The evening world. Newspaper, October 18, 1911, Page 6

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SH SHEL | HANKOW AS REBELS ~ TATACK LMAUST Force of Revolutionists % ight to Hold City When Troops Are Landed. TTLE NOT DECISIVE. flict Lasts Several Hours, Both Sides Retire to Strengthen Ranks. XKOW, Oct. 18.—The firet battle the arrival of the Government | from the north was fought to- ‘on the north bank of the Han River, west of this city. It was indecisive revolutfonists temporarily drove the rial troops back from their porition, Going #0 they exhausted their wmunition and were compelled to re to thelr base at Wuchang. @ rebels, with infantry and arttl- » attacked the Government troops, Ich were reinforced from the Chinese | ips in the river and supported by guns of the ft While the fant was in progress the thirteen for- vessels in the river landed a Joint under command of Vice-Admiral Alfred L. Winsloo, commander of British Eastern fleet, who because Hhis seniority has deen given the di- Hon_of the men engaged in the pro- Hon ofthe foreign con ¢ Red Cros neutral cam Dr. MaoWillie of the American M| . Pecelved and cared for the rebel bunded. Out 2,000 revolutioniats were pitted fainst an equal number of loyal sol- , and It was a fair fight. 1 3 that the rebelx outnumberel the y 5 to 1 were incorrect. Only a of the revolutionary army particl- Bed, and they ate claiming to-night At they would have routed completely Mere from the north if their am- jon had heid cut. his evening the imperial troops are paiting reinforcements while the reb- Are replenishing thelr supplies. A I of hostilities may take place 8 it appears to be the plan of the 1 leaders to force the fighting be- ithe imperial troops have been tur- Strengthened. The Iatter had in- to delay an attack upon Wu- until their numbers were suMel- re- to make a victory probable, and It there would ve urday hang, Han- to been ruiaored tha ‘Rattle before next so Phe revels who oocuyy Wu W and Hanyang were alert and d impertal y attacked with cach and t iment troops, taken somey vantage, responded loyal ing Was severo, but it {s impossible eacribe the casualties, as the corre- mts were not p: ited near the line and those who witnessed the from the river we: pon. the first sound of Admiral @hen Ping, tn command of the Chi- warships, ordered men landed to Gen. Chang Piao, formerly c ops of the Wuchang aesumed command of The r is hi ted this move by the flect, and the bluejackets pegan to disen irected a hot fire upon the war- and thé landing parties from thelr HMlery and field gung, which had been tioned on the Wuc bank of the YH € mira) Sah, in turn, ontered the war- to fire upon the revel fleld pieces, for a time shells fell thick among rebel gunners. The warship officers, ver, were seriously handicapped by danger to the foreign concesslons ved in a fire from the fleet engagement coni!nued for several ) When the combin@1 land and ship of the impe: en some back, and the revels, retiring, @ the river to Wucha —_——— SUN YAT SEN, EVOLUTION’S HEAD, DUE HERE TO-DAY, Gun Yat Sen, who probably will President of the Chinese Republic, Md the present revolution be sue- ul, will be in New York to-day, ding to despatches from San Fran. Br. Sun's purpose, according to Sec- Tong King Chong of the Chi- Free Masons at san. Francisco, Organization that has absorbed the i China Association, {x the nego- on of a loan for the revolutionists. fs unlikely that {f the negotlations successful the fact will be made many big cities of America it ts ood that subscription books are display in Chinese establishments the collection of funds for the rev- ition. ee K TO FINISH SENTENCE. flerte, Released te See Dying Wile, Goes te Islan: ifter having "been permitted to leave in time to be with his wife before died, and to attend her funeral, M, days yen months’ He was convicted of having elghed imports. Bonforto was accompanied to Judge Ya chambers in the Federal Building tds oldest son, who offered to serve ‘ if the parent to the hedaide | _THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, China's Five. Year-Old Emperor, | Whose Throne Is Being Shot Away| JUVENILE FAGIN WANTS SENTENCE “WID BiG GUYS" Youngster Fights Against Im- prisonment at the Chil- dren’s Society. It hurts the pride of George Zwishler who, the Brooklyn police say, is the youngest fagin they ever heard of to be rated a “kid? and taken to the Children's Society rooms whenever he in a He ts only fifteen ygare old, “gee, wot o' dat?” he wanted to-day. “Look at me reccud. I done eighteen mont's tn the P'tek an’ I'm out on now for bolglery, W'y ah'd The tucked away wid a lot o' ttle and gold'n curled kids, wot ell ted. but , | to know wus maybe Crow rough a pane er Klass, or sompin like dat * on de kid cooler fir me, I Jail where dey locks ong in de same » de dig guys. Justice Wilkine @ in amazement nod extraordinary rel in a voice breaking between the upper and lower registers, by the undersized, weazen-faced, wiry Uttle fetlow whats charged by alx-yoar- old John Bille and e y d John Kusingky with havi to enter «ie home No, 118 Lee avenue, hey carried off about $100 worth of ate, They made three «rips through the basement on Sept. 18, and each time, as they later told the p e, they turned thelr booty over to George, who gave them $1. ‘The boy was ar- h he was broug! Court on a charge of recpiving stolen goods he deciared that he was seventeen years ok. took him out of the category of fuve- nile nqbents, and accordingly he wos to Raymond Street Jatl to awak jon of the Grand Jury moat desired—to be “wild de big was short-lived. The Childres having the two baby burglars In charge, heard of George's connection wich their exploit and yes- terday notified thy» Grand Jury that he had lied about his age. When an agent of the soclety came to the jail after him yesterday afternoon eorge came near to losing § bess and breaking into childish tears. But he mastered himself and poured out & string of Billingsgate that made some of the case-hardened creminals in the adjoining cells Diueh, He fought and kicked and restated the efforts of the agent to take him away, untll he was picked up bodily and dropped into the “Black Mar!, taught them how August Day at lock’ D (by Post to the Frontier), Oot in believed here that the Turkish fleet has gone to Ulfiam'd, at the eastern extremity of the Sea of Marmora for gun practice, HORT VAMP ISHOES Cuban and French Heel in \|Velvet and All pantery ‘ i Ene, sip pen “1, GLASSBERG ss Ti sof’ rere tits | RICH DIVORCE DENIES SHE WILL WED KID M'COY Mrs. Hein Says She Hasn't Even Seen the Prize Fighter in Months, On the authority of the lady herself the reported engagement of Mra. Hdna Valentine Hein of the Hotel ‘Ansonia to Norman Selby, k@own tn the prise fighting world as Kid McCoy, was pos- itlvely denied to-day. MoCoy, who Is off in the country somewhere, presumably in training a fight, could not be reached, tut his close friends say they cannot understand how the report came to be circulated. Mra, Hein sued her husband for 4l- yorce two years ago. He filed a cross sult, naming Kid McCoy as co-respond- ent. Later this cross sult was with- drawn, Mra, Heln was granted a de- cree of divorce and the custody of her daugivter in April, 1910, “It Is a peculiar coincidence,” she said to an Evening Worid reporter to-day, ‘that this false story of my engagement to Kid McCoy should come out just as a decision ts expected from the higher courts on an appeal taken by my hus- band from the prov! n of the divorcee decree gl me the custody of my daughter, That appeal has been hang- ing fire for @ long time. My lawyer, Max D. Steuer, Informed me a few days ago that he expected @ decision this week. ‘I have not seen MoCoy for many months, and then I did not epeak to him, 1 don't remember when I spoke to him, ‘Thete never was any engage- ment of marriage between us. He has hevér asked me to marry him and I certainly have no (ntention of marrying 04 the murder of Adol Sixth avenue jJowelry & ~"the taxt- cab murder”=-was arraigned for plead- Ing before Judge O's: an tn General conference District-Attorney Vorbes J. Henn sel, the pleading was ad- next Monday, Nobody oMce would i about the new evidence Was put before the Grand Jury day and which caused Garvey's mont after a week of indecislon, Thursday, Oct. 19th, 1911 Served from 11.30 A. M. to2.15 P.M. BLUE POINTS on Half Shell CELERY GHERKINS OLIVES CREAM OF CORN Kentucky French Vegetatle Soup in Cup Scallops Newburg in croustade POACHED EGG, Macy MINCED TURKEY, Creole ROAST LEG OF LAMBaujus FRIED EGG PLANT and RISSOLE POTATOES SALAD RUSSE FANC iS 408 CREAM and Aacy's Herald Square, Bway, d4th to 80th FOUGHT FATAL DUEL IN CAFE; |One Man Fell Dying From Four Bullet Wounds as Guests Fled. OTHER MAN _ ESCAPED. Dived Down Dumbwaiter Shaft—Woman Held as Witness. | | | Shot four times oy an assailant who stood across the aisle tn the Colonial | restaurant, No. 66 Seventh avenue, and |into which Bu then escaped by diving down the dumb- waiter shaft, Charles Ross!, tweny-- four years old, of No. $82 Fast Four- teenth etreet, known also in the T derloin as Charles Young, is thought to be dying in New York Hospital. Three mgm and a woman were ar- rested as witnesses. The woman is Alice Eilenborn, who gives her address as No. 14 West Forty-first street. She Was sitting at the table with the man who escaped. The three men witnesses Jacob Alexander, twenty-four, who says he is @ coat-room man living at No. 1 West One Hundred and E teenth street; James Pellagrino, twe' four, a barber, of No, 133 Avenue and William Duffy, twenty-eight, clerk who lives at the Mills Hotel No. 3. Alexander was discharged in court and the others were held in $1,000 bail each. The affair is the second of the kind that has occurred tn the Colonial res- taurant within @ week, It is « lace @ Johnson, manager ‘icabs, was pursued on W by seven men who wanted his A tree for all shooting affray of a line of Oct. money. followed. 1 midnight throng was tn urant last night. At @ table ve, with a man companion. The wom- an came in, addressed the fugitive as ‘Sam, and asked him If he had acen " The man replied that The woman sat at the table with the two men and was talking with them Ros! entered. BEGAN BHOOTING AS 8OON AS MAN ARRIVED, Without a wordithe\shan addressed as “Bam" juroped Up, pulled @ revolver and began to sboot at the newcomer. Rosel drew hie own weapon and re- turned the fire, but the bullet went wild. His apsealiant continued to fire until emptied his pistol; then, with companion, ran to the rear of the res- rent, Jumped into the dumbwalter whaft and slid down to the kitchen, both, according to the cook, who did not in- making their way over the into Forty-first street. When Rosst was picked up he was found to have one bullet wound in the right thigh, a second in the right wrist, ® third in the right lung and @ fourth in the left side of the abdomen. Dr, Baker, who came with the ambulance from New York Hospital, says that his| chances for recovery are alight. Tech- nically he 1# @ prisoner. When Rossi was asked who shot him/| in its piano construction There i features of the pneumatic OUR PIANO DEPARTMENT ie the equal of any, and con- tains the finest of American ~ makes direct from the factories, on Va oe DINERS IN PANIC #3: Lea possibly i imagine. ing—no paper rolls—no noisy bel- lows——nor any of the many other bad 1911,’ | he said he did not |name. | Mrs. Bllenhorn. | Rossi is a fai | Tenderloin. Phil Casey [street and Eighth avenue |ago and is also said to be charged with not having returned some jewelry that ‘was intrusted to him by a woman. It in asserted he is a member of the Paul He tried to bluff at first by telling the pollee that his name was Charles Sutele READ THI, THE SEND THAT WATCH Forty Years Ago by Wife Lost at Sea. This little story ts written as an appeal to one person—the thief who entered the country home at Far Hills, N. J., of John F. Dillon, former Judge of the United States Circuit Court, last Sunday night and stole @ hunting case gold watch, Judge Dillon ts one of the most dis- Ungutshed of the old school of lawyers h Not only that, he has held for @ commanding position among American lawyers, and his career has been one of which he and his friends and his city and State may feel proud, although he ed years ago. In July, 1898, his fife and daughter, | Mrs. Dillon-Olliver, left on the French liner La Bourgagne for Europe to spend | the summer. Tiey were lost when the ship went down off Sablo Island. Al- though Judge Dillon at the time confined at home with @ broken leg and was heartbroken over the tragedy, he immediately started out to find the bod- Jes of his loved ones, He chartered the British steamer Hia- watha at Halifax and fitted hor out for a cruise in search of the bodies. For many days he made fruitless trips over the seas near the spot whore the steamer went down, but the bodies were never found, ‘The watch that the thief got Sunday was one Mrs. Dillon gave her husband on his fortieth birthday, and is easily recognized by the inscription, my husband on his fortieth birthd: Its value to Judge Dillon, now eighty ol, because of its associations, is tm- measurable. For forty years he has from her and since her death it had been a priceless memento, | i person who took {t but realized how happy it would make the venerable man to recover tt he would send it back at once. It is with a hope that he will see these lines and understand how much more valuable the watch wi be to the owner than to any one ele that the facts are given, Judge Dillon, who has just returned to his clty home in the Dakota apartments, {will pay a liberal reward for the } Which the only thing of value taken |tn the burglary. goes Ara | ARMY OFFICER FOUND DEAD. Capt. Winifred B. Carr Believed to Have Shot Himself. _LBAVENWORTH, Kan., Oct. 18, Winifred B. Carr of the Army ce Schools at Fort Leavenworth, Serv | waa found #hot dead to-day by @ mat who entered his quarters to clean house. [It is belleved the officer shot himself inte last night o early this morning. The T el-Electric Piano Player The player that plays your piano from a distance, without your assistance, or under your absolute control Revolutionary The Tel-Electric is as different from all other It has had five years of success players as you is no tiresome players. placed by any We can attach it to YOUR piano in a few hours Price $350—Convenient Terms Jf you cannot call, write for catalog. THE TELELECTRIC COMPANY - 299 Fifth know the man's He was not permitted to talk to in the mixed up with the ie at Twenty-elghth few weeks TOJUOGE DILLON Timepiece Was Given Him! treasured it because {t was a present | a| homes in America, It has never in any instance been re- ROBBED UNCLE TO GET REVENGE "FOR SPANKINGS Boy Gave Fancy Ribbons to Girls and Furnished Clue to Detective. Revenge actuated fourteen-year-old Isidore Siaselman of No. 62 Powell street, East New York, on Monday (night, when he broke into the millinery store of hie uncle, Hyman Phiilps, at {No, 42 Rockaway avenue, and carried ‘ay an many rolls of sitk ribbon as he wild hide in his blouse and tn his pock- ets, He wanted revenge for the many uncalled for chastisements which he says his uncle infilcted upon him. “He tried to boss me around,” gala the boy In the Brooklyn Children’ Court to-day. “He has no right to boi me. I wouldn't have gone anywhere near him, he's such @ mean cuss, only {my grandmother Mves with him, and levery time I came to see her he would [call me down for not going to school r@gular, and for playing on the etreet. or for nyithing at all. I couldn't of his what 1 Ain't I got parents? And when I told him to mind his own business he | [beat mé, Monday night was tie worst, ; and T made up my mind to get even | with him where st would hurt him most ~In his pocket." The robbery of the millinery store bade fair to become one of Brownsville’s | choicest mysteries until an astute detec. |tive noticed that the little giris of Bel- mont and Pitkin avenue@ were wearing the most gorgeous and the largest rib- bons that had ever adorned their tresses. Whereupon he inquired the cause of thi sudden outburst of color, and the little girls proudly told him, each as if she | were the only favored one, that Isidore | ‘had given her the ribbon. | Isidore promptly admitiad that he had broken into the millinery shop when he was arrested by Detective Ruddy. He had given away about half of the bolts of ribbon he had taken and destroyed the rest. “That'll make Uncle Philip sore,” the boy chuckled after he had told his story. “But maybe it'll teach him to let me alone after this.” Jumice Wilkin remanded Friady. | him until _—__ hington Star.) “Women will one day be recognized as greater artisis and musicians: than said Mrs. Baring-Banners. houldn't ‘be surprised,” repiled her husband. ."Kven now it comea more natural to them to wear their hatr cy (From the | FIND BOY AND STOLEN WATCH | Bleven-Ye: Fagitive in Shack With Gang at Pai | When the detectives who had been looking for eleven-year-old John Moran Sr. 8) he disappeared from his hom, No, 411 Ridgewood avenue, Kast New York, Monday, found him to- New York, ‘ome of the gold watch which the boy's bitnd father misapd. With young Moran was Harry Boyce, In Burke | Seventeen, of No. 192 Hale avenue. Boyco's ponression Detectives and McKeon found a the watch. The Mor detectives he liad crept into it room Monday night and stolen wateh. —_— NOBEL PRIZE FOR EDISON. Award for Phystes Reported set Apart for inventor, STOCKHOLM, Sweden, Oct. 18.-It 1s stated that the Nobel Prize for Physics will be awarded this year probably to Thomas A. Edison, American electrictan and inventor. ——_—.—___ No tack of It. (From the Boston Transcript.) ‘The trouble with Fritters ts «| piteation. Moti—The deuce he does! Why, hi plies to me for a loan once a week r larly. the Nerve Sufferers Look to Your Eyes! Eye8train causes nerv- ousness. It causes head- aches and neuralgia, too. It causes the distracting “unstrung “blue spells” so commonly blamed on the nerves. Glasses are the only remedy, and we fit them with every assurance of accuracy and low cost. Eyes Examined "thou! By Registered Physicians Oculists of Long Experience. Perfect Fitting Glasses as Low as as 50. Geulisis’ éSons. 223 Siath Av., 1SthSt. 217 B’dway, Aster House ‘390Siath Av.,22dSt. 101 Nassau — Ann Si. it Wea Bat Sth & 6th Aves., New York 498 Fulten St., Cor. Bend St., Brogklyn, SPECIAL 232 Street. Mest, sues Near fifth Avenue.New puns coats VEILINGS OFFERING The Vo ae Abroad Black _ i ae hapes Nith Tae New Gros Grain Suh Binding + aah of neglecting your Piano? Do not think because it was cost - ly it doesn’t need TUNING, The finer the Piano the better it should be taken care af. Our men are the most capa- able to be had, and we guar- antee our tuning and repair- ing. A postal brings a tuner. Belwing Ee 29) FIFTH AVENUE Near 30th St, N. et Le Came. ——— . i over five years the Tel-Electric Piano Player bas been before the public, luring that time it has nae its way into the finest > other player. Tel-Electric Building Avenue, Cor. 3let Sieeet, Silk Petticoats Of Imported Messaline:all Shadess Deep Heading. pure Silk Fringe "Offered Elsewhere from’5® to*7 2 et Oe [Value § 7:29} Fiedete= Copies of New Imported Blocks +795" Constipation lean Hi Hands for Workers while you ere working, ‘work is over, clean World Ads. Sell Publisher New York World: you for the services rendered by advertisements for us for the mi we have sold thirty-six lots for Considerin; alt rly HE W. J us in the near Aa W. J. Rich Development Company Dear Sir—We take this means of advising with the sense of highest gratification we wis thereon through these advertisements, the time and season of the year we consider it j most wonderful and shall certainly have you carry larger copies for OUTS, ” RICH’ DEVELOPMENT CO., Thirty-six Lots Hoboken, N. J., Sept. 27, 1911. ou and thankin your paper, which carried’ smal jonth of penternber to date, and to inform you that the erection of eighteen houses By W. J. Rich, President. World Real Estate Ads, Show the Bargains That’s Wh: Well Read. They Are So Much Used, So and So Generally Answered,

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