The evening world. Newspaper, March 13, 1912, Page 18

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pocketed aeom ti: + BLS ROOSTERS, FIMSHENS. QUERY, = HOSE ARE CHES? Bim Sells Feathered Product ~and Pockets Coin, and Now Bill’s Some Mad! Preven Mr. sie ww cannot ald him ago, it was held by i si = Xe eS « * | CHICKENS IS CHICKENS. * But Bill Says His W. Leghorns & Ain't Jim’s P. Rocks by r a Dommed Sight. “When does a Plymouth Rock become White Leghorn—chat ts, 1f you began Plymouth Rocks down in Fiat- and your father-in-law rang In @ Supnch of White Leghorn roosters and turned them loose in your Plymouth Rock harem, how many generations Mater would your Plymoath Rocks be- utterly merged in White Leg- @0 that your father-in-law could the whole feathered outfit as his? “Phe hypothetical question in the Thaw fae’ much of @ margin on the but Magistrate Howard P. Nash the Fistbush Court tackled the com- that the or in this wan the origi Rook hens, he the roosters. He had down agin. chickens or me name is not Bill Nixon.” More than five years for @ bunch Agvading white Leghorn roosters to ® Gistinct strain of white Leg- fowl, after having entered into ‘with the members of « Ply- Tt would see: aye ahead for the gray, grim Corkonian, at No, 6% Eighth etreet, Fiat- interesting hypo- peared 18 THE WINTER ,OF DILL NIXON'S OIOCONTENT. ‘want @ warrent for the arrest of liye! fr i H a | rH #f 1° ee ity if / | iH | i a : [ i [ j E | : i § 3 5 ii s = 3 : : : & FI i i i i : i : : . | Ha t i I Upon at them ehickens and hid tho ey his Jeane—give him the limit, Me Gemgnter) back Winter ere! MAKES HOME RUN. P, it Winter, a tall, s a » Were my chickens, TO BAT AND Your ith Rock feet, though I admit they begun to look like White Leg- yaa in the face, I sold them and WASHING MARS AND REDDENS THE HANDS for to-morrow’ wT Ye Wal oe 102; 1. Pilant, 10, 1ST ree. year-chds Beats, a Ee poil my hand: pretty housewife ssid to her friend, 3 work isn’t hacd or unpleasant in| 0"! and oue wotdd rather do it some. |{¥'2, sthan put up with incompetent | {pat 1% ‘ But the pretty housewife is right. we Bg water doce wrinkle, redden + tad hands, tat suing Mari i a half And that 19 just how the case | | ! g Bit) a nar sae 3 ELOND OF -—Three-s Ha te a ae Re ont nome Merrick, 104;""Melen J 100, Praca, “Yoas ¥ pace “Thr0e-$ anode ttlanes seven es RON the money. fn doing 90, 1! have got the old man’ ld man” was restrained by his ihter from hurling hémeelf upon calm and placid son-in-law, Mag trate Nash hid his legal tame and appeared to be eating ty he raived jercely composed his features and “This ds Indeed an interesting cane. Nixon faa some cause in equiry, but I fear the criminal Several centul Baron Lord 1s QUE HMLUP To. ‘THe SUPREME COURT mueat follow the dam, It Mr, Winter inal owner of the Plymouth continued In possession of the Piymouth Rock strain that re- mained in the hybrid fowl, following the introduction of the White Leghorn undoubted vested righta in the fourteen chickens he |e alleged to have stolen, wherefore he couk, not have stolen them, Q. hen, stormed Bill Nixon. gue ‘im up to Supreme Court an’ thin T'll have me rights in them m there are ttle heuseho! No, 43 Eighth street, Flatbush. 39,000 10 PARADE ST. PATRICK'S DAY Commissioner Waldo Will Be in Charge of the 600 Police- |. tthen, owe toner men Assigned to Duty. i gs é i igetots u afte te i 8 5 & é j = —___ "| INTERBORO SUBWAY PLAN GOES TO ESTIMATE BOARD. The Latest Offer Will Be Acted the Next Meeting, The Pudilo Service Commission od a resolution to-day eending to the Board of Gatimate the latest offer of the Intgrborough Company regarding the avvways, ‘The letter which wae sent with {t re views the negotiations of the last year and « half and favors the proposition in general if the pian for preferential pay- ment to the Interborough proves to be constitutional when the courts pase upon ft. Chairman Willcom and Commission. ere MoOerrol! and Bustle voted in the eMrmative and Commissioners Meltbie and Cram in the negative, ‘The Board of Wstimate wil probably races are as foll ri (i ec et Sh i $084 da) pure 1 14) Ws rleton rion Invaot ( i pera pyre Ma aT a i Nhe! Basa, ry goat.” ad in @ great HEA i ; i Mon Y pice, upserd) rin W, hese LEFT IRISH WIFE, DRANK SCOTCH AND WEDDED A GERMAN ais —The Story of a Much- Married Chauffeur. Thomas Wright fs in wrong. Thomas is a chauffeur of twenty- three years and @ tot of matrimonial experience. He is also in jail, without ball, charged by @ winsome Irish girl of generous proportions and a pretty German girl, emall but full of fight, with bigamy. Thomas was arrested in bed at No. 14 Weat One Hundred and Twenty- seventh street to-day by Detective Hag- merty of the West Side Police Court ang |taken before Magistrate McQuade. Nora MoGrath, who claims to be wife No. 1, lives at No, 182 West One Hun- dreq and Twnty-eighth atreet. She told the Mfagistrate she was twenty- seven years old and was married to Wright June 27, 190, by Rev. Father Green in St. Thomas's Church, Man- hattam, Because of Thomas's propyn- ty Cor liquor she deft him in Septem- ber Jast, telling him that whenever he thought more of her than he did of Whiskey te might come bac for for- wivencss. Here Tillie Eggert of No. 102 Ciffton place, Brooklyn, took up the story. ‘an | Tillie, who. confenses to twenty-eight years, gwore she was married to Wright Nov, 16, 1911,/in West End Presbyterian Chureh by the Rev. Edward Geigian. She was @ domestio for Mra, Nathan Hoffhetmer of No. 645 Weet One Hun- @red and Eleventh street and Thomas wae the chauffeur. He won her. Two weeks after the wekiing the bride ‘earned that her husband had Qnother wife, Thomas pleaded guilty and Tillie gave him 5 cents, told htm to “Beat it" and slammed the door in D., the his face, ‘The week the two women @ot to- gether ami hed Thomas arrested, giving TO HONDURAN THREAT. O'Nell!, Loaned to Collect $1,$00,- 000 for Britain, Stayed Right on THT He Did It, Peter T. O'Neil, a United States Cus- toms Inspector under leave of absence to the .British Government, returned to-dey from Honduras on the United steamship Garrillo from Panama. ir the Mongoe doctrine, Great Br: three Americans to col- 000 awed by Hon- to Engtishmen, Mr, O'Neill and aaacciates heave been collecting it the customs receipts of Hon- E iH the very friendly to Amer!- those who have accumu Wealth to wear to be dieagrecable, Nearly of the United States who Honduras for more than a week Gets a letter telling him to get out or expect assassination, Mr. O'Neli'é letter handed to him through the chief ‘of police of the town where he was stationed,’ He etayed and nothing hap- attendance at the hall of honor of the visit of Secre- . Knox wae ir, O'Nef gaid, to hostility to Americans #0 much ae to a prophecy it in which the ball was held be destroyed by an carth: “They never ! stra noc oe “ act at next week's meeting, ight to the ante 6% deecendante. | CHARLESTON ENTRIES, Mis Brae Marra 4220 Talon tun bed Ply) CHARLESTON, March 1—The entries ; lother broke d two mot! yuntrieumt, The al or (2'try Blosa's Linton in three endl Seusve che cured forever,"’ w, 100) % | i {s an excellent remedy for That's Why Wright Is Wrong | .| else and capacity, and no more, e e Rheumatic Pains are quickly relieved by an appplication of Bloan’s Liniment. It's very penetrating, goes own lootors didn't gent, tnd jaa entirely well - nerve In my, |e nd years iT a might 80 that I could sen ey A A friend told me to try your iniment | ga now I could not do without is, ata 4 after ite use I can go to sleep," SLOAN'S LINIMENT me EE BVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, “THERIVER GOD” ! SSOREON SOA, WHO WANTS AGIN Engineer Applies for Permit | to Protect Self From Chinese Deity’s Vengeance. A romance of the Celestial Kingdom, with all the weirdness and mysticism of the Orient, developed in busy, prosy old Now York, to-day, through an applica. tion to Police Commissioner Waldo for @ permit to carry @ revolver. was applied for by Alfred mechantoal engineer, em- ployed by the Thompeson-Starrett Com- Dany in building the Hotel McAlpin, at Broadway and Thirty-fourth street. And this a the story Mr. Scanze told Com- missioner Waldo. About noon last Saturday a workman employed on the building handed to ‘Mr. Boanze a letter, which eakl had been given him by @ well dressed man, who ed that it be put into Mr. Beanz hands, The communication. ‘was in Chinese. Mr. Soanse hunted and asked that he tran: Veh. This was the reey a Chinaman it into Bng- i igi ‘| in i ie, at fe Hit Mr. Scanse thought over this message for @ long time, and then he remem- dered that when he was @ midehipman in the United Btates Navy he had saved @ Chinese girl from drowning in the Yangteekiang River tn 1900, It 19 @ belief in China that any one nwho falls imto the Yangteekiang 18 Considered an offering to the River God and must not be taken from him, There have been atnce then, Mr. Gcanse added, two serious floods of the river, 60, not knowing what might happen to him after the receipt of the River God's message, Mr. se prayed the Commitsioner for leave to carry @ gun. And Deputy Commissioner Dillon grant- ed the permit, pened AO BROOKLYN LIGHT COMPANY LEFT THE SUBWAY DARK Contractor Bradley says Edison Concern Shut Off Power to Force a Payment. Following the acton of the Brooklyn Edison Company in arbitrarily shutting off the electric power furnished the Bradley be arity beg Company, in thelr rypyh Av ger pred In Brooklyn, causing a @ of the Fourth avenue eub- Frank Bradley eaid to-day; the course of our work ‘we have jeturb gas, sewer and water mains, and in this instance we had to remove four of the cables of the Brooklyn Edison Company of @ certain eise and capacity, We notified the Brooklyn Bdison Company when we were ready to have them {netall new cables, This.they did, and then sent usa bill for cables much ‘larger and ‘more expensive, to which we objected, We were willing to pay for the replacement of cables of aimilar ‘They re aid, us asked us to pay for something Rot owe, and attempted to f to pay by whutting off the power," COMMUTERS GET SEA TRIP THROUGH JERSEY CANYON. ‘Montolair and Glen Ridgo commuters who use the D., L. and W, Ri in thelr daily to-and-from-Go' rinations were treated to voyege to-day when thelr trains got into the new concrete walled out te- tween Watscasing and Ampere, The torrential rains laat night had filled the cut with thi t of iP. ‘There were still two the cut this morning, trains hed to cree; the waves splash forme between the cars, The trains that went through the cut midnight were awash forma While the pre water delayed tramo blockade, rin nd the long through {t,. while up on the plat- w OIL-LADENSHIP AFLAME ATPIER GREW IS RESCUED Steamer Jose, With Cargo of Kerosene, Makes Spectacu- lar Fire in East River. Loaded with 140,000 gall fene and gasoline, the « & 2%3-foot freighter of th Company, caught fire early to-day at Pier 15, East River, and after @ spec- tacular demonstration burned to the water’e edge and sank off Coentles Slip while she was being hurriedly towed | into the open by the firwvuat New) Yorker, ‘The freighter, under command of Capt. E. Rasmussen, came in from Kingston, Jamaica, last Monday and was to sail the same port. Shi Ten thousand ca: been lowered into the for- ward hold and 4,000 cases of gasoline into the after hold, Ten men wer MAROE 138, ye eat [fame tamp to assist the placing of the 1912 cargo. A case of kerosene holding 100 gallons Slipped as it was being lowered. The case burst and the oll spurted tn all di- rections, Part of it flew intd the flame of the lamp, and in an instant the hold was abl ‘The crew had a desperate ruth to escape, An alarm wis turned in from street, and Deputy Fire Chief Devariny came with the apparatus. Tue fired New Yorker and Zophar Mills hui up In charges ot Acting Deputy Worth, The crew was making attempts to extinguish the fire whea the appa- ratus and fireboats turned loose, Flames shot forty and fifty’feet high, roaring and multi-colored, The fire spread quickly to the after hold. The firemen were apprehensive of a tremens dous explosion at any minute, and the fireboats dragged the Jose 200 feet out into the river after her haweers were cut with axes, Probably for the reason that the hatches were open and there was abundant alr in the holds, there! was no explosion. As soon as the ship was pulled of the pier dories from the fire-bo began taking off the members of t! crew who had stuck to their task of trying to put out the fire. t, Ras mussen was the last man to swing off, but’ big collie dog appeared on a deck & minute later, barking and whining. ‘The men yelled to him, He jumped into the water and disappeared. Seeing that the steamer was going to burn to the water's edge and sink, Chief Worth ordered her towed down the river as quickly as possible, eo that she might sink in the open and not trance to any of the sllps, As Special Notice to Public Telephone Agents. neuralgia, lumbago, lame taccloa'end joo, At all dealer, Price PR, EARL 8 SLOAN, BOBTON, MASS, The New York Telephone Company an- nounces a revised schedule of commissions to PUBLIC TELEPHONE AGENTS, in effect March 15, 1912, as follows: 1.—On receipts for telephone messages from public sebenboese 4 Abedheces? with coin collecting lasers ments taking nickels, dimes and quarters: Where the receipts since the previous collection average S0c. a day or less........ 10% ‘Where such receipts average over 50c. and not over $1.00 a day; On tho first 50c. a day....--eeseeee pad on the receipts in excess of S0c. adey : Where such receipts average over $1.00 aday: On the first 50c. a da: 2.—On receipts for telephone mess: from public telephones not equipped with coin collecting de- vices and in connection with which the Agent makes personal collections from patrons...... Commissions on the collections, beginning with March 15, will be paid on the above basis, regardless of the date the messages were actually sent. NEW YORK TELEPHONE CO. James McCreery & Co. 23rd Street 34th Street On Thursday, March the 14th, TRUNK DEPARTMENTS. Im Both Stores, Dressy Trunks in exclusive models. Sizes 34, 36, 38 and 4c inches. Q-75++eeee+seeeee, USHal price 11.25 to 13.50 RASC ehieat aint: * 16.50 “ 19.50 Russet Cowhide Bags,—saddler sewn, reinforced corners, leather lined and inside pocket. Sizes 16, 17 and 18 inches. 3-75 value §.00 HOUSEHOLD LINENS. About 1,000 odd Table Cloths of Fine Satin Damask. Size 2x2 to 2)9x4 yards. ' , 1.85 to 12.00 usual price 2.75 to 17.75 soc dozen Huckaback ‘Towels, hem- stitched or scalloped. 2.70 per dozen usual price 3.75 pairs of Hand-embroidered Irish Linen Pillow Cases. 1.85 per pair peas} price 2.50 In Both Stores, ow. steel screw vessel of ‘built In 1908, Ni y Locomotor gers on Pennsylvania train No. 96, tween Long Branch thrown in panic at the to-day when Clem Hinchm: years old, conductor of dead upon the station platform just as he was about to signal the engineer to Dull out with the train. He leaves a wife, a, son and a daughter. 0, 10 25 cen under Pure Food and Drugs Act. Neuro Chemical Co., West Brighton, N. TY, James McCreery & Co.’ 23rd Street \ 34th Street | On Thursday, March the 14th. SHIRTWAIST DEP’TS. In Both Stores. Imported and Domestic Shirtgvaists in the new Spring styles and desirable fabrics. Domestic models made in workrooms on the premises. SALE OF WAISTS. Attractive Lingerie Models. 60.0... 6.608 2.00, 2:50 and 2.95 value 2.50 to,4.78 Variety of Colored Chiffon Waists inthe ' new Spring shades. 4.75, 6.50 and 8.75 values 6.75, 8.50 and 12.00 SILK DEPARTMENTS. In Both Stores, “McCREERY SILKS” 7 Famous over half a Century. 10,000 yards of Crepe Meteor in a choice range of new colors, also White, Cream or Black. 1.45 per yard . value 2.00 WASH DRESS GOODS. © im Both Stores, Imported White Ramie Linen Suiting, Belgium manufacture, soft finish and pure flax. 46 inches wide. 48c per yard X value 7S¢ * Printed Dimity in an extensive assort- ment of designs and colors. 12¢ per yard HOUSE GOWN DEP’TS. In Both Stores, Negligees of Crepe de Chine, trimmed ( with lece or fringe. 8.50 and 16.50 Negligees of Albatross,lace and satin trimmed. Empire model. 7.50 and 10.50 Kimonos of Albatross, lingerie and lace trimmed, 3.85 and 4.75 Kimonos of Plain and Flowered Silk. f 3.25 and 5.00 Lounging Robes of French Flannel. 5.00 and 8.75 ‘James McCreery & Co.) 23rd Street 34th Street WESTERN UNION Day Letters They beat the mails Night Letters THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY

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