The evening world. Newspaper, February 27, 1909, Page 3

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| BROKE IN WOMAN'S OOM IN SEARCH OF A “NIGHTCAP” 4 Te aie ‘Then Alfred Bingham Learned He Had Retired in the Wrong House. HAD TO DOA MARATHON Clad in Union Suit, He Led Boarders Unit! Policeman Blocked His Way. Alfred Bingham had resolved to ob- @erve Lent until le met a friend—a very old one-on Park Row yesterday afternoon. Both are printers, They talked of copy, proofs, galleys, editors, handed a rap t@ reporters, and finall driftey evel time, each argument was clinched by 4@ to the one other subject dear t Mean printer—McGraw's Giants, A nip of ale. | | \ { \ Along toward midnight Alfred's fri Decame {Il and wandered off. Alf: f started for his home, No, 22 F Seventeenth street. He Kot as far as No, % East Eleventh stre » Walked up the front steps, found the door unlocked and sauntered in. He saw no one. Up one flight front he pushed open a door, turned on a light, disrobed and tumbled into a soft bed. Somehow, all the familar accommodations of Alfred's room were missing. An hour after, when he sought a night-cap, he couldn't find the bottle. He remembered that Jim, a fellow lodger, always had a de- canter of refreshments, and that Pleased im Lock Didn’t Stop Him Trying the next room, he f locked. It would be a fine thought, to push in the door and Jim, Besides, nothing like a door ever stood between him and a drink—when he needed {t. So in went the door, Instantly the night was made wild b. the screams and shouts of a terrified f male, who ran to the windows tn her nightrobe and yelled like an oper Mt he are “Murder! Help! Robbers’ Sou was Alfred, he still knew that something would be doing about there shortly. He didn't care to stick around. Out into the street he fled. forgot that his clothes were In the first floor front. He couldn't turn back, so put on more speed, Out of windows, as he fled, heads peeked and screamed, and the nelghbrohood was rapldly frighten- ing itself into a pante. Bingham’s white robed figure, encased fn a unlon sult, flashed by under the street lamps. Behind him came the Eleventh street boarders. Some were nearly dressed, All had been awakened, and for the honor of the houge the fugitive must be caught. In all, fifteen persons were in the midnight Marathon, On Thirteenth street and Second ave- band half a block awa: ¥ cut into the race—Polleeman Scirel! of the Fifth Btreet station, He came from the oppo- site direction and bumped into the fig- ure in white. “Some ter or Mara-shon-er, eh, old Dodo?” saluted Bingham as he drew up. Friend Got Him Out. Schreiber sprang between his prison- er and a dozen of the boarders, who accused the captive of everything from murder to petit larceny, Officer and prisoner headed the procession to the | station house, where each of the board- ers lodged a complaint. Then some one sent to the house for Bingham’s clothes and he was allowed to dress himself for presentation to Magistrate Barlow, The Court assessed him $ for not knowing his own room better, Bing- m had 18 cents left, A friend later got him out. ee PRIEST AIDS ASSAILANT. Declares Man Who Shot at Him Wan Not Responsible, CHICAGO, Feb, 27.—Instead of prose- cuting Henry Vasey, the man who shot at him in church last October, the Rey, James K. Fielding will send the prisoner back to his parents in Engiand. pastor reached this determination after visiting Vasey at a police station. “The man may be a church thief?” said Father Fielding, “but If so he was driven to robbery by hunger. When he shot ct me he was In such a condition not to be responsible. I have made rangements for Vasey's passage home and on Monday will appear in court ane k his discharge.’ ——>—_ SHOT DAUGHTER'S ASSAILANT. BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Feb, 27.