The evening world. Newspaper, January 7, 1911, Page 4

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)

CARNEGIE SEES * WORLD PEACE — WITKIN A YEAR Two at Most to sites Bee Nations Into Line, He Tells Re- publican Club. | | By Marguerite Moocra Marshall. Did you know that asa citizen of the | United States you have just one chance in tw four thousand of becoming « ARMOR PLATE A DUTY. He Made It Not for Money, Because the President So Ordered. but Afid@rew Carnemie, who 110,000,000 toward a A to help Meh univeraat pence, was a to-day at the Republican Club, No. M Went Fortieth street ‘ ‘The clud In holding a series meet | (ng every Saturday and the subject to- | May was “Univertal Peace Throve an [International of Arbitral Jus oe.” Previov Ne #peeohmaking there was a luncheon, Ambarsador MBryee had been Invited, wut compelled, by rea € re ents, to send a le Mr. Carnegie described ew t wnational Court of Arbitral Justice jo maid “Such @ court would bring universal ace to this world within « ould give it an option of a second Tt ie easy for a mon to make without setting dates, bu . in my opinion, to yy of thi oy Would dare to re- ise ite decision “E would iike to know what other ations woul! have to say to one what d. They would provably say that any ation which refused to arbitrate with nother woukl be cr War known io Mghteous ju ne It never fies who is rieht who in the ronger, They would say the amount the world’s commerce could tw ured at three thousand miltions of jollars, What right have you to disturb he peace of the worll? We will stop! 1 commercial intercourse with you. Wel joule stop the mails of that country nd imagine the condition of a nation uum jaolated “L love @ healthy criticism and when- wer 1 see my name in the paper I cut it t and jay {t away. Many have critt-| xed me for my having made money -n| the manufacture of. anmor plate. Hen- y I went into of «a telerram from tim that I did it, 1 was at that time in Scotland and he wired me as fol- lows: ‘The President says | to make armor plate to KaVe the wasting of our battle-siips.” 1 did ft, although there.1s much more money in the manu- facture of pig tron. The Presitent called upon me and I take the word of a E ident as the voice of God, 1 ts my duty fe obey . His Idea of a Hero. “War does not cr al herons. Tn] tell y a real hero. I rend a few days ago of a nurse who was guarding an inmane patient. ‘Thin patient became violent and the nurse rugged with him unt! she became badly injured—so hurt that she had to give up her work, Sh * a real hero, | The true heroes of peace are thone Who serve and save.” | Referring again to the Court of Arbt+ tration Mr. Carnegiv said “T want to ma the Senate of the United States would wpprove of such a court, will pass upon ft and ratify it, within a year you will nee such a treaty in operation among the nations of the earth, and then the object of those who have been working for ih international peace will have complished. ‘Take things easy, all will come out right.” Oth@r speakers were Edw Gian, who contributed $1, Peace Fund; Senor Don ira om to the cisco de ja Barra, Mexican 4 ssador, Senor Don de P. Borda, plan Ambansa- dor; Congressman James Slayden of Texas; former Mayor Seth Low Henry 8. Dritchett, Presicent the Foundation; te” Kev. Dr. | Dwight Hillis, Melville Presilent of the Associated and Senor Don Rafael M A Common-Sense =——View—— gr Judge a person, place or thing with accuracy, you must make comparison with others of its respec- tive kind. gy can't compare to advantage, for instance, the WORLD ALMANAC & ENCYCLOPEDIA for 1911—Just ut—presenting 10,00 facts and fig- ures, with a volume thst contains but two or three bundred conundrums with answers Neither can you properly com THE WORLD, with the 1,546, individual advertisements it printed last year, with any of the thousands of Uttle newspapers published throughout the United States. The WORLD ALMANAC & £ CLOPEDIA for 1911 stands top in a class by itself as a gulde to things one wants to know in every day life. git WORLD, printing 587,401 MORE offers to hire, work, buy, sell, rent, exchange, etc., last year than ANY OTHER New York newspaper, ore ————————— Stands Supreme and Unapproached. sh ediction that if Hdwin | 4, THE EVENING WORLD, One in Every 24,000 in U. S. _ Lives to Be 100 Years Old; All Ought to Live to 125 But We in America Wor and Play Too Hard and Eat, Drink and Worry Too Much io Live Long, | Says Dr. Tracy. wh contena * Tw Hs sixth st as asa sick for fectivels used i bidding up prices. oore and wander, “hoboes who work | mete ‘ a week With a contains fever ‘otal sales of stocks were 313,400 f Mit abestnlb Aes kabadlN iceland whe was in shares, and of bonds $2,244,000. and wander” and “tramps who d Stnte of Bulgaria, you would be twenty- Ont: S00 en & and wander,” in order to include ur times as sure of hing that door to the voces of «ix of het ph The Closing Price: “road kids” who were gathered by De- green old age, since one out of every mates of the neighborhood who hast | ned Toar's highest, lowest and and of | tectives Barber and Redmond at Ful- ine thousand Bulgarians is one hun lisbreeto pay. Nera t had | pot ohaaesomoared “with font lam's pawnshop, ‘Tenth avenue ,and dred years old—or over Thee wae a Chit bar Net street, to tulgarin? = §) Bump james ulgaria where the children rroltc A few + & ‘ That was (he question 1 put yenterday |wax tapers still hung in the branches. a" E18 |Motntyee, sixteen, allan “Nitty Mnok to Dr, Samuel G. Tracy, founder of the One of the youngatore It one of the thy — | 41m aturphy, seventeen, who prefers the new Health and Longevity Club, and ¢ ‘he HMCcied thee CRUD drs WS + moniker ““Hustiing Harry,” and Bawant ho announced at the meeting the Bintont. fratantiy | Wig 4 4; [Sultivan, glorying in th lous title ther starting al comparison Aa the flames blazed up the children ee + 8 of “Pug Nose Red," arrived in town Just quoted ah ereunithg THE Gin irda (tie ae HER FB [last night py freight from South 4 ‘an aming into the stre 0 H tage t yap | eet ne Site a: Choice. 4a: ‘We in America live too fast to bles polivemen—Gandert and Zankell | B % te t A pbeee Ky Lg = — x live long,” phrased the doctor. “We Jor the West One Hundred and Twenty- ri Mig * 22 at Krieger's de- Work too hard, play too hard, drt nit t mt were passin 3 mR 8 | artment chat: city, without the too much, | They ran tarted to extingulah 1 4 + Slconsen o Sud fret too incessantly. i the fire, which by this time had spread | 8 Het |) Their method tng the valua- Sere nowt. OF hconmions Mp to the woodwork and the furnishings + lors + 1° | dies: throws cons Seatt MER SS ireans. We don't say, In so many | ot tie? hey were at this tawk| pm & Iho G.. a } | mystery of how enus road ki wor Hat, drink and merry, for e rae temnemenaee | of the boarders in the house ! Me St + gt Pee (0k tae cabartat was pee he norraw we die, r 0 ! | ; 2 + while pals ent a Me morroy Hie, but we do all these’ age of Ave, put if they pass that pol came hurrying to t)on with the news a ephone boot he basement of the | ings without any thought of the mor- | they have a very good chance of reac that Dorothy was J) log helpless fn the a | % department building, kicked row We are intensely contemporan Ing forty.’ next room. through a double partition, tered Ld aus; Intensely concentrative on the pres. | “How y tone do, you think we ought to] eethe policemen found the titite @trt ; store and located the jewelry dep \ sinee we refuse to build | #Ve?" TE inguire , bike, Shay: 4 t | ment. When they emerged they had od age we do pot have “Wearly all members of the ani- nese! Ms none eis ieee efit teas " + booty of 10 rings and fourteen watghes. mal kingdom exist for at least five fier in blankets and carried her into Then they beat It the big town, bor es the number of years it takes | t)ie jouse next door, where the grand- <q + yl where they th moderate. fast Many Are Worse Off. | mother, who had been away shoping, - & his on " fo 1 4 ke this might be ‘tistrl uted without However,” he added cheerfully, ‘“w Teedeceen being finds hi of presently found her | i £9 | detection are much better off freney ave yo oe evereenee ts. | fire did small dame ; £| But Chie « of Sout’ cou ex in pect _- > bh € e con 1 Germany only one out of every 70h aden proper conditions, human COUTANT IS RELEASED. init tg boys tad on persons three rings pe a centenarian, In Brance the} life should last for le isi jand, pte. and eleven watches, Magistrate Krove proy one in 189,000, And even in| hundred and twenty-five year: peat % Bihed them in #100 eaon’ in the West Great but one out of 17,00] clared Dr. Tracy. ey i "| Side Court. ‘ touches ¢ century mark. You see, our pr Why WATS to Nye: thet long: frane ay yi > hances are five times as good as John | og age should be ag normal as chi Surrogate Willlam @. Nicoll, tm Beare: ~™* SHOOTS FORMER BOSS Bull's. And tn all txer'and, with @| hood and youth, and should progress as|at Riverhead, f. 1, to-day dischar; | Baad efiteed vf : popuiation of over three millions, there | painlessly. It need not Infer either phy-| from custody Charles A. Coutant of {Pit Comer * AND MAN WHO GOT JOB. is pot one centenarian,” sical or mental debility, Instead of | jj uy nt, who was locked up for con- | Fen + aaah “But why ria such a happy | dreading it, we should prepare for it.” | (0) 0 (pnts MO Mae vocton fliash if ee nome for the Tt ask replied the doctor. IAP LCF SOE ORIOLE JARS | Vr. Tel — %| Discharged Bricklayer Mak Good | Haine i a Coutant, who Is a well knows Bol | "Advance His Th to “Fix” Flatbush Because most of 18 population are SEE RGA i tlelan and real estate deale is Threat to “Fix” Flatbus' raed folk, who lead a simple, nate | PIGEON CATCHER A BURGLAR. | | appear before omate Mich ist make | FIVE BOMBS IN RUINS ural life Also because there are un- oubtediy far fewer fatalities from ac-| Alarm on Roof Scattle Leads to) jan s00 Serine ip heed abe Hoe OF ANARCHISTS’ DEN. Abraham Seldberg ‘of No. 66 suttotk cidents. It ulem that hum sy Peete ois ase | pacity | Street, Manha was in charge o ty there apont phe colts ia ae i apture of foe eaten nee Weeaien Of the ée-| LONDON, Jah. T—Five bombs warela gank of Dricklayers working at the the product most carelessly hadule While Samuel L. Sarg NO. 0 a tie man persistently failed to|tscovered to-day in the debris of the corner of Glenwood r snd Brookls iE & single year 10,00 people ha One Hundred and Forty-cighth | | vogate Nicoll lemued a war, {Rouse in Sidney street, where two ont. | avenue, Flatbush, was shot twic vished In railway accidents, And the |#treet was visiting the home of Dr. Sid- raat for im. He was arrested ana |itW% Were shot or burned to deat dur- | side at 7.3 o'clock this ry State has done but little in studying the] ¢Y D. Jacobson at No. 122 East Seventy~ nad $250 for contempt of court, He 18 the police attempt to canture them | workman he discharged yesterday. problem of the conservation of human {Ninth street to-day the burglar alarm | 9" td life, t 1s infinitely easter to influence |@ttached to the roof scuttle rang. VYocked up. to pay the fine and was oiice as strengthening their theory that | cousin, Abraham Cutlash of No. | & legislature to appropriate money for vatching | At the examination before Surro-{th@ men Were Anarcoists. Linportant| Reace street, -Manhattan he dts+ the purpose of extingulshing borine me he ay ripsene th gate Nicoll Coutant. could not teri {documents which, It {s hoped, will clear | charged man ened to come Dac tuberculosis or hog cholera, or for the |gight and the root been pried | where he Jad invested $1,300 of the |e msetery of the identity of the An. | to" ek aticntiaet sanices soe Kee punpowe of disseminating knowledge on |off, Mr. Sargent grabbed the young man. | Arthur estate. He alleged that he was | S7Cnits Were also unearthed. ‘a’ slight wound. Then he sent two bu Agriculture, than it {8 to est. ih @ ree | He had a bard ture with him, but) subject to lapses of memory. Two “he bombs consisted of gun motal jets into Se! g's body Javoratory for thé prevention of jfnatly pulled him down into the house | years ago he was missing for two tubes with a special appliance for the| ‘Seldberg is now in the Kines County or to pase laws to compel Cor- and held him until two detectives ar- | weeks, When he returned to Blue Point | attachment of exploding caps. The pu: Hospital in a The to adopt humane ne for rived from the Bast Kighty-eghth street he said that he had lost himself for! pers were in a box. ‘The bombs and | assailant, who is Nght- the prevention of violent accidents.” | Station, Best Chance in America, i At the station-house the prisoner was “Then you think Unat we could live: recognized as an ex-convict with @ long longer If we took better ¢ f our |record. He cails himself John Slasek, is selve: thirty-three years okt and, the police “Amerioa has abetter chancethan /#4y, has spent almost half his life in any of the great civilised mations (Prison. Ho was locked up on « charge of making an unlawfy to produce a strong, long-lived race," Dr. Tracy auserted earnestly. “Climatic condition erally favorable, and, what ie far more important, the stock is not worn out. “In fact, we are, by way of making «| new and vigorous stoc of the een- - > ° x a o z = all c m m z | = m ” a flocking to our many races ‘Rose, | bite mo sia’ | ‘Only we must exercise conscious, de- | 4 Win vet ia hu ge liberate care in an effort for lon lalenton, 3 18; Cariie Tien, ‘There are many occupations which are . wae: 4s good us a death warrant. These in| Shoinir MtAche Selling: maiden three year clude work of cigar-makers, dyers, ‘ilies. £ a all furlongs." 0 grinders, mateh-makers, painters, pa- 06) Gero ber-makers and hangers, stokers, emelt- | ite, Sib are et ers, teu-tasters, and men who are em. | Stuart, 4} 0; 1 ployed on brass, bronae, tin or copp yeni “But s | Dar sign. » of these weom rather ne sary occupations,” I interjected. “They need not be given up altogather. they should be safeguarded to a | ols much greater extent than at present and those engaged in them should taught Just what dangers they w facing and just how these might com e be Selling, tlirer ed sneeslet ad Kei k, 100 | Wal le foes to | “We must cultivate our a our dispositions. arn to be cheerful and na mild.” T had my doubts as to whether even =| Dr. Tracy scription for acquiring the latter acteristics, but I did ask him how he SHIPPING NEWS. Port of New York. | would ate the digestion.” L a Moderate Eater, ch “Bea Moderate eater,” was his firat | aay e “Consume but litte imal) An ounce or two of meat or per day Is enough for mast peopl ttle at a time, and as often a Has OMING STHAMSHIPS, even. id chew much, A large, rich DUB TO-DAY. sould not be taken just before | ¥ dood, pure drinking water is |? sential, but should not be drunk quantities with the meals, But erage person should drink a quart and a pint of fluid every twenty-four | Oceanic, hours. Good tea and coffee should be | drunk sparingly: a cup of each per day | Harana is sufficient. Pure milk ts one of the best of foods for both children and adults. Alcoholic mica atisvane Hnggntot ag Taandon Sibine Minn beverages whould be niles avolded, but @ moderate use of tobacco ane. for adults t not harmful Generally speaking. outdoor occupa tlons are more favorable to longevity | than Indoor ones, Whatever work 