The evening world. Newspaper, January 12, 1909, Page 16

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“DR BULL'S WIE THANKFUL 10 ALL HIS PHYSICIANS She Knows of No Differences | Between Them, but Wrangle Becomes Public, FEELING GROWS BITTER. | Elder Dr. Wynkoop Ill, Son Called in His Place Is at Odds With Others. Mrs, William T, Bull, wife of the phy- sician who 1s suffering from cancer at the Plaza Hotel, is disturbed over the reports that there have been differences among the surgeons and physicians who are attending her husband. Mrs. Bull , '§ quoted as saying that beyond the bul- jletins tssued each morning and after- moon, nothing coming from the sick ;room or the physicians {s authentic. “She added that the bulletins are dis- tasteful to both her and Dr, Bull, but I they continue to be Issued because £0 many friends of her husband are ‘@nzlous to learn the progress of his “ease, Then she continued: “There has been no misunderstanding between Dr. Bull's physicians. They Sere in perfect accord, and it was due ‘only to the Illness of Dr, Wynkoop ‘that his name did not appear on the bulletins, Dr, Blake, Dr, Delafield, Dr. Potter and Dr. Wynkoop have all ‘been kindness itself, and it {s cruel to intimate that they are not working In harmony, when Dr, Bull anl I know that they are doing everything in their power to alleviate Dr, Bull's sufferings, and that they have no thought that does | Mot embody the very best Interests of their patient.” | Why Name Is Left Off, This signed statement was given out Jast night concerning Dr. Bull: “Dr. Bull drove around the park again to-day, accompanied by one of his nurses | and his man servant. He thoroughly en- joyed the drive and was evidently bene- fited by It. “Dr, G. H. Wynkoop's name has been omitted from recent bulletins because his illness has prevented his attendance on Dr. Bull for the past four weeks. Dr, Daniel W. Wynkoop, Dr. Wynkoop's son, has had no professional connection with Dr. Bull's case. (Signed) “DRS. JOSEPH A. BLAKE, “NATHANIEL BOWDITCH POTTER." | When Dr. D. W. Wynkoop was shown th Blake, at his home, No. 123 Madison | avenue, he replied that he was in-} different to the remarks made by the two physiclans, tat fa ther's connection with Dr. "he said, “is too well known | putation in the medical world e to make any comments upon statement as this."" Dr, Wynkoop in Charge, Then Dr, Wynkoop added: “3 has had charge of Dr, Bull's rom the time he was stricken at my father’s suggestion that | Dr. Blake performed the first opera- tion., the case. ¢o chores. Dr, Bull want to be calling my f ‘hours of the night, fo do sometimes worse and need he did not up at all odds and really what ‘ When Dr. V garding the pr cal staff at Dr. | Li “Social Call “My father ts case, Iam acti; , been ili now f S doing research v (year. He cabled take charge of "the cases whic “Bi quite nat sBull. 1 arriy _ Christmas, @ Madison aven and Dr. Potter visi apartments at the Hot Now ATPCARING IN VAUDEVI ‘WILL DANCE AT THEIR © statement issued by Drs. Potter and | 4" That is the way he came into c "Dr. Potter was engaged merely to | Hiam at is Bignat bd THEY CELEBRATE GOLDEN WEDDING THIS EVENING. | | HARS-ANDMR, ABRAHAM MARKS OWN GOLOEN WEDDING | Abraham Marks and His Wife Spent Most of Their Married Life in Manhattan, | Fifty years ago to-day Mr. and Mrs, | Abraham Marks were married in War-) saw, Poland. Their golden wedding anniversary finds them healthy, happy and vigorous enough to dance at the reception which is to Se held next Sun- day at their residence, No, 1630 Fifty. first street, Borough Park. A few days after they were married for the United this city after a long yage. They settled in here they lived n they took up thelr res! e in the old Fourth Ward of this y, where they resided until six months ago when they moved to| Borough Park. Mr. Marks in his close to half a cen- tury of life in this city has been an active, forceful man of affairs, and his wife has always interested herself in | charitable prises. On this anni- versary the will assemble in their home seven children—led by former Al- corre Isaac Marks—thirteen aren! n and one great grandchild. grandchild, by the way, Js the grandchild of iot, who died in ng $000,000 to Deb might have | KELSEY READY TO LEAVE INSURANCE DEPARTMENT. ALBANY. J CASTORIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the fiLedias LLE IN GREATER NEW Yok. | | work, and haunted the bread lines, THE ae Heese JANUARY 12, ne. nie plaint a ainiat ‘Aust jold fstein ar wisted around ry ff Hite Ms BAN D LUCK ENDS eave 4 100 MUCH: ENDED ot HS (IFE : On Wednesday, January the 13th. } William are Out of Work and Starving, Is Fed by Cap- tors and Offered a Job. In @ manmer of speaking {t was & lucky thing for William Austin that he stole @ loat of bread to-day. His lar- cenous act brought him a couple of hot meale—the first he had eaten In three days— a lot of sympathy and a chance | to go to work, | Austin 1s thirty-two years old, Three | years ago he was stage manager at | Grand Central Palace. He married a sirl from Providence, R. I., and went to that city to live. | Times are hard In Providence, Austin | saya. His wife is {Il and living on the | bounty of her relatives. On Thursday | Austin spent his last money for a ride |to New York on @ boat, reaching here | Friday morning. He tramped the streets looking for At | 4 o'clock this morning he was at Am- | sterdam avenue and Ninety-stxth street, Ing aimlessly to kill time until day- | Nght. He saw a wagon draw up to the sidewalk. A man jumped from the wagon carrying an armful of loaves of bread, which he dumped into a box standing outside the door of a grocery. Austin waited until the wagon had! Then he lifted the cover of the | gone, box, extracted a loaf of bread, and slipped !t under his coat. Goldstein, of the West One Hundredth street station, who had been watching him from @ doorway, sauntered up and arrested him, It wasn't necessary for Austin to elaborate about his condition, He looked famished. Goldstein and Lieut. Conklin | chipped in at the station-house and | bought him all the food he could hold, few hours later, on his way to West! fae Police Court, he stopped in @ res- Policeman | POISONED HN Could Never Falta the World! | Again in the Face, Told His Wife. Jullus Caesar Cestrini, the fifty-year- |old cashler of a down town Italian res- taurant, went to his home at No, 173) Melrose avenue, in the Westchester part of the Bronx yesterday evening, in a [sad frame of mind, He had made a mistake In change, giving out 44.75 when he should have given out only 75 cents, They had sald hard things to him about it at the restaurant, though nothing had been said against his honesty, But he felt that he could not look the world in the face again, he told his wife, after | the fuss that had been made over his| | mistake Moreover, making up for the} loas meant that his wages for the week | would amount to almost nothing. This morning when Mrs. Cestrint called for him he did not wake. She| und that he was unconscious and mmoned Dr. D. T. Corde, who has lan office in the neighborhood. Dr. | Corde sald that he was dead of some | potson which could not be Identified | without a post-mortem examination. | ‘des his wife, Cestrin! left two children of whom he was the only support, ——<—_—_— OUTING FOR ROOSEVELT. President Will Spend To-Morrow in the Country, WASHINGTON, Jan, 12.—President | Roosevelt will spend to-morrow in the lcountry. He expects to enjoy himself in horseback riding tn the vicinity of the} {country home of Rear-Admiral Rixey, | Surgeon-General of the navy, whose farm just across the Potomac River from Washington in Virginia he often visits. During the Christmas holidays he | Went to the farm and tried out @ num- ber of the guns he will use in his Afri- | can expedition, Hugo Els Left Letter Saying, Spouse, After Quarrel, Had | Gone to Son. Hugo Els was tired of life, #0 he| ended it In Foley’s Hotel, at No. 20 Wil- | loughby street, Brooklyn, by hanging, j himself with a twisted sheet early this morning. Els was sixty years old and j had been a bookkeeper for Ladenburg, bankers, of No, % He lived Thalmann & Co., Broad street, Manhattan. at No, 26 Carlton avenue, Brook- lyn, He came to the hotel, which ts managed by former Police Capt. Foley, on Sunday and took a room. In accordance with instructions, Foley went to call him this morning and! or the police to look ta his desk for his bank books and for the title to a burlal plot in Hoboken, At the Carlton avenue address Mrs, rles Wertz sald: | Bis came to live with us five | mon 8 ago. He was known to my son- $0 Jaw, and wanted to get a room with Erivats family, We understood he | ha had some sort of trouble with his | Wife, but we never discussed It with | him. He went away on Jan. 1, and we had not seen him since. He had been employed by Ladenberg, Thalmann & Co. for ten years, and was a man of good habits.” O, Sehwerdtfeger, head bookkeeper | for Ladenburg, Thalman & Co, said this morning that Els had not been at | his desk since Christmas Eve, although he had since drawn his salary, The, firm understood that Els was laid up with rheumatism, “There was nothing wrong with Els's books,” said Mr. Scnwerdtfeger, ‘He had trouble with his son, a young man of about twenty-two, and I ynderstood that he and Mrs, Els had parted a Year or more ago on the boy's account. Els complained to me several times | that his son bothered him a great deal for money.” JAMES McC Dressmaking and Tailoring Dep't. Fourt! Orders will be accepted for Theatre and Evening Gowns at large concessions from usual prices. Tailor-made materials, suitable for Southern wear, Thirty-fourth Street. Tea Served in Our Balcony Tea Room Free of Charge Between the Hours of 2:30 and § P. M. REERY & C0.) h Floor, Suits, of new Spring 65.00, 75.00 and 85,00 Onieg to the WE SELL MORE REAL LACES THAN ANY OTHER STORE IN AMERICA. Owing to the absurdly absurdly low prices, low prices, no mas and no goods will be sent 6.0. 0 alte ie nt, ESTABLISHED 5! YEARS, | The Most Sensational and || Stupendous Clearance Sale of Women’s yi’, Coats, Suits, Skirts ein the History of New York Ketatling | Determined to reduce our stocks of women’s and misses’ Coats, Suits, Dresses and Skirts to |! the minimum before stock taking, absolutely irrespective of the loss, we will inaugurate to-mor- row the most- sensational clearance sale that you have ever heard of—a sale positively without Never before have women’s and misses’ ridiculously low prices, To those who may be skeptical we merely have to say—a call will con- ity of the reductions, precedent or parallel. vince you of the actuali Coats, Suits, Dresses & Skirts ' Coats, Suits and Dresses Formerly Marked Formerly Marked Up to $10.00, at 0 1: Coats, Suits, Dresses & Skirts Formerly Marked Up to $15.00, at . . Coats, Suits, D Formerly Marked Up to $20.00, at . Coats, Suits, Ere Formeriy Marked Up io $25.00, at . Almost every character of garment suitable for morning, afternoon and evening wear is There are short, medium and {ull-length coats—and every sort of fabric imaginable. It is impossible to give detailed description—in fact, such is unnecessary in a clearance move- ment of such stupendous breadth and scope. embraced, 00 resses & Skiris a) fe SIXTH AVE., 22D TO Up to $30.00, at Coats, Suits and Dresses Formerly Marked Up to $40.00, at . ‘Coats, Suits and Dresses | Formeriy Marked ——. | Up to $65.00, ai. . esses & Siixis| Coats, Suits and Dresses (} | Formerly Marked Up to $75.00, at garments been offered at such || 23D STREET. and Furs 00 | 00 | 00 | 2s 4 WASH DRESS GOODS. 1m Both Stores, Sale of Spring, 1909, Repp Suitings. Consisting of woven checks and plain colors, with mercerized stripes of various sizes and color combinations: : 19c per yard value a5¢ % On Sale Second Floor, Gi) | | EEEREEEEEEEeenneee tt : LADIES’ SUITS, 42 Both Stores, my: | Broadcloth three-piece Tailored eae Suits, Advance Spring Models. 37.50 : /The remaining stock of Tailored Suits, various models and materials, 16.50, 21.00 and 25.00 former prices $25.00 to $45.00 Ce ey SHIRTWAIST DEP’TS. In Both Stores, A complete assortment of Lingerie Waists for the Spring and Summer Seasons. Made of Mull, Sheer Linen and Swiss, Suitable for Southern or Tropical dress. Sale of 500 dozen Lingerie Waists. Trimmed with dainty laces and embroid- eries. Ranging in price from 95c to6.75 MUSLIN UNDERWEAR, 12 Both Stores, A large stock of Muslin Underwear for the Spring Season, with the requisite _ 4 garments suitable for the present mode of dress, Gowns,;....... 43990 to 77.75 Chemises einisiisess ences DoCma nzer® j IDEN ondocans gavoonoo Gla HB cl Corset Covers........+0+. 0c ‘* 5.75 | Petticoats.........e0++00. 95¢ '* 25:75 Combination Drawers. and Corset Cover......+00+. 95e ‘12:75 Combination Corset Cover and kitts yiessniiessieooCuerl ae7o A varied assortment of Petticoats made of Taffetas, Messaline and Wash- able Fabrics, JAMES McCREERY & 60) 23rd Street 34th Street JAMES McCREERY & G0. 23rd Street 34th Street UPHOLSTERY DEP’TS. Ia Botw Stores, On Wednesday and Thursday, January the 13th and 14th. Portieres, Lace Curtains and Couch Covers. About 500 pairs, Fine Portieres in Armure, Tapestry, Linen and Verona Velour. 5.00, 9.50 and 13.50 pair foctier prices 6.75, 14,00 and 18.00 Couch Covers of heavy reversible i Tapestry—Kelim, Bokhara and other ‘i Oriental designs. 60 inches wide, 3 yds. long. 3.75, 5.00 and 6.00 each former prices $.00, 7.00 and 8.50 Moquette Couch Covers, Persian de- signs and colors. 9.50 and 14.00 former prices 12,50 and 19.50 Tapestry Squares suitable for chair seats and cushion covers, 35c, 50c and 75¢ each LACE CURTAINS. 2,500 pairs, Lace, Curtains. in de signs that are to be discontinued at 25 to 3336 per cent. less than usual prices. 2.00 to 10,00 per pair 23rd Street 34th Street ON SALE EVERYWHERE, 1909 World Almanae 4 ; *

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