The evening world. Newspaper, July 10, 1911, Page 8

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EE ee agence =. GAYTIAN CRUISER —KENLON FAVORITE RUNON AROCKBY MAKESHIFT LOT Mishap Follows Renaming of|Ten Deputies Are Grilled by) Fighting Craft by Gold Braided President. OLD CREW ON A STRIKE. ThevNemania Reaches Harbor . Just In Time to Rescue Those on Board. Mf the Allemania of the Hambure Amerioan-Atias line hadn't nosed her way into the harbor of Port-au-Prince just at tho right time on June 9 the opera-boufte navy of the Repubile of Maytt, would havo been furnishing ban- quests for all the fishes in tho Cortbbean Seas, Such was the yarn spun on beard the steamer to-day when she ar- rived here. ‘To begin at the beginning of this naus tloal yarn, it eral months toine Simone, President of th Repub} Rg tar Relig tron leg fr 3 Pooh aco hk | Si ad ce Miata [olight in the soothing, ranwreeaial torten’ wountrna, hoping [ard Gellaghan, Gid not compete for the y| sete te ae tetas Gees finer window and sovered an arte’. lvefreshing, purify ing Tadd ethdel dad eaten Hite suasione Weer ciebaton, Tals, # Aquare, Mr, Ganea aot out two big ans} Mundred and Twenty-frat § ualities of Vernas tS ae ES hou aes for tno| Bisa, Gooderson, Sura, aarti, [4 NE ee er ue bay | aad 6 eal aN Hime WO the Hane ae | LEO CLOTS money he had to spend was an obso- in, Langford, Beggin and Meher. * aca niesaitis penta Aeich digte PiUAt Gar Gm amtanes, BOdhMbD Of the Peaily Wil eneis beddth fives amy whe thrown ints the die (SOY eRe eeEe. COMEe ne | Broadway. Hundreda of horses were| kreat tamber of iieat prostrations aii! F p @ @ and healthy qums reveal card. But it had to suffice, and as she HOW IMPORTANT JOB 18. | watered there yosterday and there wer) our passed before Dr, Baker arrived.| Trig] mouthpurlty. Vernes sailed into the haroor of Port-au-Prince during the last week of June the beach ané hills wore literally black with the weleoming throng. PRESIDENT IN GOLD BRAID RE- NAMES CRUISER AFTER SELF. Out in the middie of the harbor rode the Presidential yacht, with His Ixcel- lepey Antoine Simone standing on her bridge, as erect as the miles of gold- braid with which the Presidential unl- | form was adorned would permit. In t summer's noontime by t breok. ‘Thon, like a flash out of the ceruloan, came & strike of the Antoine Sinone's officers and nd mutiny. She Sec- retary of the Navy, and the Rear Ad- mira! pleaded and argued and even down on their knees to the strikin, inera, but their walking de'-sate was more eloqu: han they, and the up- shot of It all was that they manned the smal boats and put themselves ashor But if they hoped to tle up the navy the strikers did not reckon with Presl- dent Bt fertility of mind. It dida’t take him long to niuster another crew, and though the captain was an erstwhile tugboat saloon steward and the mew engineer one who had ceased | mixing drinks and wiping glasses In a sailor's resort near the quay in answer recked not. He had shown the strikers, and as the new crew of grocery clerks, | # roustabouts and mule drivers marched | * aboard the crack fighter of the Haytian navy he bowed again and again !n ace knowledgment of the plaudits of bis loyal followers. On June 30 the Antoine Simone started out on her initial cruise. It w event. The whole Haytian ai as escort to President strutted aboard, ‘She soldi ‘on the bulwarks and cheered like mad as the salt air began whipping their warm faces. bay went the Antoine Simone, with colors flying and band playing, and again President Simone’s stalwart figure | an@ classic features stood out clear againat the horizon—a brave figure, be- dizened with gold. CRUIGER RUNS ON A ROCK | SHALLOV. WATER. But the cruise didn’t last. One may, be an excellent saloon ai tugboat, and yet know ni the Map of the Bay of Po an@ 0 it proved with the captain ofthe | Antein @imone, who made a perfect job of running the cruiser right into shallow water, and plumb on top of a | rok. The rock was on to its job at Onde and distinguished itself by tearing / a dig hole tn the hull of the crulser As the cruiser began to sink, the Presidential yacht, which had been fol- ‘hole and the Allems as close as alo « the hullabaloo was commanded by a mer having on doard a hi ere put out fought back to JUDGE DIES SUDDENLY IN RAILROAD STATION Frank A. Hooker of Mi Su- | preme Court Had Given Up | Auto Trip to Return Home. | AUBURN, N. Y., July 10,-—-Supreme | Court Justice Frank A. Hooker of Li sing, Mich., died suddenly here early to- day tm the New York ‘Centra! station He was on an automobile tr abandoned it last night and w tum home by train. MAYOR Answers Charge of ‘Corrup- of th second choles, and William Guerin third, ten of the deputy chief of the De- Partment to<lay began taking their ex-| A) aminations for promotion te the vao- ancy left when Chief Croker quit the Department, to the selection, means that the winner will head thi -| finest fire foree in the world, but be- oause of the Importance of the event Je- [in Departmental politt of the Municipal Service Commis! Mayor Gaynor made a short addi to the men, seasoned fire-fightert one of them, saying that this examina- pointm while, possibly, the best man might not sition. cool while proper ans\ they would be called upon day and to-morrow, James Creelman, President of the Com- mission, amination, sald: GAYNOR HITS HARD AT ALLE- ia not able to participate, having been debarred by physical infirmity, wan the result of dong his duty tn the ‘ve been called by Mr. Creelman to a news- paper which says this morning the rea- son why he is not being examined is some | paper praprietor, to his country's call, President Simone | kno al ined up Out Into the middle of the {for all a) RLS SD TOWATER HORSES - ON BROADWAY IN KENLON AT ODDS-4.0 IN FIRE CHIEF RACE, When ten deputy chie’s of the Fire Department begon taking thee examinations for Oe Chiefs fob, made vacant by Croker's resignation, headquarters sports made these odds: John Kenlon... 1to$ Thomas Laliy. Even Wm. Guerin....j0 to 1 IN CONTEST FOR FIR CHIEF'S POST — Examiners for $10,000 Job i Croker Resigned, BARS POLITICS, ning, Though He’s Threa® ened With Arrest. and then came urat § o'clock, art again at 19 ir test wht end at, The men bave about the same start, with the exorption of the sx points al: lowed for seniority Kenton has a lead of one point on personal herotem. WALL STREET To-morrow they tion” in Address to Fiame- Fighters Under Test. Aviaai Down, Says Com- missioner Thompson, The fitlowtne ite che Algheat, lowest ent With John Kenton, wow Acting Ohtet | Mage Se antares iat ativte Mowe | A ample act of humantty tn an effort Hire Department, ae an active in the Headquarters predict Thomas Lally, the senior deputy, | \ tare “arty or. Ban nad fit 4 % | according to Willlam J. Ganes, if | Unusuat interest attached not only because it when they seem to be go. heat exhaustion, Ry a wh! water rates, e 1 tte +eeete t4t++ fore the 01 asl Before the examination In the roome] Wie 9 Advance ‘| THREE 17-YEAR-OLD BOYS GET LONG SING SING TERM. im. ae ae: seas time an inspector From Seven to Fifteen Years for] stricken h Highway Robbery Judge piued exe ebAeds tte se Malone's Penalty, Judge Malone to-day sentenced three seventeen-year-old boys to Sing Sing Prison for not less than seven years an. six months or more than fifteen years, The three, Henry Baker of No, % West Ono Hundred and Thirty-thira street, Fletcher Béll of No, 113 Weat Ono Hundred and Thirty-fourth etreet, .. P: . both white, and Willlam Walker of No.|Which read “Recuperation Ctation. 2) Kast One Hundred and Thirty-fourth | Alone came another inspector and or- street, a negro, had pleaded guilty to {ered Mr. Ganes to take in the s#gq. highway robbery on June § wien they |He also ordered him to cut out his leaped upon n Scheober, a peddler, |water station. ‘The moving picture man at Lenox avenue and One Hundred and {complied #0 far as the sign was con- Thirty-fourth street, and took from |cerned, but absolutely refused to stop hm his stock of Inoee and embroideries |oftering water. He told the inspector to ¥- | he liked with his fining. “There is but one duty befor 60, a8 earn A Court," wala Judge Malone, "It'in'ts| “They can Ko and war berate send out a message to such as may |me os much as they pl said Me, have it in mind to waylay and strike |Ganes to-day. I have my own metered down peaceable citizens, that when they | water and I intend to ase it as I please, come to this bar they shall encounter |If the city wants to #0 1 here the full severity of the law." Se ee EEE EESEESSREE ——_——— FELL 100 FEET WITH AUTO. | ck| F DENVER, Col, July 10.—Mre, J.B, ba Baldwin, wife of coiner Baldwin of the | Denver Mint, had a remarkadlo excapo | New Remedy That Removes Freckles from death yesterday when the auto. | or Costs Nothing. mobile in which she was riling plunged ; Myploe 100 feat With renin ad | Herete a chance, Mise FrecklePece, to try « Pret a Crecwise + Folled 800 | new remedy for freckles with the guarantee Jf a feet further puntata, and | reliable dealer that it will not cost you s penay landed, a m , Ina ‘creek | Anew it removes the freckles, while tf it does give in the who Was |you a clear complexion the expense is trifling. drivin no, car bat | simply get an autos of oliiae—doutle strength eae not Hurt —férm Wiker's or Hegeman's and one night's to-day. AND BATHS. Mr. Was the most important ever heid, ving a $10,000 position. 1 1 favor, and that ved himself a good man for the po- Admonishing the men to keep King thetr brains for thi re to the many needed it. kept driving up and various city ve! cles took advantage of Mr. water station, he way to who took charge of the ex- Among other things Mayor Gaynor GATION OF “CORRUPTION.” “I'm sorry that one of your number which Department. My attention has corrupt political deal. This newa- being himseif a weil 1, een corruption In corrupt m ng. He sits down every night his own corrupt mind evolves # of corrupt things and pub- lishes them the next day, disturbs neither me nor you, fon the even tenor of our way. Mr. But that We £o reclman has said that the highegt polnt known ‘Old New York gets many pr all worta of wickedness, but will show you how easy ita to. tid away ahead on a lot of things Mrs. Baiiwin remained tn the car forever of the homely treckios and get 4 all, and this is one of them.” until it dropped the first hundred feet. arly io more than examination continued until 1|She was picked up unconscious and ms toe a es ‘ hie 4 xk, when @ brought on a special train to this city nb) yar oe mnemnenls he » [where It was found her only injuries | ouble strength othine, fee Fe oe ore, peription wold under gua \it fails to remove freckles tee ot ya the world were cuts and brulses meres tana Sale of Saks Summer Suits for Men Continuing Tuesday and Wednesday Formerly 28.00, 30.00, 33.00, 35.00, 38.00 & 40.00 at 22.00 Qt is generally known throughout New York that a sale of Saks- made clothes for men is the best patronized event of its kind, No other similar sale even approaches it—because, although similar, no other sale is just the same. That superiority of tailoring, finish and style which has given Saks clothes for men their enviable repu- tation also accounts for the alacrity with which men seize the opportunity to buy Saks clothes at such splendid reductions. @ Made by Saks and Company at its New York plant, these suits were on our counters anl> last Saturday at prices ranging from 28.00 to 40.00, and their sale at 22.00 is simply a repetition of an event which, for a number of years now, has been heralded as the most important suit sale of the Summer season. The offering includes three-garment models, 14 or 14 lined in the follow- ing Summerweight fabrics: Lightweight worsteds, flannels, fancy serges and velour finished cassimeres. The shades include grey, blue grey, brown and all those other shades which are popular this season. Every garrient is of the most recent make and embodies every desirable feature of current styles. As for the workmanship, in detail and as a whole, we believe it unnecessary to say anything beyond the single staternent that it is ours, Broadway Saks & Canty any at 34th Street DEFNGEOF TY Ganes Keeps Fountains Run- 8. P. C A, BACKS HIM. Vive Wailar Fine for Wetting ae | to seve the Ives of horses has become la crime under the rigorous rules that are now being enforced by Commission. 4 [er Thompson of the Water Department, who XB | has a moving ploture theatre at Broad- \y| way and Thirty-frat stree!, where he Is | making an effort to provide drinking water for horses and also to apray them s under from Canes ts using his own metered water, ) he is paying for according to the When he found that Mr. a bigger Ine trying to get to the cans WARNED TO STOP GIVING DRINK Ganes had been warned yester- Gay that he would be fined #5 for every wo him hose off @ . The inspector also or- Mr. ed and defied the inspector. 4 the inspector to go ahead and the | 2008." Ganes's This morning he put up @ dig eign MONDAY, JULY 219, down fine after fine sgainst me for try- ing to save the lives of horses, let them do ft. T will fight the case and i will continue to do al) I can to save the horses.” The Soctety for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is backing Mr Ganes in the attitude he kas taken, The socl- ety and Mr. Thompson have been bat- ting for some time over the water ait- uation, for the reeson that rae Water Commissioner has cut off all the 350 fountains for horses in the city and threatens to compe! the sostety to sit off Km own seventy fountains if they run a minute longer than the hours ce. tobtisned by Mr. Thompson. 500 HORSES DIED LAST WEEK BECAUSE OF THE HEAT. | 1913, AG0-FOOT CRUNK OF ICE ADRIFT Liner’s Passengers Sight Great + Berg Like Ghost of Ancient Guperintendent Murton of the 8. P. C. A. pointed out t day th Galleon. Aied from sunstroke last yorsxgh. If it were not for t niatie there weulda't be single ae trough for horses in the city. Mr. Thompscw, in addition to co iting out the ef ‘Tountains, has ordered the & P, C. A. fountaine eut off he- tween 8 OM, and 6 A. 4. Hecanse one of the society's fountains ran a few minutes past & O™ock the other day, Superintendent Ha“von got a letter from Deputy Water Commissioner Bennet! in- forming him that if Mr. Thompeon's Orders were not obered the supply of the sovietr’s fountains would be cut off, This would leave the elty without a @ drinking pisee for horses at a time when the poor animals are drop- Ding dead from the heat all over town. Pitti t Neat DRIVER CUTS AN ARTERY. Boy im Gertous Condition After Wheel of Milk VYagon Falls of, ‘The rear whe ¢/ 4 milk wagon being Ativen alone “inve avenue near One Hund 4 4 -Aret wire: to-day shrew the driver, wteen yaars old, cf ared and Vilteeath jontety's ‘Tho time haa coma, the captain sald, | to speak of other things when the! Nievcy Amsterdam came inte port to- | day end tandsmen talked of the hot) wave, Whereupon Capt. Htoggeveen wn- folded the tale of an iccherg—a ghostty, | cooling farrative that sounded, in the slenling dock atmosphere, like a frosted Julep looks | Tt was on July 1 one of the days ef | the Rie Heat hereabouts. At 11 o’tloek | the ship's officers eaw teoberg | 169 feet high and 400 feet jong. Suet. | Roggoveen ran within 100 feet of the chilly chunk se that the passenmers | might wet a elore view. Many made | pletures: i ‘The vere was shaped ike a ghost of the Half Moon, o- some other ship of the Hudsontan pertod. Ita peaks seemed to ve fee-bound masts and its high after too deck loomed ilke icryatal armor, The ship eoul No, a7 Mast ( Women of refinement ‘The boy had fainted from joes of blood Lotion used daily pre- and the dootor eald ile condition was| BOttle serves the teeth and kee} eerlous, for your the mouth surgically ice aan ace, d Jers clean. —Conceded to be | Another Odjec: Recorded, name. the most powerful, eco- (From the Washington Ater.) “Zam thoroughly in favor of this movement to prevent people from kisa- ing Dabdles," gaid Benator Sorghum, "Beoause of the germ theory?" “Yes, and for personal rensons, I've got to make a house-to-house oam- Daign among my constituents pretty nomical and delightful general antiseptic for home use. At your Druggist's, 16e, 50¢, $1.00 Vernas Lotion Vernes Chemical Co., 249 W. 36th St., N.Y. B. Altman & Co. A SALE OF MEN’S FURNISHINGS WILL BE HELD TOMORROW (TUESDAY), AS FOLLOWS: MEN'S NEGLIGEE SHIRTS, USUAL PRICES $1.50 &200 EACH? at $1.00 MEN'S MADRAS PAJAMAS, USUAL PRICES$I.75 & 2.50 rer surt ~ at $1.15 MEN'S WORSTED BATHING SUITS, $2.25 per suit AT THE REDUCED PRICE OF : (B. Altana & Cn} SILK PARASOLS AT $2.00 EACH WILL BE OFFERED TO-MORROW (TUESDAY), IN FLORAL DESIGNS, BLACK AND WHITE STRIPES, HUNTERS’ GREEN, PURPLE AND OTHER PLAIN COLORS, USUALLY $3.00 & $3.50, AT THE ABOVE SPECIAL PRICE A SPECIAL SALE OF WOMEN’S SUMMER DRESSES TO-MORROW (TUESDAY), DRESSES OF FRENCH LINEN, IN COLORS at $6.50 DRESSES OF COLORED STRIPED. VOILE at 800 DRESSES OF WHITE AND BLACK STRIPED VOILE AT $2.00 DRESSES OF WHITE BATISTE, EMBROIDERY AND LACE TRIMMED at. $5.00 ADDITIONAL REDUCTIONS HAVE ALSO BEEN MADE IN| THE PRICES OF OTHER LINGERIE AND LINENDRESSES. Fitth Avenue, 34th and 35th Streets, Nem York. Ci sasatactioke Mase Weut | ponies aff wack, Oucer one Co-day and prosper. SR Rap AMIR ID SS RE RA MN Ak AA PTOI ee ARTIC Ye —_—_—- ASWESHELTE berg alone, worse luck, ar the ice Snes | famine in New York would have got & jolt, provided the Ice Truat didn't run alongside and claim the tmporta- tion before the celiat dealers mot to it. There was a fog on the latter part of the voyage and some passengers were joared when, opposite Nantucket Licht- ahip, at midnight, the engines were sud- ly reversed. Rumora spread that the Mner had ron into the iehtehip. “Wo were not within thres miles of the lightship,” sald the captain. f june, Gone—reversed my for me to see ahead.” Rear-Admiral J. G. Royal Dutch were on the « thelr son In I Lawton, formerly of tne New returned from a continental tout, will be under the Frobman nvett ment this season, she sald, but not know what she would ple: Frances Batchetlor, who wrate and Queens of Italy” was also aboard. ntucky did what any other captain would have America’s Greatest Furniture House! wi agree 8 eam ann 8th A a mpy 36th St. 35th to ym assive Continuous Pest Enamel Actual $ 7 . 29 1) 10.50 Value \ Two-inch continuous eee with exceptionally eavy husks; strong spin- dies with fancy mounts, Finest white enamel fine ish. Construction per fect in every detail. Brass Trimmed Enamel Bed 95-49 Very pretty design, with ornamental head and foot in scroll effect; brass spindle trimmed. | inest white enamei finish; superior con- struction. TERMS 10 SUIT YOUR MEANS $50 { $3 to $4 Deposit | $100 { $7.50 to $10 Deposit ronta (15¢ to $1.00 a Week WwortH ($1.00 to $1.59 a Week nee RD LL. SEE RARE Double Stamps with “, Single Stampa Merning Purchaees SH Stamps Alter 12 o'clock Established Halfa Linen Suits & Summer Dresses Dresses $3.75, 5.00 & 8.50—Of Lingerie, Voile, Linen and other Wash Fabrics. Embroidered and Plain Tailored. Dresses $15.00—Smart Tailored Silk Dresses as well as a large collection of fine Voile, Lingerie and other Summer Dresses. Formerly $25.00 and up. French Dresses $25.00, 45.00 & 75.00—Hand-made and Hand-embroidered. Very fine collection of styles. Formerly $45.00 to 150.00. Linen Suits $10.00—Irish Linen Crash two-piece Tailored Suits, a smart style. Reduced from $15.00. Linen Suits $15.00—Tailored in a numbe styles. Made from best linens. Formerly $1 French Linen Suits $5.00—Last season’ Light Blue, Lavender and a few other colo Price $15.00. All remaining Woollen Suits and Silk Dresses reduced to close out promptlys James McCutcheon & Co. of high-class and 25.00. , in Pink, . Regular Remarkable Reduction Sales Right in Mid-Summer Of Men’s& Young Men’s Suits No end of the season sale this, but a Mid-Summer Opportunity to save several dollars on your Sum- mer Suit. member, the worst is yet to come— the very hottest days, and many, many of them, 915, 918 and $20 Fancy Suits; 915 and 918 Blue Serge Suits--Every one of them new, seasonable 51 350 a models and fabrics from our own stock and worth at least $5 more; have been reduced to 3 Cool, Stylish Quaker Gray Suits, which have achieved such great popularity this summer. No 820 suits $ made are better tailored or better fitting. An all- 15 wool flannel serge, in a splendid shade of gray.... Fancy Suits that should be 920, 922 and $25, the kind of fabrics and nent pattern that are just as ap- $ prepa December as in July. Splendidly 18 in and tailored worsteds and cassimeres Silk Lined Blue Serge Suits; flue blue unfinished wore of Blue and Gray and the famous Dixie Gray $ Suits; in English and conservative models. 430 20 Cool, Thin Clothes for Hot Weather Wear, Well Tatlored, Good Fitting and Splendid Vaiues, BROADWAY at 40th St, 970 BROAD oar Chambers St, 47 CORTLANDT BT, near Greenwich, 1251 STREET at 8d Ave, ateds that won't gloas; Suits of Oxford Blue, the new blend ie what they ought to be, but here they are at... Buk Brothers UNION SQUARE, 14th Street, Wost of BROADWAY, ’ take soundings when the fog was too thick de Booy ofthe Navy and Mrs, ae Booy ( ip. ‘They came to visit Miss Thats Bhe id 8 "Kings and other books,

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