1s! ° @ should be a suffctency of | en seven and elght hour much for most pe Am nts should be a definite factor | t fe, as the humdrum existence @ i apt to end In auteide, | 2ge MAN hot oVer-developed, welking say from 180 to 105 pounds, and | n helgit from § feot § inches to 6 feet | te Mkely to lve jonger than for Piri ol Sore Throat Cold inChest "The early children of @ fi Trial bottle 10a. large bottles S6e. Bc too longer lived than the | Up to the age of longer lived than lives aro more protected and sheltered, But after eighty, women dle more quickly because they lack @ certain | patural stamina or endurance pos- seaned by men. Twenty-five per cent. @f our bablee die before they reach the dently In Baltimore, 1911. NAB BOY YEGGS INPAWNSHOP WITH CARGO OF WE WATCHES SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, PLAYMATES START . WALL STREET CHOKES SICK GIRL subjected to considerable selling at the She Is Carried From Quaran- outset duesto the closing of the tine to Next House by Pass- negle Trust Company. This liquidation was easily absorbed and after frac- tional losses had been sustained the market turned and commenced an up- ward swing that culminated prices of the day being e: the close. a scored gains of nearly 2 points, while | Union and Northern Pacific, St. Paul, American Smelting, Steel and Brook- lyn Union Gas were all prominent with advances of 1 point or more, Disrogarding the suspension of cut Burglary Corralled With Policemen. “Road Kid” Gang. ing Bicycle the Carnegie Trust Company, traders laid bdllet Alta thy Bvick®, Who! particular stress on @ growing belief | fenjamin Meltman, M, D., of Chicas, Yves with her ¢ other, Mrs. Susan|that the Interstate Commerce Com- king of tramps, will have to add an. Smith, on the fret Moor of the boarding. | mission would grant a liberal increase th potenti pe hte clnaatfieation. of houwe at No, 3% West One Hundred and | Of frelht rates to the rallroada later | other ca in the month, and these reports were | itinerant vagrants into “bume Employer. ‘Tuesday. The find ts accepted by the, Seldberg wanted the place for his own two weeks, recovering his memory sud-| paper were placed in buckets and :e-| haired, | moved to the Government laboratory twenty-five years old and wear- ing a gray ulsier, got away. the Ages, you will always find Father Knickerbocker and Father Time in front of the throne of the New Year, drinking to each other: ‘‘Good health and Good cheer.” Father Time pictures asturdy giant who has withstood the thunderous storms of many seasons, Father “Knick” represents the robust health and strength of a great city. Each has learned the art of prolonging life by drinking RUPPERT’S Knickerbocker Beer “The Beer That Satisfizs’’ Wiley, the United States Government expert on pure foods, writes: “BEER IS A VERITABLE FOOD PRODUCT.” Professor Gaertner says in his ‘Manual of Hygiene,” that one quert of beer is equal in food value to 3-10 pounds of bread as to the quantity of carbo-hydrates, and to two ounces of bread or one ounce of meat as to the quantity of albumen. Ruppert’s beer contains all the best materials that can possibly be put into the making of beer—pure beer. BOTTLED AT THE BREWERY Families supplied by Retail Dealers, Our famous Knicker- bocker Beer is also on draught at all first clase places, rsriate sra Proceeds of 4 Derg Connecti- | JUSTICE WHITNEY BURIED, | NOTED MEN MOURNERS. |G ov. Baldwin Among the Relatives at Funeral Services Held at Cornwall, Conn. CORNWALL, Conn., Ja <The fun- eral of Justice Bdward B, Whitney, lete | Justice of the Supreme Court of New | York, was held from the Whitney sum- IMPORTERS GIVE $400,000 REFUND IN CUSTOMS FRAUDS. Collector Loeb Holds Money While the Government Decides to Ac- cept or Refuse Cash. WASHINGTON, Jan, 7.-Collestor Loeb of the Port of New York, it be- came known here to-day, Is holding More than $00,000 which has been offervd to the Government by Now York Im: porters for compromises of olvi Hatsi!- ©. Starr, pastor of the Congregational |ties in the so-called undervaluations Church. There were present delegations or sepremeatitae thn tee nd ator. from the New York and the Connecticut | D¢Y% Terese a Bars. The honorary bearers were trom | jun ic* Dg a a ™ among the distinguished men who came| Tt is understood that the importers to pay their last respecta to Justice | have been informed that eom- Whitney. The active bearers were | promises will affect only eheir ctv Ha- neighbors and close friends. bility and wil not prejudtes the Gov- With the family was Gov. Simeon E, | ernment’s right to orkninal procedure Baldwin, who is an uncle, The burial |{s sufficient evidence can be obtained. was in the Whitney plot in the Corn- —_——————— wall Cemeter, nL A a “POOR” MAN HAD $100,000. FOUR CAR LINES BLOCKED. : Souagenarian Hedell’s Will me- | Horse Falte Through Ta: veals His Big Fortune. | ering and Wa min in Way. Working on his farm in Beimere, &. A horse put its foot through the|I. until the day of his death en Doard flooring over the interbridge sub-| Nov. 15, David A. Bedell was reganied | Way tunnel work at the Bowery and| bY hie neighbors as a poor, hard-work- | Delancey street this ‘afternoon. The| {8 farmer. When his will was Glog to- timbering broke and two boards went | 48%, in Mineola it was learned for the mer home here this afternoon, the ser- being conducted by Rev. Edward Cov-| jdown. ‘The horse plunged down ff-| Or suctee tenia famity. te feet, breaking away from the de-!" Bedell was ninety yeare olf when wagon to which it had been|he died, and had invested the eamings hitched. of his farm in .Brookiya tnoluding one parcel street and another at No. street. The wll distributes the rea! eutate among four daughtere and ene son, To hie wife Bedell gave enough personal property before he died te ‘e| keep her comfortatie for the rest of her life. Stern Brothers ; will make Monday, January 9th, Another Offering of Entirely New and Very Desirable Tailored Walking Suits, ~ | Seasonable | Cloaks and Wraps, Fur Garments, Negligees and Tea Gowns | At le wreck of the wagon blocked four Minew of are, the Third avenue, |the Madison avenue, the Williamsburg Bridge line and the Delancey street line. A great east side crowd gath- ered to watch the work of getting the horse out, and the police reserves called to handle ft ‘| Unusually Low Prices | Attention is directed to their new “Sansrival” Toilet Specialties Consisting of Toilet Water, Cold Cream, Massage Cream, Sachet, Face Powder, Taleum Powder and Dental Powder, Specially Prepared and Sold Exclusively by Stern Brothers, West 23d and 22d Streets GaSS8% $3, 93,93, $2.93 $3.3, 99 $3.93. 93 9093.93 93 2. A Brand New Presentation of Magazine Articles, Up-to-the-Minute News from All Over the Earth, Editorials, Comics, Music, &c. SOME MAGAZINE FEATURES: HE First “New Woman"—“Hatshepsut’—Who Flourished in Egypt Three Thousand Four Hun- dred Years Ago; Hew Einar Jonsson Is Astonishing Europe with Statues Inspired by Legends of Natural Wonders of Iceland; ape. Strange Tragedies of the Sharon Millione, Which Began with Four Murders and Three Suicides; SPORTING Duchess Who Runs, in a Palace, a Club; That Sings, Lectures, Plays, Dines, Smokes, etc.; GEOGRAPHICAL “Survey” Showing the Centre of Population in the United States and in New York City; Ap HEse Hundred and Sixteen Women Who, in ¢ of War, Will Abandon Household Duties and Fly to the Front; Fi ry ry a a Fi a we 3585, 82.85 83500 25.83 $3 83.53, 83. 339385 hy] NOTHER “Jack Jilt” Page. Jack, You Know, Is 3 Giving Away Diamond Rings for Pictures of yn Pretty Girls’ Faces, at -g ver #| ==——=To-Morrow’s==== |‘ ae yw? SUNDAY WORLD a 9, oe ts ce

Other pages from this issue: