The evening world. Newspaper, March 11, 1901, Page 3

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IN EXPLOSION. Several Others Hurt When Chicago Laun- dry Was Wrecked. (Spectat to The Fvening World.) CHICAGO March 11.—A boiler of the Doremus laundry, occupying part of the old Waverly Theatre Butlding, on West Madison street, between Throop and oomis streets, exploded ty ing the building. Te ty a pensive nid Ten badles have been 4 rom | 9 9 and STSCI eee a the case 1 ©) wotoh T would the ruins; fv sare still missing, | beautiful: Raster Kanter BOWnE | cong World. Uke to have and atitoh 1 aw while at | men and girls | 1 hats and S| Deserteiions ma. At Bo & So's store, whone adver- were ao seriously injured that many off which will be distributed = the lprze Editor, Ev them will die, wage-carners of the metropolis ant tsb gay gy of March DEAD TAKEN FROM RUINS. Emma Sebreska, eluhteen yearn old. Minnie Olsen, thirty-stx yeare ond. George Piehl, engineer. ‘rank Haumman, Heasie Kinenpa, fiftgen yearn ol Martha Jacobi, twenty-one ye old. Katherine Kelly, elghteen years ola. Mant body burned; not Identified, Two girlie: bodies mangled. THE INJURED. rge Edens fatally hart. Ellen Conway; burns and lexe broken. Peter Dean, 490 Monroe street) will at Fannie Dean: fntally hurt. May Kothy ken, Frank Dattenwhy. burned about Inette Stern, hadly internally. Mamio Wurnay bnened. Minnle Jaeke! Twenty others injured face and arms leas broken. inj ary; shock und burua, THE MISSING. William Dean, Kate Parce: Calerts, Kate Walsh, Sarah A foros of about forty had} begun work wi t S10 o'clock, two large bollers in the base ment exploded. A jon of one of the tbollers went clear through Luliding, tearing away the roof. ‘The side walls swayed for a moment then fell in, penning the throng of workers. Crowda ran from vartous points and Volunteers began a work of rescue im- mediately. Twelve girls who were near the street line and whose rcreams cou.d \be heard for blocks were taken out one after another, and good progress was ‘being made by the rescuers when the ruing caught fire. The flames seemed to start from a dozen places, and all were @riven back, ‘The firemen had arrived by this time and a dozen ambulances followed. While the firemen played on the ruins the cries of the victims held down by the mass of debris were plainly audl- ble. Before the flames were though, these had ceased. With fire burning all about them and the ruins hot the flremen went into the smoking mass and putled out the unfor- tunates one by one. The buliding in which the curred was known as the old Waverly Theatre and wax built in 1877, Subse- quently .lt was remodelled, and the rear ured by the Doremus laundry, ‘The part of the auditorium running to- Kate aier. employees controlled, plosion ac- wards Throop street was used by the Volunteers of America, while the small! atores built out from the wings of the auditorium and facing on“ Madtaon street .were rented to shopk Several of v in thelr by Injur SON'S ARREST. KILLS MOTHER. She Was Dying of Con- a sumption When Told Boy Was i in n Prison. ‘PICK YOUR EASTER GOWN “| offered East the], ‘THE WOKLD: MONDAY EVENING, MAKCH II, 1901. oo Copyrighted, rgor, by the Press Publishing Company, New York World. Any infringement will be prosecuted. AND GET IT FOR NOTHING. The Evening World Will Pay the Bills for the Easter Raiment of Forty-three Wage-Earning Young Women. Every woman ana girl in Greater New| ment in sete the article she may} ‘i pandred it Nave it sent home to her. York and within one hundred | The To the Banter Wiltor of The Evening = World Here is an Own, or hat ening ting in value now krows tiat The fts amo} | wase Joutne Easter shirt walat watch Faster outht (or or shirt walst, as The co. (name store price). ‘Mie des ton is (describe the article): vicinity. when the conte tis the hourly and datty rosex at this. time ty planning ve! HOW TO WIN A PRIZE. [Write n Little Letter Like Thin and | Lueck May Fo! The Evening V umns provide a who Wish to compete World's J enter this dencription for the Easter eutlt (or gown, or hat. or shirt waist, as the caso may be) prize wineiover ir osavings amannted to--what sort of Bow hat er shir: waist they would get when The Werll's anneuncenent that io would pro- vide forty-threr fair wage-earrcrs with itaster raiment free came itke the suds} den realization of A aweet dream te them, and all womankinl clapped their h ind cheered and sald they had he ef such Mherality and un kolfish Intemat In the sox befere, They @ still discunsing the wonderful: an ome surprise with delight and tt «as if they would keep on talking ut it even after Easter In over followed, Mere. would the best way t columns of ‘The or to-morrow store to visit, the name of the store and the date of | | ict» letter Is simply a suggestion. It ls Hut 4 coupon to be cut out. It Just tavws You how to write the letter—-the sort of form to follow when writing. EASTER PIRIZ orld, PLO. an Box The methed of distributing tne sifte| the appearance of the advertisement tn lenrecneraliaivane Demands’ in eo simple, and so little ta required to| The Evening World, ‘Then visit” the telegraphers in the service of thy tain one that all young women who| store and took at the Easter outfits—the |«entral Ratlread ¢ Jersey will to for a living will try to be among| Easter gowns, the Easter hats, the | day. meet ener ¢ A Comralte All that any «irl or woman has to Then con a deet as to which | wages of so per “month, ‘Their wages is to write to ‘The Evening World and] one of t [now range frem $0 to BS tell it what sort of Kaster outfit, Kaster|are a wuge {pie you would. ike Jot down a ful er with th ter hat or Easter shirt wats: to have for the pamde or ing World thinks ‘ e has displayed ec taste and j ter ine this way | HOTELS’ A CONTEST OF GOOD TASTE! AND SHOPPING JUDGMENT. $500- EASTER PRIZES $500 e Have to in Shac Some Guests Some FOR GIRL WAGE-ERRNERS. =~ THE CONDITIONS OF TIONS OF THE CONTEST. Any girl wage cornpete for these prizes. Take The ing World's advertising columns for your directory, go to the stores and find, {f ter outfit, a tailor-made Easter gown, an E: bat or an t. ike the one or as nearly as possible Itke the dre’ you Then write a short description of the same—you may obtain thia description at the store-and give the price of the article, the date of tho ntore's advertinement in ‘The Evening World, and your own name und address. with the name and address of your empiayer, Send thia letter to “Easter Prize Exiitor, Evening Wortd, P.O. Box 2.34 N.Y. City." All doscriptiona will be mibmitte! to a Committes of Five Working Girls gelected by Mra. MWarriet Hubbard Aver, who will pata pon the good taste and shopping Judgement of the contestants and make the awarda ac- cordingly: The contest will cloes at midnight of Tuesdas, April 2. Thy prizes will be pald tn money if preferred. | What Sort of Easter Outfit Would You Like? Describe Itand Win One of These Handsome Prizes. For the PRETTIEST and MOST ECONOMICAL EASTER OUTFIT conststing of gown, hat, boots and gloves for a girl wage-tarner and suggested by a girl wage-earner as represen- tative of the sort of outfit she would wish to have for Baster. FIRST PRIZE $100 EASTER OUTFIT (including gown, hat, shoes and gloves.) SECOND PRIZE... ++e+++ $75 EASTER OUTFIT (Including gown, hat, shoes and gloves.) THIRD PRIZE... + $40 EASTER OUTFIT (Including gown, hat, shoes and gloves.) FOURTH PRIZE + $25 EASTER GOWN FIFTH PRIZE. $15 EASTER HAT SIXTH PRIZE. 810 EASTER HAT SEVENTH PRIZE. 88 EASTER SHIRT WAIST Easter would like to hav ste the rush of guests who have gone wn there this season to pick oranges alligators. big hotels down in some of them with point lace carpets and diamond-studded win dow casings ret ina vackground of beau- iful lapla laaull, Consequently it is 85 EASTER SHOES + 83 EASTER GLOVES §3 EASTER GLOVES ELEVENTH PRIZE. TWELFTH PRIZE..:.- THIRTEENTH PRIZE. FOURTEENTH TO THIRTIETH PRIZES (BEVENTDEN PRIZES) EAOH....... 82 EASTER GLOVES What Sort of Easter Gown Would You Like? and shoot | There are me Florida. too, of an outrage upon the p Describe It and Win One of These Splendid -Prizes. $1! !'susa'in ine woth, knee-deep floor eave erings of the Hotel Orangina and the Roynt Roman Punchinelly to be com: For the PRETTIEST and MOST ECONOMICAL EASTER COSTUME for a girl wage-earner, and suggested by a girl Harry Irwin, twenty-nne years old, of No, 4 West Twenty-fifth street, was arrested yesterday afternoon on a charge of reckless driving on Elghth avenue. Hts mother was told by her other son of the arrest while ehe was dying of consumption. She died during the night. Irwin was arrested at Thirty-firat street as his horse was running rapidly up the avenue. When Irwin was arraigned tn the West Bide Court before Magistrate pCornell thin morning he was weepin To Meeman Gleason sald: “Your Honor, the prisoner is weeping for hin. mother, She had consumpttin and. heard through the prisoner's brother, last night, of this young man's Bhe was #0 sick she died from a fire engine had horse 20 he lost control Erertenesiagistrate, cornell. di fon’ Irwin namened to the home of ie ead mother. CARDMAKER’S WILL FILED. sald Andrew Douwherty Left a Large!) Eatate to Hin Children. The will of Andrew Dougherty, the manufacturer of playing cards, who dled Tecently, was filed to-day in the Surro- ‘oMce. It disposes of a very large Catholic, Orphan A Catholle University 98,00 each. ‘The Emigrant 33 Bank Bullding in Brooklyn goes {i to the testator’s granddaught E jeline herty, and she gete it abrolutely utely when she becomes twenty- || The res residue is divided among three Jed to bunk In some old negro whack under the hanging gardens of the Suwanee River They have raise a great Florodora kick about the sort of treatment they have been receiving. Some of the late arrivals send word that even the churches have been put lto use for the accommodation of the H ae guests, ‘The pews have been up- ered with Florida moss and the rle-dieus” for Instead of room 41144, the oe wage-earner as repiveentative of the costume pho would wish to have for Easter. EIRST PRIZE.- SECOND PRIZE.- THIRD PRIZE. What Sort of Easter Hat Would You Like ? Describe It and Win One of These Valuable Prizes. } For the PRETTIEST and MOST ECONOMICAL EASTER HAT for a girl wage-earner, and suggested by a girl wage- earner as representative of the sort of hat she would wish to have for Bactor. $30 TAILOR MADE EASTER GOWN $25 TAILOR-MADE PASTER GOWN + $20 TAILOK-MADE EASTER GOWN Hlows jpants of the pews are now regintered jas "Mr. John Doe, New York, Pew 54." YjeMr. Richard Roe, cholr lofe to the lett of the organ.” ‘Thin Intter ie a mar- FIRST 5 . BG Pas! ginal note to enable the guest to be facts 920, TER HAT found, BEOOND PRIZE. ORD + $15 EASTER HAT ‘One of the “old-time’ loungers at the THIRD PRIZE. seeeeeee $10 EASTER HAT “Palmiert,” who is accustomed to knock the kinks out of every winter by ‘a Florida sojourn, was taking his daily bath {na velvet divan six feet deep the other night when a bellboy chased up to the night clerk and called out: “One Manhattan and a Scotch high for pew 94."" It shocked him tremendously, for home in New York he came near be- inc a member of the Committee of Fifteen, and naturally the idea of a Kiall going to church came nearly being fatal, You can always trust a hotel propri- tor to get your money, and when the churchea are all filled he will undoubt- edly call on the landscape for accommo- dation. A large order for hammocks given by one of the big hostelries at Palm Beach $8 EASTER HAT $7 EASTER HAT What Sort of Easter Shirt Waist Would You Like? Describe It and Win One of These Desirable Prizes, | For the PRETTIEST and MOST ECONOMICAL EASTER SHIRT WAIST for a girl wage-carner, and suggested by o girl ‘wage-earner as representative of the sort of shirt walst sho would wish to have for Daster. * FIRST PRIZE... + $10 EASTER SHIRT WAIST SECOND PRIZE. $8 EASTER SHIRT WAIST THIRD PRIZE.. he EASTER SHIRT WAIST | ‘| DISCOMFORT IN FLORIDA ++ in Church Alleviating Thirst in a Church. hhicttivitittithteieiniricteeivicivinieleivinnit EIGHTH PRIZE. -$6 EASTER SHIRT WAIST Word comes from Florida tnat the NINTH PRIZE.. 86 EASTER SHOES hotela are so crowded there that the) TENTH PRIZE.- $5 BASTER sHORS hotel people tind tt dificult to accommo- .keveals the purpose of giving the cug-” BIG OVERFLOW. | Sleep in eee ks and Others Pews. ets PALM LO), tony An “Al Fresco” Room. tani airy accom- two palm treer advantages pointed out over guerts nice modations hetwe The climatic rooma wil be fully iMuminated folders, ill comes the climate we have a beneficent eff and healthy conditte FERL THE DEVIL VS. PROF. Iueane Man Saye the F the Inventor of the Telephone. Telephone madness ts a common ¢ plant, but Juitus Thompson, Twenty -frat mreet an acute phase when arraigned tomtay before Mugiatrate Bristow. ha been jocked up at the Fifth ay thon Inst night for pecultar Thompaon. told Mute that ne had been in ¢ the devil by wir 1 know ephon own Invention.” ho explained. me that 1 had to kill my wife boyy and my mother, He saht nothing about my father, He has done that every night for a week. Tha Magisteate committed Thompson gor mental observation, FIVE OF FLUSHING’S FAIR GIRLS IN BEAUTY CONTEST. Whole Town Takes Sides on the Ques- tion, Which Will Be Decided by Vote at the Last ‘‘Assembly,” to Be Given in April. “THE LITTLE FIVE.” MISS Qpsic MISS Ere Wiss wany MISS JESSaF Miss nome Woodbury Langdons, and her coming-out fher aunt, Mrs. 1) Faet Seven- helt whoa wit Hidates ' Mreadty in “ir and ylie even, Winter. xo far as rned, wax at thi Bix of these ase winter in the and tits season it the first the occa. fo the five girls, all Every yerat ‘last June nt very formal and sts-of-urms and with Uroarrangel fer sarapie and pre-M thespiag Wy ‘. He nd Weed, rtralts. Moreover, eaeh one ‘GHiaan t They have res te Re ht pretty Bees Willem Wills. » balls this win- wome “Mmes. John W. Weed Mae Jom yo and ateter o! She peast Just tnsde the Now ft fe almost an understood tan extra ansembiy will come t Hower, and that the beauty contest Wil oe tie sensation of the ball. The Hote will t re during the last stilton thu after supper. Great ‘Tournament. a All this la why the assembly ball early a in April ix golig to be one of the most at hing has ever seen. debutantes, In five new ith Ove confident and pre- orking partners, will en- centre of all eyes. A boauty jourhament doesn't. come off ay red Lawre it of the New York # and the owner of a « i which ts Cart te the Speedaay brillant aftaai Gt Carne, who won from Cobwebs Miss Mary Ronatter in the daughter of of Clinton Rosset cm nuggested. a tiny, white| Proatel nt oof the Brooklyn Iupid » nned to the skirt of each Tmrest Compiny, Her father was one rutante at every Invitation to dance, itive count of the bows to executars of Corneltua Vander othe bits will and revelved a bequest of that each carry from him, Mixes netihich, the her to dance Arthur, tea ob ‘ the patronesses came suggestion that a committee from own number receive votes the k after the ball, which should be at reakfast at noon that orbil < at hie bache xe 1 bar Saxe a gran which shows how widespread 18 Hinterest. Inthe, be ey. “Msn Ronerta W 1 ‘ » allly, dowsiy é f je debutan of N. Dana Whine ee i Yon't think any of Us Is the Ww Wall airvet, and as third done isn't a debutante of Admiral Dewey in relate y ow.’ ZONA GALE, ran to Forsythe street and did Adsamatn ese Both men at there Were three or four per- he corner at the time. ir npaken only * was brought be- rato Hrann in Yorkville he was turned over to the vife for the first shut he refused to had been locked up woman's prison, ‘SAW MURDER {2 OF CONDUCTOR. Buckley a Witness of Shooting in Fifty- ninth Street. fore NURSING IN ALASKA. Need of Proper Food and Care foe Miners. The char: r of the food used in break down under it. Timothy Buck of 39) a very common disease, tyeninth street, the ‘police, have They drink quantities of coffee, and an eyewitness to the munter of that does its work with thousands. tuctor David pintiem A nurse, Mrs. L. Lovell, who has Jona Qi fF plattorm of «11 een employed in different places In Fifty-ni crosatown car la Maskat for the past three years. Hide srites to say that she has induced Huckiey was prese ‘A*] many patients to leave off coffee and aralgned sre Voroner Lucca ay ! stum Food Coffee, which ts “ito the Tomos to awalt now in many of the He is a coal . for they have learned Mf that she has from the use of ; shameful bil- mplexion, She says: "I not from the looks, but had nach trouble. When eit finally quit c and began using » Food Coffee my stomach be- walking toward motor} saluted conductor vim as fy was tal ack platform n to recover normal condi- Mickle: heard two! tion and my. complexion gradually ani ena? nged, until now, after a month or lean over the ise of Postum, my complexion vt th as falr as a sehoolgirl's, “send you a lst of many names rs that have given up coffee | e using Postum, and in each +) case there has been a remarkable Im- | | at oward the rin bia b provement in health ACCUSE WHITE CAPS OF MURDER. |But Horse's Kick May Have Killed Ap- plegate. March 1.—-Core County, will sh how, farmer Wving near Igilt vs death. Ilis farm overseer found him dead tr with his skull wealthy ame to bern Sunday mort 1 hy stood a horse unbitehed from. wagon, Apparently Applega’ had been kicked to death by the horse, but the signs of a struggle In the bara belied thin theory ‘The man wax wealthy but erratic, He mis rector In the Bank of Allen= town $i was the fathor-In-law of George Tams, proprietor of the Green= wold Pot one of the largest in Trenton, He made his home with his wife and his farm With both h was on bad terms because of P Var pemperament. Three months ago the “Burlington County White Caps” waa shoved under his door, warning him that ff he did not stop beating hia wife he would be tarred and feath- ered. He pald no attention to the warn- Ing, and on the night of Jan 5 ten whites robed vinitors broke into his house and were binding him with rope preparatory to carrying out their threat, when they yielded to hie wife's entreaties and agreed to give him another chance, Two weeks Inter, while driving atong the road ing to his house, @ pullet whizzed past his head. ‘Ton days anuther warning from the White Caps was mailed him. A night or two later he was felled by a blow from a plece of lead pipe as he was entering hin barn, Saturday night: Applegate drove alone to Yardville. - FATHER THEIR VICTIM. White Drank Destrey Mia Property. McDonald, of No, 106 Live Brooklyn, was complain his a letter signed by: ‘Two Sone Janes H Ingaten street, ant In the Adems Btreet Court to-day geninst his two sons Thomas F. and Gamer H. McDonald, jr. whom he cherged with having broken Into his beoktyading shop at the above number, emashing his glasses, tearing apart a@ ‘aire-stitching machine and destroyng two volumes of Harper's Magazine which were left there to be bound. The hunk men expressed great repentance for thelr act and told Magistrate Brene ner they had been drinking. ‘The Magistrate paroled the young mea on their promise to reform. Tuesday,March 12th Sie of Corsets. Straight Front Corsets, sizes 18-to 26, SI.05, valuegagox' Odd:sizes-n P.D.& Z.Z, Consets,, at greatly reduced-prices, Lord & Taylor, Broadway ° ook ea; ? Spring Renting + Season Ts Kere. PEOPLE ARE THINKING ABOUT MOVING. = Advertise Your Rouses, Flats and Apartments to Let in Che World. THREE AND SEVEN TIME RATES PAY BEST. ctimunt ine sun Ost had one patient almost gone x “ily sa om seurvy He could not retain any: : M vn, the car sgarter at{food, but lived on Postum until First avehue, will t wnother witness s at} strong enough to take other food, and the Inquest. He was nat the | got well. thtnat! when he heard. the. shots, 5 running into the street saw Quinn w: ing away with a revolver in his han “Tam going to take up a large sup- ply of Postum next trip.”

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