The evening world. Newspaper, December 14, 1911, Page 4

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, desired to ignore the time honored tr THE EVENI NG WORLD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1911, « Tr Revenge of Yerkes’ Protegee' ANTHONY DREXEL MYSTERIOUS NOTE who lived in the stable, had vamahed, | leaving his dog locked in the offfee in- seventh street will be held of to-mot~ row afternoon and evening at the Pla @ ar Annual Fair for the benefit of joka j . the Manhattan Working Girls’ Club and pry idols. aserdwlats tee Che : oy Toh ‘Deuter Gt | wien Kindergarden, No. 440 Kast Fifty: mas gifts at the different bootie. Is Sale of Art Treasures | he ae fact na 1 | sne@ to the lapel of his coat was! 1 soled note which read: : | ' , i had a fight with some one. He ce 99) tng to make trouble with me Nn ouseo ystery | N He was trying to kill me. He tried | | ty take the horses from the stable i because they are trying to steal them | COomebiiel rota Peet Pgs) Wha ken iavilen Cansei dig katie nia | | You can't make a fool of me. 1 am hang over the banistera of the. ha an Italian but is trying to do what oe Freshman Class Calls Off the fay, and she will never come back to the United States again. She has deen stairway landings there Is little to the attention of one wh been fattened on the things below. senses have w Cable Vessel Through | ‘Contradictory Statements Made} ', Pi#ht with you. Mut can't do what you want. 1 am good enough z Harris eyeglaee service is partes y of . ., . . to give you satisfy.’ + Entertainment Scheduled | she, itm coun ttn eno | the up! 14] Porthole and Shivered When | a8 to the Identity of | 9 sve eau sauatrn nN ; tain circle which was glad to have her |ory. ‘This floor his arched. overhead D: . the Victi by the vanished watchman it might ot-| Expert Oculists examine your eyes. Experienced for Saturday. beauty and her Joyourness and her re: timbers like the celling of an ancient anger Was Passed. miele Yatcemss Darweale sould peiline mal Opticians adjust the glasses ‘a sources to keap it revolving. re | Vincenzo re pould neither read Z ; . When Mile. Dussaud, the governess of}, 1? the very middie of the tong room roy write even in his native tongue. the housenold of Queen Mary, was of. (between the pine orgary and the studiol Anthony J. Drexet ar. reached New| The doors of George Welss's stabie at| He could not speak Kngitsh Jet alone | Aceuracy is the Keynote of the Harris establishment. », IS AGAINST TRADITIONS. Window at the southern end, un i i] +} cially rcolfed for introducing Mise | dozen: dozens of cheap phot« | York on the Oceanic to-day on his an-|the foot of Kast ith street were) WEN Me Your eyes are examined by an Oculist (registered phy- Grigsby into intimate relations with the |whioh hang in frames of rea nual “vieit home.” He started on the| opened upon a mysterious crime to-day! ye snd mo effort had. heen ‘ten el sician) skilled in his profession by years of experience anu po aod Le sang od nd oe oneuiy’ tome be em on ge ne ol M. igs! Olympic two weeks ago, but was re-lwhen a body a! firat supposed to belbrenk into the oifice where tie wate wan | by thousands of searching eye examinations. Only Time Male Persons Are|sebe vho knew Miss Grigsby turned | purple stoot of velve i the cated from Sautiampton to London by | that of Vincenzo Dargenio, a young, The stable door was unlocked when Jo Skilled, practical Opticians adjust the frames de is bett tisfled WP santana alec. Aap ahd Shag La joyed In th yeleph Weiss, a son of the : roprietor, Among Amoricans who artificially adopt tor, had been stricken with append! found just inside the threshold, The) vocnon with which t nknown man detail, the prescription written by the Harris Sratiee: zaar Is in Progress, & manufactured British standard. IMPRESSION OF THE “HOUSE OF Ask the cicerone what it is and she will tell you that it was a souvenir tis and was to be operated upon at once. ‘The operation’ was complet | body was that of a man who had been Young Wales telled Policeman atager- | The lenses are ground with a care and skill that can slain with a butcher's cleaver from MYSTERY.” given to Mies Grigsby by the late King successful and the fi y WAS BI Dehind, After the body had been iden-| Kal, Who summoned Dr, Marcial trom | only be fittingly described by the word “Perfection. \Et @ mouse of abnormal proportions gloomy haw Edward of Hagiand, § oer prakel nad wisaned to attend to( tied by Wolss.as that of his watch-| we, Heception Hospital The | aurgeon | The glasses you buy at the Optical House of M. H. / fed been set loose in the crowded as- dospite ite ey We OE eo that ft WAS, bie business affairs here in time to|™@m% Giuseppl Dargenio, a brother of| Shout five houre dead) Harris are Guaranteed to give you complete and lasting sembly room at the Normal College in ome ge be sadwit = th'od Lonel sail for London again with his wife on | the watchman, dented the identification ra satisfaction, whether they cost $2.00 or more. | a Mizty-cighth street, between Lexington in the East One Hundred and Fourth chi-Houwr Bill Up te Tuesday. He will now sail on the! phen ; 7 athe dette 3 amd Park avenues, to-day it couldn't | Wt" ashes of roses. In spite of ai ths Lusitania to be in time to have Christ- | Street Station. Later at the Harlem| “WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.—The wil 64 East 23rd St, nese Foes Ave? ave created any roore excitement shan | e9cadeat luxury of the shallow mansion, mas dinner with his wife and thelr | Morgue Alvento Agora of First avenue| enforcing an eight-hour day for labor- Spricar Dwouse & 27 West 4th St,, bet. 6thandéth Aves, 414 the rumor that the freshmen clans, | Jorters and critics, sestarday” afternoon children tn London. and One Hundred and Nint fre and mechanics on any contract tet G4 Went 126th St, near Lenox Ave, @f which Miss Edna Jacobs is President, |there war a sickening feeling which oD wpe bead ET large hell A a ce the ‘House by ‘Representative’ Wilson Fe Nantra Se star tone 80 emocr cP Sylvania), who an- oe from a collision with the cable steamer| k Aa data Nel * Gitions of the institution and give a|#tim detectives who guamied it opensd Stackag Bennett, The catle ably was tn | Maes Dargenio said ae Lik geal nounced his intention to push it 1009 Broadwa: Be BIS od Bklya was twenty years younger than the) di The lab rT i @ance to which mere men were to be| the great iron and L poole) iy tory the steamship lane repairing a cable,|man whe had been murdered, This | UT thar tates vibe ob pl 489 Fulton 8 St., opp. A. 43., Biya ‘open jently to- . I c 0 o Gamitres. eure the Boer Mage sy 7 gna tocting « Jong vine ane tho abort it @erved to complicate an al-| measure. A similar law is now en- 607 Broad St.. near Habne’ 's, Newark At the college to-day there were!| "Eo: in every room there was @ art ones every sixty seconds. ly deep m: tchman, | forced In the Government shops. Genials that such a trifle as the! Gran-souled watchman, In such sur- ont, renin very thick and the @Breepective presence of a man in the|roundings as those in which Mme. do had been diving under sea: Welling could interfere with the regu- Jer routine of the place, But, strangely @Rough, the freshman dance will not take place on Saturday afternoon, as eriginally acheduled. The official rea- son given is that the girls of Miss Ja- cobs’ clase could not agree on just what | form of entertainment they deired. Mies Jacobs declined to make any statement @bout the affair, because she didn't to ‘get her head in # non-break- noose.” TROUBLE OVER THE ENTER. ‘TAINMENT FROM THE 8TART. ‘This little freshmen dance has been about the most talked of affair since building was opened to the public. clique of girls wantea to have fudge party. Then angher little crowd thought it would be weil |R have a theatre party. Then a dance ‘was agreed upon. When it was found men would be admitted there sternation among the fresh- although members of the faculty Pressed one from the moment the silent, Pompadour and Ninon de Lenclos amiled upon their suitors these men took no heed of rustling curtains or clicking doors, it was theirs only to watch sealously each invited guest. So it was that the people who went to see the “fret view of the collection” yesterday stepped softly trom room to room of this strange house, speaking inetinotively in whispers, as though one dead lay in the best room. And perhaps one did; not one of pearly beauty, with rosy cheeks and golden hair; not one with « jaw like iron and @ stern, steely blue eye; not one with a tired, sick stare and a hungry, nervous eagerness for anything that an appearance of vivacity might bring her—none of these, but ono with @ pitiful droop of his fat under Up. a swimming baby eye and « quiver full of love arrows slung over his pudgy shot » Who knows? ‘FHE SURROUNDINGS 1F GAY DESPAIR. Through windows, clouded with heavy rope-like lace and filmy inner curtains, there is @n outlook on the bleak red brick orphan asylum on the THAT BLOCKED WAY (ConUnued from First Page.) spell of an autumnal frost, apologised to the jury and instantly changed his tacti Christine Lang, who was in charge of the dressing rooms at the factory on the day of the fire, testified that she had seen many persons go in and out of the Washington place door on the ninth floor during the eight ‘weeks she worked at the factory. Thia testimony contradicted that of other witnesses that the door was ale ways kept locked, Mr. Bostwick started to impeach his own witness, but the Court held the witness might be asked to explain dif. | ferences between the statement to-day and @ former statement in which the same witness had eald she didn't know there was any other door than the Greene street door. Juror No. 3 wanted to know whether whe meant that she had seen people go other side of the avenue. It is neces-| into the elevator doors or the stairway the ‘girls should have known that t t 4 ‘She sat would not be admitted. gary (to part at least onc pair of the |Goore, Ghe-setd she meaat the stairway curtains to get this unhappy Gean of the college, was|a Siiry by rein oie exclaimed Miss ‘The reporter timidly expressed this| euch were in the di | stood at tho head of tHe stairs on th hi at wins toate ths enmaction to France, But th spece| ninth floor of the Asch Building, 11 was | Cee gta aged br aahmue ber conga awe Sate. oF y tro at ture | eating to. the senses, “Always the same] {Nt ives, and on the question whether rie ovement agp pile not matter,” replied Miss Madi- ‘tured, worn toi it was open or locked on March % de- causing a congestion in the Tombs. , “but on more than that at one nf Arid as en pended much of the charge of man. pied Sarit ahan | fen doenly. a be pl wi ". . ‘the Deen cist have Rows ecors | may Secret at "at bet the “House of serted that a ‘crime wave’ was going they thought of this dance that they would allow: “ ror, was charged that this was owing to the not be red to invite men.’ Place with a guide and lecturer at his| the relic of the horror. As tt stood, Ike fact that many of the magistrates “Ig there any objection to the sex in| elbow, explainin value of each| some huge instrument of mediaeval ex-| f°! hi ses of felony which it” asked the reporter. gem, ‘each bit of ach carved on, John D. Moore, a either discharged cases "Mo, men are all right in their places. ‘Ther make eplendid policemen, fine mannerly street car conductors ete successful in business arf as But when it comes to going of this place a halt NEED NOTICE THAT MEN WERE BARRED. . It in historic silver, too, The cus-|. “How would a door of that kind “Wes any officiad notification given | 94. Ay no charge as to degree in the cases todians will show you a mug of the| open? jon houses td the freshmen class that they would ns ” they recelved from the stat! tt be 4 Tec Mynchensen Gamitycane ites 4 ged except by onder of the Presiding Magis. allowed to have men at their t was asked. yy didn't need any official notifica- said Miss Madison. “They sim- ww it was a time-honored custom course, must have realized that net be allowed to violate it. freshman dance ‘of because the girls could within is @ suddued melancholy light, fish ere for years 20. atta in he might wor! jo attain rt to realise the surroundings of ‘As for the bern) of the Ss Sorrowful Joy. Until one "has walked through the chair, each painting, each 1 of Rl and tapestry, it is impossible to real how far even in these days of grimy finances the desires and romances of a hunter for dollars may aarry him in his effort to reelize such ideals as ne has. On the first floor of the house are a Gining room and parlor. In the dining- room is pretty nearly as mucn silver &s you will find on the biggest and richest of stores on Fifth avenue to- head of the fi since 1563, Ti mugs there—bul, them will bring bigger prices than though they were of solid gold. MISS GRIGSBY’S MARBLE IDEAL OF HERSELF, In the drawing room 1 sculpture which ty; to his pupil, . burned or unburned?” doors. ae Tre Nptmpad the witness while orn i igen ey sought the original | CHARRED ‘DOOR-FRAME SHOWN TO THE JURY. Court pttendants lugged into court the hat | blackened, charted door-trame that hed ‘People's Exhibit No. 29," they called 401 West One Hundred eet, took the stand to explain {t to the jury, Miva Milholland leaned close to:the blackened casing and watched Mr, Moore a# he told how the door was placed in the factory. Having sufficient- ly described and identified the door casing, Mr. Bostwicl? asked: The jurymen left the box and grouped jout the door casing. In the frame stood Mr, Bostwick; near him the wit- neas. Judge Crain joined the knot, ‘Mr, Moore descrived in detail the con- dition of the upper floors of the Asch Bullding subsequent to the fire. Judge Crain paid particular attention to the character of construction of th ways. ‘Dhe replies showed, rule, g00d construction. ception was a wooden handratl on the stair- way from the ninth and elghth floors, “Was that portion of the hand railing ed Court. > the narrow escape the Oceanic had Salen, “pad carried away her rail for- ward and which drove even the aailors from her decks. She was within @ fow | hundred feet of the cat @hip when | Capt. Haddock made her out. Mr. Drexel said that when he saw tie | Mackay-Bennett through the porthole of his cabin ehe esemed almost to be within touching distance, With many other passengers he ran up to the head of the deck companionways and ered until it was certain the danger was past. Mr. Drexel said that he thought the fact that he had made arrangements to meet his wife here and accompany her back to London and that he was hurrying to keep the Christmas dinner engugeMhent with her and the rest of iis family was sufficient answer to ru- mors from Philadelphia that there were domestic disturbances in ‘his household. oo ‘WPADOO HITS BACK AT THE CRITICS OF MAGISTRATES Chief Magietrate McAdoo to-day is- sued a statement replying to the criti- over the town,” said Mr. McAdoo, “it should be held, or minimized both felonies and misdemeanors into charges of disorderly conduct, and that in that way they were responsible for the alleged conditions which were supposed to exist. “In order that there should be no foundation for this criticism, an order was issued from this office directing clerks in the Magistrate Courts to make trate. It does seom to me that it is very unfair to now turn around within six months and grraign the same Mag- istrates for overzeal in sending too many felony charges to the Grand Jury. “It is probably rude to intrude a tew facta and figures in opposition to a charge 80 vague, but I must call atten- tlon to this: “The total arralgnments for folunies before the Mag! cousin, Jimmie Carcaguino. Technola Pian You might spend any sum, but you could not buy anything more . acceptable, or more suitable than this beautiful piano. the House by Representative Wilson WS Tonnis 76 Nassou St., near John St. Let a Gift to Your Family Be the Aeolian Company’s New Price $450 Or $20 down. fhe balance in Small Monthly Payments The marble carving -tands on the man-| ‘‘Unburned.’* charged—practically o1 Does nor ry a . . + Gecide they wanted to have a dance. she tl sh that the Magiat: it SUEseh sor wore dstiaet, on to | et tS ihe esas tw Sakae asd TE | aa ee nee He act sAeehs | elsay Shares vary sarmect tes core, To every member of your household it will bring perpetual delight. For Bg Long ad oe they pera oe , as ea Brunnhilde |Crain had the igs Soeerie in detail | ful Senieeeten fre A od ase d | d, i] ni d th bri ve, n't ave to tell | defying ¢! 4 it is beauti- hi st constructio: f the | age of a Ing low ts they could not have men at their fu X01 Joo at but when one thinks | fire ecames on the bullding. ‘Quite high?” to every member, young and old, musica ly trairied and otherwise, it rings abou urts, ‘They, must have understood from the start.” e@esion when the ban is raised. That rere occasion'ie when a basaar is held im the building, ceeetalipeonaaers DIES EATING HAM SANDWICH. Michael Hogan, forty-eight years ol, of No. 2 East One Hundred and ‘Twenty-first etreet, choked to death terday while eating a ham sandwich, Hogan was @ teamster for a contractor In cabinets and glass covered tablos dia. all around thie drawing room ar monds, pieces of anvient latwres of priceless value, on and all sorts of things to make a poor man foe) like an anarchist. These under walle which are covered by paint- ings made by Albert Herter and other modern artists of no less renown. Her. ter's pictures tell the story of the Niebe- lungentied. There are miniatures by Ferdigand Bol and Cosgrave and all the rest of the great painters of little pore traits, On the next floor, over the dining jToom, is the bedroom of the mistress of the house. It is reached through an- other room which ts furnished with two deautiful inlaid beds. It ts a room of faded pinks and xray. The bed is under | before gathered, and there is Table Delicacies The memory of these brightens your appetite in advance. More goodly hosts of good things for Christmas were never Park & Tilford’s either in quality or large variety~ no stock in the world equal to the instant ability to play all music faultlessly and with complete expression. The First Artistic Player-piano at a Popular Price Recogni the advantages of a player-piano you may have hesitated ba Baa to buy one. The cost of a really worthy instrument may have seemed too great. The Technola Piano was built to supply just your needs, For more than four years the Aeolian Company—the beget 1 manufacturers of musical instruments in the world and, of the famous Pianola, Pianola Piano, Weber Piano @c.—have been working | to produce a meritcrious player- Moreover the cost for music is slight. preted youa py gg Then, in addition to having a A small sum annually member of the vast Aeolian Music Circulating e largest and best equipped library of music-rolls “player” inside which everyone can use, the Technola saves the cost of an ordinary no in the home. It has a keyboard just like any other, for playing and children's practice. [tne foot of Maat Forty-second stret Fig Dates, Nuts, Releine, “ ee Se Its Future Value Assured j atd was conversing with his frien Prunes, ce Fruits, P ” ‘The Technola Piano will retain ell g Py i ry ino will retain its rich, beautiful tone and Metres ond Trenty-fret etrest, whee , Plum Puddings, Mince Meats, iM ‘4 Pays i woaae aidenclstclumahast splendid action, indefinitely, This is assured by the reputation f cat tag lata aaa aot three-quarters thet width, Rich Preserves, Fresh Frults, . of its makers. Beis Policeman fullivan tried to aid the {M0 cross street corner, very Park & Tilford Candies, A Moderate Investment No music house in the world is so widely known or more i Man and then called Dr. Wille, who rg eatisey that tha ete cena elie Delicatessen Tidbits, highly ewerted than the Acolian Company, makers of the k started with him to Bellevue Hospital | ture js not jammed together helter skel- in an ambulance. Hogan dled before | tur Epicurean Cheeses, The Purchaser of a Technola Piano involves only a ‘Technola. Dut is tn entire keeping with the This gives a ‘pense value to all the Aeolian Ra punane cash outlay. $20 puts it in your home and the balance Company's instruments that assure satisfaction for years to a — |tme.ct ts "En orange’ tinted “glass eit Meat and Fish Delicacies, payments you hardly feel, come, ‘ Killea by Dough Mix ine,|indow at each floor landing of the Finest Coffees and Teas, 3 electric elevator, Thus one in the ele- A man known as George was instant- | vator could gee who was on the floor on ly Killed this afternoon in a dough mix-| which he was about to allght without dng macht: in the cellar bakery shop at being observed himself. Mo. 062 East One Hundred and Highty-|1N DAINTILY INITIALLED SLEEP. t nth street, the Bronx. ING ROOMS. finished preparing the batter and mount-| In the ‘edrooms on the foor above, 4d 4 small box to drop Jt into the ma- | and in the guest rooms, with thelr furni- ehine when the box slipped from under ture all marked with the chateleines , him. He tumbled, head foremost, into ale oh eg Mey ie may Deve been the mixer and was out to pieces. The i SACRE Se 0z0. 82 he Dallliona vietin was twenty-six years old, single aire, who provided the means, before and after his death, for the furnishings, OPA lived over the baker woop, ~ [ut except for wongertul Persian rss Cigars, Wines, Liqueurs. Easily obtained from us by phon’ or mail just as readily as personal orders, Deliveries out of town by freight and express PARK & TILFORD Fifth Ave. & 26th Street. And seven Branch Stores. ee Act Now! Come to Aeolian Hall. Play the Technola for yourself. Make ready for a new kind of holiday in your home. Other pianos accepted as part payment on the Technola Piano. THE AEOLIAN CO. Aeolian Hall, 362 Fifth Ave., near 34th St., New York The Largest Manufacturers of Musical Instruments in the World

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