The evening world. Newspaper, July 22, 1913, Page 3

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BLAMING ASQUITH, MILITANTS BURN Placards at Fire Scene Score Premier and Demand Re- lease of Mrs. Pankhurst. LEADER STILL DEFIANT. Starts New Hunger Strike in Vail and Refuses to Walk— Others Join Her. GONDON, July —A militant suf- G@ragette “arson wqusd” in the course of lest night cot Gre to 0 lange unccoupied @ansion at Perry Bar, nese Birming- tam, and burned & te dhe ground. Pie- ards wore posted in the vicinity bear (ag the words “Acquith te te Mame! Welease Mre. Pankhurst!” & number of Suffragettes, as they are Qarred from entering the House of Com- ons iteclf, this afternoon hired @team launch and from the Thames tmrengted the Members of Parliament an hour. The women mounted of the cabin, whence they abused @ crowd of meinbers om de terrace. Some of them ous their woes and demands the river police came along in meterbeats and chased them up At the women who were arrested Lendon Pavilion yesterday dur- ouffragette riot that marked the of Mrs, Pankhurst were con- wicted in the Mariborough Street Court @e-day. They were given alternative @entences of from fourteen to twenty- ome jail or paying fines. All of them chose imprisonment. In Holloway Jail to-day Mrs. Emnte- fine Pankhurst, untamed leader of the militant suffragettes, continued her hunger strike, as well as her newest ism of protest—her refusal to walk. ‘om the moment of her sensational Fearrest at the big meeting London Pavilion Mrs. Pankhurst has refused food and has declined to move her feet. ‘When the detectives seized her she sank down Iimply and they had to carry her out of the ullding. She forced them to carry her into the police sta- tion and then into Holloway Jail, Mrs. Par'hurst to-day refused to rise from her ,:ison cot. AIGELESS WORK OF ART TAKEN BY THIEF 1S FOUND, Piece of Greek Sculpture 3,000 Years Old Stolen in Athens, Dug Up Near Baltimore. BALTIMORE, July %-A piece of ir f ANOTHER MANSION Greek sculpture, the bust of a female child of about five yeara of age, stolen from the National Musei at Athens fifteen years ago, and said to be of Priceleas value and 3,000 years old, was recovered by the local police to-day. ‘The figure was dug up in the cell Charles Nemphos, a Greek confectio: +@t Hampden, a suburb. Search for ¢he bust was instituted Bere yesterday, following a visit of Dr. Alexandre Vouros, the Greek Charge at Weehington. Dr. Vouros @ame here with several documents and wen to the office of United States District-~Attorney John Philip Hill. To Qlagor Hill was unfolded the story of of this gem of Gre- art, of the efforts of European ts to recover ft for the past and of clues involving a Balti- ‘Hill decided that it was not e e@muggiing, but a problem for ice, Accordingly, the case fore the Sta! basis of wished the Grek diplomat ‘Warrant for Nemphos's home was is- of ——_____ EXPERTS FIND $500,000 | BELONGING TO THE CITY Old Accounts That Have Lain Dor- mant Are Discovered by Finance Department. Expert accountants in the Finance Department have located more than ff a million dollars belonging to the ty, found in old account. mitted to He dormant ey will now be applied to re- ‘ation. atly the Comptroller dec! Rave a “cleaning up" of old pretiminary (o introducing @ new erat ledger for the city. Accounts were fuund to date back to the annexation of the former towns of Mi a and Kingsbridge. The Compurolies wants now to have the money transferred and to-day he asked of Estimate to wet the opinion Corporation on the legality of making the transfers. to the city Going out of t mei y he 4 and ond el vo The “ lorning iy ‘orld, ‘Woi The Evening World’s and Babies’ Welfare Association’s Great City-Wide Series of Better Babies’ Contests THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JULY 29, 101 West Side Starts Out After Baby Prizes - With a Rush, Scores of Others Barred| by Boundary Lines— Ten Sete of Twins Set Record in Brooklyn's Second Races for Health Honors and Gold. ‘The west side made a fying etart in the baby contest yesterday afternoon, and, as if to overtake its rivals, the east side and Brooklya, who have hed the advantage of a week's start, re- corded at its three centres, which afe dounded by Fourteenth and Forty-sec- ond streets, Fifth avenue and Hudson River, the entries of just 160 healthf, Qopetul babies, ‘This means that at present there are Giz races going on at once, and over nine hundred children after the title of New York's finest baby. Greenwich ‘Village is already clamoring for 4 chance to enter the competition, and It will not be long before the Better Babies Contests organised by The Evening World and the Babies’ Welfare Asnociation will have registration cen- tres in every part of the city. Every baby whose home js in any one of the boroughs of the city will have a good fighting chance for the championship title and, incidentally, for the money prise that goes with it. EVERY BABY A CHAMPION WOR- THY OF A PRIZE. ‘The chief feature of the opening of the registration centres in the Chelsea neighborhood, from 2 to 4 yesterday, was the large number of healthy, nor- mal babies. There were no twins, prodigies, but according to the officers in charge at each centre the average was very high. “I have never eeen such an unusual Jot of babies before,” eald Mrs. A. M. Carrol! at the station at No, 4% West Twenty-seventh street. ‘Every one of the forty-three which have been en- rolled to-day deperves & champion prise of his own.” ‘The largest polling was done at the centre at No, 487 West Forty-frst street. Here sixty-seven babies were entered in the two hours that the office was open. At this station all ages from three monthe to five years were represented, and a large number of disappointed mothers, whose tote were either too young or too old, had to be turned away. ‘At No. 78 Second avenue, where there were forty entrants, almost as many more came from a region below Four+ teenth atreet, and 20 could not be al- lowed to enter. The most popular approach to the registering places yesterday was by baby carriage, although the common- placeness of this was sufficiently varied to keep m spectator wondering as to how the next baby would oo Not long after the opening hour at the Ninth avenue station a yellow-haired tot of three made her way unassisted and unescorted into the registry oMfoce, and made it evident by the mute appeal try her round eyes that she wished to register, LITTLE TOT OF THREE BEATS TWO OTH TO REGISTER. Just as the official was on the point of asking her whether she would like nk herself or have some on having all she could attend to in two other younger sapirants, came in, and was relieved to find that what ehe had interpreted as @ desire to fun a’ had only been @ desire to beat her young brother and sister in the race to the registration office. ‘ Speaking of family affairs, there were quite a number of mothers who en- tered three babies in the contest. The most conspicuous of these was Mrs. Ruth E. McDermott of No, 363 West Sixteenth street, whose bables are wu usually good looking. The oldest wi three years, the next one year seven months and the youngest seven months, ‘And mothers are not the only escorts. ‘A email number of fathers did the honors yesterday on the west side, and some of them were much more enter- prising than the mothers, James Buido, who brought a six-monthe-old boy to the No, 436 West Twenty-seventh street centre, was so certain that his boy was ‘a champion that he didn’t see any use in waeting time in the useless formality of an examination. He wanted to take the money home with him, The records at the Forty-firet street station state that In quite a number of cases the kiddies were brought to the registry grandmothers. * loyal and confident. © were never any bables just like those between Fifth avenue and the Hudson. In fact, if anything in the world could shake the confidence of the east side mothers in thelr children it would be the confidence of the mothers om the west aide in theirs, But the east aide is holding its own. Determined to win the title, “Champion Baby of New York City," twenty-two tots had thelr names entered yesterday race going on at the Little y Ald, No. 28 Second avenu This makes a total of 282 entries for t! centre, where registration will continue until Aug, 18, MANY FROM BEYOND BOUNDA- “Our daily the Secreary, “is that we have to refuse the privileges of registration to so many children who live outside the contest district, Yesterday two mothers from as far away as One Hundred and Eigh- ty-firet street were disappointed in this regard, But we told them, of course, that later in the season a contest would be started in their section." The registration rush continues at the Ente EVELYN SCHMIDT 10 Mos. aT MILK STATION 78. 9% AVENVOE 14, Fourth avenue.and Fourteenth etreet, Third of a series of articles o* taking care of the baby, written by Wesley 0, Coz, Principal of the Play Grounds Association of Public School No. 184, Brooklyn. Clean, well formed hands and feet are an essential, absolutely necessary If you wish to gain perfection for your Uttle charge, Most children are bdTn with perfect hands and feet, and all Little Mothers must try and keep them} up to standard, Baby's hands and mouth are In close contact many times a day. The hands, therefore, must be kept clean, for If not your baby will get dirt aud germs} into its mouth and then Into its stom- ach. h the baby’s hands whenever you! see any dirt on them and keep the nals clean. Dirt and germs hide under the nails. Always clean the baby's nails when washing it. Keep the nalis short, for If they are allowed to grow long he may scratch himself and others. Lastly, be careful and do not let the child injure its fingers, for this means @ great loss to the infant In after life, Like the hands, the feot also need s y Movies on Conditt MADISON, Wie., July 2%.—Judge John | C, Fehlandt ruled to-day that motion! picture theatres in Madison may remain open on Sundays if pictures of a re-| gious character or which the Court) might find morally uplifting are dis-| played and a percentage of the receipts ts given to oharity. | —————— | “STOP THIEF!” The words “STOP THIEF!” caught! your eye, didn’t they? | That's why you're reading this. And the story whose title is “STOP! THIEF!” will catch your interest with the very first sentence and will hold it {n mental handcuffs to the last chapter's end. “STOP THIEF!” is the greatest laugh- story of the summer. It |s_novelized from the successful play of the same title, and it is one unbroken succession of laughs and thrills, with a triple-love interest running through it. “STOP THIEF!” will begin Evening World on Wednesday, |! Write down the date, For that is the a day on which you are going to begin to read the funniest, most exciting ro- mmance of the year, Playground Association of School No.| yesterday, making date, Brooklyn. Evidently there 1s] are in the race for The Evening World's keen rivalry Netween the twins of this] prizes, and registrations will continue district. Three new sets were entered) to July 4, inclusive, How to Care for the Baby; Hands and Feet Treatment Let the Child Go Barefoot, and When Shoes Become Necessary Get Thern Large Enough and Light, Says Expert. careful attention. First, try and kep sible. salt water dally. them clean. has to have # that th heavy, the ankle, especially if your baby they help to make the MaRyY MORONEY DIST KITCHEN W-415T. FORGER WHO RAN OFF WITH YOUNG GIRL CAUGHT Arrest of Man Wanted Also for Big- amy May Clear Up Robberies at Red Bank. RED BANK, N. J., July 22—Leroy Kneeringer, aged twenty-six, wanted ere for forgery, robbery and bigamy, arrested yesterday by County De- tective Elwood Minugh at Fort Slocum. He had been misssing since April 13, when, after forging checks on the Globe, Sheridan, Germania and Central Hotels, stores, he ran away with Myrtie Parker, ‘a alxteen-year-old Katontown girl. The Parker girl returned and told the police she and Kneeringer had been mar- ried in Buffalo. Kneeringer's arrest, the detective thinks, will clear up many local robberies that occurred shortly before his disappearance. Kneeringer enlisted in the regular army under the of Fred Slater. His other allases were Leroy Ovborn and William Kensie. Extradition papers are being prepared and the detective expects to have his man here to-morrow night. Kneeringer's mother died nine days azo and it is said that her son's absence hastened her end. en 08 ARMY AIRMAN KILLED, Catches in Rat as it Is FIUDSON GUILD 426 W-27 ST! MANHATTAN total of ten to So far in this centre 260 entrants CHALONS, France, July 22.—Another French military aviator was killed ¢o- day and his comrade slightly injured while experimenting with @ new acro- pila t the army aerodrome at Mour- melon, nea 1deut, Gabriel was tn charge of the machine and Sapper Malarte was acting as his mechanic. They started the motor and immediately afterward one of the wheels of the aeroplane caught in a rut, which caused the machine to topple and the motor to fail on top of them, Mualarte was killed outright, kings in summer,| While Gabriel was able to rise and pro- ra shoes, gg ceed to the military hospital for tr et tender, ‘ment, the baby barefooted as much as pos- This allows freedom and assures Proper growth, Wash the feet lly between the toes. feet are tender bathe them in Don't let the nails grow long and keep When the child begins to walk and be careful to see ough, not too y give support to Avoid woollen stoc! a, How, When and Where to Enter Your Baby For the Big Prize Contests Now Under Way CONTEST AT LITDLE MOTHERS’ AID ASSOCIATION, Mo, £8 Becond avenue, for children between three months and Ove years, living in district from Beventh to Twenty-elghth etreet and Fifth aveoue to East River, Registrations from Monday, July 14, te Wednesday, Aug. 18, every after- soon except Saturdays and Gundays, from 3 to 4 Judging of the babies will begin Monday, Aug. 1 Mor thie contest The Evealng World offers $100 in prises, CONTEST AT THE PLAYGKOUND OF PUBLIC SCHOOL, NO, 1m Fourth avenue and Fourteenth etreet, Brooklyn. Age limit eame as above, Boundaries: Carroll Place and Prospect Park Weat, Wifteenth street, Tenth avenue, Twentieth atreet and Seventh avenue, Twenty-third street and Bixth avenue, Twenty-fourth street and Fifty ‘Thirty-sizth street and Seventh avenue, Thirty-eeventh street anc Eighth avenue Thirty-ninth street and Gowanus Bay, Gowanus Canal, r'ifth etreet Basin ang Fourth avenue, Registrations, 1 to 6 each aftersoon except Sundays, from Monday, July 4, to Monday, July 2 imclusive, Vor this eontest The Evening World offers $60 in money prises. CONTEST OF THN CHELSEA NEIGHBORHOOD ASSOCIATION.—Age Limit, same as above, Contest boundaries—Krom Fourteenth to Forty-second street, Hilth avenue and the Hudson Hiver. Registration centres—District from Fourteenth to Twenty-third street, Fifth avenue to Hudson iver; headquarters at Milk Station, No, 78 Ninth aveaue, from July 2 te July mi inclusive, from 2 to ¢ P, M. District north of Twenty-third and south of Thirty-fourth street, Fitch avenue to Hudson Ri Headquarters for registration, the Hudson Guild, No, 436 Weat Twentp-seventh street, July 21 to July M, inclusive, 8 to ¢ P.M, District between rty-fourth and Forty-second streets, Fifth avenue Hudson Rive stration headquarters, the Diet Kitchen, No, 47 Forty-first street, from July 21 to July 28, inclusive, 3 to 4 P, M. For each of these three contests The Evening World offers %0 for money prises. Contest at Extension Association of Public School, No. #1, Brooklyn, closed Friday, July 11, Prize winners and honorable mention babies will be pub- lished in The Evening World when committee of judges ennounce thee Gecision. ‘Tht R HOD ELEVATOR RSH ES | WOMAN AGED S4SIES [Clogged DOWN WITH WORKMEN, | FOR $3,000 ALIMONY DROPS ONE TO DEATH) —INABROOKLYN COURT Brick and Iron When Building Collapses. Five men employed in the construc. tion of the Consolidated Gas Building at No. 116 Fast Fifteenth street, boarded the hod elevator at the tenth floor to- day, ani one of them, Martin Ruane, of No, 68% Amsterdam avenue, pulled the signal cord five times, This Raune ways was the signal to the engineer on the ground floor level to drop the car slowly, as it was full of men. ‘The car started down with a rush and soon ewung loosé from the guide run- Nera at the ede of the shaft. Hanging on aa best they might the men shouted and at the second floor the car stopped with « jerk. Ruane was thrown against & lle of building material. Charnes Solezzo of No. G19 East Fourteenth atreet had his hold on the car jarred toons and fell to the basement. The other three men hung on, Boleszo died soon after he was carried out of the cellar, Ruane wae taken to Bellevue Hospital suffering from iater- nal injuries, — BUILDING COLL APSES BURYING TWELVE MEN. A minute before 12 o'clock to-d when twelve laborers working in an adjoining excavation were getting ready to go to lunch, @ brick and corrugated igon building thirty feet high at No, 7 Front atreet, Brooklyn, collapsed, and for ten minutes the workers were buried beneath bricks and girders. An alarm was sent to the police and fire stations nearby, and with picks and shovels the firemen and policemen worked to extrics were taken out the rescuers were about to leave they heard @ man groaning under the debris, ‘They dug out Jack Herron of No, 20 Fulton street, Brooklyn, $300,000,000 FOR IRELAND. for That Land Parchase Plan ( Ad mal Sum. LONDON, July %.—Three hundred Million dollars, in addition to the 9am, 000,000 already expended, ts the estimate given by Augustine Birrell, Chief Sec- retary for Ireland, of the sum necemary to complete the operation of land chase in Ireland in accordance with Provisions of the Land Purchase acts of 1998 and 190, which make it compul- sory for a landlord to permit his tenant to purchase the land he cultivates, The Chief Secretary made this states ment in Introducing In the House of Commons proposals of the Government for the removal of the present block in the transfer of land to the peasantry. Of the $30,000,000, however, Mr. Birrell said, It would be necessary to borrow only $120,000,000 through the public issue of land stock, The rest would be @- nanced by the National Debt Commige alonera under a new bili which would ive compulsory powers to the Govern. ment to make the vendor receive half the purchase price in cash and the other half in & per cent. atock. ring 150 on First Day Twelve Men Buried Beneath] Deborah Van Ness Claims That Amount From the Estate of Her One Time Husband. Deborah Van Ness of itden City, ninety-four years of a brought sult against Rastue R. Ransom and Wallace Macfarlane, temporary exec- utors of the eo of Cornelius Van Nese, for back alimony, amounting to $90,000, which she claims has been ac- cumulating since she divorced Van Ness in 1867, Cornelius Van Ness died in 1908, Jeaving an estate valued at $1,000,000. Charlee Blandy, counsel for Mre, Van Ness, appeared before Justice Scudder in the Supreme Court, Brook- lyn, to-day, and obtained an order for @ bil @artioulars to amplify part of the answer to the auit Aled by the executors, relating to an alleged agres- ment signed on a date not made pub- lic, by which Mre, Van Ness ently eettled her alimony claim for $10,000. ‘Through counsel Mra. Van Nebe alleges that the paper p'rporting to be an agreement ie @ forgery. ‘The papers in the eult show that M Van Nene divorced her husband on May 22, 1861, receiving from the eourt a judg- ment for alimony. The ¢o-respondent named was Mrs. Emma Louise Wright, and as goon as he was free Van Ness Promptly mairied Mra. Wright. ‘The eecond Mre. Van Ness died, and in 1900, at the age of eighty-four, Van Neas married Alice Wood, twenty-seven. @ codicil ¢o hie will he had left her his entire estate, ‘The original will, executed tn 1901, left the estate to Mre, A. Ross Fareons, of Garten City, daughter of the testator by his first wife. Surrogate Fowler refused to admit the will to probate with the property dis- posed of by the codtcll and appointed Mr. Rangom and Mr, MacFarlane to look after the estate as temporary executors, which they have been doing ever aince, TWO SISTERS MISSING FROM HOME IN BRONX Catherine and Margaret Lohbauer Seen to Board a Tug a Day Af- ter Their Disappearance. avenue, in ¢he Westehester section of the Bronz, eince 3 P. M. Sunday, when they told their mother they were going to get tee cream, Elinore Lohbauer, she girls’ older ete- ter, told the police of the Westchester atation she delleved that her sisters had been enticed away, as she had learned from eyewltnesses that Cathe- rine and Margaret boarded @ tug in Baychester Creek, @ mile from the Lonbauer home, early yesterday af- ternoon. The tug, owned by a contract. fier the girls boarded it, How Babies Will Be Judged For Health Contest Prizes Clearance Sale of Pumps for @ pestesd ing firm, sailed for New York an hour | *f, Nostrils Lead to Consumption Have you pains over the right eye, pains over the left eye, 8 across the front of the head? you take cold easily, sneeze a great deal? you sneeze until you become dissy Does first one nostril, then the other, close? Have you a discharge trom your nostrils? Are you losing your sense of am Do crusts form in your nostri Do you sleep with your mouth open? Does your throat feel dry, as if sand was Load over it? Does your throat tickle as if # horsehair had lodged in it? Have you a dropping in the throat? De you have to be constantly the throat? Is your h Have you unnatural ia ears? Are those sounds like steam escaping or like water falliag? Do your ears fee! like they were stopped up? Does the wax harden in your ears? Do your ears discharge? ‘© you pains in the chest? Les | your soreness behind the breastbone! Have you stitches in your side? Have you a dull ache under the shoulder blades? Have you an trritating cough? Do you spit up a tough, ish material? Do you spit up @ jowish material? Do you spit up bots brown, rusty looking mater jal? jour hearing. In. o! it i iaee Er ooh eee ore —re the Q q ac Pus gy ee he eet, about about getting fected eee Seeeeta ree Sere Clo; Pt Cured. " ao Yh ah aea ae Gast eet i pe Reward %,* grea) .. re Pea ea eet Re pu oe op St eas = “reoted. state ie, ome Et, eee a ARE YOU GOING DEAF? tre paint ‘and: inatesd owing Desien and Head Neioos Cored mare, Mt detent ‘sta ves rese pid Rees petiaseiet Stan, Mt, Sat ie ia Whee Titi Om tae et Seer, Magnets ae hat he can hear bis watch iy Deafness, Head Noises, 30 Years, * cite ae right ear ise Women A Summer Bargai Sale of these fash- prices, $6.00 reduced to $4.95 500% * 4.45 430 * * 3.95 400 " @ 3.45 Stores ionable pumps at] »* greatly reduced| "=: Trad pris ibe alle vimbing walt maison, lke belle ot ee vat ‘enya he machinery. a cetved uo benefit, and ‘Mir me that nothing Mince treat whieh ba sto mous o awe resides ot 276 Albeay evesen,) Dust Mr. Alfred Mteyney mT : so Ee reel ee y “alarm clock shea ery Aa eg Pe Meneke’ tee ‘wont wake to tt fur tee pane ae lig ake, rag mist got relief Singe placing Mr, Rernert rejurts that. th arises have a Stocod i preg 4 heer 6 ae Cay He i oi Wichen Troan hig: ear Mr, Hey Heennd han dieu: fot trom clogned Ie may Chvetionce’ should wake ‘me : 1 Nite pleased to have you viel. ot i wilt cost You mothing for an a advice, ; f'vimt ronide outside of this efts, write me aad t fal te please wo you i letter concur? ing your condition, DR. J. C. MeCOY, | 213 Flatiron Building, Broadway and 20d St., New York.”

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