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i j 4 | | H RR RR TEE SI EE IRR et oe ory and then con. land Payes killed both . Unued to the house. Farle, half clad, | met bin on the veranda and called out 1 | What are you doing here?” “No Trouble,” Said Earle. ) ‘I heard cries for help cc@ning trom | if vou make |Your house," replied tluves, “What's ie tele J [the matter here?” | | ‘It's very good of you to have come,” ‘ en he struck Ger answered Earle, “but there a no trou- with the butt of h HOLD-UP MEN nEMALD 5 WARE THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1908, care old, of No a climbing nlo the exea wer fugitives behind a pile of wreckage f Seventh avenue, oe | : ble here. It ts a false alarm.” m to the floor FILED. FYCLAIMS FARLE Hayes did not report the incident un The three negroes darted {nto the NEW APPORTIONMENT Ul after the arrest of Barle yesterday |street and in a second or two Sachs ‘ ad a }and then it developed that for some land hie assistant started after them |cCarren’s cl Heepe ane days the Earle home hag been a sort | | yelling “atop thief! and ‘Murder!’| ine Made to Opposition Leaders, At armed camp, Mra, Earle was Sure Wife Would Relent if} kepe » ciove prisoner in ong part of tnei Daring Negroes With Guns! sit at their mig Beans) AS Apps coUnnel On ga | house, while Mrs. Harle's mother and | Panic in Big Crowd McCarren an aDemoenn us ; He Could See | brothers, who had returned to the place) Fire Shot and Run With up sixth avenue the men ran, the{Committes of Kings, filed at the ot Her, HAS NERVOUS — FITS. Wite’s Aunt Tells an Amazing Story of Earle’s Brutality. (Special to The Evening Wortd.) GOSHEN, N, ¥., Aug. %—Ferdinand ‘Pinney Warle, the soulful artist of| + Monroe and eminent expounder of the} ‘affinity method as applied to aoul-mat- ing, manifested symptoms cf extreme peevishness to-day when he awoke to the full realization that he was barred and bolted, tore and aft, for wife-beat- ing, Following his arrest at the instance of hig wife's kinsmen he declared that the jail had a cosey look about {t. He felt he would like it and do @ ploture or two at bis leisure; mayhap a sonnet, Hoe} hinted darkly that suicide might dis-| solve his woes, and a special guard was) established at his cell. | Mr. Earle's temperament suffered a} reversal of form to-day, He wept bit-| terly over his predicament and said he would seek to get out. He js soulfully contrite over his harsh conduct toward his affinity wife, Commenting on his situation, he gald to-day “If | Can Only See My Wife!” “Alas! the charge against me is) true—true enough to support the tech-| In spite of the trouble they had on the nigh: Mrs. Barry, At the Kuttner home, Seventy-elghth street, Manhattan, It is sald to-day that none of the family Is et home, CHILDS UN CER AND KILLED BY A CAR While Crossing Tracks on Third Avenue. Three-year-old Lissie Warren, of No. 329 Bast Ninety-fourth etreet, was Third avenue, at Ninety-sixth street, this afternoon. The child ape while running across the track, fell under the fender of a car piloted by Thomes Morhair, | of No, 887 Seventh avenue. Morhair stopped the car before half tts length had passed over the oahild, but when the car was ri the girl was dead. Morhair and conductor, Conrad Meyer, of No. 2073 Third avenue, were arrested. The child lived with her grandmother, Mrs. Elizabeth Fitzpat- rick. ALLISON’S SUCCESSOR. Governor of Iowa Calls for Special Session to Fill Place. nical charge. Then I have pleaded guilty, which ratner puts me In deeper. My brain was {n a whirl when 1 made| that plea, I might have pleaded not] guilty, bogged forgiveness and had the! thing cleared up. If I can only see my wife!” (The painter and sonneteer| wrung his hands.) ‘“‘Ah! if I can only| see my wife,” he walled. “I will be-/ seech her forgiveness, and I think we| can become reconciled. “I thought when I came here to Jail that the case wasn't @o serious. I had one of my neighbors locked up here} ynce and then withdrew tho complaint against bim, I believed it woud be so in my case, But it doesn’t seem to| be. I will think my predicament over | for a few hours more, and then, prob- | ably, send for the necessary $0) bail to get me out, Tush! tush! but this ae) joomy place on @ rainy day, on ia ala," ran on the artist, ghudder. | ing, “that the penalty for this came I) am charged with 1s five years’ imprison- | ment or $1,000 fine, Heavens! Would Jt not be terrible if they should press this thing against me? But no, my wife still has a spark ef love in her soul for me. I shall get out.” Attorney Chappell will make applica- tion to Speoial County Judge Royce, at! Middletown, to-morrow te have Earle | released on bail. The feeling against Darle all through | Monroe and Central Valley 1s bitter. | Since he cast off his first wife and Uttle, gon to marry Julia Kuttner, whom he called bis affinity, he has been shunned by bis neighbors. It is recalled that the @rst Mra, Karle was afraid of her hus- band. and at the time when Barle sent | ber and their gon from his handsome home the charge was made by Mra, Barie’s father that arte was a wife | beater, This the artistic poser indig- | cae ae terday he can deny no longer that he {a given to beating women, if the women happen to be married to him, Mrs, Earle, with her baby—born on ug. 4-in her arms, and accompanied! by her mother, Mrs. Kuttner, and her aunt, Mra, Ines Barry, left Monroe last | mght, after Harle had been thrust in! prison, ‘They represented that they! were going to the Kuttner home, No. 217 West Beventy-elghth street, New| York. heppily for weeks, It is declared that before the baby, a boy, was born Earle was given to violent fits of temper and that he abused Mrs, Barle fearfully, After the birth of the baby the artist became even more bitter against hls “soul-mate,” Earle has decided optn- fons on the way a child should de Teared. He wanted a bottle baby, but Mrs. Earle would consent to nothing ot the kind, Drove Wife's Relatives Out. Mrs. Earle was not a strong w and she was weak and {Il for days fol- lowing the advent of the baby, but she would not glre way to her hus band's Ideas, Finally, on Aug. 1, Mrs Harle's mother and her two broth arrived at the Earle home, near 3 roe, and then matters were ht to a crisis, That night the brothers and mother were driven out of the house by Earle. Mrs. Barr had remained with her {Ilneas, could not » her niece, It was Mrs. Barry who 1 pealed to the law to protect Mrs from her husband's abuse and t In her eworn statement Mrs, makes serious charges aga: 2 She tells how Earle was given to ing Mrs. Earle prior to the birth o enild, and how twelve days af the birth young mother was dragged from her bed and made to stand for two hours while Earle lec- tured her. On one occasto Mrs. Karle wus and face by her injur were nece Neighbors of Earle als of beating M 6 an her eyes. T the Earle who prough made to leave accuse him mins {ssued a proclamation late last night calling the Thirty-second Gen- eral Assembly in lowa in special sion to take action in filling the cancy in the United States Sen caused by the death of Senator Allison. The poate for the session is fixed for | Aug. Aug. ll, were In another with | No. 117 West! Three-Year-Old Girl Slipped | Killed by a trolley car while crossing | DES MOINES, Aug. %—Gov, Cum- Money. | Three negroes, armed with pistols, boys joined held up Paul Sachs in his hat store in Herald Square to-day and after firing a hot at @ clerk, dashed up Sixth ave- ue, with policemen and a crowd of fully @ thousand after them. The robbery was daringly planned, street In front of the little shop, In one of the most crowded portions of the| oner. bosiness section of New York, was | sight of the negroes, his revolver in his hand, panic among the crowds swarming to and fro at that busy hour in the chase. third street the negroes turned west- ward and ran into Policeman Glennon. | Two of them darted across to the Penn. sylvania station excavation, | other dashed into the stable of the New | York Cab Company Glennon followed Into being exeouted at a time when the|The man turned when cornered, but |the polliceman knocked the revolver | from his hand and made him a@ pris-; At the West Thirtleth street | ify jwtation the man said he was Edward! ynanimou: one of Ww rd of om held creating @ delegates In the Third and gressional Districts of Brooklyn. This action was taken In Aocordance with a promise antl-MoCarron | against the orig terday ee ERIE COUNTY REPUBLICANS PRAISE HUGHES’S RULE. RUPPALO, Aug. 2—The feature of lthe Republican County Convention, | held here to-day, was the out and out indorsement of the administration of Hughes in resolutions that were y adopted Men and At Thirty- while the the stable, crowded. There was @ great hue and| cry after the men, but two escaped. | Had they not shinned over a fence and! j Tan over a pile of debris in the eastern end of the Pennsylvania Rallroad sta- tion excavation they would undoubtedly have been caught. One of the negroes went into Sachs’s shop, No, 633 Sixth avenue, several days | ago and left a hat to be cleaned, At that time, Sachs says, the man noticed ‘a poll of bills the proprietor of the place hed. and he sald there was no hurry about the hat that he would retum before the week was over. Attacked Storekeeper. To-day the man, with two others, en- |tered the shop and started an argu- ment to get Sachs to reduce amount | of his charge. Sachs refused, and while they were talking the two con- the hat drew a pistol and made Sachs the rear of the shop, ran in to see what was the matter. He yelled for help, and the negro who had drawn the pistol fired et btm, narrowly miss- ing him. The other negroes then produced re- volvers and covered the two white J, R, WOOD, passenger Traffic Manager PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD LABOR DAY TOUR Atlantic City Saturday, September 5, 1908 FROY NEW YORK, BROOKLYN, JERSEY CITY, NEWARK & ELIZABETH Round-trip rates including two days’ hote! accommodations $10 or | federates walked casually behind him. Beginning with dinner Saturday evening and ending with luncheon. on, the Mon. Budden! the: ‘abbed him, one of Bday following. okets good ing on any regular train m New York on date them MORES BintoRas the owner of g2smed end good to retum u within six r hs. See Ticket Agents. Arrive Atlante City (Bo, Car, and Atl Ave.). PULLMAN PARLOR CARS, COACH Similar Tours September 12, 19, $12 According to hotel selected i ae 26 GEO. W. General Passen| Madam, You know there are myriads of germs im it. Perh LAR | Raw Milk? do You Risk ; they come from infected cows, from diseased milkmen, from unclean Heide Why do you —who refuse raw meat—serve to your folks raw milk? If you do it, it is simply because you don’t know. Nearly every grocer in your ctty is sup- plied with Van Camp’s—the germless milk nantly deaied, but after his plea yee —+the cleanest, richest milk in America. If you don’t use it, there can be but one reason, You never have You don’t know the facts. Please read them—then try Do as your neighbors are doing. There are few things more important to you than pure milk. Please don't, for lack of ‘The Earles, tt 's sald, have not iivea| Knowledge, go without it longer. Milk Without Germs Every drop of raw milk contains a myriad germs. If the cow is germs of Consumption. germ-laden, When a disease germ gets into milk, breeds millions like it. Those are the chances you take when you nse milkman’s milk. You from where it comes. what it contains. But you do know, perhaps, thirds the mortality of children germ-infected milk There is not Van Camp's Milk. That fact proved a hundred times over. Do you think it wise to serve impure milk when you can get milk like this? 20,000 Inspected Cows Every day we milk 20,000 cows the men who milk them, tubercular, there If the milkman is diseased, the railk is often infected the dairy is uncleanly, the very air is You never know a germ of any kind in Every cow is inspected, So are is butter is carried to extremes. Every is constantly watched. Here every means known to Our dairies are sanitary, Cleanliness condition Our buildings, where the milk is evap- orated, are built without wood. science is tried it. employed for your protection. Then the milk is sterilized after the the milk. can is sealed. This makes it certain that no germ can exist in it. The result is a milk that is safe. wise to use a milk that is not? Is it That Delicious Flavor The delictous flavor that Van Camp’s gives to milk dishes is due to the fact are that this is whole milk. If the water evaporated. is half sugar—a milk that you This is not like condensed milk, wh It is rich Holstein milk, with two-thirds Nothing else is subtracted—nothing whatever is added. ich can’t use in cooking. Van Camp’s is nothing but know not Milk. Yet you never have made from raw milk such delicious milk dishes as you that two- will make from Van Camp's. The rea- is due to your milkman. has been For the butter fat rises. an excess of solids. Holstein tat, the whole natural milk, son is, you don’t get the whole milk from When he serves you from the top of the can, you get an excess of butter fat. From the rest of the can, you get little butter fat, but For the solids fall. Your milk is never twice alike. Analysis of Van Camp's shows about 30 per cent of solids, of which 8 per cent That means that you get That is why Van Camp’s, in your cook- ing, is so much better than raw milk. It is not because of anything added, Six Cents Per Quart One pint of Van Camp's, when you put back the water, makes about three pints of rich milk, The cost of such milk, when you buy Van Camp's by the case, is about six cents per quart. Six cents for a quart of whole, rich milk—milk without germs in it. Milk that is always the same—always fresh— always ready. Never a waste or shortage, Van Camp's is as thick as thick cream, So thick *” .< you add one part water for coffee. Yet it costs half what cream costs, For Children Van Camp's is the safe milk for babies —approved by the highest authorities, With children, it will avoid the many bowel troubles caused by germ-infected milk, The slight almond flavor, due to steril- ization, is a flavor that children like. And it signifies purity—freedom from germs, Children can safely drink it, Sut don’t give them raw milk—any more than raw meat. There is too much danger of germ infection, Van Camp’s Milk comes in 5 and 10- cent cans—at your grocer’s, Try one can and you will want it always. Then it is cheaper to buy by the case—also more convenient. Pr in five states by the dairies of the Van Camp Packing Co., Indian- apolis, Ind, | 1 duce Van Camp’s Milk Evaporated—Sterilized—-Unsweetened Van Camp Packing Ca, <> —= al \OROREEESOEEEEE OG AO4 4444696 66EGOOS SESEEESESES ESOS SE SEES OSES COED ERE S TENSES The key to Fortune’s vaults is commonly known v y r >_> Ss. ~~ oso oo oO eel Oe am Eighth Restaurant Floor 0. SIXTHTAV, 19°70 20 ™STREE TI NEW YORK. 10 MINCLES PROM HOBOKEN BY EDSON LeyNid —<p~— Fashion’s Favorite Weaves Are Ready for You in \ The New Autumn Silks The soft, clinging si wanted silks for Full costumes, Our Advance Showing embraces foreign and domestic weaves in Satin Messalines, Satin Ondoyants, Satin Majestic and Directoire Sa 2,000 yards 36 inch Colored Satin Majestics in shades, and white and black; regularly $1.75, special per yard.....s..... A Sale ot Slightly Imperfect and Mended Kid Gloves, values to 2.50, at ‘1 To make room tor our fi stock ot long Kid Gloves that formerly sold to $2.50 every pair that has been slightly soiled, exchanged or tried on, and price them at %1. had some slight strain and been put through our repair shop, but {or fit, style and durability they are as No mail orders filled. Women’s $1.50 Mannish C spear backs; You'll Be Delighted with the Underpriced Undermuslins for Gowns of nain- 69c sook in five styles, trimmed with fine laces and embroideries; value $1.00, for Gowns of nain- | 98e sook in new variety | of models in round, square or V neck, with trimming | of dainty lace or embroidery; value $1.50. AnE Affording Unusual Values Men’s Negligee Shirts at 75c We say end ot the sea: August—neyligee gr soft bosom shirts are worn all the year around. Every one of bears the Si The mater als are woven madras, French percales, in a choice assortment of light and dark patterns, in plain .The New Directoire Belts They've hit New York with a positive ‘‘craze’’—that s the way one well- known fashion writer puts it. The women of Continental Fashion centres will wear no other Belt. An_innova- tion that is smart and dressy, These Belts usually sell for $1. Made of the finest quality of all silk taffeta, tucked, My si with long fringed vi \ dy, sash pene 5ue plate as a World “Real 0999999809 0900000 000009999 Special i no better wearing gloves made to sell at 82 a pair than these —— J t ilks that readily contorm to classical draperies are the ta Main Floor. tin in both double and single widths. \ Bee ilk Satin Messaline—28 inches wide; in st street shades; also evening shades and black and ard., Of Rapvenzed Silk New Fall Rain Coat } Usually sold for 16.50, at 10.75 2 Third Floor, These smart Coats are made of rubberized shower- proof material in blue, brown, maroon and black, in the new herringbone, novelty, two-toned and _pin-striped taffeta; full length. double-breasted. The ideal coat tor automobiling, driving and sireet wear; splend diy tailored. larger metal | buttons, 10. ( i) New Fall Suits—Novelty Striped Cloth and Cheviot Suits. Peau de Soie lined coat, v-inch hipless model, fancy novelty pockets; cufts and collars are of contrasting Goloret t broadcloth, fastened with two large moles, selt-covered: graceful hanging nea gored skirt, finished with Jarge self-covered moles all the way up the front. This suit comes in all the new and br autiful colors of the 24.75 season. at.... and turn-over cuff rst Fall Grenoble Shipment we take trom our regular Some may have good as you could get it you paid $2 to 82.50 for them, £4” Main Floor, Black, white and tan, and are all mous juetaire styles, mostly glace leathers. apeskin Gloves in English tan shades, prix seam sewn, l'o-morrow choose at Dainty Styles in These £7 Second Floor. for Drawers of cam- bric or nainsook, wide umbrella rutte of lawn with tucks or with tucking and ruflle ot eyelet embroidery, | 98 for Combinations of | Cc nainsvok or crossbar | lawa, in Cover and for Skirts of cam- bric with deep lawn flounce of tucks and rutile of fine em: broidery; others with embroid- | ery insertion and rutle to match; value $3.00, 25 for Children’s Draw $1.95 Drawers or Cover and Skirt, ers of cambrie with | trimmed with fine Val, laces; tows of tueksand em value $150, ‘ broidery rule ; sizes 2 to 1! yrs, nd of the Season Clearing Sale son—but that’s only because they were bought’ to sell in tr Main Floor, these shirts was marked at a higher price, Every one ipson-Crawtord label—a guarantee of satistaction, 79¢c or pleated bosoms, attached or detached cuffs, all sizes, at An Opporsunity to Freshen Up That Summer Suit Clearing Sale of Men’s Fine Trousers at *2 About 400 Men's Trousers, an end of | the season cleansup—ought to have ‘been sold beiore, so want to sell them quickly. That’s the reuson we make | the price 2. | Some are wool flannels, with turn up bottoms in light and medium shadings; worsteds, in neat effects, as well us cassimeresy and cheviol sizes up to 48, at....-+ $2 | Selling Boys’ 6.50 Suits at 2.50 | All ages 8 to 16; Russian and Sailor Blouse—double- | breasted and Norfolk for the big boys, straight | or knicker panta; values up to $6.50. Clearance of Boys’ Wash Suits at 89c, ages $ to 14, values | up to $3; Russlan, Sailor and cout styles | £m Becohd Floor. SIMPSON CRAWFORD C Estate” “‘ad.” Acquire one to-day.