The evening world. Newspaper, July 21, 1911, Page 12

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VENING WORLD, FRIDAY, HEAVY THUNDER STORMS SET FIRES ALL OVER CITY AND CRIPPLE RAILROADS —— Church at Coney Struck Dur- ing Mass—Convent and Min- ister’s Home Also Hit. DELUGE OF RAIN FALLS. Hero in Jersey City Hospital Averts Panic—Scores of Dwellings Burned. From way baci to the New Jersey Hillis to Montauk Point, with a breadth of aweep that embraced Westchester County and the five boroughs of tare’ ew e electric xtorm broke % today, causing terror to , mending forth sheets ack a of Hahtning houses and crippling the rervice of the Long Island, the New Yor. Central and the New York, New Heven & Hartford Raliroade, The mornirg storm came asa big black eequel to a storm that had played havoc in a narrower area about mid- night. Poth storms were for the dispiay of lehtning and the tremendous hanging of thunder. Rain fell in many places in the volume of a cloudburst. Staten Island seemed to get the worst of the flood. Trolley lines were washed out, the Staten Island Rapid Transit line crippled and hun- reds of cellars Nooded Lightning set fire to Christ's Hospital tm Jersey City. That a panic wae averted was due to the heroism of a man patient occupying a room on the third floor in the left wing. The crash of the bolt shook the building and alarmed every one of the two hundred patients. RAISED NO PANIC OF ALARM ON SEEING FIRE. But the man in the private room on the third floor, alone of all the inmates of the building, saw that the cornice above his window was ablaze. Without uttering @ bound he reached out and Pressei the glectric button. His nuree came, eaw the fire and hurried nolse- Messly to the oMfce of Superintendent Summers, who turned in a fire alarm. The nurees were working as a bucket brigade and had subdued the blaze when the firemen arrived. Taking as « nucleus the clouds and vapor left by the midnight storm, No. 2 thunderer began to draw an inky shroud across the sky at 630 o'clock. Those who awoke shortly before 7 were de- luded into the belief that dawn was sti an hour or two away, until they heard the drumming of the thunder in the distance, ‘The lightning aid not cut through the opaque curtain of the clouds until it had come uncomfortably close and the bolts came out as sharp as globes of molten metal. The wind blew fitfuily and in savage gusts, but there was not enough of it to make a nolse above the crash of the incessant thunde: Five houses were struck and set ablaze in Brooklyn during the two storms, The morning storm dropped a bolt upon the Reman Catholic Church of the Guar- dian Angel on Ocean Parkway, Coney Island, while the Rev. John J. Cullen wag celebrating the 7 o'clock mass. ‘Tho worghippere fied from the church in a shrieking panic as the roof caught fire and blazed high despite the deluge of rain, of and that churches and score barns remarkable | fitty | brought | Conductor “Bil! protecting wheds g tory of the electrical equipment of the Long Inlaid Ratlroad, The lightning cross-ciroulted the high tension wires that carry the power loads. blew out the fuses of the electirc switches and disarranged the signal system All incoming trains from every sec+ tion of Long Isiand were delayed from minutes From every | of the road the incoming trains narratives of cloudburste and terrifying broadsides of lightning, Barns were struck and d ved by fire down oan hour. bran the ightning hac not set fire either to Roanoke or the Grant home. They broke up the demo! fuse boxes !n the cellar, and after satisfying them-| selves that there was no danger and, calning the fears of the excited tenants, they left. In other parts of Greater New York several buildings were damaged by lightning. At One Hundred and Sev- enty-fourth street and West Farms road & bolt struck the bullding occupied by the New Haven Lumber Company and | set fire to ft. A still alarm was sent In and firemen extinguished the blaze, The lons was about $500, | Another bolt struck the roof of a tene- | ment house at No. 1240 Franklin avenue, the Bronx, and started a blaze. The tenants fled in pantie. Firemen ex- hed the flames, which had made eadway owing to the heavy rain A flagpole on the roof of the Amer! Can Company Butlding, at No. 47 West Fourteenth street, was shattered by lightning. It fell to the street, but no | one was Injured, the sidewalk being de- erted. The electric lights in the bulld- ing were put out A big tree on the east side of City Hall Park was struck by lightning and hurled across the street, almost againat the new municipal butiding. MA8S GOES ON, NUNS QUIET, AS BOLT HITS. the entire length of the Isiand. | The North Shore express, in charge of Couch, got Into Long Ie!and City more than an hour late and {ts six hundred passengers confessed | they had felt more than squeamish dure | ing the worst of the storm. SAW TWO BARNS SET ON FIRE) BY BOLTS. During their run from Northport to | Jamaica the passengers saw two barns struck and fired. For fifty minutes the | train ran through & pall that was thick: | er than the blackness of night. As the | ts on the engine were not Ht the Ineer had to proceed cautiously. All | gilts in tie cars went out with @ is following the crash of a bolt that blazed along the rails behind the train. | When the express reached Jamaica the | ig transfer station was ewamped with @ jam of commuters and there were no | electric traing running elther to Man- ttan or the Flatbush avenue station In Brooklyn, Thousands of commut t soaked by the down. | pour and all the while the lightning Played about them In an uninterrupted bombardment. Many trees were struck in the town and round about Jamaica. Incoming trains on the New York Central and New Haven Railroads were d from fifteen to forty minutes when the lightning blew out the fuses of electric switches and blanked the telegraph and signal systems, The power loadsa were carried along the third rails and overhead throughout the storm, but with the switches and signa! stem out of commission the train: had to crawl and before the Park ave nue tunnel was reached they wer massed back of the Harlem River for several miles. MORE THUNDER STORMS COM- ING TO-DAY AND TO-NIGHT. During the midnight sorm that pr. ceded the early morning blasts of rain and lightning, the wind attajned a ve locity of 87 miles an hour. The Weather Man says the lightning was not so bad in the morning storm, but reports from outlying sections prove that the morn- ing bolts did about five times as mui damage. More thunderstorms are pr dicted for the remaining hours of the day and during to-morrow morning. Then it will be fair, While Mrs. Nina M. Hauss and her family were at breakfast in the two story se at No, 1200 Bast Thirty- fAtth t, Brooklyn, lightning struck & corner of the roof, ripped it open and set fire to the upper part of the hou ‘The family rushed out into the strest in alarm just as another bolt struck &@ tree @ block away. Before the firemen could put out the blaze $1,000 worth of damage had been done. About the same time another bolt struck the house of Samuel Horowits at No. 2% Bay Twenty-third street, Bath Beach. The fire that followed was doused by the rain after about $200 damage had been done. Roth storms were brewed in the Pas- saic Valley and began thelr furious bombardments over Montclair and the Oranges, thence moving eastward over this city, The first storm reached New York shortly before mirnight. During the first storm a big timber was carried off the new Municipal Bulld- Tt crashed down into Park Row, and would have been fatal to any person passing, but the heavy rain had cleared the streets of pedestrians. SCORES OF FAMILIES RUSH OUT SHATTERED CROSS DROPS AT PEET OF PASSERBY. ‘The stone cross on the church was shattered by the bolt and fell almost at the feet of Rudolph Scherer, who lives on the Sheepshead Bay road, near Sec- ond street. Scherer turned in a fire alarm, a4 then volunteered his services in @ bucket brigade organized by Father Cullen. When Batatlion Chief Rogers IN PANIC, Scores of families on fashionable | South Oxford street, Brooklyn, w thrown into a panic when lightning | struck two buildings almost simul- taneously during the first storm. The storm was especially heavy 11 Brooklyn about mid ht. Vivid flash of Mghtning and sharp cracks of thun- der roused most of the residents of the borough. Just as the storm seemed to be moving argived the entire roof of the church] out across the Sound the four-story | wae on fire and a eecond alarm was| brown-stone house at No. 64, occupted turned in. This brought a big relay of | by Wallace Grant, an inventor, was apparatus, and after an hour's work the | {tuck Mrs. Grant was in the house flames were checked. alone, her ae chibaren Aan J 2 Fae country and her husband not having Laghtning struck and shattered‘ the| returned home. The lightning hit the crose on the convent of the French Sis-| chimney, wrecking It and scattering tere at No. 11% Lexington avenue waile| pricks ail over th af the thirty-one nuns were at mass. ‘The| The lightning » to fanp from cross was shattered to atoms, The| the chimney of the Grant homo dlago- home of the Rev. Albert Gants at No,| "ally across the street to the roof of 48 East Two Hundred and Twenty-ftth| the se-story Roanoke apartment house street, adjoining the First Presbyterian| S¢ NO. ft attuk, @ telephone wire Church of WilHamsbridge, of which Mr.| through the building, into the switeh. Gants is pastor, was struck and caught] board on the first floor and on down fre, {nto the fuse boxes in the cellas Mra, Gantz was on her way upstaira| Cari Saunders, twenty-two, the tele- to close the attic windows when the bolt | P! operator, was sitting the hit, ripping a hole in the roof. She was | #Witehboard when the bolt struck, He thrown back and fell to the floor below, | WS thrown from his chatr and parttally suffering @ slight injury to her back i ee il pa - Gecrge Gants, brottier of ine clecg} fee and rushed into the street to send | map, was taking a bath at the tr The crash on the roof and the com- The shock banged his head against the| motion in the cellar when the lightning tub, stunning him, and he was almost] bit the fuse boxes roused every family | drowned when his kinsman got to him building, ‘There are twenty-two | Albert Fulton, who with his w | Apartments in the house and elghteen three children occupies the top floor! We"? apiod of the house next door, was putting; TENANTS 7LED TO THE STREET down the window of his bedroom when N TERROR, | the bolt crashed down a dozen yards hanth flat to the AtAae inden from him, He was thrown back against ae iat iia bulldine waa’ salt the wall, twese feet uway and badly stood about In the rain, stunn other what 1 happened. RAIN HFLPS PUT OLIT FLAMES, liens In the nd had been ON ROOF | roused by the crash, in a few | s fire engines raced John Brooks, hia wife, three children | thr almost every house and mother-in-law, Mra. McKay, were | ha < at the breakfast table on the ground| Dr. Blackwell, a naval surgeon, and floor. The shock of the | rew | Dr. Clayland, both of whom live on th them from their chairs. Mar dows | third of the Roanoke, quickly cea. ts hounes. ‘The | aecertained that there was no danger fire was put out in the elergyma aT ene: eed itt the peo. house before the arrival y T vo physiclans attended sev- men, The rain gre y aide ern en who were hysterical from Mr, Gantz and his bucket fright Foe storm was the worst in the his- The firemen found nothing to do, as | there was no panic among the nuna In When the Convent of the French Sis- tern was struck Father Exile of the Church of the Assumption was con- eting mass, Although the entire bullding rocked from the crash the priest did not halt In his services and any part of the building, A man on @ nearby roof on Fighty- knocked down the impact of the bolt. He sald he saw) the bolt leap across the space from | the shattered cross to the roof on) MISSING GIRL WHO MAY HAVE BEEN KIDNAPPED. The failure of the police to find the! body of Hannah Reiner, for which they have been dragging Pelham Bay ain: ‘The storm was ns fevere in White) ™eMday afternoon, han given rise to Plaine as in the Bronx. The barn of the suspicion that she has met with Langion Carpenter, on the outskirts of foul play. Relatives of the girl belleve the village of Valhalla, was ignited by|that as she sat in her rowboat reading Ughtning and burned to the ground. A|a farm hand and hia wife and a baby were in the barn at the time, but they were not injured. A horse ten feet from them | was struck down by a shaft of the light- | ning and killed instantly. Hackensack had hardly from the shock of the first storm when the second broke with even eater fury, putting the trolley Ines) out Of business and flooding the streets. | RUTHERFORD THREATENED BY BLAZE. Taghtning struck the five-story butld- Ing of George B. Holman on Park ave- nue, Rutherford, setting fire to it and for a time the blaze threatened the en- tire business section of the town. The big building, used as a storage ware- house, was completely destroyed. ‘The water pressure was so iow that the firemen were practically helpless. Had it not been for the heavy rain tho fire would have had the town at ite mercy. Ald was summoned from Passalc and Paterson, and with these auxiliaries the local fire brigades man- aged to prevent a conflagration. From many outlying towns in New Jersey reports have been received of destruction by lghtning. At Madison several buildings were struck, The villa of W. 8, Sterns of Simon Sterns & Co, No. % University place, was struck and burned to the ground, the damage being estimated at $15,000, During the height of the storm on Staten Island the lightning raised havoc with the power wires of the Richmond Light & Power Company. No trulley cars were run from Rich- mond and Midland Beach between mid- night and 9 o'clock to-day. A motorman running slowly through the first storm found the tracks sub- merged with a foot of water near Don- gan Hills. He ran into a heap of stones and his car jumped the tracks and crosged the road to a ditch into which it slumped. The passengers in the car were badly shaken up and scared. Two of the women passengers swooned from trent. The beautiful home of New Jersey State Sengtor John D. Prince at Ridge- jh It w swooped down her Into thelr craft. The fact that the rowboat from which | Nell of No. then while she became absorbed in @ book. | the Charles street station that Timothy ploy of Rosenberg & Co., Nos. 19 A number of | her shopmates and friends, Joined her brothers in the search for her, declare that she had no love affair. They never heard her Indicated a desire to dic. HEWAITEDINVAIN. FOR “EASY JUDRE” novel in a motor boat her and dragged some men upon je disappeared was found at Belden | Point, City Island, right side up and} “ Ir een dry, adds strength to this theory, ‘The| Street, Joseph Roche of No. rirl, who lived with her parents at No, | Street, 163 Bathgate avenue, the Bronx, an excellent rower. It was her habit on | !!ton avenue, two or three days of the week during | Radford of N the summer to hire @ boat and row out | wouldn't @ long @lstance from the shore, and | melons. But pretty soon a message came from | was let the boat drift slowly back is believed that some vicious charac- ter observed the girl's habit and lay tn | watt for her. The missing girl, ‘est Twenty-first street. who have y anything that TO SENTENCE HN Cashier Who Stole to Support Two Establishments Given Four Years, wood was destroyed during the mid- night storm. Lightning struck one of the cupolas of the villa, which was| The danger of attempting to main- situated on the crest of the mountain. | tain @ wife and two children in a he entire upper part of the hous asain tii Dlaged up and the structure was a blaz-| Brooklyn home and a fascinating ing a mass of ruins before the fire com- pantes arrived from Paterson and Ridgewood, During the storm at Long Branch, N. J., lightning struck the stabdle of John| Conrow, killing two horses, The build. ing caught fire and burned, Conrow's| lons is about $800, a LIGHTNING KILLS 80Y. Strack While in Woods Berrying th a th: er With Broth WATERBURY, Conn, July 21.—/ Lightning to-day struck and instantly Killed Frank McLennon, 1. In a woods the matter presented by order of Fed- | his family on his salary and got into | al Attorney-G ersham had|the clutches of loan sharks, The next | been dismissed by the Grand Jury, step led him to the cashbox of his em- | pl | Prospect place. he had been for two years cashier of blonde in a Manhattan establishment on @ cashier's lary will probably be e chief subject of the reflections of Walter P. Richmond in Sing Sing pris-| on for the next Judge Malone se four years at least. tenced Richmond to term of not less than four nor more an six years, in the Court of Gen- al Sessions to-day. Richmond is 00d looking, well- groomed man of thirty-three years, He was born in Brooklyn, where his | wife and two children It dat No. 160 last February Up to | the wholesale boot and shoe house of Sor eee and his brother John | cary, Hutchinson & Co. 121 Duane js ret. HURRIED TO A HOSPITAL | isere'wis aiscovered tie next day, and } | theft was discovered the next day, and IN REMARKABLE SPEED, | "© was a: d and indicted. It was a aa *| plain case and Richmond, arraigned be- Neath, + ore Judge Malone, pleaded guilty and Victim Taken Three Miles in Auto- ree rpg eveeionas Tre coy Be ye mobile Ambulance, but Dies the Tomos for sentence, and there he at Doorway was visited by a Criminal Courts law- Dr, Warner and the automobile am-| 20: Who gave him some advice Malone ts a hard Ju sald the bulence of the new ption Hospi. ie tal, In East Seventieth street, did their Mwyer “Change your plea and stall rest nd swiftest this afternoon to) off the sentel In a few weeks Ma- save the Mfe of Comillo Corrado, will for your case, Then It pusheart Junk buyer, who was knocked you before another Judge, who will Jown by a truck at Second avenue 4 let you of with a Hght sentence Fifty-ninth street to-day, but he ¢ Richmond changed his ple Judge | the ambulance was taking him to Malone head about the case miles from whet w hurt, within Ive . Jaw p ns fife minute fter th accident, T . before som rd Ld adel | Reception Hospital is a relief station 4 myste . » Malone to enable quick assistance to inJu ud decreed alone, was to people. After there has been a’ pre-| handle Richmond's case liminary operation they are sent to r vainly walting four months fo other hogpitals. an “easy” Judge, Richmond was advise ——~> by a friendly court officer uf the true state of fairs He decided then to SMELTER INQUIRY FAILS. new his plea of guilty before Judge besecoregese Malone and the sentence to-day was | No Vio ustor Inters the result. Richmond ¢ sed in court when h state Law & heard th de nd! him to Sing The Federal Gran Jury which in. Sing, With his ands clasped to his vestigated the busin: affairs of the breast he dropped to the floor, Court American Smelting and Refining Com. | officers had to carry him out and {t was pany has decided that the evidence two hours before he was able to handle presented was insufficient to sustain himself, the harges against th rporation of Richmond's downfall, according to the violating either the man Anti- Probation officers, was due to his tn. Trust Law or the Interstate Commerce | fatuation of @ yung blond enog~ Act rapher whom he met while he was em- | United States District-Attorney Wise ployed some years ago as cashier to-day Amitt that the secret inves. for a Manhattan acking house. He teation ad been concluded, and that endeavored to support this charmer and loy y| ‘The evening World to-day received in River, | $3 from Mrs, B. Rernard and @1 from| The body tmis McKeegan of No, M for the rellef of the family |19s Huron street, Brooklyn, was found | of « Werner of East New York. floating in the North River at the foot | Werner was 1 unconscious at his|of Sixty-ninth street to-day, He f home. Bis wife and four children were | overboard from Tug No, % of t and: | starving, The money was forwarded] ard Oll Company, which berths there, | to Mra, Werner, on July 1% ‘STOLEN MELONS - GAVE SEVEN BOYS Then Magistrate Herrman Added to Their Discomfort by Holding Them in $1,000. Seven little boys were taken before Magistrate Herrman in Morrisania Court to-day holding thelr tummies under their hands and with thetr faces twisted with pain. The Magistrate looked at the commitment papers before him and burst into an unsympathetic roar. Ri The charge was stealing a wagoniond of watermelons. Policeman Tierney, who arrested them, sald that he was riding along Featherbed Lane up in the Bronx when a man toll him that some boys in a vacant lot a block away were eating watermelons 0% ‘a rate that constituted disorderly coh- duet. “It's not my business, | “but I'l go see.” | He rode toward the spot. As he | came in sight the watermelon feasters scattered, leaving a weary little mare cropping the grass in a waste of brok- len rinds. Tlerney called Sergt, Suttle by sounding his whistle and ran down | the boys, They were Frederick O'Don- 222 West Fourth street, James Ashley of No, 29 Perry street, | Cornelius Mulcair of No. 82 Charles 62 Barrow James Keys of No. 82 Charles George Moore of No, 236 Ham- BrooRlyn, and Emmett 35 Park street. They where they got the #aid Terney, atreat tell Hayes, a huckster of No. 77 Congress street Brooklyn, had reported that a wagonload of melons had been stolen from him at the fruit pier at the foot of Chariton street. “Even as the stolen fruit is griping at your innards,” said the Magistrate to | the seven sufferers, “shall the law pun- {sh your tough consciences.” And he held them in $1,000 ball each for the Grand Jury for grand larceny. ian Killed by Fall From Scaffold. street was instantly killed to-day by falling from a scaffold on which he was working on the seventh floor of a new building at No. 16 Willett street. The police sald that no one but himself was to blame. JULY 21, 1911. TAFT OF TO MEE BLUE AND GRAY ON FELD OF MANASSAS President Speaks To-Day to Veterans at Reunion on Spot Where Batile Was Fought. WASHINGTON, July 21.—Over the | same dusty roads that fifty years ago swarmed with thousands of Union sol- diers, hastening back to Washington frorf the first battle of Bull Run, Presi- dent Taft motored to-day to Manass: Va., to speak at the semi-centennial re- unton of the blue and gray veterans, Senator Martin and Representative Carlin of Virginia, Secretary Hilles and Major Butt accompanied the President. The speech at Manassas will be made late this afternoon, the Presidential party having planned to stop at Fairfax Court House, Va. for luncheon with State Senator Thornton. The President ex- pected to return to the White House in time for dinner, MANASSAS, Va., July 21.—The Blue and the Gray marched across the fields of Manassas to meet each other to-day. , This incident, unique in history, the meeting of Federal and Confederate veterans on the fleki where they fought a mighty battle just fitty years ago, at- tracted as witnesses the President of {the United States, the Governor of Vir- |sinta, the home of the Confederate cap- ital, and visitors from many States. Manassas Peace Jubilee and Reunion, which began last Sunday with a sermon on the courthouse lawn by Rev. H. N. | Couden, Chaplain of the House of Rep- | resentatives, who iost his sight while serving in the Union rank: | President Taft and Gov. Mann long | ago had accepted Invitations to be the guests of honor of the day, to review the lines of gray haired veterans and | make addresses in the afternoon, In | the evening they will meet the old | soldiers and other visitors at @ public | reception. | ————_—_—. | RIVER VICTIM A NEW YORKER. Man Found Drowned at Rochester Identified by Papérs, ROCHESTER, N. Y., July 21.—The de- composed body of, a man found in tho | river here last night has been Identified | by means of employment bureau slips | York as John France, Greenwich street, New York. ‘The sips | Scraps of $5 and $1 bills were | in the pocke: java were dated Aug. 31, 1910. 10 found ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. ANegetable Preparation forAs. similating the Food andResva. ting the Stomachs and Bowels of | a INFANTS # CHILDREN | | Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. OTNARCOTIC. | Al Remedy for: Worms Convulsions feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. FacSimie Signarure of __NEW YORK. At6 months old 35 Doses — 35 CENTS Exact Copy of Wrapper. recommendation.” have used it.” , upon to state positively what } It was the crowning feature of the| | | | | oners, JATTLE ROYAL IN COURT AT TRIAL OF CAMORRISTS. Witness and Lawyer Fight, Two Prisoners Thrown Out of Court ana Man Falls in Fit. VITERBO, Italy, July 2)—The most Violent scene of the Camorrist trial to date was provoked to-day by a personal dispute between Capt. Fabront and Law- ver Lioy. In the tumult created other lawyers fled from the room, Enrico Alfano and Gennaro Abbatemaggio, the Informer, were thrown out bodily by the caribineers, Glovannt Bartolozet fell in a fit and President Bianchi was helpless to maintain order and declared the s sion adjourned, Throughout the hubbub Fabront stood pale but impassive. As the courtroom was being cleared, he sald: ‘The Camorra in or out of court can't in- timidate me." Fabront, captain of the Neapolitan carabineers, was assigned by the Min- istry of Justice to uproot the Camorra. During the past few days he has toid on the stand the results of his detective work and the operations of his asso- clates, Marshal Captmutt! and Marshal Farris, Alessandro Lioy, now attorney for the defense, formerly edited a news- Fabroni has testified that reve! against the Camorra made by Editor Ifoy were not in harmony with the claims set up by Lawyer Lioy n de- fense of his clients. ‘Bitter personal feeling between the detective and the lawyer has resulted, When court opened to-day Capt. Fabront was asked by Cavallere San- toro, the Crown Prosecutor, whether the assertion of Zanelli that Marshal Caplzzutl had tried to influence him to swear falsely against his fellow pris- were true, Fabront replied: “Zanell! {s the scum of criminality. Instead {t was Loy who through Zanel- lt, attempted to buy witnesses for the defense, This reflection on the lawyer raised the first storm, joy shouted like a madman. Abbatemaggtio, notwithstand- ing the caution of the President, joined in the row in support of the captain, | Enrico Aifano, the alleged head of the Camorra, led the others of the accused in a chorus of invectives directed Against Fabront and Abbatemagsto. So the storm grew greater, the Pre! dent vainly striving to head it off, Finally he ordered Abbatemaggio and Alfano removed from the room. They were not disposed to go quietly and continued their erles and curses until seized by carabineers and dragged from the place. For a little while there was a calm and the President took advantage of the opportunity to admonish all to avold personalities, With much feeling Fabroni replied “For years I have stood the insults of this man Lioy without trying him before the courts because I considered him not a criminal, but a, person whose mental faculties were unbalanced.” This plunged the lawyer into another furious rage, in which he denounced the detective in violent language, and Josephine Perlmutter of No, 70 Broome | {esued by the Atwood Agéncy of New) the two exchanged doubtful complt- ments that turned the court upside down. All the lawyers for the defense lexcept Lioy shouted their indignation which had partly rotted | jjke a fanatic. H that Children Cry For Owens & Minor Drug Co., of Richmond, Va., says: that we lend our endorsement to Castoria, a preparation of proven merit, During our long experience