The evening world. Newspaper, November 20, 1914, Page 20

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?- BONG “POSTPONED” VERACRUZ HERD phia Society Girl, Says Her Father. went notices of an “Indefinite post- Ponement” to friends of the family who were invited to attend the wed- ding. U No reasons were given for the break by the family to-day. Boyd, whon asked about the definite postponement,” declared the engagenent had been broken. Misa Boyd is well more society, as wel Her engagement to Dell waa announced A a MeDonnell is a son of Mra. Eugene McDonnell, formerly of Baitimore, gow of Fort Howard, Md. Ensign McDonnell, who was one of the Vera Crus heroes commended bravery by Admiral Fletch conspicuous during the Ve campaign in more than one ‘was in charge of the signal corps toned on the roof of the Terminal el and maintained communication with the American warships, despite @ brisk fire by anipers. One killed and threes wounded by Cards for the marriage on ‘were sent out some time ago, an ‘wan announced that the ceremony would take place vory quietly at the brid @. The maid of honor was to have been the bride's sister, Mine Herriet W. Boyd, and Lieut. John Tilton McDonnell, United States Army, was to have been bis brothers best man. Miss Helen Boyd, with her sister, Mise Hi left to-day to visit their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs, Allen Boyd of Washington. —_— Writ Forbide Certificatte: Justice Benedict of the Court in Brooklyn gr a in this city. for was ADE! 1A, Nov. 2—The 43 of Miss Helen Longstreth fa, daughter of James Boyd of! to Ensign Edward Orrick De U. BS. N., will not take rai -|tamable estate, as $73,126,868. ir th Senatorial District, to produce in court alleged “Pintle iis COURT TOPASS ON A.N. BRADY ESTATE; LEFT $77,042,443 Appraisal Shows That $5,000,- 000 Must Be Deducted for Administration Expenses. FORTUNE IN STOCKS, His Largest Holdings Were in Tobacco Concerns Here and Abroad. ALBANY, Nov. 2.—Appraisal of the estate of Anthony N. Brady, the financier, who died in London, Eng- land, in July, 1918, was submitted by the Surrogate of Albany County late yesterday by Transfer Taz Ap- praiser Charlies M. Friend. The re- port gives the gross value of the es- tate as 977,042,443, and the net, or BVENING WORLD, men 000; United States Motor Syndicate, $124,000, and the Knoedier art gal- | lertes, $10,176. | Jewelry is vatued at $11,398, auto- mobiles at $1,440, and certificates of the Forty-second street and Madison Avenue Company at $200,228. Notes | of the United States Light and Heat- ing bee) oe 4 are appraised at $250,- 225; stock in the Brooklyn Jockey Club, at $25,000 and stock In the Queens County Jockey Club at $6,000. | The “Brady Participation Account” | amounts to $3,719,014, Tho nature of this account is not explained. In his report, Mr. Friend says that various legal questions have been raised and that these will probably have to be upon by the courts. What the questions are he does not say. Attention ia also called to the Increase in the taxable value over the figures submitted by the ex- ecutors. This increase amounts to several million dollars and adds to the State Treasury between $300,000 and $400,000. ESTATE DIVIDED INTO 8IX PARTS BY WILL. The bulk of the Brady fortune was willed to the widow and the dece- dent's sons, daughters and one gra: child, charitable institutions rec ing but $100,000. Mra. Marcia My ‘Brady, the widow, will get $1,000,000 cash and an annuity of $60,000, to- gether with the Brady home at No. 411 Stato Street. The balance of the fortune Is dl- vided into six parts. The beneficiaries are Nicholas Frederick Brady and James Cox Brady, sons; Mrs. Marga- ret Ruth Farrell, Mrs. Mabel Brady Garvan, Mrs. Marcia Myers Tucker, daughters, and Marcia Ann Gavit, @ granddaughter. 4 trust fund is creat- 4 for the latter. Tho executors and trustees are given exceedingly broad powers. HE’D SAVE A MILLION IN NEW TEACHERS’ PAY. Dr. Henry Berg Tells Aldermen Many guesses have been made as to the size of the fortune left by Mr. Brady, and the majority of them have come close to the figures given out by the appraiser. The financier was exceptionally reticent concerning his There Are Already Enough personal affairs. Elementary Instructors, As generally supposed, the bulk of} “rhe appropriation for 800 addi- Seung Ohh (ease: hav in basare any tional teachers in the elementary mt . Brady ing been | achools,” sald Dr. Henry W. Berg to- rector in about sixty corporations at | day, “should be eliminated from the the timo of his death, The amount/ budget, as the teachors are unnecos- thus invested was found to be $67,-/pary. If this course were followed 307,801, Personal chattels, mort- " EY Me ee ary or ty with- gages, jsaor} otes, - | oul ing any! ly injury or harm or Loon meget die claims, ac- {causing inconvenience.” counts receivable and miscellaneous) ‘ne Aiderngnic committee on investments are set at $6,431,084; cash | fnance, which Ts to make recommen- in banks, $1,163,861, and real estate, | dations gee ne pn (og aah Recess, upon which the Board o: jormen inoluding the Brady home in Albany,] Upon wiich the, Board of Aldermen $140,265, Dr. Berg's remarks. Dr. Berg repre- COST NEARLY 98,000,000 TO AD- | sents the United Negi Estate Owners’ Axsociation. MINISTER THE ESTATE. “There is one teacher for every )Serve Thanksgiving Dinner On | "- A New Dining-Room Table ‘Buy On Credit — Pay a Trifle at a Time ‘You can make this the happiest Thanksgiving you hm known. ’e ever liberal credit. easy to come here and open a charge account.’ No red tape— t require even an ; Task soleus What you WHER and send it home at once—then we'll give you a year and « half to amounts so mall you'll never miss the money. ly you need eorre new dishes, glessware or kitchen utensils; it's @ new rug, a new chair—but whatever it is that you want it, and our prices are the lowest. and open a charge account with the oldest furniture house in La-ee fT ar mm | eh a a) 30.75 sete, aleo many Jacobean in mahogany at tow prices. af Pretty Lady's Des i en in bird’e-ere mate, ork inatruments rat tn pri $17.60 "to §800-—Sach the” sweataet toned instrument made in ite 1,000 Records at #80 each WPERTHWAIT &. SONS e “Oldest Furniture House in America” The appraiser reports that for pur- | forty pupils in the elementary schools poses of taxation he had allowed for bate Breen mye (i oat ee . | Is figured on tho basis of registration. administration expenses and for she Actually there's one teacher for every tingeng Mabilities subject to further | thirty-six pupils, as 10 per cent. of adjustment $4,916,679, which is de- bed peeiniaces DUP Kee ewavastces ducted from the gross total. school every day, making a total of In view of Mr. Brady’s wide activities | 75,000 absentees in the elementary schools, in forming and financing huge corpora-|"“wrne apportionment of teachers tions, the chief interest in the report | should be made on the basis of actual decedent's attendance. Under the present meth- peccee ta! ne nt’ corporate | oa teachers aro provided for the 75,- 000 children who fail to attend school He ts credited with having |each day. Yet fhe Board of Bauca- stock y corporations, bonds in| tion ia getting extra teachers for 1915, ‘These are unecessary, because baa pgeesy heres bib cb Rha pata the present teaching staff, properly and ayndicates, apportioned according to actual at- His largest stock holding was in the | tendance, would easily suffice, and ac- British-American Tobacco Company,| tually there wouldn't be more than Lt4., in which he held 286,898 shares, | forty pupils in a class. valued at $5,190,030. Of greater value, ae een as NURSE BOY STABBED SUES. however, were the 82,844 shares of Mise Miller Demands $5 a Week American Tobacco common, which gre praised 4. rae 2 gpl of Brooklyn | From Col. Fordyce, Child's Father. Rapid Transit, Kings Cossty. Electric] Disabled by wounds inflicted when holdings, now made public for the first ti Laght and Power Company, tt & | she was stabbed by Dingwall Fordyce, Myers amen, bra «wd and lee nine-year-old son of Col. Alexander ‘Sta ubber Company w' .. The tact that he held but $1,206,200 of Perdree) tN 284 Gregory, avenue, of the Consolld GS SORES. Ns His ae tn the ed Gael a nurse, brought sult yesterday in the wes Presisdnt, caused some comment | he'nniayere Liauiity tae", “nT . a The number of shares of stocks, | Miss Miller. charges, that the boy their value, the number of bonds and stabbed, her March § and she was totally follo their valu rr ce werk, dastt ae Deepa ee man week for twenty- HERE 18 A LIGT OF THE IMPOR: | Nise, Milter TANT BRADY SECURITIES. BTOOKS, ¥, ‘iler alleges she has been per- anently injured, but compensation on By e leaves to the court. She y no payment a Because the nurse tte Hehick appe Diaintift as Mise Mi 3 Down £50 "§ Pon '75|"9 Pox” ‘150 Open Monday and Saturday Evenings, 106 ST. L STATION AT CORNER *6 Porm "100 @> BROOKLYN Men's, Ladies’ and Chi'dren’s CLOTHING HIGH GRADE GOODS and Prices to Suit All, FeLi ically Rormente. $T., BROOKLYN, MH, Opp, Bijou Theatre, — ’ FISHER Bros} COLUMBUS AVE. BET. 103 &104 sth CREDIT HOUSE | ° ALDERMEN ARE TOLD | THAT BUREAU CHIEF | OUGHT TO BE FIRED George L. Tirrell’s Value to Taxpayers Is Questioned and Tilden Adamson’s as Well. Declaring the Bureau of Standards to be a farce, Dr. Abram Korn, ad- dressing tho Aldermanic Finance Committee which 1s to recommend cuts is the 1915 budget, advises the Aldermen to seo that George L. Tir- -|rell, head of the bureau, is fired. Tirrell {s on the list for a $1,500 aal- 000 a year now. The Aldermen are expected to reject the proposed increase, which the Board of Estimate approved unan- imously and hurriediy. Dr. Korn had nothing to say about Adamson’s ought to be reduced to $3,500 a year, which Tirrell should be allowed if the coo decide he is to be kept in o GO TO BRILL BROTHERS “GET THE HABIT” s] GO TO BRILL BROTHERS $15 Overplaid Balmacaans $15 Oxford $15 Blue Chinchills or Furnishing “GET THE HABIT” Sweaters. .$1.65 to 279 Union Square, 14th St., Near Broadway work, except to suggest his salary | 4 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1914: ford to live on $6,000 a year?” asxea! Alderman John Diemer of Brooklyn, & member of the committee, “I live on less than that,” said Dr. Korn, who is @ large property owner and represented real estate interes: befo @ committee. “Yet I live well ny American could desire. “Bi hear Mr. Tirrell works twen- ty hours a day,” remarked Alderman Diemer with a smile. “Yos? VW did you stop to find out whether it was he or the men under him who put in twenty hours a day while the budget was being drawn up?” said Dr. Korn “You seem to know more about it than I do,” admitted Alderman Dte- mer. Dr. Korn said better men than Tir- rell_and Adamson could be secured for $3,500 a year and he stands ready to provide them. acetate gET $15,000 FROM TANGUAY? Junt See if Klein Does, the Dancer Counsels Court Folk. Fva Tanguay, the dancer, fluttered into Part 14 of the Supreme Court yes- terday to defend herself in a suit by Arthur Klein, ousted manager, who mn) ants $15,000 for alleged breach of con-| ¢ tract. She was told she had braved the ir case couldn't be “No matter when the case is Mr. Klein can't win He'll never, got $15,000 from me, it he Jo fluttered out. Mr. Klein al- Miss Tanguay ousted him gement of “The Tan; and put John Ford, her will be held thi hi caving the Court she was Lew Fields Must Pay Eva Tangeay & 62,000 Judgment. CHICAGO, Nov. 20.—Eva Tanguay May collect $2,000 for one week on the stage as leading lady in “The Sun though she did not con- An opinion to t the Appellate it Judgment of $2,000 agpinet Lew Shinleipat Curge By Senet og Mgt a opatiag New York in September, 11h ane in was to receive $2, iene $2,000 a a he “ays company. in Mareetiies, Broadway and One Hun@re@ and Fourth Btreet. Among have accepted invitation: Freifeld, Grand Mi Arthur 8. Tompkins of N: ind War ind Edward in, @ Secretary of the Maste: lor W Grand cers of Harlem Lodue M: will BETTER THAN CALOMEL to'pey ber.” | Thousands Have Discovered PitenKs | £1, PRINCE SUES GLEN-COATS. | Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are a Harmless Substitute v etskey Says Patron Refused jing and Pay tor Statuette. Prince Troubetakoy, who married Amelie Rives, brought « suit in the Bu- preme Court yosterday for $1,900 against Thomas C. Glen-Coats, who, he says, owes him that amount for an uncom- letod bronse statuette of Gien-t he ‘The Prince is an meulpes HF ia ane only one more itt was a ne. necessary. He notinea ‘is lento ape ea fe Re refused to do and wrove'a letter Te: pudiating the contract. ibet: willing to de- Prince Trow duct $100 for the final sitting. —>—_—_—_. Masons Dine To-Night. No. 467, largest uptown Masonic organisation, ing the Hotel They are the resui rmination not to tres mes plays havoc with the gums. So do strong liquide, calomi Balmacaans, Suits and Overcoats for Men For $15.00 Balmacaans, Overcoats and Suits $15 Grey Mixture Balmacaans | $15 Tartan Plaid Suits $15 Heather Mix. Balmacaans | $15 Black Pencil Stripes $15 Brown Mix. Balmacaans |$15 Blue Pencil Stripes $15 Green Mix. Balmacaans |$15 Oxford Grey Flannels $15 Tartan Plaid Balmacaans |$15 Glén Orquhart Suits $15 Black Kersey Overcoats | $15 Green Overplaid Suits Overcoats $15 Shawl Collar Chinchillas $15 Notch Collar Chinchillas $15 Brown Mix. Overcoats $15 Grey Mixture Overcoats ANNIVERSARY SALE 1190 $3.50 GO TO BRILL BROTHERS. Here You Are, Sir!!! BRILL STORES AT YOUR SERVICE! With Record Breaking Birthday Bargains throughout the stores, celebrating the 27 years of Big Value-Giving which made possible the wonderful growth of the Brill -business from one small 15x40 shop to five of New York’s Livest and Busicst Clothes Shops in the comparatively short space of 27 years. A Big, Rich Slice of our Birth- day Cake awaits you now in the shape of real substantial savings on every one of these wonderful Birthday Bargains “GET THE HABIT” QO. For $25.00 Balmacaans, Overcoats and Suits $25 Velvet Collar Balmacaans | $25 Tartan Plaid Suits $25 Tartan Plaid Balmacaans |$25 Russian Stripe Suits $25 Overplaid Balmacaans | $25 Roman Stripe Suits $25 Scotch Mix. Balmacaans | $25 Glen Urquhart Suits $25 Glen Urquhart Bals. $25 Black Pencil Stripes $25 Black Kersey Overcoats $25 Blue Peneil Stripes $25 Blue Chinchilla O’rcoats | $25 Blue Serge Suits $25 Grey Chinchilla O’rcoats |$25 Grey Cassimere Suits $25 Grey Kersey Overcoats $25 Black Thibet Suits $25 Grey Shetland Overcoats | $25 Heather Mixture Suits $25 Brown Chinchilla Coats |$25 Scotch Mixed Suits $25 Oxford Chinchilla Coats |$25 Black Silk Mixed Suits ANNIVERSARY SALE CARR’S MELTON OYERCOATS at $30 Instead of $50.00 $15 Blue Cheviot Suits $15 Tartan Check Suits $15 Pepper and Salt Tweeds $15 Black Thibet Suits $15 Blue Serge Suits $15 Brown Check Suits $15 Grey Mixtures Big Anniversary Sale of $30.00 Suits, ‘D 0 Balmacaans THE BEST THAT $20.00 CAN BUY & Overcoats BROADWAY, NEAR CHAMBERS STREET 47 Cortlandt St., Near Greenwich 125TH STREET, CORNER THIRD AVENUE—OPEN EVENINGS ror. me RSPEI: 4) =E- but to tet {ta piece. «LIGVH ABL LAD» SUaHLOUd THU OL OD “‘SUaAHLOUG TITMA OL OD

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