Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
~—DELMONICO GANG ROBEED CONCERN AS ADAILY JOB Two Cashiers Arrested Con-, fess They Destroyed the | Checks “Pal” Marked. ROBBED SAFE ALSO.,| Downtown — Restaurant Ma Ay Disc harge While Force as Result of Losses, | | aa | A long and annoying leak in tha re-! eelpts of Dein ‘o's restaurant, 66 Beaver street, car oan end to-day ing and Hoffmes e John street station, arrested {No 30 West vet, and George Brandt, when Detectives Kei ter, of Camille Forty fth s of No, 3 West Louis Helmer, of No. 117 West eenth partment, on a charge of grand lar- eeny. Brandt and Helmer ye con- fessed. They are both under twe years of age With the excepts atreet, emp fa few That the Were falling eight month: was a wequer for economy the drain cont systems were attempt to locate it nic and the con-! Wall street broke! sine d all so igurated Finally, suspicion fe ATANUE @nd Helmer, who nployed 48 controle F ent Og was iu up by tube from @hange and ke were s In furth ! from the offle> saf Brandt was overcome He said his father had e 2) lowed the! dy under rd of “Practically all Americar nica hands and feet the mixture of races that does tt. Now, In London he only beautiful models come from Hto cl Kuhne Beveridge, Sculptor, Says the American Venus Is the World's Perfect Beauly; Milo Has Face Like a Sheep Venus de ———_++ English Girls Have No Figure; French Women Depend on Dressmakers’ Artifices That Vanish Under the Sculptor’s Chisel. HER VENUS WILL TYPIFY BEAUTY AND NOT LOVE. Therefore She Will Be a Maiden, and Young—To Perpetuate Her Ideal in Marble Is to Be Her Life’s Work. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. The American Venus has been found. Kuhne Beveridge, the most notable of women sculptors in America, has discovered her and has declared that it shall now be her life work to perpetuate her loveliness in marble, Mrs, Beveridge, who has spent many years in Europe and modelled nearly all its crowned heads as well as its notable beauties, asserts that after an ex- haustive study of all the European types it is her opi nd only in pinion that perfect beauty is to be fo America, and, to add to the interest of the story, she 1 sister, Ray Beveridge, to pose for the American “Where else can you find such fine straight backs, such wonderful carriage?” she asked me yesterday in Miss Ray Beveridge’s apartment at 334 Central Park West. “Where else do you see such splendidly built dren as we huve here? T have Hved in London ten years, Englishmen say and believe that “'2) thelr women are the most beautiful In the world. When you first hear {t you wonder {f they can be in earnest, Then gradually you come to feel the charm of the English women and to observe the beauty of those little heads ‘lon the long, graceful figures. Yet English women really have no figures, ankles, hands, wrists, ts) Heck#—are all bad. heir polnts—feet. And it ts precigely In these points that the American woman excels, This + true of all classes in America. Result of Race Mixture i can girls have pel, whieh, as you know, 1s district t ge, at my sug: | us of France blished, Mrs, Bev mn, took up the cla es women,” she ‘give “Fren THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, JULY 3 KRUTINE, Are 0, 1908. | enough aliverware to start half a dozen | |pleces from one whip, as you have here| DROWN AS. TFT BACK AT ‘ANG HOA OF is] HLL ugh ROCK CHIR ROREVMCON 3 che eftest of beauty, or rather an tue) ANOther Saved After Pe culiar: Hitcheock ay Vorys Will Be) Seventy-Five-Year-Old Eloper sion of {t. But it 1s all due to artifice, a ne ir faces and figures are Accidents to a Boating of course, the sculptor’s aie ; under a dressmaker-bullt | Party on Passaic, “Ttalian and Spanish have a certain WANT TOS SEE THE BANK BOOK owriet reign of voluptuous beauty, but ft Tvo men were drowned and a third Jdoas not compare with the Amertcan| dragged ashore half dead in an accle Commissioners of Accounts Ask About Hurley's Depont The Commissioners of Accounts, who | Dave been investigating the purviiase | dy tt J near Kissena Park | for 9 raining ground, have or ered the account of William S$ Burley to be produced before them, havin had a subpoena d served on the oflivers of the Boroug Bark of Bre Mr. Hurl of 840,00 The bank of ave sent the Com- missioners « rent deal of data, but the Conmiss POWDER-PUFFING LATEST IN WAY OF ROBBING VICTIMS. PHILADELPHIA, July: Bons yesterday told Magistrate @ new method of robbery which m the potice o The method ia called the powder puff, because of the gentle manner of application It Is the very lavest thing in holding up, The robt @ paper of white pow der from his pockel, putts it In your face and then you faint, ‘The rest is | easy for the footpa Max Speigel, of who saw the robbers at work of the victims and then chas two blocks, has xlven the po 1 them | a de- | seription of the thugs, and efforts are beng made to run them down 1] that Is known of the powder used is | that it 1s white, wee MACK DUE HERE SATURDAY TO START CAMPAIGN WORK. BUFFALO, July 30, forman &. Mack, Chairman of the National Democratia Committee, stated to-day that he would announce the personnel of his Executive and other committees probably before night. Mr. Mack expects to leave here some time to-mortow afternoon or evening for New York and be at the Hoffman House in that city Saturday morning, —_—_—>-_- BOY DIES OF INJURIES. Max Graf, seven years old, died to- day in Mount Sinai Hospital from in- Juries received two nights ago when a wagon ran him down in front of his home, at No. 316 Delancey street. Michael Reddy, the driver of the wagon, ‘was arrested and held on a technical eanrge of homicide, —— ——— GARGAN HAS PNEUMONIA NOW, BPRLIN, July 9.—Thomas F. Garga; ef Boston, who was operated on lant week for @ disorder et the, Somes, pares aainny Geen Me ie! e's strength during the Kaiser’ | things. One notices t | Mrs. Beveridge, “I am not a great ad- type. German women have improved + jon, Migmaie ee tie reign, Ha has been @ boat- so progressive that he has affected his us ey of five on the Passale Ri Kingdom with his own spirit, dt NY thy ahanles Vas thirty European Beauty More Lasting. |five years old, and Ahearn. re pal four, while the man rescu: “LT will say this for the European James wihbitts, thirty-three. All were ig beauty secs !o¢ Harrison. women, however—t with the faces of gop, American girls of e . ad An an women wither early, They |*Man wear themselves out; I think because noon, stopp they have no great interests. Their Passaic River ht Club. All of the lives are frittered away on trifilng occupants except MiCarthy, got f ticularly at |the boat safely, but the latter Kon to the srandmot ve Borgen, of Nowa ng in d shortly before American watering places.” as he was gett “At what age do you consider the into the Water, ‘There ts a American type ally at Its best?’ ourrent at the place and MeCarthy I inquired, who could not MN estaa Tewnieled Quita early,” Mrs, Beveridge replied, down stream. Hibbitts, although he rom’ seventeen 10 lw rhaps, could not swim, jumped o men Ww though, of course, In Indivhlual cases POL RSH lo save 1 It may be much later.” Proto iene a LIB graben et “And will your American Venus be {hIOWn to teen en steCarthy.. but so young? I thought the Vanuses—the 1° iit. nad carried, him away, and he Milo, the Medicl—all of them, Indeed, | Viappeared and Was drowned Were supposed to be mothers,” I said, During Ue eactemens Auearn, who had gotten oo close to the edge of the i toate tumbled Into the tiver, and he, Typify Beauty, Not Love, Hoa eebia to. Wim Was Carsied. off, while nelp. There was “You are right,’ Mrs. Beverldgs re- only on rver at hand, and as plied. “But mine will not be, She will soon as Hiboitts could be pat Ashore not typify Love, but Beauty. § ate emtorts re ees represent the perfection of the Ameri- the cd which to me Is the most beau- in the world. You know," confided had disappeared tetas e, i fe ; ay t the place and mirer of the Venus of Milo’s face, To het irom me {t looks rather like a sheep. SAK Wee sand had only “My Venus is to be a very serious recently come from Waterbury, Conn work, I have decided to abandon the, ra worldly life and retire to a village on | EVENING THINGS UP. the highest of the Bavarian tyrol moun- | tains and lead the life of a hermit. worker. I have to forget that 1 am a woman and only remember that | am an artist, Her Sister the Model. “In future I will produce but two works a year—one for the Salon, in Paris, ‘and one for the Royal Academy, in London. My cholce of retreat was made partly in order to allow ma to study wild animals at close range. From my studio window I can model deer, | German wild goats and other wild ani-| mals, There 18 a small colony of Gar- many's greatest artists in ang about this village, which is called Achiiersee “As soon as my ister hag finished her Los Angeles theatrical season In stock she will joln me at Schilersee to | pose for this draped Venus, which {s to | de my lite work. My slster also posed for the San Franciaco Monument that I completed in Brussels last year, ane! sother—What did Mra. Meanly give which !s about to be shipped to san you for cutting her grass? Francisco, Willie—Nothing. “I conshter my slater of rarely beautt-| Mother—Why, she promised you 10 ful proportions from an artistic stand: | cents, didn’t goer? point,” concluded the sculptor, type of the most deautifui girls in the 'do it with, and she charged me W cents 7 world—our HOT » Taft and his party from Frank the motor boat, Vorys are to tors, the float of the eral days. Virginia Bar here next week, political Mi: rib stran, “What have you th a Customs Inspector, “I have Rol: and Toc plied Miss “AN righ Jas far as y pups Is $20 a piece.” | And Miss Py | Marringe to Vida Whitmore, | | Mrs who has been she arrived bh day, declares that she is the only wito| of Mandeville Hall, don. met own” for the use of it—Philadelobia Ledgea thine’ | ! reached Hot Springs and Mrs, He ling © was West Virginia, this morning, had a the candidate rega to last longer than ours, I have seen’ These, with Joseph Adams, of Harrl-| mittee affiairs, | English vin were trave | where he and his sweetheart oarded the train] | Mrs. Fannie Ritt His speech wi oe “YARD OF PUPS” COST ACTRESS $120 DUTY. Reling in’ Miss Rita Perkins Has a Sad Sur- prise When She T: Gangph ats of the Teutonic. rips Down the wn the gangplank of t daint! basket n Round” spector, “es Miss Perk! inspector looked “A yard of | tats of truth and veracity, #0 Informed jie inspecto: "agreed the Inspector. "Gc 1 The duty on them old cane, <ins had to pay $1 fore the customs authorities wou low her to bought tn England for pre York friends. asinuch three weeks (oe SAYS SHE'S HALL’S WIFE. Quebec Claimant Denies Reported ( how does not open for the Hotel Breslin s who is now tn Lot It was reported that Mr. Hall h. na] married Mise Vida Whitmore, a former chorus girl at Weber's Impossibie for him to married another woman,” Hall to-da ind a| Willte—Yew, but I used her sickle to |All this & declared Mrs “as Tam atill bis wife, k about him having mar. His First Important Visitors | When He Resumes Work. to Keep on Spooning as He Courted. | pune |r lends to come and All but my bro’ Seventy-fve-vear-old Sheldon Carey | will conduct his honeymoon in two]! rooking chairs outside the furniture shop of his frfend, Thomas K. Browne, ned Vr wud rocked and spooned tl yesterday, when the aged wooer sur vrsed his friends and his wealthy brother by hieing to the Borough Hail | in Brooklyn and getting married, His for his bride, | y-four all is aA mature rom. r, ig old Carey is @ Three years age »plexy and since then his ramblings | ave been limited to @ dally perambula- | on, In falr weather, from the board: | z-house of Mrs. Whitland, at No. #7 > to the furniture store, | long he sat and rocked, | ently when Mrs, Ritter d and sat and rocked beside him. An Evening World reporter visited the furniture shop to-day to see the man who had refused to reveal the name of his bride. He even said | last night, when his brother, Spencer | ©. Carey, who is a man of sub with a fine house and four motor cars, | Yo, $12 Ovean avenue, tried to get | n his aged relative, he didn't! js bride was, | Carey was behind schedule | reaching his rocking sta the arrival of the reporter | awed up to the shop und Spencer Carey an that he wanted to see nis appear | he exclaimed, and down. hy, y brotner Id tn mind He's as incapad! e) of managing his affairs as an infant In arms, NAC any rate,” angrily ejaculated Mr, | af see that his property is to seo my lawyers to- matter. I don’t know out I'll do something, g with emotion. he hopped and was It minut vould | of his wrath who DbbII ng down the atrest ‘on "ble | e! * chuckled the age othiarto, any oink his shanks In h, w hen he heard of h's brother's ‘9 my brother save | ried, eh? Well. T and he went {nto have m. didn't Coffee drinking often causes insomnia, A short use of POSTUM in place of coffee generally removes the trouble, “There's a Reason” ect a seein Will be found to be non- husband woulda’t do any- nines are the nation tobe mated tor life and 1 in this one Hi in do you intend to do about your avered the bridegroom; 1 lots of money | We'll be happy as| THUNK FULL OF ONLY ONE BULLET, NES SVEN SAS CARL AS SOMERS” WOULDKLLH James Connelly Is Held Up by, PATERSON, S. J, July 99—~Seated tm \8 chalr in front of a mirror in the pare Inspectors When the lor of his home, Herman Frost, of No, ie aL 15 Hamburg avenue, last night sent & Teutonic Docks. bullet Into his brain and died instantly, ered | He had only one cartridge in his revoly= IS LATER RELEASED, | # 4d to make*sure that tt did its work he had placed himself before the glass and taken careful alm, His wife Goods Bore Emblems of the heard the shot ana, running to the par i 6 F lor, found her husband dead, White Star Boat and Kron- |r oo wa snemonct se prinzessin Cecile. ned to commit sul+ cide and had even spoken to his wife about the arrangements that he desired to be made for his funeral, He had been In bad health and had undergone jan operation in the hospital, started to Inspect the luggage of James! 1, way thought that a second operas Connelly, who arrived from Burope to- | tion would be necessary, and Frost had day on the Teutonic, he pulled out sald that he would never again submit |to the knife. He was a middle-aged man and a silk dyer by occupation, Frost had t When Customs Inspector Babcock palry of Newlyweds tn light hou keeping, There were spoons, forks, knives, trays, mustard pots, salt and pepper cruete, sugar dishes and napkin rings, | and they were emblazoned with the emblems of the Kronpringessin Cecile, “ of the North German Lioyd line, and of the Teutonic “Why, where did you get all thist’ asked the inspector, surprised, for Con- nelly ia @ well-dreesed young man and YIELDS 10 SCIENCE came over in one of the most expen- vive suites on the ship, "Souvenirs," said Connelly with a jaunty adr, | To whom It may concern: “Souvenirs your grandmother,” ra- {My lung trouble had been gradually de- Babcock, “you wouldn't | Yelping for several years. I had colds torted Inspector Bat Md repeatedly. I continued to grow worse and collect three or four pieces of one kind, | Worse, uatil I was in a helpless and dan- and there wouldn't be twenty-seven! erous condition. | "My cough tormented me almost con- One |stantly and [ had those terrible, weakening from the Ceolle. night sweats. Also had hemorrhages, some- So he notified the officers of the Iine,| times we many as tvo or three bleeding ‘i | ‘spells Ina day, and had severe pains across and Connelly was held on the pler.) iy chest and my breathing was short and While all this commotion was at Sts gimoult, height a taxlca) drove up and out) "I lost many pounds in weight and my etty ttle blonde. | Stomach was so Weak that nether food nor TE ee reer nnd atasted: for|medioine would. stay down. Twas’ Tapidly ‘Oh, Jim," ahe orled, and si declining, T had been drugging my stom- Connelly, but she hadn't got very far ach with patent’ medicines and spendiug before she saw all the silverware Rly slootoring tor Pra leators and yet y was growing worse all the time, spread out in confusion over ile trunks. “several doctors told me plalnty 1 could and realized he was In trouble, Then not get well and advised me to go to the she turned quickly, tripped back into Catskill Mountains, which I did, but came . back worse than when I left. the taxicab and told the chauffeur to, MENU gan Ratatts Hopelliconsultedle Dri Liat f | Anderson, and was thoroughly examined by “Why did you take all this stuff?" |him, and he also looked Into my chest with Connelly was asked, his Anderson X-Light, which revealed the " ‘act location and extent of the dangerous | plied sullenly and would not tell her! “I began the use of his Germicidal Vapor [Inhalation and Bleotro-Vibratory treatment, |name, He sald he bribed the meward Ai fiiowed his moat valuable advice re- of the Kronprinzessin Cecile, on which garding my diet, open-alr exercise and he crossed to Europe a few trips ago, sanitrry living I can now Bey. to the ene rs who may o@ siniiarly & and the steward of the Teutonic to get Renal {Gu L ners Peerta oacy Sa ae the silverware for him, ‘The steward LIFE ‘ e anal Teutonic y denied} ‘The healing, germ-destroying, olly vas ot thes Teuton ea ve, pors were breathed through the bronchial this and sald Connelly jad toa every tubes and went right to the ulcerations in afternoon in his cabin and must have | my lungs. From the very first I !mproved taken the articles then, I never had any more hemorrhages after 1 Tiss officials of the White Btar line began Dr. Anderson's treatment, a! would not tell anythin js, too—veree nive ine all the furnt- et and Mra Whit | jed and stirred him up, her, boarding. Peer for tenant of my by telling on the old’ man, c Night sweats, chills and fever all soon will not prosecute the Fabdue himeet?, cersed. and the cough rapidly Gisappearnd ald nol Mires No. a2 Kast Seventy. | eatned steadily tn weight and strenat + ninth Street, was on his trunks ¥- my appetite returned, and I have worked [ninth passenger on the Teutonic wag every day for more than a year and om Grace Heyer, the actress, who hag | bsolutely cure Ani spending a vacation In Tandon, |," feel and look like a new man. The and who As been re-engaged Cor weet ey nt eee auehly iat and m kl Rew Disy OU CUSUS ueuuee my friends and former doctors could scarce. , |fy, believe Tam the same person “Had T consulted Dr. Anderson AT WOMAN WRITER DEAD. \prnet 1 could have spared myself. many BOSTON, July 90.--Mrs, Mstella M, Hr, | months of serious Illness and many dollars ent in worthless medicines: Merrill, formerly widely known ag a "Rite, Anderson's treatment does not consist newspaper writer under the name of of one remedy for all sorts and conditions “Jean Kinoald,’’ and prominent algo and stages of Eee Aue A tea tf ared o ach in lividua ay a clubwoman, dled at her home fy ee ee enc rough examination and North Cambridge yesterday. Mrs. Mer- correct diagnor's have been inade and it rill) organized and was Lie first preal-|has done for me what nothing else hat Gent of the Cantabrigta Club, and |gone-SAVED MY, LIFE,” a whil e you'll Hee may, at No, 1008 Flatbush avenue, Brooklyn, y talk “over our plans, founded the New ing! and Woman Name furnished if desired for reference ) Press Asnociation, of, which she also | pr. Anderson gives consultation ant ex served ag president. She was recently amination at the office without charge, elected president of the Wheaton Alum- 59 West 224 st. (hetween Tth and fth ave nus, Mrs. Merrill devoted much time New York. Hours: Daily, 10 to 4; Menda to lecturing. Her husband: Samuel M. Wednesday and Friday evenings il! Merrill, and two sons survive her, otelon: Sundays, 1 to 2 Call for wavte Buffalo Four fast trains providing conven- ient departing and arriving hours leave New York as follows: ‘ The West Shore Limited leaves Morning Desbrosses St. 8:05 and West 42d St. 8:30 A.M. Arrives Buffalo 8:05 P.M. and St. Louis 2:20 P.M. next day. Afternoon The Continental Limited leaves Desbrosses St. 2:00 and West 42nd St, 2:15 P.M. Arrives Buffalo 2.00 A.M, and St. Louis 9:15 P.M. next day, ‘ The Chicago and St. Louis Limited Evening leaves Dates St. 6:20 and West 42nd St. 6:30 P.M. Arrives Buffalo 6:35 A. M., Chicago 9:10 P.M. next day and St, Louis 7:88 A.M, second day following. National Express leaves Desbrosses St. 7:45 and West 42nd St. 8:00 P. M. Arrives Buffalo 7:40. M. Chicago 9:40 P.M. andSt. Louis7:38.A. M, second day following, West Shore R.R. ‘Tickets and Sleeping-Car Accommodations The tek offce ot Grand Contra Staton ts onan day and night ovary day Inthe rear, and the prinetpal downtown ticket office, 1916 Broadway, 1 open every day (holidays and Sundays included), from 8:00 A.M. to'10:00 P.M Branch ttekat offices open 8:00 A.M, to 6:00 P.M, at the following places: NEW TORK: 149 18, 67} and 2008 Brosday, £8 Fith Ave, 873 Colambas Ave. LGAs vos St, 189 Besex, Bt, Deadrosees Bt and West did Bt. Stations, SRSDELYA' oe bots) ol Peles BU ad Boe, Rattroad and Pailman ttokets can be secured at any of thee elem o wb vere sp reget 7 opal ‘who oan answer oa (eee? Tybee ee meneress Li aoecataaad RAILWAY @VETEM®