inthe drug business we have had abundant occasion to note the popularity of the genuine Fletcher's Cas oria, which we unhesitatingly recommend.” : Brannen & Anthony of Atlanta, Ga, say: “No doubt {f we were called medicine we had sold for the greatest length the most satisfactory f time, the greatest number of bottles sold, and pete to us and also to the customer, we feel that we could safely and conscleatiously say Fletcher's Castoria.” CENUINE CASTORI A atways Beara the Signature of and stalked out of the room. Lioy jumped about, gesticulating and yelling No one had supposed the Neapolitan vocabulary con- Letters from Prominent Druggists addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. 6. J. Briggs & Co., of Providence, R. I., sa: Castoria in our three stores for the past twenty years and consider it one of the best preparations on the market.’ E. W. Stucky, of Indianapolis, Ind., says: mended and sold your Castoria for years {s the best endorsement we can possibly give any preparation, It is surely full of merit and worthy of “We have sold Fletcher's “To suy that we have recom- Henry R. Gray, of Montreal, Que., says: “I would say that your Cas toria for children {s in large demand and that {t gives general satisfaction, Not being a secret nostrum many medical men order it whem circum: stances indicate the use of such a preparation.” W. G. Marshall, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: “We have found your Castoria to be not only one of the best sellers in the medicine market, but a preparation that gives almost. universal satisfaction; in fact we cannot recall having had a gingle complaint from any of our customers who “It 1s with pleasure The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 3 THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TY MU! Years. OTAEET, NEW YORK CITY, i tha! tained such epithets as he hurled ot the Crown's witne ‘Meantime the prisoners in the great steel cage formed a sort of claque, Biss | ing and cursing their accusers an@ ap plauding their iawyer. At last in @ Wloe [lent passion Giovannt Bartolozz and |others pressed their heads between the jbars of the cage like wild animals, | struggling to reach thelr tormentor, “Get your heads back in there,” or dered the carabineers with a threatens i ovement. FNoe cut off our heads, Yes, behead ust" they cried. Then Bartologzt tumbled over in en epileptic fit. The doctors entered cage to attend him and were foll by a score of carabineers, each of whom seized a prisoner and held him until he | was physically exhausted. ’ | His efforts to restore order being futt™, President Blanch! adjourned the sitting. Fraboni looked like a statue of Fate as he stood before the par hurling defiance at the manacled men as they were half carried from the building. To their threats of future vengeance he replied: “The Camorra in or out of court can't intimidate me." Eas Brought NEW CASTLE, Pa, July %.—David FB. Lewis jr. of this city has left for Sedgewick County, Mo. to ciaim Miss Mary Spight for his bride. Some time ago Lewis found the girl's name and ad- dress written on an egg. A co! onde ence started and the marriage is the result. Semi-Annual ae) Price Sale Clothes Values that Seem Impossible HEN we offer yo Merchant Tailors uncalled-for garments, made-to-order to bring $25 to $75—and George: Model Clothesconstruct- ed by high grade Custom Tailors during dull sea- sons, and equalling fine est $30 to $60 Merchant | Tailored products, when we offer you such clothes at the following 50 per cent. reductions, we don’t blame you for be- ing skeptical. But why not investigate? Youonly risk ten cents carfare. gueenow is: 750 —S_ 825 useexow:: 900 10.00 1125 12.50 14.00 15.00 1750 20.00 2250 ... Everything is included © Coats and Trousers, threee iece Sack Suits, Wal rince Albert, Dress and T: edo Suits, light-weight Overe coats, Cravenettes, odd Trowe sers, Flannel Trousers, Waiste ‘ coats, etc., etc. Mohair Suits (Priestley Cravenetted $10,912 015 The new Summer attire for good dressers. Many smart well as conservative pat~ terns. Sizes to fit men of all proportions from 33 to 52 chest measure. 45.00 NOW 3 3 ——— Open Evenings for Your Convenlence, 44 West 34th St. Between Broadway & Sth Ave, NEW YORK, PHULADELPHIA, IHth&Chestnut, 5 BOSTON, 14814 Summer 56 PROVIDENC! er Before Selecting Your Apartment CONSULT THE ‘| “Apartments to Let” in the Advertisements Daily and Sunday World, IT WILL SAVE YOU Time, Energy and Money The World's “Apartments to Let” ||] Advertisements Offer You the! Greatest Variety of Selection, All prices, sizes and locations

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