The evening world. Newspaper, September 1, 1911, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

wes a \. STREET'S | ALIMONY CLUB REAL RES] a cing Most of dia Bilan Prisoners Go There to Escape Women’s Tongues, Warden Says. GOOD AS A S! Democracy Rules and All Men There Are Equal if Not Free. There are exactly nineteen members Of the “Alimony Clu Jail at present. & bers in good standing. Eight are hon- rary members, “in” for body execu- | ¢ tton, which Isn't anything gruesome Sut merely the result of bankruptcy. “The spirit of this whole institution is essentially democratic,” declared Warden Rock to-day comes in I make It perfectly clear to him that I treat every one alike. It Goesn't matter how well dressed he Is or how poor his appearance. ¢ “Upstairs he passes right into the | fame atmosphere. The boys fraternize perfectly. They spend the greater part | counties to make them Democratic is/death by his frenzied mount | 8 is evening many members of thelr day together, you know, and|aiso planned. The lines of Columbia,| The thrashings ¢ njured horse |Of the Legislature are expected, in ree they realize that kenerat sociability | Greene, Ulster and Schoharie Counties and Its whinnying att {several citi, | Sonse to Assemblyman “Al” ‘Smith's the Hime puee mast auickly and |imay he changed ta divide Republican }2ens and anotl n, who found | vitation Pe ete oh oe Bleasantly for everybody.” Is this place really the luxurious Te | gon River towns will not treat it has been represented?” was x ; It is not a Fifth avenue club. No! on, ses a valet. The prison- ire and arise at certain arly hours, The doors of thelr cells locked at night. Bach man must ¢ out his own room @aily. But, on the other hand, all wonable privileges are freely allowed. GAMES AND RACES TO KEEP MEN IN GOOD HEALTH. ‘in what way does the place differ | from an ordinary jail?” ‘Well, except for thepdaily cell cleans ng, our men are not compelled to work. | Then the cells are furnished comfort. | @bly with carpets and the ordinary fur- | aiture of a sleeping room. There ix a | large outdoor court, and 1 see to tt that everybody gets plenty of exercise. They run races, hurl quolts and pl handball. A good many now much about it when a but they are quite exp ‘Mey le: regular and t before a good library, and every= Dody enjoys the dally pay 1 fables and comfortable chairs, There Jenty of writing materials, and for the long evenings. Each his own pipe and tobacco, and smokes us much as he pleases, There ig an organ in the jail, and when a man | 4 be found to play It we ofter have | promptu concerts, | **But ever# one must get up promptly At 6.30 o'clock, That gives time for @ressing and a bath before breakfast, ich is served at S$. It consists of coffee and bread, Dinner is at 12 and varies from day to day, To-day We had corned beef and cabbage. Supper consists of tea and bread. 3 meals ares fand all lights be out by 10 hat isa truthful a Ludlow Jail,” added ti unt of life in warden. “You wee, we are not running an imitation . Regis. But I'll tell you one thing— Ife here ts healthful. Some of our men come in here all gone to pieces LIFE IN JAIL IS HEALTHFUL AS SANITARIUM., “Atyer they've lived here for a time. keeping regular hours, eating plain Wholesome food and taking plenty of physictan, {Wo assista.s one warden “But you fee,” hy went on “people don't rea'lae thay this - to be going twenty-four ho evens du We never have had any trouble with our prisoners, but we're taking no chances, » of those that | come here are held on criminal as well | as civil charges, and we ing everything powere “Why in you port his exit But ti FOR THE HOUSEKEEPER How 25c. Can Be Made to Save | ‘ Hundreds of Dollars T money to the be e economy is the spen' nt the no better usehold omy. than the purchase and use of Stearns Electric Rat and Roach Paste. A 25c box will often prevent the destruction of hundreds of dollars of property, by thoroughly exterm- inating the rats and mice which gnaw and ¢ urticles of value. It is also sui hh to cockroaches, waterbugs ané other vermin At all druggists. Be sure to get | und $1,00. Stearns’ the genuine; 25 te cago, I, Electric Paste Co, Chi and quit Junder $5,000 can come here for months and go out free oned only six months are all out of reach of their quondam [ wives’ tongues.” reigns in Ludlow Jail. New York to Get All, Except Half ture next week, the bill creating six new * In Ludlow street | Congresstonal districts in this city will even are club mem-| come up for action Aiatricts the city will have twenty-three ry Yongressmen. thing to It has been decided to abandon tho|¥8#ON as soon aw Mullen drew along! delight the five senses of shel ol plan to give Erte County one of the/#de . Palladino and Santora tried tol and many pleasant surprises for thetr | new districts, They have been appor- evade the policeman's questions, and he} elders. The usual prizes were awarded tioned aa follows: Two In Manhattan,| Whipped the ta 1 re-!the mothers of largest families, most | ‘one in Queens and ono|Vealed a load of tires and. automobite | ve t there “As soon asa man | two in Kings, partly In ‘The Bronx and partly in West- chester County many proposes to make however. the House of Ri cratic vote, | hrs ATE BREAKFAST AND LUNCH | Aviator Fourny, After New Non- an attempt to make @ new non-stop Mahe Fourny flew for 11 hours 23 minutes to-day, covering| covered is in ef 7 miles. breakfast and luncheon tn the alr. i ture of Chas, H. Fletcher when buying Castoria. "THE pale at WORLD, FR ‘POLICEMAN SURE Te FOLEY HOST supporting the wife who is no longer « wife, since a legal separa- tion or a divorce has divided her Lia husband, me of the members of neie wiven. women had MEN WHG SHUT HM ne, and the latter finally grew su You see a man owing alimony chree for the cest life, as it has bren decided that | Been in Hoepte More Than « ANNUAL PICNIC 15,000 East Side Kiddies Given “an be only one incarceration for | De ete or over can. De impris: | - Month Recovering From Bully Time by Second As- Meanwhile they sembly District Leader. | Standard O41 of New Jersey passed out } of existen sa trust stock yesterday, Jin accord with the Supreme Court | decision (iat it must divest itself of its | y comparites. | Guesses as to how much Standard Oil | | of New Jersey, stripped of these sub- | jsidiaries, was worth a share, ran all| $200 to $500, subsidiarie His Wound. In short, peace as well as democracy James Palladino and “ Luigi Santora,| Somewhere in the nelghborhood of | who aay they are funkmen, were held for] 15,000 chifldren, the bouys all armed | TAMMANY REACHES FOR the Grand Jury to-day by Magistrate| with deafening Un horns ond the girls SIX NEW CONGRESSMEN. |connotty in the Jamaica court, on a} flourishing Jittle American flags, — charge of being implicated in the shoot-| SWarmed out of the lower Kast Side | ing of Mounted Policeman James Mullen to-day and on July 22, Mullen, who was discharged from hospital yesterday, went to court on arm of a friend. He positively identified) the prisoners as among the trio who were in a Wagon he stopped on thi Flushing road and demanded to see what was being concealed und tarpaulin In it. One of the three Jumped out of the ong string of | are which bore / Foley's voarded @ Second avenue surface the) huge banners Ia e| Annual Plenic Trip after trip the forty sRectal cars hired by the genta! leader of the Sec- ond Assembly District made before the 39,00) or more men, women and children | | who wanted to reach the Harlem River | Park were all transported At the park there was eve of One to Westchester and Bronx—Mostly Bronx. With the reconvening of the Legisla- With the six new He reached forward to are) Wer one of them shot him, | fe ie with one | Ie frrup, This last district Tam. safe as a Demo- foot en ie the larger) other shot wounded th whipped up their horse and fled. Mullen in danger of being kicked to| ratic district, by lea in The Bronx. Radical rearrangement of leaders dropped, up State time during the after- Mullen dragging for help. A general alarm ca The present layout of Hud- ft along the road | Henie. TSI Te RaBy ot. <0 be disturbed, Irag-net t 0 i 1. A few ‘| COUNSEL WANTS BILL CUT IN SUIT AGAINST RECLUSE. Willlam 1. Hate, as counsel for Mrs. Jennie Perkins Williams, asked the irt in Brooklyn to-day to * for $1400 for expenses in- din having Mrs. Williams declared Mullen could leave Flushing Hospital, |{ncompetent, The request was referred where he was at the point of death for | to Justice Kelly. several weeks, The third member of the| Mrs, Williams {s the recluse who Hved band has not been located Prospect avenue. Tt was arged that she lived alone in a barri- with only a cat for a com- STOLEN “MONA LISA” FOUND, |<. WH only cat for a com 1S REPORT IN PARTS) | Pan en ara tunes ne boeee oa » Was supposed to be immensely rich, But Police Refuse to Confirm Ru-| and to have business dealings with big js * ~, nen in Wall street mor Persistently Circulated Cone ee eee eee ae nad only 85,90, cerning Painting. « consisting of $2,300 in cash, $1,500 in * 18, t. Lov | stoc! ks, and a house worth $1,500. In FARIS, Cop Persistent rumor | ine proceedings brought by those who that the stolen Mona Iisa has Seen re-|snoueht her rich, the expenses reached ulation here to-day, ne and her attorney iow wishes to Is positively refuse | hav | estate, t It ts also proposed to shift the Thirtt- | Thirty-firet and Thirty-third Con-! ai Districts now represented by| wight, Republican sentativer; kaw a Wagon which seription of that in which sailants rode, The det s,|at the point of his r nt and Santora, The | Wore tn business wick road, Ques FLYING IN AEROPLANE. Stop Flight Record, Remains in Air 11 Hours and 23 Minutes, VERSAILL Sept. L—In , France, for the Deutsch prize, aviator round the local aerodrome He ascended at 441 and ate| but the police o' to confirm it that sum pruned down to fit the The Danger of Imitations. An Ohio druggist writes to “ The Practical Druggist,” a prominent New York Drug Journal, as follows: “ Please furnish formula for Castoria, All the formulas I have worked with are either ineffective or disagreeable to administer.” To this “The Practical Druggist” replies: ‘We do not supply formulas for proprietary articles. We couldn't if we wanted to. His experience with imitative formulas is not surprising, but just what is to be expected. When Castoria is wanted, why not supply the genuine. If you make a substitute, it is not fair or right to label it Castoria. We can give you all sorts of laxative preparations for - Children, but not Castoria, and we think a mother who asks for Castoria would not -| feel kindly toward you if you gave her your own product under such a name.” No mother with a spark. of affection for her child will overlook the signa- Children Cry For ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. ANegetable Preparatlon fords. imitating the Food and! hal i mabe The Kind wen Rave, ees moaent and which has horn in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per= sonal supervision since its infancy, Allow no one to deceive you in this, All Counterfeits, Imitations and ** Just-as-good ”’ are but Experiments that trifle with and Are) the health of {o‘ants and Childrem—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oll, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syru; It is pleasant. It contains nelther Opium, Morphi en nor other Narcotic substance, Its age is its guarantee, It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relict of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Collo, all Tecthing Troubles ro Diarrhoa, It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep, The Children’s Panacca—The Mother's Eyiend, GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS BEARS the Signature of Opium Morphine nor Miaeral, NoT NARCOTIC. perfect Remedy for Consftpe tion, Sour Stonuc Diarrtwea Worms Convulsions.feverish nwss and Lossors SLEEP. PeeSimile Signarare of “ALO months old 35 Poses Shee ‘THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TY MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY, IDAY, BEPTEMBER 1, 1911. for handling the company, holdings of j the way tron [stocks of the to be distributed With “Trust” Out of Existence | Seiteuy, he 0 by Supreme Court Edict, Market Is Guessing of their worth. seanty. For the firat time In many years it, was almost impossible to buy or sell} Standard O11 stock to-day in the New all rights in subs On this basis st yesterday's figures, York market. No one had any idea done in the fore what this stock, which yesterday sold Standard Oil of at #4 a share, was worth. Even the | fis"! venturesome traders in the curb market, who usually are ready to make a price business was done. subsid the compa . No estimate tand issued a public report, which to form estimates of the kind 1s for any man who wants to buy or sell anything, were unable to reach a basis ares of the great oll and @ among An attempt was made to trade in the, old shares, attaching to the certificates agreements whereby the seller assigned | heen committed to thi faries to the buyer was quoted at a but no business t of the day in subsidiaries $00 a share was It | last night after trudging through the was all such obvious guesswork that no] soaking rain from Farmingdale. He had | orc. ee eee ea and the lowest offer was $450. to the | search of his mother, dropped insensible which are| from exhaustion at 1 o'clodk to-day on kholders 8 books could be made | OM has never | soaked litre figure and carried tt Into} and material on For w Jersey without | tiving there, though he had not heard | home he could find no one he knew or ‘ho knew his mother, nor could he learn when she had moved. Turning awa [he walked to the police station f |whelter, and his strength gave out ae up the step POLICE FIND FUGITIVE . BOY SENSELESS ON STOOP. Youngster Who Escaped From Trade | School Could Not Find His Mother. } Thirteen-year-old Richard Phillips, who escaped yesterday from the Nazareth Trade School at Farmingdale, L. 1, and| trudged twenty miles to Brooklyn in the steps of the Bedford avenue police station. Capt, Flood, \the storm who came out to see if was over, found the rain- the station-house. The boy was revived with hot coffee and a surgeon was sum- monea from tite Eastern District Hos- pital. He was stil! very weak and was taken to the hospital ‘The boy told Capt. GLENROY Big tie space “ARROW “lood that he had hool at Farm- ingdale four years ago following the tut | death of his father. He had been iiving then at No. 87 Gtand street, Brooklyn, and he thought his mother was still from her in months. He arrived there no food on the way. At his former Seturdes, Specie! 1.50 & 2.00 Sample Blue Flannel Shirts This Store Open All Day Saturday OTHE Saturday Special $3.50 German Sil- ver Mesh Bags at $1.98 AND CO AF AG we | al ns STREET Saturday Brings One of the Best Bargains “"We’ve Ever Sent Out: Girls’ $2 School Dresses at 88c Two of the models are pictured: Frocks, enabling thrifty mothers to dress the girls $6.98 Brings You a $12 to $15 Sample Silk Dress The Result of a Wonderful Pur- chase of Sample Dresses at Much. Less than Cost of Silks. [Cow | There are silk foulards, silk shantungs, silk taffetas, some handsome voll I] new 1914 Fall models, brimming with distinctiveness; finished like custom work; every dress has taped seams, dress shields; the sizes run from 32 to 44; the values from $12 to $15. On sale to-morrow all day at Pretty Felt Hats for Girls & Misses at 98c These hats at this price will createa furore; $1.98 would be the more natural price. As we buy so we sell. Fine French felt hats, several styles to select from; satin trimmings; some with vel- vet; in red, navy, brown, etc.; sale price, 98c Saturday’s Exceptional Offering: $8.00 Raincoats, 4.98 Here's an offer that every woman and miss should not let Ko by. We have secured from one of our manufacturers a lot of these coats at less than cost of material ‘trom which they are made, and are of- fering them to you at wholesale price. They are made from superior qual- ity double texture cloth in mannish style, loose fitting, plaid lining; guaran- teed shower proof: shown in tan only, These coats are selling at specialty stores for $8.00, put here Saturday only at 4,98 smartly at very little money. Come early, as there are lots of mothers who will be here. Handsome worsteds in all the popular plaids and checks in combinations of green, blue, red, brown, etc.; high necks and full length sleeves; full deep plaited skirts, button down back; all piped and trimmed in contrast-~ ing plain materials sizes 6 to 14; on sale to-morrow at....... Boys’ Women Will Welcome This wee off the Boys with a Great Sale: $3.50 Knicker School Suits 1 A) 8 at (including 2 Pair Pants) It's values like these that have made Boys’ Clothing. Neat suits—well made—of (goo fabrics. Made in a fine Norfolk style, with two Pp pants in sizes 7 to 12. Also double-breasted Suits, with two pair of knicker pants, in cassimere (dark effects), sizes 8 to 16 On sale Saturday all day. [AN OPPORTUNITY: substantial of knicker We closed out about 900 Boys’ $5 to $8 sample suits— which go on sale to-morrow all day at 2.98 and 3.98. Boys’$5 Knicker Suits at 2.98 | Boys’ $8 Knicker Suits at 3.9 Double breasted Knicker Double breasted Knicker Suits of neat mixtures, of all| Suits of all wool serge in plain wool fabrics; made with bot- cary and stripe effects; also tom facing and centre vents;| ¥0% cassimere, every suit all sizes from 8 to 17 years; made with bottom facing and oni centre vent; some with also Norfolk Suits, sizes 7 to ee ene ing; sizes 8 to 17 years; 12 years; actu- ally worth $5; 2 98 * special at e | actual value — 98 @ '——-MAIL ORDEES PROMPTLY rrrzen. ull Springing a Good One Early in These Men’s @ Youths’ $8 @ $10 Fall Suits at YOU can save almost half on your Fall Suit by getting it here to-morrow. Choice of wool, cassimeres, worsteds, blue and black Thibets; all the season's latest make; all sizes; no matter what your size is we can fit you. Salurday (open all day) at. ; Men’s and Young Men’s New | Men’ 8 92: 50 Dress Business Pants There are splendid serves, blue brown, gray, neat al cy or gray; 6 cheviots stripe worsted, black and fancy mixture blue; in all sizes; 38 to 50 waist d Iso stouts: Satur- 36 length; Satur day at. day at...... e | ars onpans Paowrtuy ZiELED _ Fall Suits $7.50 Sale of Satin and Velvet Pumps In all the latest new I shades: From the orders now in the hands of the manu- facturers, SATIN PUMPS will be more widely worn than any others this Fall. These satin pumps have the short vamp; there are also velvet pumps with high heels; perfect to 7; all Gun-metal value; sizes 5 to 8; on sale Saturday, 9 A, M, to 41 P.M, at fitting footwear with glen made braid bows; sizes all widths. sale price to-morrow ..++++ 4-Hour Feature ee and Boys’ Button and Lace Shces Like cut, at 2.00 Girls’ School Shoes Dongola kid, with dull up 1 0 e leather; good pers, stout soles) sizes 9 to 11 and 11% to ai on sale Saturday all day,, -a9C

Other pages from this issue: