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THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 1908. ASOLINE TANK HURT ON LAUNCH Wife of Sherman Zelufl, Son and a Neighbor Are Severely Burned. of Washington her son, Li Gilbert / are suffering from the aun: and received night when ine 10 fe superintendent of ards, went out for a trip on With him were his two sons and two daugi ters and fo including Gilbert Missic. When on the way home Mr Zeluff discovered that he was run- t of gasoline and he put Into port for a fresh supply After ten gallons of gasoline had been @ot on board Mr. Zeluff and one of his sons went ashore take back the empty cans, As were along dock they heard an ex sion and saw flames bursting from t jaunch. By the time they got back to the launch all had been aboard the little vessel were floundering in the water. Several small boats to be in the vicinity went to the res- cue and everybody was taken ashore, Dut it was found that three of the party were severely 4 Mrs. Zeluff was 6 the neck, tace ani had been attended sne was taken to } riage. Leroy Ze suffering trom the Alexian Hrot! Hospital tn beth. Phey were sent nome to-day It 1s delieved e@aused by son off frecrackers burning struck ir other persons, (en who that happened ed about atter sne an ne dock cracker supp the tank is of the eaused ft to explode. SPANKED HUSBAND WITH RUBBER HOSE Ten Women Held Zeigler While Wfe He Had Abused Punjshed Him. "There wasn't a sober face in the Ht r- lem Police Court this morning after a number of witnesses got through tell- ing how ten w6men helped Mrs. Her- man Zelgier, of No. 318 East Ninety- ninth street, spank her husband with a length of rubber hose. Zeigler testitied t! had been spanked and spanked, amd to substan- thee his story said that he hadnt been able to sit down then without definite and acute twinges of pain. Mrs. Zeigler was a widow wh married the man about eight ago. Since her marriage the said her four consecutive hours in a sober con- dition, He beat her frequently, and el of the neighbors in the house knew of it, Three days ago, she declares, her husband came home with some pickies and thyew one at the janitress, and then chased her around the house with @ knife. The wife had become so used to being beaten she said that she hardly minded it. But there were other w nodn th house, who thought sumething ougat to t woman usband has not spent twenty- leiger was the leading Med the women and campaign, ‘The first time was a rumpus in the tat ft Was to be the signal for carrying ft posasion came Zeigler says chasing her around w signal trom Mrs flocked into the Before Zeigler cc recover from his Purprise the women tripped him and then held his face down on the floor. But Zeigler kicked and squirmed, and the women found it more convenient to bend him face down over last night, when husdand was na knife. At a Sellelger ten women t a ohair, and the ten united in holding him there. Then one of them handed to Mr: Zelxler a plece of tough rubber hose @bout four feet long. Mrs, Zeigler started to work vigor- ously. Her husband groaned in agony but the women cheered Mrs. Zeigler on and told her not to let up as long as » could swing the hose. During this opreation Zeigler used all kinds of threats and one of the women ran for a policeman and had Zot er locked up on a charge of using threat-| ture he was loc n . | quarters, charged with homicide. ening language. Zeigler told Magistrate Horrman that he was satisfied and wouldn't abuse his wife again, He ewas paroled !n $500 bail to insure his good behavior and left with his wif —<$—$<—__—_ TWO GIRLS MISSING. Pe Alarm Out for Barbara Hil- d@ebrand and Margaret Gonzales. Police Headquarters to-day sent out & general alarm for two girls missing from their homes. The mother of Barbara Hildebrand, fifteen years old, of No. 326 East Twen- ty-fourth street, told the authorities that ehe Jast saw her daughter on June %% «Barbara wore a yellow Jacket, a white waist, dark blue skirt and black mtookings and shoes, She !s of fair complexion, five feet in height and weighs 120 pounds, Margaret Gonzales, seventeen years eM, left her home, No. 710 Third ay nue, yesterday afternoon, and having @afed to return home last night her sister, Theresa Conners, asked the po-, lice to find Margaret, The girl Is 5 fect @ inches tall, weighs 115 pounds and has brown hair and haze! eyes. She wore white shirt waist with blue dots, @ tan straw hat, black skirt and black etockings and shoes, Dk dod a WOMAN LEAPS BLOWS UP; THEEE 10 DEATH FROM walking { THEF CHASES UST WOULONT T HANS SLEP [Rt ESCAPE Mrs. William Smith, Mind Un- Woes of a Hot? balanced hy Grief for Son, \ | Instantly Killed. ight on Park Row Added To by Zeal of Men on Post. Suffering from a deluston that she 11's well on little old post 8," softly would be arrested to-day for lands {loquized Patrolman Louis Riebling to her netehbors Mrs. Emma Sinith as he swung his club and saun- her husband, W ered along Park row at 1.35 to-day. porter, on the fifth floor of some A fleeting en Twenty fifth street. b: ofa Savoy ed by. at to action nd peering into w the bending figu ppear behind the coun 1 register, < and doors of tt leaned fro: courtyard He gl ded to the e semi-dark » of a man r near the rear killed. The woman's mental troubles back to the death of her on! a boy of nineteen, who was d “Burglar? Sure thing,” sald Rieb- last summer, For a while after the| jing to himself, and having been on the boy's death she was completely out of force since January last, and never her mind. Although she improved in| having arrested one, Liebling knows @ health and became rational again, she | “Jim: 1e sees him. He ject to hallucinations and de-| smashed the platé glass window with | nis club pening club in th anifo through the ne hand and ndful was he of has to pay for clambered and Her chief delusion was that the po- unting for her. Lately she noking up the flat after | nis mself. ent to the fruit market |! In ne | From behind the counter the object She did so to-d 4 at 1 oclock | of pursuit. was drawn this morning a tub out on the bottom side neighbors saw her bring ire escape and set It e shut the d “Hands up are you?” Up went window behind her and got up on the] trans Wienerwurst, the dishwasher.” tub. She polsed herself for a moment ere D are discovered. and then took a headlong plunge, strtk- | wsgavne, ain't it” ing on her right temple upon t = Nagging of the yard. She was t old and had been married twenty-two years. | seven years am the 1 ell, I am the dishwasher, aboud i? WAR WITH LNEMEN kiddin’. Call the boss and show “Boss” Diesler, sleeping overhead, was Grace Weeks Is Dragged by Wire While Trying to und vat turn around vill you make a jaroused by the unwonted proceedings | below and appeared. He looked woe- y at the broken plate glass window at ix Hans, and he sleeps in the store th * he | explained, and | reve Cost to the cop Intruders on Land. lees hwasher, e night ts my dis jown went the levelled humiliation ler the counter. and the B t Miss Grace L. Weeks was sert- SSRTSESTIecE Nol ously injured defending her father's home, "Vista Lawn," in Bay Side, nan Henley, the against the encroachments ¢ years on the force, and phone comp: him. when the young wom: up the Flushing nor and prosecute four men arrested for ¢ door glass and tumbles passing. The noise arouses Hans Dr. H. A. Haughton, of Side. told the Court that his was real not able to leave her bed volun- nd Healey teered the information that Miss Weeks in me finish out said Hans, as had been ed accidentally Ids of a coil of wire and dra eral feet he again retired before she was to ex. ed that m of horses were attached to the er end of the wire and that her © from serious injury was remark It was also s tricate herself. a te FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN 4 y Weeks, vii w the h her father, Henry C is the executor by her mother, ekses have fought against telephone poles and wires being strung ross thelr property. The latest in- cident in the long struggle occurred last week, when the woman had four arrested for attempting toc the wires. It was not known time that the girl had been girl wn," years the W ow n= at in- men that jured, ed to en June case has been postp ee SEVEN-MONTH HUNT ENDS. Alleged Slayer of Jamen Maroncy Is Captured in Harlem. appear in court prnich dace the i James McGlynn. a steam driller, of No. 4 East One Hundred and Thirty- | second street, was arrested at Hundred and Thirty-eighth street Third avenue at 3 o'clock this morn. ing by Detectives Allen and Kessel- | mark after a hunt that has been kept up since Nov, 15 lust. | MeGlynn is accused of having hit | nes Maroney, of No. 1730 Lexington on the head with a bottle in | 16 ans arclurzument over politics, Maroney | No other medicine has been so died three days later in the Harlem | successful in relieving the suffering Hospital Before his death the wounded man/ made a statement to the Coroner, in which he declared MeGlynn struck him McGlynn las been missing ever since ‘A. close watch has been Kept on bis old haunts, however and after his cap- | up at Pollee Head- of women or received so many gen- uine testimonials as has Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound. In every community you will tind women who have been restored to health by Lydia E, Pinkham’s Veg- SSS etable Compound. Almost every SUICIDE OF OSLER CONVERT, one you meet has either been bene- ae an tited by it or has friends who have. World No Place for an Old Man, In the Pinkham Laboratory at Nurdy Believed, Lynn, Mass., any woman any day a retired business man, who nad often | ON€ million one hundred thousand admitted a belief in the Usler theory letters from women seeking health, committed suicide at nis nome, No. 122/ and here are the letters in which they found dying by his daugnter-in-law, | tures that they were cured by Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Mrs. James Purdy, Compound has saved many wo- Purdy nad been very despondent of late and felt, as he expressed it, that ornate ; i! men from surgical operations. $100,000 WORTH OF OIL BURNED.| {yagi £, Pinkham's Vegetable Com- an electrical storm early to-day threa| without drugs, amd is wholesome and large tanks of the West Penn 01 Com-| harmless. were struck by lightning, and a torrent | vegetable Compound so successful of fire spread over the surrounding ter- |i. because it contains ingredients which | $100,000. restoring it to a healthy normal con- BRINGING $3,000.000 cARGo, | “ition. MPICO, Mex., June 2%—The Nor-| distressing ills peculiar to their sex gian steamship 8. O. Knudson has} should not lose sight of these facts or sailed for Perth Amboy, N. J. with) toubt the ability of Lydia E. Pinkham's Ox) worth of lead end copper, patie Were” american’ Smelting ‘and Refining “this world 18 no place for an old man." WASHINGTON, Pa., June 23.—During | pound is made from roots and herbs, pany at Meadowlands, filled with oll, The reason why Lydia E, Pinkham’s ritory. The oll destroyed is valued at/ act directly upon the feminine organism, Women who are suffering from those Vegetable Compound to restore their health. —— Sunday World Wants Work Women’s $1.25 Waists at 79c Second Floor. Waists made of white batiste, tucked back and front and finished with lace stock collar and cuffs. B' way at 6th Av R. #. Macy & Co.'s Attractions Are Their Low Prices, ACYS | 4th to 3okh St 11 } Womens: $1.25 Je etticoats , 89c made of col vith rose ruche. Garments That Make for the Comfort of Mankind in Hot Weather Men's Store, 1 ht garments, fashioned of very thin needle-work. The call is answered in thes Shantung | Mohair Suits, Two-Piece Suits, Silk Suits, $23.75 $16.75 to $22.75 $12.75 to $19.75 Light-wei tailorman’s finest at-and-Trousers Suits, made of Two-piece Suits—coat and trousers;| Two-piece Suits, made of Prie light-weight es, includ made of fine Shantung silk; coat 3- | cravenetted English mohair, in fancy « irs, tropical worsteds, cas button, single-breasted model; trous- black effects and various shades « ind ches ots, in plain and es turned up at bottom and finished gray; fabrics warranted both spot cole au siecle with side buckles and belt loops. and wrinkle-proof UGUAIN VATE TROUSERS, «it te COATS, of black alpaca and brilliantine, ick, $1.24 and $1.06, of $1.88 to $9.20 (dt) Git a dotuce copeboGonoasguuuduopnducooidne $2.49 COATS. of blue and black serge, unlined, . $3.19 to 86.75 | CRASH S Mt_and trousers oo. 85.50 figs { P. . . . etticoats: Indicative of _ June White Sale Savings Meces Trunks and Bags in a Sale ° . Timely for Vacation-Goers |. eH Basement NCEPTIONALLY — good (fg ODERATE-PRICED travelling requisites, costing m FE | luck this year that we M than usual, just at the outset of the summer vac.uon Maas} Hive, tor June selling means just so much less expense to figure on for the White un- of The Trunks and Bags concerned, while specia are good staple numbers such as we show in the Travelling Goods store year in and year out. “Saratoga” Travelling Trunks, covered with duck and re dergarr an tive, from economy Jewpoint, as any the May White Sale afforded, yreed at al points with malleable iron trimmings; combination dowels and brass locks; Take this one collection ot two trays; lined throughout with clo : a 32 ie 34-in 38-in. $o-in. garments — Women’s Cambric Fach, 87.58 $794 $8.66 $9.02 Petticoats—all priced under “Continental” Travelling Trunk with heavy waterproofed 1] $5.09 mark, as an e aye canvas. fibre bound, brass trimmings and lock, leather straps, four slats in S mark, in) exams le of rt, thoroughly riveted and lined with the June sale value-giving :— bottom, deep set-up tray and extra s' cloth. With lawn flounce, two clusters 32-in 34-in 36-in. 38- i $8.66 $9.02 $9.33 $9.74 of hemstitehed tucks 1. .88t Cabin Trunks, covered with heavy duck, fibre With lawn flounce, hemstitche Jeable iron corners, brass lock and iron bottom, tucks and embroidery ruffle —Size, 28-in. 30-1 32-in 34-in 36-in. 38-in 40-in. With eter é ch, $4.11 $4.48 $4.81 $5.19 $556 $592 $628 With deep umbrella-shap “Featherweight” Cabio Trunks, French trimmings, mottled, fibre Deter ee auch ettgaane ate hound, hardwood slats, cloth lined and riveted. ched e 59e —Size, 32-in 34-in 36-in 38-in 40-in, With deep lawn flounce and wide —Ffach, $9.02 FOES CHOC CHO hemistitched tucks . .89¢ Telescope Bags, made of rattan, lined with plaid, leather corners; 22 and embroidery ruffle......,.89¢ in, $3.62; 24-in, $3.83; 26-1n Abe $4.04 With lawn flounce, two cluster tucks and with pen embroidery ruffle embroidery beading . 8 Vith lawn ruffle, tucks and tor- chon lace insertion and deep lace $1.19 Reed Suit Cases, very light and well made, leather straps ail around; |} 22 to 24-in., $3.96; 26-in, $4.33] | (oo ee A Bathing Suit for Every Member of the Family some with ribbon above ruttle edging With circular ruffle of six rows insertions and two edgy 81.24 lace (mgr HREE izations collect Bathing Suit stocks for | I | Macy patrons—and do the work thoroughly. These stock With perpendicular flounce of | are on sale on two floors—Women’s and Mis tits on torehon lace insertion and edging, $1.29 With deep flounce, wide tucks and two rows wide lace insertions -. $1.29 hemstitched ocys 34th Street side; Children’s Suits on the ide, and Men's Suits in the Sporting Goods the second floo: second floor, 35th Street store, fifth floor. By the attention paid to details in collecting our stocks of Wom- en’s and Misses’ Bathing Apparel you may determine our fitness for furnishing this part of the summer wardrobe. Not alone do we handle the products of other prominent manu- facturers, but we manufacture scores of Suits in our own workrooms, Women will find among these Macy Made Suits a number of exe sive models designed by our own designers. Included are Silk Bath and edging With deep flounce tucks between torchon lace in} tions and edging. $1.39 With deep tlounce, cluster tucks and very deep open or blind em- ing Suits ranging in price up to $37.74. broidery ruffles 81.49 Of especial interest :— With deep flow two rows point de Paris lace insertions and Women’s Bathing Suits At $1.98 —two styles of Suits, made of surf cloth—one a Dutch n style trimmed with white duck and black braid; the other with large sailor collar trimmed with three rows of braid and tie At $2.79 —two styles of Brilliantine Suits—one with square neck, trimmed with narrow braid; the other with a large sailor collar, trimmed with braid and tie with embroidered anchor At $3.96 —three styles of Mohair Suits—Dutch neck, square neck and large sailor collar style, prettily trimmed with braid At $5.49 — princess style Mohair Suit, trimmed with sMk braid and pearl buttons. At $5.94 _ princess style Moha Other Princess Mode Men’s Bathing Suits th Floor, $1.59 With deep flounce of blind em $1.98 deep lace rutfles.. (ase Footwear for the Bather Men’s and Women's Bathing Oxfords, of white duck; with ru Women’s and Misses’ Oxfords and Low Sandals, of black and Suit, prettily trimmed with taffeta silk white duck, with cork soles; pair, Suits, $7.94 to $12.24, Gk Men's Oxfords and Low San- dals, as above 64e Women's Sandals, of $2.24 Suits. with white trimmings, at.. Other fa knit Swi ming Roman | Men's two-piece, all-wool Wors- | in the new heather shades, u hit . high ' ted Suits, navy and gray, with red wnite nee cut high and finished or white stripes, at .$1.98 Boys’ Bathing Suita W Wy ribbon adjust it; sizes aE Other Bathing Suits, in a variety | Ba aie en aaa ATMs of colors and combinations, $2.79 to $7.49 aces Outdoor Play Clothes Or e ton Bathing navy blue, with white or red trim Men's two-piece, sweater-knit | ‘mings, fast colors; sizes 2 Swimming Suits, closely woven; | years ......... a gray grounds, with white or red |” ne-piece Bathing for the Boy. - 2+" stripes age Maelo |eeiemioceseiats ed jersey, plain na Riaehinnanve AR farithe Other — sweater-knit Swimming | $1.20; trimmed with white Not fashioned so much for the Suits, in a variety of combirations, sake of appearance, but for dura- at .$3.49 to $4.96 ‘ . Two-piece Bathing Suits, bility—fabrics and sewing such Men's two-piece, all-wool fancy | or with rter_ sleeves, sail(ewithera neler ervice sweater-knit Swimming Suits, gray | navy or gray all worst ASSO LTSAD CL NAT CeS tase DICE! 49c for Play Suits, made some- what like rompers, only the trou- Mace | Table Cloth Lengths of Linen Damask: A Clearance Banement Here are pure Irish Linen Table Damasks, bleached and of perfect quality; all in neat designs. worth 75c. a yard, at these special prices: sers are long; made of blue or tan chambgay; sizes for boys of 2 to 10 years. 94c for Rough Rider Suits, made of khaki cloth, trimmed in regulation style with fast-color red, blue or yellow drill; far boys 66 inches wide, tull Ordinarily of 3 to 14 years, Gs east ess sah aah 24c and 46c for Overalls, 2% : $1.18 $1.33 $1.48 $1.77 made of denim; sizes 4 to + elsewhere 75c. 14 at 460, Overalls tan cotton cloth Pure Linen Napkins, full bleached, the half dozen; here.. 49c na | Men’s and ' Women’s | The Semi-Annual Sale of Samples. | The Best Time for Buying Half a Year’s Supplies Main Floor, SH teft day mornir e Excepting the Women’ range of styles is prac Most of it sample Hos an article of merchar underpricing brings out hol Women's 25c. We Hosiery, Men's 25c. Half Hose, tn abundance of the Stockings placed on sale yester- irted with over 33,000 pairs HOSIERY Silk Stockings at 98c., roken. —all of it perfect qua , little wonder Wome 75c. He Men's 50¢ 75c. Half Hose,-37e 24c yme 50c. Hosiery, Men's 50c. Halt Hose, 15c iery, 37c 15c Details of the sale stocks: 24c Women’s 25c Hosiery at 15c Men’s 25c Half Hose at 15c Women’s 35c to 50c Hosiery at 24c Men’s 5Uc Haif Hose at 24c Women’s 50c to 75c Hosiery at 37c Men’s 50c to 75c alf Hose at 37c Ordinarily Worth $1.75 Second Floor nhess: worth, for it represents builders. Cho} at full regular price, is unr the best workmanship of Good fortune, th { of three differe hig! ust and long hip w trimmed with lace an ed money’s \merican Corset n, to find an underpricing such as this. she ust; and | hip with medium made of fine white batiste, al supporters attached. with As the “March tesse” oness” ty sent the | Ay standard, so our the [Miao Hand-made Chemises, 99c Chemises made of nainsook, drawn through and lace All hand-made and hand- domestic needlework You will find it ditficult to distinguish them from -irperted: 1 hand-made garments costing two or three times as much. d with | with ribbon d—and as examples of fine aes — Women’s, Misses’ & Chil- dren’s Ready-to-wear Riding Apparel *": you inst these garments and note their graceful lines and the splendid tailoring that gives permanence to you will not wonder at the marked : | Marchioness’ Corsets at 3 | : cess of this Itest addition to the ranks of apparel ready- lo-wear, The cost alone is sufficient argument in favor of such appar o” Purposes of comparison you have only to take the c similar garments made-to-measure. the equals of to-orde to-order work cos Riding Habits, for women amd misses; astride riding; of linen, $10.74; of khaki seas Children’s Riding Habits, of crash and linen, $9.49; Women's and Misses’ Long Coat and Breeches Habit: and $38.24; of khaki ( ; ; Lace & Embroidery Prizes Main ¥ These, ready-to-wear, are quite { for a third to a half less than, garments, with skirts for side-saddle « ae White Venise Lace Insertions, i wiiths from one to three inches; made to sell up to 50c. a yard; special. .24c.,29¢,& 33¢ Batiste Embroideries, combined with li vutache and Cluny including i m , in to sell up to $ urd; 38c., 49c., 69c. and B9¢ elects, s from 4 spec a Macy’s Skylight Restaurant and Airy we the street leve { Ideally Cool Eight stories a in block from 34th to 35th st overlooking the heart of the a la carte and table d’hote. feat from > entire are served choice cuts ?) Wonders — teat «et IEE: EE ETT