The evening world. Newspaper, July 30, 1912, Page 6

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—— THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY 380, 1912. [1s filled, mostly with women, and/apparently suffered any I" affects tr om|rrandma, you know. Even if 1 am ARTHUR BRISBANE MARRIED,]| #"4 Mrs. Seward Cary, of No. 4 West | vane, who was born in Buffalo, resides| Women employed in Mt. Sina! Hoepftal, lowered. One of the boats had her for- “S ir hina rince in tay oa snot id He a oy fe girl T can't let anything Fortieth etreet. at No. 63 West Ninth atreet. Fitth avenue and Hast One Hundredth |ward falls loosened too soon, @o that], oretny related her exp Abid He Pa Me. Belwbane and Mise Cary calle’ at ne street, refused to go to work at To'clock lend of the boat dropped and threw fif- |“ igng tfeboat 4 ove en Dride te the Danghter of Sewara he this morning, demanding $3 @ month ‘Whon the iifeboat tipped over T went the City Hall to-day and received thetr SCRUB WOMEN STRIKE. increase in wages and better food. AS 18 80 blamed. ‘eh in thie Cary. marriage license from City Clerk Scully. teen or twenty shrieking women M0 ln to the all over. [came right up t , lthe water. There were four other boats |the aurface becattse Thad « life-pre- ‘| in the water and as the ea was not |ferver. on, you know, Mirat thing I did] ¢ suntry, sf the man with the ready- ‘The couple were married by the IN NIGHT COLLISION: {rove oJ women, who were deing evt | lthen was to look around for grand-| made ni Arthur Brisbane, editor of The Evo-| Rev, Dr. Theodore Sedgwick of the Cal- lite-preservers, we "Oh, Taon't know. Human lives are as [ing Journal, was married to-day to |mother. @he wan right near me and I vary Episcopal Church, Twenty-second grabbed her. Miss Phoebe Cary, daughter of Mr, street and Fourth avenue. Mir, Bris- soon as the matter was called to the attention of Dr. Goldwater, the guper- intendent, the demands of the Lid Hospital an@ Win. A number of porters and scrub] returned to work, were granted and the sixty Had to look out for’ cheap as ever,” replied the Gage. _ The passenger steamer listed to port Be In the mean time the collier had ro-| = fcovered from the collision and was City of Rockland, R Running to}; Boston, in With | Collier, Is Badly Smashed. Crash BOSTON, July %—The steamer City | ot Rockland, from the Kennebec River te thia port with some two hundred re- | turning vacitionists, had her bow stove fm @o badly that she sank to her guards in a cMision at midnight with the enst- bound ateamn collier William Chisholm of New York. The accident took piace | of Boone Isiand, about twenty miles from York, Me. ‘The passengers on the City of Rock- land were hastily mustered on the boat @eok, amid panic, but all were finally transferred to the Chisholm, which had not been materially damaged by the col- Maton. Later the west-bound steamer Belfast took the passengers off the collier and landed them in this city PASSENGERS INJURED IN THE; CRASH. ‘The officials of the Eastern Steamship | Corporation, owners of the steamer, felt satiofied to-day that there had been | mo fatalities. Several of the passengers sustained minor injuries, Before the Belfast arrived on the| scene, the Chisholm had taken the City of Rockland in tow with the idea of! putting into Gloucester, the nearest hagbor, ‘The passengers of the Rockland were Yanded here about 9 A. M. and nearly al had interesting acconuts of their oes, The steamer left Gardiner, Me. yes- terday afternoon and picked up many Passengers on the way @own the Ken- nebec, @ large number boarding her et Bath. The steamer had good weather on the way down the river, but im- metiately after getting outside the mouth of the river she ran into a fog bank, The steamer’s speed was re- duced and nearly all the passengers had retired when there came a crash. The blow was suMficient to throw some of the passengers out of their bunks, and aroused nearly every one on board. The Oity of Rockland struck the Col- Mer on the latter's starboard sido, but | 3 as the Chisholm was heavily laden with coal and is @ stanch boat the City of }. Recklend got the worst of the blow. WOMAN THROWN