The evening world. Newspaper, April 28, 1913, Page 18

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a cae | ) Tr Ss. be EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, APRIL 2 News Odditics _ } DEATHMAYFINGH uted for ple and charlotte russe by the | pono LAST MANUSCRIPT there yesterday. | —>— P SISA WEEK WE EASKSALMONY OF S12ANEE HBBY OATMEAL and Harvard Dining Aw foe will beat tation a betng b ALL WATE mdm BM), inY aphe LONDON bh rted in to try to duck the suffragettes in a Hyde Park stream. : 5 Suing —— Playwright Lies Dying From ‘s Richards Declares Huge WILD DBER jumped through the plate glamn atiow window df & men's tur- wre ying , Sy -e Times hing sto Thompronvitle, % ‘Spouse Earns Twelve T imes bess ine store in Thompronville, Conn. Overwork on Drama He May Never Complete STATISTICS show that Ireland is the most sober member of the United as Much as He Does. Kingdom. SPECIAL WEATHER WARNING haa been sent to the amateur farmers SHE ,SAYS SHE DOESN’T. | o% Great Neck Hills to watch out for frost to-morrow night. pa IN A DISPUTE over who #hould take up the collection in a Uniontown (Pa.) church twenty-five persons were cut and bruised It’s Her Daughter and Not She, “Who's in Vaudeville Wife's | eat nevada: clubs in Kansas have started @ crusade to make the farmers Lawyer Declares. Theodore Burt Sayre, the prolific play- wright and reader for Charles Frohman, may never Gnish the Jast act of his last piay, “Ransomed.” For ath stands very his bed in the Fair Oaks Sani- tarium at Summtft, N. J., to scratch with unretenting @nger the single word “Cur- tain” in the unfinished manuscript. Sayre, broken down from sheer over- Work at the age of thirty-seven, suf- DELEGATION of Hartford Legisiators goes to Albany to-day to seek idear in State Government. They can get some queer ones, t 4 y| RKCTOR of a church in Middletown, Conn., went fishing before church time | tered of partial ow of Kenentine Richards (e suing Harr} 1H before church time |p, ail Mi A Paid a ach are se rad ra and had such good luck he kept his flock walting for him at morning service navies ahs ‘" ioe Corres Oe jathani ards, peop half an hour. ‘Then he dawhed Into church carrying his rod and creel with him. vet thm» hkere bytthed Bae ar the Fifth Avenue Theatre, for au abvso- 860, while he was secretly disobeying 3 lute divorce before Justice Page in| REUNION of an Old Maids’ Club of twenty years ago in Hempatead, din- | th® Orders of the sanitarium physicians the Supreme Court. Te lay she came| rupted by the advent of Cupid, wan heid there. Most of the former forbiding him further work. Now, it is bi members A Whey the request | brought their husbands and children along. thought to be only a question of hours &s ‘hat ahe be a temporary alimony | —————__. pete ine bene \ ohheet the va foi a pend iT of her / eliples and wu ak, but is Pr cogaie' th announced with mind clear to ation of ~ * the impending end. onl piglet ipa ine area gogpategy s Sayre's many friends in the theatrical if fs earning only $12 @ week, while his wife world will accep’ acteristic of Feceives a salary of $11 a week as an ville atage.”’ crled Mra, Rich- “Why, Mra. Richards is not now, and the man the story how he worked in defiance of doctors’ orders almost until the hour when paralyais atticted him. John Cort, the producer, had slready contracted for the play “Ransomed;” Sayre had it all written except the latter part of the last act, and the cast which was to produce the play had al- ready been picked, WROTE ON PLAY IN SECRET DE- FIANCE OF DOCTORS. Then, a few weeks ago, came the final ®reakdown of his strength. He was ordered to the sanitarium in Sum: mit, and the fat the physicians was that ‘was not to think of his work, Nor engage in any, until he re strength. Sayre knew, #0 believe, that his condition ‘was serious and that:the chances were against his ever leaving the eanitarium. ‘When he went to Gummit he took the bse of the unfinished play with ra. The sheaf of manuscript, made pre- clous by realisation of the short work- BY RULNG ON | REPORT HITTING sfcSp scm) MIRTERN PAC, —ABURN PRON owe gan submit aetdavite to prove| Debts of Creditors Cannot Be|Sulzer Says Findings of In- ow WE slaving on the ‘Loew veusevite | Wiped Out by Reorganiza- | vestigator Blake Will Be Sent to Cayuga County. Croult,” came back the husband's rep- ti resentagive. Con “Mow, what do you think of that, ion of cerns. Your Honor? asked Mrs. Richarés’s counsel, “Here's a man who has his ‘Wite mixed up with bis daughter. It i daughter who is playing on the w ctrouit and earning the salary he mentioned.” nok put his hands to hie head y. “T think I'l give you gentlemen until WASHINGTON, April %.—In a deci- ALBANY, April %—The report of sion @f momentous importance, espe-| George W. Blake of New Yort, which cially e@ to railroads, the Supreme severely criticised conditions at Auburn Court today 1si4 down the general) @tate Prison, ie to be turned over to principle that a crediter of a corpera- the Cayuga County authorities by Gov. tion not « party to its organisation may Gulser for presentation to the Grand 3 to get this matter straightened | "Ol Ite guocensor for his debt. ‘| Jury, according to a statement made at |!ne time left to him, Sayre concealed between you.” he declared finally.| In this specie case the court, fve.to|tne Mxecutive Chamber to-day. Mr, |" the oprings of his bed. When the y Se ceeanenen:cemmnemnenmedl I rose dogged gd én fav tion of pesdgi I mAb r| were pil W4 CURE ton, whe, dlaentet Grate prisons and reformatories tor the |nismatircan drew the menuccrint tre ite hiding place and, propping it on his knee, write furiously until he heard the approaching f of one of the house physicians, Then he would whisk the wheat of papers back to the hiding place beneath him. His stratagem was discovered by the doctors only a few deys before the stroke of paralysis was visited upon him and his precious play was locked his protests. N. Y., April 38.—Warden Auburn Prison, as a par- defense against the statements of Applies Legacy to Special | sowtes. despite tne fort that the court investigator, Blake, sald this after- expressly Of Rockefeller Institute. | doing was to ve found in the reorgani- | Boon: A fund of G80KEN, the income to be| sation. “I had supposed that during my in- devoted to an investigation of the} Corporation lawyers who heard the|cumbency of over seven yesrs I had cayes, prevention and cure of cancer, |decision declared it was a Girect blow | done at least things for whioh I was in! te the Rockefeller Institute for | at the practice of reorganising corpora. | entitled to commendation, even from a ee im the will of Henry | tion to get rid of onerous contracts or | partisan commission. The report seems Bircertoed nina fer probate in the| escape payment of unsecuréd creditors. | to carry out the idea of the conception rogate’s office to-dey. Mr. Ruther-| Its effect, they thought, would be far-/ of the investigation, and I think that fea Gied at the Hote! Astor Feb. % | reaching. ‘Most people understand the animus of lest. He was a resident of Grand| The decision was in the auit of Joseph | the report. Iolo, Ve. H. Boyd, who had a judgment for $1%,-/ “As for recommending my dismiss: ~Mayond that the testator was @ mill-/000 against the Coqur d'Alene Railway | this must appear humorous, as it js lomaire, Charles K. Fox, of No. @ Broad-| and Navigation Company and brought 8| well known that my resignation Mis May, attorney for Executor Charles K. | guit-against the Northern Pacific Rall-) been tendered to various persons in Seipers. Of Te ae Brooklyn avenue, |road Company after it bought the| authority during the lest two and a Ruthertord. Coeur d'Alene Company. He sought to| half years, and within the past “Mr. Rutherford was the son of James | have his judgment against the raliroad ' two weeks I ha’ to waive the Rutherford of Kingston, N. J., who died | company declared a lien upon the prop- legal question as to avout forty years ago, leaving @ vast erty of its successor, the Northern Pa- | anybody was in authority to receive thi fortune, The younger Rutheford lived | cine Railway Company. resignation by agreeing to turn the mych in this city at various hotels,” | «when Boyd found the property in| prison over to Judge Potter, jn charge jan all the lawyer said, same nisa-|of the Prison Departmen: mn con: Will gave $80,000 each to Mrs. Lydia tie hands after thé reorganisa- Pri part t, upo' Vearsall Steel, wife of Dr. George E. Seel, and her sister, Klisabeth Clark Pearsall, both of No. 86 West Seven! ORUG STORE CLERK. Gayre was « clerk in his cathe: play wes produced successfully in New York, not more than fifteen yeers ago. ince that night, when worked with unrelenting energy and had amassed f: final s11ness overtook him. Many of hia playa had Irish themes. Por Chauncey Olcott, Sayre wrote ‘O'Neill of Derry,” “Eileen Aethore” and “Edmund Bu Andrew Mack starred tn his “Tom Moore,” a success here and in London. Fi O'Hara Played in his ‘Wearing of the Green.” Other of his plays were “Manon Les- cau in which Wilton Lackaye etarred; “The Commanding Officer’ and The “The glittering statement of waste in held that although there had been | the commissary cannot carry gree! no moral fraud, yet the decree ofeale| nifcance when it is known that the of the property from the railroad | average per capita cost for feeding the company to the railway company was/ inmates during the past eight years was void ag to & non-consenting creditor. | about nine cents and six milie per day. He added this was true, although the, This includes breakfast, dinner and sup: feorganisation ocourted years ago. per. But it is not strange that the in- Justice Larton, in dissenting, held that | vestigators would attempt to obtain the the reorganimtion was not « mere! largest figures, when it is known that transfer of the property of the Northern | to produce them it was necessary for Pacific Ratlroad stockholders to them-| them to weigh the soup left in bowls eelves as stockhohers of the Northern | at meal time, the refuse ieft on the Pacific Raflway, but wae an effort of| pistes of inmates, bones taken from the stockholders to save the property in| meats, potato peelings, water, tn collaboration with Helen Bogart. Sayre married Miss Leura Helen de Gumeone in 1904, ———— ALMANAC FOR TO.DAY. SUFERED "ANF PHS For Sixteen Years. Restored mf Te Health E situation where the property had gone —_—_—_—_— romfam'e Vegetable |caerse tacit Seve | FLY: FOR POMMERY PRIZE. Compound. ‘Therefore, he added ,the sale should 5 : stand as valla against any one who,|7remeh an@ Swise Atrmen Start wn ae years after the sale, come forward to| From France for Russian Poland. ,Moretown, Vermont+di] was trou-| attack the ect to have the property. VILLACOUBLAY, France, April bled with. pains .and ispegularities for aa amnetn aaa Two flying men started from the aero- drome here early to-day for Warsaw, Russian Poland, in the competition for AT KING GEORGE’S REVIEW, | the Fommery Oup, valued at $1,400, The Ma competition is open every six months and the prise goes to the airman mak- 34th Street i LONDON, April 28.—A militant euf-| followed one minute iater by Leon tains had faces that | fresette to-day attempted to address! Letort, the French airman, both of out at|& crowd in Hyde Park while King|qwnom intended to fy by way of Berlin a pen T was | 00Fse was reviewing the Brigade of| to their destination, lout of doors it would pense Ze peels pat seore of the/ Pierre Daucourt, a Frenchman, was reom as if something was going to hep- | fair, and» up the military af-| awarded the prise on the last occasion pen, My hlood was poor, my circula- | be quiet and when the woman refused to} for his fitght on Oct. 6, 1912, from tiun was so bad I would be like The tion of the limited license |63) mites. jas locked up, Valenciennes to Blarrits,.a distance of Thad female weak- | under which Mra. Hmm Pahichuret, domen was sore and [| the militant suffragette teader, age ea ee) « ‘A HEALTHY MOUTH” te 0 temp of leased on April 12 from Hollow: | where she was serving three years’ im- “QUALITY” aad “GOOD BREEDING? Preokpiaees Heck Wage ed & great crowd to wbout the house where trom i Mre. Pankhurst Moway Jail, expectation of seein; ioly removed to ; \ At the weekly conctave of the militant yds° _ dieplace- | union this aftergoon tt was announced Mrs. Lager hed od intention tore on Bixth avenue, when his first heard success in the applause of the. audience, he had ind a fortune, when his of Willoughby,” which he wrote NYSTERY IN DEATH ‘OF NEE OF LATE DIPLOMAT CONE Pretty Girl Arrived Alone at Hotel in Colorado Springs and Posed as Widow. COLORADO SPRINGS, Col., Apri #.— District-Attorney Purcell and the Coro- ner here have decided to make a most figorous investigation into the sudden Geath here at the fashionatte Alamo Hotel of Miss Lena Conger, the youthful and pretty niece of the late Edwin H. Conger, who was United States Minister to China during the Boxer trouttes, ‘The authorities at present hold the case in closest secrecy and the ciroum- stances are not known that have so aroused the suspicion of the District- Attorney as to cause him toglectare that the matter should be immediately placed | before the Grand Jury unless the most {full and thorough explanations are ferthcoming from certain quarters. It 1s said that the Coroner heard ef the case only by accident. He ordered an autopsy and when County Physician J. H. Brown after much work had not deen able to determine the cause of the pretty, twenty-two-year-old death, as against the statement of ">, Otto E. Biliman, who attended her im her last hours ana reported that it was due to a disturbed condition of the lungs which resulted in violent hemorrhages, @ further and deeper examination har been ordered. Dr. Ziliman showed great indignation when he was ationed by the Coroner. @ charming brunette, ar- |rived at the Alamo Hotel three days ago. She registered as Mrs. C. B. Hutoilins of Lamar, Col., though despatches from that city declare that her sister's name married. Her sister said that according to her information Miss Conger had died of heart disease, and edded that the months ago, but that he had die! three e apologised for not wear- ing hueband’s dying wish. The hotel clerks assert that all day whe gave every appearance of being in good health, but that at 6 o'clock at Dr. Otto E. Ziliman, telephoning per- the hot bed, at it was Giately recognised that her condition Non for purposes of consultation. Before the other physician arrived Misg Conger died, he said. Then the officials declare tha: im undertaker jmomned and no proper notifica- pecullar circumstances of her sudden death. —<—___ Aute Track Kills Boy. Peter Garlick, five years old, of No. 1 Eldridge end killed corner of obstruction straight into the dig truck, saying thet it was her night she suddenly gent a summone for | sonally from her room. On arriving at) tel he found her lying on the) tired only in @ loose wrapper, and) evident that she hed bathed) orty shortly before. He said he imme-| ‘was serious and eent for Dr. W. T. Guil- tion’ given to the authorities of the| @treet, was knocked down by an eutotrick near the a and Delancey etreete evte,. €.63/Moon' ries, 1.49] this afternoon. The youngster was 17 playing tag with come little fellows his ra " own age and he ran out from behind an 1014 1099 Which wae owned by the Market and 1918. | Harlem Auto Trucking Company and was driven by John J. O'Hanlon of,No. 432 West Forty-second street. a EX-JUSTICE E. E. M’CALL GETS GOLD LOVING CUP. ‘Attaches of the Supreme Court | Present a Testimonial to Head | of Service Board. | Administration of justice in the old Court House halted to-dey while Pre- siding Justice Ingraham of the Appel- late Division presented to Chairman of the Public Service Commission Edward BE, MaCall a gold loving cup on behalf of the attaches of the Supreme Court. The ceremony took place in the robing room of the Justices and was witnessed by three hundred lawyers. Several hundred court attendants, clerks and seoretaries were present. ‘The twenty-eight Justices of the Su- preme Court, among them the two new Juatices—Weeks and Philbin—were seat- 4 in two circles about Chairman Mc- Call and Justice Ingrahem. The cup was placed on the library table be- tween Justice Ingraham and Mr. Mc- Call. Near them were Capt. Edward Hinch of the Appellate Division, Capt. Wiliam Lynch, John J. Mackin, Ed- ward Cole amt Charles Bensel, the com- mittee that purchased the ioving cup. Justice Ingraham paid’ a high tribute to the energy, ability and kindness of ex-Justice MoCall. icCall in accepting the gift said ona with his associates and hes of the court were such hat one could appreciate the ordeal through which he passed when he con- gented to go to the Public Service mi —_—_—_— WATERS PIANOS Founded 1845 Horace Waters & Co. invite you to see the new Waters Pianos and hear their sweet, musical tone, also to examine the new Waters-Autola player- pianos, which ipenblae the wonderful Autola layer action with the laters Piano and which can be played either by hand or with music rolls. Waters Pianos differ from other high-grade standard pianos in ing high-classed and not high-priced and are sold on easy monthly pay- ments without interest or extras. Examine the Waters tone and quality and compare the Waters prices and terms and you will be convinced that the ‘Waters Piano or the Waters-Autola player- piano is the very best value and the most at- tractive <a proposi- tion possible. Send Postal for Catalog dames McCreary & Co. | 34th Street 23rd Street i On Sale Tuesday, ,April 29th xe TOILET ARTICLES. tm Boe stores. Specially Priced. Perfumed Toilet Soap, assorted odors, >. .box' 25¢ D’Orsay’s Toilet Soap, « ,...cake 28e box of 3 cakes, 68 D'Orsay's Face Powder in assorted odors bo cade werd Talcum rowder, large size can ee / i Lustrite Nail Enamel........cake 10¢ and 15¢ Mumm,—Deodorizing Cream...........jar 18¢ Canthrox Shampoo. Powder........50c size, 30¢ Mason’s Old English Hair Tonic..... oss BC Imported Tooth Brushes............ Special 15¢ Wood Nail Brushes.......... ..+. 0c and 25¢ Rubber Bath Sprays... ..........0...000 POG Rubber Water Bags, fully guaranteed. @ qt. size 75c Rubber Lined Tourist Cases......50¢ and 75c Rubber Lined Wash Cloth Cases...........285¢ Peroxide, large size bottle........... v iN DECORATIVE LINENS. { Remarkable Values. Lingerie Pillow Slips,—hand-embroidered and lace trimmed. 75c to 4.95 Lingerie and Hand-drawn Linen Scarfs and Squares, bist 95c and 1.45 Heavy Linen Scarfs, Squares and Centre Pieces, with embroidered buttonhole edge. 7&c and 95c Pillow Slips and Scarfs,—made of Burlap or Bulgarian Linen, trimmed with Bulgarian bands and fringe. : In Both Stores. Burlap.........0.+e08- .. 95e and 1.25 Bulgarian.........+.+++0+0++.-1.25 and 1.75 “LA VIDA” CORSETS. 1m Bota stores. Newest models for every type of figure de- igned to meet the requirements of the prevailing pa of dress. Made of the choicest . including Broche, Batiste and Coutil. Horace Waters& Co, Three Stores: 134 Fifth Ave., nr. 18th St. 127 W. 42d St, nr. Biway, Harlem Branch (Open Evenings) 254 W. 125th St., nr. 8th Ave. James MeCreery & Co. 23rd Street “McCREERY SILKS” ‘Famous over half a Century. Sale of 10,000 Short Lengths ; On Tuesday and Wednesday. , The collection includes Plain and Novelty Silks, Satins, Chiffons, Printed Foulards, Crepes and Bulgarian Novelties in an extensive variety of colors and styles, representing short lengths from our looms and regular. stock. Lengths range from one-to ten yards each. 48c to 1.25 per yard e « « value 1.00 to 5.00 7 3.00, 4.00, 5.00 to 20.00 Fur Storage - (Dry Cold Ais) Vault on Premises Latest Scientific Construction Fur Garments, Muffs, Neckpieces, Suita, Dresses, Rugs, Curtains, etc., insured against loss or damage. Moderate Rates ce Edgewood, RED-MAN LOOK FOR THE BRAKE To appreciate the convenienée and great value of the Sunday World's Want Directory—READ IT,

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