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ad jTHE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JULY 27, 1907. Se aS G CHIMPANZEE LEADING HIT OF ‘> NEWPORT SEASON ‘ost Human Jungle Dweller the ‘4 hor Guest at Belmont Villa, Where ye e Partakes of Lunch With 3 _ New York Society Folk. : iy (Spectal to: The Evening -World.) ‘EWPORT, July 27,—By far the most successful Society function {reason was a small luncheon given yesterday by Mr. and Mrs, O. sselmont, of New York, to Consul, an educated chimpanzee, who j (ng receptions this season at Bostock’s Animal Show, Consy IsI- Ww York. The other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lehr, Mr. ‘js. Elisha Dyer, James De Wolf Cutting, Mrs. Stuyvesant. Fish, i } ayy Robinson and Lispenard Stewart, also of New York. (sene of the function was the | of honor cost Cee Belmont Newport home, | solace the'eo wae eas pi; Consul and his keeper came Vnite Roatan) tetpl erloncen ty Speier Ef Uporti byiboek? toc New York | Whe: Newari ar ees family ta eee i about the chiinpanzee fami movea ¥ morning and went to a hote, ii elled to hunt fo jungle, com! int for food’ and a ndiottve enemies. them. On his arrival at Bel- the cost of improving ir condi jests were then introduced society 0 send electric fans to the jun- ‘iments, consisting of a pair! Consul was deeply affected at the phe laser he removed upon 80~jassured those present that never had {se luncheon. Consul relating all ise jtertained at a dinner at Now-/ aay ‘that Mr.” Belmonts season. He haa sat a pace jot them Indeed have confessed to as much as 16 cente lage. After the dinner the guests atourned to the Inner court of the realdence, where Consul held a general He was very sorry to leave, Pressure of his social | Coney. nd is such that his keeper was compelled to refusc many invWa He his hearers to tears aa he told of the jihey remained until afternoon, | hard life the otimpen: of Mr. Belmont's automobiles | {ontinuadly dodge vt: ul Was met by Mr, Belmont, Ke) wiM chimpanzee: {ted him affectionately, The | 105 in’their native wilds. Bugeee: tion of one of the guests to farm a ) Soneut it. i pened tle Bie to Keep the chimpanzees cool was ‘aa correctly attired In after- | received with enthusiastic favor. =. = |concern shown by his friends over tho Hs) pale of trousers, a coat and |i rishins of his species. ‘The keeper Bre reception hall. There was|he seon a more sympatheti” aseemn- Ibour of enjoyable gonsip pre- | >! st bon mots of Coney Island. Harry? Lehr, he was the life the brilliant converse: Ey q ki: ho r,|tlons to remain the week end. 2 that the monkey whom Mr |‘ft's generally admitted in soley to- few years ago Was « distant Of thesmuest of honor. Consul | Consul eftectively sh * keep the other:soclal leaders }to the highest: pressure to equal. invuisiong: One of these, *'the efforts of Consul’s father to [correspondent that they have no was |of even approaching i r amusing. | ee waa announced there INSULTER OF CHILD . nm from behind ye @istingul: Police, Witnesses of Ad- vances, Save Fellow. From Ady; Boars. Barred. Rage of Parent. ‘erefice to the guest of honor refrained from ourrying 3 or dogs to the luncheon. Jonsul was almost in some’ of his entertainers, it a neceapary to provide a spe- tor him in Hh Dexterously slipping watt, over the of. the | Board: he inserted iin a cup of Anthony Berger, thirty-two years olf x on, er which he carefully of No. & Man! tan street, was the . This w: 2 See a a micnie thay | description a prisoner gare of himself mon when he was locked up te-day in the Giscarded his shoes. ine time. the tuncheon was wall East One Hundred and Twonty-aixth [ie {atreet station on a charge of disorderly the news that the Belmonts | conduct. ih} The complainant against Derger 1s A anon. che house Was |Oecar Schutt, of No. ¢- Wuast. Ons nd Mra, Befmont, [Hundred and Sixteenth street, the @ prince could not | tather of four ahildren, the oldeat be- a) feprenentatlve \ing Gertrude, aged nine years. Ger- trude saya she was playing with other firle in-Morntngvide Park-yeotertay-2f ¢ernoon when a man spoke to her and gave her eleven cents, a king, oF f2 Pit tayted afl who came to . the i e Juncheon and help .to sy . ‘who entered into the occaal morning at $20, and she told her father, who re- monksye--of- yoursetres:“-crint}-ported ty Inepector “‘Thompaag Be young mairone, who Js noted! | The father was advised to have hin frends, ponse was | Anughter keep the engagement, and De- je but elegant repast, consist. | tect! Marxhaui mullion. Toast: cufcken. sirloin | Win the ethene ate ne: reat feed teas champaena | With the father, lay in walt. thee wan berved by Air: Belmont's| When Gertrude passed the bench See Coe na NEL AB WH: | Where she says she met the man yes vote @ time fo use them. |t*rday a man stopped her and talked of tho cham-| with her, taking her by the hand. The ona. Kt wae Noten ton} enraged father jumped from thn hedre Jelgurely 9x Any of thejathara} where he was concealed, and befor rirteraet Seereryatibes eaiie Up ipything on him: 7") the ground and was choking and no a SR Eis Beta Dla | rest $9 hia. ane, jerger was arrested. “ti FELL DOWN STAIR BHAFT. Mary Cunningham, thirty years old, fell over the banis1 in the house at No. 14 West Sixty-fourth street early | to-day: from the third floor to tha Tret, Bhe wee ren 7 eevait Hospital with & broken leg and possibly « trac: | Sireaakcll samnutid : Reason I. Har this year The World has printed 817,345 separate adver- ts—-¥71,216 MORE.than the Herald or ANY OTHER per on the face of the earth. “ ‘ Reason II. the last 5 week-days 12,356 men, women, boys and girls advertised their “wants’ in The World—901 MORE than ‘in ANY THREE OTHER Néw York morning news- COMBINED, including the Herald. - Reason III. {World’has a greater circulation in Greater New York than TWO OTHER morning newspapers put together. aaa. Your Wants Should be Advertised in | “* Sunday World To-Morrow. q Almost Human Monkey and Society Folk He Lunched With at Newport Villa GEORGI MEN CREDIT TDN, SAYS ROOSEVELT Entire Service Benefits by the Bravery of Men in Turret When Crash Came. OYSTER BAY, N. ¥., July 21.—In re- ply to a letter from Admiral Brownson relative to the Georgia disaster, Prest- dent Roosevelt has taken occasion to congratulate Admiral Thomas and the officers and crew of the Georgia on the way the ship went back to her work. The President's letter, together with extracts from that of Admim! Brown- son, was made public here to-day. An extract from a letter from Admiral Brownson to the President follows: | "The Georgia accident was most de- [ Basratte, bat there are: brEht: spgte coh mected with it, with all of the turret accWents. fer to the splendid spirit and courage that have been shown by our men la every cane : “You “doubtless” know Georgia, immediately after landing her wounded, returned to the target range, arriving there about 10 o'clock the same evening, and early the next morning was again on the firing line to finish up her practice. ‘ “Admiral Thomas's action in ing the ship back to her work with- out a moment's delay was highly com- mendabl In 4 conversation with him \-tho-man-ont in-Newport twoaye eget -gethered + that the work dong bythe Georgia's ‘crew after the uccident was excelent. dr. Newberry,’ the acting secretary told me this morning that one of the six-inch guna nearly ted the world's Teoo! President Roosevelt repilea to Ad- ral Brownaon as follows “Oyster Bay, N. _ * ‘July. 26th, ‘My Dear Admiral—Many thankw I would itke through Tous letter. ye 0 congratulate Admiral Thom | eepectelly the officers and rn 907. for you and “crew or the way in which with- delay the ship went rk. ‘Dhe whole navy is ulated at the spirit showa ers. and enils men on Georgia/in this instance, and the ‘Missouri and Texas in other instance to which you refer. “Sincerely yours ODORE ROOSEVELT,” FINDS HIS. WIFE OVINE YARD Mre—Oathertne Bonnetakker, thtrty~ four yeays oM4, died instantly to-day aa the resukt of a fall from the roof of the six-story. fiat-house at No. 11 Weat One Hundred and Thirty-seyenth street, where she lived with her husband, John '€. Ro Bonnebakker a suleeman, as has been the case! nend-| | And So Alas! The Cooks Are Taking to thé Woods, Are the Matds |New York May Be Serbantless Soon, They're All Going Out and None | : Coming In, | By Margaret R_ohe. i For Bridget must summer at Newport, diseaed And Mina the mountains must 1 While Hulda makes tracks for the pine woods, We're left in a aervantiess home, MARGARET ROMS. the heated -season- in the shadow | breezes. } Scarcity of Girls Appalling. “The scarcity jof servant girls Is most appalling,”” said Commisaloner of Li- cenaes John N. Bogart to-day. "Of course overy summer there is the same ola‘ shortago, but this year It fa even more so. All the girls scem to want to, get out Into the country in the warm weather, and {t 1s almost tmposaible to ‘secure competeyt service here tn. the y, Naturally the fact that most fam- {Iles leave town for the summer evens up a little the demand and the sup- ply, but still for the many who aro forced to rema!n In the elty the servant problem {a a mighty hard poe,” “put where did the servant girls come from originally?” I asked, ‘and aren't take thelr places?” ; The servant gitl supply mostly finds itn source fn tho Jmmigrants—FTun ratians, Irish, Swedes and Germans,’ answered Mr. Bogart, ‘but there isn't ‘The ‘husband refuses tortalk about the affair other than to eay that his wife m@lered from insomnia. 4 ‘This morning the oldest daughter, ten years, heard the kitchen door hry 2 Toaiker, moked “ty ar wothee’s sd atter looking in-all the Tone much ef an Influx now, Not near enough to fill the vacancies. All Going Out; None Coming In. ‘epheri i's really a case of ‘It's all goin’ out and nothin’ comin’ int” “ppxaotly,' said Mr, Bogart, and that's Just all the trouble. There aren't many coming in at all just now, and *good iris are scarcer than hen's teeth. There {s really no place to get them, and that's why Tar so busy revoking Uoenses at proxent. i there plenty more at home like thove to} ‘| plied ar. LAS! It's all too—true: _—ftmine——of ———handmaidens is upon us and the ser: vantless season is here. Many fs the kitchen setting shy of its jewel of a cook. Masseusing Mag- gie no longer gives the back stairs a good rubdown with her mop and Willa the willing. waitress waits no Wore. = A And for why? Simply because it’s the good old summer time and all the haughty cook ladies and gen- tlg chambermaids insist on spending of. the pines or fanned by - ocean | Phey-oven-watch-atong the streets day, and night for girls who took -llke they belonged to the servant olass, bribe or aven drag'thom into thelr offices and try to'force them to take a place through them. Scores of cases like thia —and like that of the agent who got girls to accept @ place andteaye at tho end of a week for another place? and on_tndefinitely from week to week, #0 that he oould collect fees from eudli employer—come to our notion every fay, They are a natural but much ¢o be deplored outcome of this summer shortage In servant girls. “At fret wo admonish the culprits severely, and if they persist in thetr dishonemt dealing we are compelled to: revoke their i= No. Remedy, Sighs Mr. Bogart. “And is thore really no way to ren edy this awful soarcity in servants?! “It really seems not," mournfully. re- Bogart. "These conditions have alwaya arisen in the summer timo, and probebly they always will, Many ‘have tried to aolye the servant prob- lem, bot always have fafled “Why wouldn't ft be a good idea to atart @ servant girl farm and raise them Itke aquabs for tho marketT’ wae my scintillating suggestion. “Well, that sounds Ifke a pretty goo) plan and there certainly ought to be lots of money in tt," smiled the Com- intestaner, ‘Why don’t you ty it and But until I do my Mady will have to “You see, the employment agents are turn up her cuffs and wash her own no deeperate that they have resorted to dishes, whilo i= sorts of tricks to round up girly, Bridget and Mary Ann Vaummersgiris up at Sare- In the Adirondactra are. bein toma oF MAN “HIGHER UP” TOOK THE GRIT, COLLECTOR SAYS Capt. Liehers Traps Alleged Handy Man of Office- Holder’s Relative. may lead to the identity of the ‘man higher up" in police circles, John Mangolne, of No. | result of the District-Attorney's Inveati- } gation, wiille the police are searching {for another man, sald to be a blood | relative of a prominent clty ofMctal. | Mangoine, it 1s alleged, acted a the | wo-between for the city oMctal’s brother {and was caught recetring $200 from | the keaper of a disorderly resort In the | Bleventh . Preainct—Mulherry .street--to [allow her to transact business without | police interference. | Capt. George Liebers ts in command of the Mulberry street station, and, [with the continual urging ef Inspeotor | RusVell, has been ’so active that numer ous attempts have been made to secure | His work has reanlied in T Morita; 13” Grand Her home has been raided hy | Liebers abd Yils men a dozen times, and last Tuesday a half dozen of her women were sent to the workhouse for | ix months by Magistrate Cornell, On Tuesday Magoine, accompantod | by the relative of the elty official, called at Mrs, Morello’s house and promised | that for $200 0 week he could guaran- | tao Protection. It is said sho Wis “Stary | street pald Mangolne a first instalment of | 500, “hour tater her house was { by Liobers. he police station the womas-prompily. damurrod at the-treat- {ment she had recelyed. "I gave up, all righ here must be some ' she exolatmed. mintake."* | Mrs, Moresio and } communicated with Inspector Russell. Together they Jaid the fects before Magistrate Cornell and Acting District- Attorney Smyth, Mangolne was arres ed late Insi—night, and today was. Tombs by Magistrate Cor- It of $1,000 ball for ex. Liebers: talked with Monday ba Tt is said he hae admitted bis part Jn the transaction, but olaima he aoted only as an Interpreter for tho olty. ofi- alai's relative, He admitted to Capt. Liebers that he had raceived part of the $200 pald him by the Morrello woman. Investization by Inspector Russell Roine and hla part T proprietors of rea th Precinet shows that M held ups! in the El AIMLESS BODY 1 FOUND WANE May Have Been Mutilated by Paddle Wheel or Perhaps a Murder Victim. (he body of an unfdentifed man with both arma missing wab picked up early to-day by Capt. :Haivey rotter, of the tugboat Willlam V. R. Smith, opposite Vier 31, Heat River, There were po papers on the body by which tt could be {dentiNed. The man was about five feet ton Inches In holght Wwelghed 176 pounds, wore a red under- shirt, black trousers, low-cut shoes and @ lea@ior belt. Te cannot be told in advance of’ an investigation whether the man was nyirdered and mutilated, or the, arms Were cUt off \ tha oaddle-wheel of a | Magistrate Corneal and the District | Attorney's OMice are Investigating @ -case of -atlewed-«ratt that they -beteve 122 Bast OP Fourth street, Is in the Tombs as the and towed to the WOMAN WANTS. PASSENGERS OF SHIP SEARCHED ;Lost Pocketbook on Liner, but Didn’t Get It Back That Way. | Coming up the bay to-day trom Quar antine oh the White Btar liner Arabic, atin frem Liverpool. Mra. Eliza Ber- nard, of this city, @ second cabin pas- osengey, reached for where she gener ally keopa her purse. It was’ a fruit: lens rach The purse was gone Mra. Bernard immediately hunted up Purser Rooney and told him of. her loss. Purser Hooney was sympathetic, Mrs. ‘Bernard wanted more than sym- pathy, “What are you going todo about Itt’ he waked it." replied Mr, Rooney. have mislaid’ 1.” : “I did not misiay it,” @eclared the passenger. ‘“Bomebody stole It I want) | you to have all the passengers searched | as they: leave the ship.’’ Purser Rooney exeraived ali hia 4i- plomacy tp crying te explain that such 4 course would be impossible Mra Hiernard insisted. Bhe sald if there was a thief on the ship the Witte Star Mne ought to know it. “How much dit you! have in puree?” queried Mr, Rooney. “A five-pound note, aome small change and some jewelry,” answered Mre. Bernard. The passengers vere not searched NEW IRISH SOCIETY TO BE URGED HERE The Sinn Fein to Be Or- ganized for Aggressive : Work. “You! might the A meeting will be held on Wednesday evening next at the Irish-American Athietio Club, No. 163 Hast Sixtieth street, to organize the Sinn Fein move- ment in New York. ‘The situation in Ireland et present ts believed to favor the /establishment of & new and aggreestve 01 in this country that will redound to the practtoal Improvement of conditions in that most distressful country. The general opinion among Irishmen in America ia that all hope of securing ust concesstons from the British Par Hament must be abandoned. The recent farcibal home rule bill which wes re- Jeguag by the Irigh people tn oonven- tian In Dublin was about the limit of Eugiish liberality, but bad a: thet it would never pass th ‘The Sinn Fein moventent has ew: through Ireland, and tte work will kept up until It Iizhes the més- Non dear to Trishman. MMYSTERY.IN MAN” WHO LOST MEMORY Taken to Harlem Hospital— Can't Tell How He Was Injured. ‘was oven House of A man who delieves he ts Benjamin Englobach, eighteen years old, fs a mysterious patient in the Harlem Hos- pital to-day. He was picked up in front} of No, 1481 Avenue A: by Policeman | Hunt, of the Hest One Humdred and | Twenty-mixth street station, his head | pwathedtn oaand._his—_nose.. broken, #la/akull 1s probably fractured. | The man revived when an ambulance | came, but could only tell Juries, that he could remember- nothing | more than that he fell or waa thrown) atreot cross-town car eome time last night, and that two men took him pome- | | thatthe two-men-ban- ead, or parhe, but couldn't remember. SLAYER WARNER ON ROAD TO RECOVERY. ‘There wea no merked change in the merchant, Esther C. Norting and Jobn O. Wileon, as reported this morning from Bellevue | Dr, Lindsay Gordon, tn change of the patient, who te in the prison wand, be- Moves that Warner may posatbly be suf. fering from slight hemorrhages of the covering of the brain. but tt ls expeoted that his final recovery will be complege ‘The Bellevue doctors do not think that Warner will be mentally unbal- anced as the reault of his experience. Warner was conscious to-day and | took some interest In his surroundings. | in hot weather Grap¢e-Nuts delicious, just as it comes } from the pkg. with cream. | off of a One Hundred and Sixteenth | § him to tw INSOMNIA condition of Frank H. Warner, former | why accused of the murier of| Fallee AOD POLICEIN HUNT FOR BERLIN CHILD PER Fugitive Thought to Be an ileptic Who Now Has Forgotten His Crimes. SOPLE ARE IN ALARM. Children Kept Indoors, New Raid by the Assassin Being Feared. nies, BERLIN, July The erimtnal whe yaaterday alabbed five Utte girla on, the strests of this city {6 still at large, Whe theory that finds the greatest favor among medical men ia that the } don't see what (re cam do abeut;man ls an epileptic, who probably has recovered his ‘normal condition, and te ' Rew without any recollection of what he did yesterday—that his attitude to- ward these dreadful acta le that of a complete stranger. He will next be heard of when, in another seizure, he kills another child. . ‘This view of the case was made public to-day, / ‘The newspapers still publish warnings to parenta, and not only in the im- mediate neighborhood of the attacks ef yesterday, but in almost all sections of thie city chiltren to-day are being ‘kept Indoors. ‘After a conference ef the heads of | the Police Department, held this mort ing. all policemen, whether they were oa duty jest night or-not, were at once ordered out on patrol disty. | Some of them are In uniform, w! ere a! {a plain clothes. Between 7,00 and $,009 / rdiens the peace ‘e thus doing gus patrol service. Five or six men were a ing the night, but were rel morning. ‘The police have been supplied. with many so-called clues to the criminal, } but not one has proved genuine or help- + ed. to locate him, At midnight last night the figure of a man was obsery- ed-on the root of a house in the nelghe : horhood of one of the outrages. The/ notified and all) on that block roof, a sted dur jensed 4 police were at once the exits to the house were pioketed. A search party then went to and found a letter carrier rej pigeon TOLO' HIS BOSS HE WAS A DESERTER: Later Came a Quarrel and Dickerson Gives Schank Into Custody. In the Wrest Side Police Court to-day, ‘awaiting removal to Governor's Island on a charge of desertion. la Fred Sohank, known also Fred Wileon, bitterly regretting the tmpulse that led him to confide to his former friend and employer, Fred Dickerson, that he had taken French leave two years ako from the Fifteenth Cavalry, then stationed at Fort Ethan Allen, | Diokereon, who runs a detective and, atrike-breaking agency at No, 516 West Ninety-seventh streot, and who had em- ployed Schank ever sinco the latter's return to New York, had no hesitation, after quarrel, in giving up his secret Patrolman Barnes, of the West Sia~ ty-eighth street station, and Barnes ar rested Schank. to-day at Sixty-sixty street _and Broadway KILMER'S | CANCER AND )) _ TUMOR ~ HOSPITAL Thie'le>the-enly-inetitutlon~ the world that cures and remoy' Cancer, Tumor and other growths without the knife, Will refer you to former patients, tous Mondays, Wednestaym, 7 morning, Houre $12, inte “address letters KILMER HOSPITAL eivow anp Paaxaux Bra. AICA, LT. = posses th MAISAG Bik ves torn pene : ype rae are evel ft “ ay 00 may Prhends wat "Phos. Ottlard, Bigia, Ed) INSECT SPRAYER FITS.ANY BOTTLE. Mixterminator of monguitoes, pad every other peat, | Used for planks,” yiotstening tobacco, everywhere, Bic, each, or SE Receipts Cor destruction of all. {nawots. OF Aa Free with Sprayer) (evens & Oty Ten ae My Apentn wanted mots, 01a