The evening world. Newspaper, December 19, 1912, Page 9

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errr | I gave them a little drive above where | LIGE SEEKING GIRL HIT BY AUTO, WHO DIED IN FATHER’S tell you where thay lives ARMS ON BROADWAY. JOY RIDERS IN CAR THAT KILLED GIRL Chauffeur, Held for Homicide, -Refuses to Reveal His Pas- sengers’ Identity. EMPLOYER TO HIS AID. ‘Wealthy Mr. Sewell Goes to Court for Driver, but He Is Fined Just the Same. AM excuses and explanations offered by Walter Jones, a chauffeur, to-day, in the West Side Court were brushed aside by Magistrate O'Connor when Jones was charged with hor due to crim: inal recklessness in driving his auto mobile and with failing to a license. A car driven by Jones, in which were another man and three women, ran over and killed Elsio Kirschvaum, @ sixteen- year-old senior in the branch of the Washington Irving High School, who wes crossing the sfippery sidewalk at Broadway and Seventy-seventh street at about € o'clock last evening. According to Louis Kirschbaum, the father, a glazier at No. 216 Kast One Munéred and Fourteenth street, he and the girl had looked carefully up and Gown the street vefore attempting the crossing and were nearly a third of the before the car came upon eed of over twenty miles Kirschbaum said he jumped back and tried to drag his daughter awa,, but the machine struck her. The forward and rear wheels passed over her. Jones stopped the car. The other man and tho three women who were In It ran away. Jones helped take the gir! to Roosevelt Hospital. The girl died as her father and the chauffeur were carry- ing her up the steps. CORONER DEMANDS $5,000 BAIL FOR CHAUFFEUR. A. F. Hardy, manager of the Motel Lueerne, at Broadway and Seventy-sev- enth street, told the police he saw the accident and that Jones was driving the car at least twenty ies an hour, Jones, who obstinately refused to tell who were his passengers, would oniy say the car was owned by Henry B. Sewell, a wealthy man, of No. 222 West Fifty-ninth aireet, the Gainsborous! ts; only Jones gave a wrong th sninth strees. five automobiles. He| 4ppeared at court in one of them toc jate to speak up for Jones, and tu yay to the Coroner's office after Jones had been fined #0 for not having a It | have Said he lacked @ license only because of @ technical clerical error in acting on his application, ‘The chauffeur said Kirschoaum and his daughter steppe? out from behind a big truck, which he had been following at moderate speed, and that, though going slow, he had no time to stop before the girl slipped or the pavement and was struck by one of the front wheel “I shal! not te in the c he said stubbo unless a lawyer tela me to. I just can't, that's all.” When other chauffeurs told him he was only making 3 oat of himse: by helping people jd not appre ciate his silence, J ther lamely gave an explanation. “I met those people downtown,” he j sald. “and offered to ive them a itt THE STOMACH IS THE MIRROR OF HUMAN INTELLECT but the The brain rules the body, stomach rules the brain, lf the stomach is not Cee prop erly the brain is thrown out of balance land the thoughts it creates are no 1 HeRtHy ones, As ‘alcohol fumes rising from the lee: smach will befuddle the brain so tha | a m:n becomes drunk, so will the poison ous gases rising froin the undigeste: |food lying n the stomac! cause the brain ome unbalanced, In this way ) crimes can ever be traced to a weak stomach, Cooper's New Discovery, which is or Ml drug stores, htens the | wring up the stomach so tha (it can perform its functions as Natur where he wa minutes after the accident had employed Jones for about alx wee to drive various of lis five car: particular car Jones was driving, night, was one which Mr, Sewell was selling to the chauffeur, to } od | always intended aw acab, because it was out of date, — | It is a purify CHAUFFEUR DROVE RACING| Which first ¢ CARS. | the stomach and t Benjamin F. Jones, attorney for Mr Lae eal th Sewell, undertook to Ket the $5,000 ball which the Coroner required before Jones could be released from the Tombs, Jones, who has driven cars in Vander pilt Cup races and hill cl He said and vitali sts local di red blood which course giving it. strength and carrying away ail headaches on its trail, SKE Est. SU Yeors. 263 Sixth Ave & 17* Street What Gift So Welcome as Furniture? Kelly offers YOU best choice, finest qualities, fairest prices, easiest terms. A small amount down opens an account, Library Book Case, Mahogany and Mission four » Mission Style, " den Oak and Maho - $7.00 } any and up Special Values rris Chairs, Music ay ne's. Parlor Tables, Rem:n Chal’s. Missioa Ciceks, Rugs. ete. ‘THIS DINING OUTFIT—SET INCLUDES A solfd o2k 6-f00i Tabie aighiy polished, claw foct pedestal and four select oak genuine icather seat Dining Cualrs, ed at less than the regulcr price of the tcbie $20.50 emember, You Can Depend Upon Anything That Kelly Sells. » 263 6th Ave.; 101-105 West 17th St. Open Evenings Until Ciristmas. THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18, they Mved and was taking them back | home when the accident isappened. Jo was held for the Coroner on homicide charge. pon ASTOR CHAUFFEUR ARRESTED Arthur Thorpe, chauffour for Vincent Astor, was arraigned to-day In Market Court, before Magistrate Herr- man, by Policernan Bewick, charged with disorderly conduct. Bewick toid the Court that he was stationed in front of No. 310 Lexington avenue last evening, where a reception was being held, and Thorpe was etand- ing at the foot of the stoop, in the way of guests, Thorpe said he was walting for his party and refused to move. ‘Then Bewick placed Thorpe under arrest. Magistrate Herrman discharged ‘Thorpe with @ reprimand. a JUAREZ ENTRIES. The Juares entites for to-m as follows 4 pa 108 ura i eh ning 108! Ganten ot pe mach, Tis acon, “fou; he a 2, “oa Viste od beett wy. WO: aie rincess: {rte | Bye 10; ped Tucker. 110; Lee Meinese nu, Mo; Sir eer * Filia WACK —Selting: alt geen) atx ae | ds meat vila, Sie nnd 4 ayy halk 10). Spomitea toa” Saree fait Hoga, 104 pr Warry, 108 Jos; Fetmond Adains 108; Rosey Done! te akmle Gray, vssiiliay, ni ata: Pre ‘odie F, 102; Maaalo, 108; Hi nil Maer, 108; Halos, Lon: US Angelus 108; "Co-ed, Yon TE; Doe ‘Alfens 168 rwichehiiaen: “Sixtit 8 RAC! mt me sty cte,end wp a cy iter ‘elon ave, 108: Deck Matem Ry eat: ite moregain, Written aemence, ‘Truck fet, fra, 108: Salvi Se Intent, “iGIY TO SPEND Ses $150,000,000 ON BROOKLYN DOCKS | Board of Estimate Unanimous- ly Approves Plan to Control Miles of Water Front. | BRIDGE New York City is ready to buy up the Brooklyn water front from Brook- lyn Bridge to Sixty-fifth street. Ridge. The Board of Estimate to-iay unanimous. 0, tions on to constr and an electric freight railroad, bit Sik “*{ Comprehensive Scheme In- | cludes Purchase of Bush Ter- minal at Cost of $30,000,000. {| Fecelved and approved the report of its ‘|Terminal Committee, Its action was The total cost will be $150,- proval of the Terminal Committes's report means that city officials will be- gin at once to ap alse and obtain op- the property suitable for | docks and water terminals over the | tretory named. On thi all uct @ monster TO BAY RIDGE. Tesaned by the city are the the Bush Torminal Company and the w York Dock Company. will ask #9 | and the New York | place ts sald to b held at $20,00,00. Acyuteltton of rest of tho property either shrevit | \purchase or by condemnation pro | | inus 18 expected to cost the munteipality | another $40,0 $50,000,000 ifor their pr Dock Compan er 1 FOR CONSTRUCTION to big plants] with MAY REQUIRE SEVERAL YEARS! culty will be ex 1912. PU irra ea uenur’s | UHARGSD WITH ATTEMPT nt Hla rons roves for ts TO STEAL THREE PIANOS. | mata These: re matture| Two Men, Arrested After a Chase, mined later Accused of Running Off With Truck. of No, 26 West and John Kage of @ were to-day hdd TO CARRY OUT PLAN, t Is not expected Michael Twenty -aixth at the same add any serious diffl- brat alytg ntered In the acquisi- The negotiations mn of the pro OF DOCKS AND RAILROAD. =| nay extend over several years, Not un- | $250 ball each for examination on 8 Once all the strip 4 quired the | til afte tho optiona have been ob. | UNlay by Magistrate Butts tn the Jeffer- plan ts for the expendi of another | tained he price agreed on where | #0! Market Court on @ charge of ateal- $60,000,000 in the construction of docks and a railroad along the water front. The Bush pe already own and op- |! erate a steam line for a distance of « Uttle more than a mile over their own property, but the muntelpal plan catts for elvetrification over the whole route. | Elevated tracks will be necessary in several places, In return of this expenditure of about $150,000,000 the city expects to obtain a} revenue which will more than pay for the cost within a few years, At the same time It is the bellet of Calvin Tompkins, Commissioner of Docks, that municipal control will go a long way @ward solving the dock question for| eral wenerations and bring about a ation which will enable future city administrations to cope with the in- creasing demands of commerce, While the Board of Katimate ac- cepted the report of its terminal com- mittee without objection, many protests wore made to the commi(tee regarding | features of the proposed plan. The | ee—composed of Borough Presi- 4 of Brooklyn, John Purroy Prewident of the Hoard of and Comptroller gast—have hold frequent public meet- ings during the last few months. ‘The Bush Terminal Company does not 1p its proprietory Interest i man of No. 1 Boy Ul Ligtle Silverman girl lingered until noon Vronders | to-day. pr pe eh Coroner's orders detectives made the it Is planned em of docks hold use. That is the story. operative plan. and $1 per week. O'Neill-Adams Co., New York City. living realities. “ON In New York’s Little Playmates Die After Eating Coroner Glinnen of Brooklyn haa or- dered an inquiry (nto the deaths of two little girls, suppowed to have been poi- her who lived at St rounds of the neighborhood, tr: which traverses tte plant! jocate the store which sold the Included in the territory to be pur-|and also !s desirous of making @ deal|oug candy to the children, EILL-ADAMS ing three pianos and a truck. They were arrested after a chase yesterday afternoon in West Twenty-seventh street. Acoording to the complaint the pris- onera stole a truck on which were tions proceedings have been pass on the matter again, Then matly provide for the expendi: necessary funds, TWO CHILDREN POISONED | rm sive Suns fn d'or FATALLY BY CHEAP CANDY, | 417 Weet Twonty-etghth etreet. | The loss of the truck and planos was report: | ed to the police, and in the afternoon | the men were traced through an ox Penny Sweets Bought in Brooklyn Store. ed by analine dyes on cheap candy, were five-year-old Irene Silver rk'a avenue and » Elsi Mark's and of all the childre four-year rcent,, or more y are fifteen! little girls, daughters of po: ts, wpent sever treasured majority of these 4 for candy ye ter at some of these infantile the netahborl Epstein died 6 last 1 convulstons, more or less opium or morphine, deadly poisons, In any quantity, to congestions, Lergago death, Weust, the Coroner's Physician, rformed un autopsy upon the dead iidren’s bodies to-day, and upon the | causes the blood to circulate pores of the skin and allays polson- Shopping Centre Co. Sixth Avenue, 20th to 22nd Streets, New York City A Piano Christmas for Everyone It is the story of our co- The unreserved, out-and-out, unqualified helpfulness in every detail which presents itself, makes the whole story a romance of pleasurable, iriteresting, profitable Piano buying. The Stratford Piano—the wonder of them all—at $170 with payment privilege of $5 down Please send me your book of piano Photos stood that this request places me (tpder no ol Pianos That You Can Afford to Own High price has always been the great barrier to thousands of musically inclined people who have been compelled to look upon the purchase of a piano as something entirely beyond their reach. Five hundred dollars; four hundred dollars; three hundred, at the very least. impossible ; it meant years of denial and saving; and the piano never came. But to buy that $300 piano for only $170; or that $400 piano for only $230; or that $500 piano for only $310; to buy a thoroughly good player-piano for only $370; or $430; or $475; to pay for it in small sums each week, or each month—the dream suddenly comes true. The piano or player-piano is yours—as easily as you purchase simple items for constant house- The Kohler & Campbell Pianos — over 135,000 in use today—six different styles-—at $230 and upwards with payment privileges ranging from $7.50 down and $1.25 per week, to $10 down and $7.50 per month. TheStratford Player-piano at $370; payment privileges of $10 down and $2 per weck The Pianista Player-piano at $430; payment privileges of $10 down and $2 perweck. Book of Photographs— FREE Fill Out and Mail this Coupon Today w ‘aphs, ligations whatever. It seemed It is under. The moment of your greatest desire for a piano, and the opportunity to purchase it, have met at just the right instant. O’Neill-Adams Piano Store has awakened hundreds of vague piano dreams, and made them The splendid worth of the pianos; the reasonableness of the prices; the perfectly easy payment terms, without interest; the absolute guaranty; Another high cost harrier surmounted! Our Exch Rolls contains all the latest popular music as wel selections. You pay $1 for any roll, regardless of the privilege of exchanging and re-exchanging as of only 5 cents per roll, An instance: $10 woi each month for one year will cost you but $16.0 had the benefit of 120 rolls of music, end you st may be exchanged indefinitely Solostyle Player Rolls are actually recorded from the artisis rendition, 7! Get our catalog Lee ome 5 Player-Piano Cc. Music Exchange 5. Not included in the Exchange Li the exchange privilege—all these advantages are They blaze a new and easier The story of our Piano Capabilities is one of piano quality, of moderate prices, of payment convenience—all buttressed by as iron-clad satisfaction assurance as can be written. A piano or player-piano of true merit can home this very Christmas. of a new order. trail for every piano purchaser. easily come to your at any price—at $475 to payment privileges. find them a hardship. Every instrument is If, within one year's all remaining payments will be voluntarily cancelled. dc. ¢ Library of Player Music Long winter evenings can be transformed into the Victrola. to $200.00, Payment as low as per week, ng the standard and classic list price. You then have $1 0 brings A.$18 Vii $1 Vicwpols and $10 in V often as you wish at a cost ' faeciites cakes rth of rolls, exchanged once tion, Payments 50s per week for Bliy weeks 0 in all, and you will have ill own 10 good rolls which Open evenings uotll Christmas $3, abraty.) Ce FS Stes SOIR Da 6 Vee ee NFANT ontary is something frightful. in civilized countries, twenty-two or nearly on marten, die before they reach one year; thirty-seven Trove than one-third, before they are fivo, dud one-half before ht | Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children's complaints cont they stupefy, retard circulation and *Castoria cperaies €xn exactly the reverse, on must see that it bears the signature eof ad opens the ying to! Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of TheAutopiano—unexcelled by any player-piano Put One of These Pianos in Your Home for Christmas You do not have to pay more than the cost of some trifling remembrance to put one of these fine pianos or player-pianos in your home. minute you make the first small payment you begin to own the instrument. payments are so moderate that you will never And every payment you make you feel you are putting your money into something really worth while. How You Are Protected before it is accepted into our salesrooms. construction and tone must all be perfect. Each instrument is guaranteed in a plainly printed warranty bond which must bear the signature of both the manufacturer and our- selves, and cover a term of years. i If for any reason you choose to change your mind within 30 days of date of purchase, we will take back the instrument and refund every penny you have paid, without question. exchange the instrument purchased for any other piano or player-piano on our floors the full amount paid on the first instrument will be credited against the second. In the event of the death of the purchaser at any time during the term of payment, A Victrola for Your Home, for Xmas. here's a Victrola for every home. You can also purchase any style of Victor-Victrola end a liberal amount in Victor Records all in one easy payment purchase. tions, Payments 8c per week lor billy weeks ()NEILL-ADAMSCO. Sixth Avenue, 20th, 2ist and 22d Sts., bt Fleer, Main Building, 224 St., Elevators a ad Pressman, with whom they are sald to have left one of the ihe puasee, |KICKED HORSE, | FINED LIMIT. ty Conte Driver #25 Animal, Frank Guttingrota, to nty yonrs old, | of No. %7 Nassau street, drives a horas animat and wagon, To-day the poor was tired and the driver couldn't He got down from the Then he hit it ov on hook, Henry K. . of No, 8 Mad strated and the It 80. | and kicked it. | Guttingrola arrested. | Hefore Magistrate Barlow in the Tombs \p court Guttingrola said he wasn't guilty, Ho said he kicked the horse | because tt wouldn't go. Yes, maybe he hit {t once or twice with the hook, too, Masist Barlow fined him $25 for | eruet animals, which {# the limit Save the Babies. We can hardly realize that r conte ‘We do not hesitate to say that a timely uso of Castoria would save a recious lives, Neither do wo hesitate to say that jeaths are occasioned by the use of narcotic preparations, any ain They are, in considerable quanti ut Chas, H, Fletcher, Castoria Chan. $610 and very liberal The The succeeding thoroughly inspected Case, time, you choose to festivals of mu: ind_ mirth Prices from $15.00 brings you 4 #25 Victore Veewola and $16 ia Vcr Records of your own selec 50 Anam

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