The evening world. Newspaper, August 4, 1904, Page 3

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BREAKS HS NECK’ GIRLS PATRONIZE WHILE DIVING) SUBWAY TAVERK j yy - | Thomas NioCarty, Crippled Ex-| Thoy Buy Beer in Preference to) Foreman of Fire Company,| Soda Water in the New Idea | f Meets Probably Fatal Acci-| Saloon Lately Dedicated by Pea, dent While Plunging from Pier | Bishop Potter. FIANCEE WITH HIM SWOONS AT SIGHT. ANY YOUNG WOMEN DRINK AT THE BAR. | In Fact, Four-Fifths of Women Patrons of the Place Show! that They Prefer Malt Bever- ages to Soft Drinks. Man Dived Into Water Only Two Feet Deep—Formerty Noted Athlete, and Won Many Med- als for Swimming. J Verse of the Tavern. The following v has been writ on the Subway Tavern, It wit Th iikely Foreman Thomas McCarty, attached to the Brooklyn Fire Headquarters, was taken dying to the Long Island College Hospital, in Brooklyn, to-da mine wee \scopal , \ yn, to-day as the! (ror use in NN | Femult of a divo into two feet of water i batronaate.) on Come ye that love your boose, Your favorite tipple name, Tour pet intoxjcant now chooee And ail ite joys proclaim. Hare quaff the golden beer, Rae caredlapelling xin, ¢ heavy ‘And clases, cold and ini AW bial Qt Bayville, L. 1, yesterday. McCarty atruck fall on his head on the eand and broke fis neck, MeCarty was made @ cripple for life fa & fire that destroyed the Arbuckle Cooperage on the Brooklyn water front near Jay strect on Dec, %, M2 He trad been appointed a fireman but three months before, and was attached to Hook and Ladier Company No. @®, which has a water tower equipment While working the water tower Mc- Come to our deeorous bar An AY our prices low; 9 and kids from near And let the whiskey flow, meme soit the head, notey t n brain of lead, Carty, Battalion Chief Thomas Cop-| rd Wincehun ween ut free pinger, Lieut. William F. Jeffrey and| Oh, mrant_us every day, Fireman Michael! J, O'Toole were| ay, pagite [As gad 5 id cass of jush id erushed under a falitng wall. McCarty | | Our modest five per centre! 8% JORRPN ELORIDGR ESRAT. “One 8 of beer for me." Iw a young woman who spoke, and she looked past the shocked ex- Pression in the clerical-looking gentle: man’s eyes who with grave and pot tentions bearing had taken his seat at pital the crippled fireman was assigned the soda fountain and sternly ordered a to an easy berth at Fire Headquarters. | strawberry ice-cream soda. ‘Three days ago he started on a month's} ‘The young woman ordered har beer, Was tho only one of the four who ca caped with iis life. He was so badly injured, however, that when he left the y hospital two months later he was a crip. ple and no longer fit for active duty. Flaccee Wax Bathing with Him, After being discharged from the hos vacation and went to Sayville, where! the soda-water barkeap went to the his financee, Miss Addie Brandt, 19 rear of the fountain, gave an order ‘pending the summer. through an opening, and in a few min- He and M randt went In bathing | Utes a frothy glags of "extra pale” was yesterday evening from a pler that ed on the counter right next to the runs out in Great South Bay, Thongh| pik ice-cream soda a ‘cripple, Mcthrty wax stl! able to| The new woman has always com. swim, He had once been a noted ath-| plained of her restrictions, but at last lete and won many medals in swim-/she can walk up to a bar—a fountain— \ ming races and order a ginss of beer with as secure After swimming about fn the bay with Miss Brandt he returned to the pier. tne tde had been running out and the fire- 1 man had not learned that on o of the pler the water is v He told his flancee that before he was injured in the fire he had been @ great diver and thought he could still perform a few feats of that kind, The young woman begged him not to dive, as he did not know the depth of the water. Gizl Seen Him Mreak His Neck, MeCarty sald that he could dive tn a most any depth of water and, running to one side of the pier, dived straight a feeling as her brother. ‘The place—why, of course It is the new Subway Tavern just dedicated by Bishop Potter, A woman who wanted |to see if It were really true tha: ene a glass of beer unques- tered the much-talked of tav- Many € The red briok building at the corner of BI ker and Mulberry streets, oear- | ing on its aide the big gold beer sign uke any loon, was being tarconlstd by ing of customers, many of them curidalty seekers. into the water, ‘The water was bu Yes, this is the tavern dedicated by | twa feet deep, though the color of the | yishoy potter, You are welcome.” f sand ieade It appear a Reet eal’ “pais ig the reassuring announcement } deeper, that greeted the feminine visitor from The fireman dived straight and the full ? body was on his bead f big blackboard. Surely where Bishop ii ogg faster ‘e hard sand, Mise| Potter could sing the doxology she Brandt, who re naeto watch him {Cud enter with impunity and order a i dive, saw the ik his body reeaivea | @ of beer, The seal of respect d fall over) Dlity was on I and then saw " The entrance to the front of the mp in the shallow water. ft | tab vite, | ver was flanked with blackboards had also seen the tir and | covered with newspaper knowing the depth of , ap. | sarding the oper but the r ' preciated what had happened to him stepped up to the fountain and with a 9 MP wren he saw the upper part of the| feeling of Independence ordered beer after the head| Half a Aozen girls and women saunt- body out of the wa 1 aud carried }ered up to the fountain and had a giass had struck, He jumped f ” the unconscious form of McCarty to, beer also, while a few contented P shore, Miss Brandt swooned on the {themselves with tce-cream sodas. The) pier and had to be carried to her home, | feminine visitor's eye was caught by/ The injured fireman was taken care | ti big announcement at the side of of in the home of a Bayville physician | the fountain: ' &nd sent into Brooklyn to be removed | “Beer served at fountain. to the hospital on the firat train that, “Good soda and good beer are equally left this morning | harmless if taken temperately, Back Kroken in Two Places, “We serve the purest beer and sant- The doctors of the Long Island Hos- | ‘tY #048 pital, after an examination, discovered Brought Baby Along. that MoCarty’s neck was broken in two] “The beer ts good and I think it ts places and that he cannot recover, migety nice,” sald @ woman with a Mogarty i 00 ee Res oe baby In her arms, “I Hke to come in Sepa noved golter, awininet here and get a glass of beer, No one and football player iit Ireiand stares ov ‘thinks anything about tt but) land, His three brothers long-faced men who doa't belong aown here gene and Patrick, are pr At the noon hour and at night two layers, and his two other brothers, ‘ \ jillam and Charles are amateur ath- letea of some note en are kept busy at the fountain, for a “Tomas Mocarty and his brother | mon are aE ¢ Ae Peis nel Eugene enlisted in the U. 8. Navy when | &For* the street ts a big factory re the Spanish-American War started and| a large number of girls ace employed terved throughow: the conflict and these (ollers love a glass of beer. Thomas was a petty officer on board the Chi- tago, and Eugene vas one of the Cin- elnnati’s crew. Saved Comradg’s Life at Se During the war, while the Ame fleet was walting for the Spantar Santhiaas, Bingene MeCarty stroke Cinctnnatl’s erew to victory In a $3.90 match tice with the champion crew ot the crulser New Orleans After the war, when the Chicago was craising In the Mediterranean, Thoma MoCarty saved the life of a’ com who fell overboard off Gibraltar. nan ecuidn't swim wid the Chicago was going at a high rate of speed when he fell over oCarty lunged In after him, got him and held fim up for half an when a smal oat put off from the cruiser and picked The girls came in orderly, laughing and talking, and four out of five took beer. ‘The Tavern kept open until 12 o'clock leat night because there were many men with their wives who walked up to the fountain to be served with bert Joseph Johnson, jr, under whose di- rection the tavern is running, says the Womien seem to enjoy the beer more the soda, Asked if the place eventually become a Raines law rooms upstairs he shook his 1 emphatically Wl) Have # Rathskeller, than 1 + There will be a rathskeller down- ‘em 1s, though and it will be a fine! Just. think, this is only four CHOKED 10 DEATH, from the subway entrance You can spend your evenings here and walle) ight into the subWay station. ‘A woman who ordered a cocktail was Noy with Piece of Meat tn Throat) Dies on Way (0 Doctor's, | While at dianer to-day five-year-old] oy that they were not served, and! Antonio Bondero, of No. & Thompson) . young git! who asked for a free| gtrert, got a nieve of me Bos gaol suldfluneb with oer oeer Was also informed je Pe ving doctor he had] that the rules of a soda fountala gov- erned the front Dus! even if the! tavern in the rear did serve free lunehes. ine business men in the neighborhood | ROOMERS alt tata t ve higaly-eoanected saloon | In the rear room, whi bles cov: AND ered wich papers and ines were BOARDERS eo icescod ted bar per was dispensing drinks to men who came and went, There was no ruManly loafing. Lp-State Opinions, Two father sanctimonious men, with a strong “up-State” dialect, pulled their | Whiskers and sald) when ques to their opinion of the plac can't see any hid can't the place is good encagh to sing. ae doxoiony Eat vod enough f "A AN always be had through “World Wants.” A vacant chair at the table or an empty room in the house is occupied vhen “World Wants” are used, The 3 and 7 room | sweeps tle time rates make results saloon fe gol’ to tuen out rious-faced man, be - & look et aitapproval on | face, a young feetory air, & glass of beer as she doubly sure. THE WORLD THURSDAY RVENING, ACGOST' 4, 1904. GIRLS QUENCHING BEVERAGES IN SUBWAY TAVERN, DEDICATED BY BISHOP POTTER, and warm, on her way from work “Why do you taste this stuff, when there are soft drinks at hand," she was asked eer makes home ou fat: soda water's exit THEIR THIRSI WITH BEER AND OTHER Aultibili shy gicths, soft drinkers and) tain, after in the id BIeen-tinted Cartoons by down here with t have them chase bring you ag r So tar the women who have patron- | ined the tavern's fountain have been the | patronize the ar ere, Se ke Fen) PATTY PRR eT SRE Le b rs ‘ with no family entrance il having tavern Into with ite —a saloon pee y tan! to soft drinks and order our stomach. That's why,"| factory girls and the women. in the | plain, heer | bad, or he gine Td ain't a lu Wr"! neighborhood wha drop in In the even: |" Its a little strange tor women to "A more jeent-iooking place to} ing with thelr husbands drink beer tn public Ike this.” sald a get a drink of veer could not be found, Men. from all over New Ke have| well-dressed woman, “but | think {t's Nout it certainly Hoes visited the tavern from ¢ sity, and| a fine thing for the element it was ane wisltce n_thev sit down at the sofa “tenins_Intendad for a TRADING STAMPS | LEGAL, SAYS COURT Justice Nash, in Rochester, De- clares the Law Passed Last| Winter to Prevent Their Use to Be Unconstitutional. ROCHESTER, Y.. Aug. preme Court Justice Nash to-day. the habeas corpus proceedings brought by Edward Appel, a cigar dealer, wh was arrested for selling a cigar and a package of tobacco accompanied with tobaceo coupons issued by the Ameri- van ‘Tobacco Company. directed that the relator should be released from cus- tody because he had been arrested un- der a statute that ts unconstitutional Appel was charged with misdemeanor under Chapter #7, of Laws of 194 He contended that the goods sold were bought of him prior to the enactment of the coupon law and that the act could not be retroactive The court even a sten further and says in conclusion, after citing the Dycker and | 4—Bu-} in Gillson cases: ‘It Is the settled law of this State hat It Is not within the power of the Legislature to suppress or regulate the Issuing or eale of trading stamps,” The ourt holds that the law as jaid down in the cases quoted furnishes a rule so plain that there can be no room for discusson. In. passing on the question of coupons having a rademption value in cash printed on thelr face the Court holds that this can benefit neither consumer oP dealer, callin ORIGINAL PARKER MAN. John oD. Crimmina Advocated Judge Seven ¥ Aw John L, Crimfuns valled upon Act. ing Mayor Fornes to-day, and after the interview, when asked the significance of the vislt, said 1 just made a social Fornes, We did not ¢ call upon Mr. iss politics ex- cept in a general way What was that general way?" was as Wel, 1 belteve Tam the al Parker man,” was the rept was away back in the fall of 1897, at a littie dinner at the Hoffman House, that | ad. yoo ated the candidacy of Justice Parker for the Presidency. I said at thi \ tiene that his record as Justice showed hii to be the stuff of whick Preadent ial candidates are made, and Tam glad the Pega ni fe party has seen fit to indorse views on the subject My“ Galleve. Judge. Parker will be elected. Among the business mén with whom I associate I find many Repul ne who are going to vote thie year for Parker. I have noticed that among the young men who have their fret vote this year there is @ strong tld: toward Packer. a ——_— MI88 EDNA ROSLYN TO WED, Cards are out announcing the engage- ment of Miss Edna Roslyn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, D. 8. Hilborn, ao charming brunette residing at Philadel. pha, who js spending the summer at the Hotel Chalfonte, Atiantle City, to Mr, hae B. Welsel, of Mensa. Baume’ freee Exowm tornitere dea' offer serious obstacles to progress. AR'S ENTIRE ARM NOW IN FULL FLIGHT Russian Forces Have Been Forced to | James Conov Witnesses er, Who Says He| Is a Chauffeur Employed by) Whitney Estate, Grabbed by and Arrested, Abandon Position After Position and! toned Gate, teenth street, whe St. Petersburg Believes Kuropatkin Is; in Grave Danger of Disastrous Defeat; day charged wit! | Mra, Bella Rot! | months eld baby LONDON, Aug. 4.—Advices from St. Petersburg and ‘Tokio indicate | -2"Ht belied that Gen. Kuropatkin’s army is in the gravest danger. The Russians are) ing car down P. retreating to the north, abandoning position after position to the enemy. lhe reached the The fear of the Russian General Staff is that Gen. Kuroki has succeeded | eke afreet the in establishing himself op the line of retreat and will be able to halt the} * asssitale rrived and place If Gen. Kuropatkin eaunot fight lis way through this force he will be com- pelled to retreat to the westward, but by the time made the army of Gen. Oku will have moved north and west far enough to " such a move could be)? Mrs en to th tal ant later When the Baker the The Russian army organ estimates the strength of the Japanese forces \/i\" employed ‘by around Gen Kuropatkin at about 200,000 men, Gen. Kurgyf Is believed to) Later he denied have 50,000 men on the high road to Linoyang, 30,000 on the & Liaoyang roar, 30,000 on the roads to Mukden and 10,000 in res@rve. army has had opportynitics to move without serious hindrance and 1s un- doubtedly possessed of strong positions, Gen, Kuropatkin's offictal details of the fighting July 31 at Simoucheng | say that only a division and a half were engaged, The report does not mention the loss of guns; neither was J.Jeut.-Gen. Aloxteff {n command, as stated in the despatch from Tokio yesterday. Gen. Alexieff, who com- mands the Fifth Fast Siberian division of Gen, Stakelberg’s corps, was orking on imatezas|iawyer, who ref Thin! Rid that the we \a request. as no the automobile the seed limit yang, apparently waiting for the main body of the Russian army to arrive! of the Hast Bighty-eighth street station, | fs a not Hi s 1 man who © one si ' “ {¢ e ‘ : Work n Policeman J feur employed by the Whitney was arraigned in the Harlem Court to- jdile and running down and tnjuri woman Wao Was with ( ‘The ce f Jeane SAVES WOULD-BE SUICIDE. of No. 7 West Nine- 0 sald he was a chauf- estate, h speeding his automo- yman and of No. 3S her sever East Nin Conover was driving @ big red tour-| ark avenue, and when crossing at Ninety- machine ran into Mrs, who was wheeling her baby perambulator across Wie street Russian army long enough to allow Gen, Oku and Gen, Nodzu, with 100,000 | he was knocked down, the baby car- men, to attack on the rear and the left flank. riage was overturned and the infant Yestorday the Japanese occupied Ialcheng and Newchwang. The latter) thrown - ut r point is thirty miles northeast of the seaport, of Newehwang and con- eeteadih cine: bie Donors Geet Nine eet, H 300 siderably weat of the main Russian line, Gen, Oku’s force now extends) nan, of No. 1% Kast Ninetieth street, from Simoucheng to Nowchwang, but there fs no news that he Is advancing.) Witnessed the cident and grabbed Gen. Knrck!, with #n army of 120,000 men, fs in the vicinity of Liao-|Conover. The chauffeur waa held by the two men uncil Policeman Liederman, 4 Run under arrest nover in the during the ex- Rothman and her baby * Presbyterian Hospi a away t to their } me up chaufte y the Whitney estate, and said he was n account. His to give his name an and child were not asked for his client's urt complied with the root was offered that ad been going beyond this. pe Into River After Young Man, posted in the other side of Haicheng July 31 | John Mongunas, twenty-seven years The War Office does not Intend to publish the name of the actual com+| ©!" he says he Libs at hu NT West Twelfth street, atiompted suicide to. mander at Simoucheng for reasons of military expediency, |day by jumping into the North River from the dock at the foot of Fifty. Se pecen street He was rescued by Patrolman WI!liom F. Rogers, of the West Forty-s BRITISH STEAMSHIP NCD RRR as Seat Tospitel WAS SUNK BY TORPEDO, CHEFOO, Aug. 4.~ Twenty-ane survivors of the British steamer Hip- sang, which was sunk »y a Russian torpedo boat in Pigeon Ray on July 16,! arrived here to-day board the German steamer ¢. Among the survivors are three Europeans, They state that Wolf Hill Fort was taken by the Japanese army before Port Arthur on July 28, When the Hipsang commenced to sink the Chinese on board rushed for the boats, aud the Evropeans were compelled to swim. Finally they were rescued by the torpedo boat and were confined until Aug. 2 at Port Arthur, when they were ordered to leave in a junk which was provided for them. The junk was pickod up by a Japanese torpedo boat, which offered to tow them to Chofoo. Admiral Togo’s flagship signalled a refusal and the junk proceeded alone, Later the refugees were taken on board the German steamer Sulbere’ whicn reached vort to-day s all and Cream. | START S TRONG Food that Nourishes day Grape-Nuts “There's a Reason,’’ soloist, of No, 8 Clinton street, | the SIGNS OF SUICIDE ON Tht SPEEDWAY Clothing Found on a Bench Near the Water Contained Cards and Letters Bearing the Name “Prot. Al J, Wirz.” Mounted Poll eman Fitagerald found @ men's Ing on a bench on the cast side of the dway at One Hun dred and Nin nd street to-day, There were a ack coat and vest, an! lar and necktle and a ket of the coat were ticles tending to suow pelonged to one Al J.| @ number o that the prope Wire There was acard with t and the address, ‘Central H ntl, st Fourteenth street, No. another vard ribing Prof, Al J. Wirz as a pl Burtal & lettor addressed (o Wira at the Cen- tral Hotel and signed by Leonard Biuné Gin, of No. 16) Oak street, Buffalo, and] a hewspaper on the margin of waica! was written: i ve kept my word and made 600d, proving that 1 am no coward A KZ." wh, Photograph of @ ratier pretty girl found in the coat pocket, It was ! sa Carnie Bova, nio, another card found ame o Peter , Hemp- ined Suivide some time during the | rning T J. O'Keefe. of the Cen- in) non that 1 aturday, | mand paid until MN. He paid another week in ad on that day, and later got a for M0 cashed at the bar was aboat twenty-five yea quiet man, He made frie t the hotel late as 3 0 clad sk vesterday A Vat Po jee Hond a om Wire orming a holies of hie Intention ta. commit Me and asking them to take ciarge whieh would be found In ! Hotel. All that the COUNTS DAUGHTER I SENT 10 PRISON Pauline Von Graft Held in Ray- mond Street Jail Pending a Hearing on a Charge of Jumping Board Bill. AUTO AUAS DOWN | MOTHER AND ue Rog 8. Pauline von Graft, who claims o be the daughter of an aged German | Count and an heiress under his will to | property worth $200,000, was arraigned in en ne Leona Police Court, Brook- yn, to-day oo @ charge of defrauding an ‘nabaane Mrs, Sarah Kilpatrick, of No. Dean street, Brooklyn, was the com- plainant, and si lieged that Miss von Graft had left use two weeks !torgetting to pay a bill of $80 for board and lod: and also @ sum of money borrowed from the Kilpatrick treasury, Miss von Graft admitted the indebt- edness, but sald that her furniture, which she had left with Mra, Kilpatrick, fully secured the Woman against any loss event address she gave as fashionably and seema. to be cultured | After Mstening to Miss von Graft’ story the court remanded further hearing on next. In default of committed to Raymond 4 to Be Making ’ Water Tower and Te and Truck and Animal Is Impaled a Pole—Firemen Thrown to ti Crvund, but umidjurca. ° Water Tower No. 20 niteway tre and going at full speed across avenue at Thirteenth street coll with a truck to-day, one of horses attached to the water tower impaicd on the pole of the true had to be shot, The water tower left Ite station | Thirteenth street. between Third and Fourth avenues, and started east om | Thirteenth street. It had acquired full 7 speed when it reached Third avenue and Fireman John Schowey, the driver, Was urging on his horses when a big true | owned by John McAvoy, a ¢ of No, 919 East Thirty-elghth street, ing south on Third avenue. came at right angles, Hetore Schowey could turn out the @ truck had struck the ) drawing the water tower, ¢al a ing the animal's side, All of the firemen were thrown (0 th® rround by the force of the collision, but. ¥ as injured. , olceman H. B, East thirty “Afth street eat 0 % the firemen begged him to on 4 horse ond put it out of tu , Another horse was then and the water tower continued on its pm to the fire 4 The driver of the trues made his cape, but will BATHING MADE HIM BLIND, Optic Nerve pies oe WAKEFIELD, Mass, Aug, Adleman ia totally blind An Angost } Bargain } arvest — waits ou ere. We have reduced all our! broken lines of Men’s| Summer Suits irrespece) tive of the former p (that ranged from $12.5 to $22.50) to "10 In this sale are all s and patterns, but not sizes in every patterm, A ten-dollar bill double duty here, | Preparations to Leave, ' ROUEN, France, A 4.—Mra, Flor-| ence Maybrick was still here last even- Get the Habit. Go to « ing. This morning the house of her @ ‘ | mother, the Baroness de Roques, where | rs. Maybriek nas been re sine +} she came here from and, } ied. and it was impossible to obtain |g 279 Broadway, n. Chambers, a zeply to inqulries. is reason to believe that Mrs. Mayorick is still there, though there are indications that she is preparing her departure the Saks label to insure Washable Russian Blouse Madras, Galatea, Chambr. Linen ; Eton collar models with scarf. Sizes 214 to 8 years. Formerly $2.00 and Washable Eton Collar Sailo ported Scotch C Fa Cassimere in brown, gray or » $2.50 viot, Formerly $2 FOR THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY, A Clearance Sale of a esis Suits for Boys ices Reduced One-Half. Suits for immediate service, all of which have d Russian Blouse Suits (sizes 2'¢ to 8 years) striped or tan Linen, Fig Chambray or Scotch Gingham. Formerly $2.75 to $3.50. Separate Trousers, bloomer Saks & Cou BROADWAY, 332 TQ 34TH STREBT. 47 Cortiandt St., n. Greenwich. 211 & 219 Sixth Ave, m. i4th. | 125th St., Cor. Third Ave. good service. Suits of colored Chevior, ‘ay, Fancy Pique ‘or Griss Bicomer trousers At $1.00 5 to 12 $2.50, r Suits (sizes years) ut ured Silk. Strired ira% \t St.é and st ney Worsted, tan mixtures and $3. At$1.25

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