The evening world. Newspaper, January 21, 1911, Page 4

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r rE _ of homicide and Dunn and Garrahy LISBON, Portugal, Jan, %.—Rernado| Machaeo, Minister of Foreign Affairs, | announced to-day that favorable bids frém both American and English ship- Yutiiders would permit the immediate reorganization of avy He added phat he believed that the recent strikes had ony strengthened the Republican jnstiiutions, ax the strikers had not aoused their newly *aoquired rights. Commerc Portu was in an excellent condition, the Min ister said. A modus vivendi Would soon be aigned with France and a commer: cial treaty was belng negotiated with Italy. MAN SHOT DEAD ACCIDENTALLY BY DRUNKEN FIEND Another diharty wr Party Was Pushing Pistol Away When It Was Discharged. FOUR ARE ARRESTED. Celebration in an Eighth Ave- nue Boarding House Ends With Fatality. When John Garra) THE GINK THR GOOK AJ BIG GAME [lost a AND SMALL BY W.P.M¢ LOUGHLIN. bet and had to make good on tt to-day, What was the namo of the also ran? reached his home at No. 167 Eighth avenue last nicht and | told bis roommate, Ti thy Marmor that he bad been ay 1 assistant Janitp rot the y schoo! In East Six- ty-third street, Marmon decided to ho & eelebreuon. He # Joon Dunn, who came with him Gertehy trom Dublin nine mon a and t ata In a supply eshments that put them In big spr mtdnis Richard Kenna, who lived on the floor below, burt Inte the | ” when was well In pre the news that he had 1 of a depar ment tore ago was in an ugly mood and drew from his pocket an old pistol he said had bowsht from a striking longstoreman kome months ag His companions «aw he had been drinking, and cautioned him to be care- ful how he wielded the gun. ‘Oh, Lam able to use this th stammered Kenna, as he levelled the! weapon at Garrats | Jumping from Watt arrahy selzed Kenna by the \ and pushed his hand away. ‘The weapon was sud dently discharged and Ma As he fell to the foo from his left temple, and whih j threw Kenna‘to the Moor and disarmed him, Dunn rus While Garrat to aid Marmon. was hunting for a doc- tor, Dunn summoned Father ‘Hopkins | from St. Bernard's Church in Four- | teenth street, and Kenna staggered around to St, Francis'’s Churoh in Fif- | teenth street and aroused Mather Soully. When the two priests arrived Mar- mon was dead and Dunn was told to look for a policeman. Detectives Reid, Moody and Scanlon, who had heard of the racket, eoon reached the houge. Kenna was taken prisoner on a charge were held as material witnesses. All were locked up in Headquarters. Mar- mon's body was sent to the Mtorgue. Kenna was eo intoxicated that he could not make a coherent statement to the police, but this morning he declared the was oniy waving the pistol for ¢un He said the weapon would not have been discharged if Garrahy bed not solzed his wrist. ‘All four men are unmarried; Marmon was employed at porter by « publishing —————— NEGRO WINS BIG VERDICT. le Awarded $15,000 in First Case Under New Law. Im the first case brought in the local courts under the new Employer's Lia- bility law a jury before Justice Morechauser in White Plains has awarded $15,000 to Thomas Sawyer, nineteen years old, a “nipper” boy in the aqueduct tunnel who lost his leg in an accident Oct. 2 Sawyer, who ts a negro, was em- ployed by the Dravo Construction Come pany, a Pittsburg corporation, which is bullding one of the tunnel sections, ttorney, Eugene F. McGe 154 Nassau street asked to} ease rushed to trial in order that the now law t be tested. His application was granted, holt abe E aataaal WARSHIPS FOR PORTUGAL. American B «Wide Win Help Reorgnnize Navy, MEXICAN TROOPS MARCH follows Sh mn ¢ Yes south bership, Billy Gibson and Billy Joh] mine at the head of tits column’? I'm | targe a pest yb lth ue nm will head @ large delegation of Fair-| told it flauters me. 1'H let it go at that. | through Mr. Rowland's book he is fol- undred Federals under Lieut.-| mont A. C. member Packey McFar-| It might be worse, lowing, following up the coast. and lef) Ascension yesterday |iang has promised Gibson he will be __ down Ue coast, from Halifax to Old aeas Grandes, sent to reh ¢ a Uctle mor ERE'S a writer whose mind seems} Point and back to Marblehead, and the of four Hundred | oa ag Wol foorts from all c “|H to take a keen delight in explotta| Joke of it Is that he has mixed two for the possession of the town se a | the city will attend. Twenty acts of tlon of the contraries Min love with Herm he w Mkely. vaudeville have been arranged to enter WURRA WURRA lermione, he writes Dryden 00-Aere Deer Park John ¥. Dry of Newark, forme’ United States Sen as co 1 hegotlations for the 7,00-nere domain of the Rutherford estate in New Jers owned by them for more than five ovations. it ix und od the 1th 3,00 acres adic velor BR. Kuser of Bornardsville, a law of Mr. Dryden, will be deve into a gamo preserve and ond Michigan deer will be pl March 1. oh CEE Hew Torpedo Boat COPENHAGEN, De ‘The newly built torpe'o boat which left Karlekrona, Sweden, yeetor- on @ trial trip and was later report. OS Missing, Was towed Into this port » She wes discovered in a di a condition with lev propeller shart 4, John Patrick Goodman on the mont necessity at the Marr the THE GINK—It wasn’ hefore Hyde did. She di KING AT YOU ‘rancis Joseph MeKa of South Chicago, gent Athle admire the way ta horse, I bet that Mra, Eddy would come back kdin't. Patrick ; entiessiy t out a count of elght. And | rinnd. faq. | then Iman slowly and | Jaying Mr, | dazedl ok into the face of oping | the hand: land I heard these tie Club, b) Wise Wo! tho ringside - 4 By I n nee “Yol, yol, I got that makes | ones wallop a0- | there's more of it coming to Goodman that stuff from MeFariand, and | the Indian Bible cla WORLD, SA PLAY MAKE FINE EXHIBIT | Interesting Features of | Child Welfare Show. |BIG CROWDS ATTEND. | Exhibition Regiment Armory Instruc- tive Along Many Lines. at Leading New York educators, besides men and women prominent in soctety | the New York Child Welfare Exhibit |in the Seventy-firat Regiment Armor: Fourth avenue and Thirty-fourth stree | to-day, ‘There ts something to Interest every- hody. One delight of the little folk 1s made up of boys tn buckskin, with real paint and feath- 1 to there it é pom that the young man from Chicago] And Goodman was out . ; hed tk C VLFCuRG act enimetae |. er ihe & Aw. that feller didn't| ‘The church socteties have many fea- the faly young M odman and See SRGays: russe ou: sight, | claamea, @MMnlMIne ulideer'a forme napped over a right mttt in auch a} , UY + wher ; ne in to RAGE WEE, i i Abie. But where do you come in tol and nurseries, where there ts instruc- quick and forcible manner that Mr. !nand out certifeates of character to ®| thon In ton i Gooman rematued on hiv knees while |Hoxtighter? If ever there was a doubles | wom, POPY feeding, and many regs the gloomy visaged third man inside |ehuttier in the game you wei Bayo the roped Inclosure slowlyly nd Dick was right. | rhere te a four-room apartment fur. WURRA WURRA A bets that a man born in this ¢ President of the United State Bor ¢ spite tt of life. The little Japs whipped the stuffin’ out of the big Ruselan Household | A Terry McGovern could tackle a Hackenschmidt. and go around him Sometimes a man measures up to his | Guard: s. There nt of the Un wM is no p nited 8 Height should not be ry, under 5 ft. $ in., cannot he can, Who wins? Maple avenue, Ha pviso regulating height, ‘aft B he ath or tes. was f® qualification for any become ngs-on-Hudson, weight of not decause of his great size, place in the battle big man mentally. M: like @ cooper tapping a hoop on a barrel. aiza. And though a 6 foot § inch President would be small, he might be a great | or work done with light apparatus in Presidents, at that, | And ther Y YOUTHFUL FRIEND Mister Hoffmann comes acrose with a diretul query this week, WURRA WURRA: Maybe I am @ batter, and maybe I shoudden be, butt I just semply cant not help it to be a self elected sore moth plece of the Commen Peepel, and M. Loughtin you shail in yuores truly find a apple bodid man as is willing to put randum holes in big and small games as well as polly- nd other crooked bissenesses, T can shoot, becose I was once a ticks WURRA WURRA: I wee our British cousin Winston Churchill has got himself into the papers again, ‘The suffragettes beat him up. gallant charge of 1,000 “bobbie.” Service on the Houndsditeh anarchis: the tun, nany, O Ger Why don't you set Old I This club meets vited gu Whi laney who wi nt. 1 lest rs JAMES DELANEY. ’s wrong with that ode, Mr If the Dutch don't free Ireland, lowing ode was sung at the opening, to of Maryland, My Maryland: O Germany, Why don’t you set old Ireland free? Why don't you grow the shamy ing the Wearing of th many, at No, ‘ooklyn, and Matth presi’ heard t to which I was an in truly WURRA WURRA: A b join a Hare n athletic m. of sevent elu Yours resp nm wou MAX 14 East 120th street. 1 don a} ‘ ae qv romance of @ mother who was cousin to 1 WE ALL “FELL” for “How | * do you think of | the King of Sweden and a father who old ts Ann?’ The pias in clover wn easy, “please.” | iy sailing master of the Shark. 2% ona the fifteen purse had their | He, x nd drove many strong men to Sot Trott atceDAXZBR, | tne Story of @ Play Made Perfect y ends, Once ine while a new! No {7 Hull street, Brooklyn. | and a Made Vain, breaks loose and lives its short |, Tho fact 1 ae ae oe ATRAVERS writes the review of carcer and dies unwept. Here's a bee | i). K ¢ in that section | MI her problem novel which blights lated one the clly is calculated to drive a man her literary reputation, WURRA WURRA? | even Worse dope than yours, Ho writes the criticism of a problem ket away up on State | pa at | play which closes the doors of the awe, will you kindly answer “Is | h Cruisers Comin, there any law which prokibite ® | BRMS!, Irance, "i wane vere eA lena tar man marrying his widow! this Buate? | intend b ried on Monday, Jan. offense, thank you), losing sleep trying to decide the The future Mra, Purdy has abov Bronx t know RUARY 11 ight en the © of an athletic TO ATTACK 400 REBELS. |» s around Harlem, Max. will be age to slap that map at the top of a your column known as Wurra-Wuarrily, at Hbling's Casino, | CLA..ENCE, Scranton, Pa. Aassoclatio ok is right on the Wile Patrick. McGuire hold its annual smoker for tts mem residing around etfully, @ have been some very “smal footer soldier you now, buncooed’ by tole that he's been to see fortunat Nort Poole, and if be kine enoff to allor my good roede Bez he: of this mengse nex week. who {s this guy ‘Epictus” our Mare's Partner? guy Epictus, tion of Prendergisticus, and 20 horse, ation, and chief ok Commander Russell Raynor. reen? and ornamental titles shouldn't be em- and free? | barrassed by @ query like Sumner marry his widow's sis w Brassel | this State, Me may in the astral State, | py ‘ xung at] Try me on another one, son DOWN WURRA, WURRA: that you w is that A few days azo he led the foot and artillery of H. M Before that he got wrecked in that in the Danisk Army, the poor contry as was that Doktor Cook who eters of tvise to ritch the entilligentie orlus papper, why certely, with plessure, So I shi! com- By the wayside, t Yours respect, MISTER HOFFMAN) I haven't the pleasure of knowing this but I near he is no Baron de Forest's steam yacht. Bofore that, and before that, and before that he landed his name in big type. Isn't Winston the “Clemmy" Driscoll of London? Yours, PUTTICOAT LANER, Alas, yes! Churchill is worse than the Public Service Commission. WURRA WURRA: several real nice sisters. Yours as What is your opinion of a man who] ever before, ee calls himself an Irishman, and a Kerry "RED GREA'TEREX PURDY, man at that, who presided at a meeting sretary Technical Council 58, of the Na-Booklish Club, where the fol- Civil § e Emp! Associ- anner’s mate, rst class, dis. expert gun point, hird Division, Wirst Battallo aval Militia, N. G8, N.Y. A) with PTTING to the trrepres. (ei sibles who do not Ike y face, De. here comes fr distant Scran- ton a caligraphic wit, to wit Gink of Scranton wagers a nut- sundae that the handle s 1d Uke to nds for * your DRITS, Initials stand for “Willle section of do Puy: while Gook of Wilkes-Barre hazards a new fuzay Kelly that the Patrick." Mas eit the right hunch? club re By the way, Mac, how long ata tt take you to summon up w the matter with mbers and guests, “Big 1 send you Billy Gibson and Jack M have flashed through my hi 1) #ee that everybody a laya: 1. Pluck is be Autos furnished by Joe Ahearn | tu Because you he’ nvey the guests from the lL to) arn nO aeaben hy Fretght trucks will have to 23, nd soming mar- sister in Gloire, Yonde 1910 (Aret | Dutaure de Lajarte, have been a cruise in the G wht Shh ough cour- that map of fis of wisdom which in in the than money to you should | ndle at both ends, 3, He | thing to turn up titose who are ‘rench and Admiral under command of Rear-Admiral fled yesterday for of Mexico and | along the eastern coast of the United States, nished at a retail cost of $10, to show how cheaply a flat may be furnished. But the city gardens display, the young carpenters at work in their clev- | erly appointd shop, and the miniature playgrounds exhibits, to say nothing of cleanly day nursery, attract chil- dren and have proved very instructive to them. ‘There were hundreds of children about yesterday. The visitors saw them at all Kinds of work, at exercise and giving drills, ‘The pupils In the 5 B grade tn Public Schoo! No, 71 gave an exhibition of freehand gymnastics, showing | teal classroom lesson, tncluding corr jive physlologic, educational and rec | ative exercises. There was a two-minute | drill by the pupils in the 6 A grade of Public School No. 188. This drill ts per- formed three times datly by every school child. Then followed an organized recess, showing what can be done in a fifteen- minute recess. The 4 A grade in Public School No. 15 took part in the recess display. The pupils of the 6 A grade tn Public Schoo! No. 15, under Miss Knox, prin- cipal, gave an exhibition In the columned court in the armory showing the type gymnasium or playground. Then fol- lowed folk dances, Scotch and Dutch, and dumbbell and freohand gymnastics. ‘There was a hornpipe dance given by the pupils in the 8 A grade of Public ool No, 15. Afterward 100 boys from | the Twenty-third street and West Side branches of the Young Men's Christian Astociation gave an exhiditfon of ap- paratus work, drills and gymnastic Tale of Three Sirens and of « Pilot That Writes Poetry. Fi BOs Baie man’s an idiot,” mutters Hermione. “If I make him fee! like that, why doesn't he come over and Ktek about it, instead of flopping around in that Mttle tub and writing me fathoms of slush?’ She is thinking of the yelow-maned poet who writes love verses to her on corn-colored notepaper. And she is to have further experiences with the hand some fellow, whidh will give her at! more cause for troublesome thoughts. For presently, when she has gone to | shooting birds in the early morning, on |e forbidden dsiand, #ne being clad at | the time in a conventent and abbrevi- A man With such an array of useful | @ted bathing sult, he tx to rescue her | trom an angry gamekeep , 1s to swim her the mile and a half to her r in| father’s boat, and 4s to kiss her good- at parting—a kies that burns even under cold salt water ‘The book—"The Magnet," by Henry ¢ Rowland (Dodd, Mead & Co.), makes no secret of the fact that Hermione is | Worth going far to see in that bathing suit. But then, she ts a stunaing girl anyway in her twenty years, her splen- did length and her disregar for the conventions. She is {sone of the three lovely daughtens of Capt. Bell, once 0! the navy and now of the Shark, and she has violet eyes and a mouthful of satlor slang. Cecile is the oldest of the trio, ‘a des- Poerate flint,” and Paula is the second one—"soft and sweet as @ West Indian night breeze.” Alas! for the mere man who finds himsetf on the trail of this triplicate burden of beauty and bew!)l- ernment. Yet that is exaotly where ‘the yellow-haired poet finds himself, His boat t# the Daffodil. And because lie poems addressed to Cecile, He is some- times a stup!d poet. dut that Jong swim and the kiss under water are all to his good Paula th lover, too, Cecile ts left to momory ‘ant retribution, so that one may be sorry even for such a flirt, At- tached to the poet ts the negtigible But meanwhtle he has fallen in love with her, and when his pointed pen has done its worst for her immediate prov- peots, he adapts for her his own perfect drama and sees her mount, on his lines, | They Form One of the Most Seventy-First | and business, continued to crowd In at! Reiner | ” CAL LIA | | DAY NURSERY PloakFowerand Frat Site CITY GARDENS Thus far, Phillips. Opp. entoe."” (Lit ful declin of @ brutal doned husi barrier between Matravers and B between over and a w proffered Paradise. Mr. Oppenheim a happy ending every aiting, might readily pass to The husband Is almost | dead when ho is reveuied, and he is| also in a touching state of penitence) for his various sins of There is, moreover, a who needs a bringing beautiful ehiid | up. But the} JANUARY 21, 'School Children at Their Work and Play, | A Novel Feature of Child Welfare Oe chibit | Alexander Emil St. Ives, With his shock head and his sketch-book and his idea | | of a depth-indicator. Mary Meare's romance, renice| It | to de east na ne A RE EN RAEN EO IR I ttt ete 1911, rs lee YOUNG CARPENTERS. . And about then she meets Emil kisses Rachel he {s engaged to Annie Lawless, his New York employer's daughter, and makes love to her still after he is mar- ed and after Rachel has become Mrs. imon Hart. This love-making 1s a matnspring of ‘The Bird in the Box" (Frederick A. Stokes Company). is the only matter in which Emil ows persistence. Otherwise, he is an ‘atic inventor, whose genius leads aim ign but not to perfect. Aftor meeting St. Ives, Rachel picks p grandpa and tle fat housekeeper wht commission, | and goes to New York, where she ex- pertences an east side top floor and the millinery of Division street. Where also author's mind js set on sacrifice and on she meets Simon Hart, son of grandpa's stern presentmen 1f-repression, Berenice’ and the apotheosis of duty, Married for a Price to One Whose Face He Never Seen. REDERICK TILE, briefless young | F lawyer. is strangely married In a New York counselor's office to aj woman who keeps her vell down, whose | signature is covered from her husband's eyes, who vanishes at the end of the brief civil ceremony. For playing his part in this blind game Tile gets half a milion dollars, or rather the income of that amount, the first year's $25,000 belng paid when he signs the marriage papers. He Is to be free again after five years, But mean- while every time he asks a leading ques- tion about his own wedding a fifth of vis income will be cut off, ‘This is the beginning of Max Marcin's story “Are You My Wife?’ (Moffat, Yard & Co.) It looks as if the author has provided suffictently against ravaging curiosity of a mysteriously married man. But the reader who takes this view has yet to kwow nis Tile, Fred- erick feels presently tne cankering taint of his mercenary plunge into unholy wedlock, Bi e falls in love with the beautiful whose life he saves by a miraculous stopping of runaway horses. Tile becomes emotional. ish questions. by He asks fool- He loses his half militon intent. He purges himself for his ¢ passion, And part of the time he ts p. along with the girl he loves, an ed and rapturous knight, in a strongly guarded house in the Bronx. Why complain that it is a preposterous story, as it runs? Does not true love preva! in the end? And fs it not for reasons of hereditary right in an un- med principality of Burope that Tile {s made @ transient bridegroom of con- venience? In fiction there 18 no sane and safe way to serve the State and the Princess Romance of a Rachel Who Is Served but Il. ACHEL BECKETI’S mother dles R almost at Rachel's birth. The father has run away long before So the little girl has an irresponulh.e bringing-up on the coast of Maine, with @ doting grandfather to love and @ fat housekeeper to hate. to the highest peak in London stardom a 1 n meermncennsemene ts near at a At eighteen, nevertheless, Rachel is a the | of the gospel of!old benefactor, and eventually marries ‘him, despite his famtly pride, of which closes in a tragedy of love she knows nothing. She wed, tdeed, {out of gratitude for what Simon does for grandpa, And it ts then, because of her dreams and becauge she still loves Zmil, that she becomes a bird in a gilded box. While things are being straightened out Simon is driven a good deal to drink, But finally the climax arrives in a fire in whicl» Rachel nearly loses her itfe. St. Ives still hae hie Annie. Tho fat | housekeeper has gone back to the Maine coast. ove of Two Irish Gir! Days of Prince Charley. The the command of her brother, | v A Terence, an Irish gailant doing epy'e service for King George, Eveleen O'Callaghan ferrets out the secret of Capt. Hugh Graham, lying dis- abled at Emlyn Castle. At the dictates of her own heart, not long afterward, Eveleen confesses her treachery and sends Graham riding away, not only for his own safety, but to warm Marty O'Sullivan and his brave fellows, plotting for Prince Charley of a scheme for thelr capture and death. Thus begins May Wynn new story of old Stuart hopes, “For Charles the Rover" (R, F, Feano & Co.), and be- fore the book 1» done there is the ac- count of much boasting and bloodshed. Bat also of not @ Ittle lo Unwittingly, Eveleen has sent the man she loves straight to Mary O'Sullivan, sister of the giant and vatlant Morty, In Biddy O'Grady's cabin these two toeet. In a suffocating chamber under Liocks of peat they hide from pursuers n the natural coarse of events. thelr earts come to beat not less tenderly each other than bravely for a com~- | mon cause. Poor Byeleen! Her treachery has rought a heavy penalty, Yet once again—and for the third time, since on page 15 of the book she has rescue! him from the dark waters in which his boat has been swamped—she is to save Hugh Graham, This is when, overpow- ered by Terence's men and taken back to Eveleen, it seems sure that he wil get his death sentence In the morning. Mary O'Sullivan is dark and slender. Ryeleen O'Cal is a falry-ltke blonde, Two typas of Irish loveliness, fn the end Mary stands by Graham's side, Eveleon {s destined again tor the Hghts of London—and Morty has dies for his prince, 4 in the | “LEFT TWO $50,000 WILLS. Hopewell Masonic Temple, 1 and Fortieth street and ndt Park East, Aldermen, Roberts Marked Second pad Void and First Is Ques- j tioned. (Special to The WHITE PLAINS, Bre N. The filing of one of two Blevator Man May Not Survive the late E. Plerrepont Roberts of juries In A et it House, town in the Weste a Antonio Vari a, € ator man In the office to-day disposing of $50,000 has| apartment house at the northwest cor- created a lega on. Roberts |ner of Sev -sixth street and Park a will and made a secon, | avenu ed lift early to-day without destroying the first, b aa # tmg the gate. Hise crossed out his signature on ¢ caught in the gate and ond will and marked on the margin| torn out ty could stop the Mft. OR ey Ea ene ce njared man was removed to the ‘The first will was found without any GD, WOR TenOveR marks on it. The question aris sian Hospital, where it was to what his intention whe Kely to survive. made the second will purts that it revoked the first will, and w he marked the second will void he de troyed that also, office and r the accident Michael pson of the injured » arm to the Coroner's ted to le ve it there. He c 1© by Coroner w tom: a lives at No 3ronx taxpaye 7 Kast One ired and Seventh ddress SSBENBEM TAL WAYS. BUV:THE ORIGIN » The original and genuine Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, known throughout the world as the best of family laxatives, for men, women and children, always has the full name of the California Fig Syrup Co. printed on the front of @ every package. It is for sale by all leading druggists everywhere, one size only, regular price 50 cents per bottle The imitations some- times offered are of and do not give inferlor quality satisfaction; therefore, should be declined.

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