The evening world. Newspaper, July 19, 1904, Page 4

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© ATWENTY-FOUR HOURS’ | +. Members of Seven Brass Bands, (: - Choruses Practice at Once y How all this talent was gathered on 1 ie When the Dutch butcher bought a <n bega! Q Brot Tike the siege of Port Arthur, I Cats and Rats and Little | Dogs, to Say Nothing of “th= Cops, Are Under the | Magic Spell. CONTINUOUS EVERY DAY. | Eight Orchestras and Three from “Parsifal” to Ragtime. This story tells of the tribula- tlons of those who live ina “musical” block in Yorkville. Is ‘this block worse than the one you live In? Bend in your opinion to the Musical Editor of The Evening World. All the dogs, cats, and even the rote (What run in and out of the delicate @en's cracker boxes, smile and look Pleasant along that block between First venue and Avenue A, on Fig: tag tathe street, and thereby hungs a weet, ail pervading, all burst of song and melody. Whatever there was savage in the roasts of the hosts of canines, felines and rodent# who stalk thie block has teen soothed utterly in this abode of Tausic, encompassed between two tower fag walls of tenements, Forty - four! pianos, twenty-three phonograph, } @leven violins, ten bass viols, fourteen conquering "cellos, seven flutes, (wo aithers, sik Dboes, three bass drums. nine snare | @rums and a score or more basoow whieh, howover, are not ‘cecognised by the Musical Uplon. This is the police) Mist of musical instruments on the block, and they ought to know, with @ sta Uon-house right under the windows. Savage Breasts Soothed, e Dlock Is u mystery, and, Mt ia al- 4, a source of anguish to somo tenadta in the neighborhood, There are some crusty persons whose souls do not Vibrate in harmony with these in- struments, piping thelr several tunes in divers keys. Harsh critics find dis in the crash) and of the ie medley. But go among the usicians themselves and you will not f a syllable of complaint. They wn it out with all the force and) indon of genius. As @ matter of fact, and the polivo Dear this oul, such Is the skill of eaoh | Individual verformer that his select id wudience hears none but his or at personal efforts, The young lady ith the bright golden hair and th soprano Voice, who accompanies herself ‘4 duplex aither, has an exclusive Vibratory piteh In the gir shaft of her home, three houses down from First @yenue, on the north side. As a foil there are three flutes and two snare drums operating on the sume shaft, but the language of the janitor, “the 4 has got them all skinned, and jonly for four pianos in the next house! Jyou hear her to Avenue A | According to the Janitor the blond is just in. training, Her try-outs range rom ‘Bedelia’ to “Cordelia,” with the pecasional interpolation of that good 2d melody, “Pypper Was Slot by o kertor Man,” “oh Little, bat Oh" There is a demure littie brunette a aif dozen houses down, suy the gosaips f the street, who operates on a ‘cello ind sings contralto. “Bhe ts little,” remarked a cynical felahbor, discussing the inusical block, | but, Ob, hell! The brunette does not work alone in the five-story building {trcluding her home, advised the same nic. Two oboes ru riot on the top ms, working one with each hand, A wngarian violinist completes the en- ie, with weird Improvisations, Across the street there is a quartet Who meet Louls in St. Louls twenty: seven times a day, and an Itallan on the floor below is purchasing stilettos, which he will gladiv hand over to Louls if he will extinguish the four per formers ie. , and the jauitor beats all manner | © strange harmony out of two snare i A few doors from the police station ‘there is a whole building given over to jdeviaing vuriations on that now popular itty “Any Raga?’ The police have evt-| ‘ @ that in this one building there are height phonographs, The owners of the Loy gig evidently bought out a_tob jot of “Any Rags? the extent of their wheesing reve: Further down the street “The Man Behind" is perpetually tn the back- | tong retreating day and night on en bas0os, two harmonicas and two eloire, |e A little variety is given to the) jusical outpourings from this apart- Ment-house, however, for « Ruasian| several charity institutions, Fentriloquist holds forth on the third Jett $5,000 to his stenographer and $10,000 to two faithful clerks who had Hven the Chinaman in the iniddie of /O°eh more than twenty years In his em- | A Musical Heathen Chinee. @ block iy musical, and while lis fel-| Ploy. chinks toll he beats lively accom-| iment on the tom-tom. The Chinas) an has a white wife. who is also 4 pusical. singing “Dreamland” in sevea| accumulated his fortune in the lumber ¥8. On the floor above two sist bn . ( veiled o AW amazing strains from a brace of sie bial dnat gipygi td bithers, accompanying thelr. grands Arron, Who Nad been. wih. her Bid ihr ‘logs "hy the Days of| since she was @ Mttlo girl, ‘They went with rare skill, if the qu ot} Bure pe ago, g Beals bee trite struc * ality of} to Eurepe two months ago, intending “Ihave no Zosllive beltets as to ths rearter, asserts the fat cop whose | leads through this lock. ut if the worst comes to the worst I have @ foretaste of pandemonium. 1| ry Bhin'¢ mind that Swede singing ‘Th Jan with the Overalls.” 1 dant eon le with one stri d “ ‘Hla Pa Gave Sis Lite foe aer ho bought a fut Playing “the Teast “Ross” of “aureee, im singing to his own music in at it was th to feel sore. is , Only a few nights t rang with the ery ot| all got out on the jump. | PPSOS OOO evuntry,” but when the Jap in the cor-| | OO 4490S OOOOH HH8 i —s POPES DOOD PES GO + E+ eH ee FHS 56963 SC6-226 0429-00-24 66-42-9564 2-366-% PEEL VD ODDS DEVE E41 OE44HE 1499809 19494 9DHDGDIDDONED OL 26-1-0-1989O40 9069-9012 9G-104-4-0-004 4-0460-046-1660004 WALDORF SUICIDE LEFT $200,000 Miss Dolbeer, the San Francis- co Belle, Bequeathed Most of | Her Fortune to Her Life-Long ss Warren, Friend, Mi of Miss Bertha Marton Dolbeer, who lumped to her | story window tn the Waldorf Astoria on July 8, has just been opened in San Francisco dod by Mts terms the voune heiress leaves her entire estate of $2,000,000, with the uxeepiion of about $280,100, to her Ife-long friend and com- panion, Miss Etta Marion Warren. Miss Warren eo was a nfiuence of the hotel The will was | terday To Mise Warren tn casts, $40,000 Lumber the home and Dolbeer tn San residue of the estate not otherwise dis- posed of. Bequests to Relativen, About $125, records, for thf 18] tives and friends, and $80, ty inble Institutions tet | $50,000 be set aside for the erection of a mausoleum in C On the death of Misa Dolbeer's father about two year each to be gone a ¥ ber hi death of her fa baa cautloned must closely watch her cha ‘gs, else she might uy to hy In Europe M den notion to r New York but her dress and betore she the latter had climbed ont on and had leaped to the basemen aren way. Mies Delbeer’ to have voninit intends. She was fv throom after San Francisco Belle, 0) stiss Dolbeer was one of Sar cisco s most Margaret he contidence fe death of her young mistress, eral dave doctors kept her under + en mglancholy since the bout two weeks ymplained of the heat uly § Migs W windows at the er | Miss Dolbeer saw thorn tor them, Miss \. 1 H, Warren, a jes in this city. HITHER THE MAN IN THE OVERALL s fife Wont: TUESD. WHAT YON EAST 46TH STREET, BETWREN Pixs? aVenve 4x AVENUE 4.\CROND WATCHED |Objects to Women in PPLE DDE LEED IG AEE DDE DDE EEEDOD ES GOB EEG DEDEDE 1 4-98-68 O44 4O 4G 1044 141948 O94 ODOG 0D yy, Be pow ere DER His Old Age. OL MAN TOOK CARBOLIC. ACI Told the Watchman of a Lum- man had been around there early in the VERTZBERGER FLOWS ' Neeman Matthews. He found there a had contained carbolle acid. Matthews hurried the man to Rooge- velt Hospital, where he died soon after his arrival, He had nothing by which he could be identified. ‘The wetchman| in the lumber yard said that the old) evening asking for work, and com- ber Yard that He Was of No/ viainet that when a man got to be ay) Use in This Life Because of gid as he was there waa not much use of him living any longer, that no one Wanted to employ him and that his relatives and friends were tired of him. ——— | Few Young Vice.Presidents, With two exceptions there have been Groans from back of a lumber plie In no young men elected to the office of Hartman's yard, at Pittieth street and Vice-President of the United States. he becany man apparently seventy-two years old, Rhosovelt, who dying. By his side was a bottle which) = 6 Fivtes 2. BiANeS A PHONOGRAPHS | PiAno ~ PHOYQGRAPHS ALL. PHONOGRAPHS 12. VIOLINS UNDER THIS Roof Twelfth avenue, toeday attracted Po- These two execptions were John C. Breckenridge, who was thirty-six when ‘esident, and Theodore ‘ice- s forty-three. For Over Twenty Years DIAMOND DYES Have Been the They are Guaranteed to Make We ha and will answer free any questions abou ayaing. . fend samples of goods when free, DIAMOND DYES, Hurlington, Vt death from a ninth! was the only witness to Oo prostrated by it that opiates in her roome a offered for probate yea: | hequeathed $200,000 Dolheer & Carson | my" ke at par value, personal effects of Miss Franctseo, and all the 1s given to distant rela- The will discs Sypresa Lawn Cemetery ‘Sago he gave $10,000 to He also ear or more, Miss Dol- ther, Miss ond the physicians ren that she | arm herself las Dolbeat tok a fude| ‘et merica to live They cured a ult rt na been there) when Miss Dolbeer nm the afternoon ren opened the Mocca 269 caught on a col reach M ® mother wa tted wubcide by a fit of king young She oa tmoved Mr. Dolbee: ef wi he constant companion of his ye was seldom ‘arren attend which . ines halen tbe entertait ca a u leas cx geen without ber, M: | H This Folding 4 3 | Go Sielpe we fest en 4.3 parted for any Go-Cart. opportunity. carts, Peremptory Clearance Sale f{ Folding Go-Carts Third Floor. Mid-Summer clearance time finds us over. stocked with Folding Go-Carts, ductions placing them in easy reach of all makes them all the more desirable. sufficient time left this summer and fall in which to use them to best of advantage, Go-Carts such as these—priced the way these are priced—make bargains of value and interest mother who reads this announcement, Time, labor and energy saved the mother, com- fort and happiness for baby, and all coupled ee to ev with economy. These Prices Are designed to help out those parents who have so far failed to make the purchase of a If you need one, here’s your These clearance sale prices are only one-third the actual value of the Think—2,44 represents only one- third the price asked fqr the same style a week ago. So it is with all the ten examples. Everything in the department must go. Radical re. There's This Folding Go-Cart, This Folding Go-Cart, Gocunt 4.56 "oocan, 4,68 Trae 10,44 990000 FAVORITE HOME DYES FAST AND DURABLE COLORS & special department of advice, 3 gible. Direction book and 45 dyed samples Y LVENING, JULY'D9, 1904 ' i INSANE ELECTRICIAN Church Without Hats Addressed a Woman in the) The Rev. A. Ls Longley, of Asbury Park, N. J, Eighth Story of a Building at Saye (hat Tray Mad Borer May | Fifth Avenue and Forty-sec- Sey tear Waren 2| ond Street as Edison’s Widow FHS OST SS The Rev. A. L. Longley, of Trinity seenes one thelr presence would n@s be When he admonished his flock last William T. Flynn, known for many a Eeciat felting ct tend: years as one of th ren, 2 welnies fk . foremost electrical A number of women attended| enforce the rule, which | ast, became Insane} church without headgear, and the rector] {he authority of Bt. Pi to-day and atracted a crowd at Fitth sureh are. be announced from the pulpit that bare-| Copal “Church are avenue and Forty-second street by headed women were not wanted in the! the rule, front of a building and ad- speech to a wonn tn an ry window. “She is the widow of Thomas A. Edl- son,"" he shouted. “Mr. Edison taught me what I know about electricity, While ho Is acdressing these millions of people the Epla- to support about here I can thank his widow for his kindnese to me.” i Flynn believed that he had just re to run regularly to the various planeta, Two policemen talked quietly to him and induced him to accompany them to the station, from where they sent him |i Rellevue. There he was recognized a ceived counticss mililons of dollars for the invention of an electrical device which would permit railroad trains having been in a cell before. He lived In Eost Thirty-third street Broadway, Saks & Company 33d to 34th St. A Sale of Summer Suits and Skirts for Women \ ; Shirt Waist Suits. Tailored Linen Suits. a 2'll Suits of Taffeta Silk in black, blue, | Suifs of white, blue, tan or gray Linen \ 4 eae ad tan, taxtlnnstaue adel with i" several eae coat models, witi > | \ : __, |side plaited skirt. 4 box plaited waist and plaited skirt; Value $10 and $12.00. At $5.50 stock collar and belt to match. Value $16.50 At $10.00 Pedestrienne Skirts. Skirts of Panama Cloth, Voile or|};~ |fancy mixed fabrics. ¢ $5.50 At $2.95 white or colored Linen; side Suits of fine white Lawn in a variety, of new plaited models, elaborated Skirts 6 with fine laces and embroideries. | plaited model. Value $5.50 to $6.50 At $3.98 Value $5.00 At $3.50 A Sale of Engraving. |Summer Gloves for Women|}, Gahinet containing bo Bheets af Ocsnody, Cin. Our department has anticipated your |} ' . stamped in any aime ot three letter monaéram aig, of which |eVery glove need. You will find a we have 50 designs from which to select, and} complete variety of 50 envelopes to match, Twoeclasp Lisle Gloves. At 25¢ and 50c At 75¢ | Pownes Suede Lisle Gloves. At 50¢ and 75¢ Value $2.00 Fifty cards with your name engraved in astint,| Two-clasp Silk Taffeta Gloves. At 50¢ and 75¢ Two-clasp Silk Mesh Gloves. 50c, $1 & $1.25 plate to become your property. 45 M Cc ayser’s Pinger-Tipped Silk Gloves, clasp or ue ol heme and e address ee be wded ori Ml rae w if Also Silk Gloves of extreme length, Lace Mitts, ling endraved in agtipt, plate to become your} weiss. Chamois and Tilbury Driving leven property. At 75¢ SPECIAL Value $1.35 Pitty card with your name snérayed in #haded | SOc Gloves for Women at oe , Well fashioned Gloves of Suede|] \ Qld Bngliah of the latest design, plate to be- come your property, \ At $1.65 Lisle in mode, drab, slate, white or , black; one or two clasp. Value $2.25 Shirt Waists. With address line in shaded Old Bnglish 10 cents per letter additional, Waists of sheer white Lawn, in twenty of the season's cleverest models, trim: |]! Also, a quire package of Organdy, Moire or the finest quality fabric finish papers with 24 en- med with laces, embroideries and tucking, Sizes 32 to 42. - velopes to match. At 15¢ Value $1.75 to $2.25 POREE SESE HE EEE Te it Wash Dresses for Children A collection of dainty yet distinctive At 98¢ Ne garments which have served their] A variety of Waists of the highest « manufacturers as exhibit models. The] grade, slightly soiled, are also offered variety affords almost fifty styles of] at greatly reduced prices. ! ' various Summer fabrics, which in- clude white, tan and blue Linens, liberally trimmed with fine laces and embroideries. Sizes 12 and 14. Value $9.50 to $15. At $3,90 trimmed. Sizes 4 to 14, 1¢ $5.00 At $2.65 A GLEARANCR SALE Under Muslins and Dressing Sacques At Reduced Prices. Summer Suits for Boys. \ \ |]] Together with a series of sample} Eton Russian Blouse Suits of fine models we offer frotf our regular] light weight serge, in navy, red, royal | stock’the garments of which we have] or brown, or of tropical cheviot in not a complete variety of sizes and] gray or tan mixtures; bloomer | Clearance Sale of Parasols. Parasols of plain or fancy tucked Taffeta, or of Linen with Mexican drawn work; handles of enamelled or natural woods. Formerly $3.95 to $10 At $2.45 Parasols of fancy silk or Chiffon with large frills and tucks, and trimmed |}; with applique; handles of natural jj’ woods or sterling silver. Formerly $12.75to $20. At$4.95 styles at the following special prices:| trousers; detached linen collar and. SKIRTS Value upto $4.50 At$245 | silk scarf. Sizes 2% to 8, DRAWERS Value upto98 Ats% | Serviceable Hammocks CHEMISES Valu bed a re 4 In which two and even three person: \ Value upto $1.50 At 79% | may find comfort without danger off} | CORSET jMalscvniesion "MR |The prices are’ lover shan’ those) Sacauga of White Lawn, fitted back, full front] Which prevail generally. ' finished at the neck and sleeves with dainty em- | Fancy open weave Hammocks, in v. ’ broidery. Value $1.25 At79e | with pillow and spreader. " alate ty | ag Kimonos of White Lawn with lerge shaw! collar] Fancy close weave Hammocks, with extra wide finished with hemstitched border of pink or blue | valance, pillow and double spreader, At $2.78] lawn. Value $1.95 At 79 | Bxtra size Hammocks (44x84), close of 5 of White Lawn with border of weave net, tufted pillow and double ree: i lawn. Value 69¢ At 1 \

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