The evening world. Newspaper, August 7, 1913, Page 16

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)

i } i if ee ONLY WTONCATED, EXPERT DEGLARE As Everatd’s Secretary ‘Could ‘Always Navigate” He Could Not Be Called the Former. WHEN’S A MAN “SOBER?” “That's a Matter of Breath,” the Analyst Telis Surrogate Cohalan. Gebert J. Tracy, seeretary and treas- ‘wer of James Brevard's Breweries, wes eaiied won to defen’ himecif Sefore @urrogate Cohdlan to-day egamst ae ewations of ‘drunkenness, dishonesty ami tmprovidence” when objections made to the lesuance of letters testamentary @ Bim in the estate of James Everard ‘ware called for @ hearing. The oojec- Gras are made by Olga Jia Witiama, Gaughtor of the inte brewer, Her coun- ol is J. M. Bowers, associated with David M. Neuberger of No. 98 Broad. way. Ferdinand Fey of No. 181 Tinton > | wea. the Bronx, oight clerk in the Bvevard Baths, testified that for two! months and a half before Mr. Everard's | death ‘Tracy would stop at the bathe about twice @ month and remain there three or four days and nights. He de- clared that Tracy bed a great partiality drink in him" qhen he wee ta the baths. THE OIFFERENCE BETWEEN “DRUNK” ANO “INTOXICATED. Under crose-exemination by M. J. Meran, associated, with Thomas F. DRUNK? NONSENSE!" WOMAN OFFICER Keogh of No. 21 Broadway, counsel TOF ‘Tracy. to ask: : “Mr. Fey, would you eay that Mr. ‘Tracy was drunk on these oceasions?” “fot drunk, but {atoxioated,” ewered the witness, and intoxicated?" asked Mr, Horan. Jeok out for himself fe te just intoxt- _ threatened Mra. Friedman and her! He dlew bis police whistle and Patrol. to celehlincksaueey were being trimmed, Toren sald, i AALY “ali “Stqvell, then, when éo0 you consider] mother with injury and death, A tew| wan Myer Péllock ran up and seat in cee neat REEDS ZT RRUEey ap nibaas bambee oe cata et wr tlie cae ee Glasie ion: pon rat oly to Oculists a man sober?” asked the Surrogate, | 4Avs ago & note reading “Fou will be, Oa, alarm ine the two Coney “Istage| While for two or three seasons past the thousands that are possible, he in /Zet.” At tnat time whe Giants’ game) ( Hhrris ysicians), Mr. Fey would not dnewer, but when| Milt If you keep Violet” was found fre companies Arrived the top of the| Dasedall pools have been conducted in|in line for a large money prite. Varl- | tig newspaper scoreboards, cba Harris Glasses —- whether prompted by Mr. Horan eald it wae a|pianed on the door of the Friedman) Watchman Sees Smoke Com-| fame oullding |New York on a more or teas candid|ous other prises besides the big prize | “in Neweneper seorceoerds. === =| | they cost $2 or more—include “matter of breath.” flat. Cooper called there and and an- ne basis, it was not until thie year that |are held out as an inducement to the)... we pestern tinternaticaal rot? | the double services of our ‘Thomas Henry Gory jr., deg clerk) nounced thet he had friends with plenty| ing From Empty Cafe and | sscond tioor. The cause of it the fire-| Toren and other operators pecame e | oredulous which the Read of the information bu. | oculists and opticians at ‘the baths, sald he had never seen|Of money in the “Washington Street | men aid not find. bokl as to go into every part of the| As in the case of other operators of j WECH ped saien bs u Ns Next door was a three-story brick reau replied, “No, the Eastorn doesn't Tracy enter of leave the baths intox!.|Gang” who Would “attend to” Mrs cated, a statement whieh seemed to surprise Mr. Bowers, whe produced an aM@davit and asked the witness if he| to-day when the bell at the front door Of the fiat <yunded. Unsuspecting, she opened the door. ‘ar? Horan brought owt the fi Gory had been Informed that Mre. 5 ard was now the “boss and oo he| the head. Bhe screamed the affidavit. Denlel M. Tracy, a brother of the| Ported to the police and detectives were atoused man, also employed by the| imetructed to look for, Cooper. brewery, seid that When he and his brother first were employed together tig. brother came to hie office at 10 Qeleck, then st 11 o'clock and then ‘at 1 o'clook .and during the last four er Gve years at 28 o'clock in the after. | neon, when he vame at all. ‘WHY HIG BROTHER TESTIFIED AGAINGT. HIM. Gurrogate Cohalan drew out the fact that the witness was net on friendly terms with hig brother. “Would you be tn line for his job if hhe were deposed?” asked the Surro) “Tes, but that was not my actuating motive in keeping track of bim” “What was your motive?" “Well, the Everard:family has always been. good to us. Mr, Everard and m: ‘The Gurrogate esta that Daniel is receiving 64,000 a year Robert $12,000. , “Then your brother's dismissal would moan 04,000 a year ur “I don't know that it would, even if I got his place.” TWREE GUNMEN HOLD UP CHINAMAN AND ROB HIM, People Hear Laundryman’s Cries, But Make No Effort to and ‘ ished the fact reached in, grabbed her by the throa' | father were friends and 1 did not waai! any Everard property ruined.” Mrs. Antonia Friedman, a probation of-| ef the removal of @ four-year. girl from the contro! of her parents, euimt- Bated to-day in an att Street. Ghe was eclsed by a man shy, lnocked down, sustaining a slight con-! eueston of the rain and many bruises, | ‘The man cocaped. in prison work nine years and has been & probation officer in the Children's | | Court eighteen monthe. She lives af fhe Lancaster with her mother, Mes. Catherine Krauser, and her husband, Harry Friedman, who is a keeper in the penitentiary on Blackwell's laland. a etety took away from Edward Cooper, for highballa and thet Tracy “hed |, regpicker, and his wife, a sctud- woman, their four-year-old daughter, Violet. The Coopers fought Fetain the child, but the Childrei ciety got custody of the little one and Mrs. Friedman wan an important fac- tor in the outcome. Surrogate Cohelaa interrupted) wien the Coopers had been pro- | Mouneed unfit guardians for the baby ‘Mrs. Friedman took charge of her anc . |@ent her to the summer camp of At. | Barnabad's “What ie the distinctvon between drunk ; There it wae discovered that the child was suffering from a serious disease “Why, when o man can't navigate| and she was sent to Bellevue Hospital, | 1 eall him drunk, but when he can|Where she is now under treatment. | possessed by [wnen ne shot OF COURT VICTIM. OF THUCTS ATTAGK Throttled at ‘Door of Flat, Then) Knocked Down by Power- [ i ful Assailant. \ { SCORE CARD HAD ‘RECEIVED THREAT. | “Will Be Killed,” Read Note; to Mrs. Friedman After | Rescue of Cooper Baby. A Gorles of threats against the life of | ficer in the Children’s Court, arising out) upon Mre. joor of apartment No. @ Hast Tents | fad never eeen before, choked and Mre. Friedman tas been {nterested| ome weeks ago the Children's fo- iterly to Bo- | BR WALL SAVES CONEY FROM A | DANGEROUS FRE Home, at Tenafly, N. J. | Cooper and his wife repeatedly have Turns In an Alarm. i She was avout to siart fer the court | & light wind and a brick wall eaved {Coney Island from a dangerous Sre this morning. Battalion Chief Willian Rogers watched the wing anziousty for A stout, stocky man, with © soft felt hat pulled over his face, pulled her into the hal @ while and then said he wi nis wy ayd the orl. a Ot. But while the danger of a general con. t fle ‘The attack fiagration threatened there was a wild belongings. Every kind of vehicle that | could be got hold of was commandeared, and Japanese bagatelle men hurrying HALLBOY PARACHUTES DOWN EG STORES -N DUMB WATER Tenant Didn’t Hold Rope Tight Enough, So Richard Dropped. TO PREVENT SPOONING, park bi covered with luminous paint. im the world. ‘ by @ babooon in the Central Park Zoo, | refem to the cuinage of money, not t ‘Tne chameleon-like qualities of Rich- | grounds, ard Innis, colored hallboy at the Hol- tend Court Apartment House, No, 815 Weet Ninety-ci@@@B street, are the jest of tenants there to-day, These qualities chard were revealed he chutes for eight stories In a dumbwalter yewterday. Fright caused the varying elades of countenance. Dr. Kergen, of the Knickerbocker Hospital, who was called in after Rich ard had parachutes the dumbwaite shatt, was somewhat amazed at the chromatic effects he observed in Rich- swears by buttermilk as @ Leverage. AT THE PARADE of the order of UBING A FRANKFURTER as bai a fourtee: it waan't Assist Him, ‘Three men wearing caps entered Sing Wab'e laundry in the basement of 8 Kast Eleventh street at mid and, pointing revolvers at him, ordered No, night dbim inte the back room. He went and they followed, picking up a long strap ené tastening hie hands bebing him with it. Sing Wah yelled leudly, in epite of threats to kill him if he did not keep quiet. © his assistance. f if E } i ; F P) i if i f j 5 i I ef i ih Impelied dy the plstots held close to Cainese told hie visitors to his cash drawer could | uter room, | People across the treet the | while I'm getting off.” bi fi aré's countenance, but, says the doc- tor, "I thought he was a white man,” Richard wan unhurt. He was sent to] 3,000 artificial lege. the home of « sii at No. @ West rae MARTIN W. LITTLETON, who fant \f the) Washington, saye he can understand Holland Court, returned yesterday aherneon, but not until ene had Ononea live on $12,000 @ year. He saya it cost her puree at her own door did she re- call the fact thas had left her k tying on the dining room table She consulted Riehard, who is of an obliging turn. “Perkapa 1 could go on the dumb ; Walter and let you tn," eaid Richard. Then he remembered, with eome trepi- Gation, that the Butler apartment was em the eighth foor, which caused him ‘Be eure to hold the rope tight PRISONER serving lite sentence | witnesses swear the man he was convi: Mre. Butler promised and up went Ts the en be the | ination to sleep, heavy breathing, and lack of interest shown by baby. These | . | are the symptoms of sickness. It may be poll ecceen diphtheria, or scarlatina. Do not lose a minute. It will start the digestive into the skin, carry off fostid sickness. into the Butler epartment and called Mre. Butler to take @ firm grip on the rope. | Either he tried to get out before Mrs. Butler had obtained a proper hold, or else she didn't hold the rope firmly epough. At any rate, the dumbwalter | bearing Richard’ plunged down the shaft, gathering momentum as it passed | Give the child Castoria. | operation, 0) the of matter, tnd drive away the THE EVENING Man Held as Head of Baseball Pool And “ Bait’’ That Lures Victims got out the we | play ruph of concession holders to rave their | p, -inch black bass in Highland Lake, tude, weakness, loss of appetite, incli each story. C-r-aah! eaid the dumbwaiter as |; Geaslee Casteria always bears the signature of ray with their stock of prizes tumbled er @eere moving their crystals and draperies to safety. ‘The blaze was at the Imperial Cafe on| * Thompson's “Valk, between the Bowery and. Surf avenue, right in the heart of Coney Island's pleasure ground. Nv one was in the two-story frame dullding at the ‘ At 345 William Economou, watehman at the “ of Love” nearby, saw time, “Tunnels emvuke coming out of the second tloor. ‘building with Jacob F'uerman's restau- vant on the ground floor. Police Ser- t Kainck and Patrolman Fuerman and his fo and ren-year-old daughter, Beatrice, and Charles Btrappon with his wife and sister-in-law. In the midet of the hurried packing up of the neighbors all round, the alarm spread to Feltmanfs and the staff got out thelr hose and ed on the big structure to prevent it the fire licked against the three- brick wall and stopped. The wind wan not strong enough to carry tt fur- ther. vinta AP News Oddities enches in Huntington, W. Va. wil! be STATISTICS show that the United States is the greatest meat-eating nation UNDER THE LAW OF THE JUNGLE a thieving monkey's arm was broken GOVERNMENT in Washington is citing down on mint expenses. This ne famous patch on the White House SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY M'ADOO pooh-poobs grape juice but Eagles in Baltimore to-day; a delegation of women from Cincinnati will wear slit skirts and green slik stockings, t, Mrs, Goodsell of Connecticut caught Should have been a dogfish, but FASHION NOTE.