FROM LIFEBOAT. and almost immediately began to settle. The officers rushed to their posts, or- dering the passengers to tie on the| hi INTO SEA worked alongsite the City of Kookland, While the passengers were being trane- \ferred those in the lifeboats were brought along the other aide of the col- fer and easily reached the dock. It lteok about an hour to make the com- plete transfer, and then as the City of Rockland seemed to be in danger of kolng to the bottom, heavy hawsere were taken on to the collier and @ start was made for Gloucester. LITTLE NEW YORK GIRL A HEROINE. Dorothy Lockett, ten years old, of No, 610 Riverside Drive, New York, proved a heroine. She and her Thompson, era on the City of Rock- ey were in Hfeboat No. 4, «l @ diaastrous experience. One of the boat in which there were from fifteen to twenty women and chil- dren took a eudden drop while it was being lowered and tung at an angie of & degrees. Every one in the boat was thrown into the water, All had life-belts on and #0 were able to float. Little Dorothy learned to ewim two years ago and was not panic stricken as were many of the others. Her first concern was for her grand- mother, whom she finally found float- ing around with the others. The little girl encouraged Mra, Thompson and as- | sioted her unttl another boat was finally lowered and the men tn it began haul. | ing the people aboard, No one had to help Dorothy. She scrambled aboard without assistance, and after bailing water from the boat for a few minutes asvisted in getting her grandmother into the boat. Neither Tells ‘Consumptives How He Got Well Turercutosia te said to be curable by) simply living tn the open alr and taking | an abundance of fresh exea and milk. Un- doubtedly some persons are benefited in this way, but an effective remedy for Con- sumption ie Eckman’ Alterative. Do all n to add to etrenath and in- . nouriah - ath ¢ ‘and purest air and add the tonic and beneficial eftecta of Eckman’s Alterative. Read what it did in thie case: “ yan taken with, hemorshar. yaician, one, of the | ton, Del.)., reeomme mi 1, bewan ta fnking Tat once. thie June, 1908, IT continued faith- using no other re " “Alterative saved my iite- be ‘inne Affidavit) JAB, SQUIRES. einan's Alterative tp affect que panne. roubles, life-preservers and assemble at once on | 4 the lifeboat deck. Six boats were has- write to” Fic inet eer ty Piiladeiphia, Fs.. for aAditional svidence, good Irish, Austrian and $15.0) to 25.00. and Lingerie materials. Formerly $12.75 to 25.00. to 60.00. to 8.75. jeer Spring and Summer Stock. Waists, $2.75 and 4. fine Lingerie Materials. =f=f we fete B. Altman & Cao. HAVE ARRANGED FOR TO-MORROW (WEDNESDAY), A SALE OF WOMEN'S SILK GLOVES MOUSQUETAIRE, 16-BUTTON LENGTH, IN BLACK OR WHITE, AT THE SPECIAL PRICE OF bes byvped Established tT Mark . Galf a Contury | Summer Sale | Suits, Dresses, Waists, Etc. Linen Suits, $8.75 and 15.00—Tailored from Lingerie Dresses, $12.50 and 25.00—Lace Trimmed and Hand Embroidered. Flemish Linens. Formerly Summer Dresses, $7.50 and 9.75—Of Linen Simple and lace trimmed. Skirts, $3.75—Linen and Pique. | Woolen Suits, $15.00 and 25.00—Remaining James McCutcheon & Co., 5th Ave. & 84th St., wadtitions Formerly $25.00 Formerly $5.00 Formerly $25.00 to 60.00, 75—Of Tailored Linen and Formerly $4.00 to 8.75. 65c, PER PAIR A PHOTOGRAVURE _ROMTRAT, OF Filth Avenue, 34th anh 15th Streets, New York, eo © Wisdom BEDROOM COURTESY On this “Day of Courtesy,” Wednesday, July 31, no furni- ture will be sold, but advance orders will be taken to be filled at opening of Sale, August 1. The difference between being a day ahead and a day behind is the difference between success and failure. ECONOMY Welive in an age of economy. For the first time in the his- tory of the world, waste and wickedness are regarded as synonymous. We are cutting out folly, eliminating fiction, taking up the economic slack. Anything in life that retards, that holds us back, that in- creases expense, that adds to the difficulties of existence, has got to go. The Science of Economics is the greatest science in the world. Economics means the best and most effective way of doing business. The best way of doing the Furniture business is the Wan- amaker way, illustrated in this August Sale. ee WOODROW WILSON, FREE “Get Your Principles Right,” Said Napoleon, “and the Rest Is a Matter of Details.” The laws of trade are just as exact as the Trade Winds or the Tides that come and go with clock-like regularity. Trade, like nature, abhors a vacuum. If there is no busi- ness, the modern business law is: Make Business. The August Sale of Furniture originated out of the desire to make business. August was always a dull month in the retail furniture trade. People were away holidaying and there was little business. The months preceding August were dull with furniture manufacturers. “Let’s Get Busy”’ we said to some of our manu- facturers—“ You work at near cost to keep your organization together, we will sell at near cost.” The August Sale of Furniture was thus born. Added to the furniture thus specially made in dull season, we took on such surplus lots as for one reason or another our good manufacturers had on hand, or bought out their sam- ples and discontinued styles when good. Later—to make the sale of widest possible scope—we en- tered our entire regular stock in the general movement—offer- ing discounts of 10 to 50 per cent on all kinds of Standard Furniture. The Wanamaker August Sale of Furniture thus stands on firm foundations. Its princi- ples are right—all that remains | is a mere matter of details. August Furniture Sale Opens With ‘Day of Courtesy, ”’ Tomorrow, Wednesday DINING ROOM $714,000.00 In addition to our regular stocks, reaching over $500,000, all of which are in the August Sale, we have made special purchases of $214,000 worth from our standard and proved- out manufacturers, among which may be noted these spe- cial lots: 1. A group of $51,000 worth of medium to very fine dining room furniture, consisting of matched suites and single sideboards, buffets, china cabinets and serving tables—to be sold for $35,000. 2. A group of $19,200 worth of ex- tension tables of mahogany and oak in a great range of pieces—to be sold for $14,000. 3. A collection of $25,000 worth of selected bedroom furniture from sev- eral of our regular makers—to be sold for $18,000. 4. Another group of more than $18,000 worth of bedroom and dining room chairs—to be sold for $12,000. 5. A collection of $25,000 worth of fine mahogany tables for the library living room and parlor—the best lot this manufacturer has ever offered under price—to be sold for $17,000. 6. Among others a lot of $14,900 worth of Mission chairs, rockers and settees in the best and most comfort- able patterns, highly finished and with JOHN WANAMAKER—NEW YORK Formerly A. T. STEWART 9th Street & Broadway . For the Home — ODD PIECES Spanish leather cushions of the high- est quality—to be sold for $10,000. 7. A complete collection totaling $48,500 worth of fancy chairs, rockers and general living room furniture— to be sold for $35,000. 8. About $40,000 worth of guaran- teed brass and iron bedsteads at dis- counts of 10 to 50 per cent., in a few cases less than half price, including 130 styles of brass bedsteads. 30 styles of white iron bedsteads. 25 styles of white enamel and brass cribs. 4 styles of youths’ white enamel and brass beds. 15 styles of white enamel and brass costumers. 20 styles of sliding couches, col- lapsible cots, divans and in- stitution beds. 9, Office furniture, including desks, tables, chairs, waste paper baskets, costumers, wardrobes, arm chairs and Davenports, upholstered with leather and other fabrics, all offered at 10 to 50 per cént. lessening in price. Kindly notice, these special groups will be ready tomorrow —Wednesday—for the “Day of Courtesy.” They will go to first comers, and cannot be du- plicated at the price. BEDDING In conjunction with the Fur- niture Sale four of our regular grades of bedding hair—60,000 pounds—will be made up into regular size mattresses, fresh and new for each purchaser, at $12.50 to $28.50 for $16 to $34 grades. Full size virgin cotton ‘‘Las- tikfelt” Mattresses reduced from $15 to $12.50. Proportionately low prices on feather pillows and springs.

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