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at \) | . : | BANKER'S HOODOO |“FIRIN URS IN ST "R” MSOW'3 Foullz Would Give Million “Boot” to Trade Hard Luck Neme. Ny IS NOW IN HOSPITAL. Life Imperilled by Sickness and Sea Crash on 23d; Hit by Auto on 13th, William Fouitz, National Bank of Neweastle, Pa, heen lucky enough but been pursued by a hy de willin, rst lent of the has to amass a fortune of millions for two years he has 20 which he w 3 to trade off with s¢ and hi man who around wit n down by automobiles a go to sea without pick nblic or some craft that is up with another In a fog. Furthermor #0 anxious to rid ent evil zentus t @ million or perma At pr & patient | from a fra pound tracts fn a private room vessel himself of his persist. at ne would throw fn that It was two to © sure Feb, 13, when a him fourth street over at Was only the last ma station of the It made its fh ape nee in. ‘ Hocdoo's First Warning. The banker has a fine home in New- castle, Pa., it Ss business interests Wide cirele of friends in this city e made him a frequ Visitor fo) the past te About once a fort- night Mr would run up from Neweastle to fa few days at the Waldort. V the spring of 1967 ‘ance warning of the by being bumpe i] jammed whe € rue bile, However out of those ¢ acratches months his life w Decembe asleep boat and 5 told hin was sufforing from late of typhoid. From these and the his recent a it Mr. F Itz belleves 's Nemisis carries a banner m !with the mystic numbers Again the Deadly 23" His rience on the Republic Drought him to the 4 of nerve collapse again, when the Baltic land him safely New York, Wit friend, John Springer, also a New banker, Mr, Foultz got in an automob At the Walte Star pier and proceeded up town to the Waldorf ‘The .car skill fully avoided r unti! it reach third ond Pitth (again the fatal There feur insinuated the vel cars approachiy There was a crash, which el tragically to Mr. Foultz's mind his very recent perfl on the Republic He shut his eyes, thinking this was th last, but when he opened them again he found his car had only been about half demolished and 23") the ¢ le between two mM opposite the and Mr Springer had escaped with a severe shaking up. Nevertheless his nerves were on a When ho reached his apart- Tents in the Waldorf and he kept ¢ his room until the afternoon of Feb, 13 When he thought that he would ph benefitted by the fresh air he dect that he would not trust himself aga to an automobile until his nerves were in better shape. So he went out for a walk. Couldn't Dodge Hoodoo, Ho had only to walk a block to wade b les trouble. The moment he P erossing at Broadwa his hoo df round the eo r the shape of w taxicab on an errand that required lous haste, When the millionaire was an ambulane had a broken knee and a double fracture of the hip, He wus taken to Roosevelt Hospital an? placed In a private room One of Mr. Poulta's two nur to an Lvening World repor that the}. odoo-pursued man would remain at the hosp! at Toast f Tivo weeks arriod to said now better pondering on whether or not 1 take to the navigation of the alt to avold the peril of land and He a a million dollars. to guarantee the extine- Oo, will gladly gi any one who tion of his eee MOHAWK NOT BADLY HURT. Revenne Cutter Came Off Beck With Luck, Experts Say, The United States revenue cutter Mo- hawk, which ran aground on Hog Ba Reef at Hell Gate last week and was taken to Shewan's dry-dock, foot of East Fourth street, East River will be repaired there at an expense of about $11,000, A thorough examination of the tnjured vessel was made to-day by Naval Con- structor Bessellevre, and the Shewan Company guarantee to have the vessel In first-class condition within twenty days, It was said by experts that the veasel was very lucky to get off as easily ay she did. —— “WHAT'S THE UBE? ‘This is the title of the very clever song now being by Jae! the Bia iis CA oar eg | k | ot "ACOOK REVOLVER WMH A Pree : jIndignant Members of | Craft Protest a Housewite’s | « Method. JAIL FOR EX-MISTRESS, Justice Deaf to Miss Pade | Plea That Gun Was Little and Servant Big. When exasperated by the kitchen ama- ng 4 you can't get a police- Miss ‘ f b zon bal red" by all ver of using a gun. did that same, and to-day she [was } West » Poll rin | $1.00 en though s a] |that t Was not a turret mons but wibre toy | Fa ver, with lowering brow, was | the boosted culsine artist, bucked by all 1 belligerent etiquette of on, represented b wh brows als the vox swarm | lowered son Her n from wes ng-louse elglith street, wa used of firing a of her ¢ ne violent when her employer charged her yesterday mor: Miss Pader is a timid lttle womar nd when told that she had been ac cused of punching her buxom cook at 40 arraigned evolver tn turned appealingly to Magistrate Ha |ris and sald Had I been able to do that, ¥. Honor, It would have been neces me to flee to my room and get » Httle pistol loaded with blank eg es and fire |: to frighten off t who, I feared, was going to attack upon me. Brought Trouble with Her. Miss Pader | sary 4 Whe: told her story of the en of whieh was vehemently d by the few days a Sadie In my le moment. 8 said Miss Pade as 1 told he 1 attempted to enter the| chen to argue with her, she seized a | sugar bowl and hurled tt my head. ben everything in the kite hat was | hot down began to fly, and her | ind sereams and oa that I feared my boarders would rorized and would leave the house. 1 to my room and sent a call for a ssenger, whom I intended (o send for remove the woman. reached my room nT heard Sadie coming up the back | , still shrieking and making threaty | ine, L was so frightened that 1| |celzed a little libre pistol which | ! only blank cartridges in {t, and, ag rst into my room, I fired, know- shriek were s¢ e Henry ther sh s Pader and that the blackened and bloodshot condition of her eyes was ue to powder burns from the pistol | | Miss Pader discharged In her ta: | “That woman tried to kill me, Judge," she sald, “and I javen't yet wot over the fright she gave me. When she told me to do a lot of things yesterday that I wasn't hired to do, I told her that ahe could give me my money and I would leave, 1 resigned, right then and there, Judge, for | saw It was no place for a| lady to wa { “When 1 told her T was going to quit | ; she jumped into me, beat me and punched me all over. the kitchen. I never touched her, Then she ran up- stairs to her room and told me to come and get my th 1 was going up: | | orderly Ike, and just as Hd, Judge when she opened h tol You have took the stand and liad been brutally treated | M to work for her, but t | Honor, for she done tt Magistrate Harris told Sadie Henry | | that he would postpone ‘he case until | Wednesday, In order that she might | bring a certificate from the Roosevelt | Hospital to support her claim that her eyes Were Injured by the discharge of the pistol | Meanwhile M up, as she say | will put up $ | a /JURY SERVICE SUMMONS | IGNORED, COURT ANGRY. | | Forty-eight Men out of a Hundred | Appear and Twenty-seven Want to Be Excused, the 5 & lie, peu Pader {s still locked he knows no one who 0 ball for her. ‘than % per cent, of the students shoul: Out of hundred talesmen one | summoned to appear in Part II. of General Sessions to-day to serve as jurors only fort eht answered to thelr names, When the clerk of the court announced that the Court would hear legal excuses why any of talesmen should not serve twenty- the forty-eight made a rush | Judge Mutqueen, who was presiding, | The Judge looked startled for a mo- | [ment and then said angrily that he would not ept any excuse and that every man present would have to serv if found acceptable to counsel. As sev eral jurles were to have been chosen at to-day's session of cou which ts the beginning of the term, ‘it is expected that Judge Mulqueen will take drastic j action against those talesmen who did | not respond to the summons to ap- pear, a ! HELD FOR HUSBAND'S DEATH. ROCKFORD, U., March 1.—Mre. Lora Kauffman haa been arrested by Coroner McAllister charging her with her hu band's murder. Dr. Haines, of Chicag in (an examination of | Kau(fman's stomach found evidence of atrychnine, OSES the, ‘Wesleyan Co-Eds Driven | were THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH 1, 1909. Some Hats Women May Be Forced to Wear To Keep Up With the Latest Parisian Edict 4 RESIGNED sy sve'y MPLE LITTLE OF BRON ¥ EATION"= MADE ! FROM coed PARK LEAO PIPE, SET BOTANNICAL OFF WITH A GAROENS HEAD oF RED CABBAGE. HUBBY Wik GO WITHOUT CIGARS FOR BS MONTHS Te PAy FoR THIS RIG! 7 EMPIRE PRINCESS MADE OF SALMON = COLORED PORTIERSE MATERIAL: a we wavs VAT ~ EASTER GIRL WILL BE ROUN SHOULDERE! Dainry CREATION EVOLVED FROM THE O10 OF eiCe WASTE BASKET. Out by Men’s Opposition, Says judge Geo. Reynolds o+e. TRUCK*GAROEN « HAT = DESIGNED BY BURBANK, THE VEGETABLE NECK MUSCULAR DEVELOPMENT RESULTING FROM WEARING 40L8. Lios. Veneiuuie Trustee Favors Women Students, but Felt Compelled to Vote to Exclude Them, WT ON POD Y E dog produc: another ntinue some extent a reflection on the women students But such a conclusion is very far from the facts, | Punchinello Chapeau, Ges Ey ota “Co-education has been in force .t Wesleyan since | = Saas 1972,” said Judge George G. Reynolds, one of the most influential members Dead husbands, ve babies and stuffed of the Board of Trustees, who voted for the exclusion of the women Students, elephants are the o tri that the ‘Tam a strong believer tn {t. But at the college the feeling of the young men Milliners have ove ed as: trhaming this spring. That Is, they bilities of these Possibly Against the young women fs such that it seemed useless effort to carry it on, Girl Scholars Higher. “The young women at Wesleyan, fn Proportion to their numbers, have higher in the classes than the young to prolong the nave ommodities thus far ud husbands and stuffed elephants are bulky and {ful of contour, and therefore laptable as garnitures ignored the poss!- NAVY OFFICER'S WaRLD TRIP ENDS | fleets in no way o: and is not of co-education,” 1 ¢ “The young women attending 1 are model students in ¢ the you & recognition of the fai 8 arcely We: ‘ position to s ne girl a ety A baby, howey has none of these poste an Und spos Louatonset eae Sects" Judge Reynolds answere w | aravt aks The ver t speci 3 ‘ carry off most of the prizes may Mave! were unable to obtain fer ahem vy SOE Mie ft eI LiCES ; nad ia) wrest ideal) todo) with tes CPbo: Venant yi initheleoltexal which was tiete| TRIMeANratiecuoaanaUidtereventrateyt sition of the men students, which took | right-that's the whole situation. — in| DINK 4 ih aul Dre iy the form of social ostraciem of the CO | talking not long axo. with « jand entirely pleasing effect artistically eds. ) the left side of a drooping trustees of Dickinson College ir ‘ou know, more than 300 young that a sim! Pr n “ane hat Re ieerovcen men can make It very unpleasant for a tion pre , that the boys r: SHSUSH ANCASe OC ADUU LN: CRY SOGU A arr Raninals Sat handful of young women when they set competition with the girls, who, In pro- | DOtRINRE that have escaped the renlus Ensign Manning's Romance out to do so, I understand that the portion to their nv-nbers, rau. them in| ° eden pubrlsse aes hey Saat Sits pepe ee men students refused to recognize the the classes, are but held back co be introduced later Began in Catifornia—Fiancee as mid-su “All so ner nov rug and curtain. effe smart this se young women in the streets, or to per- mit them to take part in any of the Girls Hard Students. ts) Crossed Continent to Him, vi y exerciseg attendant upon | are exceedi c nie eee waar as y "Young women e | ded Mz, Ke & M. Ko == commencement day. Some of the / Ee osh trustees were In favor of prolonging | *V¥ely to get an education | has but recently returned from When the battleship Rhode Island the struggle to obtain fair treatment Hie Atinued. "They giv Pe coaaioet eamed into port vesterday on of the for the girls, but the majority felt that time to It boys, on the « ( i irst to obtain shore leave was Enstgn i i ty chat! have other interests—chiefly athle Press the hall ax nto milliner's! sates J. Manning Haves desleusitonde } "I belleve in co-education. I t folds and wrap {t neatly around the happens th ‘ah Ren neg: Judge Reynolds is one of the oldest Tt happens thar Arah Remein Brueg crown of ster bonnet. girl has a right to the same education 22UE OMAN POSINED, IND DEAD DB OMUGHTER Her Knockout Drops, Mrs, Jen- ye One Had Given nie Russell Charged. When thirteen 1 Annle Tussell j at it is You ar worn and hate \ Hevetvire esp the little gir toa was cold and rigid, in vit her motier was Mrs. Annie Hann uw Who sent for the polive r doweman was Mrs, Rus: rs old, wi h her uuples an ap At on ef the Man an at No ie ise ta well known nitleth street s t us they ha en summoned to nt on more than of rows van the little girl sald mother} een m as she had heard ‘ay something about knockout drops to Dr, Joseph HE. Cahoon, who had been attend otifving Coroner Sirady the po: lee called on Dr, Cahoon at his: off ‘ W t nd 1th had been treating the woman holic gastritis for a month o and that she told hin sie had been given knockout drops. tit as there were no sympto er hay ng been Nosoned hh yosed she said j this to hide the truth from her daugh- 8 absol 5 By Nixola Greeley-Smith. cy Wesleyan Unlyersity, since 1872 one of the leading Meira co-educational institutions of the Hast, has closed ity doors to women, After the class entering in 1909 no AT NI \ etion just looks | women will be permitted to attend the Middletown as had onco been’ a pers aullken <- fect ‘ H i ho 1s a, meone tas The decision was reached by the Boaru of Trustecs neds haptic IMEI eva =| Inquirys concerning the nature of the of Wesleyan on Friday last, and very naturally wast Least Paris Milliners Appar exe Eablet dco with etl te regarded as a blow to the cause of coedueation, and wo) ehtly Did This to Evolve the 1" uyghorunee. Nobody grad of Wesleyan, He Pas sr navtieres, with S whom the ¢ met on the Pa long time President of the Board of "4 should be admitted to an ae , to he brim of the lat at the left her home in Valle hat the ens Trustees, till his advancing years com. |? Which he Is eligible. She cannot get | 2 i nee otiithe! portierea | hurried) to > came pellet him to forego such an active this In the women’s colle farts ee ciny your chin, for girlish ashore -day's de- part in the affairs of the collego, T can determine. I believe t HHO | ranean \aiteetalantten thei deatures ine | velopinents Arm in “Do the men students admit that their , Westlon the co-educationa popalar ie marriage | opposit due to a dislike of com. have stronger faculties ¢ h was attired fred. tutions devoted exclusively Miss Brueg- Reynolds, | cation of women nen?” T inqu lied Judge petition with “Oh, no," “And it would be fair to We would like to establish a the attribute it wholly to such a feeling, jordinate college at Wesley nab, The bo: d the idea that the college the young women would cake would have more standing in athletics | courses as the hoys ant sn of if it were not co-educational. The classes, one he ula nealinyst t Rad es t ng men were ke! y by the idea of compet- nd no doubt of the that man from Wes! ing with women. right, Very England colleges are you ard to © lumt have defunet sa Anyway, they look Ike wusages, To ‘o-educat ional, Keeps Boys Away. “Perhaps the boys felt that the stu- dents of other colleges looked down on them, Statistics prove that in co-edu- cational the attendance of young women Increases, while that of young men dimin A law has been in force at Wesleyan that not more be women, At present I belleve there are only twenty-nine girls attending the college. The number was larger in former years, but of course the attitude of the men students tended to prevent many women from attending Wesleyan who might otherwise have sought aé-, mission.” Then the dectston of the trustees re- (ee £% (Seg POD COMME TE 4 PSODA CRACKER Anuther Biscuit"! CT BO0A CRACKER || LATEST PRODUCT | “ANOTHER 5 PACKAGE” | AM OLD FASHIONED SODA CRACKER w ° ° AnotherBiseuit’ : ! " ASK YOUR GROCER . / PLAX, SOLA LZ: A ye conducted: by en it will be ar OPPOSE SUNDAY OPENING. he inquest will i ady, and t Mtecord Methodint Ministers on Agninst Liquor DIN, the Methodist preachers, t | Fifth tule, to-day Inst the verg Liquor bill, introduced in the Leg islature, and ples of the protest tinst the bill were orde sent to Vv. Hughes, John Raines the Sen- ute; Speaker Wadsworth, of the Assem- | bly, and others. The resolution adopted by t clergymen reads. ereas, Harold Spielberg, York, has introduced in the slature a bill to permit the sel wy rem 1 P.M herefore he t we ear xsage of th amanst the bill ° uv BIGGEST JOKE” METZ CALLS THE SERVE BOARD “And the Commissioners Are@ | Lot of Posers,’” Comp- | troller Adds, © Public Service Commission {g. Joke ever perpetrated on the York and the comm ure a lot of posers, themsely the Comptvoller's deflant utterance to-day, ‘This opinion was delivered whem the Comptroller was asked to reply to the statement of the Commission thag operation of the loop connecting the | bridges on the Manhattan side cannot be. undertaken. The Public Service Commission ts @ joke, If lt had prepared the plans for the Brooklyn toop, [ suggested @ year ago, there would be no trouble {n getting a company to operate it, and the Manhattan loop as well,” added the Comptroller Another controversy ng between the is now Impendé Board of Estimate and the Public Service Commission when the Xp project comes up for discussion Frle y e Comptroller's attitude {sf | dica | tive of war 1 | You save without trying, || the tea goes so far. | White Rose Ceylon Tea A 10c, Package makes 40 Cups, The Only Co. of Its Kind in the World! [EMERGE | ka BAGGAGE aENC DEALERS IN Trunks, Bags, @ Leather Goods, &c, RETAIL PRICES GUARANTEED, EXTRA! Sole Leather SUIT CASES $2.65 $2.95 $3.95 : 1 LOOK FOR THE-o a Maer a ge aa REET, on 14th St, N 1 Door from Unt A Remark: | send | Trunks & Bags tee L ff anged anil Lab "Tool exe With ail sates, | Booklet \ made to order ee Clearance Sale of Carpets and Rugs' In Cleaning Up the Stock at Our New Store, No. 59 West 14th St., we have run across a number of patterns that wey offer at very low prices. ° Here are a few: CARPETS Body Brussels, formerly $1.60, now 97%c Axminsters, formerly 1.25, now &5c Wilton Velvets, formerly .90, now 65c RUGS Royal Wiltons, 9x12, formerly $33.50, now $24.75 Body Brussels, 9x12, formerly 28.50,now 21.50 Wilton Velvets, 9x12, formerly 22.50, now 16.75 Other Sizes at Proportionately Low Prices. DOBSONS’ . Makers of Carpets for Fifty Years. 59 West 14th Street (3 Doors East of 6th Ave.) Near “L" and Subway Stations. Uternoon, jood! Aan the Hera s the Morr An Advertiseme: work for vou ina diy than you “Y have an Ad. in the esiman, That's why | had made no Please Note Oux New Address, , an with the inquisitive cast nan Who had mate and four turndowns to silor