The evening world. Newspaper, August 16, 1904, Page 3

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WIFE REJECTED ~TINGUT'S OFFER Clubman’s Proposition for a Reconciliation and to Pro- vide for Her in Future Indig- nantly Repulsed, DRINK WINE? NOT MUCH; SHE COULDN'T AFFORD IT. At the Races, However, Fair Complainant in Abandonment Suit Did Make Enough to “Pay Her Admission.” Magistrate Breen, in the West Side Court this afternoon, resumed the hear- ing in the case of Benjamin Van Horne * Vingut, the clubman, whose matrimo- nial troubles were brought into promi- ence agaln yesterday when he was ar- Tested on complaint of his wife, Mar- waret A. Vingut, on a charge of aban- donment After the examination of Mrs, Vingut to-day the hearing was @djourned to Aug, 23 at 11 A, M, in the Jefferson Market Court When the hearing was resumed at 1 o'clock Mrs, Vingut again took the @thnd, after an offer on the part of her her husband that he would take her back, forgive and provide for her tn * future had been indignantly refused, Moses H. Grossman, representing her husband, asked her how much money he had made at the races at Brighton to which she replied ugh to pay my way in at the rit Had to “Hock” Her Ring, “How about your living expenses?’ asked Mr, Grovsman. “I ‘hocked’ my ring to pay my ex- Penses at the hotel.” Mrs. Vingut denied that she was « ‘heavy drinker, and added that she rarely drank anything, except a glass of wine at dinner, “I simply could not afford it if I wanted to,"" she explained. “On Aug. 6 did you not drink a bottle of wine at a Sixth avenue restaurant?” asked the lawyer, “I did," was the reply; “with my als- ter, Between us we had a pint of champagne. I was invited there by Mr. Vingut, with the idea of arranging a Feconclliation, I left tne table with my sister, and rather than leave th a ba yd ‘aking anything we he ae Mra. Vingut also eaid that h y bord, a Mr. MoCormick, told nee thar it ~ Ligh a Parkhurst" he would ber hu ie not have to live with ‘ou mean Dr. 2 court r. Parkhurst?” asked the POS? 80," the , ve Margaret “Rolandy:. “"A% She nergy of I ‘the name of “No, T nevi time under S name "Were you ever Y “I waa never convicted if was the reply. Here Gea Vink “fer she ‘2 wis f°, for @ , ’ > q » 6 ¢ | | broke down and cried », McIntosh Kellogg. its couldn't be protected from such tions, The Court Grossman that he wa aed S lawyer, ques- Mr, court 4 bagi rer 8 deled ne pon uroment » Vi paroled in custody of his counsel, bial WANTS 0 ANE TWEN FROM HOLS Tammany Bronx Fight Results in Wholesale Business for the Supreme Court in Antici- pation of Primaries. Memphis Man Thought He Would Take a Run Over to Newark from Hoboken to See Friends Just Before Sailing. ‘The Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse sailed without Vincent Iselee to-day just be- cause Vincent, who Is fifty-five ai might have kyown better, thought he would take 4 cab ride from Hoboken to Newark before the steamship sailed, But not having @ week's time in which to complete @ non-stop cab tour be tween the two cities, Vincent discov ered all too late that Newark was well down the line from Hoboken, ‘Then he called frantically to the cab- ble to turn about and make a quick jh for the pier, When Vincent, who 9 from Memphis, where his son The contest between August Moe- bus, former ‘Tammany leader of the Bronx portion of the Thirty-fourth As- sembly District and Eugene McGuire, who defeated Moebus two years ago, was brought into the Supreme “ourt to-day, when Paskus & Cohen, counsel for Moebus, applied to Justice MoCall for $0 orders directing the persons mamed In them to appear on Mriday betore Justice Davin and show enuse why theif names suculd not he strick. en from the roll of those entitied to vole at the primary on Aug. %. ya Justice McCall had to sign each order separately, and as fast as the orders were signed they wore placed in the hands of process servers for service the respondents, loebus all that most of those M he Wants stricken from names 3 have changed thetr resid Wee Bieckion Day, and are not theres entitied to vote at thi ng o plier the big Kalser was in midstreain hauling down the river, “Aoh du lieber,” walled Vincent, “and I have the ticket of « friend who is on board, Then Vincent sat on @ trunk and collapsed. Vincent carefully showed his friend aboard to-day, and then went ashore, saying that he would see his Newark aoquaintances before sailing. It was ine nalf an hour of sailing time. But Vincemt did not know that Newark was not just round the near- eat corner, At least the cabbole did not Now Vincent will have to remain in @ Coming} town for a week before the sailing of Percy Nagle are .|the next North German Lloyd steamer, fen pp a and at dis own expesee, Just how his . : names friend, whowe ticket he holds, fare on 8 pf pe See “ond "ER" taba ip. he may learo whe he re's yon ree py Rod Teaches the Fatherland dnl PEABODY VISITS PARKER. NAPHTHA LAUNCH EXPLODES| | Campaign Contribution « Dollar from Clergyman. ‘Three Men Blown Into Water and) nsopus, N. Y., Aug. 16—George Fos- Swim Ashore. ter Peabody, treasurer of the Demo- eratle National Committee, arrived ot 2 BRIDGEPORT, Conn, Ang 18—W. | veiocy trom his summer home, at Lake B, Tuttle, Charles Plumb and Charles| George, and was driven to Rosemount. Wheeler had « narrow escape from Geath Inst night by the explosion of a naphtha lagnch in which they were sall- ing on the Housatonic River, at Strat- ford, All were thrown Into the water, but succeeded in swimming ashore, They escaped with singed hatr and eyebrows and slight burns, The boat was badly visit. He said incidentally that the firet campaign contribution he received as treasurer was ‘from an Episcops) clergy- man over eighty years old. ‘The clergyman wrote that, while he 4id not know whether he should live to vote for Parker and Davis, he wanted to send a dollar bill, all he could afford, with the hope that the campaign fund . M “ —— would be made up of the dollars of a million voters rather than the larger WORLD WANTS 8 of rich WORK WONDERS res wal roi le iS “" VAUDEVILLE PROF, MORGAN, THE GREAT V Building Trades Workmen Take Retaliatory Measures Against Those with Active house at the owne! Some of ing was t ‘to-day at second street, The one hundred work. | enlighten Vincent and the drive began.|moen remaining on the Chaceworth job since the worl of these ene = ju vii Acoo! tractors nts w/the bi usin had ordr the Bullding ‘Trades Employers’ Asso- sand survivors of the Union forces The firat strike declared was on the} twelve-story erside Drive, owns the Arlington Hotel, reached the {the Johnston- 1 Pas avenue, and is being finished by Building Trades Employers’ Association, | L J. Philltps & Co,, of Seventy-second ; street and Columbus avenue, The bulld. J and read: Walking Delegates M By agreement reached at « meeting of | the Building Trades Alliance yesterday ; the walking delegates met at § o'clock yers, had just taken thelr tools, unions at work on ed the plumbers, MBeatloned the Chatsworth Apartment the } dines agents waiked up to Eighty- first street and Columbus avenue with to | e-etory bul ea of © tae Bans are eas tas rat | pteuction for the Colonial Bank. Ti found the mea torre building was picketed and some workmen were & putting In of winde By T. E. Powers. SING FOR THE GENTLEMEN’ bine , IN WALL STREET. THE WORLD: TUESDAY PVENING, AUGUST 16, 1904, NILLEDN FCAT CATARRH DESTROYS THE KM (IVER A WOMAN Was Miserable--Was Threatened With Brig PLESORELGGO DEG PE ELI DED IID EEE OH EA IDIE EE EE EGE POODEEEIOE4-644 HHEOEOOEMOROD ‘ 4 ‘ ‘ [LL BE GoD! YEs, Jit BE Goop! F999E9-999SSE-F5596-92 9699 8S8 090899966 D2O0-52 SORSIDDPSS HOSSEEF55-362 + $5590O006-9000506900-06001-000000500060% 999949 08 O84 64,905 0O49046404.04-64 904 ENTRILOQUIST, AND HIS DUMMIES, 22 TOOK ADRIVEAND (LOCKOUT 1S NOW 200 VETERANS MISSED STEER} MET By STRKES| MARCH BISON : Members of G. A. R. from Forty- Two States and Two Terri- tories Pass in Review Before We fee is Simeon Governors and Mayors. the Employers’ Alliance. retaliatory measures against} BOSTON, Aug. 16—Twenty-rix thou- Chateworth apartment-° Seventy-second street and Ply-, ‘This building s owned by! Kxhn Company, of No, (00! | rs, who are members of the the sub-contracts were let to 0 have been completed on Aug. | y for occupancy on Sept.2 =| Riverside Drtve and Seventy: | lockout declared by the em-/ ¢ building i the marble and painters, Business ameiis unlons went Into the buliding red the men to strike. Al thelr tools and walked out, ob paralyzed. Pickets) in Be veel me ymplayment non-ul ae the labor leaders On= made ex! dinary offers to keep them at work, prom- wages and other Induce- man failed to walk out ) omders of the business agente, Other Jobs Visited, idle, as ent of the P them out some minute: James Crowe, jon, be- wed to finish and a dozen police’ Sixty-e! no di The at to preserve order, but there was urbance. During this new Hippodrome, in Sixth aven sale no ‘orty-fourt was charged or sent on approval. th sitet station were on People who had assembled from all sec- tlons of the United States saw pags in review the Grand Army of the Republic, This wae the great feature of all the events of Nationa] Encampment Week, The occasion was made @ holiday | throughout Greater Boston, whose resi- dents flocked to the State capital to) view the yeterans, Through streets | brilliantly decorated, between ranks of spectators who cheered, waved banners, applauded and in every possible way sought to show them honor, the vet- erans marched fo rhours, At the State House the parade reviewed by Gov. Bates, with Gov. Sant, of Minnesota, and several for. | mer Massachusetts Governors. At City Hall Mayor Collins, with former Mayors and the Mayors of nearby cities, saw the pageant, and on Boylston | street Commander-in-Chiet Black re. viewed comrades who had come from forty-two States and two Territories, was Van | — William Pinkerton, of West New y Brighton, S. |. Did Not Die, from Fractured Skull, as at First Reported. Tnatead of dying from a fracture of the skull, as was at first believed, an sutopsy to-day showed that William Pinkerton, of West New Brighton, 8. 1, was stabbed to death. William Dowling, the proprietor of a hotel at Carey avenue and Columbia street, with whom Pinkerton had quar relled, was arrested soon after Pinker ton died and was held in $1000 ball Previous to the autopsy After the true cause of death war de> termined to-day the Coroner a hurry order to the police to arrest Miss Mary Krakhi, who had served drinks to} Pinkerton in Dowling’s place "It Is evident now,’ sald the Cor sent “that Miss Krakhi was standing ve close to Pinkerton when he was statbed, and that she can tell considerable about It “T have learned that Pinkerton and Dowling quarrelled about her and that]? ghe had declined the advances made by Pinkertgn.” Pinkerton was a clerk in the Amert- can Handkerehief Factory, tn West New Brighton, and lived in Post ave nue. His wife went to Burope on a viet several months ago, and while she, haa been away Pinkerton spent bis | evenings with friends Disease==Pe-ru-na Cured Him. es Many Persons Hav. and Kidney Trouble aa ; Don't Know It, “0 letter from be write “*Peruna cured me from wi | the doctors were afraid wont turn into Bright's Disease, ana — after you have gone th | the suffering ‘hat t fae ¢ . been trh of tue bladder a ney trouble, and hay |eured, you are pretty a | member the medicine i the work { “Peruana is a blessin |siek man, Hight bottles me awell man and were more than to me, high s since Iwas troubled, a ve enjoyed pertect heal ty spring and tle of itand it k freely r com rorge Kin to ree t did to 7 'Tha | sine a mud be ty the diverse rehal ki etlng unr ation nm the SAN | Peruna _ a a ¥ .. @ MR. GEORGE KING. $s Ver Peeeeerrerereeeeereee sees || He had been in Dowling’s saloon al Mr sai ¥ rene “ Liber s. Kanone z long time, when a quarrel started over perl am @ fe rennin Peruna cures kianey Mary Krakhi, She worked for Dowling, bout four years age fT suffered with @ ‘ : ecaue it cures catarrh wherever? tended bar and served drinks to custom: |sovere catarrh of the bladder, which eaused | ina stands before the nation as @) ers, She is described as buxom and at-|continued irritation and pain | was misef-| thoroughly texted, uceura oe ¥ iT ave|uble and could not stand up or walk far a internal remedy for catarrh. ere . tractive and jovial, and Dowling gave) ioe ime ‘time without extreme weariness and| Practically no medicinal rivals Im : hor credit for being able to Induce cus- tomers to spend more money over the bar than they would had there Bren 4 man back of the bar Mtabbed After Apology, The police understood that Pinkerton had made a number of remarks to Mias Krakhi yesterday afternoon which Dowling had resented. A fight started and Pinkerton was struck on the head with a bar of plumbers’ solder. He left the place, but returned last night, three or four hours later, and after apologizing to Dowling and the young woman they became friends again, and Miss Krakhi served more drinks to Pinkerton He waa standing at the end of the bar when he suddenly fell to the floor and was dead before he could be taken out The police reported that death had re- sulted from a fractured skull and ar- rested Dowling, accusing him of hav- ing struck Pinkerton with the solder a UNCLE SAM GETS GRANT. rian pal rel Jersey Authorities Give Ri; Rights at Ellis f TRENTON, N. J., Aug. 16—The Ripa- rian Board met at the State House to- day and granted to the United States Government the riparian rights of ten acres of land under water at Ellie Isi- and, New York Harbor, The land is ted by the Federal Government for the erection of buildings. The making of thes grant has been in controversy for some time, The United States Government originally clatored the right to_take the land without con- sulting the New Jersey authorities, but the latter insisted that Elis Isl within the bound: . matter was finally comprom by the Government paying the New Jersey au- thorities 8! ta, eptudy th vover where his greatest Interest says Mre. Theodore W. Birney, Honorary Presi- dent of the National Congress of Moth ers, discussing "The Cholee of Oceupa tion,” in the September Delineator. Mrs, birney very warmly advocates kind of. natural selection, to he dis a suggestive warning to parents fi prevent them destroying the spon: tanelty and self-cantidence which means gives Your Choice of any suit in the | entire house at $10. Not One Laid Away or Reserved. A supreme, paramount opportunity to buy the very best suits made a’ demoralized so utterly, so $20 SERGE SUITS, $20 THIBET SUITS, $18 CASSIMERE SUITS, Outing Suit Wind-Up. $18,516, 915 & $12.50 Suits. To close ’em out quick. No matter what your size, shape or fancy, we can satisfy and fit you perfectly. It’s a rare chance to purchase style and comfort cheap, and it will pay you to buy now if only to lay them away for next season, Sale Begins Wednesday Morning at & o’Clock. ingly. The future holds no prom- ise of another offer like this, $25 WORSTED SUITS, $22 CHEVIOT SUITS, ta price that barely covers the cost of cloth and trimmings. Never were values unspar- 10 CHOICE pletely cured and felt like a now man," James M. Powell, WwW. L. DOUGLAS Brockton Loads the Men’s Shoe Fashions of the Worlds — a t w.L. Douglas 83 50 Shoe Storesin Grea ‘or New Y¥. 5 ty | Meld '¥| “Write Dr, Hartman, President of Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, lor tree medical advice. All nen hald atrtetly confidential in, J bewen taking Peruna and it gr lieved me, and in eleven weeks I was con UNION MADE $3.32 SHOES = W.L.DOUGLAS MAKES AND SELLS MEN'S $3.50 SHOES THAN ANY MANUFACTURER IN THE } i i i it i r $4 . i 5 é fs : 3 is whe $2.00 and $1.75 Eo ows Sa~Sr9 by th rent in Watehi A Dow covered MY. tnlatpretert” to Diag fwt | akin fa hie ABO shoes, Corona | Write for new Thustrated © ints, carpenter's tools, de.” In the) Colt is conceded everywhere to be | Shoes by mail, 25 cents extra, same number, Lillie Hamilton French | the finest Patent Leather produced, . L. DOUGLAS, G. C. & E. Eli Calf always gives satisfaction. elation were taken to-day by the Bulld- which fought in the civil war marched eee —eeee go much to thelr children’s future hap cess; and Priscilla Wake. Broad: hth Avenue. tng Trades Allunce In the shape, of nrough the winding sireets of historic | SUNDAY WORLD WANTS Beit hag inert Somar| 8 Bawa comes Oy egat, | ATO Prd Av. bt vxn & a strikes ents ¢ t ve atudy of the training of girls ny way, Fepresented in the Bullding Trades Aly Boston to-day, and more than ln0 WORK MONDAY WONDERS ter nn says of our grandmothers 19 Broadway, corner lst Street, ye persis 4 Hance started out to-day to order = Oa gene Beree a 367 hme ‘Senet strikes on several important jobs which, 350 ‘eat 1apth ‘Htreet, 421 Fulton Street, corner the contractors are obligated to hi We Never Advertise Unless We Have Extraordinary Values to Offer. peomoad et. dadabed at a sisted time, |} Store Beas Paras Bc Berset, V Pompeii the great spectacle in Dreamland, } and see the presentation of |THE NEW YORK WORLD'S Set of Three Hundred Views of the St. Louis Fair. sit THESE pictures have been artistically colored and repioduced for the stereopticon, Between per. formances these pictures are shown on 150 square feet of canvas. THE NEW YORK WORLD’S Portfolio of the Fair, containing all these views, may be had at | 10 cents per part at all WORLD Offices or Department Stores. — In this city people of average circumstances cannot atiord to pay rent for one more room than they require. If you have such a room, in your house Or. flat rent it profitably by advertising it in the Sanday World Want Columns.

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