—While handcyffed and sitting in the sheriff's tempted to assault on Feb. 15, The at- tack occurred without warning, Rob- {nson firing four shots Into the negro before deputies standing near could tn- terfere. Robinson surrendered. (ee — ———— — —} “There Are Twice as Many Telephones in NewYork City as There Are in London.” With this wonderful communica- tion service you should have no dif- ficulty in securing the Position, Worker, Home, Investment, Bargain, &c., you seek by sending your ad- vertisement for publication in to- morrow’s Sunday World. A solici- tor will call upon request. ‘Phone 4,000 Beekman. SEND YOUR SUNDAY WORLD A half block away he| Thel g THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1909. ‘NEVENNG WORD BEAUTY CONTEST | —_—.— | Twelve Lovely Girls Launched | by Votes Upon Bright Stage Careers, THOUSANDS COMPETED, More Than Million and a Half Ballots Cast by Friends | of Prize Winners Name, 58—PRANCES CURTIS, No. 1 West Righty-sixth street 50—JESSIB YORK, No. 251 West Twenty-cighth street 66—BLANCHE AIMEE, No, 122 Amsterdam avenue. 46—BERTHA E. STENZEL, No. 289 Bernard street, Roches- ter, N.Y. ITTAALOTTE NEUMANN, 200 Hast Highth street, FY bush 33—ANNA KEUAL, No. 100 West One Hundred and Ninth street te 60—CLARA HEATH, No. 200 West Elghty-third street. 4—ANNA SLATER, No. 1792 Am- sterdam avenue 86—ANNIE CARMAN THOMAs, No. 24 Briggs ay Yon- kers 75—MAY OGDEN, No. 150 Wash- ington street, Providence, 82—CLAUDIA ESMOND, No. Manhattan avenue. 13—FLORENCE MAC, No. 232 West Seventy-first street I 31 porcini 2 Mere are the photographs of the @3 “S2! and became {winners in The Evening Worta's |‘ inate Fast Ceneistic Rene vine [beauty contest for the selection of | huir, with fats Srer Peat untaynr [twelve typical oA ran girls for nail and In aceo {re yrdance with her 8 girlishly slight Gibson Model Gets Stage Career. ing, free, and afterward employ them | iat = Will give them | Pull which tultfon in singing, dancing—and act- Charles Frohman, wh $ Claudia Esmond, is par- 1b owitl of $25 | week, each. for several years been posing as an When The Evening World announced pe, houehg Having abaan employed ring that time by Harrison Fisher, this contest, {t had no {dea there were | Ham!'ton King and Charles Dana Gib- 80 many young women, within the|son, besides numerous well-known radius of {ts circulation, who were | photograp s. She is a great ad- |only waiting to seize the first fair op-| Miter of Marie Doro, and would like to portunity for a stage career, The | "As 'y nitro me te Res toumoricis Evening World expected, of course,|nvt unlike Miss Doro tn [that there would be a response of sev- | Pines . jeral hundred photographs to Mr. | 0% the piquant | Frohman’s offer, but, instead, thous- | mishi cali a sweet personal lands at once began to present thelr | Brooklyn Maid a Winner. claims. For this reason tt became ; Japparent before the time for receiv. | ling photographs had expired, that tt | would be necessary to increase the humber of photographs pubilshed to et 7 + Teg: at admirer as taken her attained, No, 33 Amateur Actress, |be voted upon. The original idea was to select twenty;four out of all the | pletures sent in, print these, and ask | the readers to pick the winners from them. 1 Kuehl, is a New Choice Narrowed to Hundred. ile a A The land silde of beau that de | is most un- cended upon The Eventng World Office, hance tu the fact that it | fair to nearly a whose claims however, established would not be entirely hundred young women, to beauty were about equal, to narrow » ™Mse-tonched and a mass of head. Her eyes mouth, with quick smile, of her’ most the number of competitors to two | charining features. She is well moulded dbzen. One hundred photogranhs were, and above the avenue In height, therefore, printed. The voting, which ted from January 7 until February | 20, was fast, furlous, and exciting. During the perlod of the balloting, more than one million and a half votes | were receiver | Now that the contest has closed {t Is easy to Imagine the pride of The Even- ing World in being able to place twelve typically stunning girls In the | 1s of Mr, Frohman | But, after all, it was a very close race, for it was difficult even for the most critical Judges to decide from the 100 photograplis of varying but practicaly ! No. 86 a Little Beauty, No. 83, Miss fe Carmen Thomas, ) Was a native New rker, but is now She !s small of and slight of build, and of a t suggests the lovely littleness 6 ( But she has taken the standard to be a hatr i kVand her eye in a combtnotion of coloring that suggests a bit of Irish ancestry, Not Yet Eight en Years Old, ». 4, Miss Annie § eighteen years of age. Miss Slater was born in Massachusetts, but has lved for the past five years in New York, She is the most ed a resident of Yonkers. feature er, ts not yet equal charms the twelve girlish ‘ace! arivanial most entitled to the coveted prizes, It sweet sy \ t gives great 1s safe to say, too, that out of the | promise of loveliness of tone in sing- ng. Miss Skiter 1s an mirer of Miss Billie Burke. Yankee Favorite Now Here, 75, Miss Lillan May Ogden, comes thousands of photographs entered there er Intense ad- would not be a half a dozen that would not be entitled to serious consideration office at Bessemer yesterday ‘Jim | from any of the New York managers. | all the (way from Providence,” RL, Brown, a negro, was shot and in-| Winner an Up-State Girl. re slic tas born and educated, As stantly killed by James Robinson, | |@ matter of fact, when she arrived in white, father of a gitl Brown had at.| No. 62, Miss Frances Curtls, was the |New York Thursday accompanied by ja stalwart brother it was exactly the second time that she had ever set foot on the paving stones of this city. Miss winner, with the most votes, or, asshe herself laughingly explained, “happened | to top the heap.” Miss Curtls, with her | Og Is dark end abe cet six : i inches in height. Just n her joy in four slatera, was born and brought up In }yee' 2ooq fortune la rather. subdued, Malden-on-the-Hudson, a small river| owing to the strangeness of herp town tn Ulster County, tall, fully 6 feet 7 inch gracefully slender of build, She has the | fresh, clear look that plenty of pure out- | door air gives to the face, She {8 rather | sitfon, but she gives ample promise of jan attractive youthfur gayety, when her in Delght, and |cirroundings become more familiar, No, 50 Is Trained Singer. No. 50, Miss Jessie York, is a | New Yorker, bred in the b little She has Miss Curtis has large gray eyes be- |alw. been — gre sted in neath finely marked brows that are a r musieal perfor and has shade darker than her brown hair. Her NOIRE LETMIe) is slight rench cal! Mis: h gray eves and quantities of pretty brown hair, Rochester Wins & Place. No. 4, Miss Bertha Stenzel, comes from Rochester. Her voice has been jcultivated for the past three and a half | mouth is quite large, but her lips part over two rows of strong white teeth. She {8 vivacious, although she !s sure that her dramatic ability will develop to the | best advantage along serious lines, High School Graduate. years by the best Ro instructors No. 68, Miss Blanche Aimee, is a | Miss Stenzel |s magnificently formed and has an exceedingly attractlye face, the | Braduate of Wadleigh High School, and about & feet 4 inches tall and prettily plump. Her eyes are yery blue and she has a fluffed mass of golden brown halr that becomes a kind of halo when the light strikes it | | New York Girl Third. Yo, 60, Miss Clara Loulse Heath, is also a New York girl, but a graduate of Smith Seminary, Vermont. After Pit ful . she was graduated she had decided to| [ing the thirteenth on the tet at eae devote her time to drawing and paint-jtestants. I had the least votes of any ing, but eventually became discouraged | 0! the twelve girls, you know, but I cer- with the work that she now ¢ males |wen 6 Saas a IT Bae earns Thirteen Hoodoo Number No Handicap. Miss Florence Mac, Ifis proved number in the cor s not i Mac n nd e to k Her hair t auburn tinge and her eyes are gray, shotograph on Dec. 13," and omy ium delighted with the chance to! fora year In the chorus of the musical | begin her new work ats Mr sic | play “The Dollar Prine ata salary |man's management, Miss Esmond has ate of gre charm of Which Is its ever !s a New Yorker born and bred. Miss varying expression. Her mouth Is sw | Almee has always been interested in smiling, and her eyes are unusua latelens tata and gray, ¥ mg black last amateur theatricals, and hi= played the alr is a very dark brown, and she} jPart of Pitti Sing in “The Mikado” sev- ti Jeral times, With great success, She is TURS. TEAL Gl “WN TONBS: Wi FIGHT SENTENCE —~——— | Recovers From Hysteria That | Followed Conviction— | Execution Stayed. AJ i} The Mrs, Ben Teal, who awoke from | a night of sound sleep in the Tombs {this morning, was Teal, jacross the Bridge of not the same Mrs. | Ben figuratively, was led yesterday, jWild-eyed and raving, after a § before j Judge Foster, in General Sesstons, had found her guilty of attempted suborna- tion of perjury in trying to procure false evidence against Frank J. Gould | in his wife's action for divorce, Mild of manner, and seemingly re- signed to the grim prospect of a year's term on Blackwell's Island, to which place she has ve sentenced, the wife | of the noted stage director was a changed woman to-day, She had cried | herself out yesterday, and while she! Was as non-communteatlye as ever with | prison cttendants, Mrs, Teal sup-| pressed whatever emotions she felt to- dav, Itels said she still has hope that the sentence imposed upon her will not be executed. Col, Robert J. Haire, her lawyer, will argue before Supreme Court | Justice Platzek, Monday, for a certifi cate of reasonable doubt. Judge Foster granted a stay of execu- tion of sentence until Tuesday, that Mrs. Teal's counsel might appeal to the high- er tribunal, Mr, Teal was one of the first visitors to the Tombs this morning. He ap- peared greatly depressed, although he inade no statement for publication. The only comment he made yesterday, after hearing the verdict, was relative ‘to hic baby, which he said would die without its mother. —_—— OFFICERS AND MEN OF FLEET WELCOMED IN NORFOLK. | | Bluejackets From Around-the-World Battleships Make Proud Show- ing in Big Parade, NORFOLK, Va., Feb. Thirty-two | of Bluejackets, forming a| | fleet brigade of 2,0) men, were landed! here this morning from the Atlantic fleot anchor in Hampton| com panies battle for the big parade that tt a fea- { Norfolk's reception to the fleat companies of const artillery ‘ort Monroe and additional sof bluejackets from the , Navy-Yard, a ‘regiment of the National Guard and various other organizations iped form the greatest martlal event fe a known in recent years Veterans of both the Union and Con: jfederte armies were brought together In the parade and at the reviewing stand. | peste Sains \'THE MERRY WIDOW’ HOOTED | coer Montenegrins in Constantinople Object to Comte Opera, TINOPLE, Feb The ntation, pres last night the local |Opera-House of “The Merry Widow, ‘the comic opera that has had such sue- | cess elsewhere, | resulted In a boisterous scene. It was being sung by an Aus trian company before a large audience. iding many members of the dip! itic corps. In the midst of the 2 group of Montonegrins, whose natl nitiments were wounded by the pre created a disturbance. They |, hooted and beat on the floor th heavy sticks The audience hurriedly left the theatre and a number of women fainted in thi tush, The demonstrants wert arrested, fo | Ju could raise ireen rules S ° he e pamela | Sticky Sweating sh is out t in time and PRE WINNERS Twelve Winners of Evening World’s Beauty Contest, Picked From Thousands of Entries HER LVEOREAN CHER ANGE 1S 18 THAD NOT TO LEM GRUSHING BLOW TOMS TO-DAY a oe Emily Williams Doesn't Even) Will Begin His Term on the Obtain a Money Balm for Island Time Blighted Hopes. Next Week. —_—e—- Some Love's dream has again been Williams, and It ts the | pie third time. | Several days may elapse before Carl tered for Emily Hansen, luwyer, who was recen Out In St. Louis fs a man named Will twelve months in the 1 fams, who married her only to weary the. ¢ attemptal bribery of her and desert her, leaving her in the | transver Tombs to Bi ate of Rhode Island, that Eastern, well's Island haven of the mis-mated, for the dis-! it was generally Supposed that the satisfied one can get a legal separation | convicted lawyer would be n to there quicker and easter than in any| plackwell’s Island to-day, and the other commonwealth this side the Ale} vague replies made by Prison Keeper ghaneys. : Delghanty, in whose keeping Piseher The bereft Mrs, Willams migrated tol yangen lias beon placed, to the direct New York without having obtained ail eteationa put to him Gio ranantencol divorce, Then came along Herman faye tyening World, tended to shed Igel. He had a most winning way, andj {ttle or no Heht on the tl what could a young and longing heart feorge Gordon Battle, iy An: do? en's personal attorney, Sald that If} client 1s sent to the Island to-day it wil Emily gave her heart to Herman, but!) done t his knowle she told him about that first love af- under the Impression that the c: fair and its !ndeterminate ending. /Putn WIT not completely wind up hi Whereupon Herman, who had no relish ty Orihasts waeke arte for risking his Mberty by committing! will beg is term In the pen bigamy by knowingly marrying a mar- | eee ried Woman, told Emily to go back to} SAILS WITH FULL STEERAGE. Rhode Island and get a divorce from Williams and then they would get mar- red. line st her pler a » North River, this morn- Southampton, via Cherbourg. but w ing for with @ very light cabin tis She Gets a Divorce. Emily got her divorce for desertion, | wnusualy | IAFEe num of stecrage Willlams stayed in St. Louts. He was served with her summons and com- plaint In his office there, He did not offer any defense, He sent no lawyer to court to look out for his Interests Emily came back to New York, but Herman had changed his mind. He would not keep his promise to marry He had even gone so far as to consult a lawyer, and sald he did not belleve her Rhode Island divorce was worth the paper i: was written on How to Tell Whether a Skin Affection Is an Inherited Blood Disease or Not. Sometimes it ts hard to determine wheth a ekin affection 1s a sign of n blood disorder or simply a forta of eczema, 1 physt- clans are often puzzled in thelr dtagnosis, The best way for any one afflicted Is to go her This was the story which Justice | to Hogeman’s, Riker's, Kalish's, Kinswan Green and a jury listened to In the Clty | Jungman’s or any good druggist who han- Court In Emily's suit against Herman | dies pure drugs and obtain {0 cents’ worth es for het broken heart ft the case to the jury v $10,000 dan ice Green of poslam. Apply this, and {f the itching stops at once and the frouble is cured in a ect to his decision after "reading | | up’ on the question of the validity of; few days !t may be set down as having the Rhode Island decree jury | been eczema, as this is the way posinm acts brought in a verdict for $1,200 damages for Emily The Third Blow. blow {n the worst cases of eczema, and in curing herpes, blotches, r, piles, salt , Fash, barber's and other forms of A Al) CN to Emily's) 4 y acalp, and all surface skin at. oving heart came to-day when Justice | rections Green set asice the dict and granted | ‘°° judg » ground that} Those who will write to the Emergency the Rhod vold, bas-| Laboratories, No. 32 West Twenty-fitth of the Haddocks, eee New York, can secure by mail fre p courts. f of charge a supply sufficient to cur by the § {} small eczema ¢ } overnight and | four_bours oy ms} t me the que was bless divorce in Palms sttor taking salts or cathartls waters—did you ever notice that Weary all gone feeling—tho psims money to get that wor little Rhody THE BREW— of yoorhends sweat—and rotten {o your mouth — Cathartics One may have a Delleious, only move by sweating your bowels wholesome cup of —Do a lot of burt—Try a CASCA- RET and see how much easier the job 1s done —how much better you feel, POSTUM A CASCARETS: bor if it is properly brewed—but treatmentiAll cropeieice Brereton Postum, like all good things, fa boxes @ wouth. ean be spoiled in the making. If cook has abused you have another try. It’s easy—follow directions on pkg. “There's a Reason” ASH UO CKE DIT, AMY PAYMENTS, Agent will call if desired, ; AN WATCH & DAKOND (0, Maideo Lage, Tei, 6907 Cort, GILCHRIST BEGS . INTERBOROUGH “COURTS PADIN 0 CONTENT Lawyer Too Near Jury Room | During Consideration of His Case. BY — GFFICER,| HALED “Student Would Have Known Better,” Says Justice After Apolog Former State Senator Alfred J. Gil- and humiliating half christ had a tryty hour In the Supreme Court, Brooklyn, to-day when he faced Justice Kelly to |} show cause why he should not be ad ged guilty of contempt of court. Mr. c rist not only made an apology per for Insulting Court Offlcer ty Thursday night, but his law p sonally ner, Jacob Neu, made the apolog duet Mr, Gilehrist humbly admitted that | Thursday night about 7.30 o'cloek he approached the door of a jury room on the third floor of the Kings County) Court House, In whieh a fury was | locked up considering the ease of Jotun} Clark Retd and BR, Mr ther that he the Relds Mrs. Reid againat the Gilehrist- admitted fur | had acted as counsel for in the trial of tt ane, “But, your he! t Thad ho intention of violating any rule of court 0) delve, Thad no destre to approach the jur When court adjourned and the Jury went out 1 dtd not understand Just what the instruction did not knew wh be locked up until door was to be nthe ¢ vehed at that in the vi rat about half ld inquire floors of the a floor, Otticer the Jury, here lL encow therty and ash int hint abou “TL thought he was a Hetle harsh in his replies to me and lost my temper Vor this Pam truly sorry and [ apoto: tizo to the Court and also to the of- teor A jaw student.” sald Justice Kelly, AND HUDSON IN SUBWAY FIGHT —— Walter G, Oakman Resigns From Former Company to Stick to McAdoo Concern, CONFLICT OF INTERESTS Feeling Intensified by Tunnel Companies’ Desire to Ex- tend City Lines. The confilct of Interests between tho Tapld ‘Transit Company Hudson Compantes has been abruptly brought to public notice by the resignation of Walter @ .Oakman the directorate of the Interbor- Interborough and the from ough been for several both a director and a member of Mr, Oakman = has ugha Execut Commit. te president of the Hudson C he has found tt imposalble t vot corporations, Whon seen at his home, No, 2 West Porty-third street to-day Mr. Oakman id ‘My resignation from. the Interbo ugh Was perfectly natural, The inte 3 of the two compantes conflict and I could not therefore serve both con- That Is all there is to 1" yi mean that the Hudson and In- terborough Compantes are both in busl- hess to build subways, and tn that fact Hes the contitet?’ “you have tt Oakman: Mr some utright,” replied Mr, Oakman has been regarded for time by the Interborough Com- officials as being rather a Hud- n companies’ nan, His resignation, which cannot be altogether regarded as forced, was not opposed by the Inter- borough, a rhe relations between the companies rime very much strained when the 1 people applied for permission tu nd thelr Sixth avenue subway to the Grand Central Station, The Inter- borough regarded this as an invas of its terriiory, The feeling was i tensified when the Hudson companies proposed to build the extension with Its own money, which the Interborough 5 tion on its own ability subwitys With private capita ‘the Interborough would have known better than to have ay hed a jury in teh he Was interested and conversed with the ourt officer in-charge of it wil take your explanation and un: | der ‘consideration and de cision." 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