The evening world. Newspaper, October 7, 1914, Page 4

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“THE EVENING WORLD, puitared and she was senselesn. “ged ot Oe Evelyn lay Bhi gpd etes jt U0 CASH KILS FE, INIURES FIVE, lend fate hysterically a tale Miss Lulu Gali, daughter of John taco a a a oe farmer, was cae ae | | me ¢ were © broken. Frank Dreher of Patchogue, a crip- was sonseless with a fractured skull and physicians say there ts no | hope of his recovery. Daniel Mur- dock, only bruised and shaken, was the least burt and the first comers found him trying to drag Bellman from beneath the car. him they got an account of the I “ASTREDANE ¥ &, at High ip Speed, Turns Tur- tle on Dangerous Curve “oats To-Day. it. CAR WAS GOING FAST WHEN | WRECK OCCURRED. He said that Bellman had made up! the party early in the evening to pay | a call on friends In Sayvil eR MEETS DEATH. Y nat Women and Two Men Are Seriously Hurt Hotel here, though his home fs in Sayville, ao he was with the return- ing party. He and Dreher, with the Misses Burkart, sat in the tonneau, while Miss Gall shared the front seat The Brening World.) POINT, L. L, Oct. 1—Real- of the Old Country road, a con- of the Merrick road here, roused earty to-day by a ter- ‘rash and then the shrieks and of men and women. Those who from their homes found Daniel Bellman, who was an expert driver, was sending his car along at a good rate. He wanted to got the Misses Burkart home, and was within a mile of their residence when he swung) around the curve in which the road twists in front of the nome of Walter 1, Suydam jr. at what is known as Suydam's corner. ‘The road pitches downward at a sharp grade and there are deep | @itches on both sides. Bellman went urve, and was just straight- re came a blow- out in one of his rear shoes. The} collapse of the tire sent the speeding Burkart of this town, and ¢the|car off the road. It struck in the ditch It was the report ef the tire which first gave the alarm, and rescuers immediately carried all of the party into the home of Mrs, tying dead beneath the wreck the ground, some of them many ‘from the wrecked car, lay Mise Burkart, daughter of Joseph and toppled over. Doctors were telephoned, and Dr. William Ross of Sayville Cornelius O'Leary and EK. A. Fonter of Patchogue came at once in auto- ae They carried Drober to the hogue Clinte at once, leaving the sciee to be cared for by Mra, Laue for the night. Bellman's body was taken to his home. | Miss Evelyn Burkart was taken home by her parents later in the morning, but her sister was too bad- ly hurt to be moved. The physicians think she may recover, ; Mise Gall, also, could not be moved. or @ rest, was all right. ‘The Suydam curve has been tho @cone of many accidents. Fields, proprietor of Jack's Tavern | at Belmore, was so badly hurt in a ‘wpill three years ago that he died, months later, of his injuries. The curve held no terror for Bellman, however, for he had been @ racing Griver and only recently had won the Port Jefferson hill climbing contest. But for the blow-out he would have negotiated the curve in safety. ASHINGTON » October 18, Laney gl 1, when the fire swept over the top floor. It progressed so rapidly that oocu- pants of rooms there had to flee in their night clothes, Roth and a man known only aa “Ed. |turn of indictments against New die" were trapped in their rooms, Haven Retiroad oMfcials by the Grand Roth stood at his window on the | Jury now in session in New York was Fourteenth atreet side of the build. | forecasted to-day by a statement te- ing. Smoke swirled around him so|sued by Attorney-General Gregory, that only at intervals was he visible /announcing the appointment of two . [to the crowds in the street below. |attorneys to “prosecute any indict- Then came flames, which darted out pene Treet ae @ result of this in- over hig head, and, as the smoke cleared momentarily, the crowd saw | ,,J0mee W. Osborne of New York has || the young man climb out of his wis- dow and bang suspended by his hands from the aill. Truck No, 12 had pulled up in the | Polntment street and Firemen Golden and Meyer ran up a thirty-five foot lad- however, several feet below Roth, who by this time had lowered himeelf even farther by clinging to staples set above the win- ee Chief Engineer Lacombe Going Ou Char Commissioner Williams wh: ter absumed office Feb. 3, Young Men's and Boys’ Clothing—Third Floor Entirely Separate Department — New Building OPPENHEIM, GLUNS & G 34th Street, New York Very Unusual Sale of Young Men’s Suits 98 to 48, suitable for medium sise men. Modelled on sistent with heim, Collins & Co.'s stan Special Value for Thureday About 185 Hand Tailored three and four button soft roll front natural shoul- der Suits of Casstmere and Cheviots in Stripes, Tartan Checks, Serge. Actual 22.50 Values Men’s Raglan Rain Coats English Raglan Model, made of Tan and Olive Double Texture materials. dow on the third floor for awnings. Still he was out of reach Meyer and Golden climbed to the very top of iad. ge Cog Baud a en braced himi imaelf Mey over nis shoulders, hin. brother fre. man clinging to bim, until he got band on one of Roth's feet. At a pd from Golden that he Kd realy ‘or the shock Meyer shouted Arrives Boaly Pr From Arch- ants tae, ae ‘irseuy ‘over ny cH Mrs. Carrie 4 Chapa Cait to Administer Former Publish- er’s Bequest to Suffrage. head the last minutes that eh hens window. angel—Barbed Wire and, | beneath the GOES UP SCALING LADDER To Maybe, Guns Alongside, RgecUE MAN. a “The mystery ship from Archangel” | Truck No. § went to hie, assistance is what sbipping men along the water | 00,8 thirty-five foot ladder. ix ‘Ss Golden's and Meyer's, it was short, | nd it} front in South Brooklyn are calling | but poe Ae @ scaling ladder with | they | the Russian-Amerioad line ateamenip | Bim and started for home, Murock has been) Dwinek, which got into pert to-day hie man safely to the ataying recently at the Blue Point) rom this northernmost port in Rus. | % sia, on the White Sea, without pas- | eengere and without cargo. Mem- bera of her crew say the Dwinsk left Archangel at 1 o'clock on the morn- sien Perens the ing of Sept. 22 and in @ great hurry. | licemen aroused the other occupants Why she came here with no cargo | thé priest found stg wo haga 7 and not @ passenger in her saloon, | Madge although there were several Ameri- had meade his cans in Archangel willing to pay any price to avoid being trapped there neither Capt. Neumann nor any member of the Dwinsk's crew professed to know. But the Customa men who have ® |the added duty these days of guard- ‘patrolman in 1901. On ing Uncle Sam's neutrality believe ir ‘ioe, they have a reason that will stand| Park Avenue Hotel fire and On the wharf, alongside| guished himeelf in the rescue of im- of which the Dwinsk tied up to-day, | Derilled persons. For his ‘went Up an extra story on 5g g 4 ar 75 scehits Hod in, who was thirty sts, wae 5 Re was sent to the G courageous it occasion he was are 200 automobile trucks, crated, &| awarded a medal of honor and honor big consignment of barbed wire and/ able gio, 8 one enides, two dozen heavy cases ao constructed ‘gens an to conceal their contents, and each | 15, 1818, and mood, wal Up on the Mt marked “Place on deck.” who ac of Collector of the Port Malone ajemergéency, and it was Customs guard was placed over these |COmmandeer an automobdile in order crates, and none will be allowed to| ‘gt to the fire in a hurry. ins was known quickly in an idea to On orders| as oman married and lived at be lifted into the Dwinsk’s hold until/ yo, ‘Weet Ninety-sixth street. the contents of each case h examined. Even though the cases NEW YORKER IS KILLED Current suspicion, « auestion of the| BY AUTO AS HE TRIES right of the Dwinsk to take away] 70 BOARD STREET CAR. automobile trucks and barbed wire ie likely to be raised by the Collector, Both ied on the provisional contra- POLICE SERGEANT 3 KILLED, PATROLMAN [ze sieseas Bie ‘William J. McCormick of New York, whose summer home is at New Mon- mouth, N. J., was killed by an auto- mobile at Red Bank last night. The machine struck him just as he was about to board a ener car on Broad bar neigh ron hehe) hae tay few hours from the resulta of a fractured skull. McCormick was fitty years old and widow and two childrea. leaves a (Continued from First Page.) OSBORNE T0 PROSECUTE NEW HAVEN LOOTERS and Frederick | WASHINGTON, Oct. 1—Zarty re- HEN you ask to see jumper dresses, for example: Shall we show you first the highest priced jumper dresses? Or the lowest priced ones? Or something between the two? Honestly, we don’t know. If it happens to be the high- er priced garment we show you first, you might be given the impression that Best's merchandise is mostly of that high-price grade, Which would be so wrong it couldn't be more so. Our people here are able and glad to show you any article you have in mind—at any price you have in mind. Pith Avenue, West Bide, Corner af 84th Street that FILE LESLIE WILL GIVING FORTUNE T0 = VOTES FOR WOMEN’ William the executors of Mrs. Frank Lestie, ;@nmounced to-day the will of Mrs.|don to-day. Lesile would be filed for probate to- He said Mra, Leslie had bequeathed all her household and personal ectec's to her niece, Mrs, Wrenn, and had also left $50,000 in trust for Mrs.|on Sept. 29. Wrenn, and $10,000 to each of Mrs.| Sister Mary said: ‘Wrenn's children, and had made many other provisions for relatives a. 1 friends, the total amount of such bequests being about $190,000; that she had also bequeathed $10,000 to! puiidines, the American Society for the Preven- tion of Cruelty to Animals, in the formation of which her late Frank Leslie, bad taken pi the residue of her had bequeathed to Mrs. man Cott of the city of New York; that the bequest to Mrs. Catt Is ab- sotute and unconditional, but the be- quest contains this provision: “It Is my expectation and wish that ehe turn all of my said residuary estate into cash and apply the whole thereof as she shall think most ad- bay 7 Fae a wetien ago We sent alt cer Viable to the furtherance of the) uous home from the convent, but in Antwerp I met many of my girls among the penniless refugees fleeing ny of our sie- to go. reot} “One of our sisters is blind and they are with- cause of women's suffrage, to which she has 90 worthily devoted so many years of her life, and that ehe shall make suitable provision so that injiers, had no pi case of her death any balance ¢ remaining unexpended may plied an Mra, Leal! Pert Antonlo, Jamaica Alfred Neble, Retterdam Red Cross Day Electrical Grand Central Palace Lexington Ave and 46th St October 7th to 17th \ lamtollpm Wy Mt i) i) xpended in the same way; but this expression of my wish and expectation creating any trust or as limiting or affecting the character of the gift to her, which I intend to be absolute and unrestricted.” Mr, Cromwell would not make any statement with regard to the size of ‘e eatate, except to say it would be probably in excess of $1,000,000, | iA Peers. th ae Shit aciaas tae Wt _DNWESDAY, OOTOBER 7, 1914. and| he | Refugees soon followed 1 from Like another is owt Dp. is not io be taken as STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. | nuserenterseen temrenetet po Fear on your feet. Start using it today, sett shot mie siege NEW YORK NUN DRIVEN. OUT BELGIAN CONVENT. BY GERMAN CANNON Fled With cae’ Some Blind and Paralytic, When Wille- broeck Was Shelled. {i can *retur LONDON, Oct. 7.—Sister Mary Mc- Laughlin of Skaneateles, N. Y., was Neleon Cromwell, one of| among several hundred refugees from’ the vicinity of Antwerp to reach Lon- ‘Together with fifty other Augustin. jan sisters, she was driven from the’ Ville Marie Convent at Willebroeck, fifty miles south of Antwerp, by + bombarding of the fort at this piace six-mite strip of the bog meadows at “We stayed at the convent as long as possible to protect the propert but the school being near the fort,| reat the sweep of the fire had been shells struck our chapal and other , shattering windows and] y wrecking the roofs. Driven out, we made our way north to Boom, two sbqnd.| miles away, where we were told we would be safe from German atta rrie Chap-| trom Willebroeck and to that town had been destroyed. “Thursday we had to leave Boom |f on account of the bombariting, Final- ly we reached Antwerp, but were or- dered to leave there immediately. We were unable to get a bont until Mon- at the Show All of the box office receipts for Thurs- day, October 8th, will be devoted to. the American Red Cross Society for its International Relief Work. Thus, the greatest educational exposition ever held in this country can be visited and at the same time you will make a material contribution toward allevia- ting suffering from the European war The Electrical Exposition and Motor Show St, nen. OO Py f : cones SPECIAL! 3 Housekes; Rooms Ou $1.50 A WEEK Tew relatives to whom they can turn.| settled dawn over the section. or fying to stayed with theses) dents jell "T ng to — a safe Place a tity eleium teaghisig| ts years, but fortunately in America to whoin Some of our hetpless preg have been in the convent for All the members of sheir tamil lea are dead, and until we can get back to our property and restore hb their condition will be deplorabi American in th rtunate in havin «a ki government, which is help. ing me until 1 can help myself.” Bister Mary was met on her ar- i London by workers from the ae Committee. Ar rangemi are Being made for he: to sail for t ameriea next Saturday. MEADOW FIRE BRINGS SICKNESS TO MANY! Smoke From Blazing Six-Mile Strip Settles Like Fog and Affects People and Cattle. MIDDLETOWN, N. Y., Oct. 7—A Durlandville was afire to-day to a depth of two feet. All efforts to ar- futile and indications wete that for rs to come the fertile land where the fire now rages will be sterile. Great quantities of smoke have ae ha MX No more in our warehouse. $45 Daven-os, $22. $50 Daven-os, Pea $68 Daven-os, $34.00 $80 Daven-os, $40.00 $90 Daven-os, $45.00 port alone. ‘We have a distinct advanta; spre te lferng bagoine fe ial to sell at t . to you of exactly $20. We coul of Owen superiority. and herds of {cattle ive been stricken—some of them 4 moke fog which lies GULDEN'S MAKES Cold and Hot Meats Tasty wustard bay g tallndh TO U: bean lh ee vertised im The World will be FINAL CLOSE OUT EXPORT DAVEN-0S at 1/4 PRICE RO RT QT FUT er TT RY KKK LLY OOO is Must be out of the way quickly It isn’t likely that you will ever again have an oppor- tunity to buy the original Owen Daven-o at half price. The end of our sale of cancelled export shipments will come with the disposal of the floor samples. There are No twe alike. Many coverings fe choose from. Te be sold as they are made up. $100 Daven-os, $125 Daven-oe, $150 Daven-os, $75.00 $160 Daven-os, $80. $175 Daven-oe, $87.50 Two articles in one—a full size bed and a beautiful Davenport—for just half the usual price of the Daven- “Moving” Time Bedding Sale over any other store when it Bedding. As manufact: Owen Co. turn out a line of ality. Not made up There is an dctual sav idn't afford to sell it at this price regularly. We,do it now more asan advertisement This is the Standard D.’T. Owen (= )D.T.OWEN 34 East 23d Street From Factory to. you saves you fully ONE-THIRD.

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