The evening world. Newspaper, November 29, 1912, Page 14

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Esa on 4 BLAME WRECK ON BRIDGE DEFECT; aulet opening, the stock | Carmania, market to-day developed | | On the eve of departure @or his | *trength and many Issues scored ad: | ! $1,000 tn hts William power wa in : number of ’ Ih ihe Finnish dene. | the GbE pe Is group with a —_—>—_ jer % Greenwich estrest mp t gain of nearly 4 points hemo -cpamemd é , | He home yester ta vs | Tells of Seeing “Funny Faced” | Coroners Jury Brings in Ver-|» eo Went. He had two Tells of Seeing “Funny Faced") dict that Structure Sagged— |! Locomotives Sprang in Air. 114 Nov ch to-day t oner’'s jury wh Or spent Thanksgiving in water: | lcleo Beard, fourteen years old, picked | The turf courts of the Warehouse | ures of a general character, Represen- (Mest Into the death of four pergoi Lad and when he went to his| to. tl oat alo the sive deta Men's Grounds, on which the matches | tative Underwood, Democratic floor Wade, hay'a @hatt wresk ob the Pawn. | fo0et ght he carried a bottle of | net at from the forty-five defendants at wore played, were in fine condition and | leader tn the House, and Chairman of 2 tag BS whiskey. The empty bottle was on a |‘! the “dynamite conspiracy’ trial to-day | there was a great gathering of specta-|the Ways and Means Cominittee, was sylvania Railroad at n Loch ren- dered a verdict this afternoon that the acclient was duc to the sagging of @ JON EVE OF SAILING HOME WITH $4,000 HE ENDS LIFE! WALLSTREET Native of Finland Had Ticket to) | Leave To-Morrow on the for re There way a 0 of hin pock veral years remittan: at home emall table beside his bed when his body was found to-day. He had shot himself through the left temple. Hed with Christmas presents & | After a j Amal Copper: iia Am, Car mind i THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1912. GIRL PICKS TWO AS SUSPECTS AT Man and Another Before Explosion. INDIANAPOLI8, est witness yet to testify, Miss Ind, Nov. 2.-As the yor two men whom she gald she saw shortly before an explosion at North Randall, plaice Aiea |e /O., on March %, 1911, In that exploston ridge. | Ai) ore conveyo: plo > \- ‘The jury added that after examining) SCARED HORSES KILLED. |Am an ore conveyor was blown up by nitro. the witnesses it was unable to determine am glycerine with $60,000 damage, Phat caused the bridge to sink. | Ranawa ce, bat) sn The ttle witness, garved In a pink was held at Westchester, Driver At M. Ramsey of Philadel- r of bridges for the Penn- Sylvania Rallroad, testified that he ex- dmined the bridge after the accideat and found that it had sagged in the Biddle about twenty inches. The bridge @pans two feright tracks and is 158 He said he examined it on A team of horses attached to a loaded moving van and driven by Wiillam |Jones of No, 8% Melrose avenue, bes feame frightened to-day while going | west on One Hundred and Fighty-sec: ond street at Park avenue. train passing in the New York J cut sent them galloping south ofa a Inter Tehigh climbed the high witness chair |, looking toward the act bomb "told her story with her sister she was going road toward Randall she sald n, The men a lonely’ | n who were |explowion, a mile away, knocked tho] dishes off the table.” fdentified the men accused by the Government with havin 4n the hands of Smith and Am son was produced in court and identified by other witnesses as havi ploston, —— jAUSTRALIANS WIN DOUBLES | MELBOUR: |The Austral matches against the Ef lin the contest to-day Austratia, Nov. thus obtaining revenge for yesterday’ unexpected defeat in the singles, play was very brilliant, | | tors. Laura Beara, eighteen years old, also Anderson and Smith, tron workers, are « |APPROPRIATION BILLS blown up the North Randall job because it_was erected on the “open shop’ basis, he box which the sisters teatified they been found In tie wreckage of the ex- FOR DAVIS TENNIS CUP. »— team won the doubles ish challengers the Dwight F.| 9 Davis international lawn tennis trophy, The Public interest in the contest has been roused to a high pitch and a record attendance 1s expected to-morrow, when the last of the matches will be played, peasebemnaedsy “teeta FIRST IN NEXT CONGRESS. Little Other Important Work Will Be Taken Up During Short Session, WASHINGTON, Nov. %.—No legisia- ton of importance outside of appropria- the opinion of Republican Leader Mann of the House, who returned to-day after a trip to the Panama Canal with the House Appropriation Committee. Mann visited Speaker Clark short ter his arrival, and the two lea s|ers agreed that the length of the ss- sion is not sufficient to allow careful consideration for any important: mens- expected to reach Washington to-night. Uon Uiits wili be passed at the short | any session of Congress opening Monday, In FEEL FINE! LIVER FIGHT, STOMAGH SWEET HEADAGE GOHE— CASCARETS Iy cleanse and sweeten the ng food and foal gases; take ted waste matter and poison Cascatets make you feel by stomach, remove the sour, undigested and the excess bile from the liver and carry off the from the bo ghten ve ach regulat Don't forge “CASCARETS WORK WHILE YOU SLEEP# pesca RE a . long. fov. 18 and found It In the best condi- | Won. After the wreck he found that a! wy girder had crushed through a} tticed column. on cline. Jones saw the horses were headed | straight for the tron fence that hedges | rk avenue and down a steep in- ¥ asked District-At- you see him in the “A funny fa ENGINES APPEARED TO SPRING | the cut and decided he had no chance IN AIR. =George H. Brown, a bridge engineer the company, gave similar testimony, @etitying that the box girder had ebrung, letting down a girder. ‘William Hines, Philadelphia, engine- man of the first loamotive drawing the express, and T. H. Redmond, Phil- adelphia, engineer of the second toco- motive, both declared they felt a sink- ing sensation as their engines passed over the structure, They were making Between forty-eight and fifty miles an hour, the usual speed for that section @@ the rond. Their locomotives ap- Peared to go into the air and then ame down and left the rails, they said. ‘Mrs. Two of =Wreck Victims, Gave Up Home. SWord was received at the office of the American Three-Way Prism Company Gf No, % Weoster street that the wife And daughter of Charles D. Hudnut, the president of the company, who were fhJured tn the Glen Loch wreck, are in ie hospital at West Chester, Pa. Mrs, rt to stop them, He swung clear from th van a few yards before the team crashed into the railing. One horse was killed outright, the other received in- Juries which caused Patrolman Piffert j him, horses and wagon were owned by A. N. Joffrey of No. 003 Morris avenue. flbvsatbealiaioe~’ Ae MABEL BOARDMAN HONORED BY EMPEROR OF JAPAN. ferrad on Red Cross Secretary for Meritorious Work. WASHINGTON, Nov. 29.—Miss Mabel Boardman, secretary of the American to-day received from the ‘he insignia of the Fifth Crown conferred upon her nese Emperor for distin- Sulshed service. So far as officials hore know to-day, it is the first time an American woman hag been so honored by Japan. dnut is ring from three broken r conferred upon Miss Board- bs and Miss Ruth Hudnut peclaily established to recox- dustained joken rib and contusion jorious services done by wo- of the hip. Bot Mr, Hudnut ts with them, Mra, and Miss Hudnut came to this elty from Chicago last June and were going back there on the train that was wrecked. Their home in this city was dismantled and Mr. Hudnut had com- pleted: plans to follow them to Chicago when he recelved news of the accident to b's family. peices BROKER ATTEMPTS SUICIDE. Philip J. Jones First Writes Note Explaining His Act. Phiiip J. Jones, sixty years old, an in- surance broker, whose home ts at No. Brooklyn, attempted muicide near the Farmhouse, Prospect Park, shortly after 1 o'clock ‘this after- noon by e@hooting himself through the head, He was removed to the Kings County Hospital and cannot long survive the shock of the wound, yhe surgeons aay. Jones left a brief note beste him on the bench, where he seated himself to take his The note sald that tho writer w: sappolnted with ‘Ufe" and id enough to g ‘out of It. “ap of paper also gay @irections that his body should be er mated, men. The insignia was sent to Presi- dent Taft, president of the American Red Cross, by Marquis Matsukati, head of the Japanese Red Cross. President Taft has writtten to the Marquis and to the Japanese Emperor thanking them for the honor paid Miss Boardman. ——————> GOODWIN LOSES A POINT. Court Denies Motion to Reopen Case Againat the Actor. Judge Schmuck of the City Court de- nied to-day a motion’ to reopen the case { Walter D. Turner against Nat C, dwin, in Which a Judgment of $1,022 i was rendered on Nov, 21 in favor of Turner. ‘The decision gives permission to renew the motion upon the filing of proper papers. | Turner said he had been hired by the jactor at $75 a week for the season of } 1920-1911, and had been discharged early |in December, 190, He asked for the |salary to the first week in May. The | Judgment was granted by default, and the motion to re-open was based on a | doctor's certificate that the actor was unable to ungergo questioning on uc- mt of the effects his accident. el for ‘Turner replied that Good- ad been attending bali games and he theatre, of the Tremont police station to shoot | Jones escaped without Injury, The | Fifth Order “of the Crown Con-) The stomach is the “seat of bodily power.” The strength of the heart, the brain, the arms and legs depends upon what they receive from the stomach. Therefore, when you abuse your stomach you abuse your whole body. As you well know, one of the worst things you can do to the stomach is to put into it im- properly cooked food. Yet many people eat improperly cooked oatmeal every morning. }iand, a de Pay more attention to food and you'll pay less to medicine orhey Miller. sourtroom ?" “Yes, tha pointing tc 's him," replied Miss Beard, ge Amlerson of Cleve- nant, “He's the one that d the box, And there's another y she added, pointing to Peter J, smith, also of Cleveland. “We hadn't ven home more than an hour when t arr At least two and a half hours of cooking are necessary to pre- pare raw oatmeal for digestion. H.-O is the only oatmeal that does not come to you raw. H-O Oatmeal is steam-cooked | for over two hours at the mill. | You cook it but 20 minutes in your kitchen. You will prefer H-O Oatmeal because of its far greater conve- nience and economy. You will like it because of its far superior flavor. For breakfast tomorrow—H-O, “The World Takes Off Its Hat And it likes to do business with Successful Concerns—it likes to buy in breeds confidence and incidentally confidence breeds busy stores live, hustling, homelike, cheerful stores, where the clerks always smile and Courtesy and Satisfaction sit enthroned—and it’s the confidence bred by 25 years of honest methods, good values, and persis- tent progress that h Clothes Stores. And it is these 25 years of progress which we celebrate with the offer of this great as made the Brill Stores what tl Silver Anniversary. $5.00 & $6.00 Boys’ Suits & Overcoats At $2.50 Anniversary Bargains for boys Overcoat and Suit Sale $15,$18and$20 A Winter Overcoats and Suits $20 Gray Mixture Overcoats $20 Brown Mixture O’rcoats commemorating twenty years. of ‘wessful Clothes | $15 Black Kersey Overcoats pide eee SIs Double Breasted O'oats Suits — Norfolk and Double- $18 Belt jack Overcoats breasted, all-wool, in browns | $15 Oxford Gray Overcoats and grays—sizes 6 to 18. Overcoats—Russians and Reef- ers, all-wool Blue and Gray Chinchillas—sizes 3 to 10. $7.50 Values at $4.75 $15 Fancy Mixture O’coats $20, $25and$30 Winter Overcoats e To Successful Men” Common Sense i busy store, forthe busy store‘ tthe Brill Stores are busy stores, are—New York’s foremost Moderate Priced at $15 Fancy Back Overcoats $20 Single-Breasted O’rcoats $18 Gray Kersey Overcoats $15 Button Through O’coats $15 Fly-Front Overcoats $20 Chesterfield Overcoats $20 Ulster Model Overcoais 92u vark Mixture Suits $18 Worsted Suits $15 Cheviot Suits $18 Fancy Mixture Suits $15 Blue Serge Suits $18 Brown {viixture Suits > $20 Gray Mixture Suits A Bilious Attack ourself all the good things on the table. Reminds You Beechain’s Pills act promptly and gently; Ce ee that your digestion needs attention. There isa much pleasanter and easier way than denying i . and never fail to help you when you are constipated, liverish, bilious, headachy or any way uncomfortable after meals. Don’t wait until you are really ill. Ifyou are not as well as you want to be, do as millions of others do, Overcoats—Big, warm, double- breasted, belted coats with con- vertible collar—new smart de- signs—-sizes 10 to 18, Suits — Norfolk and double- breasted, with two pairs of knickers—all-wool fabrics, This Sale of Boys’ Suits and Overcoats at 2 Stores Only— Union Square, & 125th Street and Suits at $25 Chinchilla Overcoats $25 Split Sleeve Overcoats | $30 Gray Mixture Suits $30 Gray Mixture Overcoats | $30 Heather Mixture O’coats | $25 Blue Serge Suits $20 Gray Kersey Overcoats | $20 Black Kersey Overcoats | $25 Cassimere Suits $30 Belted Back Overcoats | $25 Button Through O’coats | $20 Fancy Blue Suits $25 Plaid Back Overcoats $25 Fly-Front Overcoats $25 Dark Mixture Suits $25 Brown Mixture O’rcoats $25 Patch Pocket Overcoats $30 Double-Breasted O’coats $25 Single-Breasted O’rcoats Anniversary Sale of Men’s Furnishings $25 English Model Suits $30 Heather Mixture Suits put yourself right with 9 ” 4 _ inthe household rem f edio™ as directed, they will prove a the world’s most popular ‘aken $1.00 Knitted Neckwear, 50c 50c Guyot Suspenders, 33c $1.50 Natural Underwear, $1 $1.50 Tan Cape Gloves, 85¢ $1.50 and $2 Knitted Ties, 85¢ $5.00 Silk Shirts, $2.65 79c Ribbed Underwear 50c $1.00 Pure Silk Hose, 39¢ $1.00 Pure Silk Neckwear, 50c $1.50 and $1.75 Shirts, 95¢ $5.00 Bath Robes, $2.50 $3.50 Full Dress Reefers, $1.75 25c Paris Garters, 15c $3.00 and $3.50 Shirts, $1.65 $1.50 Gray Suede Gloves, 85 $1.50 Madras Pajamas, $1.00 Sale of Soft Hats and Derbies $2.00 and $2.50 Hats at $1.40 $3.00 Hats at $1.85 $3.50 Hats at $2.65 Derbies, Soft Hats and Tweed Hats. | Derbies and Soft Hats in all Styles, Fine Featherweight Derbies and Soft Hats, They are compounded with the greatest care from the purest and _ most valuable vegetable ingredients. i their genuine worth. Everyone needs a little medicine now and then. You will find Beecham’s Pills the best tonic-aperient for general use. Do you feel in perfect health now? If not as well as you oygnt to be, get a box of these famous Are Your Remedy any speedy remedy for all disorders due to of: unhealthy condition of- the stomach and gale bowels or sluggish action of the liver or kidneys. opel Beecham’s Pills have been in use for over half a century. One trial will convince you of ills and take a dose before retiring. ere is nothing bette id th h ve used them will tell you that Beecham’s Pilla At all druggists, 10c, 25c Directions of special value to women are with every boa 279 BROADWAY, NEAR CHAMBERS STREET Union Square, 14th Street, near Broadway 125TH STREET, CORNER THIRD AVENUE—OPEN EVENINGS . 47 Cortlandt Street, near Greenwich

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