The evening world. Newspaper, July 29, 1912, Page 12

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. — — . = " ” . es THE BVBNING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 29, 1912, ‘ se TAKE THISHOUSE | How to Know if They’re in Love OFF CITY'S HANDS? ~1pe the Man Who Is , | | Girl’s Heart Will In- It Obsiructs Street as the Result of Quarrel Between | Owner and a Mover. | The Borough af Queens, in the pore eons of the Superintendent of ite Bureau of Incumbrances, G, Howland | Teavity, and some workmen, to-day eet @bout the task or removing a two-and- | a-half story frame house from the! Middle of Woodbine #treet to the cor | oper yard, @ half-mile away, where it is to be impounded for damages. | ‘Uniens claimed i: will ultimately be wold at auction to reimburse the city. Incientaliy, it may be remarked, Mr, Leavitt and his chief, Maurice ( Bolly, Borough President of Queen were praying, when Leavitt started ‘out, that the owner of the houre, Mri Mary Kline of No, 75 Leonard street, lyn, would consent at the inst moment to pay certain on: houre and @o take @ job off the Borough's hande. About @ month ago Mrs. Kline de- ei@ed to move this house from ite Joeation in Fairview avenue, in the Rigewood section, to another plot she | owne in Madison street. She hired | Andrew Geyer to do the job for a) fixed eum, and Geyer went anend with |SUnded, more er teas obtrusively, the hie work. ‘The house began the laborious crawl @e Me new Yooation. But after tt got © the middle of Woodbi: feet from ite old site on avenue, electric leht wives encountered, ¢! ef which demanded that they be taken Gown and then re-strung at consider- edle expense. @ir, Geyer said he was sorry, but Mre. Kiine must surely see that this could not be included in the covenant between them. Ht was a wholly un- Weoked-for contingency, Would Mre. Kime kindly guarantee reimbursement of the extra expense? Mrs. Kline was Siso sorry, and she certainly would not do so, Mr. Geyer had stipulated to do expected him to do it for ti oum, It was preposterous to expect her to ad- vance anything further. Whereupon Mr. Geyer and his workmen put on their ooate and went home, leaving Woodbine street, an obstruction to trafic. A week passed, then another, and an- other, The city officials finally woke wp to the situation, and served notice on both parties to the dilemma. Mr. Geyer said it waa none of hie affair. | Sweetness and beauty to her lover,| sympathetically and tappily, without Mra, Kline naid she was not respon. |%U8t 8° @ rose opens before th venturing contradictions and ~argu- sible. The city oMieials argued. the June eun. ments, If she has ever had any silly|~ Finally Mr. Connolly instructed the Bureau of Incumbrances to impound the house in the corporation yard. This ‘™Meane that the city will have to move the house a distance of half @ mile, Much more than the distance tt would pve to go to reach its intended destina» n, It will be no light undertaking, and furthermore, the question has arisen, What can the borough do with a two- and-a-half story frame house in its pound? The house will only be in the way, and when it comes to auctioning off @ two-and-a-half etory frame house that has to be moved by its buyer, its— well, It's no joke. So Mr. Leavitt wan rnestly hoping, as he set forth to exe- cute his task, that elther Mra, Kline or Geyer would spare the borough the rid- Aculous duty of impounding a full-grown dwelling house. TAFT AND LORIMER GASES ARE ALIKE NORALY,SAYST.R No Mere Coincidence, He De- clares, Puts Same Leaders ’ in Both Fights, OY@TPR BAY, N. Y., July 2—The Fepomination of President Taft by the MBpublican National Convention last Month waa comp Md by Col. Roose to-day with the election of Will Lorimer to the United States The two cases, hi the same moral pl nomination, in his opinion, can be de- | fended only upon grounds which would Justify Mr. Lorimer’s election. Had the Chicago convention been organised | honestly, he said, there would have! been a majority of over Mr. Taft. Col, Roosevelt's statement was itn reply to the Administration's defenses Of the proceedings at Chicago, which was issued yesterday at Washington, 1h follows: ‘If honestly organized, tion would have been ayalnst Mr, by over 10 majority, t Patt Moreover, aside m the stolen ninety delegates’ which majority the fraudulent Mr. he rotten borough hose Southern States, where there te ne real Republican party and which ave never cast a Republican elector. @i vote, and from the hand-picked dele- gates of Messrs, Barnes, Penrose, Gug- Kenheim and company trom the North “E wish to state with all emphasis that (here is no room for honest doubt as to what happended at the Chicago convention. It Is not @ case for honest The was as bure- any fraud ever tted at elections by the machine in those days when there was no pretense at holding @ fair election iw New York City, “it is no mere coincidence that at least nine-tenths of the Senatorial Jeaders in the theft of the Chicago convention were also leaders in the Might to retain Mr, Lorimer in bis seat fm the Senate.” ae ee simply “ectentific,” because I think we lattc distin others te the prevalence of the scientific epirtt. We examine our emotions in test-tubes, or knife. ways busy with Love. it eeeme worth while to consider it from a frankly old-fashioned angle. HERE 18 WHERE WE GET 8 NTb) est of romanticieti mental. the economic independence of woman the work for a certain sum, and ske|and the other modern improvements, thie more successfully than that most Dopular author of the tale of sugared Mrs. Kline's house in the middle of |#entiment, Miss Laura Jean Libbey? heart,” Miss Libbey began. why the rose is the emblem of true love, all over the world. A young girl, @ bud, when ehe falls in hove unfolds her 100 againat | receding the conven: | Her Fate Appears, a crease Its Vibration and the Beating Will Seem So Loud She Will Think Every One Else Must Hear It, Too.’’ | HOW TO CHOOSE WHEN TWO COME. “Let Her Send First One, Then the Other, Away, for a Few Weeks and She Will Soon Know Whose Absence Makes Her Heart Grow Fonder,” Says the Expert. Marguertte Mooers Marshall. Bow do you know when you are im love? Practically all of the enewere to this! Question which I have wived have modern note. By “modern” J mean have to agree that the one charact ishing this age from the under the dissecting And somebody's ecalpe! is al- Before we leave the subject, however, MENTAL. Let's follow the example of the great- nd be openly senti- Let's forget divorce courts and WONTSOMERODY ‘Laura Jean Libbey Tells Girls |PUCKYWONANCIP GUARD SAVES BOY AFTER SLOGP UPSETS FISHERMEN'S BOAT Devotees of Rod and Reel| Leaving ARRESTS SUBWAY ‘DIP’ AFTER HARD FIGHT Magistrate Commends Proba- tion Officer and Holds Swam Youngster to His Fate. ‘The sloop Penguin, piloted by Capt. H. Bi. Beebe, was sailing out of Graves end Bay from her anchorage off the Ulmer Park pler in the gray of the early morning to-day when auddenly a ery | her bows, and before Away, | Her Prisoner. ox Market « nese to-day was the n the West Martin Cohen of No. © Hundred and Seventeenth ight | ety last ng fight in the N station came from under the skipper could Jam his helm over she | had smashed into a rowboat containing two men and a boy. The men made good time to the shore, leaving the boy | He clung to the top of the! charged with bee “ld hy Magis- to the} action | to his fate. overturned rowboat as tong as he could while the sloop jockeyed about in the dim light; but before sne could get help. to him his hands slipped and he went the daring young brings to light a new method dips,” who, instead | of using a “mob” of professionals to surround an fntended victim, make use of the subway crowds for that purpose, 1 Miss Shannon, who had been visiting woman, the pol down The boy would certainly have been drowned had It not been that August | in New Jersey, left WAY OXPFERK! Fiman, the lfe-aaver at the Ulmor Bliiterny wala nd stood on the | ask Pier, was already up and standing platform, waiting for local train to | PAT PIy MC tne accident and continue to her home wt No, 24 Weat/O" 1% Ren nt, and leaped into the 1 swaron thes bined r cee et bay. Dillman haa to dive to get him youngster was Unconscious when non Was jostled about quite a bit. She| Tre younss! Tete hi ndb 4 jhe reached land, but t was not long be Hed a number Of court wocumente ana | fore the water was all pumpyd out of had a numver of court documents and Ki pe was able to tell his rescuer @ snail amount of money nim and able eacuer | Looking dowa, sne saw a man's hand| that he Brother Rieter of No. 414 to extricate the| Kast Fifty-elghth street, and that he | money. With her free hand sie seized | was nine years old. the hand of Cohen, wh He had twen standing on the end of at her wide. It was tn the pier when the two men came down she told the Court, when she grabbed It. | ,na got into thelr rowboat, and asked him {f he wanted a ride, He went with | A struggle followed. Cohen tried to jerk loove from Milas Shannon, but the hi \ i on etarted fishing, in cky woman held tightly and was| them, and they soon ot Tragead: wayeral: feel; Cohen none te) thelr excitement dosing an oar. It was | make his way through the crowd into| While they were trying to make the best of thelr way back to land with a single oar that they were run down by the Penguin. }a local train which had just stopped Jat the station. ¢ roughly tore his hand loose from Miss Shannon's grasp, but as he did so she placed her other hand firmly under iis collac and clung |S jttgntly, at the same time calling for] —e, help. An Interborough guard who | her'erlegavized Cotten and turned hin LA Sanitary } street sta 4 if I could cry a Iittle with his arm around me!’ SHE WILL EVEN A SUFFRAGETTE. “In the most modest and feminine way she will try to make herself attrac- tive to him whom she has picked out as her king of men, She will curl her hair and put a ribbon in it. She will wear dainty, light dresses and practise pieces on the plano, Shoe will Hasten to him 4 try to formulate the purely emotion- @tatus of the lover. Who can do “Love is the flowering of @ young girl's “That te Httle ideas about suffrage si get them, because in her heart every woman knows that a man has @ horror of strong-mindedness, “Me wants to be the stro! one, to @helter and protect his men- tally and physically. Spiritually, of course, every good man likes to look man he marries, ‘the will for- her in his heart. But in the other crises of life he yearns to be the protector, and the happy woman is Ghe who lets herself be protected. “There ia just one little black spot in this beautiful whiteness of 101 the ‘Or, possibly, than his future,” I mure murred, but Miss Libbey shook her red- | gold curls crowned with @ baby biue tion we call Jealousy. “I suppose a young girl in love never enoapes at least a touch of Jealousy, If fillet, and gave mea glance of playful Se cares for a man she cannot bear to ace him made happy and interested by others, particularly by other women. And the more the girl cares the more deeply ahe suffers, Jealousy is the thorn that belongs ¢o the rore of love. \ “Therefore, I would caution young men to be very careful not to make their sweethearts Jealous and unhappy. But if this inadvertently happens, the reprobation. “Real love je only increased ty mar- * she proclaimed. “A happy little and some sweet children are the most beautiful things in the world Have you not seen men and women soventy years old who are lovers still? But I'm afraid you're @ real naughty cynic, You probably lke to read th Greadful books where people have all sorts of troubles and discomforts after should be made up with a kiss"? marriage, instead of living happy ever titer as they should, ‘There things ey SOMEBODY 1S PUNISHED sa tune clos atime, 7°U™e People’ = IN THIS TOWN ANYHOW. “But now, just how can @ young girl weer be sure of her own heart and know| Twenty Persons Get It for Crimes Wine lave has comet" I asked Miss of Selling Bread and Maga- WHEN HER HEART GOE® PITTI unes on Sunday. PAT, JU8T LIKE THAT. Violators of the sabbath law, ‘“Bhe will know by her heart's dettctous | Whe Nat he prosunnt! flutterings,” the lady itemized, “When |iread over the counters of bake-shops the younk man who Is her fate appears | ariur 10 nek in the morning, were on the threshold she will feel the ine | arraigned Magistrate McQualde creased vibration of that little prisoner |i the Jiariem Police Court to-day. He in her poset ie tbe wsesing wit seem |aned five men for selling magazines $5 eo lou at she will think every one| apiece, Fifteen men and women were else must hear it too, That is why her | fAned for selling bread hand will go up quickly, in that charm. were fined for selling ma ingly familiar girlish gesture, to hush | Edward MoMat the wild clamor in her bosom. jOlympte Oval; F “Then, too, the color will come quickly |)I* Assistants, ant | into her cheeks. Every nice young girl 24min Crooks an hor are employ blushes when #he aces her lover. The,” yon words have bean spoken only through excesn of love, and the little quarrel people fon to play base- rhe men who lawyer who A beautiful red suffuses her face and neck,|/men told the Magistrate they hed not quickly as it rives, It te the |becn playing ball, nor had the parks infallible mark of maidenly modesty in| deen charking admisston from the | the presence of the most nt crowds that witnessed the Kames. They member of the other sex. And when the; 2ad simply peddied @ #mall educational magazine. | lover etays away for a long time the| | Poor young girl will grow white and pale and thin, #0 that the blue veins show to ber pretty wrists, This te the | sickness of love deferred, but if the lover only returne he will bring back health and thushes with him. “If @ girl be not sure whioh of | two men has really won her heart, | let her send first one and then the other away from her for # pertod of several weeks. She will soon | be able to tell whose absence AN HONEST DOCTOR remarked to his patient wh had been cured by Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound, after his efforts had ailed, ‘Mrs. Weber, 1 do not believe in patent medicines but I will say that Lydia E Pinkham’s Vegetable Con pound is the best medicine ever discovered for women, Con- tinue to use it,” This is another link in the long chain of evi- dence to prove the reliability of this standard medicine for women, “Then a girl May know that she's in | love if the man in questi ma to her tronger and wiser and than else, She herself will feel wow and small and thintd, She will r that me is somebody to pro through the battles and struggles of Mfe that no woman ought to bear alone. And phe will think, ‘Ah, I should always be happy and protected 1f 1 had hits bis, broad shoulder op which 1 could lay my FORGET SHE'S) young men should realize that the bitter , ball parks or | wer to Detectives Fay and Fitapat fon, who locked him up. ‘| transparent f the West One Hundrec ohen stoutly maintained his inno- ust-Cap cence, but Miss Shannon was so poul- COGENT MORe7 MOSH RE By: tive In her identification of the prisoner rae sancti Callan Pu se that Magistrate Corrigan committed - . . noX avenue station was on duty at! jim to the Tombs. He praised Miss enox avenue and One Hundred and Six-|pnannon hishly fc a pralied Miss! OVEt.t ristles nth street to-day he saw several acks xo sailing by. He chased Slips om F John Chaff Hundred and ployed on Fl Haven R. R, ac claim could be proven, and he AG as the float was bac the money to the station, where OaBt.| munipaw and was drowned. Kelleher has it, wafting for an owner, [was not recovered. are after the money and found four &% bills, He searched the neighborhood for an owner, but failed to fina any one whose slipped Kleanwe| TOOTH BRUSH The Danger of Imitations. An Ohio druggist writes to The Practical Druggist,” a prominent New York Drug Journal, as follows: “ Please furnish formula for Castoria. All the formulas | Ihave worked with are either ineffective or disagreeable to administer.” To this “The Practical Druggist” replies: “ We do not supply formulas for | proprietary articles. We couldn't if we wanted to, His experience with imitative formulas is not surprising, but just what is to be expected. When Castoria is wanted, why not supply the genuine. If you make a substitute, it is not fair or right to label it Castoria. We can give you all sorts of laxative preparations for Children, but not Castoria, and we think a mother who asks for Castoria would not ° feel kindly toward you if you gave her your own product under such a name.” | No mother with a spark of affection for her child will overlook the signae i | ture of Chas. H. Fletcher when buying Castoria, Children Cry For NT. AVegetable Preparation fords. similating the Food andRedula ting the Stomachs ant Bowels of INFANTS Cit REN te The Kind You Have Always Bonght, and which has been Promotes DisestionCheerfid- in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of ness and Rest.Contains neither and has been made under his pere Opium.Morphine nor Miueral. sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to All Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘Ju Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Otl, Pare- goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. I¢ contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee, It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than oA bee it has been in constant use for the relief of Co: pation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles an Diarrhea, It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend, NoT NARCOTIC, Aperfect Remedy for Constin tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worns Convulsions Feveris:: ness and Loss oF Sieur PacSinile Signature of Fined $18. » BIS Haat ted ruil Street. Bad raspberric: Jous Donker, Venth street DEALERS ARE FINED One Grocer Taxed $100 and) * Others $25 in Special | cin Ow" FRECKLES The following deal Were to-day| New Drug That Quickly Removes These convicted In Spectal Sessions of selling power beeen bad foodstuffs: ‘There's no longer the slightest need of Mel feeling asha wasktnpicn stay ew drug, othine—double strength 26, been discovered that positively removes these homely spots. Simply get one ounce of othine—- double strength—irom RikerTegeman Drug Stores and apply a little of it at night, and in the morning you will see that even the worst freckies have begun to disappear, while the lighter on have vanished entirely, is seldom i that more than an ounce is needed ty completely clear the skin and gain beautiful clear complexion: Ke sure to ask for the double strength: othine, as this is sold under guarantee of Fourteentn ' money back if it fails to remove freckles. butcher, No. 43 bad meat. Pietro Arcurt, butcher, No, 1988 West hae Road, Bronx, bad meat. Fined Samuel Rubin, butcher, No. 14 First avenue, bad meat. Fined $26. Jacob Lenner, grocer, No. 235 Kae One Hundred and Twenty-first street adulterated milk. Fined $15. Jacob Strauchler, grocer, No, 71 Mast Fourth street. — Adulterated milk, Fined $15, Max Burnbaum, fruit dealer, No. 2 Fast One Hundred and James McCreery & Cc 23rd Street 34th Street On Sale Tuesday and Wednesday, July the 80th and 8ist “McCREERY' SILKS”. Famous over half a Century. SEMI-ANNUAL SALE. In Both Stores, All short lengths and discontinue? patterns of Silks, Dress and Wash Good. One-half less than regular prices. HOUSE GOWNS & BATHING § In Both Stores. ITS. Imported Figured Lawn and Dimity Tlouse Gowns. 1.95 and 2.95 values 3.50 and 5.95 Kimonos of Persian Satin, trimmed with plain satin. values.zs3 3.00 Boudoir Gowns of Stripe Voile, trim- med with lace, lingerie collar. 4.95 value 6.75 Negligees of . lbatross,—sun-plaited skirt. value 7.50 5.75 Imported Batiste House Gowns, hand-embroidered. vatue 10.50 7.50 Women’s Bathing Suits of Messaline, trimmed models. 3.75 and 5.50 values 6.50, 7.50 23rd Street 34th Street WITH NEXT Sunday’s World (FOR THE COUPON) A Photogravure Portrait Woodrow Wilson (Size 15 x 2014) Same Style as the Famous “Sertes of Presidents” Photo- gravures, but More than Twice as Large. HEAVY INDIA TINT PAPER, . HOT PRESSED SURFACE. LLL il This ts a splendid photogravure from a photograph by Pach Bros.—the best photograph ever taken of the Democratic candidate for President. nizconnacorews | GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS BEARS BEAD ace months old _ the il 35 Doses —35 CENTS Signature bitsy of Guaranteed under the Food a ‘4 . een Exact Copy of Wrapper, Fil FOR FULL DETAILS SEE FIRST PAGE MAGAZINE SECTION NEXT SUNDAY’S WORLD.

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