The evening world. Newspaper, December 21, 1903, Page 8

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» Gown, and then came Walter. oar iS HS US CUEST LF \ ad | thin Three Days Three of Ty- nan’s Ghildren Have Died, An- other Is Mortally Ill and Wife Is-in Danger. LEP FEVER AND + - DIPHTHERIA TO BLAME. +4 ' Mother Wore Herself Out Nursing Little Ones and Dread Disease Now Has Her; 4 in Its Grip. Boarlet fever and diphtheria combined ‘three days have caused the Jeath of three children belonging to Baward Tynan, of the Alex- wwenue station. Now the srief- ed man is quarantined in his h do and expecting at any t to have the dootors tell him bis wife, who has the fever, can- ot live, | ‘The first and youngest child. Eugene, scarlet fever several weeks and three days later, Margaret, a older, was attacked by the most form of diphtheria, Edward, ten years old, was the next to be taken ‘The last is the only one alive, and there} fot thought to be the silghtest hope lor him, quickly got a grasp on her system. BLIGHTED HOPES MADE HIM END LIFE His Examination for a Den- Swallowed Carbolic Acid. Joseph Schwett was not satisfied with being @ mere mechanic and with living in a two-room tenement on the third floor of No. 827 Madigon street. He wanted to risa ubove his surroundings so that his wife and two children could talk to their friends about his struggle from poverty to affluence. So he began to ‘West Forty-second street. That was two years ago, when Schwett was thirty years old. Until the past few duys Schwett slowly but surely climbed nearer his goal. In the spring he would have got his diploma. But {t was an up-hill fight. Schwelt found it hard to worl at his trade by Gay and go to school by night. He never complained, though, and when the first examinations came last week the went to his task in the same brave spirit he had shown throughout his two : | years of study. Somehow the examinations were more difficult than before, and when Schyelt received his report the word “failed,” written In black ink, blotted out all the ambition he ever had. It was no use, he reagoned. He was handicapped by poverty to begin with. There would be no dental office, no new home; nothing tut a steady grind at his trade. ‘Then he gave way to tho firat weak- ness. He drank carbolic acid. His wife, Bessie, found him on the floor. He was taken to Gouverneur Hospital, where he died last night. norant of the misfortune that had come When Joseph Schwett Failed in 3 tist’s Diploma He Promptly! study dentistry in a dental college in| J {3HE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 21/4000, ZEELAND ARRIVES TO-DAY. ‘ Steamship Brings Steerage Pasken- gers of the Kroonland. The Zeeland was sighted off Nan- ue and will arrive ‘the victims fot an hour, the physician restored them to consciousness. The family had gone to bed, leaving a big fire in the kitchen range. All the dampers were closed and the gas from the stove filled the rooms, FIVE OVERCOME BY GAS. Entire Family Unconscious from Kiteohen Range Fames, Jacod Zhiar, his wife and three chil- Gren were overcome by coal gas in thelr | ——<—<— home at No. 7i Mangin street early to-| FROZEN FIGHTING FIRE. | > is bringing the aay, | CARTHAGE, N. Y., Dec, 21.—Unusual CERO EAs SOUr Anes Other tenants smell: | rred at ueenstown iMeulties beset the Fire Tenartment | ed the gas when bs The thermome- | ¥ got through the and when t arrived here last LOWEST PRICE HOUSE FIRST-CLASS GOODS. | JORDAN MORIARTY @ H fut 25tx| 155,157 and 159 East 23d St. [actu § @—CURISTAAS SUGGESTIONS AT MARVELLOUSLY LOW PRIGES ae We are offering some very strong inducements for next few days ! Ry which are well worth taking advantage of. For instance: ¢ OPEN EVERINGS omppw it ry an Saddle-Seat Arm Rockers— fh Like illustration, in golden oak, highly polished, regular ¥ price $5.00; special... $2.89 Desks—Like design, in oak, finely //5 » polished, with 4 drawers and} compart- shelves, value $8; spec al, Mahogany Tete-a-Tete/|(s $9.99 4 class passengers | f AM f | In the last hurry and rush of Christmas | 1] Give a Man a Scarf that is Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, | Thursday CHRISTMAS Hurrv-Time Is Here Now, Sure Enough Have you noticed how smoothly and pleasantly shopping goes at WANA- MAKER'S? Fiverybody says it’s the busiest |{) store in Greater New