The evening world. Newspaper, October 11, 1911, Page 4

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ee ee ee THE lt ids WORLD, WEDNESDAY, OOTOBER 11, 1911. BROADWAY PARTS [Rich iii s Wite, Parted From "| IN DEATH HOUSE WEALTHY LAWYER y AND SECOND Wire hearts Don't Sp Speak and Di- vorce Is Likely With $100,- 000 Seitlement for Her. eorice King’s Heir Couldn't | Settle Down With Dram- j atist Fyle’s Daughter. at @ married Now Yorker cannot the white lights of Broadway ar subdued glow of the home fireside uitaneousiy ia again evidenced in ee of George Young Rauchle, the m lawyer, and his beautiful w je Bauchies have separated and voree je among the prot ly because Mr. Bauchle could om Broadway and at home « time, and Broadway required ble of his attention The estrangement — b> uchle and his wife has rey A conference ts scheduled for | lay between George Gordon Tat nse! for Mrs. Bauchie, and co Mr. Bauchle. At this contere wyers will arrange a plan fee followed in making the sep: nent. » Bauohte, tt ts antictpa upon his wife a substantial ev bly $100,000 or more—and also mo wision for her maintenance and sup- | aside trom the settlement flo children by this marriage to licate the situation, although Mr uchle bas a daughter seven years old & former marriage. VE IN SAME APARTMENT, BUT DON'T SPEAK, Bauchles aro living in the same ent in the Walton, although they @ Not spoken to each other for weeks. . Bauchie refused to seo callers to- » Mr. Bauchle said he had decided to ho comment for publication about js marital troubles, Inferentially he mitted that his relations n his fe have reached a siage where recon- tion does not appear possible. rge Bauchle js thirty-three and a grandson of George Youns, je “Licorice Ki who left him a big tune. Besides what he inherited from grandfather, Mr. Bauchle has fallen to fortunes left by other relatives, iWhile he is @ high liver and is noted the White Light District for his tav- “expenditures in entertainments, he added to his fortune instead of de- jeting it. He is a good business man extremely lucky in his ventures 1901 Mr. Bauchle married Loulse Mon of Brooklyn. She died in 10% and in 197 he married Florence I’yles, Gems of Franklyn Fyles, tho play- Gaughter by the first mar- ere years ot caused the forty-elght boys of the) port in the action of Irving 14 Ernat, The boys marched In a body to Hamil | | y | is m re w wi Fi te BOYS ONASTRKE BANK MUST PA FOR TEAGHERIN BANKRUPT HOEKNG PAROCHAL SCHOOL BROKERS $229 74 Indignation over the sudden transfor thelr teacher another school Charles F. Rankruptey, this afternoon filed dia rex Rrown, Spectal Master tn to ting of 8t al at streets, Jersey City, to-day and walk out of the class School, era roo Mary's Pa-| Lindsay Russell and dfarford Third and rte | 4,1, to declare a strike | y J. Ware . trustees of the brokerage firm of | M. Fiske & Co, against the Mechan- | s' and Metals National Bank. He di- 5 « to pay to the trustees lass-rooim, ton Park and there they held a meet-! Weeks with her| ing, at which they firmly resolved not | coed, ko & Co., which jandn Mre./to return to the ¢lass-room untess| jad offices at N Wall street, went pn of No, i$ Putnam ave-|proner Malachy, on whose bebalf they | down In the He Poo! crash Jan. , Brookly had struc also returned. 19, 191 The bank Iesued that day to UNION WAS IDEAL FOR SOME! prothor Malachy had presided over) tie credit of the firm $40,0%, without TIME, the arnduating clanten for the last ag.| security, under the arrangement The mat of Mr. Bauchle and years, of man who kers hi with bankers for one day Miss Fyles joined two young people squarely into boyish hea He | loans I se & Co. | fond of the good things of life, widely | way with t fn thelr games, encour. | °°" Lac lalla (@mmaninted in theatrical and literary | aicq their athletic inclinations and | 1 yt, tenn and bohemian in their tastes. | “*°° ; i ae In Iris report them: asys the ared to be an ideai union, and | stood by the fellow wt n't Keep |pank must have secure ance In & time appearances did not deceive, | Pace WINE t lass, helping formation that the firm was Insolvent Inevitably the time came when Mr. | him over the rv Lees, coe! Jand that the 1s no wa Bauchle was called upon to se down | him and cheering him on so thet he |its loans of the day, for t eensiderably if he desired to ple his receive his diploma along with | notified its customers failure, wife. It te said by hin friends (nat he |t test pupils. {Frank ©. Roe, cashier nk, fe too full of Nifo and ener: When the boys walked Into the class= | yu Fiske — offices down. room to-day they found Brother Deklan | gra ain aight kad The unhappy family life of the pair [at tte desk. “hey have nothing agalns’ | yy been known to thelr friends for a Deklan, but they = want! pe trunte nded that the time, but hopes of a reconciliation Malachy. This was the ultl- | bank nad no use Its advance were held until yesterday, when Mra they se to the principal, | ynowledge to t iment of other | Bawohle learned that her husband jad | Brother Rar sed (0) creditors, and if tt could hold the asve| gent to three morning newspay regard the up rittes it obtained the day of the fatl- | vertisements stating that heres “They re w nothing for other would be responsible only for ue assu : : PMA GES tracted by himself. Mrs. Hau. and wh ; eae eye the Cah kos ried to tne office of George t canit help with them tn view | Battle, No. # Wall st loyalty to : | there at 6.0 o'clock last all be back Mr. Battle, after hea » wife's on as their | t demonstration from being aj story, got Into comin with Mr n hand and Bauchle and asked hi withdraw | cha i er Maymond explained — that | the advertisoments. Mr. Hau grant Y " ' an, Malachy had been transferred | #4 the request, but publicity had al uh ready been accompils on laectltinl CELEBRATION OF NEW JOB COSTS LABORER HIS LIFE. | Man Dies Suddenly of ‘Heart Fail ure Due to Acute Indi yestion After Feast. Albert Fay, a lab thirty-one Years old, of No, 306 § Fort th street, celebrated Just night because he had @ job after being o e.time. To-day he SOpporediy from heert £ agute Indigestion Wayunvited Mrs. Elizabeth beer, one 1 Jamb's tongue rye cheese, Fay went home with Mrs, Scdtockel an@ on the way they stopped at Tirty weventh street and Se dave to heve.@ drink. Fay got home afte mewhat Intoxicated and him, Early to-day he was taken ib and ‘told his wife he would a and go to a h fellito the floor, His w jeeman Green of the Mast Fi atl an station, who called Dr. Mi was wi hg to certity @xact cause of death Coroner berg, who was nou! ‘ boy taken M . Detec' ease failed to find anything suspicious, | In the Hot _ Summer Days i nothing seems to 50 quite “touch the spot” as Pabst BlueRibbon The Beer of Quality it 13 20 cool and refreshing. The delicate tonic tang of the hops, without an excessive bitter, whets the appetite and adds zest to the meal. Order a case today, Dealers Everywhere “a McGrath brought from Sing Sing to-day Grath had been In the death-house since fon- in the degree murder. ./ ZO MONTHS, GETS QUT ON APPEAL li aad tenced on Original Convic- tion in Second Degree. ‘The most pleased man in the Tombs) was Me- Kaward oF, MeCrath, who ruary 28, 190, when he was ed on a charge of murder firat degree. MeGrath, ander in the second degree, At the quest of his lawyer, this conviction an wot aside by Justice Goff and he an retried and convicted of murder in the firet degree. Robert J. Hare, MoGri counsel, He will be sentenced ‘riday by Justice Goff on the second de- gree conviction. For tRe first time in twenty months McGrath wore a pair of #hoes, Men {n the death house do not wear them. He ‘as one of fourteen awaiting death at SingSing. McGrath ts fat, having gained flesh during his sojourn in the shadow of the chatr, sce Iaughs, and talks In- restingly of his experiences in death house, — | WOMAN KILLED IN WRECK OF HOT SPRINGS SPECIAL. LITTLE KOCK, Ark., Oct. Is Ordered Resen-| who killed Renjamin Rose on Labor Day, 19, was twice tried. His firet trial resulted in a conviction of the didn't care a--well-a—well—anyway, they didn’t care anything about human life; only about property loss. So we jdidn't pay any attention to fire insure ’ lance companies. We let ‘em alone and all we asked was to have them let us | | atone, | The Public Safety Commis pointed by the Governor and [4s @ result of the loss of 143 lives in the Asche building, came down with an un- | eepectes Jump on the Siate Labor De- partment at to-day's hearing in the Clty Hall. Assistant Factory Inspector Henry . 80 r ti | Waldo Tells Nate Pi Public Safety | L. Schnur had been on the stand all Board He Steered Clear n@ Which {t did do in the protection Jot factory workers. ‘ “Under the authority of this Commts- of Them. fi aid Abram I. Eikus, counsel for mittee, “I direct you te summon pie the Commission by t ie inspectors who forenoon, He had told of many things which the bureau @d not do and of before necessary lon the Ascho building in the week pre- |ceding the disastrous fire then and tite Police Comminsioner Waldo, who was) | formerly Fire Commissioner, outlined the necessities for fire protection in| thelr order of !mortance at the hearing of the Public Sxfety Commission at the City Hall this afternon, H's outtine of the most !mportant needs were: 1, Cleantiness, ellminating inflammable rubbish. 2. Relinbdle rapid alarms, 3, Eixtingulshors ‘quickly reached by @ trained corps of employer. 4 Proper escapes, elther by towers,” separated from buliding: by fireproof walls—“fire bulkhead: 5. Laws preventing overlneurance, inspectors have reported within | the Inst few weeks on the condition of |the ‘human hair factories’ with regard Leo- to the fithy condition of whica Mi nora O'Reilly testified before this tulasion late yesterday afternoon, In her testimony 3 Opey, who lon mi ae last Saturday afternoon, ATE INSPECTORS KEPT BUSY took an appeal and the Court of Appeals AT CLERICAL ‘WORK. fet aside the conviction of first degree | Walch encourages arson, murter oh Oct 2 and sald he mould not| Mr. Waldo agreed with former Chiot| Jt was the obvious Mite May Drotet have been convicted of more than second | Croker that the Fire Commitsstoner Samuel Gompers wero the on ought to have power to clo | and ue pe 0 only @ building | ra in attendance through the peremptorily !f !t were used In a way! of the day) to ww that the which he deemed unsafe. Tha Board of administration of the State Labor Health and the Building Department, the Commissioner sald, could close bulld- Ings on account of violations of the rules | ot thetr departments; why not the Fire Commissioner? With regard to the Asch building fire! Mr. Waldo said Department {ts perfunctory and clerical and not in the toast intelligently @: tematic, Mr. Elkus in his questto tried to put the whole responstbility on the shoulders of the Staite Commis- sioner of Labor John Williams. Tho inspector at the Asch Bullding before the disaster of last spring was “Tt had the legal supply of fire-escapes.| Elvert I. Harmon of Hooslc Falls, N. But I belleve that if all the people in| ¥. The name of the inspector respons). that place had reached the fire-escapes| D¢ for the reports on the human hair (and 1 was Fire Commissioner at the| factories was not known to the wit: ‘4 2 + ut his presence was promised for time) it would have been a matter of houra and not of minutes to get them | 11,—Mre fa asked’ Mr. iikue of snspected out safe! s rt. Etku inspector | Wilitam I, Kilpatrick of Hot Springs “Many. ‘so-called ‘exita,’" aald Mr. Schnur. . m [wan killed and several other passen-} wardo, “end into blind alleys, ‘They| "About once a year,” replied the wit; Island Ratlroad was derajled while ap- | "fuses for sate |make? A. They have a lot of clerical Proaching the Malvern station thir “When I was F Commissioner," said) work to do; a lot of blanks to fill ont. f.ronoon. A number of passengers re-| Mr. Waldo in answer to a question by| Q. Ie there any reason why @ flying eeled minor injuries Mr, Elkus as to the Insurance Trust,| squadron of quick, intelligent, observant ‘we found that fire insurance compantés | m: should not be kept moving through ory districts on the lookout for vio~ lations—making no technical reports but notifying the main office when con- ditions require the more technical in Q. Would much a system make it pos sible to Inspect so called “suspicious shops" elght of ten times a year Instead of only once--without an increase of force? A. Y Q. Why Isn't it done? A. It's a matter for the Commissioner's discretion. illo CLS SPHINX CLUB TALKS A LOT. Norman Mack, Chairman of the Dem- ocratic National Committee, was one of the guests of honor inst evening at the meeting of the Sphinx Club, com- pored of advertising men, held at the Waldort Astoria, Augustus Thomas Was another witty speaker. William Berri was tonstmaster. It was announced at the dinner that tgation? A. No. f | the prize of $2,000, offered by the Rice Hlectrical Display Company, had been won by Roy L. McCardell for providing the greatest number of ideas to be used vertising. It was 4 that 250,000 stions were r 'y Park, TRENTON, N. J., Oct. 11.—After @ light which ‘has lasted ten years, As- |bury Park to-day won out against the roads in the matter of having trains stopped at the main etation at that re- sort on Sundays, The Public Utilities jon to-day issued an otder, to take effect Sor. ou Cut This Out Recine that Breaks a Cold ine Day and Cures Any Curable Courh. “Mix half ounce of Concentrated Pine compound and two ounces of glyceri with half a pint of good whisk well and use in doses of on teaspoonful time.” maller doses to according to age. Any one can mix this. But be sure to get only the genuine (Globe) Concentrated Pine. Fach half ounce bottle comes in a sealed tin screw-top case. not hi he will mixtures are of cheaper, but it is to experi This formula comes from a reliable doctor and is certain. One of our prigcipal uptown druggists states that he sells these ingredients constantly during the winter and that he has scen this mixture work wonders in curing the severest kind of a cough and od in short order. He advises that it be kept on hand at all times in every family.—Advt. White Bread Eaters Beri-beri! What’s That? A recent press dispatch from Paris to the New York American quotes Thomas A. Edison as saying, that in France: “They (the French) do not unbalance the wheat for the sake of appearance, but retain the gluten + qualities in an extraordinary way. I think that most of the indigestion ig America comes from the de- sire to make bread look pretty, and in so doing, unbalancing the wheat, taking from it qualities most essential to nutrition and health. “It has been found in countries where that dreaded disease known as beri-beri flourishes (Beri-beri is a fatal disease attacking the nerves and nerve centres) that in the process of polishing and whitening rice, elements are taken from the food that, if allowed to remain and be fed to patients suffering from the disease, actuall ly cures them.” In the making of white flour, the vital elements of the hard, outer coat of the wheat are ‘thrown away,” Né@ one can (Diastase, Potash, Li transform or digest starch and make it useful for the body. because they darken the flour. “beat” Old Mother Nature. ime, etc.) up under the outer shell. Diastase is the el gray matter in the nerve cells. In the making of Grape-Nuts these brain- and nerve-building elements are purposely preserved, among them the valuable Phos- phate of Potash (grown in the grain), the essential tissue salt-of all gray nerve matter. Nerve starvation is a natural result. She places in wheat and barley certain elements ement which helps to The Potash goes to rebuild the For growing children, for men and women who work with body and brain, there is_no better food than Grape-Nuts. Grape-Nuts contains all the meat of the wheat and barley from which it is made. A dish of Grape-Nuts and cream is the cereal part of the daily morning meal of hundreds of thousands of people all over the world, “There’s a Reason” POSTUM CEREAL COMPANY, LIMITED, BATTLE CREEK, MICH, rk of a slower and | Any Home in New York Can Afforda Meister Piano Try It In Your Home 30 Days Free of Cost and See What You Thinkof It The question of sale will not be discussed until the month’s free trial is over. The sale depends upon how the has behaved—what on it has created in your it a 1k your 1 Raa rich is—to let yc w how sple is built and attuned, we pro; send it to your home for a th y t arces. well we couldn't h unless we were cer- no's effect upon you— ain of its rauial ity and class. WE SELL DIRECT FROM OUR FACTORY TU YOU, and the money that would be wasted in extra profits if we sold through dealers {s saved to you. We save you beyond question from $100 to $230 on these truments, EIGHT FINE GRADES TO CHOOS: FROM RANGING IN PRICE from $175 to $350. We will send the one you like on the "hits ied above. Our terms of sale, if you d 2 to buy after the month ts up, are: No Cash Payment Down No Interest, No Extras Piano Stool and Cover Free Sold Under Rothschild&Co.’s5ond We Fay the Freight to Points Outside the City Prices $175 to $350 We pay the freight, no matter where you live. THE MEISTER PIANO CO. (Rothschild & Co, ‘Sole Owners, Chicago, Ill.) EASTERN BRANCH, NEW YORK CITY CLARENDON BUILDING, CORNER 16TH ST. & 4th av. ‘Tel. Stuyvesant 3: Tako Blevator to Tenth WE FURNISH HOMES COMPLETE: SEs2M re ATEFOB COrocere ATH 7498 S CoHRtre ATH24%8 CREDIT TERMS 932° DOWN ON # $0, WORTH] $50° DOWN ON # 75, WORTH 975° DOWN ON #100.WORTH OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS 267 W125 "STs BAY. Invite Yourself much to hire know are Anxious to Work The very best way, then, to reach the employers of New York and SHOW them you are ambitious, ENERGETIC and ANXIOUS to render good service, is to Use a ‘Situation Wanted” Ad. The Morning or Sunday World. Such an ad. will cost but. fr “42-words-for-a-quarter” up, ye Invite Yourself in This Way to the Position You Seek and Your Chances Are Best That You Will Be a Welcomed Guest, Bmployers those whom they prefer

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