The evening world. Newspaper, July 5, 1904, Page 7

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KAISER TO HONOR {70 PAY CIVWDEND (ADRIFT 1X BOAT, “HELLO” MAN SES ~ SLOCUM URGES} ON THIRD AV STOCK} BULLET IN HEAD) YOU THRO’ PHONE New York City Railway An-|A Skiff Floats Into Jersey City He’s in St. Louis and You're in nounoes that 11-4 Per. Cent.| 00k in Which’Is the Dead} New York, but He Desoribes Will Be Paid for the Quarter! Body of a Young Man, Appar-| You, Just the Same—Yes, on July 30, ently a Suicide, He’s a Wonder. German Emperor Orders Consul In New York to Send Names of Three Who Did Most He- Tole Work In Disaster, Official announcemnt was made to-day A Pound-Bottomed rowboat drifted tt ae sade ata aol that on July 9 the frst dividend rental| into the dock at, the foot of Gates ave-| | : world acs edeo, B'S po etl to the stockhoklers of the Third Avenup|"U® Jertey Clty, to-day. Some men] 1B NON OUie or On enone Railway Company will be paid by the| WN were at work on the pier were) lion of (te Nelmwope ine Supe New York City Railway Company, The) *@rtled (0 find the boty of & young) ee TT ne holder can et Gividend will be 144 per cent, for the/m™an Tying 9 he bottom of ihe ilttle | OO re and de other romerka: quarter, craft, There was a bullet hole in his bgt re and er right temple and a revolver lay by his 8 Becher ba Ppt rye peed alle, The police were notified and the ie Lakota Ke Sean goatee now the New York City Railway, The | P0dy waa removed to Highes's morgua, | 08 VEN “ bait “3 bs 4 vel lease began April 80, 190, for $9 years,| The man was qbout twenty-three} MAt Mm Et louie ant’ ae . oo the terma being that the holders of the| Youre old, Bifeet 8 inches tall and | Mope0! i ove ; brag any $40000,000 of Third Avenue stock were to| Weighed 199 pounde. THe was lint com. |Wuestion inet war aswel of hin over aan te Ret tear veare only the] blemion and elean shaven, He wore a|'*, lone-dimance telephone, even to Ret Income above expenses and fixed! ilk ponges shirt, biack diagonal coat] Aline Any niece ot walle wae charges, After the fret four years| 4nd trousers, fine underwear and new | Wo) ie wo in treet Of We tener the ot era to|patent leather shoes, The shoes bore “ ser Proed cant yor annum, and after te name of Marshall & Ball, of New-| | Th* Inventor wae Allowed to fadle 's ‘ner cent, | atk, ‘There was a label on the cont on he telephone until he eaid that he ranteed | which the names could not be plainly had his man in St. Louls at the other '- | read ‘The name of the maker seemed |C° Then Currie, who writer funny Slto be something like “A, Engeloder.” | things for the paper, arked st. Louts The words “merchant tailor’ were de- What color his hair waa, and got the sl clpberable, but the address jad bean | 4 hary Anewer that he hadn't any 3 m away. In writing was the name| 3 y, the poet, had tha various the person for whom the coat had | Articles of clothing he wore described ST. MARY’S CROSS MAY BE AWARDED TO THEM. Mies Smith, Mrs. White, Miss MoKibbon and Marie McCann Mentioned for the Brave Oeeds They Accomplished. ‘The German Emperor is determined to], feward the herole women who risked , {thelr lives to save passengers on the }@eneral Slocum. Ho has cabled the \@erman Consul in this city for the ‘ames of three nurses whom he may honor for their courage and unseifish- ‘mess. ‘The Kalser was greatly shocked when pe jhe received the first news of the horror. H hes been made, This looked Nke “A. Frins | With startling exactness, even the price As the head of the Lutheran Church | gor : ee Ture | Chfaky.” Dut it was very indistinct de pald Miny er for them, and as a * [and as the ruler of the German people|to pay tie «and which de- {On the label was the date “Dec. 11, 1902." | Climax to the performance the man in Kis interest was great. ‘The ancestors] Pressed the. Venue and Metro-| pegiden the revolver thirty cartridges | St Louis read a story from the maga- , lef nearly every Slocum victim had heen | Poulan # were found In the boat, aine pase of The Rrening World whten his subjects, He cabled a message of ee qeerible. suiner at Hlurrabe 44d im leondolence and asked for the list of weirs: vane exrake and Time. neg gy ee By BB JUMPED FIVE STORIES, LIVES, | Tosie "st 1% Seti skoscr’ st \eompleted. <yrereiemne ‘| Everybody, including Kelly, who is Hospital Sw 2 Amased at Old/the hardest man ever to convince, ‘Wanted Names of Heroes, , Then came the request for the names lor the heroes who figured in the dis- Qater, and this list {s being prepared for the German Consul by Col, J. Wea- Tey Jones, president of the United States Volunteer Life-Saving Corps, It ) Will be submitted for the approval of ‘Coroner O'Gorman before it is cabled to Berlin. But without waiting for this last re- quest to be attended to the Kaiser has }@aked for the names of the three brav- Qt nurses, Vitality. agreed that it wae very, very wonder: 1 ee Uy the rake of the office sestared Robert Chapman, sixty-one years old, | that the thing came in general use he was going ta haye hia telephone re- NTO h All ANCE of No. 2% East Fifty-third street, at: | N° 4A* fone 10 Nate nie eo ventor, tempted to kill himself this afternoon ew having fooled everybody P 4 by jumping from the window of his Waly, fealiy cerueees satelite toes 0 ~claga ven- fiat on the Afth floor tiiloquiam, and then everpbody looked i 1. |+ Though his legs and arms were brok- | foolish Heat Victim Was Being Con | rrrratna ned recived invert ine | the, teleropephons, man, as, teen veyed to St. Mary’s Hospital ha showed wonderful vitality, and re- | Stems, fn different cities during the lagt in BI { nd sho k | mained conscious until an ambulance ew montn, oes ea . neee + in Brooklyn al Ok 18 | arrived trom Flower Hospital. He waa) pitting his voice In the receiver tha y tabse te toe heaeicdd, Shice thé BATS Pile Tikpossibte to detect the Imposition Likely to Prove Fatal to Him. | clans marvetied at his still beg altve, — The Consul submitted the request to Mealth Commissioner Darlington, but ‘whe latter la not ready yet to name the Courageous trio, It is a delicate com- Mission and Dr, Darlington does not Want to see an injustice done, In the long list of heroines on that @ay there are four that stand out pre- @minently, according to the officials, Qn@ the three names will probably @elected from these four, Three @urses and one an immigrant girl, who was & scarlet fever convalescent on Worth Brother Island, Fifteen boys and young men were ar- ¢ Jefferson Market Court {stole in the SICK MAN ENDS HIS LIFE, An ambulance carrying = Alfred| It was reported to the police of thi Brackit, forty-two years old, of No. | Alexander avenue station this after 1% Broadway, Brooklyn, from Uttea| noon that Cerl Mornginweg, of No. And Atlantic avenues, where he was| Beet One Hundred and Agadir my overcome by heat, to the St Mary's | streot, committed @ulcide by drink- ch case. 4 of t) Hompita, was run into by an aephal Giditec hed been wien lor: The fines meee pald'in il'**bes truck this afternoon and the patient ‘ 2 and the driver wore thrown out in the | ———— — mreet and severely hurt, The shock will probably result fatally to the beat vietim. The ambulance waa in charge of Dr Doyle agd nad protested but half « bieck from Utica and Atlantte avenues when the truck craghed into it. The Offorts of the ea) ambulance was completely wrecked. knee deep in the water and passed] tte oecupant was buried under the the bodies of the dead and dying tO| debrie and it took some time to dig arms of those ready to f@/ him: out. Jos¢ph MeMurray, the driver the ambulance. waa pitched out on head and bad bruised. of . Mra. Superintendent of the} his Ivy cut 5 Melp, rae, did noble work in] After the wreckage cleareg ditecting the labors of her subordin- | YAY DT, ,Dorls Sot SB Sarrege tee tes, The third is Miss McKibbon, the] pital. young woman In charge of the tele- a Phone central at the island. She fe a Rurse, but Was detailed as telephone GAYNOR 10 VISIT —_———— The fourth, although not & nurses Marie McCann-waded out into the wa-| Announces that He Will Make to Rer neck and rescued drowa- Operator, She saw the burning boat nd brought the police, fire and health je he a Ona helpless w i, Dogtreu! ofan bed bye Parsonal Inspection of Bow- O@Mcers to the scene, It waa due to fer efforta that Dr. Darlington ‘was * able to reach the island within thirty minutes after the boat was beached. Brave Marie McCann. \ + “4 e ates Gu‘ Retenpa haSate | ery Hostelry Whioh the Police (Y IC 1) G Wateh, ’ evidence serve any 4 ai, im ay bestow upon them. - 6 it, Mary's Croag, ROOSEVELT NURSE SAILS, Mrs. Ledwith Has Served Prest- ab dent's Fanily a Half Century, a pa saree tagged ‘bench One of the happiest passengers on the] this afternocn when he heard argument Lombardia. which sailed for Maly to- and sqping an injunction restrain. flay, was Mrs Mary Ledwith, who for the police from Partie Interference eaere| A Baily Conlection c= SEE | Candy Caled Chaning bmn fatter cha eae Porticulart desirable “aller Sinmer” Made bp the makers of i aaah te ‘Dleers Pepsin Saw" Sulereg, Mrs: Leawith 16 eovencraine| than wos of evsiag the law eatoreed.” SORES®ULCERS rice pomuarccasence| Choir esl Recommendation SHOW A BAD CONDITION CF THE BLOOD When the blood is in bad condition a bruise, cut, ecratch, or any slight injury to the flesh, is to decome an ugly Dokisg sore or ulcer, Som a boil, blister or pimple is of a | from the effects of mala- to nd I then began 8. 8. rial sickness, debility or fi afr, bat Ba Attack | some old chronic trouble, began ee) oom as Twos over that the impurities break “** a Bote. tomer tatsonstie eather parte the body, Thee ia ‘Five - cents \ extrem: or of the , is always some mor! ] - ‘2 u — unhealthy matter in the ifood that kee: Sts sore disehargi te 7 : $ worth of Chiclets -now—= be gotten out before it will heal. Washes and salves, Yo-day—may save you the severe pangs of they do uch teeth tha eda wy indigestion To-morrow eating ulcer or open, discharging sore. Often soothing and helpful, will not A\ all tho better kind of stores. Retal SowMeepers supphied by any Wholesale Oruggne’ @ Conlectioner. JORBERS SUPPLIND BY F: HL PLEBR & ©0., Inc., Phitadeipait , Or L. Lowenthal, 415 West 39th Street, New York eee Eee ee , THE WORLD: TUESDAY: EVENING, JULY 6, 1904. om Saks & Company ae The July Clearance Sale of Summer Suits, Coats and Skirts f Suits and Costumes for Women. A representative collection of the season's best models of white or colored linens and kindred summer fabrics. The variety also includes sizes for misses and small women. Formerly $24.00 to $29.00. At $10.00 Formerly $34.00 to $36.00. At $15.00 Formerly $39.00 to $46.00. At $20.00 Formerly $52.00 to $75.00. At $30.00 Tailored Suits for Women. Of Linen in tan, white or blue. Coat and blouse effects with plaited skirt. The collection also affords sizes for misses and small women, Value $9.00 to $12.C0. Special at $6.90 Taffeta Silk Suits. Formerly $25.00 to $40.00. At $25.00 At $29.00 Formerly $43.00 to $69.00, The July Clearance Sale of Shirt Waists for Women. A collection of fivg hundred Waists which have served the manufacturer as sample models. The fabrics include white Silk Mull, French Lawn and Fine Linen, richly elaborated with laces and em- broideries. The Waists are offered At Qne-Third hess Than Regular Prices. IN ADDITION : Waists of White Lawn, with front of tucking and embroidery. Value 75¢. At 50c. Waits of White Lawn, yoke of embroidery and tucking. Value $1.00. At 69c. Waists of White Lawn, with lace insertion and tucking, or with wide embroidery front and side plaits ; a large variety of distinctive models. Value $1.50. At 98¢. Waists of White Lawn, with dainty embroidery insertions and tucking in several pleasing models. Value $2.50. At $1.50 The July Clearance Sale af > Negligee Garments for Women. Negligees, Kimonos and Matinees of Silk, Crepe de Chine, Chally, Flannel, Swiss or Lawn, simply orrichly elaborated with lacesand ribbons, at prices which have been reduced one-third and qne-balf- The july Clearance Sale of Parasols. variety of effects, not a few of which are exclusive. The handles are of natural woods and sterling sil- have been greatly reduced. 3.95 to $6.25, At $2.95 pee 1§0 to 12.75, At $33 Formerly $15 to $22.50 At $7.50 The July Clearance Sale. of Summer Silks. Corded Wash Silkg, in an excellent variet of col- ors and designs. Vaiue 39c. At 28 Figured Silk and lrinen Tokios, in natural pongee. Value $1.00 At 49 Shirt Waist Silke, printed warp and chine effects in variety of colors. Value 75¢ At 49 White Habutai Wash Silks, 27 inches wide. Valug 50c. At 35c The July Clearance Sale of Ribbons. Linen effects, Ombres, fancy Gauze and checked Taffetas, 4 to 6 inches wide, in varioug colors. Value 35c. to 59c. At 23c. Moire Taffeta or Liberty Sash Ribbons, 6% to 7 inches wide, in pink, blue or black, and foreign Novelty Ribbons, 4 to 6 inches, in warp print, linen plaid, dotted linen, fancy gauze and other effects. Value 48c to 98c. At 39c. The July Clearance Sale of Laces and Embroideries. Venise, Valenciennes, Imitation Cluny and Net All- over Laces. Value 75c and $1 per yd. At 39c Circular Collars of Venise Lace in white or ecru. Embroidered Linen Collars in white, cream or blue. Value $3-25. At $5.65 Acollection of high-grade parasols in a diversified ver. To effect an immediate disposition the prices Women. Black Taffeta’ in a variety of distinctive model Formerly $19.50 to $26.00, At $41.00 Formerly $35.00 to $45.00. At $16.50 Formerly $49.00 to $62.00. At $23.00 Separate Skirts. Pedestrienne Skirts of Panama Cloth in black, blue or brown, fifteen gores with side plaits. Value $8.25. At $5.90 Pedestrienne Skirts of English Tweed in gray mixtures; side plaited model. ; Value $5.00. At $2.95 Wash Dresses for Girls. Of Chambray, Gingham, Percale or Lawn, in suse pender, sailor, blouse, Russian hlouse or guimpe effects. Sizes 4 to 12 years. é Formerly $1.75 to $6. At 95c., $1.65 & $2,95 The July Clearance Sale of . Trimmed Hats for Women. One hundred distinctive and exclusive models. Heretofore $10.50 to $18. At $5.00 with white or black band. Heretofore $2.25 to $3.50. At 98c Heretofare 95c. to $1.50. At 59¢ for women. A variety of styles. Formerly 98c. to $2.50. At 50¢ A very large collection in various effects at Greatly Reduced Prices. The July Clearance Sale of Wash Dress Fabrics. Twenty thousand yards of the season's most fa- vored fabrics at prices reduced almost one-half. Printed Satin Band Mull, Imported Dimity or Scotch * Zephyr. Formerly 22c, 25c. and 30c. At 12%e Imported Mercerized White Madras, Oxford of Marseilles in fancy weaves, Linen Suitings and 36- inch Natural Linen. Formerly 32¢,, 38c., 45c. As 196 Dimity, Batiste, Mull and Lawn in plain, corded or printed effects. Value 12%4c. and I5c. At 7#e¢ The July Clearance Sale of Summer Dress Fabrics. Plain and fancy Voiles, Etamines, Bereges, Twine Cloths, Batistes and kindred weaves. at Heretofore 85c. and $1.25. At 48c. Scotch Tweed, light weight, 56 inches wide, in light grey and fancy mixtures. Heretofore $1.00 and $1.25. Ar 68c, Plain Mohair Brilliantine, 40 inches wide, in black, grey, red, brown or navy, or fancy weaves in black. Heretofore 50c. At 35¢. The July Clearance Sale of Back Combs for Women. Fancy combs in amber, white or imitation shell,” mounted and jewelled in various combinations of white and colored stones in clever designs. Value $3, $3.50, $4 and $5. At $1.95 The July Clearance Sale of Garments for Infants and Children. Infants’ and Children’s Long and Short French Hand-Made Dresses of Persian Lawn Heretofore, $7.75, $11.75 and $17.75 Special at $4.95 7.50 and 10.50 Coats and Reefers of Pique, Silk, Allover Lace or fancy wool Fabrics, Infants’ Long Coats, Hats, Caps and Bonnets at one-half former prices: rce Sale of Handkerchiefs for Women. Handkerchiefs of Linen, with scalloped hem- stitched or lace edge, or plain hemstitched. “Value 25c. and 35c. At 19 Handkerchiefs of Linen, with white or colored em- broidery, hemstitched. “% Value 39¢. and 50c. At 3c.) 3 for $4. Value 65c. and 75c. At 59¢.,

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