The evening world. Newspaper, January 20, 1912, Page 10

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)

FOUR MEN SAVED AFTER CLINGING 30 HOURS TO MAST Revenue Cutter Crew Makes Brave Rescues at Daybreak From Sinking Schooner. @ORFOLK, Va., Jan, 1.—<After cling fag for more than thirty houre to the masts and rigging of thelr sunken ves @@, the four remaining inembers of the ew of the tiree-snasied schooner Senry Prescott « vescued at day Qreak to-day by te revenue outter Tegsea, Whlob proceeted to Wilmington, aoe Teo four men were wearily dead. After vesting for a while on the Jibboom of fair vesse) late yertorduy they were empties at nightfall to take to the rigging again, and there larhed them: | elves for a night that proved to be one @f great suffering tn the face of aj Gevere northwest wind that carried (1 temperature below treesing. Bt was 9 o'clock Thureday night that | the Prescott, bound for Wilmington, N Cy with a cargo of ealt, struck on the faner Diamond Shoals when her master Mistook the Hatteras iigit for the Dia- fe from the start moers of the and ¢he Preacott's her men were with- rink from midnight ve for cure | 1 it wae found vomed It. Pilibrook, master » bad “ ne rewult of severe ed when he, Mate T ith and Steward Ge O. Robine, vast themselves into the soa from the masts of the Prescott in order that they might be rescued by life savers, They are belmg cared for at the Hattoras station. tLe SRE, COL. ROOSEVELT’S IDEAS OF WINNING SUCCESS. | cabins soon out food a Thursday until their rescu what little they were a about their persons whe that the silp was Capt. V “Do What You Have to Do and! ™ Do It as Well as Possibly Can,” Col. Roosevelt wile “Three Arts C! You speaking at the! what te | He replied asked sway and as What good ts and attack the bre « > ~ de for Yunu-Shi-Kal, seu Dr 8 n| ‘Will Stand BAN Fi Yet Sen announce wae willing to wilhdw dency of the re ay PhieK at ring Jan nme of the The United formal action t present regarding the appeal for recog mition from tie republic It was ald to-day State Depart | ment prefers to w 4 strictly neutral position wniil are More seltied. Chinese affairs | (EAP YEAR HOLD-UPS-- THE BARRIER” WANTS LAWYER, NOT DOCTOR, Isaac : Bachus, Suggestive Name, Tried to » LINER BATTERED BY STORM. | Neuentets [sustained during O, wise, wise mother, to thus stand aa a barrier againat the bonnie ‘asaeca who come awoving in leap year, and so save her son, the idol of her heart, from the dreadful fate of being kidnapped! ELEANOR SCHORER LEwis NIXON HAS Quit SHIP BUILDING, HE SAYS. Sails for Panama Declaring the United States Is Against the U. S. Flag. Lewls Nixon, who designed aa@ built Many ships before he look part in the organizativn of t International Mor- cantic Mart Company, satled to-day #y | for Colon on the United Fruit liner Car- ‘AFTER AN AUTO MISHAP, Seamon Does a Heap ot Groaning When Car Knocks Him Down, Isaac Seamon, forty-thren yeara old, was knocked town to-day by an auto- mobile owned and driven by George W. Pierson of No. 367 Sterling Place, Vrovklyn, at Norfolk and Dela streets, Seamon wae running to c rillo . @ car an don the ice covered} “I am out of shipbullding,” sata Mr. street, fall n front of the automo: | Nixon, “until the tt bile ates tag, mut Edo look om merc wilt be built uy done ay Mr cy 0 Alied from Qov Dr. Powsard ex victim, but could any aort, Pler { Seamon into the aute and drove to the man'a home, at No. 144 Wawex street, Jersey City Ae Plerson drove away from the Bea mon home he heart the groaning man asking #on ne to send—not for a doctor, but a lawyer is strongly againat the poi- vavink American-bullt ships pay aval as the shipa of other as fxured out a schedule sandise in forelen bot- ay $1 # ton on thelr groas An-built aiipa fying an «ton, United 8 20 cents w ton and pind SN : “| HAVE LIVED,” HE WROTE; _,,.. THEN HE SOUGHT DEATH. fag 0 cen ships in fovelan tra End His Trouble With the expense | " {on foretgn trade | (and Amertoan trade will be attmulated,’ r rmpanied by Gas and Knife John Ma this elty last night ly oft and took a room in a Be 2h street Nae ote lodwing houre. Half an nour afterwante f i. {came to the Court from cliente af the In const trade 10) ‘| Expedition to Peru. _- FATHER AND SONS, BROKERS, CHARGED WITH LARCENY. Insurance Premiums Not Turned in by McCuskers, it is Alleged— Sons Are Arrested. Frank MoOusker of the insurance bro- kerage firm of McCusker @ Bons, at No. 17 Montague atreet, Brooklyn, was ar- rested an he was entering Nis office to- day by Detective Denny, who had 6 warrant charging him with larceny. Magtstrate Kempner held bim in 00 ball. John McCusker, his brother, appeared in court to arrange ball for Frank and wae promptly arrested and charged with Grand larceny. The police are seeking thelr father, Hugh McCusker, senlor member of the firm. For more than a week complaints have firm that sums paid in for insurance premtume had not been passed on to the jeurance companies, and that much in- surance had lapsed. A. Re Jolinson, counsel for Patrick Hynes of No, 47 flecond street, showed cancel! which had been ker by Park avenue had been jsame hotel. Ten or have ben received aj of the firm. certs TAFT AT YALE MEETING HEARS OF PREHISTORIC MAN Find of Bones “10,000 Years Old Told in Report of College NEW HAVBPN, Conn, Jan, 0.—The porter heard » noise tn the room and | proke the door open. Hachue had putled down the « the room was ftiing with wtting at hin He was over Hoxp.te 1 that TOUCHED THE POLICE BOSS FOR HIS FINE OVERCOAT. Gilhooley of New Haven Hung It! ona Hook, sPurned Around knife to St M. the und Found Only the Hook. » Grand Jury ' vniiestone by ie police showed the Reconter a nete found in the roorn Bachus had ‘|town at § o'clook this mornii weed. It read ‘To my friende in Boston I have lived. Goods: ja handsome new overcoat. at 6.10, looked at the hook on which he had hung {t at 815, and the benny hed Me hte suicide interrupted be- cause ho wae tired out, lonely and eut of work. pes a ol AEE BAIL FOR ACCUSED PASTOR.| sas If 1 ought to have brought Ja bodyguard.” said Gilhooley, “for if 1 Kvep on getting touched at the rate I ost that overcoat I'd be naked tn an tamtoa' Fifty-firet atreet station and the lone. je Ald in TH. Pa. Jan 20.—Per- sonal friends of Rev Dr. WD. Me Farland, former head of the Academic Department of the Pitt Scheol, who war with th tary. I HORSES RING (a FIRE “ALARM. Out Enines, Rese- Out Two Mgt Poet | William 1 », a driver for the New York Bottling Works at No. &¢ Weet ‘Thirty-stath street, had no idea that something Was ab { to happen when he left hiv-team to-day in front of the into court fay, @ ney Homer astle anked fixed at 00 Axwistant Attorney ard Martin insisted on bath at; Union Square Hotel. ‘The team teok £6,000, and the Court, after hearing | fright at an automobile, @ragged the arguments, placed the amount at] wagon into an electric Mght post and $4,000 (into @ gas laMppoet with attached fire When Melarland arrives here to- hie Mberty until! alarm box, Both horses, The fire brought four engin deputy chief and tw Policeman Martin 1 passing pedes- trians managed to ch the team. >- Two Women on School Board. Mayor Gregory of South Orange, N. J, broke all town precedente to-day oy n, Appointing two society women to the two trucks, a battalion chiefe, at Avores for Ke- paire—Sickness Aboard, FAYAL, Anores, Jan, 20—The G teamer Nenenfels, which lefe New school board. ‘They are tie. Bawerd 1 for Bombay, bes ys | F. Chamberlain of No. Bh. -f f9F BOmUAY put in’ fer Venue, a leading ee endered necessary by damag ote Club, and Are. the recent storm on th, president of the Arte and Crafts: the Atlant =. ‘of New Jersey. The Rev. Ferd. |thie morning by Pollceman Holder of | the same time she has been put) nand Muah anchard of the at the Butler street station, A theory of into 4 ine on unt of atcknoss, | Street Congress !!ons: horch wae glee | murder wae changed to one of accident the nature of which te not stated, appointed. . (efter ea i —— ‘ Ponape eo eroTN eee o~ - - ham, in which were made known for jup in a Forty-second street restaurant | a programme of the satay of President | Taft at Zale to-day included attendance at the meeting of the Yale Corpora- | ton, of which he ts @ member, in the | forenoon, and luncheon with Preeldent Hadley of the university later. At the corporation meeting waa eub- | mitted a report of the Yale expedition to Peru, headed by Prof. Hiram Bing- he firat time some remaf¥able diacov- ories. It 10 stated that no ectentific ex- pedition in recent years has garnered 80 much that {e of interest to the ecten- tifig world. Chief among the results was the finding for the firet time of bones of the prehistoric man, of the age before the @tactal period. An estimate of the age of the bones le not lees than 10,000 years, Beveral archaeological Macoveries made by Prof, Bingham {neluded rutns of sev- eral ‘Inca, or pre-inca cities, and traces lof a tighly ctvittzed people eariler than the Incas Rae TRAINS IN REAR END CRASH, Baggase Car of New Rochelle Local ‘Wrecked, Passengers Shaken Up. A New Rochelle local, stopping at Westchester Village station on the Ha: jem @ivieion of the New York, | Marin’ ana Hartera Malivcad’ ene bumped by a grevel train to-day and | the baggage and the end car partiy | ‘There « curve and « grade at the station and the gravel train was beek- | ing down the grade, Express packages | were being unloaded from the baggage car of the local when the crash came, Just before the heavy car truck the ngineer of the looa! ed up hie | and thereby softened the impeet. | He could see the sravel train epprescs: ing. No one was injured in the crash but passengers !n the train were badly shaken up. Woman te K¢ The body of Anne bb, thirty-six "| yeare old, was found in front of No. 1M Bond street, Brooklyn, at 8 o'clock | THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, CUBANS PLAN ss adagahe 23rd Street 23rd Street m Include the immediate ces- sation of the Veterans’ agitation, the re-enactment of Women's he medge or fa ause WILL “PROBE 41 Service jaw and SOROSIS ANNUAL SALE Commencing Monday, January the 22nd. Sorosis Boots, Slippers, including many styles and the latest fashionable models. Made of Satin, Velvet Glazed Kid, Tan and Black Calfskin, Suede, Patent Leather, etc. 2.95 per pair former price 4.00 3.85 per pair former prices 5.00, 6.00 and 7.00 Men's Sorosis Boots and Oxfords 3.85 per’ pair former prices 5.00 and 6.00 James McCreery & Co. 23rd Street James McCreery & Co. ANNUAL SALE GLOVES AND HOSIERY (For Men and Women) “Commencing ‘Tuesday, January the 23rd. | “1912, HARVESTER. } {| Wickersham Promises Congressmen | Oxford Ties 34th Street of colors and black. 1.75 per yard value 2.90 34th Street WASH DRESS GOODS. : Trish Linen Suiting, rough crash 34th Street tlome not to indorae fe opposed to James McCreery & Co. 23rd Street 34th Street “| SILK DEPARTMENTS. 10 Both stores, “McCreery Silks” . Famous over half a Century. The latest weaves and colors in plain and Novelty Silks for Spring and Summes, Exclusive designs in Printed Foulards and Taffeta Dress Silks. Single width............ 7§¢ to 1.0 per ya. Double..........2.07..1.50 “3.00 “ On Monday and Tuesday, January the 22nd and 23rd 40,000 yards of White Dress Silks con- sisting of Satin Messaline, Palette de Sole standard and Dull and Japanese Washable Habutai. 35 inches wide. 75¢ per yard value 1.28 © Black Dress Satin, soft brilliant finish. 40 inches wide. 95 per yard Ane value 1.90 Double width Marquisette in white or black. 42 inches wide. gsc per yard value 1.50 a DRESS GOODS DEP’TS. tm Both Stores. New Importation of Spring .Dress Fab - rics, comprising the latest ideas for ‘Tailor- made Dresses. On Monday and Tuesday, | January the 22nd and 23rd 3,000 yards of superior quality 54 inch | Whip Cord Suiting. A choice assortment weave, pure flax. Large range of the latest Spring shades, also black or white. 36 inches wide. 26c per yard vibes 45e James McCreery & Co. 23rd Street 34th Street ONE OF THE DETECTIVE STORIES EVER WRITTEN SIR A. This is a new story by the takes one from a myth of strange situations to an astoun at the genius of the author, You'll find the detective To-Morrow's Sunday World, This fascinating that ever came Get To-Morrow’s Sunday World wo Lrothers and his round the table i s4ull spread in front of them and the ¢: to their sockets, The sister lay bai jone-dead én her ch hile the two brothers sat on each side of her (on hing, ALAN, and singing, the senso stricken clean out of them, All three of them, the dead woman and the two demented men, retained upon their faces an expression, of the utmost horror—a convul- sion of terror which was dreadful to look upon."'—From “The Adventure of the Devil's Foot” by Sir A. Conan Doyle. MOST THRILLING CONAN DOYLE most famous author of pecblem narratives that ever lived, It ing conclusion that makes one marvel story as a remarkable feature of the Magazine Seciion cf one of the best famous author tale is unquestionably from the pen of this

Other pages from this issue: