The evening world. Newspaper, May 30, 1914, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

BLAZE ie and fought with men STORIES UP. Mary Griffin, wife of Michael, pou SUPE HE SE : and Women Struggle on Fire Escape When Drop Ladder Refuses to Work. ‘Marshal Prial believes Michael i the ex-janitor of an apart- Roose at No. 118 East Oné Hun- and Sixteenth street, paid with “Mife carly to-day for a supposed to obtain revenge upon own- ) as the irom ladda became JAN WALKS LEDGE THREE for a the appeals of firemen of 26 and walked a one-foot ledge stories above the ground feached Mrs. Sake'’s apartment ir coming out? ‘its color and lustre. until JUDGE HORNBLOWER DYING AT HIS COU oped Into Bronchitis and to Chronic Heart Trouble. tance phone George 8. Hornblo' may die at any moment. HNO DANDRUF—25 CENT DANDERINE If dry, n, faded, bring back how dull, faded, brittle and moisten a cloth with Landerine end ‘he amazing—your hair will he light, fluffy and wavy, and have abundan: inco: softness luxuriance. Get @ @5-cent bottlé of Knowlton anderine treatment—that's all—you have beautiful hair and lo you will just try a little Danderine. ly und THE ’s Free wor , Railroad an Tours and Citizen. "eer Contest “Rany coupons eg "yeu Blosee to Welp Fou er your Sreadsey ter > Address + TC RIE 14 Rrecdwer. anzgle; to tenant; s gas one to teaims meat. Seatac y Vacation Places enw EE Er ashes wegen Ries AEE Ma en we at any ef eur 10 ctores, or can be mailed to VOTE GOOD FOR ONLY ONE CANDIDATE Vote must be cast Pape oe June 4 Little Lines That \\For Lift Heavy Weights Iift great loads of care {rom the 0f those who seek ensploy- 5 ise capital for worthy In- i “haul goods to market as if Scoop up ba gains at every SUITS 44 lo Measure Bw W., May 30, Bowels in good condition. tly Pills. “Purely Millions of of are hy Aa Great South Bay offers many attractions to the city man or woman who fe looking for « place where it is pleasant to spend a week-end without fear to bire and a six-mile cruise may be taken on the natural canals that wend of bankruptcy. If you go by rail, first get to Jamaica. Then take a Free- port trolley which connects with boats that crons the bay to Point Lookout, | the way, and you iniagine that one cannot go any furth where there ie a wonderful beach with a life-saving station, the Nassau | twist or curve discloses itself and another stretch of canal lies ahead. Places to stop and have a bite of lunch are the little white sand strips HOME TAFE CONN, Cold of Last Winter Devel- | Judge William B, Hornblower of the Court of Appeals, who te fll at his country home at Litchfield, Conn., fe near death to-day, By long dis- to The Evening ‘World from his residence, The Gables, is son, eald: “My father’s health is euch that he There is a alight possibility that he may linger, but it is remote. He ‘s suffering with » june d care- of itif| the prime movers in t! Nothing so safe, so certain or so Satisfying as Carter's Little vegetable. people, old, young and middie age, take them for billiousness, dizziness, sick headache, upset stomach and for sallow, pimply and blotchy skin. Rod and Gun Club house and « quaint summer colony. who 1s in attendance upon him, Dr. Lioyd Deming, regards his case as hopeless.” Although Judge Hornblower has been ill for weeks, it was not known chronic heart trouble. The physician until last night that bis affitetion had become critically acute. Judge Horn- blower celebrated his sixty-third birthday on May 1. He was ill then, having caught cold in the winter and fatled to ohake it off. Bronchitis | resulted and was the beginning of the; Mnese from which now he suffers. Three weeka ago Judge Hornblower was compelled to end hia work on the bench and a special train was employed to take him from Albany to New York. As a newbuilding was being erected near his home, No. 5 East Pighty-ninth street, he was quartered temporarily at the Hotel Renaissance at Forty-thirq street and Fifth avenue, to escape the noise, but he became so ill at the hotel that he was removed to his country home. Since his arrival at Litchfield he has weakened rapidly. Few lawyers in thin State havo achieved the prominence and distinc- tion which have been Judge Horn- From Jamaica the Rockaw their winding ways through the m! Stream. At almost every turn t! trolley Kves to Hook Creek, where boats are of salt marshes all the way to Valley grasses of the marsh seemingly block invariably a new was married twice and leaves, rays. his widow? four sons and @ dai tsa He was a member of the ve canum and the nights of Colum! 4 “HY TROUBLE BE WITH PIMPLES” Mass of Red Boils All Over Face. Iched and Burned. Caused Die» figurement. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured in Two Weeks. By Eleanor Sghorer AAT AR Ne OD 614 Rockaway Ave., Brooklyn, Bo good. I washed my faco Goap in warm water each night applied the Cuticura Ointment and ta twe ‘weeks my face was all cured.” Bolomon Weiss, June 19, 1913. ——p ITCHING, INFLAMED EAR 61 Columbia S8t., New York, N. Y=“! could hardly bear the pain en that car. It was swollen and very Prominent. The Cuticura Soap and Olab Ment cured It In two weeks.” (Signed) Marry Zwickelberg, Juno 3, 1913. A ddnglo cake of Cuticura Soap (26¢.) amd box of Cuticura Ointment (50c.) are oftes euficient when ali vise has failed. Sold Shroughout the world. Sample of eact mailed freo, with 32-p. Skin Rook, Addresd Dost-card “Cutt Dopt. T, Boston," with clumps of wiliows growing on them that you'll come upon quite unex- pectedly in your cruise, It is undoubtedly a most novel trip. The canal has ® mouth that can be entered right off Great South Bay. There are many hotels of all sizes and to fit all means on the shores of Great South Bay, for the folks who wish to spend a few days; and if it is just a day's picnicking you wish to do, there is no more picturesque spot to be found. Apd so near home too. ROOSEVELT OFF FOR SPAIN TO SEE KERMIT MARRIED, (Continued from Firat Page.) lane was formed somehow or other end, with Mra, Longworth on his arm, he walked to a special elevator which had been held for him and wan borne to the upper deck of the pier, There another crowd had col- lected and the Colonel had the greet- Ines to acknowledge WITHHOLDS A ver STATEMENT UNTIL TO-MORROW. The Colonel went at once to his quarters, the Adams suite, named after John Quincy Adama, which is on the B deck of the ship. There he immured himeel!. Te the crowd of newspaper reporters who met him at the pier Col. Roosevelt blower’s, He was appointe to the Court of Appeals last January by member of the law firm of Horn- best known in this city. His son, George Sandford Hornblower, repre- sald: “I have no statement at all to make Gov. Glynn, ceasing then to be @/ about politics or anything el statement will be given blower, Miller and Potter, one of the| the duy at the Manhattan Hot Philip J. Roosevelt explained the Colonel's utterance as follows: A out later in ‘AS sents the family name in the firm,|to.day is a holiday, Mr. Roosevelt member, At the time of his appoint- ment to the Court of Appeals, Judge Hornblower was president of the Bar Ansociation. Upon hia resignation hi was sham, In 1893 President Cleveland ap- pointed Mr. Hornblower to the Su- preme Court of the United States, during a receas of Congress, but he by the antagonism of vid B. Hill and Edward Murphy jr., Senator Hill, ing forgiven Mr. Hornblower for his part in causing the defeat of Judge Maynard for the Court of Ap- Ie. Tadeo Maynard for his acts while a |m r of the legal department of The committee of the Vacation Sav- ings Fund has made final arrangements fat the Girls’ Clubhouse, No, 38 West inth street, for an “All Girls’ to be held next Tuesday night, on the East Twenty-fourth street recrea: tion pier. There will be @ concert, danc- ing. moving pictures Phe cominittes it the city, whet the Savings Fund or no \astor cards to the festival may be obtained at the clubhouse. Np men will take part in the celebrat: ee sd girl in o “fund byt the fun 1 aep ited, Nes 00 deposited by the 100 members since the fund was organized. 50 Years the World’s Perfect Liver and Bowel Regulator If you want to feel young and full of Vigor be sure and keep your Liver and CARTER’S William W. Miller being its sentortnought the be given newspapers.” on June 8 After the dre: pertal Suite. command of Eva Booth, land were also bound, ; thom, Miss Booth said: “The fight must go on. jement would better to to-morrow morning’s e Co}, Roosevelt will leave the Olym- oceeded by George W. Wicker. | Pic nt Cherbourg and take train for Madrid, which he expects to reach wedding he will go to London to deliver an ad- upon bis explorations in Brazil. failed of confirmation in the Senate! On June 18 he will sail for home on by one vote. This was brought about|the Imperator, occupying the Im- defeat, never| EVA BOOTH AND EVELYN NEB- BIT THAW ON BOARD. The four hundred Salvation Army Mr, Hornblower had attacked | soldiers who eailed were under the , the head of. the army in this country. S “|bound for the International Confer- ence in London o which those who sailed on the sunken Empress of Ire- ‘They are Speaking of We grieve for the living, not the dead—they are in the hands of God. England I shall ask for of the families of the m army who lost their liv Another passenger on don, Her mother and When I reach ald in behalf bere of the the Olympic and refreshments | was Evelyn Nesbit Thaw, who with lepositor of | Juck Clifford, is bound for a three nm} weeks’ dancing engagement in Lon- her son, 4 year-old Russell Nesbit Thaw, were an) ** the pler to see her been|in a very happy frame off. She was of mind un- til one of the reporters asked her about her son, calling him “Pom Vom,” a nickname by which he has been characterized several times. "Hi " ahe replied “He's not Pom Pom,’ for the dead of both William McKinley. Bri Hoyle tn an addres: the brave jpaniah their lives for the honor ose bodies are pal soldiers May 30.— united for the orial services tions at Fort Gen, Eli D, bute to ‘of thelr coune pried he GIMBEL BROTHERS GIVE DANCE TO EMPLOYEES Entire Eighth Floor of Store is Turned Into Big Ballroom. The entire eighth floor of the big Gimbel Brothers establishment was turned into a ballroom lust night and iwenty-five hundred dancers, the em- ployees of the store and their friends, tripped about the shiny floor from eight o'clock until half an hour after midnight. To give the dancers room, the many; tons of stock—drygoods are on the eighth floor—were moved to other floora and the ball room thus con- trived was with Chinese lan- terne and flags in such profusion that the place was transformed, A buffet supper wan served during the dance. ‘The idea of the dance originated with Mr. Duggan, the manager of the big store, and he and staff worked for many days to make itt the success it proved to be. Mr, Isaac Gimbel and; Mr. Fred Gimbel came over from Phil- adelphia to attend the ball, and Mr. Samuel Gimbel of the New York estab- Ushment was present to make sure that the employees had the time of; their lives. —_—=>—_ GIRL ENDS HER LIFE BY LEAP FROM WINDOW Sadie Schneiderman of Brooklyn a Suicide at the Neurologica’ Institute. ‘Twenty -one-year-old Sadie Schneld- erman, a stenographer, of No. 1,828 Fort was a victim of nauresthenia, dived from a third story bathroom win- dow of the Neurological Institute in Bixty-seventh street, Manhattan, shortly before 8 o'clock this morn- ing. Her body was found wedged between walle by patrolmen of the East Gixty-neventh street station next door. They had heard the acream of the suicide and saw her flash by a window. The Schneiderman girl lived with her mother. When she arrived at the institution last Thursday she aa! e could not sleep, So far as could be learned by the nurses Sadie had no love affair. ‘The young woman arose to-day apparently cheerful. Just as her nurse was about to accompany her to breakfast she asked permission to go to the bathroom for a drink. ‘Then she leaped from the window. ———____— LEFT HER GIRL BABY ON MAN’S DOORSTEP Had Five Children, She Said, Couldn’t Support This One, and Serine Was Childless, The belis in several apartments in the house at No, 1898 Belmont avenue, the Bronx, rang violently early to-day and several tenants, among them Joseph Bei fearing @ fire, hurried down to There they found a blu girl wrapped up in a bundle and an unsigned note addressed to Serine. It read: ‘ I am the mother of five chil- dren and I cannot support this one, IT know you are childless and will take good care of this one for EF Men who shave and shampoo with Ow (cura Soap will find It bert forskiuand scale ~ The World’s Confidence in any article intended to relieve the sufferings of humanity is / not lightly won. There must be continued proof of value, But for three generations, and throughout the world, endur- ing and growing tame and favor have been BEECHAM’S PILLS | because they have proved to be the best corrective reventive of disordered con- itions of stomach, liver, kid- neys and bowels. The first dose gives quick relief and manent improvement fol their systematic use. A will show why, in all homes, ham’s Pills GOP'S SENSITIVE PISTOL CITY OFFICIAL EXPIRES SHOOTS BOY ONTHEFLY| IN ROOM WITH WOMAN Haas Hops Out of His Pocket and Sends} Michael A. McCarty had registered Bullet Through Youngster’s Under an Assumed 1 Leg as He Runs. Name. Policeman Valentine O'Toole of the Bergen atreet station, Brooklyn, has.a revolver that shoots fugitives without being aimed at them. At least that was the prank it played on the police- man early to-day, A crowd of boys was disturbing residents at Bergen and Sevins street, according to O'Toole, and gave him what he called the “horse laugh” ‘when he ordered them to be quiet. Finally he chased them. He was gaining on a boy who later said he was James Cox, sixteen years old, of No. 478 Baltic street, when his re- volver flew out of his pocket, hit the sidewalk and was discharged, “Ouch!” yelled Cox, clapping aj hand to his left leg. “I give up." It would have been hard to tell which was the more surprised—he or the cop. They went back and found t erratic weapon where It had falle Michael A. McCarty, 60 years old, brother of Father BE. W. McCarty of St. Augustine's Church, Sixth av- enue and Sterling place, Brooklyn, who had been a clerk in the Depart- ment of Charities for twenty-four years and recently had been trans- ferred to Kings County Hospital, died early to-day in the Hotel Val- dosta No. 15 East Houston atreet. McCarty who according to his son, Cyril, told his family yesterday that they need not expect him home as he was going to a club meeting, regis- tered at the hotel last night with a young woman under the name of “John J. Ryan and wife, Hoboken, NJ" According to the night clerk, sev- eral drinks were served to the couple in their room, and it was after mid- night when the young woman rushed Dr. Dilimuth of the Holy Name|2i9 the hotel olfice, greatly excited. | the use of 8 Hospital found that the bullet had|%re° nusband is alck! Oh, do grazed Cox's leg, barely breaking the akin, The boy was locked up on a charge of disorderly conduct, something for him!" The clerk hurried to the room and found McCarthy unconscious, He tel- ephoned to St. Vincent's Hospital for an ambulance, and Dr. Lavelle found that McCarthy was dead. Meantime the young woman disappeared. He was identified by papers in his pockets and his family notified at his home, No. 78 Bond atrect. Brooklyn. McCarthy was well known among! Brooklyn politicians and was a close friend ofthe late Hugh McLoughion and other Democratic leaders, He —_—.. 950,000 Gift to Harvard. CAMBRIDGE, Mass, May 30.—An unrestricted gift of $50,000 to Harvard College from Nathan H. Stone, Har- vard ‘75, was announced to-day. The gift 1s in memory of Mr. Stone's broth- er, Henry Baldwin Stone, a graduate of the clart of 1873, who for many yeurs was president of the Chicago Telephone Company and who died in 189 TATE AT AUCTION. | REAL ESTATE AT AUCTION. 0 baad DAY (RAIN OR on commencine at 10 A, M. 420 SEPARATE LOTS or tae PEARSALL PROPERTY WILL BE SOLD AT PUBLIC AUCTION FOR WHATEVER THEY WILL BRING on the Premises, Pelham Parkway and Williamsbridge Road, Bronx. THE SALE WILL LAST ALL DAY AND UNTIL LATE TO-NIGHT THE MEN OR WOMEN who go to this sale to-day will pick up some bargains. WHEN THE SUBWAY IS RUNNING THEY ARE BOUND TO MAKE A PROFIT If they buy a lot on Pelham Parkway or a corner lot, THEY WILL HAVE LAID A FOUNDATION FOR WEALTH IN THE FUTURE “A GOOD INVESTMENT JS WORTH A LIFETIME OF LABOR.” GO TO THE SALE SAVINGS BANK BOOKS TAKEN AS DEPOSITS ON THE PURCHASEOF LOTS ONLY 10% REQUIRED TO-DAY, 20% ON JULY 2ND. BALANCE CAN REMAIY ON MORTGAGE FOR 5 YEARS. Title guaranteed by the Title Guarantee and Trust Co. TO REACH THB PROPERTY J. Clarence Davies, 04 Av, thence i 149th St. & 3d Ave, Joseph P. Day, 31 Nassau St. Agents and Auctionsers, >

Other pages from this issue: