The evening world. Newspaper, November 10, 1913, Page 2

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(ee gs ener eS seserihtibecenrgsitealis eh MNecovered that young Tuiieky the iMegitimate gom of Alezanéra urd THOUSANDS PLEADED FOR THE PRISONER. The alleged reason for the orders to the head detective was that Col. Kou- iabko hed entered tnto @ compact with the criminals of Kieff whereby, in order to minimise erime im the elty, they sere to refrain from their operations there but were not to be hampered by the polive If they confined their evil to the @urrounding territory. Mistchouk, Bowever, refused to obey tho orders and was discharged and placed on trial for insubordination. He was found guilty amd sentenced to a year's imprisonment, But he had aucceeded n convincing himself at least that the murder of the Yushineky boy had been planned to inflame the people against the Jows and had been committed in tne house of the outlaw Romanuke. “After the elimination of Mistohouk a number of well known criminals were allowed opportunities to talk with the imprisoned Bellies, and one of them, Kasatchenko, after hin release, stated that Beilise had agreed to give him a large sum of money to poison two Gov- ernment witnesses and bribe a third. ‘The Toheheryak woman said that Jews had offered her 40,000 rubles if she would # REFUGEES HERE Prisoner Acquitted of Ritual Murder And Members of His Family © EDEOE 19044 64 991444491444414-04 6614-044 190% O4440405 TL OF HORRORS WN MEXGIN ITY Women and Starving Babies on Train 14 Days, Mak- ing Only 300 Miles. « ALL IN SCANT ATTIRE. Picked Up Material on Way and Stopped to Build a Bridge. 2SFS2FAGIDITEDTRERSD Nineteen refugees on the Ward ner Guantanamo, most of them Americana, arrived this morning from Tampioo, Mexioo, having been obliged to fee from the interior for their Mves, Eight [don Btreete, TWO MEN CRUSHED TO DEATH UNDER ~ T2TONS OF EARTH Loosened by Rain Falls While | Being Jacked Up. The lives of two men were crushed | MAde that the award of the Moar of belleved wns innocent of the out today in the subway shaft which fe being sunk in Broadway opposite Waverley place on the atte of “Old Lon- once @ landmark in the! city. The two men were Charles ‘Thompson, twenty-five, of No, 141 W man place, Jeraey City, who was in charge of the timber work about the ehaft, and an Italian laborer known only as “No, 23%," They were crushed under a loading platform upon whioh were twelve tone of dirt await- ing loading. The accident was due to the undermining of the platform's aupporta by the severe rain of yester- women were in the party. The ma- Jority of the party were from Tor- reon in the State of Coahuila, where they had been engaged in mining farming. B. M. Fletcher and his wife and their aix-vear-old @on wore among the refugees, having fied to Tampico, where they went aboard the Guantanamo and were cared for by Capt. Sepley. Axel Ferdinand Linder, manager of @ sugar plantation near Torreon, left when he could no longer stand off the take on her household the reaponsibility for the murder. Beiliss, from the day he wae arrested, had maintained Ris innocence of the crime. He denied knowing anything about “ritual murder’ and declared himself to be not even a consistent fol- “lower of the Jewish faith, as it was hie custom to work on Saturdays. Petitigns, signed by thousands of the most influential men of Great Britain, France, eGrmany and of Russia tteelf, have been sent to the Russian author fenegades and outlaws. He had several fights with the desperadoes and finally cloned down the plantation. None of those who came on the Gu- antanamo had time to collect any of their effects. The majority of them came with only the clothing with which they left thelr homes, They had no Winter clothing and auffered keenly this morning in the cold air. The passage by train from Torreon to Tampico occupies usually two or|®y Villa, whe was quapicious of out | trom @ecret backing from English cap- three days. It took the refugees|good intent. We convinced him that ital, EOE DEDE GSES GE8-99-9F-2-9-96-8-95-4 F098 Gay. Superintendent W. @. Thompson of the contracting firm, and a brother of one of the dead men, when work was started to-day that eome of the supports of the platform had been made insecure by the rain, and Charles Thompson was called ‘ange for its readjustment. ‘Thompson and “No. 232° made an in- vestigation from the outside and then | erawied under the platform. They had_ been there only a few minutes when the tructure yed and fell upon them. Superintendent Thompson was standing fat the edge of the thing and saw it fall. He at once called to the shoveliers working near and while they dug at the load of earth he tried to drag hie brother out by the 1 which protrud- ed from the pile of dirt. This he was unable to do and it was not until the firemen of Truck 20 in Mercer street arrived and gave thelr assistance that the two men were taken out Both had been killed instantly. ——— {ties in behalf of Bellis, These peti-| twenty-one days to make the trip, They | we were leaving our various businesses tions have been eo earnest that It 18) were harassed all the way. The ar-|as security and that all we had in the said that the Russian authorities woud | rivals to-day said that it would be @| world was centred in Torreon, and he ‘have been glad to Grop the case long ago if it had been possible ¢o do eo and “save their facea” FIFTH RITUAL MURDER TRIAL IN TWENTY4IVE YEARS. The Bellis trial was the fifth ‘ritual murder" case charged against the Jews in the last twenty-five years. Invar- jably these charges have bem the climax to @ wave of anti-Semitism or were brought to rekindle the fires of hatred inst the Jews when perse- cutions were on the wane, After ten years of more or leas oon- twuous Pogroms," endless persecutions and indesorivable horrors in Russia that ineredible in the twentieth cen- Bellise was charged with “ritual r’ when the bitter racial and re- ‘gous anti-Jewish wave js waning trom exhaustion im the land ef the t White Czar, Tho firat time in the lest half e tury that there was staged in @ tri- bunal of justice the legendary mediac- Val superstition that Jows drew the blood of Christian children with which to knead the dough of their Passover cokes at aster time occurred in 1853. It came at the height of an anti-Jewids wave in Hungary when a young gir! Mather Bolimossy, was literally butch: eed at Tissa-Wasli At was charged to the Jews as @ “rituel murder,” a» if they had mercly sought for an- other opportunity to draw upon their heads till greater racial and religious Batred and persecutions, When the antidiemitio wave was at vtigh tide in Germany in 11 and again in 2900, @ boy et Xantan and one at ‘Konitz were murdered. Jews were charged with “ritual murder.” Shortly after the “Christian Moctalists,” a * Catholic organisation, not Kientical with the Gocial Democrats, spread trom ‘Vieuna to Hohentea and etirred up a | bitter anti-Jewish movement, two peas: bam maids were murdered. The vodies {More terribly mutilated, The cry of « ‘Jewlsh rituad murder" was iimimodi- Cately raised and Leopold iilsuer, « haM-witted Jewish cripple whom either Of the girls could have bandied with ome hand, was charged with the crime, \The charges, naturally, w brought } ae: Chriniane 1 the Tisza-Kesler case the progecu- [tion's eole evidence was the testimony of an eleven-year-old boy, Me said he peeked through the keyhole of a door and saw the nude body of the girl ly- ing on the altar in the Synagogue. The head of the community, said the boy, with the rabbi by his side, stood tn favont of the altar, Around it were @ mber of high church officials, The arma and blessed tho ere singing or Jewish community, atepped tor- ward, deftly cut off the head of te girt and caught the blood Jn @ vessel, the boy said. In the Polna “ritual murder” case in Hohemia, 1t was impossible to make tt ‘ppear that the half-witted cripple Hils- was the official reprosentative of 4h communities and that he killed the two girls under dire: on or instigation of the rabbi. Th i was then advanced that there “wecret cult” or soc lety among sho ood of Christian tong time before matters would be/let us go. straightened out in that part of Mexico] Hap oe that It would be again habitable for EY OC ET Omurce AIREY bead . “On th raat found @ way to Monterey we foun REBELS ATTACKED TORREON), erainiond of bridge bullding material AND FOUGHT EIGHT DAYS. Jon a aiding. Figuring It might come in When seen at the Park Avenue Hotel,|handy we hitched onto It It was a Mr, and Mrs, Fletcher told an intensely | lucky thought, for at Lake Mayran we tatereating story of their experiences in| found @ thirty-two foot bridge blown Torreon and in getting out of that be-|away by the retreating Federals, With Veagured city. the material we had confiscated we suc- “Torreon, which is in the State of} ceeded in rebullding a makeshift bridge Cohuila, in the northern part of Mexico,|in two days, although there wasn't a was attacked July 2 by several thow-|clvil engineer in the party, From there sand rebels," sald Fletcher, “and after}on we had @ handcar with two Ameri- eight days of almoat incessant fighting| cans and dour Mexican laborers travel) the garrison of Federal troops succeeded | along in front of us aa @ scout, in driving off the revolutionaries, “Lmagine our surprise when, after “During those days of continuous oom-| passing the troop trains bound north bat my wife, baby and I were kept/for an attempt to retake Torreon, we Jumping from one part of the town to|should reach Monterey just about the another to avold the flying bullets./same time ae our families, who had Several hundred other Americans were|siarted fourteen days before.” in ike danke: Fietoher ts in the jumber business “When thin attack failed things qulet-/and had been in Mexico thirteen years. ed down for a while, but early in Sep-| tHe is @ native of Téxas and his wife is tember camo rumors of another rebell¢rom Milwaukee, Wis, where they are force assembling to attack the city, and/ pound for @ vidt before considering we decifed to wend most of the women | whether of not they shall go back tw and children to Monterey and thence] stexico, to the coast, There were 310 refugees,| “american intervention ta the only mainly women and children, on the! thing possible to save Mexico and the train that wo bade goodby Sept. 2.) interents of the 40,000 American busi- We expected they would reach Tam- ness men who are showing the Mexi- pico in about three days, but we stocked! rang now to develop thelr own coun- the train with provisions to last @ aaid Flete “The Mexican: wi cannot govern themselves unlens unde 4 DAYS TO MAKE A 300-MILE| an tron-handed ruler such as Porfirio JOURNEY. Dies, Why, already there in a counter 4 revolution: junta blishea for o Ea ee Cae nip ved FAT purpone of declaring @ revolution a ordinarily taking about. twelve | sxainet Carranza should he be inatalied hours, My wife and those with her|!! place of Huerta, There will be fatto stay tm those dirty, suffocating | Fevelution after revolution for @ tiou- vt te thea for fourteon daye before | *ind years, unless America steps in or thay uct th Montanens”” another Diaz im born, | Hare Mrs. Platcher took up the tale] “A® for arming Carranza or any with a brief chronicle of her experiences | ther faction and telling them to Ky During thal terrible sources, head and beat Huerta out of Mexico, nit wasn't #o bad untll the food gave| that d# the helght of folly, It means out at the end of the firat week, ‘Then| merely providing Mexicans with arine wo had to live on han! hread and Mexi. {Md etnmunition to fight us in the end.” can veans. ‘The water was bad and al- though the other mothers and I had provided plenty of condensed milk for the bables the milk we had to give them was so bad they all got sick, My baby almost died. We thought we were Koink to lose him, but he pulled through in Tamptoo. “The main cause of the delay was the fact that the Federal Government had atarted nine troop traine north to reinforce the garrison at Monterey, It wan a aingle track road In places the tracks had been blown up or torn | away and We had to atop to pateh they up. Then each of the ¢ trains held us at aldings for days at a time waiting for them to pasa ui In the mean time, unknown to the|tco City and aatd that he expected a efugoes on the much delayed train, |Feply to his message @hortly, Lind's n, Franciaco Villa with 4,000 rebate | instructions have been to keep the I'res had stormed Torreon and after thirty-| {ent fully Informed of everything that #1x hours of fierce fighting had driven | transpires and he iv doing so. of Gen. Butiquio Mungta anc bis gar-| But he has steadfastly retrained trom rison of 4,000 Kederals, making any positive demand on Huerta THREATENED FORCE To GET A|f°r_ a0 answer to his representations WISONTELS = GREAT BRTAN HS STAND ON HUERTA (Continued from First Page.) within @ certain time, That Is left to hte bellet @ull previatle very gener. MILLION. the discretion of the Provisional I wily among the ignorant population of |. After the capture of the city,” re-|dent, but it ds believed that an answer hire Hungary, Poland. Russe act | sumed Mr. Pleteher, “we thought things | will be forthcoming not Juter than Wed- even parts of Germany, Anti-Jewisn | ¥ould be ber but early in October | nemdlay. vgitators, particularly in Russia, have |Gen. Villa issued a proclamation re-| ‘The report that agents of the Huer ways availed themselves of this be- ne the loan of $1,009 for his|ta Government had made repre ef and feeling to fan the Man We Ametican busin men/tions to Lind and AUR hNesy hatred and persecutions agai: the} were expected to raise that sum, |@aniing alleged atrocities on the J When |t was not forth « in a day |of the Carranza forces tn the a or go Gen, Valla backed up his pro also officially dented to-day Renawaey Boye a, John Lattle and Ralph Miller, ‘Philadelphia boys, who gave their a, ‘an sevent but who look like they ‘might be approaching their thirteenth birthdays, were sent to the Gerry So- j elaty to~ their parents. ‘last night at Grand strost Bowery asleep and hungry two y by Magistrate Appleton in| \-\1,, ‘the Tombs Court to await word from The boys were arreated ‘the | Was to let & door| We also wanted to se {the kind has taken place and none is looked for The President conferred at length mation with the postscript that unr tho money Was paid at once he and b men would have to take (t by force y| “ly that time some of us Americans | With John Bassett Moore, counsellor in business in Torreon decided it wan Of the State Department, today. Moore sto Kot out of the city. We went to|i® an expert on international law ond iit and aucceeded In convincing him ,%® aw been handitng the purely te} that the best way ts get that $1lw.090| Phases of the situation, He has been investigating the report much of the Huerta strength comes is MO outeide and raise it how our women step. folk had got thro: > | : _—S “After much pala’ neented sip Cqpogsr's calce, 1 Ereeh Beet in| to our taking a train, tnirty ot us We aE atte NS A rane HEF, a. crerngst 21,10 sonie ber poubd. adit” |60t @ Little outside aud were called back | Eoave. Tomstare i on tach bes, Maa ham, ! \ 2 ee 78 | third floor at No. | | found the daor locked. The purpose | that |; Neither the President nor Moore would discuss the viait in any way. Later a copy of Huerta’s note to the iplomatn was received at the State Department from Mr. O'Shaughnessy. Secretary Bryan would not comment upon it further than to say last night's dispatches from Mexioo City described it accurately, An official statement was issued by Charge Alara, of the Mexican Em- bassy, stating that on Nov. 26 next “the legislative power assumed by President Huerta will reinstated and the new Congress will pass on the result of the Presidential election.” —— LIND AWAITS WORD . FROM WASHINGTON. MEXICO CITY, Nov. 10.—John Lind, President Wilson's personal represdn- tative here, claimed to-day to be in {gnorance of the intentions of the United States Government in relation to the Huerta affair and said he wae awaiting instructions from Washing- ton before taking any further atep in the Mexican situation. Quiet pre- valled in the city to-day, Gen. Victoriano Huerte’s declaration to the Diplomatic Corps last Saturday night, when the Provisional President indicated that he would retain his of- fice until after the holding of new elec- tions, was applauded to-day by the Mexican press, ‘The newspapers de- clared that his stand met with the approval of the Mexican people, — FINED FOR LOCKING DOOR TO FIRE ESCAPE Judge Sorry He Cannot Inflict More Than $50 Punishment on Owner. Isaac Schrieber, who employs thirty- one pecple in a clothing factor: on the 17 Alen street, was fined $0 to-day in the Court of Spectal Seastons for keeping @ door leading to the fire escape locked, The offense was committed on Sept. 29, An Inspector of the Fire Prevention Bureau visited the factory on that dato A locking the door was to prevent employees from sneaking out goods by way of the fire escape. The inspector testified to-day that It took five minutes to find the key, “This is a flagrant case,” remarked Justice Salmon, “but the law prohibits us from inflicting @ fine of more than the Tn case of a fire in this factory key to the door leading to the fire would probably not have been at all, but the limitation of $30 in 4 fine is binding " Nathan Rrakestone, |blouse factory at No, [ay arrested for simoki his workroom on Sept. There are sign® up all over the room prohibiting jmboking, but Brakestone was puffing ja jis in | the owner of a 612 Broadway, iw 4 cigar in ay vigorously when an inspector lle was fined 8%, ies SUBWAY BIDS OPENED. Commission opened to-day by the Pups ‘commision for the construc ti tion No. % of Routes No, 4 and N the Seventh avenue sub: | way in Manhattan, This section lies Jin Varick street and the Seventh ave- tenston, and Cr tere will be four-track rail- ost of the work will be igh Rapid Transit is to operate the Ine, tween Beach street on whi by the Interbore subway si at Times Square and yenth avenue, Varick strects to the Battery down treet and land Brookiya, enue subway leaves the | SAYS AUTO NOT WORTH POEMS HE HAD TO HEAR But Prosperous Looking Man | Locked Up on Complaint of Artist's Wife. Lambert Lewis, a fine look- with gray hair and bear, tall, heavily eet and looking like a prosper- ous lawyer or doctor, thaugh the po- lee ay he is known to them as Dr. Camp, Eggleston and Lambert, as well an his Jatest name, was arrested at Fifth avenue and Twenty-fifth atr thia afternoon by Detective McMahon of the West Sixty-elghth street sta- tion, Mrs. George H. Barrett, wife of the artist, of No. 305 West Seventy- second street, told the police he bought her automobile about fifteen days ago, paying $100.on account and promising to pay $1,200 more. Since then she has not seen him or the money. “Its an outra, declared Lewis, who in aixty-two years old and who, the police say, has served eleven years and six months tn different penal in- stitutions in Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York. “Why all I offered for the car was $100 and if she isn't satis- fled she can have it back. “If ehe gave it to me outright it wouldn't pay me for the time I spent Metening to her read her poems, to her iscusniona on religion and reading the Christian Sclence books sie kept forc- ing on me.” Nevertheless Lewis was locked up. RE SULZER DEMANDS $416, PAY DUE HIM, HE SAYS In Letter Asking October Salary Balance, Asserts He’s Gov- ernor Still. ALBANY, Nov. 10.—William Sulzer Asserts he still 1# Governor of New York, it developed to-day. In a letter copies of which were sent to the State Treasurer and the State Comptroller he demanded that hia full salary for the lant half of October, 1913, which would amount to $480.14, be paid him. According to hia letter, the Impeach ment proceedings ® illegal, uncon- atitutional and vold.”" And the letter closed, “I am still lexal Governor of the State." Sulaer had one-half day's pay— $18.47—due him when he was removed, and a check for this Was sent to him. He kept that and wrote for the remain- Ing #16.67 which he would have ceived had he remained in office. | Saemaeieemaiaese Preferred Ballet to Tubercalo: When Mra, Lene Schwarts, pr prietress of & lodging house at N 1722 Lexington avenue, did not hear Louis Bermudes, a young Spanish clgarmaker, moving about his room at] 9.9 o'clock this morning she went to call him and found him dead in bed with a bullet wound fn his right temple Bermudes had frovuently confessed to fa dread of consumption and had hat a ‘bad congh recently a re- | Do You Get Up Tired Out after $ of. hours’ ales? Tongue coated? Mouth laste as ZVENING WORLD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1918. EASTERN TRAINMEN WIN WAGE INCREASE, WALL STREET REPORTS is ye | Though Arbitrators’ Award Is! Not Yet Fixed, Men Are Credited With Victory. Although announcement had Arbitration tween the In the dispute Stern raliroads asd + conductors and trainmon would not be made untll thie evening, Wal! Street heard this afternoon that tue arbitra- ton had reeuited in the wage tmaal conees. mons to the empioyees and a pariial Victory for them. This report fixed the increase in wazes at 10 per cent. It was sald that the board had eatab- Mshed the principle that wages in the East should be as high am those paid for similar services in the West. The arbitration board held @ meeting at the Hotel Manhattan this mornin; Frank Milstead, speaking for the board, @nnounced then that the award would not be filed in the United States Dis- triet Court until the Inst minute this afternoon, and no announcement would be mado at the courthouse even then. “Can you not give ua some intimation of what the award will ve?" he war asked. “I doubt If even the board could give that yet.” he replied. The membe of the board include Seth Low, Cha! man; Dr. John H. Finley, represent: ing the public; W. W. Atterbury, Vice- President of the Pennsylvania, and A. H. Smith, Vice-President of the New York Central, representing the roads; and Lucius E. Sheppard, Vice-President of the Order of Railway Conductors, and Dr. L. Cease, editor of the organ of the Brotherhood of Railroad Train- men, representing the unions, The hearings began on Sept. 10, and ended Oct. 10, and if the trainmen's de- mands are met, 73,266 railroad employees will receive an aggregate increase of $18,000,000 a year. Practically all the Principal roads east of Chicago and forth of the Potomac are affected. —_——>—_ GIRL WHO SOUGHT DEATH TO BE TRIED IN COURT Child Tried to Commit Suicide Because Her Mother Had Whipped Her. Paralyaed on her left side and sight- leap In one eye, little Susie Langenegger, the twelve-year-old child who attempted suicide because she sald her mother punished her, taken this afternoon from Ford Hospital by officers of the Children's Society and will be ar- ralgned to-morrow in the Children's Court as a@ delinquent. Mer departure from the hospital waa marked not only by her own tears but by those of the nurses who have been in attendance upon her since the day of the shooting, July 2 last, Little Susie had become the great favorite of the institution Susie shot herself in her home, No. 447 Bast One Hundred and Seventy- third atreet, during her mother’s ab- sence, The removal of her left eye and the bullet from her brain saved ner fe. In the apartment the police found two communications from the little «irl in which she explained her act, She said her mother had broken her heart by whipping her. ———< os AMERICAN SUFFRAGETTE HAS BRAIN CONCUSSION LONDON, Nov. 10.—Miss Zelle Emer- son, the American suffragette of Jack- son, Mich., is lying seriously ill from concussion of the brain, the result of injuries received during a riot at Bow- baths In the east end of London on Nov, 5 according to an announcement made to-day by Mrs, Dacre Fox at thi regular weekly meeting of the Women's Social and Political Union, a militant auffragette organisation, Mias Emerson had presided on Nov. 5 at a meeting at which was announce that a volunteer corps was to be organ- ized for the protection of the militant suffragettes. Miss Sylvia Pankhurat was present, and when the police tried to arrest her a violent fight with sticks and clubs took place, in the course of which Miss Emerson s knocked down with a blow on the head, id ntewtls ah! teens ot iy realation throug + Deo te, Dut know ma Toiigestion loot WAN fein raperieuced No saipe aud we will Send for Bos MANACKA WATER hi seme are t have hilt for y 7 & Case of | WATE, id betwen "me rw end w Brom y 20 CORTLANDT STREET Corner Church Ntreet ARK ROW AND NASAL ST. At City Hall Park Contre Street 89 RAAT Bird ATRERT Just West of Fourth Avenue MORSE TRIES TO SAVE + MAN UNDER INDICTMENT Forme: J dies With \esistant Nott. slice king, wae inte Raid er lee ilge Boster and Prosecutor Charles W itor Moree. the the ¢ for th the minal CY fret t edera diay \ net release from alled and A [A Nott Mr. Moree told reporters that he wae y mu ested in a Man Who bod o see Judge Warren stant Dietrict-Attorney Chartes been recently judleted and whom he erline dA against him is simply one of many canes,” Mr. Morse sa to my attent “that has been brough: on by friends. In this case I believe the man tx Innocent of any wrongdoing and I am willing to help him all T can. At the District-Attorney's office it was stated that Mr. Morse was Interested in the case of Charles Holden, one of the men concerned in the case of Antonio Muatea a ere arrested in New Or after de- frmuding creditora in this clty of nearly @ million dollars. WHITE SLAVER FOUND VICTIM AT MOVIE SHOW Slip of Girl Lured Into Fake Mar- riage, Then Degraded in Paterson Brothel. Moving pictt theatres as a fertile recrulting ground for white slavers was shown by the Government at the open- ing this afternoon of the trial of five alleged violators of the Mann Act before Judge Hunt in the United States District court. The victim was Fannie Fass, a slip of @ girl not long in this country who was @ domestic until, at a movie show, sho met Samuel © emberg. ‘The contention of the Government is that after securing a marriage license under the name of "James Brown, of Lembe Austria,’ Lemberg went through @ fake wedding ceremony and took tl irl to Paterson, N. J., where he made her the inmate of a disorderly house, With him on trial are his brother, John Lemberg, Rosie Lemberg, his real wife, and Willie Klass, Another alleged victim of Lemberg was Nellie Gross, and on trial with Lemberg In this case is Morris Gross, Nellie's husband. The arr of th ened vera came after @ police raid upon the Paterson house, HIS SON HURT BY ‘CAT,’ HE SUES SCHOOL BOARD Lad’s Left Eye Destroyed and Father Begins Action to Re- cover $50,000. Charles Bloomfeld of No. 2933 West Twenty-third street, Coney Island, be- gan sult to-day before Supreme Court Justice Manning and a jury in Brook- lyn against the Board of Education |for $50,000 damages on behalf of his [twelve-year-old aon, anuel, the sight of whose left eye wae destroyed two years ago when he was atruck by the “cat” with which some boys were playing in the yard of Pubic School No, 80 in Coney Island, Witnesses, most of them schoolboys eleven and twelve years old, testified that Emanuel had been in the base- ment of the school until the antics of the boys there caused the janitor to drive them out Into the danger zone of the yard, where the game was in Drogross. Mr, Bloomfield bases his uit on the allegation that the Board of Fducation was guilty of carelessness In allowing auch @ game to be played dn a crowded school yard. | A Snappy Seasoning It Is necessary to the full enjoyment of a dinner, LEAcPERRINS: | SAUCE | ‘TME ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIRE ior relish for Som ad sa ctice reli lenge Fim An Appetizer | Sold by Grocers Everywhere | Percel Post Reduces to a Minimum the Cost of sending Loft Candy sit ufo Your Out-ol-Town Friends. Special for Tuesday UIT GOODIES—A ‘allection of long lastiog mt Of styles and i POUND BOS every evening 1 v'elork, A Corner Pulton street A477 NASBAL RIKERE Between Beekman & 5 260 WEST th STR ghth Avenue th STREET ninth Avenue RE! 472 LTON STRE! Corner Elm Place, Brookize id his sons, hair dealers, who | |the roof of the ve DWELLING IS WRECKED, MOTHER AND SON HURT BY FALLING ELM TRE ancnnliianiins to Dig Mrs. Coward Out of the Ruins Firenren Have of Her Home. Wo the kmen, clearing a) tot adjoining No. ve of Uenry 0. Coward &. 180 Marcy avense, Bust Orange, Ne Jy had gous howe ein tree nor: cut down in the midst of a tiga wind storm to-day ‘They had placed no guy roper on it and the great tree pitched over toward the Coward home, on the porch of which stood Mrs. Coward and her seven-year-old son Will Mrs, Coward saw the danger end tried to gray up her son and run, but before she had got off the porch the tree crashed down on the house, It Wrecked the upper floor of the frame cottage and came smashing down on ja, crumbling up the Ight timbers as though they had been of oardboard and burying Mra. Coward and her son In the wreckage, ‘The lwborers ran over to the house And tried to release Mrs, Coward, who Was unconsclous, but she had been enught In such a way that they could not get her out. Then a call was t for the fire company, Firemen came and with axes and ropes chopped and hauled away the debris until Mrs. Coward wan liberated. An ambulance surgeon wi waiting from the Orange Memorial Hos- pital. He found that Mrs. Coward's skull Was sactured and he hurried her to the hospital, anying that she was in a dangerous condition, William w: ut no bones adly cut ore broken. Ex-Congressman Harry Republican leader in Brooklyn, waa ar- rested to-day and released tn $6,000 ®all because ho refused to answer questions in the supplementary proceedinge brought by the Russell Sage Founda- tion against Patrick H. Flynn, once a wealthy Brooklyntte and builder of the Nassau street railway there, against whom the Foundation has a 860,000 judg- ment. Supreme Court Justice Benedict, set Nov. 4 to hear argument as t whether or not Hanbury should be made to answer. FYose CEYLON TEA “Storm Hero” Umbrellas a Cost from GIFTS am $1 to $10 eat Macy's, Greenhut: Bloomingdales’ — Th m ‘aus’ of othe: ork and HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS, CR LOA GHINESE _ | RESTAURANT Coghasace eo he brightes . Complete 8 Inspecti ' FALL OPENING, To-Morrow, Tuesday | ve Paleo oa { y «nee Hannon)--ELIZARRTH, wife of John Hu West, County Limerick eral from her ti orning, wt 10° Mary's Chureh, ited verieuced SSS

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