The evening world. Newspaper, October 17, 1911, Page 4

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)

rt saeafedisieleeerseiaren ener agian: maieilit me op SARIS NIL i mE oe Lt HAMA WONTIET ¢ f€ anything had refreshed Mr. Dack in the apartment. ad ber shoulder. me out of here,” insisted the volce. Want to square myself with the news- fon, “and put that ice poultice on yu Julian was not at home, she closed tho interview. BILLON’S CHUM STUDYING AT , @ friend, Chudby Braden, cratic traditions of Yale by keeping two Qutomodiles at New Haven and studing Seeldlogy on Broadway as many nights along as a witness. penterdi ~ and hands, but Warren ew HIM OUT TO TELL IFRE'S Min i) Perhaps He Is if chee it Hubby and Perhaps Not— | He Doesn’t Know. .STORY OF A JOY RIDE. i} Young Dillon Has Head on| Ice, and Show Girl Has “Gone West.” Toung Julian 8. Dillon is not at his father's apartments at the Belnord, Broadway and Wighty-sixth street, to- day—thet is he is not there for publi- cation. According to @ telegram sent to a newspaper in this city from New Haven, signed with Mr. Dillon's name he was married there yesterday to Miss Sue Young, a gir) of the chorus of the “Kiss ‘Walts.” Miss Young is quoted av say- ing the report ts p: ature. Mr. Dillon, eoconiing to one ecquaintance, sald ast night he did not know whether he was Married or not ani he did not even re- Member sending the telegram. When’ an Evening World reporter called at the Belnord to-day to learn Dillon's mother came to the door nly that her son wi piped up a voice from “Ie that a ro- “Keep quiet,” called Mrs, Dillon over “No, mother, unlock the door and tet “You go back to bed," sald Mrs. Dil- r ‘Then, repeating firmly that her son YALE AND ON BROADWAY. , Dillon, who is eighteen years old. has who is at t in the Demo- ® week as they wil! bring him here. ‘With Dillon and Miss Young friend, Miss Bibel Russell they had supper junday might and then some mor Der at the Madrid. Out of the suppers e the suggestion that Braden take ion and Miss Young to New Haven | to be martied and that Miss Russell go | According :0 advices from New Haven the party appeared in New Haven in the early morning and had police whis Blowing all over town on account ceding from the home of mint jer efter minister, justice of the pei etter justice of «he peace, The youths ig elivered the young women at ¢ Hotel Davenport and wen: them- Salven to Rraden's room on Yate 4’am- pus. pny returned to New York late Miss Bue Young lives at the Hotel Van Cortlandt. She left word at the desk there to-day to tell all callers for in- ation that she had “gone West.” YOUNG HAS HAD OTHER RICH YOUNG ADMIRERS. | Mise Young has been no stranger to| the ardent admiration of very young e@cions of wealthy families, Up to a Bhort time ago she lived with a girl named Ethel Grace in an apartment at| No. 214 West One Hundred and Ninth atreet. Among their callers were the son of one of the leading bankers of the city gné@ @ youthful chum bearing one of the oldest names in the aristocracy, | These lads were Yale students and! | elaine between » Haven and New ‘ork in an automobile. One of the youths was called “Muggsy" by Miss Young, to whom he was devoted. He confided one day that his father's new and young wife had cut down his allowance and after that he wasn't ween around the One Hundred and Ninth etreet apartment 0 often. —— WOMEN IN PANIC IN CAR AS CRASH KILLS HORSES. | More than fifty women became rickgn in a Madison avenue car er & collision whic and Madison avenue when Edward War- | Ten of No. 27 Kast Thirty-ninth street tried to cross in front of a northbound | ear. Motorman Alfred Bude able to check the speed of the struck the front of t force that the two h. and dragged ten feet by t The front vestibule of mashed and the sound of falling glass caused the women to rush to tho rear, Drepared to jump off. Only the prompt Betion of the conductor, who hastily ad the doors, saved many from in- motorman was ut about the face 4 injury. Dr. R. H. Kingston, a veterinary of No M9 East Forty-second street, shot the ‘berees. ——<-—_— STOLE BIG BOOK ON “CRIME” There was a touch of irony tn the ease of John M. Simpson, accused In Adane Bireet Police Court, Brooklyn, nook ft It is tue pro- , the eminent erimin- (s sixty-four years od. was & proof reader, he says, In Hoo! @eP and Albany before he became to @i2 to hold down the job. He came to New York, was unsuccessful in iinding stole the book because he | tought {t would be easy to sell, man was held on $00 bal) for soouser ie & woman detec- Riordan. Miss Waugh Identifies Young Giant as Assailant’ —_— (Continued from First Page). roved arout room until they rested on the giant figure of Brach, standing sullen and angry at the foot of the bed. The girl screamed and threw herself back on the bed, attempting to cover her eyes with her hands as though to shut out the vision of the man she had a | ust Been. “God has never betrayed me," cried the girl, who hee been praying from the night of her attack with all the fervor of a religious nature, for the power to the man who attacked sure as there is a God in that is the man who attacked me The girl's dramatic {dentifoation shocked her hearers and completely un nerved her. Brach was led from the room while Dr. Livingstone and Mra. Waugh strove ven, to quiet the girl. she became calmer and Prach was again led in Miss Waugh had Welt with such force on the huge hands of her assailant that the detectives were anxious that she should be certain in her identification With Brach at the bedside a second time Miss Waugh was asked to look agal m and to touct hand She reached out her own hands and her grasp fell on Brach’s right hand, on the third finger of which he wears a heavy signet ring, An tnatant Miss Waugis fingers strayed over his band, then she said distinctly "Il know absolutely thts t# the man I would know those arma and shoulder anywhere and 1 would kn: Look at those hi miataken in them? See that ring, marks are on my face now.” BECOMES HYSTERICAL AS SHE POINTS TO RING. ok at it," she erled wildly, polnting tte JAKES HOME BAKING EASY THE EVEN Showgirl With Youth on Joy Ride At the ring. “I know this is the man,” 4nd became hysterical again, Breach was take from the Waugh home to the Fort Hamilton police tlon, and from there to Brooklyn Headquarters, where Acting Ci Coughlin put him through a searching examination, He stolidiy protested his innocence, saying he was a roofer employed by George Morch, tinsmith, of 3} 308 Lawrence street, Flatbush, The police wot in touch with Morch, who said that Brach did not work Jast Wednesday. The detectives were led to suspect Brach because of the antack on Alma Sopano. Detectives Geisler and Cou- tant, who had worked on the Sopano ease, Were struck with the sim: tween it and the Waugh case gested that Brach be w hed. HUNTED FCR THREE DAYS FOR SUSPEC Efforts had been m to locate Brach for three days the detectives s: but without avail, Ho lives at 131 | Din y-eixth street with b's parents and | an elder brother, Deiectives | Henne, Dwyer, Gelsier and Van Wag- her were assigned to arrest Brach, and him for four hour saw 0 the doorway of his home Herma ast eventn Brach 1s more than six feet tall and is massively built. He is more than & mateh for one policeman, as the pos llce records show, and wien he stepped Into his ho ing office elves upon him, There was a sharp struggle, but Brach was d, though he fought des- Tt was with ei Moulty that he deufted, his wrists being almost z for the es Hirach ts char acked last August, 1s a nt girl no from Finland six years ag pow |made her way to a neighbor's hous lin A A TROT RA, MON ING WORLD, she anid today. “last April T was employed by Mrs. Baker, at Greenwich, August 20, and it was nearly midnight when I was coming home. IT had | walked from the car to the house and big man grabbed me. Firat he struck me a violent nlow between the eves and staggered me, Then he put his band over my month and got me by the | throat T yelled.‘ will do “Don't ki me,’ anything :f you spare my life.’ | THREE BRUTES ATTACKED HER NEAR SIDEWALK. “Two other men came long and the three dragged me down the up the sireet to @ vacant there was high grass. They tore the clothing from my body, They took turns holding me and beating me, 1 could hear persons pausing in the not far from me, but I could not mal them hear, “They kept me unttl 2.90 in the morn- ing. Then they beat me with their fists fo that my face was all swollen and my eyes were closed and black. Then they took my hat, my dreas and my pocket- book, containing @ dollar, and ran Jaway, after binding me #o I could not move and putting a “When I managed lone, | met a night watchman and told him about the case, and he watched until T got In the house,” y2h* gIFl reported the caso to the po. | ice. on the street and pointed him out as one of the gang who attacked her. Braoh got away, but five days later was arrested. Magistrate Reynolda held him without bail, but he was released on the order of Judge Dike on a bond of $1,000, for which his mother, Emily Brach, pledged a house at Twelfth ave- nue and Thirty-sixth street, which she said {8 worth $10,000. Brach is No. 3,700 in the Brooklyn po- lice gallery. niiceiaatilinanmerts STEPMOTHER HELD IN $500 FOR BEATING LITTLE GIRL. Thirteen-Year-Old Mildred Marcello | Says She Had to Do All Housework. A thirteen-year-old girl, who looked to be not more than nine, appeared in Fifth Avenue Police Court, Brooklyn, to-day, as complainant against her step- Nate MEET. Conn, 1 came to No, 1169 Thirty-elghth street, Brooklyn, to visit some friends. | We went to a ball on the night of | Waa preparing to open the door when a) Shortly afterward she saw Brach | ‘CARRIED A JAG TO MALN-LAW'S Mrs. Rainforth Calls Hubby’s Conduct Shocking and Asks Separation. Ta it cruelty and ground for a sepa- ration !f a husband comes home late and inebriated on the night when plans had been made for a surprise party to his mother-in-law? Is it extreme cruel- ty for @ husband to refuse to take his wife to see his mother-in-law when his mother-in-law is ji? Mra. Martha Rainforth thinks so. Sie entered sult for separation against her husband, James Warren Rainforth, business at No. 25 Waverly place, Man- {hattan, on those grounds to-day. Mrs. Rainforth lives at No. 414 Grove street, Brooklyn, and suit was brought in the Kings Coypty Supreme Court. It appears from the ellegations in the papers‘ that every time anything hap: pened to Mrs. Rainforth’s mother, Mr Rainforth came home showing the ef- fects of stopping by the wayside at in- tervals, He started for his place of business on Sept. 16, his wife says, hasn't come back yet. Justice Garretson allowed her $12 a , pending the wlal of asinine AVIATOR R ROBINSON STARTS | ON HYDROPLANE JCURNEY, Favorable First Flight Made From Minneapolis in Machine Equipped for Water Landing. mother, Mrs. Marie Marcelle, thirty-five years old, of No, 816 Seventy-second street. The girl, Mildred Marcelle, showed Magistrate Hylan a right arm still black and blue from a beating she sald administered more than ten 5 fared, “Marcelle 18 practically a sav- She has er becn to school. her father's second marriage, she she has been out of the house only on errands. Her stepmother bore five as to do all the housework, Her hour ing was § o'clock {n the morning get her father's breakfast, and she ly went to ‘bed before 10 o'clock at t. girl had been beaten, sneaked out she says, she of her father's home and This proved to be the home of Charles Blood, an officer in the & P. C. C. He took the little girl in and the next day over to the Children's Bocie- ty and investigated. According to Blood, the child told the truth as to ber tr ment Magistrate Hylan held Mrs. Marcelle $590 bail for trial in the Court of Spe- clad Sessions. ©. By to-morrow she'll change her mind.” Newest models and lar,est Light Biscuit Delicious Cake Dainty Pastries Fine Puddings Flaky Crusts The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar FINAL REDUCTI A loose swagger garment in Olive shades; all sizes. Smart jexclusive stripes. Tan, | Brown. Value as high as $40...... Ladies’ Raincoats Mannish Effect, made of Rain- Proof pialeriaus Light and Dark $7.50 | Value RAINCOAT 872 Broadway, Cor, 18th st, hildren to her father and she says sho | had to take care of all of them as well | $7.50 Value........ uare and Raglan shoulders, MINNEAPOL! Oct. 17, — Aviator | Hugh Robinson started on ) apolis to New Orleans fligh M. today. ‘The weather was ideal for the start. He e in his hydroplane frmo Lake Calhoun to about 1.000 feet and headed over Lake’ street east to the river, He will follow the river to New Orleans. gh! At midnight on Oct. 4, after aa | = f Higity relish 1 with Tadao} | ol Prene. bevel plate > ot, y wood knobs RAINCOATS OVERCOATS POLO AND ENGLISH COATS FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CII DREN EVERYTHING CUT TO Half and Lower We vacate our 6th Avenue Store Oct. sist Must dispose of all merohaneisa before date mentioned. range of maferials in New York, Smarts Coats for all occasions, rain or shine. ONS IN PRICES START TO-MORROW AT 8 A. M. Men’s and Women’s English Coats. Tan, Gray and 3.50 | Men’s a:d Women’s Fall Coats styles in cloth fabrics plain and Black, Gray, 12.50 Children’s Raincapes Made of Silk Satine, Rubber Line! ed, Plaid Hood, in Tan, Blue, Redf Green and Brown. $6.00 | Value About 100 Women’s Waterproof Canes isp 50 PLYMOUTH COMPANY wa" 212-214 Sixth Ave., BEB Que door trom Cor, 14th Bt. and| of her! TUESDAY, OCTOBER 17, | SURPRISE PARTY cUte ROST covered cooling pipes in the brewery keep the temperature just right, day and night, for aging PALE RIPE RHEINGOLD Beer brewed by S. Lieb- mann’s Sons, Brooklyn. Sold everywhere. In Greater New York, $10 case of 24 bottles. Straight Inner Line Last For Women (with Coward Extension Heel) EAKNESS in the foot structure causes falling arch and “flat-foot” condi- tions, The helpful, scientific sup- port of th.s Coward Shoe, re- lieves’ and remedies these prevalent foot ailments, A shoe so sensible, bene- ficial and efficient, that orthopedic surgeons accept it as the correct shoe, and recom- mend its we ring. 1 \ Coward Arch Support Shoe and Coward Extension Heel have been made by James 8. Coward, in his Custom De- partment for over 30 years. SOLD NOWHERE ELSE JAMES S. COWARD 264-274 Greenwich St., N. ¥. NEAD WALGEN HTREET) ‘Mail Orders Filled | Sead tor Catalogue tiow Long Are You Going to Continue Coughing and Weakening Your ¢ System? No Need of It, When You (an Make a« Pint of Laxative Curacive Cough Syrup Cheapiy. The only way to cure a chronic Or acute cold on the lungs, sore 1) bronchitis, etc., is to get & and congestion respon- for the cough (which te only ® symptom of inflammation) and then proceed to restore the blovd and membranes to @ healthy state. A fine laxative, curative cough syrup, which will delight any one it, can be made at home Tt beat it Goes not sicken or conatipa’ Obtain of your druggist, or have him order from the wholesaler, 34% ounces esnence Mentho - laxene, Empty it into @ pint bottie, Then make a eyrup with“a pint of gran- ulated sugar and a half pint of boiling water, put on fire and let it come to @ boll, Then cool and fi) up pint bottle, and you will agree with the writer that it makes the finest, quickest, active cough syrup you have ever tried, And It not only reileves, but cures, The dose !s @ teaspoonful ® to 10 times daily, or, as required, Give children less, according to as ———————————————— Within » stone's throw of New York City fe 8 haunted butldine vet! the city's employ have re- bi there bas be able to answer tees Men’s Fall Suits For ball game or business,dress wear or every day wear, you will find here just the suit you want. And you can be certain of the absolute integrity of the farua Because into every garment goes only the st of materials, trimmings and tailorwork, and the priceless experience of fifty years, devoted to the mak- ing of good clothes only The Hackett, Car- $ hart Special Suit at ae tad Meats far oeak cae 1911, exclusive weavi and col- t The‘most wonderful suit in the city at anywhere near this Pp To be had in the sea- son's popular fabri and blue shades. orings. Th ish and Z ( fitting qualit uits are such as you expect to find in garments usually much higher priced. The Hackett, Car- $ hart Special Suit at ‘ young men. A that si Extra values in Men’s Suits at Presenting a wide range ey Fall, suit gives our men how and to sell f pleasure to wear, bi Jusive pattern and sterling serv ett, Carhart 25 suit is to be had in the new redwood browns, new grayish blues and new golden tans. 265 Broadway Near Chambers St. 119 West 42d St. 125th Street Near Broadway Near 3d Avenue. Harlem anc 42d Street Stores Open Evenings 841 Eroadway { 128% 13th St i g LA GRECQUE CORSET Advance season's models from our factory 4 | to you—smart styles fitted by expert ‘ i corsetieres at reasonable prices $3.50 to $25.00 VAN ORDEN CORSET CO. 45 West 34th Strect (Upstairs—Take Elevator) rh ’ Pt MRRERERFERNEEASKK KES KERR E SERERE ERE FENNEL Retablished Nearly Malf @ Century. Homes Furnished Compieie of" TERMS TO SUIT cnebt! Everything in Furniture Every piece of Furniture sotd is guaranteed as to quality and ice. 1 or nearly 50 years we are known as sellers of HIGH-CLASS PURNIFURE A] TONY RRIGES,. stores and inspect the re .arkable values we give for the money.” It will be time well spent. LAIN FIGURES ALL GOODS MARKED IN P LAIN FIGURE Furniture Stores , WE FURNISI HOMES COMPLE |GEO. FENNELL & CO, 2209 3rd Av., Bet. 120 & 121 Sts. Furniture, Rues, Bedding Bronx Store 3d Av. & 149th St. ; Reduces Living milk Brought to you by the most perfect delivery service in the world. BORDEN’S Country -Bottled HE Sunday World’s Want Directory makes more “Offers of Positions” tian any in the universe, other two mediums

Other pages from this issue: