The evening world. Newspaper, July 14, 1908, Page 5

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—__— DOCTORS STA OT TOSESI BES FPO Evening World’s Corps of Physicians Begins Work Early This Year, HEAT KEEPS THEM BUSY. Five Hundred Little Patients Will Have Week at Sea- shore During Summer. The heat wave bolling up over the @art side vesterday left in Its wake hundreds af smothering, walling babies. | Make Their Living Selling For che past twenty years The Even fxg World's corps of physiclans have battled wiih infant mortality, and to meet this urgent need for help thelr work has ‘een resumed this year. Ef- forts ‘jeve the sufferings of the tiny hea’ victims have been begun by the visits of competent doctors to the eoncested dir The Evening World's doctors have eartc blanche to carry to the sick! abies any necessaries in the way of medicine or food. Explorations in the/ emwrded touement districts lead the | doctors to believe that the need for! poth (a going to be greater this year| > than !n any previous year In their ex- perience. Preparations are being made- for a vigorous campaign to save the davies, Eve tors re: where The Evening World's doc- © a grateful welcome from anxious mothers, at thelr now what to do with the walle | inz babies Mothers Shown How to Care for Them, A crisade of hygiene {s being carried on through the most y quar- ters of the The doc explore for diseased had’ prescribe for the sick, and provide medicines and stert- lized m uy duties are as largely educational as fessional, as the Ig- Morance of what {s proper food for a baby is woeful. Hundreds of mothers need to be instructed every day {n the care of young children, the {m- portance of dally bathing, fresh alr, and of keeping the milk clean and cool. The physicians are earnest and dill- gent {n their efforts to prevent disease as well as to heal It. Rigid instruotions are left that small babies are not to be fed on food prepared for adults. Fre- ay nether: of first hables have to be ford: n to feed them corned beef, dill o ss, soda Water and other things fatal the Infant stomach, and taught to vrepare sterilized milk for them. Reducing Death's Harvest from the Cradles. It {s hoped that early efforts will greatly curtail death's annual harvest from the s and cradles of the poor this year ng heat ts mak t qu wea s have s had tin 1 mse heat wave. The re of rmanent im- t deaths re- of Suns of age, of the {ll- ned by the s in pre-| 5 carried on e@ effort to are eoor g Word share i At of a trip to Bea Breeze, > the second fifty of The Evening World's 80 bablee will be sent on Wednesaay. | —— a WOMAH 15 CRUSHED BY SUBWAY CARS Pushed Off the Platform by Crowd at Fourteenth Street Station. Mrs, James L. Morley, twenty-seven, of No, 49% East One Hundred and Elghty-second street, was severely bruised and otherwise injured at the Fourteenth street subway station last night between two cars of a northbound | local train, ‘The platform was jammed with people, Mrs. Morley was standing near the local northbound tracks when the train pulled in. People were crowding to the platform from the stairway, and despite her struggles Mrs. Morley was grad- wally pushed toward the edge of the Platform and finally fell into the space etween two cars, John Metzger, a platform watchman, yelled to the train guards not to start the train; then, with the assistance of | al guards, succeeded in getting the woman to the platform. She was hysterioe! from fright and her Injuries | and Dr, Murphy, who was called from | Bt. Vincent's Hospital, took her to that institution, 1+ was sald at the hospital that al- though the injuries she sustained were quite severe, they were not dangerous, — SEALER LOST THREE MEN, HALIFAX, N. 8, July 14.—With her flag at half-mast for the loss of three of her crew the sealtng schooner Alice Gertrude, Capt. Ryan, with 1,000 skins, arrived yesterday from the Falkland Islands sealing grounds after a run of fort e days. During a storm Ar- thur Griffin, the mate, Harry Pace and face Yaft, al) of Halifax, were |or her troubles, THE BVENING WO ELD, TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1908, Mrs. Howard Gould’s Sister Camping HINT FORPOSIN With Chinese Husband in ‘Frisco _\N JAPACK CASE | ae Companies Refuse to Pay In- surance to Woman's Son | Pending Investigation. | | Clty Chemist Sant, of Paterson, N, J., |{s making an analytical examination of ‘the stomach of Mrs, Fannie Tapack | whore body was exhumed yesterday following the circulation of stories which moved the county officials to action, It was stated that pecullar clroumstances attended the death of | Mrs. Tapack, who lived at No, 18 Hud- |son street. | Oounty Physician Armstrong had the | woman's body exhumed and re-interred In flve hours, placing the vital organs lin possession of Chemist Sant for ex- | amination. | Dr. Armetrong, who belleves Mrs | Tapack was polsoned, said atter the | autopsy that only a chemical anaylais | of the portions removed will establish anything definite, “The etomach had » peculiar hue,” | admitted the physician, “and it 1s pos: | sible that this ‘vas caused by poison.” | | While the autopsy was being per-| | formed Louis, Nathan and George Tapeck, eons of the dead woman, stood on the opposite side of the street. | Louls, who had Insured hig mother tn | his own favor for $5,000, wanted to wit- | ness the work of the surgeons, but Dr. Armstrong refused to allow him Inside |Louls, who Is out on ball pending hts jappliication for a new trial on the bur- glary charge on which he was sentenced to three years in Trenton State Prison, | talked freely with his brothers while | waiting to hear the result of the au- topttiy in the day Louls Tapack called at the offices of the two companies in Paterson which had insured his mother. He showed a copy of the death certifi- cate, in which the woman's illness was given as acute inflammation, and asked that the insurance money be paid. Both companies, having communicated be- forehemd with County Physician Arm- strong, declined to pay unt!l the result of the autopsy {s made known Relics Dug From Ruins of Chinatown, but Have Dis- covered an Opium Cure | Which May Make Them | In the resurrection of @ new San Francisco there is nothing more inter- | esting or popular with sightseers from ew York and the East than the quaint Oriental Camp presided over by Wong Sun Yue and his wife, Ella “fay Clem- Howard SS ER a RS AS mons-Sun Yue, sister of Mre Gould Persons returning from the coast say | the reports that the one time beautiful! elby Perry Clemmons, of daughter of Pittsfleld, Ill, istence with her almond-eyed convert of is ving a romantic ex- a husband. Their Oriental Camp fs the st visited of all the curio shops g among the ruins, It is on the site of, ( p old Chinatown Besides, Mrs, Wong rnomore Sun Yue and her husband have patent- ed a cure for opiim victims which is Hose SILK LISLE SOCKS [That don't wear through, Near Saranac Lake yesterday, as Guaranteed for 6 months, band’s race, She speaks of their strug: gles to breast the earthquake disaster, | ET FOREST FILES members of the volunteer fire depart-/ Should they wear through. a frankly declares that pictures of here) t ment were at work at a fire in the self and Chinese husband ring 15 cents pines, a passing locomotive threw out new palr FREE. epiece, and ventures the prediction | | Sparks and set several more. [ee if one Saat oi nee that her eplum cure will eventuallly sell | One railroad has a great tank of NeW nair if a HOLE shows in 6 months, for &15) @ bottle on the world's mar | Water on wheels, and with hose pipes | Sold Only: if kets. In one letter describing her Ute je fire brigade of section men !s at|In Manhattan: KING BROS. a TED in a tent che says: | | Work pouring water on the flames that| WAY, 217 Oth ave, and 102 E. 14th st, y \ ere) n Kiyn: R. W. BENNETT & CO, ATainGlaba a Tereertn elon ental Oa tans can be reached in this manner. There is| ihrer bro Gulvn ee yO oth an where the Jong Hing Taw (the oplum Trespassers Blamed for Flames ® great amount of tais work to do be- | and 1011 Brosdway, cure) Is made, The old blind man, Ah) Sweeping then WRocke: tween Remsen and Plumadore, a| Ww L. DOUCLAS and promises to sister of Mrs. ining wide fame ring a fortune to the Gould. In letters to Mrs. F. Behrman, of No, | 437 East Tenth street Mrs Wong Sun! Yue, who recently formally foreswore the Stars and Stripes for the Dragon, | breathes bellef in the Ideals of her hus. | HREM .S WONG SUN YOUR —— Coon, is picking the herbs. My hushand | | stretch of more than 100 miles, carried him from the fire and I am| The preserve of William Rockefeller ts stil taling care of him, Atter two! feller Preserves. Le er tiae phous te appease, te 3 50 SHOE MEN ears charity, during which we cheer- pens Ie | Impossible here to extinguish the fires e MEN AV CRO Oe ANG Oly Oe Pe Bits | that originate here and there and Atrialwillconvince eve we now have a right to chaigs SARANAC LAKE, N. Y., July 14—| everywhere, One fire warden expresses yon that W.L.Doug- for It. Peonle indulging In such expen. Scores of men to-day added to the force | the opinion that many of these fires ‘a8 $3.50 shoes He i sive habits can pay to be cured. trying to check the forest fires that have been set by men who have come thabestinthe world s in contact with the law against tres- passing which has been enforced by Mr. Rockefeller's guards ‘one of the resorts of the Adirondacks 1s suffering, although clouds of smoke “Our place is most beautitul. We have all kinds of relics, which Wong Sun and myself dug from the ruins. A sack of salt turned to stone; bottles vw all shapes and colors, beautiful enough are raging along the lines of the rall- ways in the Adirondacks. The fire pa- izol established by the railroads proved to be inadequate, for a spark from a locomotive has been sufficient to start Stores in Greater New York : #85 Broadway, cor. Howard, 185 Broadway, ath St. 65 Broadway, cor, 1th st. 1349 Broadway, cor, a8th Si 147-149 Broatay, cor, dat 5 Naseau Street, Pn hover over some of them, z asa 'Frisco fire relic to adorn the né¥ tn. ground ablaze. The woods are 50 | pe eer ein arene Hoffman bar; Chinese ootn In big me = fan Third A¥., cor. 130th fl ary that once a fire gets @ start | COUNT DE MERODE I8 DEAD. chunks—the best collection in 'Frisco; wind drives {t over miles of country in beautiful jade rings like my wedding 1779 Third A venue, be. tween 148th & 147th § BRUSSELS, July 14.—Count de Merode, 886 Sirth Av,, cot & short time. 1, hth Avenne, 1947 Broad ring, which Wong Sun gave me, and a situation to-day Is alarming, | President of the Belgian Senate, died yChy—I8 Newark Av, 4 Fulton Ste co The ton to-day larming. | yesterday. Tse Broad Streets 21s PUD AY SOPs Nt Bey Chinese god—their first god, who ts 8,000 years old, Although blind, he made the medicine for the Chinese, even as Ah Coon makes {t for us now, and he oovld see the medicine as {t went through the body. When he could not cure he would ery. This god the Chinese rich and poor worshipped, for ell ave sick more or less. Others of her letters indicate the hold Chinese superstitions have upon her. Io & letter whose date Ine bears the words ‘Feast of St. Primus’ end the ine “We cannot bear our triale without patience,” she telis hww her ¢ictures brings 16 cents each and af the great oe number of New York people who visit her. No mention te made of her sister In the se of pictures forwarded to Mrs. Behrman, who became friendly with the ¢ormer Catholic missionary & among the Orinese in 'Frisco's China- town, are some of the Oriental Camp and !ts surrcundings, showing old Ah Coon at work on the drug cure; herself and her husbsnd, she decked in the f jade wedding ring which makes her ; the property of a Chinaman, and also 4 crucifix, whics ls suspended from her neck on a heavy gold chaln, and other religious ornamentation; Wong Sun Yue surrounded by palms and In native cos- tume; the couple’s bridal chamber, and others of her husband, who asserts his Orlental distaste for pictures on several of the photos, ‘(-—_———— HARMSWORTH HAS TIMES. LONDON, July 14.—The Daily Chron- {cle asserts that the new proprietors of the Times include Lord Rothschild, Lord Cromer and Lord Northeljfte (Alfred Charles Harmsworth), the last named having a controlling Interest. Have made their great suc- cess because they fully sat- isfy those who demand real “taste” in their cigarettes. Just try the Helmar, ROBINSON'S | PATENT BARLEY PN re ABE AL AIR Tas A 0 AE BS SEES TT MY been the best substitute for mothers’ milk during the Inst 70 years all over Europe, and the same in America, BARLEY WATER made from | ROBINSON’S PATENT BARLEY | is the “Thirst Quencher” for the athlete, invalid and those suffering from STOMACH 8. TROUBLES—Is cheaper, cleaner and more : healthy than any other food. | Grocers and Druggista Everywhere. JAMES P, SMITH & COMPANY, IMPORTERS, NEW YORK, 10c for 10 | Sold Everywhere With fresh cows’ milk for Infants has | ees ANARGYROS, Manufacturer 113 Fifth Ave., New York This Is the Coolest Store in New York NO. CONNECTION\WITH ANY OTHER STORE SIEGEL (SOOPERE cae J.B.GREENHUT, PRES. NEW YORK Every person applying at Premium Parlor, fifth floor, to-morrow, will be given free a set of 10'S, & H,” Green Trading Stamps, Only one set of stamps of the same date is good in any one book, but stamp collectors will receive a reasonable additional number of complimentary stamps for other books they may have unfilled. Chairs and Rockers--Half Pree BOUT one hundred pieces in all; some, just purchased from the Furniture Exchange, All will be soid at exactly half prices. Samples Only. No Duplicates. Only One of a Kind quartered Cut No. 5—represents a mission : design arm chair, in golden oak; Arm Chairs saddle shaped seat, broad arms and low back; regularly Pr $9; sale price... , $4.50 Arm Chair—made of oak, golden oak and highly pol- ished; saddle shaped seats and | high back; regularly eg - $7; sale price $3.50 ~ )) ‘ Si Price |. Value Price 5 $10.50 | $32.00... $16.00 Cut No. 4—represents a large Cut No, 7—represents a large fire- | 14,00/ 38.00... 19,00 feshett golden oak frame, ney side rocker, {frame made of solid | 14.50 | upholstered seat; back covered) oak; golden color and rubbed | g)7 i with leatherette; repue $7 50) | finish; seat and back covered RET larly $15; sale price.. OU | with leatherette; regus gy pe larly $15.50; sale price, $7.75 i q . 7,00 7.50 14,00 Hall Chair. 15,(0 Hall Settee. Cut No, 6—represents an ideal | Morris chair, quartered oak oO Obes et) | frame with pica weathered | Morris Chairs—Mission Rockers oak finish; fitted with small | Style | Value Late Ti Value en eres boxes on the arms and have | Vil Sale) vai Sale | $11.00.,.. $5.50 | $28.00... $14.00 ) genuine Spanish leather) ‘sue Price ue. Price) 12,00 6.00 $.00.... 2.50 cushions; regularly $40; gy | $22,00,...$U1.00 $32.00....$16.00 | 1 2.50'77! 6.25| 15.50,... 7.75 Sale price ssevsesseesesse, 90 | 15.50,... 7.781 37,00,,.. 18.50 Siegel Cooper Store, Filth Floor.) Refrigerators, Enamel Ware and Window Screens New, Fics and Periect Goods at Clearance Prices tor To-Morrow Stransky Sauce Pans—four-quart,|Refrigerators—to be used in genuine Stransky turquoise offices, private rooms or nur- i 5 series; made of all metal; gal- blue ware sauce pans, with white vanized lined; oak grain finish inside; enameled covers; a on the outside; a separate com- regular price 75c; at..... 45c| partment for ice; nickel-plated faucet; regular price is Enamel Lined Water Coolers— in turquoise blue and white lin- ing; oak jackets, nickel-plated faucet; 8-gal, size at $5; 4 G-gal, size at....sseeeeeee $ Window Screens—center extension. Imperial Waxing Pads—haveacor-| $2.50; at.... $1.95 Height. Extend to rugated surface, and by rubbing | Refrigerators—hardwood, oak fin- 24in 33 in, lee ish; ice capacity of 40 Ibs, gale) 32in. 37 in, ahot iron over same afew times | Vanized ‘ining; 39 im. ons 28in, 37 ia. the rust spots or roughness} hich; special veces $6.25] 30in. 33 in... Window screens; 18 inches high; extend to 33 inches; spe- caused by sticking starch or im-j Polar Star Ice Cream Freezers— proper care will be removed; reg-| will make delicious ice cream; ular price Se; special ¢ sh see demonstration; 2-qt. aw lor to-morrow only, 7 OC | size at $2; I-at. size at... 75e 24e | Pi (Siegel Cooper Store, Basement.) White Goods, Linens and Muslins All Odd Lots and Smalt Quantities Must Go j Regardless of Cost Clearaice of Summer Rugs and Mattings China Matting In several grades; bright color- ings in pretty designs. 5c Unbleached Cheese Cloth, 19¢ to 29c Plain and Fancy yard..., 2% White Goods, yard.,,,.... 4c 8c Unbleached Muslin, heavy 49¢ to Y5c Hand Crochet ‘weleh, pI De nrg, 6 Mats, each.......,. 29¢ $e and 10c Hemstitched and ~ i d $ Hemmed Doilies, each «64... OC tie - Hemet teed: Aeayie 29¢ 10c and loc Hemmed Damask e Napking, each....... 9c] 79 Heavy 81x90 Bleached Cotton Sheets, each,.,... 9 White Soft Finished 59c Cambric, yard Te | $1.39 22-in, Irish Mercerized Damask Napkins, dozen,, 98¢ 12'.¢ White, English Long 9c | rice Regvlarly 35 dive nee y@ egilarly $80 yard) cleatanes 27¢ Crex Grass Matting Carpet designs of ligured effects | in preity colorings; 36 in, wide. | regularly 38cayard; cleat- a ance price......++ 27¢ Plain Crix Rugs Omali sizes Japanese Straw Matting Cloth, yard (Siesel Cooper Store, Main Floor, Rear,) In choice carpet designs and | —--~ neem eee color effects, al Regularly duc yard; clearance Q4g Clearance of English Perambulators Offering a Savirig of $6. 0 on Every One HEY are all fine carts —too well known to need a detailed description, Enough, when we say that they are ~ superbly built, and that the materials used are the very best. Clearance | See the illustration Sle rT Price, . Aaeenee Hel for design. 7x54 in, bie , 30x60 in, 85 boc Well made carts in three-quarter size, 36x72 in.$1.1 ; 95 and regularly sold at $21.50; to- § 4.6.x 7,6, 2.2 1, $175 Morrow’s your chance to get one at 5 Siegel Cooper Store, Fifth Ficor, Frout, Siegel Cooper Store, Third Floor, Center.) Pure Foods at Lowest Prices ’Phine Chelsea 4,000. Mocha & Java Coffee ieget Cooper's famous GUADARALI i blend. We serve it in our PURE FOOD Ze RESTAURANT an LUNCHEONS; be DERED; 10 Ibs, § 1-Tb, Mai: anu telephone orders filled promptiy. Crisp Soda Biscuits, rwieback, Waldorf tea: grahain biscul n special doz. Sc, Cooked Ox Tongue UVM MMATNe aT oe OSE 1.15; veg. 10c package our DAYLIGHT ground, or POW Hams for Shipping Ham What style dry sugar um. Canvased for delivery to your elty or R1/ summer home 4.90 Lb 4ge AN re farina, old fashioned ed wheat 9) fe cit 286 whole evapo imported DF Ht 25¢ PINEAP- 9c canister $1; drum Armour's “Star. “The \ Dold 3 \\ estphal Sample Teas 220 chests pre dy reg. Isc nesdey, 1b en quolity, Wed New Red Onions, FORMOSA OOLONG TEA, tragran. yellow onicns, white onicns lon, English Breakfast, Young Hys onions, yelloy Mi Ib. sdiv 5 31 So she Ro 8 basket yti5; cat, rene 38e livered : NEW PENANG N 80c quality sN0. 8 256 MARACAIBO COFFEE of fancy golden RALSTON B EM {) Santos coffee: fresh from the roasier teed abs: f° ground, of POWDEREL D On an to t ang Be 6 Iie FRESH ROLLED OATMBAL - DD} ae 10¢ Hol )MATOES — Fountain fave ae \RCH~ Fountain Be AN AETAE iraii ad Loe) RG eof dee ’ Die ore sf ce rum a tore , Fourth Floor, ——mmmmmn ASk for ‘‘S, & H.’’ Green Trading Stamps—We Give Them —_—__,.

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