The evening world. Newspaper, May 26, 1911, Page 8

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)

WITH DIX 10 LIFT STATE QUARANTINE Mass Meeting of New Rochelle Citizens Sends Petitions to Albany. OPINION IS_ DIVIDED. Mayor and Some Officials Fa-| vor Canines Unmuzzled. | but Others Object. | Bvery man in New Rochelle who owns | @ dog and nearly every man there who loves a dog, whether he vans one or Not, signed petitions forwarded to-day .o| Gov. Diz begging him by his own act | to raise the dog quarantine that has lasted in the town since last October. On the other hand there are a con- siderable number of the residents who Delieve that Fif and Fido and Towser | — - nies and Tige and al! the rest of them look | most before he was of the train a . “< 6 een ENGLISH CHAMPION RULE OF‘JACK POT” BECAME FIANCE MATT WELLS HERE. POLITICIANS HIT OF IRENE OSGOOD TOENTERRING = BY LAFOLLETTE BEFORE DIVORCE |Pugilist Comes With Dia- Freddie Welsh. | | | | Matt Wells, the Enation lehtwoieht |champion, is here. Ho arrived to-day | on the Cleveland. With him were Dan Levy, his backer, « well known Lon: | don bookmaker; Dan Dollings, his | trainer, and Weil's mother, who ts eev- |enty years old. ‘The Aghter eent his | mother to the home of his brother, | who, by way, is an American citizen, | having ilved here twenty-seven years, and then he and his retinue went to the | Metropol, After that the English party was piloted around town py George MeDonald and G11 Boag, man- ager of the Madinon A. C. Wells's firat bout here wil be with Jack Goodman at the Madison A. C. next Friday night. The Madison Club has an agreement with Wells by which he te to fight three times under its auspices, Wolls also has an offer to meet Packey McFarland in Milwaukeo. Detter with their heads inside of muzzies policeman had nabbed his dog, which than out. Asa result New Rochelie at| wore a New York County lice thie present writing is @ivided into two|!ts collar, and carried it away eampe—dog and ant!-dog, eo to speak, | SPKY but helpless New Yorker Beven hundred citizens, including men ana women from every walk in life, tool Dart last aig.t in the mass meeting atiir tt were given to him tax free. on The paid dog straight back Germania Hail, to protest against the! A rich woman left her automobile restrictions leid upon the dogs of New!standing in front of a store. In the car Rochelle. were her little girl, a nuree and a little The two petitions which went to Al- Dany by this morning's mail bore the eignatures of probably twice that many: persons, inoludin, Mayor Colwell, Comp-| troller Griffin. Chairman Lathers of the the fourteen-year-old daughter of George Board of Public Works, Corporation| elharn, was walking with her King Counsel Harmer and his assistant Mr, Charlies spaniel on a string. A policeman Beers, Chief Engineer Wilkes, eight | nek the dog eye it bape od pon ne Weeping @irl clung to her spante Me ecasun cep, axon, Dine DOME’ land wouldn't surrender her hold upon tt Le ‘Count “a ‘Cordial—t oft. | unt! they reached the police station. In |nddition to paying @ fine of $10 Mr. Pel- cers and members of a newly formed! nam had to appeal to Albany before he dog, the adored possession of the child. | A dog-catoher climbed into the car and carried off the dog. Two weeks ago Miss Féith Pelham, branch of the Society for the Preven-|couid regain poasession of the tmpris- | tien of Cruelty to Animals, and many of | oned animal. te conan Oe Wate vecple 08 Muzzles Make Dogs Vicious. ¢ The petitions which went to the “Poor Man” Starts Trouble. Governor to-day recite that in tho The ver againet the dogs of New| opinion of experts the constant, wear- Roe! dates ight |{nw of @ heavy muzzle will mal o Preece ahio Wack ore chan sight | EO Sate dog smorost, end vicious (Bh seven if it does not actually drive him when the dogeatcher impounded the| to ranien, It also sets forth that while pet of @ man living in the outskirts of | it costs the municipality $1.10 for each the town, claiming that the animal had|dog impounded, the $10 paid for its Re license. redemption Koes to the 8 fo that ‘The owner wrote to Raymond Pear.|the town Is put to heavy expense for Otat. the carrying out of a law to wi a aia thet Ree eee oe pent | majority of its residenta. object. ae nly the dogs of poor men! Hesides, the police chief has felt tt were being seized. About the same| his duty to put two members of the time, so it was alleged, a man died | uniformed force tnto plain clothes and of fables in New Roohelle, Ase re-/to detail them as dog catchers. The ult Mr. Pearson issued a sweeping | men object to doing such werk, but order that all the dogs in Westohester | meanwhile the town pays them their MGs ching te qussies, ie to ries of $100 9 month each and loses claimed, however, that only in New Rochelle bas the rule been enforced thelr services from patrol duty. To date about 500 unlicensed dogs have been seized and of these 100 were With any dexree of strictness, redeemed by thelr owners at an average Indeed, in New Rochelle, the Chief of | cost of $12 and lots of trouble and Police, living up to the letter of Com. | Annoyance As Counetiman Cordial puts It, “The whole thing is a d=—d outrage and we have stood {tt long enough. No other town in the country or the State either is #0 imposed upon in this matter, and all on account of a fools ana unreasonable prejudice, We have pe titioned the Health Commissioner and he didn't even answer our letter#. Now we are going right te the Governor.” Others Favor Quarantine, On the other hand a smaller percentage sirlet enforcement of the muzzling or- impounded because they were not U-| Ger asa wise provision, Dr. D. H, Cod- coneed ond muzzled. ding, @ veterinarian and an expert in the handling of animals, says ‘he thinks ieee. Te7 Dee From Woman, it ts better that every dog alive should 4 woman was making a purchase in &/ wear a muzzic than that one human be- meat market. Ehe “ad a iittle toy dog | ing should die of hydrophobia. in her arms. A dogcatcher entered.| His little son, who was Mitten eome took the dog away om her despite her | Weeks ago by a stray cur, ia now tn struggles and protests and carried the |the Willard Parker Hospital undergoing v treatment, Dr, Codding ls authority for yelping Metle beastie off. The woman | re yatement that at leat eight doxs fatates. suffering from rables have been killed ingide the town within the last six or Ale Jetent months, missioner Pearson's order, has ruled thet @ dog securely tied or even locked fn @ kennel is lable to be selzed unless he %8 muzzled. Accordingly the dog- catchers have entered yards and taken Possession of dogs that were actually in leash. Dozens of instances of what the tn- A Manhattan man went to New Ito- chelle, al) primed to buy a hous Many Women The mistake is natural, be before the gloves. “cost no more” than the 15 $1.25, $1.50 1 Julive Kayser & Co. Mahers NewYork, N.Y, |the penalty and took his redeemed |@ Union Jack ribbon. It 1 home, swearing he | thing like $15,000, Wells pe [erty and that he had no that all silk gloves are “Kayser’s.” ser’s” are the original and best known. There’s A Way to Tell the Genuine “look in the hem’ for the name “Kayser”? it means assurance of quality and reliability, A Guarantee That Guarantees. A “new pair free’? if the ‘tips’? wear out “Kayser? gloves kind’? and are worth double. Short Silk Gloves, 50c., 75¢ $1.00 Wells brought over the celebrated Lord Lonsdale gold belt, which he won by defeating Freddie Welsh recently. It is a massive tnscribed affair, linked over worth somes 0 proudly ex- | Wouldn't own a house tn such a town | hibits @ big diamond ring and a heavy | old watch that looks like a young alarm clock. Both are gifts of admiring English sportsmen and Wells had to) ow to the Customs’ men that the h and ring were hii ither, looks In good shape, but he ts carrying around @ bad left foot encased | in @ carpet slipper. He eaid he hurt | the foot while exercising on the boat, but made light of the injury. “I scraped some ekin off my toes,” he eaid, “in making the sharp turns on deck, but it will be all right In day or two, 1) boxed every day on the way over with | Dollings, and @ week's work at Allen- will fix me as good as I (4a | story that a big Ger ve Wult had doubled punch and made hm quit moving about aboard ship, Welle jaughed and eaid: “I did box with a big German. I hit him once and he stopped. I never saw ‘him efter