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aT Bis | —— hE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMB'? 17 RAY it ys World ond Wallure Assoclatl SHOWS ROLL OF BILLS AT GAY HOPPER eth | The Evening World’s and Welfare Association’s N ews Odditi es BAR: BEATEN AND ROBBED City-Wide Series of Better Babies’ Contests : nt FOUND IN RIVER 1 Ta Manufacturer ay ag and na \ e e 2 ° e In PARIe aoe we 4uP aivin heel she ta Mh blo Meet a Diamond Rings ree WAS A SUICIDE Woman Expert in the Science of Raising Babies |s.72*i22c 2g" 8° ts wo oitinei ioe a ‘ ; | John Manrot, fifty-clght, a tapestry H. K. THAW courte slumber these nights in a bed at Concord once oo- | manufacturer, of No. 00 Sixth avenue, fied by Theodore Rvosevel! — _ Tells Mothers How to Treat the Litile Folk\"” ™""-"" Pee Coroner's Physician Finds No ; WOE e eG ty ach Gait GRE I Tea eS | ee ee ee iar 9 ‘i Medaka liars sng mr 1 Mark of Violence and | Warnings Against Over- f VIOTIN: of lateat wreck on New Savon, wrapped in plaster oom, raseeltre’c: “Nacue with ftenss cptown, oe tants With Medicines, Us- A) Be f : before her death, saved 6 roll of bit, eS Ales by the IRDE ing the Bottle, Neglecting i" ee ae had been in the saloon, pounced on Aim, Ta’ DISCARD MURDER IDEA. to Take Proper Exercise : dates of vaving upplied wa aveey sblanes te women ia bartoom conversation, woe te was nit on the ee eT —_——__— S Hl * - He fell, ne of the om on elatives Say Victim Was fcecie flan ket gidkésa ia Na bate roy man claims prise for mushroom 7% Inches across, ge the others went Three, a 4 > Homesick and Had Threat- Time They Cry. « wrenched the rings off his fingers, s€ar- Wm IT HAS NOT escaped notice that Tha’ friend, “Educated Roger” Thomp- | aon, having finished his foreign education, has been turned loose at Sherbrooke, ing the flesh. worth about $19, Manrot wi The two rings were ened to Kill Herself. treated Que. at the West Thirtieth street station for aasant tieae es ae wivive hie cuts by an ambulance surgeon and jard House, No. > tye ‘ . went home. Despite the first rumors that a mur- fourth street, yeaterday atternoon, to salad tewsala ibe 16 pclae ine Maadh al Cody, Wyo., and de- - -y z Police learn how to take care of the baby. | ” cat, Reecropeliby vane trages bets ways) | Wy you don't advertise nabody dor had been done, Chief of Police To: | | from the ace,” hospitable Cody replies. en you don't adve: len of Kearny, N. J., and Mra, Sarah |!) the Hetter Baby Contest conducted knows that you are doing business, and y 2 a it will not be long before you will not Hopper of No, 18% Windsor street in | PY ae eettioment and The a spo! | BAN FRANCISCO judge, eentencing Diggs and Caminettl, adds new phrase | know it voursell.” , that town are ngreed that Alice Hopper, | hes ~ re il abet plete to literature of criminal Jurieprudence. “*° ete eee ’ ie of two, have nm entered. said, referring to the laxity of conduct rmitted In salooi ¢ the sixteen-year-old ie! whore Body | Nearly every nationailty on the con- . se ons eee MRS. LEITER’S ORCHIDS DIE. was pulled out of the Passaic River! tinent of Kurope is represented. And JOSEPH DAVIS. “MAD LOUIS" MANGHETTL speed champion, has gone the way appointed | since Demine of Owner Flowers With the skir: pinned up and welxhted | every baby'n mother and father and AT LITT, [sor autoiste who are mad for speed. K'lled in race at Norfolk, | FOUR HUNDRED DOLLARS bet at evens in Stone street house on mayor- alty rece, With atones, committed sutcide She had grandmother and brothers and sisters deen suffering from an aggravated case are eager to know just the necessary of homesicknesa and had told all of | drill and training for the development of her friends that if she could not go back | one-hundred per cent. prise winners. to England, whence she came five yeare| ‘That's why they crowded Into the bis ITALY Le Hovuse Have Steadily Faded. Sept, 18.~Tho mgg- nificent orchids which were ihe pride of Mrs, Levi Z. Leiter's conservatory 11 Iaiter Co on Dupont Circle, are HYMEN goes into retreat ot Sparta, Wis., where death of county clerk ago, she would di : —" and deadlock over election of his euccessor mak withering since her death, Mutter made @ careful examination of | 2°" . . turists these strange flowers refuse to respond to treatment, and many of the } choicest rpecimens have died. Mra. Leiter was well versed on horticulture, Among the most famous of those she cultivated were the pink verbenas, which formed the principal! decoration @t the verbena ball she gave Taft when she m Dr. Van Vonat in @ blue-eyed, < ry the young girl's body to-day and found no marks of violence which would indi- | thet young women who for three cate that ehe had been attacked and | Years has concentrated on work for thrown into the river. ‘The condition of | babies and small children, Sho is at- the lungs showed that drowning and no | tached to the Presbyterian Hospital, and ther contributory cause had produced | she pays weekly visits to the Board of hese Health Milk Station at Kast Bighty- Mra, Hopper had adopted the girl, her! sixth street and Avenue A. niece, taking her out of an orphan any- Hi! ABIES TO lum In England and bringing her to tnis| A ait eaaune country ¢o live with her. A yout She captured the attention and the ter remained bel 1 y iad ip sicrshyp oad gestnat eden tes approbation of her audience at the very had never become reconciled to her life in this country, #0 {t wan nald by Mre,|atart by remarking smilingly that she LONDON workman who picked up part of $600,000 necklace in the gutter cast pearls before East End publican aa tender for glass of beer. Thrown out of the house, THOMAS A, EDISON, lolling in bored convalescence from ri following his first vacation in many years, site up and takes viv “thinking dog" which does atunte in his presence. “It is wonderful the inventor, nt iliness notice vf exclaims WIN a Sons Are Father's Palthe: Six grown sons of Charles T. who was a widely known resident DANISH eteamship limps into St. John’s, with whale, N. F., after disastrous collision | 1 e Wiltameburg and who diet at j@s Hopper to-day, and was constantly pin-| was sure all the babies present Ww: ‘ Psuning lnleerat WHITMAN, having “kept cas on Judges dur-| home, No, 238 North Hen: street, last ing for her old home, Saturday night| one hundred percenters, and that the ing hot weather, intimates that if thetr Honors would consent to abridge vaca-| Monday, carried the et of their when a cousin of hers, Jolin Leever, re-| only queation wan how to keep them #0. | tions and give more time to work deplorable condition of congestion in Tombs | father irom the howse to the hearse celved @ post card from th» sister 8 and grandmothers nodded would be much amelto: ted, remaining in the Old Country and Alice got none she seemed to be plunged in deeper gloom. On Saturday night ahe wrote a long A when funeral services were held to-day and again from the hearse throug the door of St. Cecilia's Church at Nort e mot! and the scattering of proud and af- fectionate fathers eat up several inches straighter. NONOGENARIAN who saw first railroad traing in Long Island te one of the most interested visitors at auto show in Riverhead. | | | | Henry and Herbert streets, They were letter, presumably to relatives Peaking care of the baby begine —_—_—_— Charies, Frank, John, Joseph, Thom Jand, went away from her aunt’ when you first know you are geiug 18 to feod It regularly. Home ables right in twenty-four hours tal tt to 4Mos. ANTI-DEFAMATION LEAGUE, formed at Chieago by prominent Jews, casts to mail it and was not seen alive aga to have a baby,” she continued. | inay have sufiiciontly good digestions the doctor at once. CHET . will combat alleged belittling depiction of race in newspapers, on stage and in |. MeGoldrick conducted — @| n Nelson thought | wos must tebe special care of yOuF- | to survive irregular feeding. But it} “Don't try to dose the vials your | ———____ echool text books, 1 sereame on the mast | is the safest pli t to feed the baby |#elf," concluded Dr, Van Vous ————_—_— brink of the river a few blocks away| Self from that time os. You moss riences by doen't |Can Ket along with very few medicines. from the Hopper home. He searched| be careful for two reasons. every time it cries, A bat yy doe I prescribe castor oll elghty-eight times before the typhoid spread over the east thevbank but sould find no one. Last| baby has @ right to be borm healthy |cry every time because it's hungty.| 0.00. nundred.” Aee palennaioea: ES MAN WALK OFF PIER night two men on a acow pulled the| gnd@ strong. And you should be is | A baby gots tired just we do, ANd) were will be another lecture on the Whe Aepartinent atone! Went to: werk girl's body from the water. Iler skirt) @ eoméition to murse the baby afte? | crying is its only means of exprensiOK | wcare of Children” at the Warren God- to find out what milk was being con- AND DROWN | RIVER was looped up with safety pina to form) ‘tag piste, our out of five of te |disguat with the surrounding condl-|gurd House noxt week. sumed in the infected area, & pocket and about twenty pounds Of) yoissg not wureed by the mother |tiona We're not hungry every time ———_—- MILK “DIPPING” MAY BE CON- : We're croas, Neither is the baby. “alle . ———__. Me Sauce ran sneul GATEMAN DIES IN SHANTY. ! TRIBUTORY CAUS Watchman Calls ‘Help, Pursues in| “The baby should be fed either every two hours or every three hours. It should never be fed oftener than once In two hours, because by #0 ‘o- ing the process of digestion 1s inte: fered with, The new milk is intro- duced into the baby's stomach and cf Oldest Ome! Dies. Henry Ridgway, seventy-four, oldest city oficial of Paterson, N. J., in point of service died iast night at his home, No. 17 Graham avenue. He had been city treasurer and later was secretary of the Board of Education. His term of service was thirty-two years and he try to have your food as nourishing as possible A good way to find out what food i» most nourishing is to determine the food that satisfios you for the longest period. Some of you who are listening to me may be epecially fond It was found that there were a num- ber of small groceries in the nelghbor- hood where milk was sold from the can and carried home dn all sorts of pails and pitchers, There is no ordinance against “dipping,” but Commissioner Lederle ordered a strict surveillance of Rowboat, But Sees Victim Disappear. Charles Foster, watchman of the con! Dockets at the foot of East Fifty-fourtn street, saw @ man walk down the pier in on Bad Crosn- Vietti Engineer Stops T ing a Apoplexy’ DOCTORS ALARMED 'Throngs of persons crossing the Long Island Rallroad tracks at Washington avenue, Laurel Hill, in the factory dis- t many \ of potatves and may eat a wes a civil war ran. mixed with the partly digested milk. of them. But though a few potatoes are all right, a ateady diet of them will not help you to nurse your baby. You i \\| e by the Commissioner, but he says ciat|‘!ar- Foster took notice of him only to Resi | heals H SHORT TALKS Naa Tane contain’ cimment Of 60041 “Give the baby a rest between f te TAPIA : avery aan aye Ne will take time to get the rules work-| Observe that he was short, dressed in | | ° A ne i @hould eat a ny you may pick it up is is w very busy and very dan- ‘ ; A etorlly f health viow-| blue suit b | chin: | - meat and vegetables and you should] 1, y sa pain, But if you|erous crossing and many fatal accl- Department Investigating tas eons torlly from a hea Bite: eebieat ine hat and seemed | at g% eczema |} drink as much good milk as YOU CaN| 4.5, the habit of holding it every| “ents have occurred there. Bae HABIT je. THE SLAVERY OF DRINK Don't let liquor dominate you. There ia nothing more ting and grinding than the slavery of drink. Yet drunk- enness wouldn't be the worst crime in the world if it didn’t involve women and children. THE GATLIN TREATMENT can break the chains and free any man or woman in Three Dare: Alcoholism is an affliction caused by fered, poremnnated Hloshotie poison, minate that poison from the ee. by the easy, scientific GATLIN ATMENT the craving for liquor is gone. DESIRE IS CHANGED TO DISGUST ‘The appetite returns. Sleep comes naturally. That nervous unrest has disappeared. You would come today Ht you knew how easy it ix to break the fetters that bind you to the terrible tyranny of Drink. Absolute privacy. xcallent cuisine. Private baths. ‘T' utmost satisfaction guarantecd of the fee puid will be returned, Cull, write ‘or ‘phone for free copy of “Tb: Whirl- of Drink.” GATLIN INSTITUTE 441 West 23rd St., New York City. Uptown consultation office, Chelsea 5246. \ZUSMITHM STREET BROOKLYN NY e: - nobody afford to buy. condition. ble to nurse your baby. berculos! jair before her baby's birth will be t in good But f you have certain se- rious diseases you will find it imponal- Have you tus Have you heart troubl Have you serious kidney trouble? As soon as you know you will have “Your blood must be k @ child you should go to your doc- cal examination. Then nic tor for @ ph: if you are affiicted with any 01 weakness you can be treated for it, “Now let us assume that you are able to nurse your baby, It is a busy world and aome friend is aure to say to you, ‘Why do you feed your baby yourself? Why do you not give it the bottie? But the bottle is not @ good thing if you can do without it, “Living in Mew York, you the Board of Health rules “Another point which I must call to the attention of the expectant mother {a the necessity for @ certain amount ft cise, Now I ‘Oh, it's all very well for her to talk about exercise, but my work gives me all the exercise I nt, What 1 need is the better able to nurse it. IMPORTANCE OF FEEDING THE CHILD REGULARLY. Thie 1s the commonest cause of acid @tomach or vomiting, it will form the habit of m thing for her child, be> cause cow's milk was designed prim- arly for calves and not for babi But though the question of feeding is an Test, quiet, cool water and fresh air should also be provided for the baby. “A baby is born small and weak, in Many cases, because t! mother has falled to take care of herself. A mother while nursing her baby should keep up her own welwht, If she doesn't she should go to the doctor right away, without waiting till the last moment, complaint is to prevent it. Thore ere more cases in a hot summer than in-a cool one, therefore the you to go to the doctor or the dispensary soon as tho baby coma to be suffering from summer complaint. More die of this disease than of meningitis or pneumonia. But if you don't go at once to the doctor Keep all food from the baby for twel or twenty-four hours, Give the baby plenty of pure bolled water and a dose! of castor oll, Give it barley water if it “The first rule for nursing the baby Out of Tt! | fracse weakness, loss o! are the symptoms of sickness. worms, crou Give the child Castoria, It wil and el ee | heavy breathing, and lack of interest shown by baby. These It may be fever, congestion, | , diphtheria, or searlatina. Do not lose a minute. | Genuine Cestoria always bears the signature cries a great deal, And if it Isn't all Sorts IS, something is wrong with baby, but we can’t tell what it is. All mothers recognize thi c e term by the f appetite, inclination to sleep, | start the digestive organs into operation, open the pores of the skin, cai off the fatid matter, and drive away the threatened slcknes trict 0° Long Island City, early to-day noticed that the Kates were up and there was no sign of Christian Murthur, Edward Feister of No. 84 India street, Brooklyn, an engineer, aprouching the crossing with his train saw pedestrians swarming across and slowed down, Noting the position of the gates, he stopped the train, climbed down from his cab and entered Murthur's shanty, The flaxman, who was sixty years old and very stout, was lying dead across the little stove in his shelter, Apoplexy had selzed him soon after he had re- ported for work. Murthur'’s home was at No, 901 Grand street, Brooklyn. sh see GASHED BY HORSE’S HOOFS. Victim in H With Possibly a Fractured Skall. Charles Hopki driver of an old Duane otreet horae car, dragged on the lines and twirled his brake around as his car approached Centre street this morning, for down the track toward him came running @ man, The runner leaped for the off horve, grabbed It slowed the ancient vehi- clo down the other man fell under the hoofs of the frightened horse, The vic- tim had a bad gash on the forehead and another on the back of his head, which an ambulance surgeon from New York Hospital sald might mean a frac- tured skull. He hurried the man there. The injured man is James Ross, for- merly @ porter in t at No, 299 Broadway. — APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. | ' Rebecca Henry, died June 25, 1912; total estate, $169,747; net value, $168,697. Charlotte Elisabeth Thompson, died May 16, 1913; total estate, $8,930; net value, $7,990. George W. Quintard, founder ef tho! Quintard Iron Works, died April 2! 1913; total estate, $2,220,285; net value, | $2,060,123. Nicholas Wernert, died Jan. 26, 1913; total estate, $866,625; net value, $360,- 234, Mrs. Emily Northrup, wife of Dr. Willam F, Nortarup, died Jan. 1913; total estate, $60,104; net value, 955,946, Bridget Brophy, died July 3, 1913;! total estate, deposits, $1,957; nct value, $1,459. Henry Muller of Hoboken, N June 1912; assets taxable In New York, farm at New Baltimore, N, Y., Valued at $2,000, and four lots at Tot- As Hopkii J, died) tenville, 8. 1, $800, Jamon Garvey, died March 14, 1913;1 total estate, $21,402; net value, $19,254.! Frank J, Dwyer, died Dec, 11, 1909; | total extate, $20,000. Wrancls Gookin of Lexington, Mass, died Feb, 19, 1911; entire per-! sonal estate, $4,462, assets taxable in| New York, stocks, total value $1,460; Nearly Hundred Cases Lower East Side—Health on at half past 6 o'clock this morning and the dealers doing this kind of business. stand on the stringplece smoking a The strictest regulatious were enforced | round the neck and hung on. tT “In the last few years such outbreaks we have on the east side,” said Commissioner Lederle, ‘have deen traced to the milk supply. We now re- quire that milk for cooking purposes shall be warmed, We have learned that the ignorant are unable to distinguish the various grader, and we bdelleve that to treat all of them is the only safe thing to do. “New York City has never been so free from typhotd fever as this year. Not more than a month ago physicians from Bellevue were congratulating the Department on the small number of cases. “The outbreak on the east aide is the only one in the city.” ene ee BLACK EYES BRING FINE. w Strennous Pa ‘The sweep of typhold fever over a comparatively small area of the east side, which put seventy patients tn Bellevue and a number of others under treatment for the disease at their homes in the last month, aroused the Board of Health to special action to- day, and Investigators sent into the in- fected district prepared special reports for Commisioner Ernest J. Lederle, It was #aid at the offices of the Board of Health to-day that Commissioner Led- erle would likely make public a state ment showing the number of patients Infected and thg causes of the sudden increase, Under section 183 of the Sanitary Code typhol1 fever is classed as @ com- municable, infectious disease, and phy- aicians are undor Instructions to report every case called to thelr attention se reports, which are made daily, cover the city, Investigators locked up the cases and traced the sources of the infection, BLAME INFECTED MILK A¥ ONE CAUSE OF EPIDEMIC. Tt was suid that the final report on Lawrer es Meets William E. Dressler, a lawyer of No, 223 Convent avenue, wore blue glasses to conceal his black eyes when he ap- peared in the Harlem Court to-day net Robert Phillips, superintendent of the apartment house at No. 263 West One Hundred and Thirty-seventh street, and his son, Frank, a youth of at bi "9 about twenty-two years. tio | outbreak on the east side)” str, Dressler sald that late on Tue: handed to Commissioner Lederle ; thet tate. : shows just how #o mang rest- day afternoon he had called to serve the summons and complaint in a fore- closure action on @ woman who, he believed, lived there, He sald the Phil- dents there contracted the disease. The Health Department assigns tour causes The watchman went on with nia! Ii aweeping out of his shanty. He heard a splash. The man had disappeared. Kos. | {Hf ter ran to the end of the pier and saw @ black hat floating away on the tide and a man's head bobbing up to the surface of the water near it. ON’T stand that itching ec- | zema one duy longer. Gi to any druggist and get a jar of Resinol Ointment and a cake of Resinol Soap, Bathe the | eczema patches with Resinol } Soap and hot water, de, ond | apply alittle Resinol Ointment. : The torturing itehing and \ Unavie to swim, the watchman shouted for help. Policeman Quinlan ran to the pier from Avenue A and Fifty-fourth atreet With the watchman he climbed into a rowboat and they pulled for the maa, ing begins, Soon whore head was atill bobbing to the top | tormenting ernpti burning stop tastantly, you no longer have to dig sleep becor: nd seraich, nle, and Ys Poss ] | of the water, though he seemed to be|]} f making no effort to keop himself ailuat, i eonvissl Aer a Bee But when they reached the spot wheve they last had seen him there was no sign of him. They rowed about in val for soine time. The tide was running strong, Prescribed by doctors i You neod never horltate to use Pose fol, It is a doctor's proscription, that has been used by other ph. the past 18 years in tho treatm all sortsof skin affections. It contains |f absoluta'y nothing thateomld injure the —— ure on Child Hygiene, Dr. am W. Bostwick, Chiet In-| {ff tandereste kin. Trial « epector of tie Bureau of Child Hygiene, | IL 20 Department of Health, will taik to the {citizens of Old Greenwich Village at the {Social Centre, Publig School No. 41, [Greenwich avenue, upposite Chasies atreet, this evening. ree. » Resinol, Baltimes a AREN’T YOU LUCKY? So jnuch interest Junt when you are fixing up for fa) shown in the prize baby contest || Me ere,fiooded on iwo ‘loore and forveg conducted by The Eve the Little Mothers that a A Water Damage Sale. Inge to be addrewsed by eminent phy: cians and teachers {8 being arranged by the Greenwich Commonwealth. for typhoid fever in this clty—Infected milk, direct contact with other cases, infected food and infected wa The return of vacationists from the county districts where the water sup- ply {@ not so well guarded against direase In given as one of the contrib: uting causes of the spread of typhoid in the town, Then again there is the open- ing of the alleged oyster season with September as the month with the R that Introduces the oyster to the tabl fhird avenue from Third ‘Thirty-third. Bellevue handles most of the cases in this gone and the rush of typhoid patients to the hospital In the last four weeks caused alarm among the physicians there, MANY CASES CAME FROM OUT- SIDE THE CITY. In the first #ix months of the present Year there Were 461 cases reported and ninety-one deaths for the city, The Health had been contracted out of town, ar fn commenting on the figures antd: “it 1 hardly be doubted that the improved quality of New York Chty's milk supply, due tn great meat at enforced by net value, § John D. Kane of Cranford, N. Jan. 30, 1915 dled | ew York ulations, hax been prominent among the local factors caus- favorable showing in the total e of cases.’ deers This statement was given out just) Clu lpses assaulted him and finally threw him out of the house, The defendants said that Dressler was intoxicated when he catied and refused to leave after he had been assured that the woman did not live there. Frank admitted that he had struck Drensier, but he said he did not do ao until Dressler had squared oft as though to hit him. Magistrate Krotel took a long look at Pressler's en and fined father and son $5 each on neral princtples, ee GROUNDKEEPER MURPHY FOUND DEAD IN BED. John Murphy, groundkeeper ‘at the Polo Grounds, died suddenly this morn- ing. Murphy lived with his wife at Summit avenue and One Hundred and Sixty-fourth street, Mra, Murphy found him dead at 6 o'clock this morn- ing. Murphy was one of the best known groundkeepers in the country. He made the Polo Grounds one of the show places on the baseball eirevit. Lo Murphy was fifty-four years old and] s started as a ball player with the Hir- mingham Club, He proved a failuve as a player and the club retained him as groundkeeper and general utility man. He became famous because of hie thorough Knowledge pf groundxeep- ing. The New York Club !nduced him to leave Pittsburgn. He had been here about ten years, Tom Murphy vrother, 9 groundkeeper for t! Clin e Failed; mal Medicine Effective ir and well-cooked, nourish- more ts needed, medicine for Thruat brought about —In many cases roundings wera not iden! Judaing by the many reports of recov ‘ries received, we belleve it should be used ine able c of Lung Trouble, ot A remark- follows: ‘My Dear Air: mentality I have been ture «rave. On December 1904. taken with Typhoid Pneumonia, develyped. into Conaumption, 1003, 1 want to Fort Worth, later to Canon City, Colurad there two weeks my phyal atm t ary. and reachin . 1 beman taking Tek - ul remedy for Cansumption. # pounds. Tam wout fo any kind “of work ‘on ARTHUR WEBB, (Above abbreviated; more um request.) Eckman’a Alternative has been proven by many feet to be moat in cases of ‘Throat and Lung fectiona, Bronchitis, Bronchial Asth Biubvorn Colds and In upbullding the tem. Does not contain narcotics. pols ffloactous Af: jm. Bed Sacrifice Beautiful Brass Hed. 2 fnoh tube; satin or brase finish; value «812.50. Price only FURNITU ve., Bee STEWART 436-440-442 WEST 5/%I ST. RUG*°CARPET CLEANSING 1 Pire-Proof Building. FIRE PROOF STORAGE Houschold Goods. founded in 1863 TELEPHONE 7_COLUMBUS