The evening world. Newspaper, August 13, 1912, Page 4

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GIRL WHO SOUGHT DEATH FINDS HOME: ANDWANTSTOLIVE Through Evening Ssaag Wor Gus- | sie Berger Obtains New Friends and Employment. Through The Evening World, Gusste| Berger, who tried to end her life Inst ‘Thersday night, has found both work | ang a sheltering roof, Miss Berger wad deapondent because she could not! secure employment. She had been out of Work for a year until three weeks | re whe tried to end troubles in the Bast River. Then a! ured a Job which brought her twenty-five cents | a Bay. Her rent was long past due, | and she could not figure any way out) of ber difficulty on such small wages. The girl was rescued from the river, and deing revived was charged with pting suicide, The Evening ‘World published her story Friday, whon he declared she was sorry she bad not Permitted to die. She ip in a diferent mood to-day. Saturéay morning, 1. Bader, represent- ing the Hebrew Settlement and Immt- Grant Ald Society, appeared tn court 4nd said he could find a nome for the Young worn. She was discharged and Pafoled in his custody. Plays ‘Dearie’ Every Day On a $100, For Hen ies Gibson Paid $15,- 0 a Year to, Entertain the Steel King an Hour Daily at His Summer Home Near Ma He Has to Do Is to Re- peat One Tune Over and Over. Beverly, Pity the hard lot of Archer Glbson, | He Kets $15,000 @ year for fingering « $100,009 organ an hour a day and ren- dering “Dearie” between the classical thunderings and groanings of the coatly Pipes. Also he «i summer home— you'd wish you ow if you saw it= and 4 nice, comfortable automobile. Archer works at the above mentioned laborious task to delight the musical soul of Henry Clay Frick, multi-m!ilion- aire Pittsburgh steel magnate, whose summer home ts at Pride's Crossing, near Beverly Farms, Mase. Every day at 2 P. M. the phone rings in the Gibson house and the organist motors over to the Frick mansion. There in the music ‘hall, the silent, gruff money giant sits waiting for his daily music. While the Mrs. J. Remus, who ie the head of the |Mimble fingers of Organist Gideon rip out Trinity Lunch Club, No, 45 Beaver street, read the story in The Evening ‘World and wrote to the paper, saying she could Gnd a place for the girl. ‘Manager Mason o: the Hebrew So- ciety was seen by a representative of The Evening world and was pioased @t.the offer of Mra. Remus. Miss Berger, when told of the prospect, was one with it. Mr. Bader went to » Remus wivh the reporter and the arrangements for the care of the Girl were completed. To-day or Wednes- < she will go to her new home, never can thank The Pvening Werla enough,” said Miss Berger, are some kind people in the world after all. 1 was sorry when they @ayed me from the water, for I could ace how I was golng to be bene- Ated. But now everything Is different. & have not known what home is since 2 lett my own home tn Russia four Zipre seo. Tam sure I am going to be fas work for every girl in New Manager Mason. ‘The wan those who can't secure it ts; they don't look in the right direction. They get into a groove and there is no work to be had oul- spin the lines in which they have But if they are willing selon ind of work, they can get e It to far better for a girl to be em- a domestic than to work ine ve but the majority of girls do not it tn that light. We have been un- at Fogg 4 ail times to supply the ig CQURT WARNS CROOKS TO KEEP QUT OF QUEENS. to Emphasize It He Sends Three Offenders to the Workhouse. Passing sentence on Samuel 8. ik of No. 580 Lexington avenue, ik, address unknown; Harry Rrook- of No. 158 Forsythe street and Rose of ‘Yerk,” fe Zapch in the Long Island City Poilce to-day served notice on all ly dressed youths who make their Ur by their wits that Queens Borough ita them to keep outside its boun- three were arrested at North on Gaturday for jostling and act- Mke a crew of pickpockets and charged with disorderly conduct. Brookman and Rose had admitted had not done any real work for and Frank had stood silent un- & police charge that he had served e in Kimira, the Magistrate said: think I know why you were over The police are watching your eet Manhattan #0 closely since the thal murder that you have no chance ove r there) You came to Queens toi Misded hunting grounds. You made . shall not impose fines. You, Bramk, are sontenced to etx months in the workhouse, and you, Rone, Brookman to three months in the same Bend word back to Manhattan to your friends that the same sort of ie waiting for any of th wh come crawling around this bor. ough” —_—-———. EXPERT SWIMMER DROWNS BECAUSE OF HOBBLE SKIRT. Miss Stockhauser Saves Two Chil- dren, Then, Fettered by Clothes, Perishes. RINGSTON, N. Y., Aus. 12. s LAs peth Stockhauser, & gove was drowned after having 4 two chil dren from the same in Esopus Creek, at Mount Pleam: Miss Stockhauser, with another gov- eriess and two children, went rowing In ®@ gmall rowboat. The creek, which ts usually low at this season, had risen considerably owing to the rains of Bun- dey, and « awift current made naviga- ten aMicult. When near the shore the boat was overturned and Miss Stockhauser, who ‘wes an expert swimmer, directed her | ektly to the saving of the children. She oe succeeded in landing her charges on shore when el usted and unable to operate her Umibs treely, owing to the tightness of her hobble skirt, was drowned, pHa Abbett KILLED ON SECOND AVE. “L.” Wetes, o Mail Driver, Strack as He ‘Walked Tracks. denn Welss, thirty, of No. 290 ast and gentlemen,” stri “| would slipped, und being | 66 Deal after peal of stuff that dead men wrote—the kind that no one could are any merit In while the composer was alive—Henry Clay Frick, the tips of his atrong fingers joined, listens In s#tfence, After a particularly weird aucceaston of crashes and thunders from the costly organ lowes its former expression of wrapt in- the millionaire's countenance terest. He leans forward uneasily as the music bursts in a glorious finishing flare. “Play ‘Dear! Then the strains of he commands. 000 organ senda forth the hat popular ballad, ladies that the com- mon instalment, g0~ piano used to know began ‘doing it.” WHAT THE NEIGHBORS THINK AND SAY. ‘Usually a few repetitions of the above ballad are enough to allow a fresh start on the previous heaty stuff. And 0 the hour of music pasnes. There are some along the North Shore who are mean enough to say that the owner of the ort hasn't the eoul for the “com- positions.” They hint that the big Frick organ was installed ‘just because Andy had one put in.” Andy being the Laird of Skibo who sort of set the pace as it were for the bunch from Pittsburg, And again some aay the music hour ts a relief space, @ agfety valve in tho preset troublesome thoughts of Mr. Frick, who te getting ready for his “Billion Dollar Lawn Party” next Fri- day evening, when the aristocracy of Massachusetts is invited and the prin- c!pal interest centers in seeing who will come, But that is neither here nor there, It ta of Archer Gibson and his bard lot the story would treat. ‘When young Mr, Gibson left Babt- more, friends warned him his lead into thorny paths had become one of the gr if not the greatest organia America. His future was bright and he might have labored on for the sake of Art. Ha might have called down maledictions on the —unapprecit public and turned his collars the second day. He would aurely hi been recog nixed within @ year after his death. But young Mr. Gibson determined to get his'n this side of the River Styx. Ho he began to be friendly with millton- aires. He played the organ in the homes of Charles M. Schwab, W. K, Vander- Dilt gr, Masry Payne Whitney and the rest, and was called the “Billion Dollar Organist.” And see what {t has brought ‘him to, Not content with working an hour a day he has composed an opera, A atriking example of what genius will @o under difficulties, ‘And, as they nay in the class! some opera.” The title is ‘“Yadr played parts of it over for an Evening ‘World reporter who called at his sum- mer home yoaterday, and although the reporter doesn't know @ thing about nd| music from a technical standpoint, he found elf trying to remember snatches of melody that had the finer mething that went right out # i took hold, A music critic jain, Gibeon says it's due tion in tl to in- form of his charming wife, who criticises his work. But about Yedra, She Jee young lady, a princess, to be exact, and extremely sp! beyootiful. Her father is @ Hindu ruler who takes a lot of stock In the oracle of something or other which predicts dis- aster from a great conqueror, ‘This hap- pens wdout the time the princess is emit- ting her first lusty yells, and the king decides the cheetid must become a snare for the conqueror. FED HER ON POISON 80 AS TO KILL ANY WHO KISSED HER. Bo they fet her on—what do you think? Poison! Lots of it every time she grew hungry, eo that by and by she lved entirely on deadly drugs, ‘Think of it! The worse the better, Ysdra could eat a couple of pounds of lead arsenate for br Ask for The Foed-drink for All Ages. ate hotel: and fountain. Seventy-aixth street, & mail wagon ‘Griver, wae struck an4 instantty ki!!ed | easty to-day by & north-bound train on the Bocond avenue ‘L" at Ninety. am | +» and About Ail ‘ast and calmly stir | AtFountains & Deewksre HORLICK'S” MALTED MILK ‘THE E EVENING WORLD, 0 red musical The music corpuacles left wo will produce t few years ie going to be alive, The ‘rage’ and ‘turkeytrote’ are forms of it, very low, but true to the lives of the type they make thelr appeal to. It is the muste of the higher grade Ideal American that T strive to write, Hut that music must be alive and real, Lake their absinthes and benedictines and other abnormal things, the French chase after the ab- normal In muste, Why startle the ears with musical acrobatics and say it Is the Inst word In Art? The Germans | pursue the stolider way, Tholr muse, like thelr natures, runa to the phieg- matic. It ie overloaded and pedantic, What have we in our national character to warrant seeking their schools through for meana of expressing the feelings of America? “There I only one nation In Burope whose feelings are as a nution some and that nation Is Russia only to remember what an effect the wild mualc of Tachaikowek! has in this country, As music {t is perfect In rhythm and har- mony, but In no nation except our own and Russia is {t loved. American music In the ultimate will be red-blooded, whatever else It may be, and it will be Rreat because tt will be trie.” ‘That's the way Gibson thins and the way he acts, and toward this end he is striving when not otherwise engaged. Meantime there is always the security that comes with the condition mentioned in the first paragraph. Pt That rare flavor which distin- guishes FATIMA CIGARETTES 000 Organ ry Clay Frick the cracked ice in her tumbler of prussic acid. You see, the idea was to have her fo filed with poison that any one who might kiss her would die, And even at that she was so lovely !t was all they could do to keop xeveral smitten youths from all othersis from sulcide. ‘Then along came Alexan- . der the Great. After the battle was just the pure, over and be had put the India the Hindoo king, emissaries wero sent to him. Yzdra came along too, ready for the dirty work. One little kiss and Alexander's name wag Dennis. But !f Yadra was beautiful, Alexander was @ good looking young fellow himself, and Just as naturally as anything they fall in love. Now, what Is the princess to do? She loves him madly, Yet if she kisses him ‘he will die. Of course she might have Kissed him anyway and killed herself too. In that way no other woman could have him. But sho doesn't love him enough for that Lady and the Tiger pro- ceeding, Ge tries to flee, but is urged by her father to infatuate the warrior further, and she does so by dancing a kind of Gibson Salome. As a dancer nobody had anything on her, You know the kind of dance, Alexander | to kiss her when Yadra, unha) draws a dagger and stabs he he ts dying the warrior kisses what do you think?—the polson di to have any effect. Dying Yadra ee her sacrifice {s in vain. natural flavor of pend tobacco— rought out in the height of its perfection by the most skillful blending. Curtain, “Yadra" ts to be produced next win- ter, and meantime the “Billion Dollar Organist" is going right ahead com- Posing smaller things in what little time he-can find off from his daily work. He has sone strange ideas, has Or- ganist Gibson, He doesn't care a rap about the Italian school. He thinks the abroad is thin and superticial. HE BELIEVES IN AMERICAN MU- SIC, HE DECLARES. “I believe in American music," he says. “What do I care about the way my erendfather played the organ? I play It the way It expresses the moat to ine. Ho also what do I care about the way they do things abroad and the Pattorn eet hundreds of years ago? I wasn't educated abroad, ahd I try to Keep all 1 know from going. What's the use of going to study in @ musical RS ] TURKISH pen rely vegvtable, P ond reliable, | Hagulate wae vey "en Digest Organ, The safest and best medicine in tJ Gre N ateorders of the Stomach, Liver, Bowels, a Baader, Nervous traces, ists’ of Are: | Camtipation, “Tadigestion, Fever, ‘ot the Bowels, Piles aud” all. de ls of the interaal viscora, PERFECT bi ecomsished by taking | Furnished MARKCDaWN Batwa ‘8 PILIS, PE @ do! EPSIA | $110.00 NOW GOING a hig Font Fer Billousness wii | brates i]s. E: Cor. ater SaRs aah Sic 34 Ave. N.Y. Bick Headache, ite nouriahir propertien tor atirel wastes gf the body Scouts a tng, At dr RADW co, orgy, mall, Saks & Company Broadway at 34th Street TUESDAY, | AUGUST 138, 1912. BONWITTELLER&CO. WILL CLOSE OUT WEDNESDAY Women’s Summer _ Apparel At Less Than Cost Dressy Coats & Wraps Formerly 29.50 to 45.00......... 10.00 Of satin, charmeuse, chiffon and taf- feta—the best styles of the season. fee Expooiion Ferstire end Rup Sait Beginning To-Day and Continuing To-Morrow A sale of three-garment suits for Men Formerly 25.00, 28.00, 30.00 & 35.00 at $20 q The best indication of how these three-gar- ment suits are made is, that they are Saks- made. Beyond that, we might tell you that they are tailored in the season’s most approved fabrics, both as to weight and design, and are half, quarter and eighth lined, @ It will also interest you to know that this sale gives you the unrestricted choice of every three-garment model in stock at the above former prices, Blacks and Blues alone excepted. Women’s Coats..... Were 15.00 to 29.50..... Linens and pongees in tailored and .ouring models. Women’s Coats. ....Were 29.50 to 45.00..... White and tan Polo Coats; white, tan and navy serge, handsome imported mixtures, mistrals, and black and white checks. 15.00 Taffeta Afternoon Wraps Formerly ve 25.00 45.00 to 59.50... A variety of exclusive models—one of a kind—lined with chiffon or peau de cygne. Linen Suits...... Were 10.00... Belted effects in ramie linen. Linen Suits...... Were 15.00. ..........00000e Tailored and fancy models, in exclusive effects. Linen and Terry Suits..... Were 20.00 High-class models, in the most desirable style, - 10.00 Fifth Avenue at 38th Street fampico trom the leading manufacturers which have been on exhibition at the recent Xow Yook Fornttare Beshange ie cumnortion with every diecentinued pattora &E QD throwsheut cer entire cotablichment, we will offer at = reduction of...... No Money Down Club plans or ridiculously small deposits will attract the inexperienced buyer, but wise shoppers will look for honest concerns that don’t draw preepective buyers inte a net et high prices and tronciad conditions. Proof of our straightforward dealings is berne out by the fact that we are one of the largest furniture and carpet distributers in the country. Thanks to eur enor purchasing pewer, WE are enabled to effer you exceptional values. All Goods Marked in Plain Figures Out-of-Town Deliveries Made by Our Motor Trucks 4 QUARTERED fervor) Golden finish, hy hand- QUARTERED OAK = tage sel i es fond, | ie" tla ne Golden, finan, biehiy v0 a S78 outs valu . $3 4. Right Uke cuts value S86. Cork Linoleums Velvet Carpets. IESE Value 50 to 78c 19% 98 0 Mw he, is and 59c —vatue $1.00 to sgh IL (ty ipl 2 RN 2 pe 5 | {Con 6Ave 15"5r ye HAVE ARRANGED FOR TO-MORROW (WEDNESDAY), A SALE OF HOUSEHOLD LINENS AT THE FOLLOWING ATTRACTIVE PRICES: TABLECLOTHS oF Linen pAMAsk $2.75, 3.75 & 4.10 DINNER' NAPKINS To atc. PER Doz; 3.40 & 5.00 LINEN HUCK TOWELS, HemstitcHep. _ eR Doz. 3.00 TURKISH BATH TOWELS, Hemmen, per poz, 3.00 BiNh Avenue, 34th und 5th Streets, New York. IT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED— Pro A WORLD “WANT” AD. WILL GO AND GET IT. Stern Brothers will exhibit Wednesday an Advance Importation of English Tailored Hats for Street, Golf, Tennis and Automobile Wear, from the leading London Hatters, from $9.50 to 18. re) Also Preliminary Showing of FRENCH MODEL HATS for Early Autumn Wear, with Copies and Adaptations from our own workrooms, for Dress and Semi-Dress. , 4) THIRD FLOOR MAIN BUILDING SIF Specially Priced, A Special Offering, To-morrow, of Silk Umbrellas of Heavy Twilled Silk, close rolled, mission $ and natural wood handles, Values from $3.00 to 3.50, 1.95 of Extra Quality Silk, close rolled, handles of a 2.90 etched sterling silver, gun metal, buck horn and natural woods silver trimmed, Value $4.50, To-morrow, Wednesday, Continuation Sale of Irish Linens % to 4% off Their Regular Prices Immense purchase of world-famed Irish Linens, noted for their rare beauty of design and finish, and unexcelled wearing qualitles, Over fifty exquisite round and square patterns, many are hand loomed and all bear a hallmark of quality seldom equalled and never excelled. Satin Damask Table Cloths, from $3.60 to 24.50 Regularly from $5.50 to 49.75 Napkins, to match, from $4.50 to 20.25 Regularly from $6.75 to 40.50 Dozen, Full Bleached Damask Table Linen, at 88¢ Regularly $1.25 Yard y Hand Embroidered Pillow Cases, _ Pair $1.75 to 10.00 Regularly from $2.75 to 20.00 Pair Embroidered Bed Spreads, from $7.75 to 42.00 Regularly from $12.75 to 85.00 \West 23d and 22d Streets 193E2 Wit Sale ot NeW warerooms formerly selling up PIANOS of different styles ee | woods, formerly selling up to $600, will be closed out TO- MORROW ONLY at... and PLAYER-PIANOS to $325 will be closed out TO- Terms to Suit Your Convenience In order to make room for the large Fall stock now on its way MORROW ONLY at. 190 $5 Down, $5 Monthly to us, EVERY PIANO in our A limited number of PLAYER- 12 Rolls of Music Free and Library Privilege. All Bear Our GUARANTEE Liberal Allowance for Old Pianus Taken in Exchange, Knabe Warerooms 39th St. FURMETURE AND CARPET SALE WE MAKE A SPE PURNION Itooms Comptetely 3 "49.9 a Furnished at 74.98 4 Rooms Complies! $3.00 Yon" $50 $5.00 ox" | $75 $7.50 Dawa

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