The evening world. Newspaper, May 11, 1911, Page 3

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AUTO BLOWS UP, GIVES OTH AVENUE CROWDS A THRILL Tosses Chauffeur and Pet Dog Aside Just as Mrs. Henes Is Stepping In. MOB FILLS THE STREET.! Eight Fire Engines, Four Trucks and Other Apparatus add to the Excitement. ‘The $5,000 automobile in which Mra. Wiillam J. Henes and @ friend had gone sopping to-day stood in front of the MeCreery department store, in Thirty- fourth street, about ten minutes before noon, as Innocent of any wrong intent ay the Ittle, white, curly-haired dog that ‘at on the front seat, basking tn the admiration of the shoppers, who we degected from thelr course long ugh to pat his woolly back, and to] sell him that he was a cute little darling, mobile stood John envying the cute! darling. Mrs, Henes and her ame out of the store and Haug He bent over and friend Juinped for the crank, hesan turning the handle, groaning 9s | he turned. | He turned and turned, and then | @topped to moisten his hands and turn | Mrs, Hones had reached the auto- and had opened the door, step- | ide to permit her friend to enter | right on turning. | lon covering h's br Dog Hurled Into the Air Mrs. Haug screamed, her shrill sopraso scribing a graceful p ighth of an ase. As it pace suddenly who ke a steam Wald fata wad dining ch was running # tiery torrent automobile Crowd Jams the Avenue. Culprit’s Plea € Buy Loaven tor “Lye been out of work f: savings have been s ug my wife and thr To-ntght they eried w: made up my mind to & In God's name, don't a: Patrolman Edward ney of ‘he Alexander avenuo sia ad caught a man ci ne bakery at No, 498 Brook av with two loaves of bread 1 m last n “Do you arrested?” Sweeney asked rletor of tho T've got my bread back," was vell,”” remarked the pat n, dig- ging down into his pocket, “here's the money for the two loaves, and here's some more; so go inside and get this poor fellow another loaf. you' “And as for sulprit—“ehase se three hung: Daily Question 9 Where Should a Person Go to Eat SQUARE meals-~- Sit "ROUND in easy chairs— Meet people of the same PLANE in life And with PARALLEL interests— In a FLAT or apartment of Either HIGH or LOW elevation— At a STRAIGHT cost of so much Per day or week? World «* Boarders Wanted" Ads, Answer thls juestion sid Sundays. to the emaciated home and feed kids and the wife.” Jtet it pass. Miss McAdam, Who Is Teaching School Teachers Deportment, Says: BY said the sw I'm glad to hear it, t taught me these things yesterday. New York Is the City of Dreadful Mann ers So Much Rush There’s No Time for Courtesy | New Yorkers Sit Down Too Sudden-| ly—They Flop With Their Feet Wide Apart—We Should Sit Grad-| ually, Gracetully, Not Plunk Down Suddenly With Our Full Weight. | The Trouble Wiih New Yorkers Is They Won't Take Time to Do. Things Properly—In Philadelphia’ Every One takes Time to Be Courteous. for Good Fellows. The “Fraternal Handshake” Our Women, You.g and Old Alike, Are Careless in Their Deportment ~They Sit With Knees Crossed in Fublic Places—They Talk Loud— They Seem to Wish to Be Taken Belongs to Men—Young Women Should Never Give the “Palm to Palm” '$} Handshake to a Man. New York is the have no deportment full i neither have 1. NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. City of Dreadful Manners. You walk ungrace- Instead of sitting down properly. you flop down You) 48 for me, I have been shaking hands in the wrong| way all my Ife Miss Adeli ‘de McAdam, “deportment specialist,” I had read that Miss McAdam was conducting a special class of manners in Board of E this city for public school teachers, so, wishing also to sit at her feet and learn deportment, I called up the cation and asked for her address. “Teaching public school teachers manners, {s she?” olced Unknown to whom my inquiry was referred. ut we don't know anything about it up here!” “Weil, Further research revealed Miss McAdam as the arbiter of a private school of manners in West Seventy-ninth street, which grown up persons to walk, sit, stand and shake hands, and where they are attend to learn Initlated into the “twelve points of ballroom etiquette,” whatever those are, The “deportment spectaliat," as she} ~— oo — Is known, ts a quiet little woman with| ‘They seem to wish to be taken & manner of punctilious courtesy and] for food fellow: & very serlous concern about New Prager Teddy prea) solng: te RACAL IAC Ie leave Miss Meadam. We're Too Bohemian. “Perhaps you would like