The evening world. Newspaper, September 5, 1913, Page 18

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| A bw! track t ie ond wll no t owt tank of r F ETHEL LEVEY FLIES TODAUGHTER'S SIDE AFTER AUTO WRECK, George Coie and and Four Oth- ers Seriously Hurt as Motor Strikes Farm Wagon. FIVE IN THE HOSPITAL. Both Vehicles Splintered, but All Participants Are Peport- ed Not Fatally Injured. Reports from the bedaide of George | M4. Cohan, the actor, playwright and Manager; his daughter and the others who were hurt lant evening in an auto- Mobile accident near Hartford were given this morning by Dunn, business manager for Harris, who was called on the long-dis- | tance telephone by The Evening World. | “George Cohan suffered great pain all | night,” said Mr. Dunn, hia shoulder, which was disic set immediately after his arrival at the Conn, , was Hartford Hospital and he was given an opiate, He was made nervous nm only by his physical pain but by a xlety cver his daughter, Geo “When they told Mr han tht Morning that Georgette was conscio' and that she w undoubted|y re- cover he fell asleep and is still mi LEVEY ARRIVES AND IS WITH DAUGHTER. “Ethel Levy aette’s mother, ar rived at the from New York about 299 this morning and is with her daughter, Georgetto’s injuries are nothing like as serious ax we feared at first. She haw a fracture «f the sku but It Is not “Francia X. 1 ard Harris staff, was the mo injured, having suffered a fracture of the arm. Hin pain in in- tense and the doctors tell me it will he several weeks before he can leave the bospital. “Wallace Eddinger's face is swollen and discolored, but he wil! be out in a few days and will be able to appoar ‘a Mr. Cohan’s new play, ‘The Seven Keys to Baldpate,’ when the new piece opens next week.” It was to attend a rehearsal of the prospective production that the Cohan party was hurrying from New Haven to Hartford in Mr. Eddinger's automo- bile. The other members of the com- pany had already gone up by train. William Van Buren, Mr. Eddinger's chauffeur, was at the auto wheel. He, too, was bruised and cut in the accl- dent, but not seriously hurt. OBSTRUCTION TO MOTOR AP. PEARED SUDDENLY. ‘The machine was being driven over the Berlin road about five miles out of Bartford and apparently had a clear @tretch of road ahead. But, just too late for Van Buren to avoid @ cras! Wagon, driven by a boy named Gabriel, entered road from @ lane that had been screened by undergrowth. Van Buren threw on his emergency Drakes, but the machine was hardly @hecked in its speed before it was upon the wagon. Both vehicles were wrecked ané everybody huried out. The auto- mobile turned turtle, with Van Buren, @all clutching the wheel, underneath, farmer boy was unhurt. He took look at the figures about him on fond and then ran as hard as he to the nearest house where there telephone. Jamees from Hartford. Before the boy and residents of the meighborhood got back to the scene of @ecident another automobile had Mr, Cohan, Georgette, Mr. » Eddinger were placed in taken into Hartford at turned over to the doc- je hospital, who was George Cohan's wae notified by telegram of meee condition @ short time ‘was to go on for her vaude- Pte Colonial. She was 10 distressed that {t was advisable for her to went on, sang a song caught the next train thought when little Georgette ‘wag examined that she had been burt and her mother was under fimpression when she left New Fert. By the time Miss Levey arrived in Martford, however, an X-ray photo- @raph of the child's injuries had been made and it was found that the fractur: et the base of the skull was of minor importance and would not cause death, ———. LIGHTNING SHATTERS HG § rE j i iy 4 7 tere at th 335 att 3 ft tf FIREMAN'S TORCH __ Lieut. @ugene Lynch Badly Burned at Dongan Hills, SL Fire Laout. Eugene Lynch wae tnjured by the explosion of # hand torch follow- ing a stroke of lightning at a fire at Dengan Hills, Staten Island, in the storm of the early morning, Lynch lighted the flare to give his men a « 1 thelr streams ut Bled nd roa h’s bands and head, sie Smith uth Infirmary, pe) DRINKING CUS 4 cur Wms Petre to seh) ‘ie dren to in Ur i a2 eas oe Wouldn’t Trade Her Hubby for a Ruby Mine, THE EVE NING WORLD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1913 YOU WED YOUR HUSBAND HE MARRY YOU Copyright, 1013, by The Vrene 1 ‘ubliaing Co. (The New York World), Because She Has Got Him Trained Fine |‘*Maud B.”’ Would Marry Her Spouse Over Again Rather Than Go to the Trouble of Breaking In Another Man—“Ethel M.” Chose Her Mate Because He Was the Best Chance She Had to Establish a Home. By Nixola G Greeley-Smith. ' BRowN EYES SENTIMENTAL” “ETHEL ARE Too A married woman, after telling us why she married her husband, as sures us (o-Cay that she would undoubtedly marry him over again. Other- wise, she declares, she must have wasted ten years of fine work on his character and disposition and would have to begin again with raw ma- terial. I commend her cheerfu! Philosophy to such men and women as belleve that matrimony has not given them a square deal or who attribute to individual shortcomings the limitations and restrictions of an institution, There are @ great many persons going about with the secret illusion that life might have been less nig- eardly to them in {ts allotment of a permanent partner—women who think that they are misunderstood and unappreciated by their hus-| ‘bands—men who fancy that they are handicapped by marriages were too early or too impulsive, But they are mistaken, for whether you marry a chauffeur or a chancellor, a duchess or a dairy maid, it will all work out to the same thing before ten years are over. changing partners in middle life. Im the latter venture there is always, of course, the chance of chance, perhaps, as @ child has of finding im hig hands the bit of rainbow in the soap bubble which he has broken in the hope of see- ing what is inside, We have all known persons who have given years to the atudy of art only to decide suddenly that they prefer to be poets and to abandon that will- the-wisp eventually for the call of some- thing which seems newer and looks easier, We know boys who are never Braduated from any school because after having specialised in literature for a little while they are inspired with & ye ig for a technical education, and having gotten fairly well along in that field throw it over suddenly to learn to play the xylophone, Bo it is apt to be with the dilet- tantes of marriage, or perhaps = whould say the dilettantes of di- vorce, the ingenuous optimists like Wat Goodwin, Lionel Lawrence and Ferdinand Barle, who marry five or six times im the hope of getting & diferent result, — If one changes the text-book every day or #0 one can never expect to get out of the grammar acbuol to do more than master the a b c's of life, And to hope that one man or woman will give you more joy than another In the Jong run fe to attempt to change the multipileation table by repetition. Another married woman declares that her husband is the most wonderful wan in the world, mainly because he ts the father of the three most wonderful chil. dren, Many mothers will agree with her, | but there will be just as many women who will reject her theory that no childiews wife can be happy; in fact, 1 have ived letters now and then from wives and mothers who #ald that they had their * to lve over again they would not have children, #6 they entertained the extraoniinary Hef that men are more attentive childless wives, ‘The communications to which I have ed follow; * GOT HIM TRAINED JU8T TO SUIT HER. Dear Madam: You can just bet I ‘would marry my husband over again, Do you think I would wa all the fine work I have put in on his char- to | Burroughs) acter and disposition during ten ra of matrimony and atart all er again With raw material? It taker fve years of patient and cares training to k any man to He hates, ‘The ileal humana widower caught before he haw » to (to pe After ten years I have got my husband ao Well trained that the shaves on Sun- day of his own accord, never critle clothes, and is willing thag d the entire judge of what is properfor me to Swapping horses amid stream is no more dangerous than mont implies. Only women will Understang that having taught one man fimally to attend strictly to his own affairs and to let me Attend to mine I aldn't ex- change him for a ruby mine. As to why T married him. Well, it was the usual reason, I thought him the most glorious, wonderful, Perfect specimen of manhood that had ever condescended to ask ® poor, unworthy apecimen of femininity to share his life. Do t think ao atill? If you and I could have tea tos gether nometime I might toll you my real opinions on that point, But whatever they are you can be as- sured my husband will never find them out. MAUD B. MARRIED TO HAVE A HOME OF HER OWN, Dear Madam: I don't agree with jondent who states that men make the best huss Fven if tt ts true, as she ays, that brown-eyed people are the fools of the world, who wants a fool for a husband? 1 don't. The trouble with a brown-eyed man is that he is too sentimental. Give him @ tittle moonlight, a little music, @ highball or so and any brown-eyed man alive will persuade himself and any woman who happens to be around that he has met at last the only girl an the world for him, I married my husband because he was the best chance I haa to establish @ home and to be the mother of children. We have three —two boys and « girl—and x think we both feel that all the sacrifices ‘we have made for them are worth while, Of course I would marry my husband over again if only because he hae little Jack's hlue eyer Mttle Tommy's chin, Bvelyn's red hair. Uttle Other men may be greater and handsomer, but he has the unique distinction of being the father of the finest and handsomest children in the world—or T think them so— and that makes a bond between us thing can ever break, The tof every happy marriage dren, I don't belleve any childless marriages @re happy. Certainly all the childless women I know are miserable—only most of them don't know why. ETHEL M, —metppeenes STRANGER THAN “TARZAN!” You remember “Tarzan of the Apes?" Strangest, most fascinating story ever printed in a ne Well, the Rice has written new story even stranger and more fascinating. yi GIRL." GIRL" has all the ele- of wilds junwle ie that made #o enthralling, And it ts, if @ better story, CAVE GIRL" will begin serial publication in The Evening World, Mon- day, Gent, & Read a ments “Tarzan which | bad States, ie out with a statement tha will not harm if thie recipe, devised spirits of camphor and ofl oj Throw the towel over the head drops on the face and hi DRIVER THROWN OUT AS HORSE RUNS AWAY, | DIES IN HOSPITAL a ; Policemen Finally Check Ani- { mal Dashing Through ' Crowded Brooklyn Street. John Rour, twenty-nine years ojd, lv. ing at No, 110 Hopkins street, Brooklyn, was driving a big bay horse down Ful- ton street when the animal got fright- ened at the Nostrand avenue crossing and ran away. trand avenue at Ful- ton street Is one of Brooklyn's worst jtrafic congested thoroughfares. Ca: automobiles, men, women and childre: were in the jam when Started, Rour managed to guide the fright ened animal safely through the dan- werous places, But the forward wheel of the wagon was caught in a switoh, and Rour was thrown out on hie head. |Two wheels passed over his body and the horse raced down Fulton etreet. Policeman Henry Kelley, on tramo |duty at Bedford avenue, seized the | bridle, The animal shook him off and threw him under the wheels also, The big policeman was on his fect | in a minute and grabbed the reins, He | pulled the horse over to the left side of | the street and Jammed him againat one of the “L." plillars. Sergeant Frohne came up in time to take hold on the right side of the bit, and between the two polloamen they held the animal until he was thoroughly quieted, Meanwhile diarry Goldman had ar- rived at Nostrand avenue where Rour wis thrown out, He sald that he, too, had been on the wagon, and had been thrown out, but had escaped with alight britees, The ambulance had been sent from St. John's Hospital. Rour had hardly been placed in the hospital when he died. Rour end Goldman were peddlers Goldman took charge of the rig. the runaway —_—__ STORM BATTERS STEAMER. Stove and Decks Swept by Big Sens, The Rardsey, Capt. J, tt, arrived to-day from Matanzas, Cuba, with @ cargo of # nesday afternoon the ve in a hurricane off Cape Hatteras and was badly bumped by heavy seas. A port Iifeboat, aft, was stove in by @ big sea and the davits were twist- ed, Vantiaiors vers dented by the oruh of water, were torn away and the forward starboard torn com ite davite and carried doard. The storm lasted all night the eleamar Was Renn t . steamer ae * iT TAKES FIVE YEARS To BREAK ANY MAN TO DOUBLE HARNESS® Here’s a Fusion Remedy to Foil the Mosquito Dr. L. B. Howard, Chef of the Bureau of Entomology of the United Pour om a hath towel a few drops of ofl of citronella, within a mosquito mile will hasten to safer quarters. A few will insure freedom from visits, | Alexander avenue station, Third Article of a Serie: ‘$6,000,000 IN LIENS ONCITY PROPERTY — Many Noted Citizens on List of Delinquents on Sale . To-Day. CHURCHES GET CAUGHT. Day’s Batch Sold by Collector Moynahan Aggregate $241,240.80, ‘Tax and assessment Hens, aggregating $6,000,000, held by the City of New York aginst property in the names of many | of Manhatan’s most noted citizens, were | it the pernicious American mosquito b~ him, is used: ff cedar compounded together. of the bed and every mosquito BOYS WITH AIR RIFLE HIT ICE MAN TWICE Youthful Assailants Escape After Chase, Leaving Gun in * Police Custody. Vena Dante, living at No. 357 Alex- ander avenue, was delivering ice at 9 o'clock on One Hundred and Thirty- ninth street between Third and Alex- ander avenues, He had juet picked up a chunk of ice with his tongs from the pushcart when there landed a ating ke kick of @ wasp on his neck, Look- ing across the street, in a lot he saw two boys about fourteen years old, with an air-rifle, The outlaws’ rifle spoke again and a slug hit Dame in the might elbow. ‘Patrolman Mooney of the Alexander avenue station ran to the spot and with ‘the iceman Through the boys made the ft thelr gun behind taken to the where the owners can get it by calling for it, The police would be pleased to see them. POLICEMAN BRADY F FREED, of Hola-Up a Not 8 ea in Conrt, Policeman James F. Brady of the East Fifty-first street police station, |who was arrested last Monday after- noon charged with having held up John Robinson, a bartender, of No. 49 Proa- pect place, and the robbery of a gold vatch and $42 In cash, was to-day hon- orably discharged in the Yorkville Police Court by Magistrate McQuade. Brady said that at the time specified | he waa on fixed post at Forty-second | street and «avenue, @ block away from the saloon. He had never seen Robinson, he said, until the latter pointed him out in the line at the sta-| tion house, Owen Devery, @ policeman | from the Fifty-firat station, tea- tifled that Robinson had firat pic Gut’ in the line end bed thes eézmaitioa that he made a mistake, | ; the Hens becomes due on the first day ‘of January and July of each year, put on sale in the City Hall to-day by Daniel Moynahan, Colector of Assess- ments and Arrears. Premises held by the Astors, Goulds, Delafields, Pickneys, Greens, Phipps and others are on Mr. Moynahan's books for arrears in taxes, water rents and assessments. When the Collector finished recording his sales to- day he found his first batch of lens brought $241,240.99. According to the new “Transfer of Tax Lien” law these properties became saleable for arrears yesterday. The! first group was knocked down to per- sons bidding the lowest rate of interest, fot exceeding twelve per cent, a year. The new law provides that all such Nena sold at auction must run thre: years before the purchaser may fore- clone. The owner may redeem the prop- erty any time during the three years by paying up his back taxes, together with semi-annual interest on the taxes and the rate of interest allowed the purchaser of the lien, The interest on WILL SELL BROOKLYN LIENS TO-MORROW. So far Collector Moynahan’s hammer has not reached the names of any Manhattan notables. He will dispose of @ bunch of Brooklyn jlens to-day and to-morrow and continue the sale of the Manhattan liens next week. In case the owners meet the obligations held by the city against their property it was said to-day that the city woukl re- lease its tien, Several checks for back taxes were received by Mr. Moynahan before he began knocking the property down to the most advantageous bidder. According to the list a lien of $53.80 for water rent levied in 197 against the property of the National City Bank on Wall street will be sold to the high- est bidder, The Interborough Rapid Transit Company ix down for 7% cents it owes the city for taxes levied in 1850 against a piece of property It now owns on the north side of Fifty-third street near Eighth avenue, With 7 per cent interest this claim now amounts o more than $300, The ino Opera House on Broad- way, the Shuberts leasees, has $#2,138.56 in taxes marked up against It. The Union League Club at the northeast cor- ner of Fifth avenue and Thirty-ninth street has against It a charge of $33.60 forwater levied in 1907, Cooper Union ‘s down for a number of parcels at Lexington avenue and Forty-second Street, levied from 1908 to 1912. Some of the well known New Yorkers, their properties and the tax and assess. ments lens recorded on Mr. Moynahan's books for sale are: Anna W. Gould, Third av- enue and 113th St., water. Hettle 8. H. Green, 90th St. an Columbus avenue, tax.. Hettie 8 H. Green, 9th St. and Columbus avenue, water., Richard Delafield, 46th St. Sixth avenue, taxes .... Timothy DP, Sullivan, ath St. aw 60.95 and (lot No, 9) taxe: 15,086.94 Howard Gould, Fifth avenue and 73d St, taxem oo. + 46,123.58 H. J, Phipps, Fifth avenue and sith 8 taxes » 35,068.18 Victor Herbert, 108th St, and Riverside Drive, taxes and as- sessment : 3,577.10 William 8 Devery, Bixtieth @t. ‘and West End avenue, taxe: William 8. Devery, Sixtteth St. and West End avenue, wa Mary G. Pickney, 124 St. Fitth avenue, water J. J, Astor, 16th St, and Am- Bterdam avenue, taxes......... 1,260.36 SOME CHURCHES ARE LISTED FOR UNPAID TAXES. Many properties owned by churches and charitable institutions are listed for unpald taxes and assessments, which Mr. Moynahan said Was due to over- sight on the part of the institutions in not applying to the Sinking Fund Com- miasion for concellations, Among the prominent parcels Msted Is that of the St. Raphael's Roman Catholfe Church, on the south side of Fortleth street near Tenth avenue, which has taxes to- 1,210.46, + 165.60 and 21.55% The Effects HAT INFANTS. preparations, allot tian ea tions and nd growin of of ne cells which are likel imbecility, men: a craving Nervous thelr infancy, receive opiates in tho smalicst doses for more MPhysician hot bese pany tHe Gilden ® physician, and if is nothing less than narcotics if it bears the Set ae Petes as ugaeae ly th Fitu avoidable, on ythe & mniatration of Anodynes, ay children by an, should ‘diseases, such as intractable hervous dyspe wers are & result of dosing with opintes or edly to keep children quiet R Tho rule among physicians is that children should ne of Opiates, He $0, oplum and tte gory ane oplaten canes chanaee in the funo- to become permanent, for aloohol or narcotics in later and lack of stayin, or a day at a time, and Cordials, ts Soothing heat ol ant be too stro! | who a a aH to PLACED ON SALE: | flooded by awollen streams. 742.46 | 3 apne gan cet oe o™ BOMMITTED NO GRIME, 19 to 1912, Tn the number of lien deposed of by Riera and bulkheads owne w York and Brooklyn Declares Matter Not Bribery the Brovkiyn Ferry Company and the Krooklyn and New York Ferry Com- ‘ , any and located at Gran, Broome, None Concerned Is Pubity Delaney, Rivington and Stanton streets Official. i: ant the East River {nh most Instances the Tax Lien Com- Grand Jury action te not Pany of No. 68 William street, with the charges that ay See which William Lustgarten, one of the 39,000 to Gaffney, Charles F, - friend, “The matter has not been the attention of ‘the Saonrae office, and I do not see where amy crime ta been shown,” to-day eat@ Acting District<Attorney C, C. Nott “Even if it were proved that mag] 1 really paid this money to Gaffney i ~ order to procure the latter's influemes to aecure the Aqueduct contracts, Ge crime has been committed, for Gaftney ie not a public official. * “Influence fs an intangtbl soreiting and it js not agalset the law—no ‘ter how much it be agatnat publia mor- als—to sell influence. Why, even if this money went to Murphy —_ tt woulin't be bribery, under the law, Be + cause Murphy is not a public official and i¢ not supposed to have anything to do with the letting of public com prime movera of Mayor Gay ‘a cans didacy, ts Mentified. Mr. Lustgarten's activities fn buying city Hens in bulk has been criticized by real estate men and olty officials on the ground that the purchase of large biocks of these hens promotes litigation. -_——< 500 REPORTED VICTIMS OF COAST STORM ARE SAFE People of Ocracoke Island Near Hatteras ped Fury of Gale That Causes Wide Havoc. RALBIGH, N. C., Sept. 5.—No liven tracts.” @ Were lost on Ocracoke I#land in Wed- SRT Fea nemday's storm, according to advices Disappointed in Lov = Feaching here from Hatteras this after. Helen Anslander, twenty-five old, a maid in the employ of Julius Witmark at fis home on Woodmere Drive, Woodmere, L. 1, was found dead this morning In her room by Me, = committed suleide by noon, Reports had been circulated that about five hundred regdenta of the Island had met death. The island is thirty-five miles south of Hatteras. Wuh reported depredations from Witmark, hav teat Wednesday's hurricane over Hantern 4% t hon Iau Mt Tesonacat’ koe a y North Carolina already involving prop- She Mt ee cen love affalr. erty damage running into the millions, and save loss of life at different points to-day'a despatches from the stricken district told additional stories of the storm's havoc. Many small towns along the coast reported severe damage from wind and heavy rainfall. Several were Delayed messages from Washington, Newburn and other towns near the coast told of floods that surpassed all Previous records. Every stream in the storm-swept section was swollen by the torrential rains, and incalculable dam- age to crops is expected to result. Many bridges have been swept away. A number of vessels were wrecked off the coast a. LIME BARGE FIRE BRINGS ENGINES TO BELLEVUE Burning lime hare: off Twenty-sixta street In the East River early to-day caused Policeman Kellner to think that Bellevue Hospital was menaced. 11 turned in an alarm from Box No. known in the Fire Department as Bellevue box,” In accordance with a never rule the engines made as little no possible in approaching the h sirens and gongs being astilled the patients was disturbed. When it was seen that river craft was burning. the land apparatus quietly retired, ani! the flreboats Wiliam Strong and Aram 8 Hewitt towed the burning barges down stream, away from the hospital The barges were loaded with un- siaked lime. Water was splashed apon the lime, and the heat so generated started the fire. The ourges belong to the Rockport Cement and Lime Com- pany. 4x0 “the CLEAN IP OF THE SEASO INOW ON (Limited Time Only ) UNMATCHABLE VALUES In MODEL CLOTHES FOR MEN and YOUNG MEN UNRESTRICTED CHOICE of the season’s 2 and 3- piece Suits, including Nor- folks. Many heavy enough for late Fall wear—Now grouped into three priced lots irrespective of cost or in —_—~ “THE END OF THE WORL Doyle, fam the creator of| Imes, hay just written a most | ith the Thin dew story, from the pen of this famed author, will begin in the xt Sunday World Illustrated Magazine il Mtory ection, and be completed in Saltnxthy, IMustrated instalment Order ler In advance, Ti nd World te pi returmable, hence each news dealer's supply tn Medio, SHIPPING | NEWS, PoRT oF vEW YORK, AR i +Lrernoot nab SUA MSIIPS. SAILED TO-DAY Wtiaderrin, Mricaa “Prince, hampton, Rio leo, Afghanistan, i Por Antor Javary,' Pari Jefferson, i Montserrat At That were $15, ones and $20 12 That were $22.50, $25 and $28 5 That were $30, $32.50 and 35 Morn, Cast Hay ‘Trinite for CONSTIPATION ; . ar * experiment with jureyour bowels. Tal perfect remedy, Hun Janos Till irreparable injury. pills at night bring tain relief. Get a box of Hunyadl Janos Pills to-day at any up-to-date Drug Store, 250, or send stamps to Andreas Saxlehner, New York. Alterations FREE TWO NEW YORK STORES 42 West 34th Bet. B’way & 5th Ave, ALSO CORNER OF Broadway at 36t MARLZOROUGH HOTEL Bldg. BLAcKwoon 2 for 25 Cts. A COLLAR OF EXCEPTIONAL STYLE, Pointe 3}¢ in. Back 1}4in. EARL & WILSON MegEED OF TROTS GENT PRODUCT.

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