—Buainess directory Just ivsued shows that two bustle | factories are etill in operation in New York, What? LAST of John Brown's captors has just died again in Weat Virginia BALKAN GOVERNMENT hus advertised in the German newspapers tor formerly vocupied the Logan hous why Bryan, who now lives there, can't him almost that much for*coal to heat it. In Jefferson City appiles for pardon and cted of murdering is stil! alive. Out of Sorts something is wrong a» ‘ hing ja wih baby, but we can’t tell Cte WORLD, THURSDA DAY, AUGUST 7, ARREST OPENS WAR eet ee Nn Ee eS ee eS Ln) AE Se eee ee EE ee t “the man with the card” wae weit a Among friends in offices, clubs. cates, [tribution of prises” Upon the reverse! But to sue; of the score card part of the poo! ticket | or i tone tear is a Met of thirteen’ money prizes for| It was tought tnat theme teste nett tifying “comy: daily and weekly “iigh’ and “low" | not be suMeieniiy fe Fyren, ag poul It Is ovviow combinations. These range from $100 for | eimilar request# for {f lon eee Winner, but In great poois run by|the first high weekly combination, down | made by telephone on succeeding dnrm profess few of those buying} to % for “Afh low combination for. with almilar results, On Saturday | J chances ever know what combinations] week.” ning Inst. at 6.45 o'clock, Cortlandt 1m ‘ { win. HAD TWO FORME OF POOL, | wan called and a vole which soun le HIDE THEIR GAME BEHIND “IN- “BLIND” AND “OPEN.” ke that of « Janizor «aid: “OA, tee FORMATION.” ‘Toren’s Lusiness progresnivenesn is at-| people beat it a long tine ago!” When ‘The unfatrness of these poois arid tne] tested by the fact that evolved | asked If there was no one aronid oh it . ae io senall ge toe fact that few players ever get any re-| (Me Idew of having two separate forms] oMfce who fad the basenal y en turn on thetr money is of course minor, {Of Pools, the “vlind’ and the “open.” | Janitor hung up the receiver in a (Continued from First Page.) |lemally, to the fact that the pools are]! the case of the former the teams are | gust, According to the titera bie nothing more than lotteries, The keen| Selected for the player in Toren's office | out by the Metropolitan. fie service oat | minds behind thelr operations have] and the ticket is delivered io the plaver! be had at any Cine hetween the hours evolved a dinguine which they have]! aled envelope. of 4 and 7 o'clock any afternoon That the Toren oucht dues nor make tof carrying on an infor A rther aiown oy 4 en says that this is more profitarte than the “open” pool, in which tie buyer | even a pr the iberty of selecting his own; mation bireui is And he does not encour: glance avout the offive, Nowhere Ja the to push the “open” poo! docs w \.sitor st Ucker, seore- : any otrer evidence that gath- num himseM ples Cring baseball mores I a part of the business of the office, It might be pM angeabtndl se perk Dg mentioned also that when Toren sends tained {n the sealed envelopes that bear his agents out he isn’t in the hablt of, tickets In the blind pool. After giving| (autioning them to sell c swith the name, address and telephone num-| are gub- ber of the Toren enterprise these appear In heavy type: ‘$1,000 in miums. Giver away to subscribers of {| fondly looked upon as a complete alivi fesued by Magistrate Bariow. Arraigned | #94 full protection from prosecution before the Magistrate ‘mmediately utier, | The “om names of the pools, at he was put under $00 Dall for the hear. | !eaet the !argest ones ope ing this morning. most vitious benefic! fraud, are “information bureau WINT@ HE CAN GIVE LOT OF jone would more profitably look for ” knowledge in a home for imbectlus than Sh ieonmer ter \epend time seeking baseball information arrest of ‘Toren, which took! in @ “baseball information bureau.” in the office of G Robinson, & lawyer, at No. 99 uu street, | Beyond securing the signature of the buyers of chances to an alleged “sub- where Toren operated his pools under the allas “Metropolitan Bai 1 In: tN. scription” blank the operators do not h make even a pretext of supplying the! p: I thon he frankly spe formation Bureau,” was the result of| information that subscrivera have nom- jour service. For sale at all news-rtanis, oe i hee of ‘ities a oo Inally paid for. That no one ever buys] If your newsdealer does not handle ou: i sj ae as stp oii office that Toren’s business is @ plain!a chance in one of the po ith {information kindly give him your orler violation of the Penal Code relating| thought of availing and he will obtain same for you, or t| AVIATORS DODGE METEORS. to lott For almost @ week Aesist- he onta!ned - ae ant District-Attorneys Leo and John- BERLIN, Aug 7.