The evening world. Newspaper, April 2, 1903, Page 4

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il Yes, He Loves America, but Then He Really Means to Come Here Every Year. SCAGNI ALSO DEPARTS. Reconciled with America and Com- ing Again—We Also Lose De Mon- tesquiou, with His Bunch of Beau- tiful Pink Thoughts, ‘The Count and Countess Boni de Cas- Yellane, with their two children, two ‘maids and two valets, sailed for France to-day on the French liner La Savole. FOR HOME t Boni Hates to Go, for, Oh! | COUNTESS DE CASTELLANE SAILS BACK HOME TO FRANCE. They had a sulte of six rooms on the Main deck. _ None of the Gould family went to ee them. off, but they sent so many Mowers that even the six staterooms ‘ould not hold them all. Miss Helen Gould sent a magnificent bunch of American beauties, Mr. and Mrs. How- jetd Gould sent splendid orchids. Mr. and Me» George Gould sent Ameri- an beauty roxes and lilies of the val- ley. The Count explained the absence of the Members of his wife's family by saying hat they were all in the Weat. He was 4h fine fettle as he stood on the Savole's sk Just before departure, He wore a Deautiful flowing neck tle and used simi- to the reporters. ue Loven Am jen. e tea, you know," sald he. Wfor, 1 have such tender recollections | Connected with it, but £ must be getting We shall or we have © Wad a moet delightful visit.” ' The Countess, who stood by her hus- ‘band’s side, clad in a black travelling | ‘Bown, echoed his remark about the "Pleasant visit, “She, too, said they Would come back every year, “Another distinguished French nobdle- man to leave on the Savole was the pic- ‘uresque Cotint Robert de Montesquiou, ‘who came over here to teach America What beauty in Hterature, art and nature ‘Feally ts. With him was his other self ‘and secretary, Gabriel de Yurri, who ‘xpresses in English the Count's beau- Hful French thoughts. “Phe Count was also delighted with his | i | ip in America, He chattered with feat freedom to the reporters, Gabrie! f Mal Called Him “Gabby,” “"Aln't he gabby?" remarked the maid bf one of the cabin passengers, but as Jeeither the Count nor Gabriel understood is sort of English no feellngs were urt In effect the aesthetic lover of bats And embroidered pajamas, who came to} this country to mfer'’ with any one who would pay $5 per conference, sald that he was coming back for more ‘con- ferences” next year. “The ‘people didn't understand me hen I first arrived," he went on, “but they know me now and tove me. ‘The Feporiers went to extremes with me. You know there ure two kinds of news- Paver reporters, One kind Is, treated ith a giap in the face and a duel; the jother with a shrug of the shoulder. 1 Rave been shrugging my shoulder ever Bince T came to America, But the wom- % were most kind, and I shall come back to seo them." |. Maseagni a Passenger. to leave us was Piet another foreigner ! Wite was with letro Mascagni. im. He, tov, now loves America and ven the labor unions. He declares that he hates Chicago und Boston, but, that Wifornia is the garden spot of the world, Next year he is coming back ‘to conduct ten concerts for the Call- fornia Symphony Orchestra. "To show ow well he stands with the labor unions showed = terpreting. the reporters a gold waich ich he said was given to him by the nylon musicians of San Francisco, “It was all my manager's fault—the Yow with the unions, Had I had a good manager I would have made the great- @5I success ever seen in this country.” Miss Yvonne Rivers, lately of the “Jewel of Asia’ company, sailed for a brief sojourn In Paris and London, THREE HURT IN TRAIN CRASH. Passenger and Railroad Men, Victims of Wreck on New York Central, Will Probably Die. + SCHENECTADY, N, ¥., April 2—In a fain wreck at Hoffmans on the New York Cential Rallroad, near here, to- ay. one passenger and the con ' end the fireman of the engine at 40 2 milk train were fai ——— Pour Years for Negro Brute. (Special to The Evening World.) WHITE PLAINS, April 2—Inasc Jones, a negro, who was nearly lynched in rrytown several months ago for - attacking Miss Annie Foley, was sen- fenced by County Judge Platt at White Plains to-day to four years and six at hard labor in Sing Bing ‘ou are & brute of the worst THR FOR “KID” M'COY Pugilist Sues Woman He Has Three Times Wedded and Who Has Twice Divorced Him " MoCoy and his wife, who has divorced him twice and married him three times during the last six years, while he was in Europe last July his travelling companion, Ralph Thompson, son of the Schenectady banker and grandson of the founder of the Hillis Losomotive Works, gave him the aiip, came back to New York and visited his wife. She was a Miss Julia E. Croselmeyer. She had diyorced one husband when she wedded “Kid McCoy In June, 1897, In September, 1900, "Kid" sued her, but was persuaded to drop the sult and| let her get a divorce. She took $5,900 In Neu of alimony. ‘They made up four months later, and were re-married Jan 7, 1901, In Boston. But when the autumn leaves were falling, and he was in Hu- rope, she got another divorce by de- fault, with alimony of $500 a month Selby came hane !n the spring, and they were married for the third time last April. But In May they fell in with Ralph Thompson at Saratoga. Belby alleges in his complaint, filed by A. H. Hummel, that Thompson was being treated for alcoholism and Mrs. Selby got so Interested they took him to thelr home for better nursing. Beiby | and Thompson sailed for ®urepe to- gether last July, At Queenstown ‘Thompson silpped away, boarded the Oceanic and came back.’ Selby alleges that the couple took a journey together to Japan, returning only last’ month, and have since been stopping at the Rossmore Hotel Mrs. Selby enters a general denial through Thomas E. Osborne, but her loth shrink from the publicity of a trial in thelr third effort for a separation, and Justice Glidersleeve to-day appointed Alexander Lamont referee to take tex- Umony and report to him whether the ex-prize fighter 1s entitled to an absolute divorce, Norman B, Selby, which is the legal name of “Kid MeCoy,” charges that | $ YOUNG BANK CLERK HELO FOR FORGERY Goldsteine, It Is Alleged, Has Swindled Many Business Houses by Bogus Orders. Reuben Goldsteine, eighteen, of No. 84 East Broadway, was held for trial by Magistrate Flammer, in the York- ville Court, to-day on a charge of forgery. Paying Toller Herzog, of a branch of the Jefferson Bank, at No. 2 Avenue B, claimed that the prisoner had presented an order purporting to be signed by Adelsicin & Avuntine, architects, of No. 29 Willett street, for $150, ‘The order o have been made payable to joldberg, at the Stile Bank 8 . Adeiste ourt and said the onier declined it Me~ rhe boy Jast ni Conville, was emp house of Jarmulo 1 street, us clerk, persons were in court ready to mak. against the priso t Hergog's com- plaint was the only one heard The Aetectivea claimed that Goldsteine THE WORLD: THURSDA similar complaints | THEATRE PILLAR FIGHT ON IN COURT MeMillan’s Application for In- junction Against Klaw & Er- langer Is Argued. James F. Donnelly, asking Supreme Court Justice Gildersleeve to-day, in be- half of ex-Park Commisstone® Samuel MoMillan, for an injunction to stop Klaw & Erlanger from building pillars on the sidewalk In front of thelr New Amsterdam ‘Dheatre, in West Forty- second street, declared that the theat- rical managers were building in anticl- pation of an ordinance recently passed by the Board of Aldermen and now in tae hands of Mayor Low. “That ordinance has not been signed, may never be signed; and if it is it wht not stand in because it will be against public .' said Mr, Don- nelly, “It proposes to allow the obstruc- tion of the sidewalks by permitting the erection of ornamental fronts on new buildings to project five feet out. The ardinance was framed especially to cover this theatre, but if It became good law we might have the whole sidewalk wiped out in Nassau street by ‘ornamental fronts’ to the building's on that narrow lane.” Mitchell L. Erlanger, for the theatrl- cal managers, replied that ex-Commis- sioner McMillan sought the Injunction only to harrass Klaw & Erlanger be- cause they refused to let him “shake them down" for property adjoining. “Mr. McMillan owns the adjoining property,” sald Mr. Erlanger. ‘He 1m- ¢_RVE U Forinng’ demanded clined bepause the price asked ex- orbitant, and aroused Mr. MeMil- Jan's animosity. Decision was reserved. MAYOR LOW REJECTS THE “STANDEES” LAW, 2, to, Aldermen Will Now Be Asked to Provide for Standing in New York Theatres. Mayor Low will not accept the Senate dill amending the charter permitting “standees” in New York theatres. His| objections to the bill are that it deals with a matter over which the local au- thorities have entire control and makes no discrimination between old play- houses and theatres of the modern | type, which are bullt to afford standing reom, The theatre managers will now appeal to the Board of Aldermen, In accordance with the suggestion of the Mayor at the recent hearing, and request the adoption of a city ordinance permitting ‘standees" in the rear of seats. The Mayor has also returned the bill} amending the charter in relation to qualifications of patrolmen and firemen. The objection to the bill ts that It wtrikes out of the charter tae provision re- quiring that firemen and policemen must be realdents of the Greater City before appointment. ‘ SWALCPOX ON FRENCH LINER One of LA aine’s Crew Stricken with Malady and Ship Hela Up. ‘The French lne steamship L'Aqui- taine, which arrived last night from Havre, 1s detained at Quarantine with ‘one case of smallpox among the crew. ‘The patient, a fireman, will be sent to North Brother Island, a portion of the crew will be removed to Hoffman Island for observation and the steamship dis- infected. Stern Brothers Women’s Suitable for Dress Decided Reductions in Slippers and Street Wear Untrimmed FANCY STRAWS, Millinery Dept., First Floor. COLONIAL TIES, in six styles, also Moire Silk and $3.7 Bronze Beaded Kid Slippers. Reduced from $5.00 and $7.00 } 3.75 First Floor, Annex. oat Special Offering of in the newest Braids and the most fashionable Shapes for Spring Wear. CHIFFON AND STRAW COMBINATIONS, Straw Hats 95c and 81,25 $1.88 West Twenty-third Street. had beon swindling firms all over the clty by means of forged orders \Wems @ BROOKLYN. , husband has also sued Ralph Thompson for $10,000 damages for taking her away WORKMAN TAKES SIX-STORY PLUNGE, Comrade Who Saw rites Fall Clings in Terror to Ironwork, but at Last Cries for Help, While working to-day on the sixth floor of the Broadway Hotel building, which is being erected at Broadway and Kigh- tleth street, Sandford Matthews, an iron- | worker, of No, 1807 Second avenue, lost ‘his balance and fell ¢o the first floor, His right shoulder was dislocated and several of his ribs were broken. Edward Lauritsen, of No. 1790 Pacific street, Brooklyn, another laborer, who witnessed Matthewa's fall, grew so dizzy that he had to hold to the iron work of the building for some time be- fore he recovered his equilibrium, Then he shouted for help and other laborers Tushed to the spot on the ‘first floor where Matthows had fatten: Dr, Milliken, who arrived on an am- said the Judge in passing sen- French Kid Gloves, bulance that took the Injured man to the Roosevelt Hospital, sald he thought he would recover. 4 B.Altmans.do. : Will offersat SPECIAL SALE, Women’s and Children’s Gloves, day and Saturday, April 3d and 4th, 51.00 pair, pale, everything put in good shirts is in these, and 50c, Blouses, at, each light grounds, with neat stripes of black and e and whi darker grounds and heavier stripes. There are about 500 shirts in this lot that have two collars and one pair of cuffs with each shirt. The shirts all have cushion neckband and We cannot too strongly urge you to take ad- vantage of this offer, as it is really the very best shirt offer ever made in Greater New York. Sizes are 144 to 17. On sale when store opens Friday morning. 29c, for Boys’ 50c. Blouses.—The best offer of boys’ laundered madras Blouses that has ever been made. There are twenty-five hundred of them, enou of boys, colored madras, white apely, finished with pearl buttons, laundered 59c. for cially for this been equalled money. are negligees the Oxford s improvement. ne Ww h ready eee ere eee ee ee The 60c, and 75c, Shirts at 39c, are ligees of excellent /Percales and Madras, ite and blue and white. Then there are uinds, stripe effects, neck ban Another Men's Shirt Pointer!/ This Caps the Climax. 39c. for 60c. and 75¢, Negligee Shirts. $1.00and $1.50 Negligee Shirts, These shirts are new and just in spe- sale. They come from one of the largest and best shirt makers in the country, and for real, intrinsic worth haven't anywhere any time for the The $1.00 and $1.50 Shirts at 59c, of excellent woven Madras, choice aries and stripes, and excellent Oxford; a good many are the favorite black and white; some have attached cuffs, the majority are detached cuffs. On some of hirts there is a soft cuff at- tached, not starched, specially preferred for olf playing and cycle riding. Each shirt as cushion neckband and every known “The Guarantee” — CLOTHING COMPANY, Uptown 127th Street and 3d Ave, Corner AND OVERCOATS HEN the “Guarantee” first came to Harlem, fourteen years ago, Harlem then was not the Haré lem of to-day, nor was the “Guarantee” then the “Guarantee” of to-day. With the wonders ful growth and development of upper New York the “Guarantee” has grown, too. Since then we have built a reputation for selling the highest-class merchandise at the very lowest prices dependable merchandise can be sold for. We have earned the confidence and patronage of our public by giving them dollar for dollar in value—and a little more than somebody else. To-day we stand ; equipped, better able to serve you than ever. To-day we set the pace and standard for clothes value and clothes quality not only in Harlem but all over and about Greater New York. Our showing of Spring Suits and Overcoats is larger, better, more oomplete than any showing of spring clothes we have ever made. To know this store and to buy at this store means satisfaction and profit to you. Behind every- thing we sell, from a $6 garment to one for $35, stands our broad, liberal guarantee: Anything not en- tirely to your satisfaction we take back. Here are some prices for the new Spring Suits and Overcoats: Men’s Suits. Black Coats and Vests, ‘ At $6.75—single and double breasted coats and cut= New Spring Styles. : Single or away fronk epats and sae nreds pon fae a yee ‘ fast color black diagonal. Value $10. Sale price 5 Men’s Suits at $6.00 — actpre i ® breasted, made from all-wool black Cheviots and Ox- At $8.00— Cutaway frock and single and double breasted coats and vests of fine black diagonal. Value See with an invisible hairline stripe. Value $8. $12. Sale price $8. eink At $10 & $12—Handsomely tailored black diagonal ’ ly _tailore Men’s Suits at $7.00 i) ingle te coats andé vests in single and double breasted and cut- { breasted, made of gray cheviots, brown cheviots and a | away frock style, with fine Venetian lining. Walues $12 sae secortmnent of fancy mixed cheviots. Value $10. | 27d $15. Sale prices $10 and $12. ale price $7. 9 ’ Men’s Suits at $8.00 —%¢: ,of| Men’s Overcoats. and light tweeds and handsome dark striped cassimeres. Also gray worsted. Cut in the single-breasted style. For Spring Wear. Value $12. Sale price $8. Overcoats at $6. 00 — Made from A 5 td tal overts Men’s Su its at $10.00— Agee me and Oxford gray cheviots, in short, full, boxy Hop cous medium length and extra long overcoats; stylish and ser- viceable. Value $8. Sale price $6. Overcoats at $7.50 — Aiiepor made from gray and black cheviots, short box coats, me-: dium lengths, and long loose overcoats. Value $12. Sale rice $7.50. Overcoats at $10 and $12— Light tan whipcords, silk sleeve lining, Italian body linin, at $10. At $12, silk-lined imported olive whipcords in al overcoat lengths. Regular values $15 and $18. Sale prices $10 and $12. Overcoats at $15, $18 & $20—fvery good new spring style is represented at these prices. Coverts in all the new shades,, some silk’lined; black Thibets, Ve- netians and vicunas, some silk lined to edge of lapel. Col- lars, fronts and shoulders hand tailored, These overcoats. are sold at a third more than our prices at most stores. Separate Trousers. Black Diagonal Trousers to match coats and vests $3, $4, $5, $6 and $7. Neat Striped Worsted Trousers in light and dark colors, worsteds in neat, genteel patterns—stripes and checks— and gray and brown striped cheviots. Single or double breasted. Value $14. Sale price $10. Blue and Men’s Suits at $12.00—P!"¢,2n4 wool ribbed suits, single or double breasted. Rough cheviot suits in blue and black and fancy worsteds—sin- gle or double breasted. Value $15. Sale price $12. Men’s Suits at $15, $18 & $20 — Fine fancy worsteds, hard finished or rough, long yarn Bannock- burns, handsome imported worsteds; made up in single and double breasted sack style, elegantly trimmed and tai- lored. Suits that demand from $20 to $30 anywhere else. Prince Albert Coats and Vests. At $12— prince Albert coats and vests, elegantly tai- lored, perfect fitting, fipe serge lining. Value $15. Sale price $12. ‘ At $14—prince Albert coats and vests of fine im black diagonal, facing satin piped, fine quality Value $18. Sale price $14. At $15—silk-faced Oxford Vicuna and black unfin- uahed porsied Prince Albert coats and vests, cut, made and trimmed tailors’ coats and vests at $25. Sale many Tite SACROE Bere Hi 2 cheviot and cassimere trousers, $2.50 up to $8, Store Open Evenings Until 9 o’Clock. Saturday Until 11 o’Clock. Guarantee Clothing Company, yerown 127th Street and 3d Avenue. 8d Ave. & 59th St. ported ining, B.AltmandGo. Boys’ Clothing, in Spring and Summer Styles. ‘ Norfolk, Vest and Double-breasted Suits of Worsteds, Cheviots and Serges. Sailor and Russian Blouse Suits in a variety of materials, Reefers, Covert Cloth Top Coats. Tam o’ Shanter, Yecht and Golf Caps of Woollen and Wash materials. Domestic and Imported Straw Hats, Shirt Waists of Fancy Percale and White Muslin. Blouses of Cheviot and Madras, Mercerized, and Butcher Linen. Eighteenth Street, Nineteenth Street aud Sixth Avenue, Three Wonderful Piano Values, CAPVERTISE FOR Cooks and Waiters! THROUGH Worla Wants gh for three regiments is, yoke back, cut full to wear, sizes 6 to 14—-real Sunday World Wants Work; ;

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