that. said his defeat of Welch for the yh championship was as big a eur- prise in England as it was here. “I beat Welch at his own game. I out- pointed him and outfought him. Ref- vi himself said I won seventeen out of the twenty rounds and the other three were even. My only plan of battle with Welch was to hit him and not let him hit I think I succeeded very an't look anything like the welterweight he is regarded in some quarters, ‘He {s making 135 pounds at 3 o'clock for Goodman and eays he can do 1%) at the same hour, “When T was here befor he con- tinued, “I never got @ real chance, I fought men bigger than myself. Fd | Keliy was used more as @ training part- | ner for Owen Moran than anything else." inacinicniiiaaiecete PRISON AGAIN FOR SLAYER, aden, Who Pleaded Guilty After Court Upset Conviction, In Sentenced. John C. Lumsden, who pleaded guilty yesterday to mansimughter in the first degree for the killing of Harry Suy- dam, a broker, was sentenced to-day to not less than four, nor more than ten years in Sing Sing by Justice Mc- Call in the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court. Lumeden had been tried before, con- victed and sentenced to eighteen years fn Sing Sing. After serving two years |the Court of Appeals reversed this Judgment and directed a new trial Martin W. Littleton, counsel for Lums- den, entered a plea of guilty for his client yesterday and threw him on the mercy of the Court. . Think cause “Kay- “ordinary | Delled the Senate to make a second | | vestigation into tho charges that WH) THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1911. Precedents Like Decision in mond Belt He Won From | Case of Lorimer Force Direct Vote and Recall. WASHINGTON, May 2%.—Declaring that the honor of the nation is at stake and pleading for an inquiry by five new Senators, who have not yet recorded thelr sentiments tn the case, Senator La Follette (Rep, Wis), concluded his four-da peech on the Lorimer case in the Senate to-day, He predicted that “betrayal of the public trust will | hasten the destruction of representative | government,” and cause the complete establishment of direct legisiation by the people direct @lections, the Initit- tive, the referendum and the recall. In asserting that mepr evidence com- fam Lorimer was elected to the Senate from Illinois by bribery, La Folleite said In part “It 19 a deeply significant fact that for seventy years after this govern- ment was established the United Staces Senate had never been humiliated by @ call to investigate a charge of corrup- | tion in the election of one of its mem- bers, Since that time eleven Senators have been summoned to the bar of the Benate to defend against the charge of bribery, “A @tudy of the ten bribery cases tried | here in recent years discloses the grow: ing tendency toward establishing prece- dents which make it increasingly a@m- cult to convict, excepting in cases where the proof {8 overwhelming and notor- fous. “The decision tn makes another of precedents. lowered senatorial standards “The abolition of caucuses and con- ventions and the nomination of all can- didates by direct vote, the election of United States Senators by direct vote, | Ment of him. Mr. Sherard sald the nomination of presidential cand! dates by direct vote, the initiative, the referendum and the recall—all these are but the logical outcome of the betrayal | of public trust by public offictals, “The recall will enable the people to dismiss from public service a repre- sentative whenever he shall cease to serve the public interest. hen no Jack- pot politician can hold his offica in de- | fiance of the will of a constituency | ‘whose commission he has dishonored. | Proves incompetent or false to his trust. | Intrenched in office for full. term, | his constituency 1s powerless and must | submit to misrepresentation. At the expiration of his service he may be re- placed by another who will prove| equally unworthy. The citizen ts en- | titled to eome check, some appeal, some | reltef. A new turn was given to the Lorimer case to-day when Democratic Senators declared in. a party caucus called by | Senator Martin, that they would sup-| port the La Follette resolution rather | than leave the conduct of the proposed | new inquiry with the regular Senate Committee on Privileges and Elections, | Foulard ever con The prettiest 3 Downon $50 “ o 75 2.50 “ 100 2188 2190 |HE HAD A WIFE THEN. the Lorimer case | these unfortunate | In 1892 In some respects it stands | until May, 1908, when we were married, alone—a lurid page in the history of | th Ave., Corner Sale Tomorrow a $h50 Finest Silk The result of the most re- markable spectal purchase fashionable colors pro- duced this season in (iS (@\ waive FoR CATALOGUE Home Furaished $49, 9§ Actual Value 875, at Containing the fotlewing articles: LIVING ROOM, ROYAL FURNITURE CO 32 AVE 119«120 ST | Sherard Says Novelist Offered to Marry Him Five Days After They Met. After Marrying Writer He Was Merely a “Prince Consort,” | | He Testifies. never considered my her room without bi permission, entitled to pri door relentiessly shut.” Describing the acene in Gullsborough Hall, Deo. 2, when Mr, Sherard made so gre aid a woman wa: evolt, after a drinker and | her second, Col. Harvey, drank f to death, yet drinking was al- going on at Guilsborough. I have three men come there drunk. T only allowed water, while the vis- itors drank wins, “1 was left alone at Guilsborough Hall, which {s aa much cut off from the world an Is the North Pole, and was treated locally as @ leper {stand, I had 4 most humillating position—I was a sort of prines consort. My wife at firat allowed me £150 (9150) a year, but after- Ward #he cut that down to £50 ($250), Then she raised tt to £100 (3500). During three years of married life I have had entitled to go to | C6 (12.77 fron. tw ate sorkes @are | called of asking | Writing her book. @ i a | with Mr. Sherard on the vos maica, teatied that he never sav’ him | under the influence of drink. ‘The hearing 1s not yet finished. ——— to reat @ commotion & policeman was QUT OF WORK; HE ENDS LIFE, ‘She told |T00 Poor to Pay for Necessary Operatio Henry Perrin, an of work, suffering from appendicitis and | too poor to be operation, hall bedroom he rented from Mrs. Pat- ick Murphy at No. %3 West Eighteenth treet. Mrs. Murphy found him dead from 1i- juminating @as whioh he had inhaled through a tube. the French Consul and to Supt. Kehrer of the Metropolitan Bullding in Union| : Square, where he was employed up to i last Monday. if the time.” i pr Smith, who shared * stateroom | e to Ja- | Mas U Gas. ator operator out the expense of an| killed himself to-day in the Perrin left letters to VONDGN,” Mey = mover ar dorough Bherard, atatuesque, theatrical, | flamboyant, testified in his own behalf to-day in the suit for separation brought by his wife, Irene Osgood, an American novelist, the trial of which was sontin- | ued to-da Mr, Bherard indignantly ented the | charges of inebriety contained tn the on. He offered to mubmit himeelt |to @ medical examination and agreed z that {f the doctor reported @ trace of | alcoholism in his system he would vetlel draw his dofen-> to his wife's sui, | This chailenge evoked applause tn | court “Five days after we met tn Cannes tn February, 19," Mr, Sherard told thb | Court, “Irene offered to marry me if I Rot a divorce, Then we became en: | Bagel. She detared that he had been | anxious to make my acquaintance ever since the first time she eaw me in Paris | I travelled with her from 1906 “Our only disagreement before that | had been tn Egypt, but we met again at Nice and became reconciled.” Testifying In regard to his w treat- ‘Sometimes she was just angolic; | sometimes the very opposite. Some- [times she forbade me to enter her room | for ten days; sometimes she sent for | me twenty times jn the morning. Some- One Dollar Does the Work of Six when you wear The Antiseptic Hose You see, the hard wear on socks falls on the heels and toes, and Knox-Knit has heels and toes six times as strong as ordinary hose. 25¢e a Pair—""sad Childeon™ KAHN & FRANK, Distributors 573-577 Broadway New York jor Their Sutts.” th Street Dresses summated styles and most 10 Yds, Matting KITCHEN, I 1Glase 2 Wont 10 ¥de, Olleloth 2 Wond-Seat Chatra *15 The Brill Special for the things he wants. The Blue and the Gray figure largely in two very remarkable offerings of values in Men’s Suits ‘20 The Brill Twenty AMD tumbling standards of value, these two great BRILL specials re- main firm, because they're built upon the solid foundation of quality and good workmanship; made to satisfy that instinct of economy which makes every man—no matter how much money he has—count the pennies for that which he must have, in order that he may have a fuller purse Every man who gets one of these suits gets quality, style, fit, service; makes a worth-while saving, too. Deep, rich, color-fast blue serges, Oxford blues, blue-on-blue, gray serges, pencil stripes, browns, tans, grays, silk mixtures, cool effects in hard, closely-woven worsteds; gray, tan, black and pencil stripe mohairs, Scotchy homespuns and cool wool crashes. Very Smart Suits, These Young Men’s Suits at $10, $12 and #15. Blue serges, blue-on-blue, grays, browns, Very serviceable and stylish, with that young men like. tans. the snap Sale of Boys’ Suits Were $6.95 and $7.95; $5.75 A closing out of broken lots from these two justly pular lines. Double- Breariod and Norfolk styles, very natty new patterns, excellently tailored, roomy, serviceable. You can buy a play suit with the saving you make on one of these dandy suits. om Play Suits Ensure freedom of action and NORFOLK SUITS in Khaki, $1.95, $2.45, $3.45; AMERICAN BOY SCOUT Sutts, $3; official New York agents. Harlem and Union Square Stores Open Saturday Evening Sale of $5 Outing Trousers at $3 A saving to you of $2. White flannels, striped white serges, gray flannels and cassimeres; new, correctly cut, seams sewn with silk. A really marvellous offering, just when outing trousers are most needed. Are you equipped for Decoration Day? 83. Sale of $2.50 Shirts—$1.15 Silk striped Negiigee Shirts, with ‘soft, double turn-over cuffs. The opportunity to stock up for the summer with ideal warm weather shirts. Make the hours pass all too quickly for the children, and lengthen the life of their regular clothing. At $1, Indian, Cowboy, Major, Tar, Baseball At $1.25, Captain and Scout, the latter with regulation cap, $1.75. At $3, special Cowboy Suit, with hat, belt, pistol holster, laria‘, bandanna neckerchief. Girly Squaw Suits, $1; Senorita Suits, $1.50. y KAZOO Boys’ Athletic Suspenders, 4 patterns, oper circulartot support + Knickers and stockings, too, Galatea, Nothing nearly as good atS0c. Croxton. FIVE STORES: . 125TH STREET “BROADWAY At Third Ave. 47 CORTLANDT At 40th Street Near Greenwich 279 BROADWAY UNION SQUARE NearChambersSt. THE HOUSE OF BETTER VALUES _14thSt., nr. B’way At all five stores. With patent waist attachment $1 & $1.50 The only Wash Sut in New York with an attached waist; so arranged as to per- mit the suit to be length- ened to suit the needs of the growing boy. 1n linen and white duck, $3.45, At all five stores. Handsome fast color, in Gingham and Unequalled value. = WISSNER PIANOS represent real dollar for dollar valué, We can prove conclusively to you that they are the most expensively built pianos in existence, but not the | highest priced, which in conjunction with their Supere musical qualities | makes them the choice of far-seeing piano purchasers. Send Postal fer Catalogue, WISSNER WAREROOMS: 96 Sth Ave., cor. 15th St., N. NEW LOCATION, 55-57 Flatbush Ave., BROOKLYN. ruer ont readey i ag Avert Roe 54,068 Publisher N. Y, World, people to other houses in our vicinity, sume our contract with you. Yours very truly, WORLD “‘SUMMER RESORT” ADS. LAST YEAR, \A REMARKABLE RECORD TRACEABLE TO WORLD AD, RESULTS: Primrose Hill, Rhinebeck, N. Y. Dear Sir—In order that you may know Just how much we value The World as an advertising medium of Summer Resorts, we would Say that during the last several seasons we placed an announcement in your paper, beginning in May and ending in September, and our house was CROWDED during the entire seasons. In fact, we were compelled to cancel a grtat many applications for accommodations and refer the World “Summer Resort” Ad. Battery Takes Primrose Hill Hotel by Storm: May 2, 1911, This season we expect to re- Assuring you that we appreciate and value the results we receive from advertising our resort in The World, we remain MR. AND MRS. C. E, BRICE, Rhinebeck, Dutchess Co., N. Y, 35,269 Tie heRALD, i

Other pages from this issue: