The evening world. Newspaper, August 11, 1911, Page 12

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OPENS NEW BATES Record Gathering in Early Morning at Doors of | Coney Pavilion. VETERAN HEADS LINE. “Strong Arm” Police on Hand to Foil Threat of Rowdyism. | ‘That the new manicipal bath at Coney | Taland, built and equipped through the— ‘forts of The Evening World, will soon | be taxed to its capacity was made plain within an hour after the opening this| morning at 8 o'clock. During the first tWo hours more than 200 men and boys entered the ocean by way of the mew) vath house. ‘That wae n greater number than used all the other bath houses on the Coney Teland beach combined in the time men- tloned. In fact, few of the private bath | houses are open for the general run of trade before 9 o'clock in the morning. At 11 o'clock the rush was starting. | All (hat stood in the way at that hour | of a record breaking Coney Isiand bath- Everything worked smoothly as though the bathing pavilion had been Inder the direction of Supt. Charles Sackmann the at- tendants performed theit duties with the sion and speed of experience. From mdications bathers can be handled much more rapidly in the mu-| nicipai pavilion than in any other bath- house at Coney Island, VETERAN GETS FIRST TICKET AND 1S FIRST IN WATER. William H. Hale, an elderly man, superintendent of the public baths and comfort stations of the Borough of Brooklyn, was at the head of the line when the municipal baths opened. He got the first ticket and was first in the vcean, All the bathers in the early hours peared to be id to pay the nom! tee of ten cents, It was decided to im- fee, not for the production of but for the purpose of order and dincipline. The experience of Bos- tom ‘and other cities which maintain munteipal bath houses has been that the ten-cent fee is a factor in insuring the comfort of patrons and the preser- vation of the property of the city. ‘A new and long needed official of the bathing beach of Coney Island ap- peared at -ho municipal bath in the person of Clarence A. Smith, one of who might be called| it is his duty do not wear CHICKEN SCRAMBLE BRINGS THE POLICE TOEAST SDEFIRE Children Made Dash for Sal-} vage When 500°Fowl Were Released. ‘artin Handy and his gallant chased chicken to-day when a mob of 200 children on tho east side| sought to make a fire that released 500 feathered victims from thelr cages in fesh color.. bathing trunks or jackets! the poultry establishment of Samuel or offensive apparel of any kind, Two Frankfarter. men with bathing sults the reverse of/ Some one dropped a cigarette in a modest were refused admission to the| pile of shavings in the lumber yard beach. They went back to the office/ of 1. Marx & Sons, which takes up and were returned thelr dimes. most of & bounded by Delancey, Only the men's section of the pavilion | Rivington, Yompkins and Mangin was open to-da; The section for) streets. In a few minutes th lumber women and girls will be opened in a| yard was on fire in fine sh Cedi few days. The labor troubles seriously | worth $4, to th delayed work on this section, Litue | flames fore the high pressure sys boys may be taken by their fathers or |t¢™ made short work of what proms brothers to the men's tion and |'#ed to be a disastrous aftair, dreseed.. On beach they will el pause emporium owned by | farter was on the Delancey at under the care of a special attendant, | side of the block. When the lumber Sere Codearine. Cover. | smoke filled the chicken ranch the em. QPECIAL ATTENDANT TO TAKE Dlovees ran for their lives, leaving al | CARE OF CHILDREN. hs 0 00RS OF The chickens fol- | lowed the employ A ‘When the baths are in full swing Mrs, | mob of children gathered to watch the Onser and a corps of ansistants will de- | “re. vote themselves exclusively to children, |, They saw the cloud of feathers com- |ing through the alr and i c d dropped the and the municipal beach will be free! pursuit of knowledge cone Ht ry fre aded par- |fignting for the pursult of the ckens, joking, foal chil-| Somebody telephoned Capt, Handy dren into the ocean at the risk of per- | tha’ riot was in progress and that manent injury to the health of their| chickens were at the bottom of tho +» Mrs. Osser knows how to/ trouble. He manned a patrol wason children to overcome timidity | with his reserves and went to the or fright arising from the sight of the | rescue. rolling surt. | He found that the streets were filled ‘With the attention to detail that has| with children and chickens. ‘he pollce- all the an ents for|men started to corral the 5 fowl. of four | When they completed the roundup and was on hand.| went back to clean off the chicken feathers the police had missed nearly one hundred of the birds, and us many pots along the east side were boiling Fifteen girls who employed on the fourth floor of han Summer- beaches and all have records of lives saved. saver, looking Jack McMonigie, the chief life was on his elevated stand over- the hundreds of beach front when the first bath: ran into the grade's feather bed factory made an water, At ir designated stations | orderly descent by fire-escapes, over the were Thomas F. Molloy, Arthur F.| protest of a nt male employee who Medwede and Arthur O'Nedll. It ts the| was trying to dewign of the municipal authoritles to| escape with a make the city's beach the safest along the Atlantic coast. SDA SORSEARANS: PAK Commissions Waldo had a sumcten: | MISS MOISANT WILL Geiger that tight arise. There. wae| TAY FOR AERO LICENSE. a reason for an extra police detail Word had reached the authorities that |Girl Makes Splendid Showing in nterested persons planned to invade NGC ARATAY the bathhouse on the opening day with Mandlin > Mon ) t crowd of rowdles and thus seek to Hempstead diseredit the project at the start. In- cluded the police detall were some Mise Matt) M tf s members of the “strong arm" squad, | fully this 1 n 1 ———- that she wil WORKMEN SCALDED IN Sormarse REPAIRING A BOILER. Thought It Was Empty, but Steam Suddenly Rained or ney, de Them with Molsant mony 1 ne @ painfully sealded tn ars ee eee ot tne nied rut MOTORMAN IS ARRESTED. Company's steamer apa to-day Set MISCA The TR clceinan cn suortly after the ship arrived from ye tyanburg ave Jamaica, The men, Jose Bernandine, , Jean Resales and Nicholas Machude, all of No, 504 West Twenty-fourth street, were hired to remove a plate from the vottom of e of boilers, Th He blow-cock to allow the , sf, but as no wa ved the boiler to be eut the plate mu gave way ig water poured e workmen. They were the face and body, hey were taken to Hudson Street Hos- pile Goncussion of the brain we’ a INTERIOR. EVENING WORLD, ¥ BIG CROWD TAKES ‘New Coney Bath Opened, First Bathez, FLUNGEWHENCITY Interior of Pavilion and Life Savers on Guard GIANT DERRICK FALLS INTO RIVER; WORKMEN ESCAPE Hoist at Work Under Bridge Springs Leak and Cap- sizes in Water. A giant derrick which had been used in constructing new strengthening pll- ars at the Brooklyn end of the Will- nsburg Hridge flopped over in the st Piver near the foot of South Fifth street early to-day and three workmen barely had time to jump for their lives. The derrick, which 1s owned by the Arthur MeMullen Contracting Company, No. 100 Broadway, sprung a leak last night after its crew had spent the day | putting in a new “tower leg” at the | bridge end and three workmen were. as- signed to remain at the pumps all night. It was planned to mend the leak with steel reinforcement to-day, but the derrick Msted more and more, and about 5 o'clock this morning John Downing, the watchman at the dock, | yelled to the men at the pumps to » ashore at once. ning Was not a second too Iwo of the workmen managed to scramble onto the pier, but the third chances. He ran to the edge Th took ter A second or two after the watchman's shout the big derrick trembled and then heaved completely over with a great groaning of timbers, Its capacity is about ) tons, and the great cran wi tends seventy feet above th | wa scraped one of a of using to the elty © al report from the Depart- [ment of ridges merely states that Ar O'Keot appointed Bridge Commis- the dock as soon as he apelmng. no of the deck and Jumped out as far as he could Into the river, from which he | fished out uninjured a few minutes Columbus United for the tion Tombs. ot $100, investors. jto the usual gathering of tired, ps y lressed women who come to see their | Sepa aaah 8 English Soft Roll Suits in the Ww | her iw ts and his associates, attorney, and W. selling agent, from serving’ their prison | sentences will be made by the applica- tion of their counsel for an order to stay the execution pending appeal on a writ of certiorari, This was learned to-day after of Bourke Cockran’s office, had a long consulta- with the three prisoners in the defense, of Appeals denied their appeal must serve three years in t prison and pay | must serve two years and pay a fine, of $50) and Tompkins must go to Black- | well’s Island for a year The using the mails in a scheme to defraud usual, 26, and genery marriage, is a | When the two young w |eWerly prisoner to-day they both burst 5c, each WIRELESS WILSON MAKES LAST TRY TDESCAPE PRISON Rich Stock Swindlers Seek Stay of Sentence—Wife Vis- its President in Tombs A final attempt to save Christopher | tt all Wilson, Wireless Telegraph President of the Oompany, Francis X. Butler, W. Tompkins, stock W. D. What seemed to be the ultimate blow day when the New York Circuit Court a fine of $500; trio was convicted Wilson's young wife and his grown | visited him in the prison to- | been to see him nearly every day since his convic- ly are the first where their good looks and tylish clothes make a strong con ‘They have 88 preside © before me girl men met the The GLENROY ARROW COLLAR Specially designed to avoid all the bothers. There’s ample ‘space for the cravat to slide in and to tie in, ‘The handy Ara- Notchand the snap-on back and front buttonholes make it easy to put on and take off, 2 for 25c. vly & Company, Troy, N.Y. a further Cushman a lawyer 1, Wilson { Atlanta Butler | and pay a fine | of ographer A needs wma at naan MAZORP es into -tears and fluag themselves upon him, overwhelming him with thelr ca- resses, At the earliest the prisoners will not have to start thelr sentences for ten days, as the marshal will not receive the mandate of the court eariler. ‘sonsoreseneiliiienntioene STOLE $175,000 AND HIS VICTIM LAUGHED. Picturesque Negro Thief Tells Story to Wondering Sleuths at Headquarters. Alfred Lexdale, a@ negro arrayed in vivid raiment and possessed of a vivid imagination, was lined up for the in- spection of the Central Office detectives at Headquarters to-day. Lexdale, who {s forty-nine years old, is known in po- lce circles in various parts of the world as “The Black F-ince.” Ifeuts. McKenna, Cain and Cray picked him up last night at Forty-sec- ond street and Eighth avenue on gen- eral principles. Few of the young sieuths in the Bureau have ever him, He was released after th looked him over tives at arter his Hning up, “I stole $175,000 from a | bookmaker in Australia, I took the |money and made book myself, I lost Two months later I told the bookmaker about tt. He only laughed.” Georges Price Sua Aa /2 Sale SPECIAL! Mohair Suits Priestley Cravenctted.) $10 and $12 The ideal summer eervice suit, in smart servative Built on and will hol shape. All sizes. 4 Silk Lined Serge Suits For Highest Class Dressers Regularly $30—NOW. . $15.00 In light Velours, no ahoulder- ci padding . ’ 25 $15.00 And 80 On Now up To The $7.50 iighost-Friowd $45.00 Now $22.59 Evenings for Your Con- venlence. 44 West 34th St. Between Broadway & Sth Avo. W YORK, RoOSsTON, 14416 Sumner St! PROV B00 West aang eatin BIDAY, ATGUST 191f-; if TAFT AT HIS SUMMER HOME FOR A WEEK END VISIT. President Arrives at Beverly in Time for Breakfast With His Family. BEVERLY, Mass, Aug. 10.—Prest- dent Taft arrived at Beverly early to- | day for his third week-ena may at Pi |matta, the new summer White Hou He arrived here in time to breakfast with his family. ‘The President came from Washington on the Federal Express. He was ac- companied as fav as Boston by a dele- ration from Congress to the funeral of |tho late Senator William P. Frye at Lewiston, Me. President Taft left the Sav NFANT MORTALITY all the children born \Vegetable PreparationforAs. imitating the peta ting the Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digestion Cheetfit ness and Rest,Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mine lOT NARCOTIC. We ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. FacSimile Signarure of 35 Doses 35 CENTS] PSP Yaeeadeteas or P Saree Congressional party at the South Sta- tion, Boston, and motored with Major Butt, his military aide, up the North Shore to Parmatta. Although it early sev dred persons were in the South station ‘waiting to catch a glimpse of the Presi- dent. away the crowd cheered heartily. The motor trip ‘from Boston tc the new ‘Taft cottage was made in an hour, Shortly after breakfast the President and Major Butte motored to the Myopla Ag he and Major Butte motored | haan Lioness SS La SD CHILD RUN DOWN BY AUTO. Doctor's Machine Fatality Harte Four-Year-0la Hoy. An automobile owned and driven by Dr. Paul Dolan, of No, 3703 Willard ave n Robert Helse. nue, the Bronx, ran do fou 14, of No. ast One Hun= dred and Twenty-third street, at Madt~ son avenue afd One Hundred and Twen~ ty-third street lagt evening. Dr. Dolem | brought the child to Harlem Hospital. links and started a game of golf. d Lawyer Dies, | where Dr. Ritter Ug LY ipo a frace C., Aug. 1L.—Fleet Rose | tuged 1 and could not Hive. ine years old and counsel| Witnesses saiq that Dr, Dolan was a not driving fast and that the boy starte: to run across Madison avenue without pausing to avold several automobiles and a street car that were approaching. for the Company, died suddenly of heart ure in the Superior Courtroom y day. Atlantic Coast Line Ratlroad e the Babies. is something frightful, We can hardly realize that of in civilized countries, twentytwo per cont, or nearly one-quarter, die before they reach one year} thirtyseven per cent, or mgro than one-third, before they are five, and one-half before they are fifteen! We do not hesitate to say that a timely uso of Oastoria would save a ma~ jority of these precious lives, Neither do we hesitate to say that many of these | infantile deaths are occasioned by the use of narcotic preparations. Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children’s complaints contain more or less opium, or morphine, They aro, in considerable quantities, deadly poisons, In any quantity they stupefy, retard circulation and lead to congestions, sickness, death. operates exactly the reverse, but you must sce that it bears the signature of Chas. H, Fletcher. Castoria causes the blood to circulate properly, opens the pores of the skin and allays fever. astoria. Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. A. F. Peeler, of St. Louts, Mo., sa: I have prescribed your Castor!® {nm many cases and have a! s found it an efficient and speedy remedy.’ Dr. Fred D. Rogers, of Chicago, TIl., saya: T have found Fletch Castoria very useful in the treatment of children’s complaints. Dr. William C. Bloomer, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: In my practice I a glad to recommend your Castoria, knowing it is perfectly harmless and alwa: tisfactory. Dr. B. Down, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: “I have prescribed your Cas«- toria in my practice for many years with great satisfaction to myself and benefit to my patients.” Dr. Edward Parrish, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: “I have used your Cas- torla in my own household with good results, and have advised several patients to use it for its mild laxative effect and freedom from harm.” Dr. J. B. Elliott, of New York City, says: “Having during the past sfx years proscribed your Castoria for infantile stomach disorders, I quem heartily commend its use. The formula contains nothing deleterious to the most delicate of children.” Dr. C. G. Sprague, of Omaha, Neb. says: “Your Castoria is an ideal medicine for children, and I frequently prescribe it. While I do not advo cate the indiscriminate use of proprietary medicines, yet Castoria is ou exception for conditions which arise in the care of children.” Dr. J. A. Parker, of Kansas City, Mo., says: “Your Castoria holds ther esteem of the medical profession in a manner held by no other proprie~ tary preparation. It is a sure and-reliable medicine for infants and chil- dren. In fact, it is the universal household remedy for infantile ailments.” Dr. H. F. Merrill, of Augusta, Mc., says: “Castoria is one of the very finest and most remarkable remedies for infants and children. In my opinion your Castoria hag saved thousands from an carly grave. [I can furnish hundreds of testimonials from this locality as to its efficiency and merits.” cenuing CASTORIA atways Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK Orry, Out To-Day! for FREE distribution at the World’s Main Office and all Branch Offices— The WORLD'S FALL RENTING GUIDE TO NEW YORK CITY'S High-Class Apartment Houses * In every way the most complete book of its kind ever printed. Presenting Illustrations and Detailed Descriptions of 200 High-Class Multi-Family Structures. Take a Copy Home With You To-night or send 5 cents for postage and a copy will be mailed to you forthwith, Address: “RENTING GUIDE DEPT..” °°™ sew vor crlDING. vt | | -

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