to “The Pohemian spirit rules New know how to shake hands prop- York." she sald, “and Bohemian man-| Fly,” she said. “You gave prevall everywh “Our young girl growing up without the slightest knowledge or care conduct which should govern their ere. is and boys are for tho rules of | of your whole hand just now. That is the fraternal handshake and belongs to men. Persons who have just met should give the tips fingers. If you wish to ex- Press hospitality toward person ‘But never relations with each other. Men in your own home give the full and women rush, rush, rush and length of the fingers. often an escort, whose duty it is give the palm to palm handshake supposedly to pro’ tect and shield to s man, his companion, has hard work keeping up with the go-nhead P American girl he is taking ont. 80 I “How many New York men observe | way all my life. that fundamental rule of deportment | cede her men or are ri sprawlir ys a man must follow @ wo- a car, either, for that matter, * added Miss McAdams, “ts / the torso when seated, | right to take up extra] but must pre- | off? How many | count of space ntfully entitled? tionary 5 sand legs.) ae SPY si BURIED 140 YEARS AGO, REMAINS WILL BE MOVED.! to! ‘Bones of Two Quakers of Revolu-| youn woman’s condition 1s the fact Times to Be Taken Up in Scarsdale, ag World.) to-day by arsdale health board allowing W. H ‘ 1d the tall) Heaton to remove from the Old Quaker | Young man who volunteered to take it It may make you many friends, but it is not correct de- Y., May 1.—! y the | Misa Walsh the remains of rah Schureman, ve (been shaking hands the wrong | ‘HUERSDAY, MaY 11, 1911. ADELAIDE Z. Rie ADALI G,/ WHRLED AROUND SHAFT BY HER HAI, GIRL IS SCALPED Fifty Companions in Pencil Factory in Panic After the Accident. Scalped by machinery in the factory where she worked, Miss Margaret Waleh, twenty-four years old, of No. 214 Deacon avenue, Jersey City, is in a serious condition to-day tn St. Mary's Hospital, Hoboken. | mediately after the accident |geon rides on the Jersey Dr. Uenty D. Brosier happened | What increases the seriousness of the 'that her eealp and hair were stolen tm- No eur- City ambu- lances. to be nearby at the time and cared for Te put the severed scalp and hair in a sterolizer and gave It to a instantly to | oould be grafted on the hospital that ft The young man ‘so ‘They | disappeared and cannot be found. te property They Don't Sit, but Flop. and Dob} My philosophy has never been deep! Who were buried 140 years ago. enough to answer that question, sc I e among tho earliest settlers in that) Yorkers sit retty foet $4,000 7 To “REPAIR CHIMES. Miss Walsh did not notice that ner! Irst position, stand with your pack was less than a foot tne cola together, #0. Second position, |2¢0rwe My Morgan Also Made Re- shaft that drives a score of tnachin Avance the Tight foot with the toe, @mest €or Memorial Flowers, . |A# she tossed her head to shake free volnting, rd position, draw the! some of the tangled strands tlght foot back to the instep of the| “mons vasious ohari heauesth | them fell against the rapidly re ie : 1 {contained in the will of George I. Mer-jghatt and caugat agains: a volt, left, Fourth position, step forward) (4) nea gor pribate to-day, wa clause| In w second It was wound a Wein CURR Et n before |Hiving the Trint n of Lenox, t, ner head was Accents toot "t : 4 + $4,000 f : in repatr the | backward and the headstones will be Mr. Cornell and Mrs. | Quakers. acres of property in in the fourth poe one knows what | 1 so 1 rand selute, or subside | baal | ng t " id sit gradually, gree od in memory a} Bare pluat down suddenly [| *t Master, the first | with our full weig’t.” on All Saintes’ Day. Tam w to here {s not a} Me. Monn died Ap reader of arth who ever down in quite the way described Miss McAdam In Too Much of a Hurry. “The trouble wit {tw that they won't take time todo — +a ‘ things properly,” continued the | ders of the monitor of manners. ‘Now, in |" heaves Philadelphi y one takes time to be courteous saunters along the street with as much leisrre as {f Southern cerky on a summer day, th w Yorke: A Philadelphian he were an old taken also, Steven Corn jureman ned the I adow M ns diay of Jul & estate after divided 88 at Pitte fon of Westchester County, Hving in| charge of several machin the Clinton streets, Hoboken. down too suds! Nevolutionary days near the scene of | hwn with thelr feat | the battle of White Plains one siould sit) The bones will be removed to elas inta cemetery in Purchase, ‘The old Quaker as both tresses, of which she n were | many TO RE-INDICT FOR FIRE. Grand Jury Calla 15 Witnesses in ning over erect-| hurled to the floor on the o} forgan | dragged un: her hair, and ly andl! over again and again. Fifty givls witnessed tho ac t 4, | began screaming, which at No.| Murphy, t reman, As the uncon- ous girl's mp form wa that was drivin r stopped the revolutions ‘By that tine Miss Walsh bad carried around the shaft « a i ier scalp had been torn off nd of her | ty was wour © steel shaft. he other girls © her the from the room, and a cosen i in a faint. By the ti x reached them the entire f y was in New Yorks mé a Continaing Asch Bullding Probe, pel a & r Ly Abe The March Grand Jury of the Court Murs McAdam conceded, “and the one- [of General Sessions, which probed the generation, get-rich-quickly crowd, I|Asch Bullding fire and returned Ind Know of no sight more pathetic than) ments against Mex Blanck and lsaa » first generation New York | Harris, proprietors of the Triangle 1 or seventeen, One sees | Walat Company, charging them with re- aurants, with loud, queer | sponsibility for the death of certain Jothes and her face made up, drinking | einployees, reopened the Investigation with young men, or even |this afternoon, Fifteen new witnesse iskey, I've seen them take, were examined straight What reapect can| As a result of this afte & young man feel for such girls? wrperceding indi What worthy feelings can they Ine based 90 (ha de Men are sickened by them, Why, her eee Of my DuUPIW aald to me not long. & indictments were found the ‘Miss MaAdain, I know no woman t AS) neaimele, | mere, ane I respect except my mother and sister “Our women, alike, are care) ment. They sit wii public plicos. young end old ) relating n Shops. ito fa great amount of additionai to per | ty where | afte! he Was buried and wax a man of in- | dow: fluence in the Sommaun nity ray expenses! was carried scr than more two she ha in the wom. en's department of the American Lead Venet) Company's factory at Fifth and her luxuriant very proud. had be about the building for Noticing that her hair disarranged about 4 0’ on, she left the machines and sat before a mirror to fix tt. When |she removed the fastenings \t fell sev- an uproar, NO MORE DUST! { Think of That! When vou \ ‘ \ ' ere Look for this mi "F the green cam Nomordst + i ——— rent | voluntarily lock yesterday |}, ; , ‘ MRS. SULLY LOSES. AND MUST SETTLE $28,360 ON LOAN Jury Disbelieves Former Cot- ton King’s Stories and Gives Col. Corr Full Amount. Peter H. Corr, cotton manufac- turer of Taunton, Mass, recovered Judg- ment against Mrs, Emma F, of Dantel J. Sully, th Sully, wife dankrupt “cotton King,” for $20,000 and interest on that amount from March 24, 1904, amounting {n all to $28,266.60 trom a jury in Jus- tice Amend’s part of the Supreme Court t ‘o-day The verdict was for the full amount for which Col, Corr sued. The jury refused to believe the inte: esting stories told by Sully and his wife 4# to Col Corrs visit to the Sully home and the latter's that District-Attorney Jerome was plan ning to Indlet tr king as a com- mon gamb v Core wit n days a her t and directed y ald not i NATICK av, May EGGS Rice Noreca Fancy—3 Ibs. tor .25 Corn—A. M. & C. Extra Choice Maine 1.30 .12 omatoes —Noreca -Selected Jersey Large Cans I 12 Peas- Noreca Uarly June 110) 10 Sardines! acitiat French-—in Pure Clive Oil,'; Cans, 1.75 15 Peaches or Apricots~ Fane) Calilornia Large Cans,2.25 .20 Jeblies--A. M.& C.—tis ude—10-07. Jars...2,75 25 Coffee Plantation An Excelleat Java Blend-—per th, .25 Tea— Ramona- !ndia and Ceyton — per tb 4 35 | 120 Chambers st, STth St, & Gth Ave, Broadway & 102d St, ) West td at. BROOKLYN STORES turning over $30,000 to him oe his defense denied chat she ever aaw the 1 him furniture from the Sully 724 Bt, Mrs, » eve Sully rtes and ying hi version was that on March | fi er the cotton mai rly telephoned dansk: tm to loan tlew Amond refused to set aside the judgment n days tn n under fering from a mental nontns, Charles J, Wood, postmaster of nonitted sui te anti 1 of his ere t Mr. Wood vi been unable nd had been n . “ nm He was [71 years old a veteran ——e ia @ Amsterdam Ave. intimattons|in that port from June 11 to June 18, 1 Company fa You Pay No More for the Best Extra Selected Fr BUTTER Finest Grenconny~ per Ib. {WAYS PUNCTUAL, HIS REPUTATION MAY SAVE LIVES i | Store Not Open as Usual, Cus- tomer Finds One Dead, Two Overcome by Gas. BREAKS IN THE DOOR, (Night Light) Goes Out in | | Boarders Room and He Is | Found Lifeless If Neeato Gentetle and his wife are saved from death they will owe thelr lives to Gentelle's reputation for |b punctual, Hoth are at Harlem Hospit at the point of death and “Patsy Dendero is dead from the effects of escaping ‘iuminating gas, The three ‘sons occupled rooma just in the ntelle's grocery store One Hundred tly after 7 o'clock Joseph Domm- 'intck of No, 610 Bast One Hundred and Seventeenth street went over to tne Gentelie is When Dom- | rocery for some goods. Dominick's brother-in- jinick reached locked. That's funny,” ho never sleeps 80 open at 7 o'clock.” As the hands of the clock had gone several minutes past that hour Joseph | felt that the situation demanded his | strenuous attention, So he proceeded to \ open the door, ‘Then he went to the rooms of hi relatives and | the store he found it he mused, ‘Neerto late. He alw thelr friends and found them uncon- sctous. Dr. H, Mooney of No. 812 Kast One Hundred and Seventeenth atreot was catled and a number of policemen | came to help him, They worked over | the threo persons for some time, when | Dr. MeCallum, from Harlem Hospital, reinforced the workers. Father Long! came from the Church of Our Lady of Mount Carmel to min- Inter to the stricken fot. Dr. MoCal- jum found that Dendero was dead. He had the other two removed to Harlem Hospital, where they have the barat chance for life. In Dendero's room the gas was slightly turned on, while a smal) flame was filckering on the jet in the room of the grocery keeper and his wife. Dendero was in the habit of leaving a amall light tn his room and it ts thought turned the g1 low that the variance of pressure extinguished it and the escaping fumes killed him. paras ES He Meltte4 | LIGHTNING KILLS EIGHT. M Death in Stor Sweep of Germany. BERLIN, May U.—During thunder- storms that occured throughout Ger- many yesterday lightning Killed elght persons, and near Hamburg rekindled « natural gas well which had been recent- ly capped with the greatest dimculty. Huasia to Greet U, 8, Fleet. 8T, PHTORSBURG, May 11.~The| {naval authorities at Reval are making [extensive preparations for th: the second division of the Unt Atlantic fleet. The battleships wil) Vietime They come to Reval, as Libau was) abandoned as @ naval port two years) DISCOVERY KILLS BED BUGS Peterman’s Discov- Cry~killebed bugsandthelr cays. Atui ventive, Peterman’s Rosch Food —kiis roaches, water bugs and beetles, Standard for 24 years, Peterman’s Ant Food—xills und fleas, Peterman’s Moth Food—0dorless ~Killa moth, A gure preventiv Dozen Each .22 .27| W2hih St & Teh Ave, 14M Valter Sty Cer Mont Ansemblyman Foley's pill the Dance Hall law will be etr posed | Amusements WOMEN OPPOSE CHANGE IN THE DANCE HALL LAW. Mrs. Israels Calls Foley Amendment Scheme to Delay tion of Licen: Revoca- by and Vacation th To-morrow Begins a Sale--New At the Season’s Most Sensationally Low Prices 11° 12% Navy, Black and White Serge This Magniticently Stunning $45 Model *15 «. finest grade men’s wear serge, in rich dark blue and black, lined with finest peau de cygne, Newly fashioned sailor collar of black satin, graduating into large fancy rever fronts of black and white striped silk adorned with diamond braid and small buttons. Coat fast- ens to one side with large crochet ornament. Beautiful trimming to harmonize on cuffs and skirt. As Always FREE Alterations stocked drug {Janet § | toms indicat to amend mgly ope the Women's Committee on Resources. “Famout f The Doctor’s Answers On Health and Beauty Questions Mrs. Charles Henry Israels, the ohetr~ man, and her co-workers who have Seem instrumental in tmproving conditions. qe ward the proposed intervention as aél- Fect attempt to block the working of the Statote. bd ‘The amendinent provides that ti the case of a pending licens for « hall the teensing authority must, fit event of a refusal, give good and clent reasons. If these reasons Ugpm examination are not shown to be waigd, the granting of the license shall be com- pulsory. - for Their Suits.” Ave. Corner 1 7 Model Suits By Dr. Lewis Bak: are general in the answers will by adi Ist can onler of college rhwost’ dix Lm bake dium tor rel. No guiestions ‘will a salt or qiom de Blame can be fuled nlewaler, me Any ares an ele of whokenlan tne a we red iy Cre git suky too thin for your \ Pi 1 be scent Rt iz eoavileel fe

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