The evening world. Newspaper, July 17, 1911, Page 3

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\ W f 7 THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, | TWO BADLY HURT | Zen “Thou Shalt Nots” Are Revised Downward RISKED HER LIFE JULY WHEN FIRE DRIVES | #o Fit the Needs of New York Men and Women \} 100 INTO STRE Aged Mary Bullen Tumbles Through Escape and Glass |For Her—Remember Thy Husband Is More Than a Meal Ticket, and That Any Fool Can Get a Divorce; but It Takes a Wise Woman to Keep a Man’s Love. Disables a Fireman, BABY, GAVE THE ALARM. Infant’s Cries Awoke Mother to Peril—Blaze Confined to First Floor Cigar Store. F Hotmes paw a diase in the A4am t j il five-story building at @olock and, after sending an alarm went to | | v tt | i Hy i i ® t i j i : Edi ia g jag TH f t i 5 3 (OMAN TUMBLES DOWN RE-EGCAPE WELL. . fi to the the ladder and fell through the landing in the areaway uncon- ectous, with her left leg broken. i. ‘was picked up by Fireman Brennan of i -Bome of them were first warned by Mrs. Bessie Hirschberg, wife of the pro- Drietor of the burning cigar store. She, her husband and two children, Louls, ‘three and one-half years old and Harry, twerity-one months, lived in the rear of the ‘store. The baby has whobping cough, and the smoke caused it to have an attack soon after the fire started, ™M Hirschberg was aroused and saw are. She shouted up the dumb- walter and managed to arouse some of ber neighbors. ‘Then the Hirschbergs got out, but for- @0: all about the sick baby until they had reached the street, Hirschberg ran back through the smoke and flames} and brought {t to safety. It was so af-| fected by the smoke, however, that its condition is serious and {t te under the care of a doctor at @ friend's house in the neighborhood, VERY FAMILY HAD A PET, ALL SAVED. The police reserves on the Job said they never saw so many dogs, parrots and canary birds brought down a fire- escape as during the excitement at tils fire, Every family seemed to have one, and nobody forgot it and had to send back. Lieut. James Ferris of Hook and Lad- er Company No. 2, 4 couple of blocks from the fire, was leading his men to smash in the door of the burning store when the plate glass burst with @ sud- den roar in his face, ‘A piece of glass struck him on the pack of the hand near the wrist and gut the artery. Pollceman Alexander MsManus of the West One Hundredth street station made a tourniquet from the thong on bis nightstick and stopped fhe flow of blood, He was taken to @ Luk a ETHEL BARRYMORE ON WAY HERE FROM CALIFORNIA. ‘Actress Has Cancelled All Her En- gagements for the Season in the Northwest, @ACRAMENTO,, Cal., July 17.—Ethel Barrymore, the actress, has cancelled her engagements for the remainder of the season in the Northwest. She de- parted last night for w York, SON KILLED, TWINS BORN. Boys Die, Giving W Raby a Fam veme Ta Ty duly 1—| nnn nnn nnn AARAAAAARAAAAARAAAAAAAAAA A For Him—Thou Shalt Not Take to Thyself Any Painted Image, Nor Serve Any Baby Stare and Still-Born Soul, BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. From Moses atood the test of in them all for @ble for himself. But Voltaire NIXO GREELEY* SMITH ward” has struck Hirechberg on the| throughout the country have offered various modernized Mosaic codes to their readers. It occurred to me that New Yorkers should have eome com-| arouse | Mandments of their own, and here they are: TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR NEW YORK MEN. 1. Remember thy wife te the god- ess of the hearth and heart. Thou shall not put other goddesses before her. TI. Thou shat not make unto thyeelf any painted tmage., nor bow down nor serve any ornamental veouum, any self-made siren with @ baby stare and a stili-born soul, for the goddess of thy hearth is & Jealous goddess, alao feirly wise and oelf-respecting in these days, and she realizes that the iniquity of the father is visited upon the children, whe shall come to know ft and hate him accordingly. IIT. Thou shalt not take the neme of any woman im vain. Granted, there are many fools among us, and more hypocrites and still more silly Uttle enobs. But the Lerd made Eve to Adam's erder and many of us do our best to live up to the manufacturer's sample. IV. Remember thy wedding day to keep it holy. Three hunéred and sixty-four days shalt thou grumble and bring home the grouch that the stress of thy work hae put upon thee, but on thy wedding day thou shalt tle the grouch outside and bring nome the smile of thy marriage morning and = meny flowers. V. Honor her father and mother as well ag thine own, and let all four remais fur from the heme and the land whicn the Lond bas given thee. VI. Thou shalt not bully. VIL. Thou shalt not brag. VIL ‘Thou shalt not commit the unpanionabie sin of lying to the love wf thy heart. IX Thou shalt not dear fatss wit- new against thy love, velling it with a ch ynicism, nor dis- guise thy kind feeting for thy fel- low man with a harsn demeanor. Thou shalt remember there ts but one thing worse than cringing to those above thee and that Ie brow beating those below. X. Thou shalt not covet thy neigh- bor’s house, nor mortgage thine own to obtain an automobite similar to his. Thou shalt not keap three maid servants merely because he does, nor permit thy spouse to bank- rupt thee in the endeavor to dress like the wife of a milionatre. Make not unto yourself gods of silver nor gods of gold for to the Ught purse the Lord sendeth @ light heart. COURT BANISHE HCH BORN THE TONATE KORY Robber of 20 Brooklyn Homes Must Leave Country or Go to Sing Sing. Wealth, social position and high con- nections served Karl von Metz Meyers happily, for when the young gen- n burglar was arraigned to-day Judge Dike {n the Brooklyn inty Court he was sentenced to ban- to tve land—-Norway. He Is the son rand a former officer In the King's Guard. In sentencing the young man Judge his na of a ban fives | » whe wes run] yan le, Mrs. Samuel | Wood rth to twin bows, . Jutomobile owned b I lion of ast down his machine, hut could not avold running down the Wood boy, who ran dire path of the big move ing a My ord ry edt hoy ur er Girls Hane Cans Lizvie Migs * living at No, 422 Bust One Hundred a Sixty-first st caught hand to wk in t opped after badly lucerated. home in a physl- Dike permitted his family the alterna- taking him home to Norway or havi him go to Sing ne prison for not less than two Years and @ half or more than five, good looking, pollshed and soft- nnereo young man had pleaded | guilty to one of three Indictments for burglary. He could have recelved a punishment of ten yeors with hard He had confessed to more than burglaries In the Columbia chts section ef Brooklyn, JUDGE DIKE SEVERE IN PRO- NOUNCING SENTENCE, » pleaded gullty to an tn- y the se da Dike “A Norwe- " arentiy of good | ance Am lant e of the predice in which stand before me, ‘ollowing the lead of otner indigent unlous foreigners of good imp were but nine. Thomas Paine came along with “The Age of Reason,” and then there were but eight. Since then every philosopher or scientist has taken a crack at the Mosaic tablets. The entire literature of the French nation has specialized on the destruction of one of them. In America we still respect them all, but in the past two or three weeks the rage for revision “down- Sel-Made Siren With a |New York Society to Voltaire the Ten Commandments time and attack. Everybody believed Is neighbor, and tn the least objection- threw the first stone, and then there even the commandments, and papers TEN COMMANDMENTS FOR NEW YORK WOMEN. 1. Remember thy husband ts more than @ meal ticket, and i¢ through fear of wrinkles, or in imitation Of come cast iron Venus of the ro- Clety page, thou permittest thyself but one smile a day, let him have tt. He wit! value it much more than will the young man met et an after- noon tea who would take it as the (inevitable tribute to his wit and beauty. Tl, Thou shalt not make thyself into @ painted image, nor into the NEWPORT, July 17.—Miss Constance Warren, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Henry Warren, made another record swim yesterday from Bailey's Beach to the Forty Steps, a distance of three miles, in one hour and fifty-five minutes, breaking her record of last season by thirty minutes. She was accompanied by Joe Boy: swimming master at the beach, and o: Girl Who Made Remarkable Record as Swimmer} of the beach boatmen. Crowds of interested spectatora watched from the cliff walk, many of the num- ber being friends of the popular athletic you ona. Miss Warren, who lives tn New York, {s interested in east side philanthropic work. She is a niece of Mrs. Robert Goelet. She 1s keen for athletics, and walked twenty-eight miles on Newport's “hottest day,” June 22, 1910, keness of the kalsomiined sirens of Broadway that are not like any- thing tn heaven above or the earth beneath or the water under the earth. IZ. Thou shelt not take the name of thy love and thy mate in vain, Drattling the secrets of the taber- @acile in the tea room or at the bridge party or when the next door neighbor rune tm tc borrow @ couple of limes. V. Remember thy wedding day, the vows that were spoken and th Greame that were dreamed, and re- call that any fool can get @ divorce, (but that it takes a wise woman to keep her husband's love. Remem- ber, too, that marriage is a partner- ship with equal responsibilities and equal Habilities to thy God ana thy world {n case of failure. There has never been @ husband yet who wes altogether in the wrong. To be « good wife means to have patience, Poise, eMotency and understanding. Realize that Love 1s not spelled with @ capitai I, in fact there is not an “I' in it, And the wages of e {sm {e too often alimony, V. Thou shalt not babble of bridge or bargains tc @ man who Is wonder- ing where the rent 1s coming from, VI. Thou shalt not spend when the madness of spending comes upon thee. VII. Thou shalt not “manage” thy husband, which is just another way of saying thou shalt not lle to him Granted, thou hast often to choo: between a row and the truth, but a | row will be over in twenty-four hours and les are the weeds th: once sprung up in the garden of love, flourish rankly, overtopping and killing its flowers. VIII. Thou shalt not be snobbish. How shall thy husband hold thee higher than other women if thou showest by emulation and envy that thou begrudgest Mrs. Jones her GOST WRT SERVER $2 TO PLAY TREK ON A PANS Sham Sickness Turned to Real Pain When Taxed Twice His Fee. Rudolph J. Hruska (pronounce trom the middle out) of Woodlawn, ts a |Pesourceful young subpoena server, but he slightly overstretched his ingenulty when he invaded the office of Dr. Maurice A. Sturm, in the Ansonia Hotel, to-day and posed as a patient in order to get an opportunity to flash |@ audpoena in supplementary proceed- ings on the physician, The young man is small, pale and thin, Standing beside Dr. Strum in the West Side Court to-day, it looked a cinch for the big physician to tuck him in his vest pocket. There was a big line of patients in the ante-room of Dr, Sturm's offices when Hruska slunk in and took a seat in the corner. He waited until the last, and when the maid asked him if he wantéd to see the doctor he replied with @ faint affirmative. Ushered into the presence of the big | physician Mr. Hruska began to shiver. HAD A NEW CHILL WHEN HE SAW DOCTOR. “Got a chill?" asked Dr. Sturm. motor or Mrs. Brown her jewels? | ‘°@ UT naked Remember there is no diamond that | 40% y-y-yy-yves” stuttored the aparkles like a happy woman's eyes | Mitt q a and let Mrs. Brown keep her aun- | “How long Rave you had 1t7" asked burst and covet thy sunlight, IX. Thou shalt not forget when buying thy seventeenth hat that a man may some time tire of wearing his last year's sult, even for thee, X. Having joined the unton of mat- rimony, thou shalt not throw stones at the scab and the strike breaker, ut shalt let thy Mght so shine upon HSfssfSSJust weBe chattered Hruska, Is that what you came to eee me about?" -N-N-nen-n-n-no, I t ‘Ot & CrAMP-P-P-P-P-P. ‘Take off your things and let me look you over," said the physician, and think 1 young Mr, Hruska shed bis coat and them that they will see the error of | waistcoat, Dr. Sturm thumped him on thelr ways. the chest and pounded him on the back, - took his pulse and listened to his heart. looks and engaging manners, you came | Then he said: “Do you want a prescription?” to this country to solve your future by | b meee en TT oe marrying some rich American girl. | Hruska, whose | well unded out of him, signified that Your letters that the police have surely hag |he did, Dr. Sturm wrote one out and show this. igned it. Hruska took the slip of “Two months ago the Columbia | paper, studied the signature, and then ped out: I see you are Dr, Sturm, all right |'ve got a subpoena for you," He inched the subpoena, gathered up his Heights section of this borough was startled by a series of burglaries. Th police were put on thelr mettle to dis- cover the burglar, Lieut. Tunney with | | he SUUROROR. BODE DPA @ splendid force of detectives, by yyy “rigas a most admirable piece of work, arrested |“ Me Or i okea him you and solved the mystery of the | tossed him into a chatr, twenty more burglaries which you > this ts your little game,” said the have sed big physician, “You're not sick at all “Your very respectability was a men-| en?" ace, because you were able to operate| REALLY SICK WHEN ASKED 7O unsuspected in that nelghhorhood, Your | PAY FOR TIME. knowledge that you were able to make| sim pen-nen-n't sick, urned Hrus use of pol big APM BUM | Kp yeb-b-but I f b-b-bad." | picion while engag: a felonious act) “you'll fe ¢ you Ket out \makes you @ menace to this com-| of here," pron You munity. | have Ags me and 1| } for you. SAYS HE SHOULD BE ELIMINAT.| ive written eight shades paler ED FROM AMERICA FOREVER. | "iv ivica anaes bile i an his o sald, In a “Why should the public, In case of| than his orieinal mov as only joke your confinement for this crime, bel tis and really didn't want the pro- punished wth your support, having ale | 1 AN i ready suffered from your wrongful acts?| "sre you take up any more of my | 1 er that you! time," threatened the physician, ‘it! P mM our land | will be $5." | | Hrusk ny, detached man | binge y ' tarm and left leg. 1 At his represe | father Von ever tn his the Wes:| 1 Ma Ato He got a big ro ur amon back and|J —_—— man to serve the summons while hi Watched the service from across the street. When Dr. Sturm was arraigned and the stirring tale was told, the Court sald sharply: “Disoharged. No ca: You (to Hrus- ka) had no right to take this physician's time without paying for it.” Hruska sighed, wept a little and fared on his way. 12-YEAR-OLD GIRL FIGHTS A BURGLAR UNTIL HELP COMES Then Her Brothers Made the Man Glad to See a Policeman. ‘TDwelve-year-old Loretta awoke before the rest of the family this morning, and as she was going through the connecting hallway toward the kitchen of her home at No, 10 Greenwich street to give her mother a unt surprise by starting the break- she saw an crouching in a Cuneen of the hall, Now Loretta, if freckled, t# spunky, and the sight of the man didn't frighten her a little bit. She jumped at him, catehing hold of his shoulders with her slim little hands and began yelling at the top of her voice for Clarence and John, her two husky young brothers, “shut. up,’ d the man. “Shut or I'l kill you.” B t all scared, “Clarence! John!" she screamed again. “Here's a burglar: The man sprang to his feet and caught Loretta by the throat, But Loretta is wiry and she wriggled out of his grasp, and her little hands shot up and began clawing at his face, The man turned ta!l and ran for the open window through which he had crawled into the Cuneen apartments. Loretta caught him by the coattails and planted her heels firmly, so that she acted as @ drag-welght for the fleeing burglar. By this time Loretta’s brothers, Clar- ence, who 1s @ law clerk, and John J., had piled out of bed. They ran through the hallway and caught Loretta's burg- lar just as he had turned on the gir! again and punched her in the face. The pair piled on top of the burglar then, and when they got through with him he hailed with delight the arrival of Detective Markey, who had been tele- phoned for from Police Headquarters. In the corner where the burglar was crouched when Loretta discovered him they found Clare best Sunday gutt, John J.'s fancy waistcoats and the fam: ily's pride, the gold and ormolu clock which had the place of honor In the parlor. 4 1 he years of and by Brandretits Entirely Vegetable The Very Best Laxative and Blood Tonic, For Constipation, Biliousness, Headache, D. Indivestion, &e., they have no equal iness, 17, 1911, GIRIL WHO SAVED GOWN BY RISKING LIFE AT A LURE. ~-BYFIREAND FALL TO SAVE A DRESS ae) ere | After Rescuing Mother, Sisters and Brother, Girl Ran Back ' Into Burning Room. After twice emcaping death, frst from fire and again wher she fell from @ third-story window ot her home In the tenement at No. 20 Wes, Sixty-seventh | street, May Murvhy, twenty-one years old, Is recovering to-day from severe but not dangerous injuries To the! & &irl's heroism her mothor, two siaters | and brother owe their lives, but her! own Injuries, including the loss of her beautiful hair, are due to her de to save her new dress from the flames. | Hundreds saw the girl's remarkable | double escape, and faces were turned | away when it was thought she would | be dashed to death. The Murphy family lve on the third| floor of the bu MOR PI i ‘ing 4 includ hi mother, Catherine, 1; Terresa, 12, and| VEN THE CATS ATTACK William, 14. The famtly had been to an| THE NIGHT GARBAGE MEN. excursion and returned home late last | night. q 7 ee aren : " 3, About an hour tater, May, who|50 Many Complaints That Edwards! occuples a room tn the rear, was a-) Investigates and Counts 235 wakened by smoke. She jumped out of bed and saw that the mattress was on fire, She rushed to the front room and aroused her two sisters and mother, and half carried the latter to the hall. Then May remembered her brother sleeping In a rear room and dashing through the blazing room she occupied she picked the boy up and earried him | out into the hail. on One Tour, The predatory mouser not only marring the al beauty of asheart men in the employ of the Street Clean- ing Department but also greatly handl- capping them In the work of night col- lection. Following the recetpt of numerous} complaints from his men, Commissioner ‘ .|Edwards made an Investigation, He vate Rane Hota thought of her new nted in one night's tour 2% midnignt white Aannel sult ang once more ran) yrowiers which leaped from garbage back Into the burning room, ans when the collectors approached. The sult was in flames and tn trying to rescue it her hair caught fire, The flames had cut off her escape to the hall and she was driven to the front of the building. She climbed out over the window aill and hung by her hands, ‘Don't jump!" cried a hundred votces, Several of the cats jumped on the shoul- ders of the men and scratched and bit them. work of night removal of ashes an { xarbage have reported sick, saying that | they we Ditten and scratched so verely by cats that they require me foal treatment. 80 that the work of his| ‘a ladder te comin department may no longer be hindered | For another moment she hung there, | ( | mmissioner Edwards {* plenning a| But the ladder was slow in coming. Her| crusade against night prowling cate, | srip loovened and she fell. | exec one gran per, "wom| EX-CHIEF CROKER WANTS WIFE’S ALIMONY CUT AGAIN. | Murphy owes her life. As she fell she struck the ledge, For an instance ahe Court Reserves Decision on a Mo-| tion to Reduce It From seemed to hang poised there. Slowly $200 to $100, her body turned and fell within the room. Patrolman Link of the West Sixty- eighth street station heard of her plight. | Covering his face with his helmet, he Fan up the stairs, broke open the door| Fdward F. former Chict of and carried out the unconscious girl.|the New York Fire Depart Her hair was completely burned off, her| peated to-day to Justice Glegerich In hande were frightfully burned and her|the supreme Court to reduce the all« feet were badly burned and bruised. | ne een an eet. Ceol Ske was taken to the home of friends) ee ee ne ane en tron eae) when she revived, rom whom hel s separated, from $3 to $10 per month, 1 the sup pn, & boy n This money goes t of the twe Croker of twelve and @ girl of to LEFT SMASHED AUTO, " i Originally the Court directed Croker Police Find Danges-up Machine! cay $000 a month to his wife He ted and the Appellate. Division ‘The Fast One Hundred and ‘Twenty. B AInCUAL: tO ee, Jpcatn Croker was Chief of the sixth street police are trying to pacnanit, and nastier a eae why a large, high-powered touring car, r. He says he now gets Nov 221%, N. Y., was abandoned early 00 a yenr, the amount of his this morning at the corner of Lenox| pension as a retired Fire Chief. avenue and One Hundred and Twenty-| Counsel for Mrs. Croker declared that sixth street. Pollceman Clerk observed the automobile standing at the corner| for upward of three hours. Then, | of the after making diligent inqulry tn the | which neighborhood, he had the abandoned | car hauled around to the station houne, where !t was found that it's rad was badly dented, and the buffer torn besides his pension from th city Croker is receiving a handsome Income as head new fire prevention convern nized, s lawyer dented he was making y at this time out of his new ent non the motion was re: Dee! rved Fully a score of men engaged in the| * Sat PARROT CUSSED Rot PIETY AND LOST (TS HOME — Deacon's Wile kes the City a Present of the Nasty Bird Down tn a wiodowless room, In aot tary Imprisonment in the cellar of the Arsenal tn Pork, i9 a large gray BI! Snyder, the ke and green , Is hie jailor. The parrot war taken to the Arsenal to-day by an elderly lady of Yonkers, who asked that he be eet In a souna- proof closet while she explained mat- ters to Mr. Snyder. She couldn't stand his vile taik even one minute longer. The bird was taken away and the laay explained. The parrot belonged, she 4, to her husband, a deacon in @ Yonkers church, She would rather not mention names. He came by the parrot through the will of @ friend of hls, « Colorado ranchman. With the parrot was $3,500 for Ite maintenance, Lora (thats her name), hadn’t been with us very long before he began to use awful language, such as I never supposed Christian human beings could bring themeelves to teach an innocent bird,” sald the woman, “Tt got worse * and worse until my husband sent the $3,000 back to tho estate and decided go chop off the parrot's head, But I wouldn't let him do that. It wan't the poor bird's fault, but the wicked cowboy who taught him. So I have brought him to you to see if you can cure him. If you can, the elty cam id he would try. Nite Trose CEYLON TEA 1 ' 5 IMMEDIATELY when you feel their need. If you have headaches | dizzy spells, or if print * blurs, you do need glasses, Eyes Examined "¢ By Registered Physicians, Oculists of Long Experience Pertect Fitting Glasses as Low as 92.90 QE hrlich Sons Oculists’ Opticians 5chSt. 217 B'dway, Aster House ast ie Nemes hes Se way, as if It had been in a colltston, y 24 until J bitterly opposing Dr. Wiley for many years, and would moved from office. The people have been eating these things for many THE WILEY CASE. The industries employing flourides, saccharin, alum, sulphurous acid, bensoie acid, benzoate of soda, sulphate of copper, coal-tar dyes and e' 496 Fulten St., Cor. Bond St. Breckiye. r flavors have been be delighted to see him re- and are eating them now, for they have no mezns of appreciating the gravity or the extent of food adulteration. menace to everything bad in the food world. “ANYTHING dere : only when the adulterator takes a chance by shipping his that the Federal Government can act. The present situation has inspired the following Leggett & Company to President Taft: |TO THE PRESIDENT, WHITE HOUSE, WASHINGTON, D. C.: could be committed than to inflict upon this pure food any unnecessary worry or sorrow. as invaluable to the nation. and they stand as living witness junnecessary and bad, is right. Jellies, Premier Ext cls, Premier Spices, Premier Olive we take this opportunity to declare our attitude toward | represents, | FRANCIS H. Leggett’s Premier Pure Food Products are absolutely free from all such drugs, ’s that Dr, Wiley’s contention that such drugs are In spite of the fact that Dr. Wiley is powerless to interfere with food adultera- tion when it is confined to the State of its origin, his honesty and his zeal are a constant Foods prepared in any State and not shipped outside of that State may contain so far as prosecution by the Federal Government is concerned. It is product into another State telegram from Francis B, We believe the conservative and honest food manufacturers of the United States are in sincere sympathy with the work of Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, and we believe that no greater act of injustice great champion of We hold him to b2 unimpeachable and incorruptibie, and we look upon his services LEGGETT & CO. Premier Canned Vegetables and Fruits, Premier Cereals, Premier Jams, Premier Oil, Premier Olives, Premier Sauces, Premier Coffee, ete., ete., represent Dr. Wiley’s ideals of unjuggied purity, and Dr. Wiley and the cause he FRANCIS H. LEGGETT & CO. Soesoees

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