—A new danger for aviotors was chronicled to-day by the German alrman Victor Btoeffler of j bureau, the service in whic Information Bu-} Johannisthal Aerodrome, who repor' were euch a thing and the girl avalied reau, however, that fs quite as interest- thet his biplane was caught 38) herself of it, would cost her many more, ing its news service. After signing, #hower of meteors lst evening while of the nickels that to her look like dol- | this legal tooking agreement: I heredy|h@ Was flying with Lieut. yon Breder- tare. subscribe twenty-five cents for the ner |10w of the Prussian Army at an alti. Possibly the rarest bird in New York! vice supplied by the Metropolitan Base | tude of one mile. is an individual who really mubscribes | Ball Bureau for the week ending—., He heard the whizz of ghe meteors, to these alleged information rervicot. | one naturally thinks that it witl eome in| Which passed #0 closely to the fying Agents and the operators of the poole} handy when he wi to find out how! machine that both aviators say they alike sell these chances with the under- | tong. All he haa| felt them rush through the alr. standing that the proposition le a pool Toren, for instance, never balked a’ the terms ‘‘chances" and “pool” except in the case of inquirers whom he sus: Dected were investigating. LOTTERY PENALTY INCLUDES; TWO YEARS IN PRISON. The laws of the State of New Yor! are specific in their definition of lo! tery, expressly declaring that ‘a lot- tery is @ echeme for the distribution of Property by chance, among persons who have paid, or agreed ‘to pay, a val- uable consideration for the chance, whether called a lottery, raffie or gift enterprise, or by some other n The punishment prescribed the Penal Code for one found guilty of con- ducting @ lottery is two years in prison or @ fine of $1,000, or both. The baseball poo! operatea oy Toren! {4s almost ‘dentical with others betiug run in various parts of the city. A ing one-twelfth of her w “membership” in an feature of the, widence was submitted immediately approached chatting with oMce. In the little partitioned off corner of the room where Toren has played apider to the thousands of gul- ble flies was a pretty young woman assistant. She was perusing a novel, and there was no sign that the “in- formation bureau” was in operation. At that time the ba: il games were it, but @ was a biise- in Toren's office—his But no, now could one be #0 ridiculous as to suppose for @ second that the @fetropolitan Base Ball Information Bureau furnished base- | ‘dail information? If one knows anything | at all.he knows that he has got infin ly better chances of getting baseda scores in a haberdashery than in a base- | ball information bureau.” | HERE (@ WHAT ACTUALLY HAP. | PENS IN CAGE. | But suppose there does happen along a boob who carelessly allows himself to think that maybe the Metropolitan Base Ball Information Bureau does supply news as a silght adjunct to its lottery? This ia what happens: On the afternoon of July % a bona fide “subscriber” of the Metropolitan | service called the “bureau” on the tele- | phone and asked for “the Giants’ acore.”” {a a stockily built man of thirty-five, of an enviably happy dis: Position and prosperous looking in every detail, At the time of his arrest he professed little concern, but later, just before his arraignment, he atrongly expressed the hope that nom- inal ball would be fixe At first he insisted that his enter- prise wae perfectly legitimate, but jodified his statements per- He went so far as to inti- me @ had a whole lot of inside information on “the game” as it is being conducted in New York, and that ration he would valuable data, | | Early to bed And early to rise, Made our grandparents Have better eyes. We won'l go back to the habits of our forefathers—so we inust pay the fiddler. Im- paired eyesight is the price. No cne in need of glasses became public, would cause a scurry- ing to cover among other shrewd young men who are prospering on the WILL CAUSE SCURRYING OF |®ore vcard gh which are spaces for the} 4 voice, recognized as that of Toren, and not wearing them can’ OTHERS TO COVER. total runs for a week of each of the | was heard at the other end of the wire| Work at highest etficiency. | A» He declared that his arrest, ce it ipsa Rays Pd plier ana in something like a gaep of surprise.) clear head for every businfess * y warry-| ew York State. Then tt sald, 'Why-er—the party sat | hour of the day is sure to The buyer of the chances is siloxed to select, or ts as- signed, one team in each io, and at has that score is out just now.” t ‘ ‘Asked about how badly the Higntana.| Tesult from properly selected glasses. We intrust this ime city enticing men, women and children to play. Likewise, only this’ year the extent of the evil and the grossly !m- pudent fraud upon those who succumb to the lure of “easy money on a small Investment” became fully apparent, Mathematicians know that thousands ‘upon thousands of combinations are pos- sible In four or five leagues of eight teams each, but to the casual buyer of a ce this Is not apparent. the baseball lottery, Toren depends upon the pretext that the buyer of the chance {s “subserfbing” to the “information jeervice’ of the Metropoilten Baseball In- formation Bureau, come in until quite late, On the same afternoon at 5.10 o'clovk Cortlandt 109% was asked for the score of the Dodgers. At that motrent the ‘A few weeks ago the stub, that {s re- | S2™me Was complete on the ticker ana turned to the office by ‘agent (with | the scoreboards. The an with the the quarter subscription) bore a a} )ecore wae still out.” Nor was there to number, but eal nothing about the j be had any information on the Glants- selecti@n of teams. The latest and bolder | Chicago game, seven innings of which form used by Toren, however, contains; were complete on scoreboards and tick- Basebal pools, operated upon a large | a blank to which theee words are the At 6.35 o'clock, when practically basis, were the outgrowth of iittle/introduction; “The following is my game in all the learues over, friendly poole, conducted informally’ choice of teams to be used in the dis-| the reply to requests for scores was ear Willo’by, B’kiya. 489 Fulton St., opp. A. & "hl 507 Broad St., near Habne's, Newark. AT OUR FINAL CLEARANCE SALE THE 4 HACKETT-CARHART STORES OFFER GREATER VALUES THAN EVER BEFORE The necessity for clearing our decks for incoming fall goods makes it essential that we dispose of all our seasonable stocks of summer goods at prices in many instances below factory costs All the newest models of Norfolk Suits in our stocks, in fabrics of Tweeds, Crashes, Homespuns and mix- English and American Sacks, comprising our entire atock of Suits that were priced from $20 to $25, in a complete variety of models to tures, specially priced for our final n clearance sale. $ 50 suit the most- discerning GS 50 In this assortment will be found je dresser. Priced for our final e every type of the popular Norfolk. clearance sale........... .. All our Suits, comprising many exclusive models, some typically American, others of English type, in a wide range of colorings, of Tweeds, Cassimeres, Worsteds, high Py ; Crashes, Homespuns and Blue Serges, of a quality igher prices, which through the Hackett-Cerbart that was low in price at 820, $4 9.00 syne wer aa | 6:50 system were priced $80, are priced for our final clearance now marked at their lowest sale... for our final clearance sale... Choice of our entire stock of Panamas and Bangkoks Those that were $5 & $6 now . . . $1.95 Those that were $8 & $10 now . . . $2.75. There is plenty of time to wear them, but not much time to sell them, 90 neither cost nor loss gets mu-): consideration from Those Suits from our stocks, superb in workmanship and finish, of fabrics that at many establishments bring / e Our Money-Back Policy Je 57 Yeare Old 154 East 125th Gt.; Near 3d Avenue, Open Evenings,

Other pages from this issue: