The evening world. Newspaper, April 14, 1914, Page 3

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~. WNT A MACHINE Pa EV HEH ‘The evocess he had had in sewing patients up with a sewing machine was the subject that Dr. W. Man- or elght months later,” he . “persons so operated on suffor rem hemorrhage or show some other cation that the operation has not “entirely removed the trouble New “ot this kind. Personally I have found pyloractomy (the removal of part of the “and excision the best for both cancer ;and ulcers of the stomach.” De. John B. Murphy thought evi- @emce before the congress and from ,the work of the last few years! soul! ts the very incarnation of the) “ahowed that ulcers were not caused | spirit of adventure, and although the/ by changes in the acidity of the dalees of the stomach and intestines. ‘Uleors, he said, were due to infections from other parta of the body and from this fact he thought that many valuable discoveries might be made. The day's session of the congress {{-wres begun by the visit of the foreign i : H H H | fetrength to t! "i SEE EEEnSsneEE \ BOYS WHO DIDN’T DROWN. delegates to clinics at St Luke's and the Presbyterian Hospitals and the , Rockefeller Institute. The operations performed in these clinies were in the main simple oncs. In only one case was there anything of @ novelty offered to the visitors, ‘This was performed at the Presby- terian Hospital, where in order to etrengthen the bone of a fractured leg both during the knitting process Zand afterward strips of ivoPy were Sdnlaid in grooves which had been cut tn the bone both above and below the/ fracture. The ivory thus, in a way, fed the broken place and lent he processes of nature. Crowd Reported Their Death Strug- | gles, but They Swam Ashore. The crowds who told so realistically of seoing two boys struggie in the sea »@M Coney Island and finally sink after day must have been gifted with vivid imaginations for both young men, Charles Shaw of No. 1728 East Four: teenth atreet and ‘Thomas Graney of Avenue O and East Thirteenth street, Flatbush, were safe at home to-day. The young men, who are nineteen years old, said that the high sea had capsized them as the crowd but > they swum ashore, landing at Stauch's beach, where they had their clothes dried and returned home. The tales of their herole struggles and final drowning were all fiction. DRINK MORE WATER IF KIDNEYS. BOTHER Fat less meat and take Salts for Backache or Bladder trouble. Uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, become overworked; get sluggish, and feel like lumps of lead. The urine becomes cloudy; the bladder is irri- tated, and you may be obliged to seek re- lief two or three times during the night, When the kidneys clog you must help them flush off the body's urinous waste or you'll be a real sick person short! At first you feel a dull misery in the kid- y region, you suffer from bac . ik headache, dizziness, stomach gets sour, tongue coated and you feel rheu- aatic twinges when the weather is bad, | Eat Jess meat, drink lots of water; algo ge( from any pharmacist four ounces | of Sra Salts; take a tablespoonful | in a glass of water before breakfast for e few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is nade from the acid of grapes and lemon juices combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean clogged kidney, and stimulate them to normal activity also to neutralize the acids in urin it no longer is a source of irritation, | thus ending bladder weakness \ dad Sults is inex; nsive, cannot in-, ure; makes a delightful ‘effervescent ithia-water drink which every one should ‘ake now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active. Druggists here say they sell lots of dad Salts to folks who believe i aie aly oaks kidney trouble es —— Wars, Was Charged bya Wild Rhinoceros, Wrote Ripping Stories of the Boers and British in the Fights on the Kopje and the Veldt and Helped Madero in His Revolution in Mexico. A little thing like @ police shakeup will never bother Guy Scull, secretary methods are needed tn handling casos/to the new head of the department. In fact, he is fond of upheavals and all other forms of disturbance. He is lower section of the stomach) |e friend of war and strife, and if the | few remaining crooked “cops” on the force don't look out Guy Scull will get them, for he is an old Secret Service man. rank and file of New York's police system have provided many an inter- eating specimen of humanity from “Clubber” Williams and B, Devery to Max Schmittberger and Faurot of the Present day, it is doubtful whether any of them could outpoint him for genuinely interesting humanity. A gentleman by birth, breeding and education, graduate of Harvard in the class of ‘98, belonging more to the moneyed and leisurely class than to the other, Guy Scull's mat! might be Sent to him with @ fair chance of de- livery wherever there might be a |War or something else doing. If the fighting gets real good and Villa ac- tually storms Mexico City, Guy is Mable to clap on his hat and depart |}from Police Headquarters. He is a man who lives on thrills, his spirit craving thrille for breakfast, lunch and dinner, and his physical courage such that he can command them. Copa ‘will like him, for he is one of the quiet- est, softest-speaking men that ever turned @ corner suddenly in an easy effort to clear out an ambushed enemy. He is @ good man with a gun also. The many society people of Philadel- phis, Boston and New York who know Guy Scull call him {mposs!| He does not like dude raiment, and if he tangoes he does it in secret and hides well his secret. He likes a pipe and old duds, and a real battle of many men fillled with the spirit of annihilation, DISAPPOINTED IN WAR AND LIT- ERATURE. As soon as he was graduated he Joined the Rough Riders and began to wear off the Harvard accent and ac- quire a cosmopolitan one. The Span- ish war, unfortunately, was a tame affair. He didn't even get the typhoid fever, and he returned from the fray to mope in his corner of the Harvard Club and complain about the innocu- ousness of modern Hife, To kill time pending the next war he wrote a ro- mance, It was beautifully written, so declared a publisher who rejected it. It was all about knights in armor, beautiful princesses, terrible battles, high-piling castles and the rest of that mediaeval thing, One of hisown family in the publishing business re- Jected it and pointed out to the au- thor that the publishers couldn't pull the Walter Scott stuff nowadays and begged him to reel off a modern story, He declined to do so, and then the Boer war came afong, Scull noticed ‘the Boer war in the paper one morning and it looked good to him, though a@ bit distant. His cousin, the gholarly and sedate Na- Scull bade him good afternoon fol- lowing the coffee Mr, Curtis asked him where he was bound. “Going out for a while,” he replted, He went out and the next heard of Mr. Scull was that he was with Gen. Buller's brigade fighting the Boers and writing some wonderfully vivid stories about the great struggle be- tween the Dutch colonists and the bloody British, GETS INTO A COUPLE OF REAL GOOD WARS. That was a good war, a real ripping scrap, and Scull enjoyed it so much that another mediaeval ro- tarted mance which was finished and rejected. The Russe-Jap- Participated in Three thaniel Curtis of the literary staff of Dodd, Mead & Co, ate lunch with him at the club that day, and as HE WAS A Connesronvent. 3 iW Tne BOER was anese war came along, however, in ume to save him from being bored, and he hurried right off to Man- churia, where, of course, he bumpod into Jimmie Hare and a bunch of other adventurous spirits. He wrote morn good copy with bursting shells making music for his owo particular style of inspiration, and when Teddy Roosevelt butted in and stopped such & fine little war he came back to |New York, joined tho Secret Service ) of the United States and got an as- signment to prevent violation of neu- | trality along the Mexican border. He jmet Jimmy Hare, of course, and Bob | Ritchte and the same old crowd. There is a story to the effect that a| bunch of Mexicans tried to wipe up ithe floor of a little San Antonio saloon with Scull after they found out that he was a Secret Service man. Knives jand guns were used, but Scull man- |aged to walk out of the place. Sev- jeral Mexicans remained on the floor ipectbe saloon, Jp and down the Mexican border Scull did his trick aa a Secret Ser- vice man, making many arrests, get- ting himself thoroughly hated and much admired by the big men in the Department of Justice. He returned to New York after the success of Madero in Mexico and threw up his job because “Buffalo” Jones had a fine idea that lasooing lions and tigers rhinoceri would be good sport. ‘Buffalo” said that he would lasso the wild beasis if Scull would tatrc moving pictures of it. “Sure,” sald Scull. He did, and came pretty near | paying with his life for this particu- lar little excursion from the Harvard Club. A rhinoceros charged him as he was working the movie camera. The present secretary to the Police Commissioner was thrown in one direction and the machine he was operating tossed in another. GOES HUNTING FOR TREASURE AND FINDS A TYPHOON. After “Buffalo” Jones had lassoed to his heart's content and had enough wild animals captive to supply a 200, Scull returned to New York to catch up with his correspondence. All his mail looked over and his club bills nettled, he suggested at supper to a lot of his college cronies that they go after the treasure in the old Span- {sh galleon Good Faith, which sank in the Caribbean 200 years ago, Scull had an idea that he could find the ship on the sandy floor of the ocean, hoist up the pieces of eight and doubloona and other romantic cur- | rency and establish himself and his| friends a8 millionaires, There were Harvard men who felt that if any- body could get away with that prop- | osition Scull could, and so they all| chipped in cash money and “Skipper” | Scull called a bunch of his classmates | about him and organized the expe- dition, | The old Mayflower, the cup de fender, was chartered and off sail the treasure seekers, They struck by a terrifle typhoon and were |wrecked, but a tramp steamship picked them up and they 1 to New Kk. Some « friends say, he is going to get all |that good Spanish mon As soon us the new Commissioner is hounced. and his ary with him—those things happen in 2 York—it ts likely that the Harvard bunch of ad- lventurers will start again for Capt. | Kidd's loot Caught ta Elevator sump Mole. Philip Reilly, an oller, and Patrick | Rolley, an engineer employed in the} Hotel Theresa, Seventh avenue and One| Hundred and Twenty-fourth street, | were to-day pinned in the shallow sump hole under @ hydraulic freight elevator in such @ way that to move the car might have caused the hole to flood with water and drown them, Thoy were ay, TT an cette Fee AND WAS A SECRET SERVICE MAN DURING MADEROY REVOLUTION CLAIMS HIM AS HERS AFTER HE APPEARS AS HUSBAND OF ANOTHER One Mrs, Jacobs Says Divorce Defendant Is Not Father of Other's Child. The charge that James Jacobs of the firm of Jacobs & Vell ia neither the husband of Mrs. Amanda Jacobs nor the father of Ethel Jacobs, as he testified two weeks ago in Magistrate Krotel’s court, was made to-day In @ sult for divorce filed in the Supreme Court by Mrs, Jullette W. Jacobs. Mrs. Jacobs asks $40 a week alimony, @ counsel fee of $750, and names Mrs. Amanda Jacobs as co-respondent. Attached to Mes. Jacobs's complaint is an affidavit in which she tells of the arrest of Ethel Jacobs on March 24, 1914, on the charge of her mother, Mrs. Amanda Jacobs, that the daugh- ter stole $1,200 in diamonds. The daughter is an actress and ts mar- ried to @ man named Friedman. At the hearing Jacobs and the girl's | mother appeared against her. “Are you the husband of Amanda Jacobs and the father of this defend- " asked the Magistrate es, I am," he answered. Mrs, Amanda Jacobs swears that Jacobs ts her husband and the giri their daughter, The against the daughter was dismissed | and the caso settled, Lind and Pfeiffer of No, 46 Cedar street, who drew the complaint, said their client's attention was directed to the case when she read of it In the newspapers. She says she wa married to Jacobs in January, 1900, and that a daughter, Gertrude, now thirteen years old, was born of the G5 COUGH Itis not safe nor necessary, You can relieve it with Hale's Honey Of Horehound and Tar It does not upset digestion or nerves, complaint | 4B WENT With “BUFFALO” Jones’ AFRICAN EXPEDITION AND wat CHARGED . BY A WILD RHINOCEROS \ crouched in @ space already filled with | Js pleasant to the taste. Contains no} water and oli, and it was only by chop-| | ping out the floor of the elevator, which was done by two firemen from Hook ny No. #, ead Ladder Com: at the were injured. opium nor anything injurious, All druggists, W/ ~ ‘Tey Pho Toothache Deage Ge iy Secretary marriage, She declares that she lives at No. 410 St, Nicholas avenue and that her husband and the other Jacobs woman live In a big apart- ment house a few doors away. “I have seen the woman who claims to be Mrs. James Jacobs and found hor beautifully gowned and with diamonds of large value, Mrs, Juliette Jacobs. “I am in im- boverished circumstances, subsiating meagrely on the $25 a week which my husband allows me for myself and his daughter, He has an in- come of more than $10,000 a year, and I believe he spends more than that sum each year on this Amanda Green OR and their luxurious establish- ment. wish to cultivate my child's voice and rear her in keeping with her father's income. My husband de- serted me ten years ago. Tho dis- grace of having him swear that he is the husband of a woman who calle her daughter a thief and to have him say that this daughter Is his compels me to sue in court to dl- vorce him." Tho papers in the sult were served on Jacobs last night. He has not yet put in an answer. Caught Fire From Mra. Bertha Goldberg, sixty years old, of No, 428 Monmouth street, Jersey City, was rendering ard in her kitchen stov: thie morning when her clothing caugit fire. Her husband, Max Goldberg, sixty years old, and their aon, Max Jr., fifteen ours, Went to the Wol ald and wero t the han The bu on ing 1, APRIL 14, 1914. PATIENTS SEWED UP} Guy Scull, War Scout, Explorer, Rough Rider, \N)MORA |FSSON Secret Service Man, Now Police “INGUNMEN'S END, _— SAYSMISS DAVIS Woman Prison Head Thinks Capital Punishment Fails | of Implied Purpose. Commissioner of Correction Kath- orine B. Davia believes the four gun- men should not have been electro- cuted. She thinks capital puntsh- jment should be abolished in New York State because it does nothing to prevent crime, and @ays that, had “Gyp the Blood” been sent to an in- jetitution for defectives, as was sug- | gested a year before the Rosenthal | murder by Judge Hoyt of the Chil- dren’a Court, he would have been alive and @ good citizen to-day. Commissioner Davis believes there are instances whore murderers should be eet free after a period of observa- tion and study. She cited the case of ® Sicilian woman who murdered the mao who killed her husband because she thought the New York police were not active enough. The woman was allowed to go aft term under Miss Davis's care and later married her dead husband's brother, went to Mea- sina, where she motherad a houseful of children orphaned by the earth- quake and lived happily afterward, | Miss Davis does not favor omitting the punishment, but she belloves that “State murder” is unjustifiable under any conditions, even In the face of a confession of deliberate, cold-blooded murder. “I believe a person convicted of a erime should be kept under restraint only as long a# is necessary,” said | Miss Davis. “This applies to mur- derers as wal as othor criminals. “There shdMid be a State Board of Rehabilitation,” sho explained. “All persons convicted and sent away to State prisons should come under tho observation of this body. ‘The VINEGAR—Pure Cider |PEAS—Marcillat Imported Natural color | EGGS Sti HONEY—A. M. & C. Clear Strained—16 oz. jar.. Large bottle... . OLIVE, OIL—'4 gal. tin... Cream Lucca—Finest Italian |MUSHROOMS—Maccillat Imported—large tin .26 First choice LIMA BEANS—A.M. &C. Green Medium in size—unusually tender. tly New Laid Maplehurst Brand ment fs not making one gunman oF one murderer less,” said Miss Davis. “Every one in New York knows that, en, too, the stories in the news- papers are not helping. There appears to be a tendency to make heroes and martyrs of the four unfortunates, vo read that they died game! Isn't that unjust to the foeble-minded who pore over the pages of the news- papers which print this sort of stuff? Every feeble-minded person is a po- tential criminal. “Judge Hoyt said that ‘Gyp the Blood’ was a defective and that if he got out within @ year he would com- mit some great crime. The Judge's words were prophetic, “What wo nood State institu. tion for defective dolinquents. We should get them in the schools, where they are first observed, and kee track of them. If guided right they lead simple lives and never harm go- cloty. On the contrary, if they fall in with criminals of a higher order of intelligence they become gunmen and rillas, That is the class the police New York are to-day dealin; ith, Where you find that r jisre- gard of human life, that hob: tuseness and the inclination to al- ways go the wrong way, there you have the defective delinquent. [ have studied the girls for many years and the boys are no different. “Tam not guided by maudlin senti- ment. One who has had charge of girls at Bedford fur years gots that out of her system. IL believe in pun ishment; there should be no relaxa- tion of it. But there ts nothing to Justify putting a man to death. A Board of Kehabilitation could tell at & glance in just what class a criminal bei Convicted persons found to us, and defective delin- ould be held in check al- Davis recalled that “the gray murder which figured in the Ro- senthal murder was used iy ! soveral Ttalians in an attempt to kidnap a girl from the Hodford Reformatory & year before the mu ©. Libby, she says, drove the car Commissioner Davis was yesterday @ guest at a dinnor with Al Jenatngs, the ex-bandit, who is a candidate for Governor of Oklahoma a TO FREE EX-BOSS KUEHNLE. Coart of Pardons Commaten Sen- tence of Atlantic TRENTON, No J, Kuehnie, April, 14.—Loutx Republican leader City, will be releared from year nvteted of parttelpat- a public official in the letting {to A company in which he ed. of a contr was in Acker, Merrall & Condit est. Company 22 Buying at our stores means money in your purse - 24 large tins .12 Tres Fine size doz. .29 | large tins 16 Arranged for To-morrow BONWIT TELLER. &.CO, The Specially Shop of Onginalions FIFTH AVENUE AT 38™ STREET Moire Faille | Glace Taffet Taffeta Jaqu Moire Coat Wraps. Silver Em'd Chiffon Wraps. Egyptienne Moire Coats. Ripple Silk Coats. Plain Faille Coats. SilvereStriped Silk Wraps. * 35.00 Values up to 55.09 Coats. a Coats. ettes, | Imported Motor Coats. } Special Purchase and Sale of Women’s Dressy Silk Coats & Wraps This collection of coatsand wraps reveals every correct fashion created this season. There ate only one or two of a kind, which assures a distinctive individuality, vaovs: ghO [ees 8 TREATMENT. FOR $5 During the past siz. years, while my office was located in the Flatiron Build- ing, & great many persons have come to me and told me that they would Iike very much to have me treat them for clogged nostrils, deafness and other ma: ‘ations of catarrh, but that they could not afford to pay my fees, Such Dersons have requested that I treat them for a lower rave than my usual feo. Owing to the fact that my facilities in the Flatiron Building would not al- low me to care for the number of that would be attracted by a 1 was compelled to keep my foen as they were, When my lease ex- Dired in the Flatiron Buliding and £ moved into my new offices, No. 220 West [42d stront tien were so and the arrangements © much better, that £ | finally decided to reduce my fees | for @ limited time to a nominal price, 0 that all may afford to receive my treat- ment. 1 take thts rtunity of notifying all th who require treatment fer ecatarrhal troubles that during the Month of April my fee for treatment Will be a charge of $5.00 for eight com- blets treatments. ‘This feo will include all necess treatment and medicine, In order to take advantage of this low offer it will be necessary to visit my office and enroll your name on or bee fore April tho SON. All patients whe begin their treatment before May 2 Will receive treatment as long as they require it without any increase im the fee. My specin!ty is freving cbatencted nostetl ina deafnees and bead nolves and healing some breathing tte: 1 have apend ‘lyin the teat way to do ehie, out at the 1 will be pleamnd fo have you visie my offies, It wil cot rou nothing for an etamination end advice DR. J. C. McCOY 802 Candler Building —220W. 42d Se. Next door to the Now Amatentam ‘Testes Honre- Mandar, Welvestar and Friday. 10 8, M. to # P.M. ‘Toewlay, ‘Thuretay and Maton tay WAM. to 8 OM, Sunday, 10 A, Me ” Are You Run Down? coal ( AM 12 Bottles, $11.00 H. T. Dewey & Sons Co. Wines and Grane J Uriten . Wet BEN Mee WHS ES, Ce. fall ve Ack Cha: Chas. RA St. ON. We 44K 484 St. Newark: WSs ia LOW & Pieces 85 antoe 1 or phone Plage 167 and man will call with samples, RIELZ AVE URNITURE CARPETS RUGS LL You will find that Yuban pro- duces the most delicious cup of coffee it is pos- sible to secure The Purity and Rich Quality 2 Syst ‘Conder: 1s its bost advertisement, A trial will convince you of its superiority, It is per- fectly prepared from pure cow's milk, ne SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS,

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