen-year-old Johnny Carroll, who wrot At 62 P. M. I was coming from Bighth Avenue and saw a crowd of Doys standing by the Donac apart- ments, I met my friend, Joseph Rando, and we stood there awhile and saw soRebody throw a rag at the superintendent. The boys ran and Barth lomew Peluso was stand ing by the railing and as be run with the boys Mr, Hickey fired a shot and hit the boy in the back He walked a fow steps and fell to ‘the ground and cried: “I am shot—I 4m shot!" and the blood begun to Pour from his back. Before the boy Kot shot, some little Doys threw a garbage can down the @tairs and Mr. Hickey threw bottles at them, When Mr. Hickey shot the boy he run downstairs, Sergt. s7 And 1 went down the cellar and talking to of No. 30 when the During the Last Twenty-eight Years 5,242,756,179 Becn'cieutins’ 25,831,786 Beca‘pnited*”*® ‘This is « remarkable average of 187,241,292 Sica: 922,563 World Ads Per! Year Published. READ AND ADVERTISE IN SUNDAY WORLD TO-MORROW | to play. Per Year) f) OPERA SING 7ER WHO CONFESSES SHE LIKE (ones ABoTr found him tn a room where he was hiding. Very truly yours, JOUN RROLLS This is my own statemenc mi by my own free will, Also Saw Trigg.. Pulled Twice. Another statement was made by Leo Hootor, thirteen years old, of No, 32 West Forty-ninth street. It runs this way: At 8.20 P. M. T was sitting opposite the Donac apartments with Thomas O'Brien and George Gorman when the boys threw ash-cans down the cellar, I saw the man tell Bartholo- mew Paluso to get away from th @oor and he would not do it, so he ran ‘up and kicked him and then the boy wanted to hit the man and the man took the gun out of his povket and pull the tricket and failed, and pulled again and the bullet hit the boy. ‘The boy fell and said I am shot, and fell back, and Jolin Hurley picked him up and carried him into the drug store. Respectfully Yours, LEO HOCTOR, The statements of the other boys run along the same lines as those quoted, Janitor Admits Shooting, ‘The boys, who had spent the night at the rooms of the Children's Society, where they had been locked up as ma- terial witnesses by order of Coroner Feinberg, came to the West Side Court bright and early to-day, all eager to tell their stories to Magistrate Breen, who read their statements with inter- est, and then turned them over to the District-Attorney. Hickey does not deny the shooting, but claims that he did not intend to hit young Peluso or any other boy, He inat he fired in order to scare | the boys, who have been making him the butt of thelr mischief ever since he procured some summonses last week for boys of the neighborhood, who were in the habit of gathering in front of the apartment hous Magistrate Breen remanded until Monday to await the young Peluso's injuries, ‘The boys were permitted to go home on their promise to appear wnen wanted. At the Flower Hospital, it was said to-day, that the Injured lads chances for recovery were extremely slight Hickey —— MISS CAMPBELL LOSES GOLF MATCH IN IRELAND, PORTRUSH, Ireland, ing for Scotland against England for the international shield on the links the Royal Portrush Golf Club to- day Miss Dorothy Campbell lost Miss Cecil Leitch, four up and y 13,—-¥ to two The American champ’ poorly, snatched at tee sho was responsible for her de wise whe Diayed spin splendidly SHIPPING | HEWS, ALMANAC Pt Sun rises. 44 mn, driving and thin Other- TUE Tbes. Hig MV AML Santy Hook Govemors Inland Hel ate ¥ NEW yvoriK ARRIVED. Argentina cain anly Mohawk Churity be | Principe ai’ AMSHIPS, INCOMIN: I Day Ming, Sotthamoten, Prius Pieterick Heady May, |p | STRAMSHIPS, D 1ODAY New Orleans, m uthampton land, Jamaice, Carolyn, Phitinn Intande, Ta. Breiagne Yeon, | Laverne eronee Naien Yauckewbach, D. @ Abrus: han Tuan, Troguots, Jacksonville, Oregonian, Pusr'n, Dew’ qitireston, eer Meaico, Gomal, Tampa, ind, Arroyo. Nepo, Vere. | ies i "Sowterides. t iS DUKES. result of | NEARLY CRASHES INTO FERRY-BOAT Passengers on the Somerville See Taffrail of Philadetphia Looming Over Them. BESSIE ABOTT SAILS. Just as She Voices Her Liking for Dukes One Appears to Wish Her Bon Voyage. A near collision with a ferry boat wan only one of several exciting inci- dents which marked the departure this | morning of the Philadeiphia for Eng- | ish and French ports, Just as the Philadelphia cast off and backed out from the American Line pier at the foot of Went Twenty-second street the Bomerville of the Lackawanna road churned out of her slip just above, heading for Hoboken with her decks | crowded with trucks and teams. | The Somerville swung down atream @ bit before straightening for the crossing and then, for some reason or other, [checked her speed and began to 4r ft. The stern of the big liner loomed right over her, threatening to crush the fer> |eyboat under, Passengers on both craft seeng the danger ran about and screamed warnings, A disaster was prevented by the @mart seamanship of Capt. A. R. Mille, skipper of the steameh!p. He rang the bells for reversed engines. The pilot at the same Instant swung the Philadel- Phia about. Then the Sommerville be- | gan ta draw ahead and the peri! was past. But, even oo, the ship and the ferryboat siid by each other at such closeness that a good jumper could have leaped from the taffrall of the Philadel- phia upon the deck of the Sommerville. Had to Hire a Tug. Right after this @ stout gentle nan came tearing down the pler splitting through the crowd and yelling for the Philadelphia to come back and get iim. ‘The stout man was C. Odelon Matiloux of No. § West One Hundred and Jev- enty-firet street, an electrical engineer oats ENING WORLD She Is Also Tall and Strong, Says Dr. Glas- gow, and Bones Don’t | Show, but They’re Merely Covered, Not Padded With Flesh. \Ia Neither Fat Nor * Serawny, but Hae the | Happy Medium She| R aches Only by Work} and Natural Living. By Marguerite Mooers Marehall. To be slender, willowy, wandlike, ethe or, in_pl ol4 English, thin—whi else has the New York woman longed for since the reign of the bipless and the hobbie skirt began? With fasting. if not with prayer, she has sought the oltmness, the perfect proportions of the chaste and elegant knitting needie. That she has not always succeeded in her quest she has taken to be her mis- fortune, not her fault. Now comes Dr. C. W. Moots, @ Toledo surgeon, who says a woman ought not to be thin. He told the Ohio Medical Convention: “Something is the matter with every thin woman. Every time I see one of them coming into my office, with her sharp face, flat chest and inelastic muscles, I am in doubt whether to fee! sorry for the patient or for myself. The reason she ie too thin is that some- thing i» wrong. Neither Fat Nor Thin. And when I showed Dr. Moots’s re- marks to Dr. Maude Glasgow yesterday she nodded and said: “Something is very ap: to be wrong with the woman who tries to make herself thin by un- natural and artificial mean Banters, please note. “A Women should be neither thin mor fat,” Dv. Giaszow contin- ued, “Ef she is in proper health she will be neither plump nor scrawny. “Think of the very fat and very thin women you know. Are not the former wheesy and asthmatic and frequently troubled with indigestion? If you were ® physician you would probably find of note, who is going abroad to lecture before the Sorbonne in Paris. He had tarried too long on the dock bidding goodbye to his wife, who had her pet spaniel along, and to a party of his friends. The Philadelphia wouldn't come back for him and he chartered the tug John Nichols which chanced to be loaf. ing about, and boarding her from the string plece chased the ship down the North River @ half mile, She checked up as the tug ranged alongside and he mounted her sides on a ladder. Before the ship sailed, Mrs, Phitlips, from somewhere in New Jersey, ran about excitingly, asking the stewards, the of.cra, the crew, the passengers and everybody in general if anybody had seen her ducks. Nobody had. It would seem that Mrs. Phillips is a poultry grower and she meant to take three red head ducks with her to her former home, in the Isle of Wight, A Mr. Thomas Martel had promised to bring the ducks to the ship in a coop, but he never got there, and Mrs. Phil- lips sailed in tears. isle Abott Likes Dukes, Besse Abott, the opera singer, was one of the passengers, She said she hadn't yet recovered from her disap- |pointment at not having the oppor- |tunity of singing the name part tn |Mascagni's “Yuobel," but she hoped that by next season the Lieblers Mascagni would complete arrangements for producing the piece here. She said that on the other side she expected to nee her dear friend Geraldine Farrar and somebody recalled Miss Farrar's famous remark that she didn't care for dukes. “Well, T do," gatd Miss Abott, “and ‘one of them * coming to see me o! Thi: was the cue for the appearance lof the Duke de Isola, who is staying at the Brevoort. The Duke's atten- tions to Miss Abott were so marked that a ship news reporter was moved to ask her when the engagement, if one existed, would be announced, She blushed prettily and begged to be ex- cused from answering the question. Senor Luis Moreira of Bolivia and his English wife were also on the #hip bound for London, where the Senor, who fs a rich mine owner, will repre- ent his country as envoy at the coro- nation, Pela iS NICE SCHEME CREDITED TO TAMMANY INSURGENTS, Said to Have Planned a Building to Be Rented to City or | County. Some of the Bronx Tammany district leaders who revolted when Charles F. Murphy opposed the proposed Bronx County bill are said to be interested in an office building project now before the inking Fund Commission, They proposed renting office epace to the city In a bullding to be erected at the northwest corner of Arthur and Tremont avenues, Bronx. Leader Ar- thur Murphy was a candidate for Bor- \ough President when the plan was con- | ceived, It cropped up again when the Bronx County bill was sent to Albany. © projectors, it is alleged, figured | that if the county bill were defeated the jclty would become @ tenant, and if the | Dill was adopted it would equally be- come desirable for county effice pur- poses. When the first invt: jon was pent | to the Sinking Fund 26,500 square feet jot office space w: offered the city at a rental of $1.20 a aquara foot, |'Tots was later cut down to & square foot. The city now pays cents @ square foot for space in the Walter Buliding tn the Bronx. The matter will come up at the next meeting of the Sinking Fund Commis- sion. There is little likelthood of the offer being accepted. Its originator are not pushing it. The building not been erected. Having resigned their respective leaderships, Tammany will doubtiess put @ block im the way that they had weak hearts, too; have at We tendencies and are apt to contract contagious disease: “On the other hand, the very thin jance, women, at first seem to be , BATURDAY MAY 13, 1911 LINER, JUST OFF, (Physically Perfect Woman Ha: Hips, \\f’S \ NEW CONEY Broad Shoulders and a Waist Line LETTER 10 MOTHER IS RETURNED WITH | BLACKHAND THREAT Brooklyn Woman Gets De- mand for $5,000 While their stout & great deal more—for a time. But very, very often they are working almost entirely on thelr nerves, and when the end comes {t comes with @ crash. They are fre- quently people of low vitality, with Uttle constitutional resistanc When they are narrow-chested and stoop- shouldered that is a sure sign of pul- monary weakness. Their circulation is Boor. Exceptions Prove Rule. “Ot course there are exceptions. But such only prove the general rule that either extreme means weakness.’ ‘And what sort of a figure has the really healthy woman?" I.asked. “The modern woman nearest to physical perfection is tall and “A woman must come by this sort of figure naturally, not artificially; by Plenty of work and outdoor exercise and plain food, Why They Are Stout. “If the wealthy women who diet and massage to reduce their flesh would only go out and do a Iittle work they would get better results. No wonder these women are stout. They are abed hours longer than {s necessary. They eat several meals a day of richly cooked food. They drink alcoholic stimulants, And then they do nothing. They drive or motor instead of walkin, their housework is done for them, and they have taken up no ogher work. Af such women would only go down into the settlements and help out they would find the plan a@ splendid reducer. “You do not approve of artificial methods of getting thin?” I asked, “There are serious drawbacks to them ‘ she declared. “Take banting, for which consists of a diet of frult, stale bread and water—‘toast and orange.’ In some cases it is probably & good thing. But it would not be wood for a person with a weak heart, which many stout people have. As for absolute fasting, it is barbarous and Ukely to be attended by the gravest consequences. “Massage is valuabie for many things, but when used in reducing it is simply lazy woman's exercise. It is a substi- tute for waiking, rowing, playing ten- nis and working—and a substitute ts never equal to the real thing. ‘Turkish baths or any similar eweat- ing process are debilitating, “Finally, tight lacing, the eliliest of all reduce: very barmful, It hin- ders the circulation, incidentaily giving one a red nose, and causes many serious troubles. | “The best way to get @ good figure.” | concluded the doctor, “is not to think about it, Think about working and walking, sensible hours and sensible food, and the figure will coi Helen M, Gould of York has writ- ciphered the seals forming a part of her gift to the college of # collection of of the pgm being favored, ten to Wellesley offeriig to have de- | Travelling in West. Peculiar features surrounding the re- ceipt by Mrs: Nathan Sachs of No. 1100! Prospect Place, Brooklyn, of a Black Hand letter directing her to send $5,000, to @ Brooklyn address, have res:rained Charles Burnstein, a lawyer of No. 802 Broadway, Brooklyn, brother of Mrs. Sachs, from reporting the case to the Police. Mrs. Sachs is in the West travelling with her husband, who is a diamond merchant at No. 9 Maiden Lane, They will be home next week. May 4, at Cincinnati, Mrs. Sacha re- ceived a letter that had been forwarde! from the Hotel Brevoort in Chicago. It| was written on u letter head of the Bre. voort, the envelope addressed in Mrs. Bach's Wand writing, and the postmark | showed that the letter had been mailed in Brooklyn. Signed by Skull and Bones. It The missive was brief. directed Mra. Sachs to send $5,0% to No, 132 Nos- trand avenue, Brooklyn, undgr fiain of being shot In Chicago. A skull and cross bones, crudely drawn, emphasized the demand, The ,letter was signed “Black Hand Leader B, H.R." No. 182 Nostrand avenue is of Mrs. Sach's mother. Whe absent from the city, Mrs, Sachs writes her mother every day and always closes a self-addressed stamped env ope with @ sheet of paper inside for ie home she is answer. Envelopes und paper are fro hotels at which she stops in her travels. She wrote her mother from the Hotel Brevoort in Chicago and inclosed a self- ad@fessed envelope directed to that hotel—in fact, she wrote several letters from there and sent self-addressed en- velopes with all of them. It was one of the envelopes she had sent her moth- er that reached her in Cincinnati carry- ing the Black Hand messa Two Under Suspicion. “There iy no doubt,” sald Mr. Bur- atein to-day, “that the paper upon which it was enclosed came irom my mother's writing desk and stole an envelope and @ sheet of paper. "I have two persons under suspicion. If one of them did it f am disposed to Jook upon the matter as a joke, If the other proves guilty I shaN probably flask the police to interfere with what looks like a plan to extort money from my sister.” SAVE MAN, THEN GO AWAY, John Walsh, a laborer, found a man ripping wet, lying helpless on the pler at East One Hundred and ‘Dhirty-titth street to-day. The man managed to tell Walsh tpat he was Alfonso I man, aged twenty-six, of No, 635 One Hundred and Thirty-fifth street He said he had been hauled out of the river by two men in a launch, who, after landing him, went away. Walsh found Policeman Tynan, who Joalled Dr. Moensch from Lincoln’ Hos- pital with an ambulance, Lausmaw was found to be suffering from immersion and tuberculosis in an advanced stage, He weld he had been walking along the river bank when he Was overcome by weakness and tumbled into | water. But the police put it down as @ Egyptian scarebs and seals. part of the eollection of Dy, Chauncey Murch. ( was entered on the hospital rolls as a prisoner. house. But she knows absolutely noth- ing about either the letter or the en- velope “My sister writes my Mother every day, but my mother does not reply every day. Consequently those self-ad- dressed envelopes accumulate. Some person gained access to my mother's | the case of attempted suicide and Lausman | LILLIAN RUSSELL -TO WED EDITOR? | BOTH DENY IT But Actress Admits That Mr. Moore Is “Dear, Sweet Man,” and Very Attentive. PITTSBURG, May 12.—Here is what Is agitating Pittsourg to-day: “Is the fair and ever young Lillian Russell avout to wed again?” Tt is reported that a neement will be made in New York to-day that the famous actress is to be married some time next month to Alexander Moore, editor of the Pittsburg Leader. Miss Russell playing here in @ vaudeville sketch at the Grand Last | night Mr. Moorg was in a box with Mies Russell's sister, Mrs. Westford, He was lagitared wnen asked about the report. | “Don't say anything about It," he said. “Don't even go to the trouble of dony- | ing tt, for there is nothing to it.” | Miss Russe said if she ever married again she would feel called on to retire permanently from the stage, something |she has no tion of doing. There- | tore, the report that Bhe ts to wed again | can't be true, Of Mr. Moore she said | “He is a dear, sweet man and a won- derfully good friend. uuse he takes in hix motor car, sends me flow- ives me good dinners. loans me his personal use and In a thou- Ways shows me the atten nan likes to have a clever , and because Tam now is now single, there are pesple who will talk in that we are engaged. But there 1s nothing to tt" eee eee BLAZING TAXI RACES WITH WOMEN IN PARK, Flames Finally Force Chauffeur to Vet Fares Out—Machine Destroyed. Southard, Robert S. the Mutual Taxicab Broadway and Eightieth driving through Central Park w two women ssengers who had halled him from a Fifth avenue restaurant Just after mid- night, discovered his car was on fire, He put on all speed to get out of the park to reach a fire alarm box, His speed fanned the ‘lames and the women an to scream. Jouthard stopped and they fled toward the lights of Fifth avenue, Southard found an alarm box at Seventieth street, but by the time the engines came only the steel work of the $150 machine was left, He re- fused to tell who the women were or where he was taking them @ chauffeur for Company, of reet, bes Peterman’s Roach Food killa roaches, water .bugs and beetles, Standard for 24 years. Peterman’s Discovery kills bed bugs and their eggs. A sure pre- ventive, Peterman’s Moth Food—Odor- less—Kills moths, A, sure pre- ventive, Peterman's Ant Food kills ants and fleas, Atalldealers, Insiston Peterman’s . eA ES RT RTS AOE Tle le et merase eC ON RAN OPER RIT LOE TE TE MTT ETE Ri A a eh ee Va ea ann ni A ft a “US Re AND RUSH IS ON FOR THE SEASON Fine Weather Starts Business at Scores of Amusement Enterprises. LUNA OPENS TO.-NIGHT. |Many New and Strange De- vices for Enticing Nickels From the Multitude. The spell of Coney Island has fallen upon the people of the Greater City. Because of the warm and pleasant | Weather, thousands, unable to wait for the offictal opening of the amusement | resort by the eoa, are making their first visits of the season to the place every day. And Coney is a bedlam of nolse— which isn't strange for Coney, only this noise is different. From one end of Surf avenue to the other there is a Workmen are hustlin| new paint overpowe of the frankfurter. and the odor of even the aroma Activity is the order. | Saturday, | However, Fred Thompson can't wait | for next Saturday, Luna Park will throw open {ts gates {> the public to- night and remain open. Many others have taken advantage of the favorable weather and the music of the carrousel and roar of coasters on the Bowery are heard as they reap in the nickels of impatient New Yorkers. The sight-seeing auto- mobiles are out and the barkers are busy. Millions of “Hot Dogs.” Every freight train brings tn thou- sands of boxes and on each is the name |of a Chicago packer. The boxes con- tain Coney's staple food—the “hot dog” and he is trong. One place on Surf avenue sells $0,000 a day. The early visitors, however, noticed something strange about the resort that was at first hard to account for. But it 1s explained by the vigilance of Po- lice Captain Robinson, who has issued orders that Coney must beh itself this year. Familiar faces of other years are missing and, with Capt. Rob- inson on the job, Coney is to be re- wenerated. No liquor licen: has also brought about a change in conditions. The Bowery has been ready for vis- {tors for some time. The Japanese plc- ture machine men and hundrods of others in charge of devices assigned to woes it ii open now as it will « any time this season. They have coined a new term at Coney, but just what it means no ona, can tell exactly. There are terpretations, at For instance, if you yell it ts “bounces If you speak loudly it 1s “bounce.” When a lion roars the up- to-date keeper says “bounce.” So you have it in advance of the official open- ing and can go there already initiated. Many Changes Made. Of course there are many changes tn the amusement resorts, Every press through talking a person is convinced that the newness {s all there, only he wonders where it But, as a matter of fact, there are more devices to en- tertain, amuse and be paid for than ever before. The largest roller coaster in the wotld, built of steel, is going up on Surf avenue and is an objec of great interest. Moving a mountain 1s usually consid- ered a great achievement. At Coney they don’t think it is anything. Hun- TRADE of time to accomplish a cure. Price 1 s bottle containing 328 NEW HIGH STREET iui din of hammer upon steel and wood. | | Everything must be ready for next | roiler- | coming many millions | for the concert halle! part man and his money ers in fuli| swing, and as far as this part of Coney | ral in?) agent tells about them. Before he is. CURES ALL RHEUMATIC DISORDERS _ AND AIDS THE DIGESTIVE FUNCTIONS La ac Le) “No man is healthier er stronger than his stomach.” The fact that certain drugs can be relied upon to neutral. ize uric or lithic acid is well understood. without complica enteguaion end. atage Gn digests t an tract, rendering impossible their use for a sufficient length Uricaol Sotves the Problem Uricaol not effects a care, in rheumatic disorders, 1 i enealoalaie! Street, Loe Anges, po to equal.” ICSOL IS THE REMEDY YOU LONG Bote Distributers THE CALIFORNIA CHEMICAL CO, FOR SALE AT RIKER'S~ALL STORES, enti One of the new features In Per is a motordrome. H. L. Curran ef loot the-loop fame, will firt with death t &n automobile, He has conetructed | saucer-shaped track, eighty-five feet $ diameter, and obtained four racing ait tomobdiles and some one who places & Httle value on his life as he dees, an they wiil race daily on this track. To Make Aeroplane Flights. Another feature in the thrilling iin will be aeroplane flights. Mr. Thoms |son has ordered four Queen monoplane! land‘every day during the summer noted aviator will make an ascension. Another new feature will be an gute mobile arrangement whereby everybot, ae bon ogg ® mountain inte ap Ori can operate his own machine. It rum zag, whic, is designed two dety the laws of gravi tation, One of the new attractions, a monete in size, ts the Grand Canyon, and it | intended that the Canyon shall ecly with the shrill cries of hundreds of girt jat the same time. To that end six dit ferent rid been provided an each ts to make any git shriek. ‘Then there ts the cuckoo clock. Yo ride around in it and when you get t the top the cuckoo coos and the wheel fo flying around and before you knot it you are out in the place you starte from and not a bit hurt. Every one who goes to Luna Park wit have an opportunity to fly, for there wil be real aeroplanes to shoot up over th park, © arrantd Dreamland Busy, Too. While Dreamland will not open unt! next Saturday, there are doings ther and it is visited by thousands, Ther Will be @ recapiton there to-morrow fo the lions and leopai ; Dreamland has a new color schem this year—red and white, Even the tow er is to be red and white, and the light will be the same. The dancing hall ha been brought from the ocean side to th centre of the park. A new front ha been made for the park and an addition al 190,000 incandescent lamps mering. There will be two t cuses going all the time, inst Although more than ‘have seen the put on again has been ret made in the pr | Practically ne “Creation,” year this The theatr many change . so tt will b This being the semi-centennial of th berinning of the civil war, Dreamlane comes along with “The Seige of Rich mond," showing the way things wer, done about that beleaguered city, a Well as the blowing up of the mines # Petersburg, A new double-track racing coaster, st that two cars can start at the sam, me and race es . ts one of th sensational add Anew ride ha heen christened “Mary, Go Along. bur where Mary is to go will not be deter jmined until the park opens | dancing hall will do duty tink, There will be a coneress of al Kinds of freaks. A new Riblical panto [mime, “The Sacrifice’ has been addet to the lst of attractions. Then ther will be the animal show In the arena At Steenlechase Park there are th “Human Soup Bow!" and the “Humes Roulette Wheel—not the kind that fig ured as evidence tn the courts recently= as wel) as many other “human” things Coney is Coney, and {s assuming itr [real shape and appearance, and th barkers and the show owners and thy vartous others will all be there to wel come vou next Saturday. $300 down will buy you a house in Brookly n. You can pay pet the bal- ance in aay ly payments equal to what you now pay \ffor rent and live in the house while paying for it. Houses of best construction and material,within 30 min- utes of City Hall by 5c. fare. Write, call or (eal for igs No.1 giving | full particu- jars. | 60 Liberty St., N. Y. |], Telephone 7440 Cortlandt. as 4 > : tae z dreds of mountains have been moved whe ie tides from one spot to another in the amuso- | vin "t Ht Barrative, & ment parks. For instance, yesterday in Bes Luna Park they changed the Alps to pica Tele i the Rocky Mountains, and didn’t look , ception an apon It as a miracle In Dreamland { 4 ese ia ote ne ae MARK. damage the digestive ay weight und given tae os C4 doses, Bend tor bookies : LOS ANGELES, CAL,

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