York, and certainly we are doing the largest business we ever knew. System does it—long experience, and profiting by it; care for every detail of the customers’ comfort; stocks intelligently, almost scientifically arranged. drawn upon. week, for comfort, for satisfaction, to get things quickly, get the best, and pay the least Come to WANAMAKER’S, as Cruikshank, plain white, or plain black, if you are afraid to choose colors for hin. Today there’s a special opportunity for such nice and diplo- matic selection, as well as a money saving, too. ‘ English and Folded Squares of self-figured white and black silks, to tie in either four- in-hand or ascot Bhape—scaris that you proval. J Store Closes at 7 o'clock. Handsome Books forChrist- mas gifts. And those who join the Library Club have nothing to pay before Christmas. We offer you the opportunity to make a most useful, beautiful and appropriate Christmas gift without the outlay of a dol- lar—an offer that will be quite acceptable at this time, when the purse is heavily A month after Christmas Mother and father have been devoted | Mrs, Schwett sald this morning that —Finely polished, with uphol- ments, value short their nursing, but the woman's | her husband had not taken polson, that router ree ‘ t Th $6. 00: s ecial would expect to pay adollar for—each in a een Counter, near elevator. was unequal to the shock of |e died from overstudy. Her twa babies Mioseig ce (URI y See Ca Enes se epee neat Christmas box, for 55c. i . three of her children. and the} enping on the bed, laughed aloud, tx Chairs springs, value $15; $3. 60 Raninvatseel alti Mi > : you begin on small monthly payments. The members of our Book Club run into the thousands. Every year we save them money in printing, illustrating and binding on account.of the large number of volumes we have published at one time. illustrations, and “getting fifty sets of books cost as much as if you printed a thousand sets ; so, on our large editions we save our Club members from one-third to one-half. All of the frontispieces are full-; illustratio: colored by hand in aquarelle—such Tas Usually a) pe only in hooks that sell from $10 to $25 a volume, There are fulrpage illustrations by such famous artists ailthorpe, Taylor, Freer, Merrill and‘ Dielman. The paper is a pure, white wove stock, spe- clally made for these editions—very light, but opaque to prevent the type showing through. There are seven sets in ‘all, Irving, Thackeray, Balzac and Dumas, which are bound in dark red; Carlyle, Eliot and Hugo, which are bound in dark blue, half morocco,, with crush buckram sides and gold tops. We will send you these books on ap- This will enable you to decide with the books themselves in front of you. secure the chance to inspect the books leis- urely, it isnecessary for you to write or call at the store immediately, for the time is The plates, ready” to print To Easy Chair Optimism. man {s nearly crazy, to them so near to Christmas time. ou tied or tees eo) 2 —— a ith ree Side Tables—tike cut, ir ernis-Marti “i * ] i ik i i ! with re Si i; tnis-Martin Music Cabinet: Nothing like the ca: ~ i y pole ~Like design, with dainty decora- MY | A Pair of Suspenders cesses of Pept Chair to shilges a cheatitl A) oa spell tions, patent doors, sliding shelves, nicely boxed for half a dollar. A neat and || after-dinner view of life. The cares of the hie 5 mi aris Polished, |* French bevel mirror "$12.85 || serviceable gift for a man that can scarcely day take flight, and the white-winged dove NEW BRIDGE ON LONG-MISSING SON top, ype $15; special, SK special at. Leatherette Library Couches, be equalled for the price! The variety to || Of Peace coos pick from includes every kind a man could some busy friend a —send him an arm-c: softly. air fo: If you want to do partioulanly good turn r Christmas. 4 nf ad e like cut, with heavy oak frames, bes| wish; and some have particularly handsome Choose it from this splendid stock, the : ys Combina- z handles, aCrin 4 ‘ EGET \ plen ; as gy Combina- | a as Prings, mad trimmings. 50c, amplest and best in the city: ; . Mollenhauer and Party|Edward Lancaster, Who Left) \¥ tion, in oak An r| Bisiie wy eo ain If you want better sorts, we have more || jAgieather pase Chalre) | Arm and Easy Chalra, in ‘from. Williamsburg Be-| Home Nineteen Years Ago, Is| 2 voor, sma A leceeet| where at about § SS nie ae #) {| kinds to show than you'll have time to look Revcod «frame | Lenther| stutfed frames and’ wood ef i; ir to His Father’s Estat miriér on WA our special... ..« fe aan MH! at. gekers at $15 to $27. | frames, at $20 tn $125. re Daylight—First Regular) Heir to His Father’s Estate,| \yp top. ttrawers, ae , Broafwey and Ninth street. ArmChairsat$25to $175. | Fourth floor, Truck M&kes Round Trip. Worth $100,000, Gf}compa rt: Ghia, Parlor Ch ; ; ts; val its, i ae B 518; special, finished in ma ¢ in mahogany fin- ‘Without! mtich ado the new Williams- Bridg@. was at 6.30 o'clock this opened to daylight travel. An jour and.ahalf before that time, by ission, a delivery wagon to cross from the Manhat- sige,,and about the centre of the ucture’it met an automobile owned \ME°Mulfenhauer, the sugar refiner, 1B; from the Williamsburg side. the trip over the bridge the sugar is friends were accompanied ‘W.)W, Shetield, Superintendent of Y ide it was ned round and driven back to Will- enthusiastic persons awaited There is a fortune waiting for Bdward Lancaster, formerly of Paterson, N. J., if he cares to come after {t. He has been missing for nineteen years, and his mother does not know if he {s alive or dead ‘ William Lancaster left home when he was twenty-one years of age and appar- ently roamed all over the country, for | # he was heard from at various times in | fA different places until 1897, Then he was in San Francisco, if the son {alive he must appear within a certain time. Otherwise he will be declared legally dead. ish, finely pol- 24 hogany, highly polished, with upholstery tap- estry seats, good springs; value $10.00; special, ished, with up, holstered tapestry” seats; strong springs; value $9.00; special, $5.99 4! Desk Chairs, like design, in ma-ty hogany finish, handsomely carved and GW polished; actual worth $5 358 5 Credit Given on Easy Terms. —In golden oak, Piano polish fin- } best springs, really worth $50.00; Christmas. Week Sale of USED PIANOS Just a month ago we stirred up New York City, with one of the greatest offerings of Pianos ever made anywhere. Since that time we MThip,, Oret, ‘regular truck to| Ecward Lancaster, be father, died in 39; special... sees have taken in exchange a great many pianos. These have been gone was ownel by I. 8. Remson. 2/1. 4194 up in the Jersey courte because Ladies’ Desks over thoroughly in our repair shop, and put in excellent condition for this Pre-Christmas movement, which we announce for tomorrow. the pianos listed below are splendid bargains, every one, and the last great WANAMAKER Peer ss a present of| There Is nome of the family left ‘ut Christmas }ish, with drawers ¢ Our lack of storage space compels us to make ridiculously low prices, in many cases, juminating’ the bridge, no foot passen-| Willams mother, whe Srnig leiak snd Things {and compart- and decisive reductions on all, in order to find homes for the instruments which we tool meh atlowed onthe bridge until! oo wor newa of her beent om po tocgerprercares arsine pias rename Way He tas uC : only as an accommodatien to those who wished to buy our Chickering and other fine pianos. i Policemam Plays Joke. — iNustration, beautifully polished and handsomely Seca Below $5100) ante), So, tomorrow, if yoy will sacrifice a bit of sentiment, you may secure an instrument P, fae ene a Sibi a eaplever BRIDE'S TROUSSEAL covered in best quality velour, dainty colorings, very $ Regular of musical quality far superior to what would be possible in a new piano at the'price; for opening ot the police lines, whith mitre EFieht had been drawn across c¢, Before the start Police- ell, of the Fortleth Pre- t, who &tood shivering at the en- ca, In a’ confidential way jokingly a number of enthusiasts that the t twenty men to get across were to t BO cents apiece on reaching WiIL- pore... , "Ap a result of the policeman's tip, When the bars were lowered there was 4 @0-ae-you-plerse race across the struc- BURNED BY CANDLE Miss Ida Hutchings Drops the Light on Floor of Closet While Showing Wedding Dress to | |12Ist St. & 3d Ave, Chatham Square. | The list follows: | Upright Pianos Sale of the year. Py And the offering is made the m Upright Pianes Chambers, was $250, now $65 Chickering, was $450, now $285 Grand Pianos Chickering Concert Grand, $900, now $220 2 Galckerings, were $450, now $285 each Kohler & Campbell, was $250, now Gabler, was $800, now $185. Hardman, was $350, now $235 Sterling, was $800, now $185 Gordon, was $275, now $165 was ore acceptable by the easy Christmas terms. Square Pianos Steinway & Sons, was $509, now $125 Crow & Christophef, was $225, now Weber, was $400, now $55. Weber, was $450, now $120 Bradbury, was $350, now $65 2 Chickering Concert Grands, wure $900, now $175 each Chickering Baby Grand, was $750, now $375 | Mason & Hanilin Parlor ttiretexi@ the oprinters, after thelr m and a half run, discovered that the leged payment of the 60 cents apiece was ‘simply a fake. y Gitls Walk Acros. ay 9 Myst hour of the opening of t for regular trafic about 300 1 ers crossed from Manhattan _ end ‘about 1,500 from the Willlamaburg wide. In phe same time only six vehicles paid toll The; volume of traffic in- Greased ih tho ext hour, and the: About 3.00 podestriuns, Including a ume of shopeiris, who, a ¢ the stron gale blowing in their tramped. ong the south roadway from Williams- Bacon & Raven, was $275, now $25 Bacon & Raven, was $275. now $40 Sitek & Hints, was $250, now $25. Gronpeeln & Fuller; was $300, now ‘5. Peton eran gato noe ans wan $800, now $32 on, Was ys} , now bs Chickering Grand, was $650, now Wing & honey $250" fies $60 . 5Be5 Jennings, was $250, now $65 OHN WANAMAKE Royal, was $225, now $125 Schubert, was $250, now $125 Bradbury, was $350, now $140 Haines, was $350, now $185 Wagner & Sons, was $225, now $100 Heintzman, was $225, now $05 Stadie & Sons, was $225, now $125 2 Campbells, were $190, now $165 Friend. % Fire to-day destroyed the entire trousseau of Mise Ida Hutchings, of No. 208 West One Hundred and Twenty- fourth street, who ls to be married on Jan. 28. She has been collecting " for @ year. ‘The trousseau was in a closet of her thome. Miss (Hutchings went to the closet with @ lighted candle to take out her wedding dress to exhibit to a friend, and the lace on the dress was Ignited, The younges!t! dropped the candle and hastily closed the door. By the time the fremen arrived al the trousseau was burned. Mr. Benjamin Hutchings, father of the bride-to-be, was ill with lumbago when e fire stanted and had to be carried Broadway. 4th Ava, 9th & 10th Sts ere was a jarge force of policemen on duty at the bridge, and cs there w no provision made | for those at the cowers and sca main span had dectded e duty was detail cared for, but they 121st Street: Chatham Sa.: 2226 to 2234 Third Ave.}193 to 205 Park Row. da ly cold Jo! all nk ert, fearing ‘that from the fiat by Policeman Canter, of | T Rs . : ms . SRR ere rece ine, structur the West One Hundred and Twenty-ftth wo Establishments. ETELY FU 1 334 tor the {Numination of the new atrest station, to escape suffocating from $ 123 ee 9 the @ Will be closed at nigt the smoke EVERYTHING ror HOUSEKEEPING, EVERYTHING RELIABLE. | Carpets, Rags, Bedding, Ranges, Stoves, Etc. UE “$200 ‘etly “athe wo ine V Damask Parlor Hult, so Ber Mirror, French ne Velour or Darn It, 5 pieces: g veh © Table (orasg eet); handsome Lanip and Globe; pair of handaor fental Rug. 4 F} Rocker; 2 pairs Curtains, oak OT t Sewing Machine, with 5 years’ guarantee, DINING-ROO! oak cane apa ru; oak Dining Table; decorated Eni ‘Tea some Table Cover; 15 yards Matting. i 0OM:—Golden Oak iy And Washstand: <lecant brass trimmed ates! enamelled Bed: woven wir . a 4 Printed in Monday morn- ing’s World, World Wants reach» 3,000,000 M.— Bot; Cane = op Mattresses; ir feather. Pitiowy; Comfortable; 1 oak Chi 12 yards ¥ Rugiish Totlet Bet. 10 pieces: IOFLESN. “Gale Kitchen Closet: lane Gore; Kitchen people, Read the list; Ran or Refrigerator; 8 Kitchen Chaira; pleces of Tinware; Kitchen Table; 10 : ry fs Olleloth. WEALSOFURNISHAFLATATSOD | (QUA WEEK OPENS AN ACCOUNT | Send for List of Goods. Freight and R, R:fare allowed on all out-of-town orders, Open Evenings Till 10 o'Clock, ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF ADVANCE STYLES OF Foulard Silks, S=INCLUDING A NUMBER OF ORIGINAL s DESIGNS, Substantial CHRISTMAS Until | Presents. CHRISTMAS. | COWPERTHWAIT & SONS, |= 12Ist Street and 5d Ave. Bituations— \ CHAM 0. sees Female +») 87] Summer Reports, Situations —Mall i Help—Female Melp Male Houses, Room: 19 pen Evenings Park Row, near cae Sunday World Wants Work Wonders.

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