The evening world. Newspaper, September 16, 1911, Page 6

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} ' : i GROUCH LANDS HC BERGEN ON THE SLND Keeps Up With | Neighbors and Must Serve Suspended Sentence. Quarrel WAS IN JAIL BEFORE. Departure of Eccentric Mem- ber of Old Family Makes Bay Ridge Peaceful. Many Inhabitants of Bay Ridce are] 4eeling relieved to-day because John C. Bergen, C. G., .nember of a family Nivetrious in America for three hundred | years, kin to the Schermerhorns and Astors, is going to spend a six months’ vacation as the guest of the city in the penitenUary’on Blackwell's I nd. The ©. G. after name means chronic grouch, and the title has been conferred vote of his neighbors. The chronslogy of Proves his right to it the social column when, through his lon to the Schermerhorns, he was y “He's a cousin of mine,” by unanimous life into his recent He broke merhorn to William Astor Col. John Jacob Astor. After years of trouble and “scrapping” with relatives and neighbors, which he hit real trouble. William C. d a woman also sault. He was found charged him with guilty on both charges in the Brooklyn si .MI Court of Special Sessions and went to{AN4 Turkish women, Shah-Mir Raymond Street Jali for three months on the woman's charge, sentence being sua- case. COULDN’T BE GOOD, MUST SERVE OLD SENVENCE. After his release from jail six months ago he remained quiet long enough to raise hope among his neighbors in the choice section of Bay Ridge that at the ‘age of sixty he had learned that it paid to behave. Of late complaints have piled up egeinst him, euch calling the neighbors bad names, thfeatening them and throwing stones at them. Police- men and probation officers found other eigns of relapse. Yesterday Mr. Cleary asked the Court to rescind the suspen- sion of sentence and impose the penalty. Most of Bergen's relatives are socially socigi conventi@ns and has shown his contempt for them in ways that have division by his grandfather of the family y estate, which comprised much of Bay feng he Ridge and New Utrecht, Bergen took his! +5 sell their goods in the bazaars.” “Tradition has made it harder for a woman to sell a yard of silk than for hare and lived alone in ® small house he built on Shore Road and Seventy- fifth street. This he tore down when he married and built a mansion on the alte, AND ABUSED HER, was eent to Raymond Street Jail, was that he stood on his own premises and shouted vile and opprobrious epithets at | Pestnes: ; class was to spend Friday night at Coney 8 career her. her, she being on her own porch, and LaLa pis Labbe ph Ae ron Island and that the meeting time would that he placed his hand to his hip pocket | Christians, But even among the! PO Friday night on the college campu a though to draw a revolver. That|Ghristian womer I doubt If what you) THe three, desirous of upholding the sort of thing happened with Cleary and det ip at YOU! Nonor of the new class, found the call here you ‘woman movement’ would other neighbors. ea ee TMC menna| campus all right and also a crowd of Bergen filed formal complaint with the] ¥ 4 ch Women| forty sophe who proceeded to Police Department about ten years ago OT Turkish Women Lead Americans Their fdeals, Not in Harem Skirt but in Using Bright Colors and Preserving Natu- ral Lines. “Eastern Sister Has) Never Had Hysteria of | the Leg o’ Mutton Sleeve —- Can’t Earn Her Own Living, Though. By Ethel Lloyd Patterson. ont they have each a personal pen for existing in a mannor that permits |*If they one to say of them that “they toll not,| “They'd be nonsense,” neither do they spin.” Of course you | him, are Koing to say thero have been chorus | more than once lod to the police court. fgisla and bank presidents who worked, | but if such there be these have long since been elther starred or striped. However, it that Aram Mourad Shah-Mir discoursed. plained, are very much adverse to any- thing which resembles an effort. “The main difference between American women and Turkish to- ay ie that the American woman believes it honorable to earn her ows living and the Turkish woman Delieves she is degraded by such @ course, just ae you are absorbing some of our ideas of artistic oul- ture, so we are absorbing some of your ideas of progress. But for us {t comes slowly. American women have always had an eye for the artistic lgveliness of the 014 ‘World. Turkish women have never had an eye for the enterprise of the Hew. Prominent, but he has always despised }TURKISH WOMAN “The foot of the Turkish woman has brought him into public notice for years| never been set where commerce pass: as @ Gisturber of the peace. With the|1t nas only been within the past three “It 1s the Mohommedan religion which WOMAN SAID HE THREATENED [nas kept women back in Turkey,” con-| tinued Ghah-Mir. ‘The complaint of Maric Itosecrans, his) hammedan {a forbidden to show even neighbor across the way, for which he| her face in the atreets. ily velled. Of course that procludes the, possibility of anything resembling a work, yes—but it cannot be denied that} ave ventured In! True Art of Dress, Says Ottoman Consul PN aenateel —_+— ) Adopting| Bustle” or the| An interview with Aram Mourad Shah- Mir, Imperial Otto- man Vice - Consul and acting Consul General for Turkey, convinced me of one thing. Plainly chorus girls, llles of the field, ana- condas, bank presi- dents and Turkish |Turkish women have always known | women have much | them.” tn common, = In ‘he difference between sense and short, it {8 appar. (Common pet I remarked And fortuna have both, y, American women )-Mir gallantly, was of Turkish women THREE “FRESHIES” HAZED, THEN SENT TO POLICE CELL New York College Students Arrested After Furnishing Sport for “Sophs.” ex: @hah-Mir said. “ot There are three freshmen of the Col- lege of the City of New York who this morning feel that they are getting more than their share of the prescribed cur- riculum. Not only were they hazed last night by their college mates, the sopho- mores, but the police themselves took @ |hand in the ceremontes and the three | unfortunate “fresht landed $n the Fast One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street station, a bullding in no way con- nected with the college domain, Morris Sthneider of No. 61 Tompkins avenue, Brooklyn; Donaldson Coombs, No, 308 Alexander avenue, and Joseph Diamond of No. 310 East Twenty-sev enth street are the unfortunate youths. A few days ago, they eald, they re- celved notice that the whole freshman HAS PLACE IN COMMERCE. NO that the merchants of my coun- to employ women ell her birthright," I commented. “The wife of a Mo- She goes heav-| TO BUILD BETTER FLATS ON OUTSIDE LINES OF SUBWAY School Registrations Show How Masses Are Moving Away from Manhattan. MUST HAVE MORE ROOM, Big Gains in Older Transit Zone Induce Operators to Open New Cheap Sites. School registration figures started new movements in suburban real es- tate this week. Operators have been studying the changes in school population as a sure index to the drift of hom ing masses. The increase of 20,000 pupils over the 1910 registration in- dicates an increase of 150,000 in gre er city population, because the @ ego ie @ little leas than one pupil for every seven persone. According to school figures the greatest Increase of population during the year has been in Brooklyn, The indicated gain 1s 65,000. Manhattan comes next with 41,400, The Bronx shows an increase of 37,700. Queens scores 19,100, Richmond has 2,600 more people. These totals are verified by recent estimates of the Health Department, which show that the greater city has gained 240,000 people since the Fed- eral census in April, 1910, nearly a year and a half ago. In the entire metropolitan dtetrict, which embraces all of the New York home suburbs, the school registration shows @ population increase for the year above 220,000, Sections just outside of the Greater City show the highest rate of increase in their history. BRONX AND BROOKLYN TAKE MASS OF FLAT-DWELLERS. Brooklyn and the Bronx have gained heavily in districts to be opened by pro- Jected rapid transit lines. Much of the Bronx sion. That of Brooklyn is largely in the Flatbush section. Practically all of the territory served by the old transit lines has been crowd- lation has convinced real estate operat- ors that the time ts ripe for a lively dis- counting of the new subways and they began to buy this week at many points. In both the Bronx and Brooklyn the new campaign is intended mainly for flathouse construction. Districts to be opened will be covered with flats before the subways can be completed. Ac- cording to present indications there will be population enough in the new ter- ritory to make traffic that will test the full capacity of the new subways as soon as they shall be ready for opera- tion. Most of the inorease in Brooklyn's school registration is a result of rowth in flathouge districts. Hundreds of families from Manhattan are mov- ing there because the flats are more roomy and there is lees congestion of people. In the Bronx, the main | growth has been of the SMALL-HOUSE BUILDERS RULE QUEENS GROWTH. Queens is gaining er in numbers than the other two la: boroughs, but with ch: decorate the i, grotesque cos- that seven officers had attacked him|they lose caste In thelr own country) tymes, impolite signe belle and other in the Coney Island Police Station and|¥ #9 doing. paraphernalia had beaten him. Inquiry brought out|BUT EVEN VICE-CONSUL ISN'T! "A procession was next the that he had been the assailant and the OVERWORKED. Jroute being down Broa¢ by combined fervices of seven were necded| But in spite of the fact that one half |the tlne Manhattan street was reached to subdue him. the population supports the other haif|the parade, augmented by citizens, had One of Bergen's merits is that helin the land whence Shah-Mir comes,|#Town to considerable size, Finally mever flaunted his wea! Tt is g never did I see urkish gentleman) Patrolman Flynn took a look in, and work how much he is worth. ‘There|who looked overworked, And Shah.| attested the "" the sophomores were many heirs in the partition of the| stir is no exception to my observations, NAVIN wisely, mingle’ wlth the trong. original est His share was believed | nouptiess he does spend some little time sedan eee however, and entertain to be about $500,000, consisting of real} on @ glossy beard and mustache thatthe freshmen with outside cheers, eatate in the Bay Ridge distri. - would cause the blood of a Mormon| ‘The prisoners protested at thelr ee prophet to turn to green paint with{arrest, claiming that the position had GERALDINE FARRAR CALLS [envy, ountiess he spends some ittle| been forced upon them, and that no HER FATHER TO PARIS,|time. more on finger nails that are | senalble freshunan would masquerade of *| marvelously oval and shining, And 1 bat hd anak vias pee Ce ial . belleve it ts customary for an acting |" ——————>_——_ Mother Operated On for Appendi-| consul-General to occasionally sfx 4 Hide \ituve to samethine. or| MORE TOADSTOOL VICTIMS itis There, and Case Serious, ~ other. She Cables Tut in the Condulate ofices at No. 59 Sidney Farrar, the fathor of Geraldine |Peari street, Shah-Mir lounges luxuri-| tp and Mra. Michael Lyons dled yes- Farrar, will sail fo 8 to-day on the| ously In a swivel chalr that stands on a Me thele Nome Kt HONIG Lae Ac George Washington, in response to a| Turkish r Y, from eating toadstools, cablegram from his daughter, in whi “You say we—that is, the women of they mistook for mushrooms. , he learned that Mrs. Farrar was oper-| America—are learning of art from the will be a double funeral to-day. ated upon for appe itis Thursday, | women of Turkey 1 remind deaths make a tota) of four from mee Serres and her mother were to} “J mean to aay that in thelr the same cause in that town, Mrs, have sailed for York on ] gerin Auguste Vic ja, While on Tuesday, but at the last Mra. Farrar was taken iI, and determined not to sail that tim however, her illness was not considered | serious, and it was only late Th that Mr. Farrar ha telling him bh had me to Mr. Farrar was in the Adirondacks arrived mor 8 daug with him, when the He hurriedly left for Ne Miss Farrar 1 America early this year, because she | c , tou READERS “S OF THE WORLD ff Going out of town for a va tion may have The World #e to them, and addr ften ai lorning World, 32 per World, Ge per wi ‘orld, Se per funday NeW YORK WOKLD | ui seal or & Kal-| tn thelr jewels the American women wore such enor- mous sleeves, had what you would call a ‘dress | Toudstools have killed reform,’ But while the Turkish | pi cons in South Norwalk thin fall, woman undoubtedly stood still - in the matter of dre yet the Aw- erfcan women, after returns to her, | EARNS TO FEAR CCLOR LESS; ESPECTE CONTOUR MORE. | You mean the Barem skirt” 1 said | ‘Borax lodineé Bra! de “ocstea™tone S Try It To-day Aine nt and her are each year tending jursday. They had eaten the polsom- + murentas Of line which 16 true ish In ‘the Lyons home. ah-Mir_ replied. | In Bridgeport, Conn. yesterday | “The women of Turkey, remem- De Filippo died from eating ber, have never passed through 5. His wife and daughter Rosa| any hystevin of dress such as your erously i | bustle period, or the time when the ard of Health at South Nor-| dstools a misde- of They have never | by a@ fine or a@ jal , punishable wide ciroult, NSON'S Foors Every kind of foot trouble is relieved by a single application, This is the time of year you need it for burning, smarting feet, corns, bunions or callous Johnson's Foot Soap, 200 Filth Av, N, Y, Turkish wo: 'e in women th be denied that cannot | IN VARIOUS LOCAL!TIES, young. daughter died make the picking two | it 1s running far ahead of them tn the |construction of homes compared with |the totals of other years. While the | Bronx outlay upon new structures for the year to date ts $11,500,000 under that of @ year ago and the Brooklyn expen- diture is nearly $3,000,000 behind the 1910 total, Queens is running $6,100,000 ahead of its best former figures. Queens construction is of the small |house type. Each new bullding houses only @ few persons compared with the big flats of Brooklyn and the Bronx. | But its rate of growth is faster, and | thts convinces operators that t 4- | vance tn its land values will be greater |in percentage than that in the more con- | Rested boroughs. | In the nearer sections of Queens, with- in reach of the new tunnel under the st Rb econd street and r at Fort 9 samme eee recente tie Alte THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 191f, KOLFF IS BUSY ON 36,600 ACRES IN RICHMOND. ee CorneLius G. Kourr As Secretary of the St Chamber of Commerce, alse real broker and auctioneer, he is covering the entire borough. P the bridge, several site lated this week by operators whe will Promote flathouse construction, They say that those localities are much near- er the Manhattan business centres than many parts of Hariem and the Bronx With the projected transit Ines com: leted, they expect to see such parts of eens the logical fleld for a big cam- ign of flat building. SOCIOLOGISTS ADMIT THAT FLATS ARE NECESSARY. Various civic associations that are warring upon congested conditions in Manhattan flathouse districts are friend- ‘0 the spread of population into the new suburban flats. They recognize that New York's immense population could never be housed entirely in small ‘dwellin, When the projected ye Ways are finished, population will hi increased to a volume large enough to er with flathouses practically all of the home territory opened by the new lines. The land will be needed for flats and seekers of smal! houses must 0 chee to the city limits or pase beyond them. As land ts cheaper urban flathouse territory on account of its freedom from business competition and the pressure of wealthier home- seekers, bullders of flats there can ford to put up capacious structures of only three or four stories with enough open space around them to insure plen- ty of light and air. Suoh homes are regarded with favor by the sociologists as the best solution of the congestion problem. They fore- ee the time when nearly all of the suburban territory covered by the city's rapid gransit lines must be de- voted to such houses in order to take care of the masses. Those who ‘make homes in amall private dwellings will use the trunk line railroads rather than the munic!pal rapid transit lines. STATEN ISLAND DEMANDS ‘A SUBWAY AT ONCE. Staten Islanders are rising to demand assurance of a subway at once. They say that city heads are seeking to de- velop Yonkers, Jamaica and any outly- ing suburbs rather than Richmond. En- gineer BE. E. Smith of the Brooklyn Fourth avenue subway says It would cost less than $6,000,000 to continue the tubes under the Narrows. “Staten Island could stand its share of assessments,” says Morton Wista Smith, whose family has owned realty there for several generations. ‘Think of the increase in values and the homes that could be bullt for people who are planning now to go to New Jersey, Long Imand, or anywhere but Richmond. The Mayor says he {s using all the city money and credit. Is Staten Island to get no good from it? “If Staten Istand gets thi tunnel more will ‘follow. We mu: and to- gether to get it now, not in the distant future, which we might not live to see. We want fair play. Then Richmond would have a phenomenal Increase in population and business. Its realty would have high value and a ready mar- ket, whereas now there Is no ‘property within fifty miles of City Hall which 1g 80 little in demand. Property bought by my father tn 1880 would not bring enough at auction to pay back purchase price, taxes and interest. “If Staten Islanders let this oppor- tunity slip by, when the city is using up its credit for years to come, then Richmond must remain a dead end of the city, as it Is to-day.” accumu- the new sub- died suddenly last night at Halifax, England. Mr. mother when she passed away. |Dereavement is likely to delay his re- turn to the United Sta a ~ Took Poison or Friend's Advice, sy ISK, Ol t= Kee tics t bated bid is peg and re Edward Rovde Fearn, twenty-one y-a huge lion tn a side show St! veary old, an advertising agent, who ithe State Fair late yesterday, Laura liveg at No, 1% Riverside Drive, died Presbyterian Church, New York City, Ome a eath nisl who gra aa..d in the spring, wishes to GIRL WIFE TRIES TO KILL HERSELF AND HUSBAND. “Jealous of Me, Although He Has No Reason,” So She Turns On the Gas. Joseph Darcole and nis wife Jennie, the latter only seventeen years old, were taken to the City Hospital from their home, No, 315 Fifteenth avenue, Newark, yesterday, both unconscious from gas. At the hospital tho girl-wife admitted that she had tried to end her own and band's life. “He was jealous of me, although he had fo reason,” Mrs. Darcole told the police The couple have lived in the hduse about two months. They were heard quarreling frequently. Both will re- cover, CLD IS SEED BY LONI CAE TERLY TORN Animal at State Fair Reached Through Bars and Fastened Claws in Girl’s Head. Burns, seven years of age, of Morris- ville, Hes so frightfully mangled at @ hospital that she may not recover. of ions were roped off with |clothesline so tha, spectators were not to get nearer than four or The little girl climbed under the rope barrier. The lion reached out in the Harlem Hospital late last night from bichloride of mercury polsoning | j ber screams rang through the tent. With his other paw he clawed at her and tried to draw her through the Attendants rushed to the child’ but the animal had her fast in his rasp. | ‘The screams of terror of the child at- tracted throngs to the tent. People crowded through the entrance and jammed against the cage. Attendants beat the lion with bars and prodded the infuriated animal until the child was released, When the little girl had been finatly freed {t was found that the lon had torn out one of her eyes, torn off an ear and lacerated her face and the upper part of her body. The great throng and the shouts of the crowd and attendants frightened the rest of the beasts confined in the tent. Keepers moved among them with loaded weapons, fearing that they might attempt to escape. A strong rd was placed about the show tent the girl had been taken to the hosp! d the crowds were kept at a di onmeneiiifommenames WEDS RIGHT AFTER DIVORCE. Once J. P. M jm Rene. Sept. 16.—Hardly had the ink upon his divorce decree become dry when William T. Stokes, formerly con- nected with the J. P. Morgan banking Company of New York as fourth clerk, peared at the County Clerk’s office re and applied for @ marriage license. He said he was a resident of Repo and was thirty-two years of age. He gave the name of his new wife as Miss Elizabeth 8. Van Arsdale, twenty-three years of age, @ resident of Plainfield, N. J, Less than forty-eight hours after he became free from Gertrude Stokes, whom he had married in 1902 and by whom he had a daughter, Stokes made another trial of marital bondage, for at noon at the parsonage of the Presbyterian church he wi married to his choice. who came across the continent to have thelr wed- ding take place in the State which granted his divorce. Stokes says they will make their fu- ture home in Reno, but other informants say the couple will immediately depart for New York City. + cess. establishment. you should request t prices elsewhere. wal and acute nephritis. sic at One Hundred and 1 street and Third avenue 4 anid friend. HORLICK’ MALTED MIL A Take no substitute, Ask for HO OF Others are imita Herald Square, 4 MACY’S STAFF OF SHOPPING GUIDES is an innovation which has met with gralifving suc- Its purpose is to furnish every assistance to customers who are shopping extensively and wish the advice of some one thoroughly acquainted with the merchandise and prices in anv branch of our Our Shopping Guides are intelligent, experienced: young women, who are variously qualified to assisl in the purchase of Kitchen Outfits, Hot Layettes, Mourning Oulfits, School Outfits, Trousseaux, costumes for the members oj a wedding party, &c. Whenever a momentous shopping tour needs the con- firmation of one pit ogee with values and the vogue, é atlendance of u Shopping Guide. Guides will be assigned on application at the Superintendent’s Desk on any floor. When a mourning outfit is required, and the customer cannot conveniently visil the store, a wrillen request will promptly be honored by the altendance of a Shopping Guide at home. A CHARGE ACCOUNT AT MACY'S} differs from the usual charge account run on credit, even as Macy prices differ from higher Combine the benefits of Macy prices—the low- est in town—with the facilities of a charge ac- count, by opening a deposit account. We allow you 4% interest (compounded quarterly) on your daily balance with us, so that your money is not lying idle. In Addition— A 2% dividend on the total amount of it Account Purchases for the year will be paid on or about December 10th. This is profit sharing pure and simpl Only accounts intended for purchasing purposes accepted. We de ne venking atom _ Fearn wa he had taken traighten up," on “Just Say” it Means Original and Genuine The Foodedrink for All Ages. is healthful than Tea or Co Rich milk, malted grain, powder form, quick lunch prepared in a Broadway, 34th to 36th St, furnishings, fii BOAT THEIR BRIDAL NEST. Members of the New Rochelle branch of the Y. M. C. A. discovered their for- mer physical director, Clare F, N. Schram, and his bride aboard # house- boat in Echo Bay, yesterday afternoon, The couple, belleved to be travelling in the West, had been on the boat several days and had hoped to remain undis- covered until they should take apart- ments in this city ..bout Oct. 1. Mrs. Schram was Miss Mazie Almira Porter of Sandusky, O., where ti ding took place Sept. 7. Mr. Schram re- signed Sept. 1 and left for his home in Oberlin, O. He intends to enter as a second-year stu the College of Phy- siclans and Surgeons, Columbia versity. ANNOUNCE, BEGINNING Dr, Jowett’s Mother Dead. | NEW HAVEN, Conn, Sept. i¢—Der- COATS, MILLINERY, FURS, LONDON, Sept. 16.—Mrs. Hannah | nara s, Tommers, Yale baseball pitcher dome Bae gene and all azound athlete, wa: actively en- CHILDREN’S GARMENTS, ETC., ETC. ged yesterday in driving a coal team through t! city streets, making deliv- ‘ eres for @ local company. Tommers, learn the coal business from the bot- tom up. 1! 3rd Ave. 2) 121st St. s Cowperthwait @ Sons Cash or Liberal Credit Everything for Housekeeping Park Row 4,602 meena 2, 539 nen Two Stores Acres of Floor Space Chatham Sq. STORE WILL REMAIN OPEN Open This Evening way 8 $ $ $ S$ @ show bargains HA BAG IOALEATS Be EN iT SINS ea B. Altman & Cn. THE OPENING OF THEIR AUTUMN FASHIONS, COMPRISING THE LATEST STYLES OF SUITS, DRESSES, COSTUMES, TEA GOWNS, WRAPS, ESPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO POPULAR GOODS | AT_VERY_ MODERATE. _PRICES. Avenne, 34th and 35th Streets, New York, Make Dollars Grow King Richard offered his kingdom for a heres, And so it goes all through life, Often a storekeeper will sell his business enterprise far ‘a song” when in need of ready money or because of ill health, etc. examination you will find that World “Business Opportunity” Ads, MONDAY, SEPT. 18th, MISSES AND DAILY UNTIL SIX P. M. ey AAAs that are BARGAINS,

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