The evening world. Newspaper, January 16, 1909, Page 3

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BABY AND AGED WOMAN SAVED AT TENEMENT FIRE Boy’s Clothing Ablaze as He Brings Child to Weep- ing Mother. TWO POLICE HEROES. They Rescue Former Servant of Mrs. Astor Who Was Paralyzed With Fright. rs. Loulse McDonough put part of } breakfast on the stove in her flat| No. 279 Tenth avenue to-day and ‘t out Into the front room to do a of sweeping and scrubbing before husband should come home from his it Job sr four-year-old boy Willle was ep in @ room back of the kitchen, looked Inte the kitchen to see how cooking was Kolng alead, and was with a burst of ft and smoke, Ing up her cleans 1, she threw | contents in the divection of tae es, ran out into the hall and amed ctor Mehrhoff, the elghteen-year-old | of the janitor, came bounding ap | stairs “Baby Will Be Burned." he baby is asleep in the bedroom | all T nd the kitchen,” she erted to him, | BRC SESE cmme by. |Of 1,000 Who Answered emt about) Ad” for Women With Kitchen, vt tails on fre}. Small “Tootsies” Only nt tails on fire From under Wile, the} Three Could Wear a 13A graltet the bate ets| Shoe—Chicago Filled Simi- fon therate lar Bill in Short Order, Mr. Grau Declares. ears and minute later rows siiked {iam Dowling, « watchman in John fob Astor's palace at No. 92 Fifth yet them on the sidewalk, His 1 was on the of the tene- at, He knew that his mother, etghty- | old, Who has lived with him became too feeble to be Mrs,| held to themselves for lo! th Feminine residents of New York have » many ‘ THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, New York Girls Have Big Feet, Growing Larger, AIF QRSMAN Says Expert Who o Is Hunting for Cinderellas BCOMPOSITE, gEROSKLYN 4 7 B. Astor's laund: Ts ago, Was 88, a score of | years the his twelve- tering belief that they | feet of the women to do it, because T am a New Yorker have the sme grold_ niece, myself, but the fleld here, large as it ts Paralyzed With Fright, Ot pan Yulara a ccllyemainey nave SotWed iGeringt ain material enow r yeh Police and Callahan | themselves especially upon their su-/me. I'll het I will have all the I through the | periority in the matter of small, neat Want picked out in ago Ins a three days. Just to show you how di {cult It has been to get the kind of girls whieh ¢ pead from the M Nre lad already | tootises over their sisters of New York's recep neato ie They | geaditest rival, Chicago. | we want in New York, as regards fect, aed . zed with) tn this pleasant atate of mind con-|I have only to say that we nre offerin ht, In an arm clair, begging the ; the girts | twice the chorus girl's salary at girl to leave her and save her] cerning thetr pedal extremities the girls | ict, the : “ j) Ife, The two policemen picked up| of New York have been encouraged by | y Dowling, and Dowling grabbed his | the newspapers and the comic weekiles. and carried them down to safety, anbling and staggering through the ‘ake, The Immense crowd which had ‘oered with the coming of the engines] at tho meeting of the fered mightily when they appeared/and Shoe Manufacturers’ Association eather ye rut FY held this week at the Hotel Astor, Of | hy app! jhe water \ which the firemen! Jotiberately ang falsely discounting the jiin5 (¢ on most of the feet 1 have run }iged the McDonough flat drove Fred sizes of women's footwear, Geross In a week was like trying to fit | ine and his familly, who lved below, jut the dream Is o'er, The fond de-|a peanut shell on the end of an incan- 1 sen ain tanteriantg They have also been helped atoms by |y, Bnlaettet tesa eas growing revealed | ear by year, 1 ren n 1 was younger, nay t of pos ve d for a chorus Po: on, Put. ms | the practice of shoe deale ational Boot | bi t y fitth girt :of thelr home, and also made much | tusion that New York women have Cin- | gescent lamp. fi ea baking with which the! deretia-like feet has been shattered. In Feet! I'll give you my word I never | hese Ne Phone bakeshop had Just] ine language of Mat Grau, theatrics! thought there coult Le ey many alleged | booking agent and stage dire Wl tect as have been presented to me ‘i York women's feet, instead of peeping Cinderella tuotales. x ) P _ {2 Buls sur was not lig and out Ike mice, carry thelr owners [you were looking at t ake y bank of Willle Me-| over the ground like twin suit cases, | ioe minding the ough, Wriggled away from his i mindt ate cher twice to try to rescue it from Oh, Grau, How Could You pas ‘burning house, but was overhauied.| Mr. Grau dectares, without equ voca- | WEMINI OF policemen oF y Ver @ soft-hearted | tion, that the feet of New York women York girl fi tere nerned Hat} are not only large, but ugly. He find H the ted! that corns, bunions, callous ridges and Tie badge" | mounds, unsymmétrical toenails, distig- ured toes and flat areves are the 1 rather than the exception Y “PIRATES” COMMITTED, |e fre s» fr 05 to ay that ane Coe he flremen estimated the loss by fire jf Water at $ e of them, if feet alone and x of t @ same, might pass for the pedal ex- | thing for the New sith, way of handsome, tidy sae ar unbemished feet has her New Yo ffee Lada, Who Mad Lain tn! sister {nthe Milly Mills elass, (St © jpty er Shanty, Held by Court, Mills 's known to fame and dime Meged by the police to be piyer |8eum history as "The Big-Footed Girl “| i ci Htes, three seventeen-vear-old boys | {rom Misso | "9 were arrested night In a| The conclusions and startling charges nty at Secor nite and One Hun. | of Mr. Gra , and Twenty-ninth street, were to. | spection of arraigned before Magistrate ¢, oklyn he Harlem court n of No. 435 Bast One Hun. | chorus et in Manhattan, Newark, To him h ntrusied the task of choosin, $ able to wear a WA she in the forthee produc: i bborn (Mnde at the Broadway Theatr ne treet, wa conduct amitted to th "Hart's Isl of No. 2 nty-sixtl of No passed under Mr. Grau nty-elghth st under gaze past twenty yeat hation for three patina! mente Since iast Monday he has looked oyer ee close to 1 t ed ule pe naurpassed for ialit ee ’ a, Trial packet | trenilties. vetoes" OU EMAN O ON TIAL BS SUMTER MONDAY ake a Lesson ; From This Man © a Shellard, Accused of Killing Barbara Rieg, to Appear Before Justice Crane. dred fr had sn feet One in 20,000 Really Small. : Grau, wor 0 responded nt have thelr feet were small gely that the ation of ¢ Ot a tiathematleal cufn'o mind, 1 ha elucidat from what I have obese y in the past week, that o wn adult woman (Too many grocers are trying ireater New York ha Hadware dealers; too many chints a small, syminetrical foo |,be brokers; too many chambermaids for by the demands of the chorus 1 an {abe laundresses, &c., &e. engaging. ed the occupation you are best “out in Chicago we had no <ilfMeulty | ed for, Then turn to the hundreds of a serious nature In picking « chorus | } “Business Opportunity” Advertise- of girlé—adulta—who could wear a 13\| (5 ints to be printed in to-morrow’s shoe. In Manhattan I have thus far aday World and find 4 business-enter- succeeded in finding only two, and in c oF fe bargain. It will take but a minute, Brooklyn only one. Of the three, but | cruminally SS a Alea that 4 The World seta one, Misa Rita Harris, has a perfect | removed $145,000 from the bank on Sept. ee ck Ba BW sanwet, wh pee “The stage reached when 1]4,.1 rae laxwel mh was the presi- a heart ot Si neat, committed suicide soon must send to for girl, I hate after thread ot dd adage, “Every man to his to he ¢ Monday Justice at the trial of Wilt. i char ‘SG WAREHOUSE TO TAKE PLACE OF ULD ST. J rwA-woult sip Ttinity Corporation Plans to! Put Up a Seven-Story Fire Proof Building. | | And They're Growing, Too, ! g that the New! | the American looking toward the preservation of St John's Chapel, Corporation has made definite owners of | arrangements Warehouse on oi (" test nk t Grane Nuts |) from personal experience, “There's a Reason” = TARUERY 16, 1909, CAVILLE WRIGHT WN TRAIN WRECK “| ON FRENGH ROAD sorts Recovering From Injuries in Air Flight, Es- capes New Peril. } PAU, France, Jan. 16,—Orville Wright, ist; his sister, Miss Katherine and Mrs, Hart) O. Berg, wife pean business | manager of the Wright brothers, were| in a ra’ wreek near Habas, tn the! 1 eof them sustained ten of the pasgengers on F train were hurt, four of them ser-| The Wright party were on the express train from Paris, The express ran Into an accomm n train bound for Dax just before entering the Havas tunnel. Hoth the locomeiives were royed Me the pa re svaken up. | journey wh a no further support © Corporation Pointed, Out the Facts, as vather than at the end of @ Hine petitioners cited ret bt AVAIL SB. ltatn, on M arke by the in Welnstein’s store at New Haven, op- GUES WEST WITH SHU? GIRL BRE. FEL FROM BUNK “INTIS SLEEP AND ae es aan 9s LAUGHED AT YARN OETECTVE SHOT LEGED THE IN FREIGHT YAR vanete nant Hunt Flouts His) Then fie GPA Told Story to| Quigley, Wounded Man, Says Family and Elopes With Store Beauty. FATHER ON THE SEA, Plucky “No, 4" in Last Year's) when ne climbs into his. “steera ., > be h o t Crew Dazes Relatives and |S" 0" Me Olraré Lodging House Friends by Marriage. Frank Carley Hunt, the young No. ¢ of last season's Yale olght, who forced the final, heart-breaking mfe In @ pitt- | ful effort to drive Yale's beaten boat up to the Crimson crew, and who eloped and married a shop girl without the| knowledge or consent of his father, Richard H. Hunt, the architect, faces | another struggle now. He Je forced to) 0 out and Win In a life race for success, | So far Young Hunt has not communt- | cated with any of his father's folks, and | it the Yale Club and other places where | Old Eli's sons congregate none has weard of his whereabouts, although all now bis bride and applaud his act. 1 rom a reliable source It is learned that | he can scarcely rely on his family for id, as his marriage before his school term expired las angered and grieved sis relatives. Hunt's father, Richard Howland Mtunt, sailed for Europe last Saturday with the bridegroom's mother, Mr: Richard Morris Hunt, who lived at No. |37 Madison avenue, The boy's uncle, | Joseph H, Hunt, a member of the firm | f Hunt & Hunt, architects, of No. 2] | Hast ‘Twenty-first street, sald to-day: | Father Doesn't Know It. “Too bad Carley couldn't have walted & while. He has not sald one word to any of us, Hiy father will first learn of his marriage when he latida at South- ampton to-day, He ts not yet twenty- one years old, and had only five more months to go, Carley 1s a big, lumber- ing, good-natured boy, with romantle | ideas, kely, and a great athletic, Boys | will be boys, won't they?” Tt is understood that young Hunt calmly planned his marriage with Miss Florence Adele Loomis, who was a clerk jPosite the campus. His mother, former- ly Miss Carley, a daughter of Frank D. Carley, was divorced from Mr, Hunt some years ago and 1s now the wife of Dr. Charles W. Hargens, of Hot Springs, 8. Dak. Mr, Hunt is also mar- led again. His present wife was Mrs Walter Wilson Watrous, parted by dl- voree from her first husband, + The boy's mother met young Hunt's sweetheart In this city and gave her consent, the story goes. She was so pleased by the youth's manly devotion to the shop girl that congratulations | followed and an invitation was extend: | ed to the young couple to Ko west. It is sald that young Hunt and his bride have joined his mother in Hot Springs, and that he will shortly enter the min- | ing business with the flim of a class- | {wate’s father. Surprises His Friends. | Hunt's elopen a Yate ile 5 the City Hall nse 1 eloping ¢ Licens Hunt, PD. Carley came to New ¥ eo frem Ly ‘| ¢ bu Hare were two daughters and An Old Fashioned Soda Cracker, Doctor Who Sewed Up Cut in Face. 22 ee Patrick Trigg 1s as gallant a sailor as never went to sea, but It's the hardest thing In the world for him to stay put No. “70 Third avenue, Patrick in the forty-five years of his life probably has failen out of more bunks than any man you ever met, but he never had such 4 bump 46 he recelved early to-day , After he got through work yesterday, though a sailor at heart he {s a laborer |by profession, Patrick fell in with « crowd of friends and they awappad see stories and made @ vigorous attack on the brand cf red Hquur known in that rection as “shook.” One etory he heard that pleased him @ good dea! was about @ monkey on a barkentine that had the habit of taking things out of the cook's galley and leaping Into the rigging. Then with his tafl wrapped around a cross treo he would swing off and pelt the sallor men, One day thee caught him and greased his tall, This tlme as he swung off the orosstree the tail slipped and he fell to the deck with considerable of a bump. After that for days and days before attempting to go {nto the rigging he would wrap his tall around the taffrall and try it to see If it would hold, When Patrick heard that story he laughed and laughed, Between laughs he made further nroads on the supply of “shock.” Very late, with all satls sef, he started for the Girard, “Heave-ho, yo-ho,” he sang, as he | climbed up the ateps to the third floor, and paseing by the “stalls’ orawled heavily Into the top bunk of a tler of three, Ho wouldn't go to sleep until he had told everybody about that monkey try- ing his tal] out on the taffrail, Finally the succeeded sep yarns, Several hours later Tom Lawrence, the night clerk, three floors below, heard jA loud notse and felt the building shake. “It's elther an earthquake or Trigg, he ventured as he ran up the stairs. One of his two guesses was right, Trigg, who had laughed in his sleep, was on the floor with his face battered and a bad cut on his forehead. The Harlem Hospital ambulance came and got him, a Di th sewed his face up. When he had shed there camo through the bandages 8 thick yo “Dochter,” it said, “did iver y No? Well, I'll tell It t ye. And ue ald. nephew, Earl Carley. One of the daughters became the wife of Ollyer |H. Harriman; the other married Mr. Hunt, from whom she was divorced, Karl Carley married Mies Augusta Bar. (of Lienderson Ky., and for a time kus figure ulong Broad- Troubles of Carley, B,D. Car! got into trouble after he bullt a railroad which tapped tne Kentucky Mountains and which later became a part of the Southern system, remarked at the Ume, however, 1 uever knew t defeat was: Was @ perfect '. Nawcoinbe.” He t ned lavist and was looked M4 a mai of tremendous wealth crash ¢ame. “another” 5¢ Package hock" got in {ts work and snores| i ‘hear ie siory ay the monkey that went to | He Was Not One of Gang of Four, = @ John Quigley, a laborer, of No, 18 Colden street, Jersey City, wus shot !n the abdomen to-day by Jacob Fel detective employed by the Central Rall- road of New Jersey, Helsats sald he came upon four men under a frelght car In the yards, who were trying to steal the brass journals of the car. They ran when he approached, he sald, and he fired two shots at chem. He did not know he had h:: one o. them until the police had been summoned to Quige ley’s bedside at the City Hospital, Teists was arresiod by Detective Lee, of the Jersey City police, Michael Haley, who lived newt door to Quigley, was arrested on the acouss- tion of Felsts that he was another ef the thieves. The police are looking for two other men who are be'leved to have been with the brass thieves. » when he was first cna Moopitdl, “eald’ that_ he" hed "tee hunting for work !n the yards, and he was looking at some e_fallows wi running away fr Then he was shot He wit { de ———>_——— L. @. Ghanier’s Gon Under Knife” William ©, Chanler, son of Mr. an®’ Mrs. Lewis Stuyvesant Chanler, hae; just been operated on in Roosevelt re pital for appendicitis, His conditt ono time caused graye noxlety, a a Chania: has joined Mrs, Chatter iat r has oancelled all her ents and will remain’ & at ‘he Valeott until Heal son {s strong tnou to be moved hom: is the best remedy for rheumatism. It’s a stub- born disease but Scott's Emulsion conquers in the { end. Try it. AllDraggiets hes of SLEEP Body and brain need sufficient peacefui sleep each night to repair the waste caused by the physical and mental exertions of the day. Broken rest brings on peadeche, despondency, ir- Bape nd nerve exhaustion. When the nerve force is low, Scechams Sully are invaluable as an aid to ree new the supply of health-pro- ducing elements, They act :| favor: ably upon the digestive | organs, throw otf impurities | from the blood, and restore | the vital energies, Beecham’s | Pills relieve congestion, dispel brain-fag, quiet the overe wrought nerves, and Bring Sweet REPOSE Sold Everywhero, In boxes 10c, and 21 PLAYER- oe » equipped | \ ot This tamous vary e for NEW YORK . i ‘lt ral <RANICH & aie CARH OM UREDIN. BASY PAYMENTS. FEMALE. anent pele SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS.

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