The evening world. Newspaper, June 23, 1914, Page 5

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»GAVEINENGULFS [MUNCIE IN, ERE + EIGHT, KLS OE NEW SUBWAY Thirty-Ton Crane Carries Mass of Stone and Sand Into ‘Brooklyn Excavation. ‘Pwo hundred fest of sand and stone, Nom both sides of the Fourth avenue \ * @abway excavation between Seventy- otath. and Seventy-seventh atreete, Breoktyn, caved in at a little before 8 @elock to-day. Hight of the work- @en who were busy at the bottom of the tzench, which is ninety feet wide, were caught under the sildes. All were dug out within twenty minutes. One was killed, two were seriously in- Jared and others were badiy burt. THE DEAD. DOMINIC DEMITTO of No. 843 Third avenue, Brooklyn; crushed by falfing derrick and shoring timbers, THE INJURED, Nicholas Sequalot of No. 886 Twen- ty-firat street, Brooklyn; right leg torn off at thigh; dying at Norwegian Hospital. Nicholas Lidese of No, 777 Sixty- fifth street, Brooklyn; fractured skull; dying at Norwegian Hospital. Carlo Bilgie of No. 1029 Sixty- street, Brooklyn; cuts on scalp; Holy Family Hospital. Fred Youngs of No. 1820 Wallace avenue, the Bronx; ankle broken and of No. 1820 Wallace avenue, the Bronx; cut scalp and sprained back; sent bome. A number of other men, one of whom had been buried for a few minutes, went home with bad cuts and bruises before the ambulance surgeons could attend them. Leroy Chisholm, of No. 375 Oving- ton avenue, superintendent for the contractors, and Jacob A. Keever, of No. 231 Seventy-second street, Brook- lyn, timber boss, were arrested, charged with criminal negligence. THIRTY - TON TRAVELLING CRANE USED IN THE WORK. A travelling crane which weighs thirty tons and runs on a twenty-foot truck has been used by the contract- ora for the section, Carpenter and Boxley and Herrick (Inc.) of Roanoke, Va., for hoisting earth out of the cut. ‘The track was shored up with ten by ten inch upright timbers and heavy sheathing. Jacob A. Keever, the foreman in charge of the shoring, said that he thought the vibration of the ground @ayood by the approach of the big travelling derrick caused the sand to ghift back of an uncompleted stretch of sbeathing, bursting it out and @arrying away the uprights. The track sank and the big machine rolled fpto the excavation with a crash which was beard at the Hamilton @venue police station, half @ mile awag. Both banks of the cut began to slide and workmen who tried to run out from under the fallen derrick were met by an avalanche of sand and stone from the other side and buried. A truck to which two horses were at- tach slid down in the confusion, dragging the horses after them. They were found dead under the debris later, Many of the rkmen who escaped by running through the center of the diteb, did not return for nearly an Bour and for @ time it was feared that fifteen or twenty men had been caught under the debris. Those who were stopped by the foremen were wet at work digging furiously to get out their comrades. POLICE AND AMBULANCES QUICKLY AT THE SCENE. Police-Lieutenant Fitzgerald was Just turning out a equad at the Fort Hamilton station when the noise of |. OPPENHEIM. GLLINS & G A \ An exceptional assortment of Long Tunic, Tai- ) i lored and Coat effect models of white striped | and novelty voile, white and colored crepe cloth, ; French and Ramie linen; wide silk sash, Organe die and lace collars. 375 Attractive Summer Dresses : “THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JUNE 28, 1914. MAN WITH BUNDLE NEAR SPOT OF GIRL MURDER MYSTERY Hired Boat to Go Fishing, He Said, and Carried Nothing on His Return. WITH VERY LATEST HINTS IN FASHION Mrs. Anthony Is Going to Show Paris Experts a Thing or Two. ‘The best dressed woman tn Indiana| The pottce of Schenectady, accord- ing to Chief of Police Rynex, are no Paused in New York to inform us) 'D& ‘0 Chlel Om in they were Fri- that we are all wrong about having) aay to knowing the identity of the first voice in feminine fashions. She| girl whose headless, armless and i Mrs. Charles Haines Anthony of | legless heed ka uchawn #106 bd e bank of 1e ol . Muncle, Ind, who dassied Gotham (OM Tow the New York Central before with ber gowns and her dia- bridge. mond heels. “We are working as hard ae ever,” Mrs. Anthony conqyered New York|said Chief Rynex to The Evenini at that timo and rw, with fifteen| world over the long distance ti trunks of the very newest things,| phone to-day, “but until we can she is off for Europe. Paris is her) jearn who the girl was we are find- objective point where she proposes! ing it hard to start on @ real solu- to put Muncie, Ind., on the map as altion of the mystery. The young rival for fashion’s honors. Her tour! woman, accofding to the physicians, will be through Norway, Sweden,| was about twenty-five ye old. Germany, France, Switzerland and| There are no wounds on so muoh of Italy. the body as we know to indicate “No, I haven't time to describe even| now ahe was killed or the motive for & part of my new gowns,” she told an| xilling her. She was apparently a Evening World reporter at the Wal-| good girl. The onty clothing in the dorf-Astoria to-day. “I would like ¢o| red ollcloth covering, which was put #0 much, but I am simply under an} apout the body before it was wrapped avalanche of appointments. Iam leav-|jn @ burlap bran sack, was @ purple ing immediately for a trip over Long] cloth skirt of fair quality and @ Island and a dinner engagement this| cotton underskirt, with one and a evening. I am so hurried and I have| jaif inches of machine-made lace so many things to do. My son and I| about the bottom. leave Saturday, you know, on the Im-| “according to the doctors the body perator. Mr. Anthony is coming from) nas been in the place wh it was Indiana to-morrow night and will see! ¢ouna for almost a month, We have us off. asked the police of every city in the “Diamond heels? No, not this time. | country to let us know about young T had lots of fun with them here two! women reported missing during May or years ago. Last year I had a beau-| the first part of June, A few have tiful diamond armlet and I must 8aY| heen reported, but we have been able with a little pride that Indiana liked| ¢ trace them. The last two, Teresa it very much. It was quite original. | Feuse and Sara Meader, were found No, I cannot say I have anything] with relatives yesterday. ° really original this year, “The burlap bran bag in which the “Fifty thousand dollars’ worth of | poay was found is of the same make clothes?) Who sald my gowns cost] ang material as the bugs used in the that much?" Mrs. Anthony laughed | warehouse of E. W. Berning & Co. of gaily. “I cannot #ay that is true—| no 02 Front street, not far from and I will not deny it. Guess again—| the river, The pi of cement slab but they did com quite a lot of| with which the ghastly bundle was money, I have my own dressmaker) weighted is identical with those in a in Indianapolis and she ts @ perfect) pie of such pieces in the yard of the jartist, 1 import my materials and Berning warehouse. Three minutes’ walk by a footpath from the ware- house is a little pier where boats are kept for hire. At the boathouse we my hate from abroad, chiefly from Paris, and 1 think I get better ef- fects with my own designs and the superior workmanship of my own dressmaker, Anyhow, I'm going to let Paris judge for itself.” With Mrs. Anthony is Harvey Mitchell Anthony, who has just been graduated from Harvard. They ar- rived in New York last night. eee Aged Minister Dies. NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., June B.— Dr. Edward Tanjore Corwin, one of the oldest ministers of the Reformed Church of America, died at the home of his son, the Rev. Charles E. Corwin, North Branch, N, J., early to-day, Dr. Cor- win waa at one time the special of the General Synod of the Refé Church of America to Holland. He the manual of the piled N inary for = have the only clue which seems to us to promise anything—and very lit- tle at that : “The boathouse people remember Delco THE DOU DESSE The dessert that’s different! Two assorted pure 10c fruit flavors in box; @ summer delight. At Your Grocers, the cave-in was heard. He held the men until informed by telephone what had happened and sent them to the scene double quick. Their ar- |= rival was followed quickly by the- ambulances. A station of the new subway is to ‘be built on the spot where the acci- dent occurred. Officially the section is known as Section 2, Route 11 B. The Fourth avenue subway is nearly ready for equipment as far as For- tleth street; from Fortieth to Eighty | sixth street there is much excavating yet to be done. An effort was made to bring up a second crane to hurry the work of ciearing away the slide and looking for the dead and injured. Before broken shoring could be patched up, it was found that the men already dug out checked up the count of the employees on the payroll, and the risk of bringing another 30-ton ma- chine over the shaky margin of the | ditch was not taken, Waw-waW MUSTARD | know what the best is .ike. | ounces cents 34th Street—New York Special Sale Wednesday of that one afternoon about a month | ago—they think it was May 20—a man lcarrying a big burlap bundie was at the plier. He was a big fellow, smooth-shaven, of average height ‘They described him as ‘well-dressed,’ but the most detail I oan get from them Is that he wore a stiff collar and j® tle, They are sure they would know him again if they saw him. “This man hired a boat for two hours, saying he was going fishing. He stayed away more than two hours, and the incident js fixed in the mem- | ories of the boathouse attendants be- cause there was a dispute about the amount he should pay, They are quite sure he had no bundle with him when he returned. “Joseph Foley,” a pump-house en- gineer of the Delaware and Hudson Railway, and Edward Dawson, a rail- road engineer, tell us of having seen a man acting queerly along the river front one afternoon a month ago, They described him as looking and talking like a foreigner who did not know much English. Dawson is sure he saw him carry eavy bundle. “We will welcome any information about young women who disappeared from their homes a month ago, and persons who send us such information will be assured that we shall do all we can to find them in our effort to learn the identity of this girl. lodgings at No, 346 East Eighty-ninth street. He left a note for his Inndlady, Mrs. Fannie Weiss, saying that he had been til a great deal lately and feared losing hie job. His only relations are in Germany. _ enti PARKWAY SUBWAY LET, Conacepenon . of Section No. the cofitract to-day for the conatru of Section No. 1 of Route No. 12, Ei ern Parkway subway, in Brooklyn. bid, the loweat, was § tion in the contract ‘a that of the route in Flatbush av the terminua of the existing ‘St, Mark's avenue. ‘The subway will be mostly a siz-track one, four of the tracks. being for the gperaton, of the Interborough Rapid ransit. © ny An tion by the New York Municipal way Corporation. These two track: @ part of the proposed connection - tween the Fourth avenue subway and the Brighton Beach Railroad, Work muat oe In sixty days. Thir- ty’ months will be given for the com- pletion of the job. Dandruff is a disorder of the skin. One of the best remedies for it is Glenn’s Sulphur Soap It’s a delightful toilet and bath soap,—cleansing, heal- ing and purifying. two for opera- it Diamond at Lamberts preaching. direct from to whem w mounted them in Solid Selid 18-karat Gold and PI were to pay. us for a Lambert Seamless thicknesses. plain ring naturally giv not alone does she buy jewe' us to her friends, for which Wedding Rings 14-karat, $3.30 up] 14-karat, $4.40 up 18-kerat, 4,00 up| 18-k 3.50 up 22-karat, 5.25 up| 22-kurat, 7.00 up LAMBERT Store Open Evenings Until 6. SUMRANTEE® BOSS For Women and Misses | 8.90 Regular 15.00 to 20.00 values. Mahogany fine hod 1 i handsomely hed wood i polis: seutn, with fons, Panne can’ be without c cash for fine gems in quantities and frankness and straightforwardness, us store has become a from $10.00 to $1500.00, and every one of them is value that would be simply out of the question if the middlemen G b, Diamond _ Jewelry for Weddings and Grad- uations. All Fashionable Patterns, Much Original Lambert Work and Every Piece a Money Saver. Seamless Wedding Rings In time buyers of Engagement Rings come back to which we supply in all styles, shapes, widths and The bride is our friend ever after. endearing brightness and the wearing quality of her her a good opinion of us and AT 84ST. & SAVE. Lamberts Pioneers in Economy This idea of DIRECT communication between producer and consumer and of sending the middleman to the right about is good, but not new. of satisfied customers who have bought SOLITAIRE DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RINGS Thousands can testify to that. Many long years ago we began to practice what the economic experts of this day are We imported Diamonds the cutters e paid spot — —_— Sore Sa 1100 14-Karat or Ca $135 atinum, For Solid Gold Wedding Ring, The Iry of us, but she commends we thank her. Engraved Free. at, $5.50up | 14-karut, $6.60 up 18-karat, 6.75 up | 18-karat, 8.10 up 22-karat, 8.75 up | 22-karnt, 10,50 up BROTHERS} DIAMONDS—JEWELRY— WATCHES Third Ave., Cor. 58th Street Satuftday Night Until 10. BRO White foaOen Naw far Store Closes Daily 5 P. M. Saturdays 12 M. } Best &Co. : { ’ During Greater New York’s Baby Week | | } Jane 22nd to 27th What name comes to mjnd more naturally than the Best & Co.’s “Liliputian Bazaar” We are working for the child’s welfare not only this, but every we k of the year, developing better ideas, better quali- ties arid better workmanship, in both clothing and supplies. | The ‘‘Liliputian Bazaar” pure NUR Is the greatest children’s store in the world, a ae known everywhere fog the superiority of i its merchandise, and yet it is absolutely ’ Trade Mark—Copyrighted Lowest in Price for Equal Quality Reed Pullman Sleepers, with corduroy cushions and wind shield, complete. i Special for Baby Week 15,75 Outdoor Sleeping Carioles, easily handled, collapsible—for thin, under- weight children, very low priced. 16.50 19.50 Our Own Pure Castile Soap, made from the beat olive oil; bland and healing for infants’ skin; two sizes. Te 1ldée 18e Our Own Nursery Powder, unexcelled for baby’s bath. 375 Pieces Fine Baby Wear Greatiy Reduced for Baby Week—-3rd Floor The assortment is mostly one of a kind and includes many hand- some garments. All are band-made, materials of finest qua ity, and marked now at much below our regular stock prices. Long Dresses Formerly 1.35 to 61 50. 95e¢ to 45.00 Short ** “9.35 16.40. 1.95 ‘* 12,75 Wrappers ea 1.50 18.50. 1,25 ‘* 15.25 \ Hood Shawls # 4.00 ‘* 15.50. 3.50 ‘* 12.50 . Sacques st 2.25 * 8.00. 1.75 ‘ : 6.75 Short Coats a 675° 28.50. §,25 ‘ 18.75 Also a number of Long Skirts, Flannel Gertrudes and Barrow Coats. Corded Washable Sun Hats. Up to 6 year size—4th floor. 75¢ Pique Hats, hand-embroidered, easily laundered. Up to 6 year size. 1.65 nn AEN At Special Prices for Baby Weeh Sale of Little Children’s Rompers 50c “Oliver Twist” Rompers 50¢ Regularly 75 Regularly 75e Pink, blue or tan crinkled One-piece Suits, white cam. seersucker, ensily laundered, bric waist, pants of blue or Beach Rompers no ironing; Duteh neck, pink striped gingham. short sleeves. 1 to 6 years. 2 to 6 years. Large Variety of Sand Toys, 25c. up { / Toy Boats, Tents, Children's Tennis and Croquet Sets, ete, ‘ We are Closing Out—4th Floor 125 Girls’ and Misses’ Coats In various materials and styles, selected from the regular stock and marked at clearance prices. . Broken sizes, 314 to 17 years 5.00 to 14.50 +4888 Special Sale of Girls’ Dresses 2 3% to 14 years—4th Floor ; 2.85 3.50 34 to 7 years. 8 to 14 years. White lawn, with tunic skirts prettily trimmed with fine embroidery Blue, Pink or Brown Gingham Bloomers Sizes 3% to 7 years. 50c. Special —~ FIFTH AVENUE At Thirty-Fifth St. The World Summer Resort Guide for 1914 now ready for FREE distribution at all World Oftices and by mail! G Announcements of over 2,000 Country, Seashore and Mountain Hotels and Boarding Houses, Steamship Cruises, Railroad Routes, etc., will be published — therein. q By far the most artistically printed, profusely illustrated and altogether valuable Guide to Vacation Places ever issued by any newspaper. q Mail Orders filled upon receipt of 6 cents in stamps to cover actual postage. WORLD SUMMER RESORT BUREAU | Pulitzer Building erly a co

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