The evening world. Newspaper, September 7, 1908, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

} 4 } t } ; I BRYAN SORRY HE ORDERLY BEATS CANT ATTEND SURGEON IN A BiG CARNIVAL HOSPITAL WARD eee. wi ae Sends Regrets and Thanks to Preity Nurse, Who Says Doe- tor Kissed Her, Suspended by Flower Officials. HURRY IN THE VOTES. RIGID INQUIRY IS HELD. ———— Coney Committee for Its Invitation. Balloting for King and Queen) Woman, Adinittedly a Beauty, of Isle of Joy Will Close Entered Training School Thursday. Four Months Ago. Dr. Charles BL Hornby. Superintendent las HOW VOTE STANDS FOR KING AND QUEEN OF CONEY CARNIVAL. KING. M. Potter, of Flower Hospital, just closed an investization of a scandalous occurrence | in the surgical ward of that institution | late Saturday night | As a result Helen THovt. a beautiful | voung woman, has been suspended from the nurses’ training school attached to Jack Goodwin- Williams, Alderman Lew Alfred Kate the institution James Fazio Jos. M who says he belongs to an old English Schen pal family. has been discharged from his Peon cple i 2aai renty positign as orderly, and Dr, G. E. Lane. Reis Taanyh: | young ambulance surgeon, as been oe mani sequitted of the charge of hugging and | ; kissing Miss Hoyt oaainst her will Admits the Agsault. Williams is accused of assaulting Dr, eS arb Lane, and admits it. He goes further Ad rSVAbSGe and says that he knocked out two of wg Two the teeth of the ambulance surgeon, Claude L. Magen placed a large dent in his face and 3 H. Covert’... Bilin Arkell ‘ss. se0++ Ed, Slavin stherwise disfigured him. This all hap- pened in the surgical ward in sight of Qu! the patients and created a disturbance | inimical, not only to hospital discipline, Lilian Murphy | out to the health of the occupants of ara Beat AVY: the sunzical ward . Miss Hoy is a New York girl, and nna Phillips ‘annie Wolf .... Edna May Spooner | al! the hospital attaches agree that she |is a stunning beauty. She entered the Hospital Nurses’ Schoo) about four months ago. All the young doctors and surgeotis were immediately smitten, aod vigorously pursued her with their atten- | tions. Dr. Lane was the most persis- Willlam Jennings Bryan, scorning the | tent, and appeared to have somewhat services of his private secretary, re- of an advantage over his rivals, piled in hls own hand to the invitation Then appeared on the scene Jack| Goodwin-Williams, a well set-up, pale gent to him by Secretary Ph. Sohwelck-) voing fellow, obviously trained and et, jr, in the name of the Coney born to station in life above that of | Ysland Mardi Gras Committee to grace) an orderly in a hospital. But he ap-! peared to be satisfled with his humble the carnival with his presence on one) so) ang let it be known that although @ay during the festivities. It was an{he was an English gentleman and a wmavoldable declination, but testified to former soldier in His Majesty's ser- the nations! importance of this annual vice, he was down on his luck and had taken up work because ho knew noth- play opel sa ad York’e great Bley-| ing of anything else in the way of ‘ground, as wet labor, Yn Route, Bt, aa Aug. 31, 1908, | Fell In Love with Nurse. Ph Creda i” ‘Williams fell in love with Mise Hoyt. | New York, His infatuation was apparent to every: Dear SIF! tor tne tnvitation, but owing| body in the hospital. Because of his the of other work it will be !m-| menial position, however, he was com- cloting’ your kindness, 1 em, pelled to resort to all sorts of expe- truly Foy BRYAN, | dlents to see her, but he was a resource. H nt tul performer along th: lines, Whe New York Central, New Jersey! Tit saturday afterndon Miss Hoyt (etatrel and Lehigh Valley abana led excited and left the hospital, A : trains to| few minutes later Willlams, who was Pan ea eae Coety Island | off duty, disappeared. They were seen \ Gan oak & Jal rates, re | together later on at Forty-second street baie good tor six days, and the and Third avenue by one of the hos- i wompany has written to Edward pital attaches. estar jr. Chairman of the Press| Upon thelr return to the hoepital late Committee and Director of Publicity in the evening both were subjected to Lasse val Committee, that it will considerable badinage. Miss Hoyt wont ros aie tot or dlstribute any no. | ‘© the surgical ward for duty, and Will- thoes or anouncements for the commit |!ams also was assigned to a station, ides ail along {ta lines free. Here is how Williams describes what | happened about 10.8 o'clock. Balloting Nearly Ends. | “Dr. Lane came in with the am- | With only three days left for the! bulance and a pailent, The patient way | taken to tho surgical ward, and Dr, | hhustling campaigners in behalf of the respective candidates for King and/ Lane went with him. I had notloed Queen of the Mardi Gras and the Isle | that the doctor was looking at me with | of Joy, there {a ceaseleds activity. The|a black expression all through the | last official ballot coupon wil! appear! evening, Something told me I ought to | fm The Evening World on Wednesday, | follow him and I did. | and the polls will close at 12 o'clock “I Saw Him Grab Nurse.” | noon on Thursday. No ballot will be) “] got to the surgical ward just in| received after that hour, time to see him grab Miss Hovt and rain} It was necessary to mit the pub- kisses upon her face. She was strug-| Mehed list of candidates for the King'® giing te ‘ ees gling to get away from him, but he crown to those having 3,000 or more | Eva Tanguay .. Anna McCullough Morgan je E. Dixon . Wm, Hennigs these, and the gap between the highest, i). jag: Alm to unnand Alderman Lewis M. Potter, of Coney 10 ia : ie Island, In whose behalf all the other le not only refused to do so, but Coney Island candidates are withdraw. M@de Some rem arks about on owly ing, and the lowest In the published ! } nt ie no gentleman could brook ix not so great as to be {nsurn je, Then he slappy face, I know how (while there are two dozen 11 gave him a wai are close up to the 3,0 mark t knocked him half n, limiting the list to t Then 1 juinped tes or who leaves thirtee with a ie leadership between jut race for the lusky popu Me the ambu holding and told him that if spon the name of the lady him," t enind Alfred Katz, “Mayor of Yorkville,” ‘ond to Alderman Potter, vy third and a of him, e West One H educated at “dred ar and is a mem- way from his home ber of James 4 Nineteenth Aa- h. He served in Egypt sembly Distr nany organization n AE He ts being Boer Alderman | W of surgl- District WEDS THE GIRL HE RESCUED came uf k hold of of the surf was nt ‘ Waa kad cn) a ‘ 1 ‘ . y " 1 tin Anes at Bright a (and h drowning when K ad evening pA month later they were enghged spiials of tae city THE EVENING WORLD, ORDERLY WHO BEAT DOCTOR IN HOSPITAL , and Po pistol Fe G@- WILLIAMS: NAZZARO WINS BOLOGNA RACE. BOLOGNA, S the Italian di Flirio Cup, covering 315 miles hours and % minutes and 21 seronds. in 4} —<< ee - You Ask for Pure SALOON MAN SH MOSS ISSUES WARNING. Election Fights Mean a Lot of Men Will Land Behind the Bars, He Says. John Dillon, a saloon keeper at One; | Hundred and Twenty-elghth street and | Lexington avenue, living a: No. 18 Easting carried to the headquarters of both mained in complete sealusion un‘il his | |One Hundred and Twenty-eighth street, | sides, too.” | | walked into the Bast One Hundred and lopwenty-sixth street station at 3.10 A. M. to-day and sald to Lieut. Looney: | “T have been shot. | along at One Hundred and Twenty-fitth lstreet and Lexington avenue just outside ‘the Post-Office when three men came | |up. One, a tall man, picked a quarrel, | I struck him with | pulled a pistol and shot me | Dr. Bennett called from Harlem Hos- | pital and found that Dillon had been shot in the right side of the abdomen He war taken to the hospital, where it was sald he would probably recover, ceman John shots, “@ou needn't worry trying to get the | t study ‘man who plugged me,” Dillon is said to caught a east through One Hundred and Twenty- fourth street, near Second avenue, after Joseph Levy, a painter, of No, 165 East One Hundred and Fifteenth street, had | pointed him out. The prisoner said he was John Doo- ley, forty, of No. 221 East One Hundred and Twenty-fourth street. nothing of the shooting | dark man, and when taken before Dil- | ‘elloa Nazaaro,| lon, the latter said he was not the one yesterday won the| who shot him told the with him w jhave square still Dooley, who Is way Department, but handbook leadership of rict the a elty employee, per east side, held Dool little evidence La} against | Ben Baker, who if on men behind the bare. I was walking | Nathan Straus, who my fist. He fourteen months propaganda, so fatal to Infants, after the running Kearney man fant mortality hausen over one-half, den, and presented a Aberdeen. |ropean success, Mr. and knew He {s a short, the empire. Lady companied Mr. Straus Here It I MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1908 ¢ au TT get n 1 get well.” held, told the police he was a foreman jn the ld clubhouse {snot Both Active in Politics Dillon {s one of Nagle's election dis- trict captains, while Dooley, although has always opposed) the present leader of the district. \ Financier Reported to Have Magistrate Moss, who ts sitting in the) : Hariem Police Court this week, just as| he has done during primary week for the last three years, because he 1s sup: | ‘ | posed to know a good deal of tne work. ings of the election experis on the up- y In bonds of $2,000 to await the results of Dilon's! whereabouts, injuries, although there was really very the prisoner, y, the principal witness, showed a Jockey Club, very faulty memory when it came down to what he actually saw and heard. Magistrate Moes called up Lawyer represented “T know what this means, even if w can't get at the facts,” sald the Magis,! on trate, “I want to tell you fellows that) It is reported that following @ ner- | W AgUre| yous breakdown the New York finan-| e| ou het the inrou that rting up here to-morrow I am ft going to do my best to land a fot ot cler went to Paris and entered a priv I want this warn. | sanitarium near the city, where he re- | (eerie ce STRAUS EXTENDS PURE MILK ABROAD. | varied interests. He was in Paris only a few hours on) New Yorker Reduces, Infant Mot-| steamer, and none of his friends s tality ina German Town One- | him. half by Pasteurization. has turned from Europe, where he devoted obscure parts of Sw to his Milk was In reality taking a rest cure was said yesterday more than satisfied with the spread of| Pure the movement here and abroad for the! Mr. pasteurization of milk to kill the germs Mr. Straus established a milk labora- tory in Heldelberg and reduced the in the town of Sand- He put a plant, blow tot in Karlsruhe under the auspices of the Dowager Grand Duchess Lulse of Ra- lant to Dublin | under the Vicereine, the Countess of A great deal of his Eu. Straus said, was due to these two women Bienerth, Austrian Minister of the In- terior, after visiting the Straus exhi- bition in Vienna, promised to introduce the pasteurization of milk throughout Aberdeen's secretary to this country | in the e latter's methods of pas-|, ‘The teurization at his new laboratory, Is reported PED QUI ‘Dillon Tells Police of Queer Attack, bui They Suspect a Political Feud. Dis *—ONLUSTAN ond a Been Resting Up in a French Sanitarium. which financlers and his associates In the bills to kill race-track were under consideration Doo! ey the Lusitania | phyalclans told him he [able to return and take up incident to the management of his way to Liverpool to catch During the past few weeks co’ flicting reports reached Just land, he was news to them, . er traction | thsch dled in t age of the anti-bett another of his worries ———_—___——_ POISON SIX MASTIFFS. PITTSBURG, Sept. 7 ner, to prevent his house from bein Vuued, yeservay pald sow Lor s.x th Baron von 3. ir. Chestner and his family went has ac- | ma The other five we d, all dead from po! se was wide OF h of money Mt The cry the country over is, “Give us pure milk.” Eve-y grocer in your city has it. Van Camp’s is the cleanest, richest milk in America. Its purity is absolute. Yet it costs less than raw milk. No need to worry about your milk, Van Camp’s is everywhere. And not a germ can be found in it. No need to buy milk day by day, You can have a cow in your kitchen. No need of shortages—no need of waste, You can always have fresh milk and cream when you want it. Are you missing all these advantages, simply because you don't know? If so, won't you read these facts— every one of them? Then let the milk itself prove what we say. Milk Without Germs Every drop of raw milk contains a myriad germs, tubercular, there are nption, If the milkman re milk is often infected. If the dairy is uncleanly, the air is germ- laden When a disease germ gets into milk, it breeds millions like it. Those are the chances you take when you use milkman’s milk. You know not from where it You never know what it contains But you do know, perhaps, that two- thirds the mortality of children is due to germ-infected milk. There is not a germ of any kind in Van Camp's Milk. That fact has been comes, 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 milk 20,000 Every cow is inspected. Holstein So are Every day we cows the men who milk them, Our dairies are sanitary. Cleanliness is carried to extremes, Every condition is constantly watched, Our buildings, where the milk is evap- orated, are built without wood. Here every means known to sclenco |p employed for your protection, Then the milk is sterilized after the can is sealed, This makes it certain that no germ can exist in it. The result is a milk that is safe, Is {t wise to use a milk that is not/ That Delicious Flavor The delicious flavor that Van Camp's gives to milk dishes is due to the fact that this is whole milk. It iy rich Holstein milk, with two-thirds the water evaporated, Nothing else is subtracted—nothing whatever is added. This is not like condensed milk, which is half sugar—a milk that you can’t use in cooking. Van Camp's is nothing but milk, Yet you never have made from raw milk such delicious milk dishes as you will make from Van Camp’s. The rea- son is, you don’t get the whole milk from your milkman. When he serves you from the top of the can, you get an excess of butter fat. For the butter fat rises, From the rest of the can, you get little butter fat, but an excess of solids, 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 is butter fat. That means that you get the whole natural milk. That is why Van Camp’s, in your cook ing, is so much better than raw milk, It {a not because of anything’ added. Six 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 that you add one part water for coffee, Yet it costs half what cream costs, 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. But don’t give them raw milk—any more than raw meat. There is too much danger of germ infXttion. Cents Per For 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. Produced in five states by the dairies of the Van Camp Packing Co,, Indian- apolis, Ind. Van Camp’s Milk Evaporated—Sterilized—Unsweetened Van Camp Packing Co Indianapolis, Ind. The mystery of August Belmont's has been puzzling the whom he deserted when | gambling | was cleared | to-day by the announcement from Lon- | ’;/ don that he had sailed for New York) was weil and| duties his | iis friends of Jas movements, the rumor most cred- ree) ited being that he was motoring through That he Before his departure from At Belmont had been in some | most exciting conflicts of his career, s fight with Thomas } Charles Chest | MAIL OR TELEPHONE ORDERS ON ADVERTISED GOODS f NEW YORKS FASTEST GROWING STORE To-Morrow (Tuesday) We Have Ave Great Sale of « Furniture, | Rugs, Carpets, Linoleums, Upholsteries @ Lace Curtains; ' Also House- furnishings Crockery. | Do not fail to visit this store to- morrow. The opportunities to save money were never so frequent and 8 splendid as they are in these mag- '§ nificent sales. Half minute from Ig | | pee OK SOSOOCK Hoboken Tunnel 14th St. Station. ROTHENBERG @ CO., WEST 14TH ST, % : | WORDS and MUSIC | | COLUMBIA YOURE MY GIRL | ie sone wr or rie => PANHANDLE | SUES PETE FOUNDED ON Tht SUNDAY WORLD FUNNYSIDE =| SERIES by ; GEO, | Me MANUS ' \woros ay AVD KEMPNER \ music By | SAMUEL LEMAN N SUNDAY | | | lf Business with Your Friend Is Bad | Cut Out and Send to Him This Ad. PrivatePlailing Slip i tes To Mr. N. 0. Trade: When passing by yours! our sore I noticed things were dull 1 wondered If you contd ex, This most provoking to-day 1 explain lull. If sou can't see why crows , atte, roe tore Danese oe you don't use World Wy Like any man that’s saneve't 44% DON'T YOU KNOW THE yOR! PRINTS MORE “FOR SAL vi re EVERY WEEK THAN A THE 6 OTHER NEW YORK MORNING /\PERS COMBINED,

Other pages from this issue: