The evening world. Newspaper, December 8, 1914, Page 12

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)

But there Basdy Wel oer Lg LH for crab bait. It would be too Jo heart So horrified was " by this thought that he allowed Douglaston to alip by unnoticed, Ho ‘on the way to the t Bayside he saw John V. A — . IL LONG ISLANE Beene, son of the well and trouble- any. own, Brian G. Hughes, lop. \V Ny STIRRED WP BY ing toward the station and rej ‘ENGELS KASEHUND ft Had Been-Wished on am a Supposed Priend, Who | is cen Weenies, ir BAYED AT THE MOON. he Neighbors Kicked, Engel “Lost” It and Now a Big Lawsuit Is Threatened, (Gperiad to The PORT WASHING 4 "We—Tre utterty peaceful relations be- tween Maurice J. Engel of the Con- wal Iron Works of No. 490 East Forty- ent Street, tan, and Gue » his bor of this village, threatened by @ oult at law for transportation, board and attend. | of Raweltyn Kasehund T., a mere houn’ dog. Betweea consult- his attorneys un to bis responsibil- 4m the matter and dictating to his Jottera in answer to que, as to the price he will pay for! way and walt for Murray Hill. And there Liwellyn was thrust out on the gunken platform. ir. Engel went on hin way an Ught- i of the way in hin next’ Port Washington atronolis lowed down the Engel eacse forlornly up and exclaimed Mr. Kaisor. pA og Maurice Engel'a dox. The f. DUP must. have followed Maurice train and chased him all the . eee save him. How glad it be to get his dear dog |. A. M. Barrett of Ftushin, ra laid his high im th beside hi "john Gabler of Doug- aa ¥.C. Pala ern known ull Gaby Dealys i. in np wid as, Gash of rescue. The la. held:for melee Gpitaay nae suddenly and un- ‘eouatty owe Liewellyn into th car, Thers was a whole lot mud on an unusually aad sleek. overcoat: be- Soin gid out of th Cv 3 ) but there wan no of ion as to the debt of Mr. Engel owed Mr. i@ aasintant reacuors. to the loas of office time committees, waa taken to master, his trangportation arranged for was put in charge eonsolentious baggage- master on the line who is ao well is only name on the tiple eeecting leis tow cad wocte remain to be Rame, but because of the thingn ‘3 De Fl norerigllhed of te Enge! Bad baroly seated dinner pi onlle night when Liwellyn was at. the, time of Buse} raiehing, i you, 4 worried be- gift suppoued to bean Atredale of) cates you lost (ited ‘dog. Ho has been afternoon. I just heard you which looked like a petiti@a} were ome and turned him loose and is iP the road toward 8000 “FANS” TO KISS AND PAT 100 MOVIE STARS Mary Pickford, Mary Fuller| and Even the Men in Danger at Grand Central Palace, In the latest and most tmproved ¢« works on hero-worship no mention is made of moving picture actors and actresses, If some aspiring author had gone to Grand Central Palace last night he might have obtained material for @ Rew book o1 leroes and Hero Wor- ship,” with auch aide lights aa Carlyle never dreamed of, for eight thousand movie “fans” paid homage for hours to a hundred or more of the country’s very best screen performers. Dressed up in the very best they! tl owned the big stars and the little stare held impromptu receptions, while swarms of their admirers gazed at them in wonderment. Tho Motion Picture Exhibitors’ As- sociation of New York was holding its fifth annual dance, and the people| se who make the pictures, the people who pose for them and the men who market and exhibit them came to look at their good friend the pi and the good friend public came to look at them. And to top all this off several of mitiees of iinetnorene one Diadvone of te jomated for totter? a Fite’. olne, tograph of herself and the proces w donated to the School Lunch Fund. The picture was won by Emil | Meuse!l, a moving picture operat joe Jennie Florence, di lowner of er of the Bron: | sold @ er many tickets and gave a kins wil ach dollar's worth Four separate moving pictu hibitions on the mezzanine floor a: the dancing In general were shut {down when the throng was sum- moned to the main floor to witness Grand march of the favorites. In very first line, twelve abreast, Mary Pickford, Frank X. Bi Clara Kimball Youn: Me Dermott, Anita | Stew: Williams, Mary Charleston, Marguerite Snow, Cruse, Gene Gautier and Jack © came the remain- TRAINS BRING STARS FROM CHI- CAGO AND PHILADELPHIA. ily studios had turned out Poe contingent ‘ain from Chicago and the ubin forces in @ special from +. itagraph party filled four Besides ‘Mine hin there Mary Maurice, Edith ee erald and the ro- Price, who holds record and can imi- tate wild “anim 8. L. Rothapfel, Strand Theatre, Frohman and Frohman, The Edison group contained Marie Em- preas, Gertrude McCoy, Gladys Hu- lette, Sally Crute and beg h ae sien Ah aire McDowell. ‘Charles Hitter ana Isabel Ma; H. R. Clark Ostriche in Director box of Thanhouser per- Paul Pamser was the re manager of bf Daniel Thomp #0! formers 6, | resenta! seing but her husband, Tom ae was on hand. ‘owl and Mabel Green were tha very well known mon and women of the screen met one another for the in ‘the All-Star Feature Films box, and Kinetophoto ont Fer inelud Anna ror tias, dw! frat time, and everybody thought the | 4: ing was just fine. NCER OFFERS REALLY |¢ INTRODUCTIONS. Len Spencer, who used to be a cir. cus man and has talked “rube” stuff Into many phonographs, announced | Fm! the most popular of the players one by one, but they were recognized and applauded before he was half under way. Everybody that is anybody in the iam. a rand nancial Becre- ary of the association, told all of the stare that he would show them how they looked in pictures if they woul come to his theatre in elgg aah end let him know in advan ranged to entertain a smal Thursday. ou “OB Old Bast River Pilot Dies. Capt. Nimrod Bai aged eighty, New York pilot for fifty-eight year: died in his sea: at Fanwood, plore J. movie world hereabouts was on hand | eart except John Bunny and Flora Finch, and it wa id the; ere posing for a Washington Squa) rtist who was Heng an improvement on “The SAyiltiam Landau, President of the association, waa successful in his ef- fort to al the nd of every one that dame into the hall, and Triggor, chairman of tne Icxecutive Committee, made himself useful as general pilot of the procession that was in frequent need of mineral water, ‘The wore received with ap- ee ass & Wit! strug. Maurice plause gled to got to Contello of the agra, he foun hia. weit in the arms two wom fore he could get his overcoat off, and Mary Pickford, Mary Fuller and Anita St rt needed fore they half way up the staire. Some doting maiden espied Hand. some Donnie Hall's silvery hair be- fore he had his bearings and was patting Be Posi when her mamma yanked he: When Mary yale got tired of ting in her box and atarted off to some of her chu Venus come all the way out of the sea, Sho was finally rescued by King Baggott, Ben Wilson and Harry Mey- rs, also of the Universal forces, and taken to her box, Mary Pickford’s mother and sister accompanied her as a sort of guard, for every time she ventured on the ord ae was petted os. a abaaea had to flee to aafet: “the School Children’s Lanch Com- sad and his tail bung down be- High authorities in dog ip Fort ‘Washington, like Richard Lin- if Great Neck Hills and’ advised Mr. Engel thé he was custodian of a rare Siberian wal- hound or @ genpige Menican’ my 4. Bot In him to despise, much legs anything which has grown up bis homestead, refused to be dle- inted, The dog wagged its tail time Mr. Engel came up the Ik from the 6.56. That was enough. \YED AT THE MOON AND LosT 4 HIS HOME. J Recently, however, Liwellyn, whose had been amplified to Kase- by Fritz Kraemer, developed op- ic instinct, Since the moon has full this month, the lop-eared has developed an“unquenchable @mbition to reach the moon-dwellers _ With wong. Seated on the very middie, @f the Engel lawn, the dog lifted his > mournful muszale to the orb of night 7) Med bayed until dawn. The neighbors firet Shouget it tumhy. Then thoy bled. y called Mr. Engel on Reicslicnt's and kicked. There were ings from several that Engel became nervous, H the man to condemn a helpl nine friend to death for an error in irth certificate, He tried to ae dog away. John Bradley's bat moved oe oy a qutereek of ‘ery time Mr. Engel men- the subject of giving away - He reluctantly made up his toa bewtal plage of of ec pery larly priced. Sold by Leading Dealers led the trustin 17a “Kasebund I. to the 7.1 and lured him aboard, Ho was ly motioned to the Jeaned | WESTMORELAND Introduced and Certified by the tooth. If you haven't found what it is, do so today by trying PECONUT CRISP The Double- Taste Candy Virginia — the birthplace of so many good things — never produced a more univergal public delight than this blend of peanut and cocoanut flavors. Besides it’s pure, well-made and popu- pEUEESSES F ~ [CUPID GETS TATE OUT spe i ee Bok t BUTTER FinW ACCUSED | OF ASTORIA SANITARIUM! OF $1,500,000 FRAUD! air Rescuer Then Accompanies Young Man to Marriage License Bureau, Arthur Tate, who loherited $100,000 under the will of his father, J. M. Tate, President of the Whiting Paper Company, was released to-day from the Astoria sanitarium to whioh his mother, who live at No. 60 Riverside Drive, had him committed several weeks ago. His flancee, Miss Chi lotte I. Gibbs, a stenographer em- loyed in the offices of the German ‘ali Works at No. 42 Broadway, sued out @ writ of habeas corpus before Juntice ge he in ‘tia Supreme Court in Brooklyn to-da: In her epplicauon for the writ Miss Gibbs stated that the repreee ee that young Tate was an in was a pretence of his mother in or- der to prevent her son from marryini her. Yesterday Mise Gibbs visited Mrs. Tate and persuaded her that her fiance did not need sanitarium care and got also ificates from the presiding physicia committment mis! well celled. When these papers and the consent of the mother wero laid be- fore the Justice he ordered that Tate go free. Tate and Miss Gibbs started at once for the City Hal) in Manhattan, say- ing they were Face is 4 get @ mar- riage license be! other inter- ruption of their plans was possible. ———— PARK PRISONERS HELD. Acense@ of Stealing Taxi te Reb Jew Meivin Meyres and Benjamin Smith, the white and black men who stole taxicab In Central Park yesterday afternoon and were captured at the point of Patrolman Fee's gun, waived examination this mofning before Magistrate Barlow in the Yorkville Police Court and were held for the Grand Jury in $2,000 bail. According to the police the men confessed that they stole Peter Zaun's taxi for the purpose of robbing a jewelry store. In court Meyres w identified by Emil Correttl, a barbei of No. 65 East Highty-fifth Street, as a man who formerly worked with He charged that he robbed him 1 half interest in Pa ve a bot no interest. Corett! went to the Dis- trict Attorney’s office to lodge a com- plaint against Meyres_ Cheated Government Out of That Much Revenue in Four Years, It Is Charged. Special internal revenue agents are in charge of the butter house of the Fred D. Oetjen Company at No, 839 ‘Washington Street, seised some days go on suspieion that the concern was putting oleo oils in butter and selling It to confeotionery and bakers’ supply -howt without paying the Government tax. Four men were ar- rested, following indictments by the Federal Grand Jury. Commissioner Houghton has held Fred D, Oetjen, head of the firm, in $16,000 bail and J. H. Lichtenstern, ©} truckman; George M. Hermes, book- keoper, ai Paul Wimmer, butter- SELENE toy AY HAIRS FOUND In SLAIN GIRL’S HAND May Help Convict Sexton of Mun |? der of Margaret Milling in a Church. SACRAMENTO, Cal., Dec. 8.—Seven strands of @ man’s Bair sprinkled with Gray and found clasped in the tight | hand of ten-year-old Margaret Milling, whose murdered bedy was found in the basement of the German Lutheran Chureh last Saturday, may send David Fountain, sexton janitor of the church, to the gallows. It was learned to-day that finger prints on the undergar- ments of the girl may incriminate Foun- tain. After six hours of cross-examination to-day Fountain maintained his inno- cence. He admitted to a further prison wi brella. In bad and some candy. was abou sd years old and wore 1 clothing. The eyeglass wearer who makes his purchase here is sure of real service—of quale ity — careful workma and the lowest prices consist- ent with accurate eyeglasses, Whether Harris Glasses cost $2.00 or more, we Guarantee absolute satisfaction, maker, in $10,000 ball each. It is said other arrests will be made. The com- pany does @ million dollar business and is accused of having cheated the Government out of $1,600,000 revenue in_four years. The five-story. building of the com- | stock estimated to be worth are now in the hande of In- ES what js known as ladle butter, old butter bought from every vert of the country and put. Ha ng process called “washing. @ Government ives @ a tor hat “wut the intro- aer gr? et ot cleo ha Table er a nen fact of cleo lal ce ound’ ‘It 1s charged ents on 9vi nd. s cl the oelo ol or pane, into the place u eentent by Lichtenstern. ACCUSED MAN LOSES 108. Bronx Prosecuter Dismisses Sab- poena Server Under Charges. District Attorney Martin, of Bronx County, to-day dismissed Sigmund Fox, a subpoena server attached to his office who with his son Philip ts awaiting trial on a charge of attemp' ing to bribe employees of the Stat Compensation Board. The son was formerly an interpreter for the Com- ission. mer do do not want this action to be rejudgement of a man ne ," said Mr. Martin. “It imply beara’ out my promise that I would Me ger be independent inxestiga- tion and a: Fox if it seemed that he had even laid himself open to taken a fa suspicion.” Don’t Fail to Visit Our ‘Gift Shop” Devoted to Low Priced, Practical Gifts—and floor Will Close Out Wednesda ‘Greatly Reduced 400 Garments from the Regular Stock Women’s and Misses’ Suits 16.50 to 35.00 Formerly 29.75 to 59.00 Of broadcloths, corduroys, cheviots and diagonals, many fur trimmed, priced according to materials. Misses’ Suits 16.50 Formerly up to Of cheviots,a number fur trimmed. (4th floor) 14 to 17 years. 35.00 satin. 14 FIFTH AVENUE A WEEK TS Dag Danes Oe (2nd floor) Misses’ Dresses 12.75 Formerly up to 23.50 Offine serge or serge combined with to 17 yrs. (4th floor) at 35th Street A Cheartul hens of finished handsomel wood a Peace and Plenty 1 may be from the country, But 1 know a thing or two; The best move that 1 ever made ‘Was reading World ads through. To buy a good farm cheap, they said, Was when the demand was small, And suiting the action to the word 1 bought 2 farm in the fall. And now you see me well intrenched On a farm and making money. And if you cannot do the same term when he said he bad served eight months In Engtand for robbing a bakery. ‘Witnesses told the authorities Fountain had been seen ut the church the afternoon of the murder. He has told the police he left the church at noon and 414 net return until 4 P. M., when the body. Optical Trouse of WSeStonnis Laub ea a 822 BS Ge Ete ‘00, A well dressed, unidentified woman was Killed at 11.15 o'clock last night | 1997, at Main and Fulton Streets, Hemp- stead, by a taxicab driven by Thomaa| wexs = Pha Let Cowperthwait Credit Be Your Santa Claus Corlarty rd tebe Santa Claus fcr over a hundred years by i t to all. yee tee tt all the members of your family to combine "; a handsome and substantial peal an easy chair, a table, ¢ sidebpard or, ind 2 Fear apa you an neo of thousands.of pieces OT etree Resncvag oa tate You need no introduction—there's mo red go through—just come and select what you want. Prices sunteed ik pain igure No club fees—no interest—no extras of any Come and let us show you—you will surely find here just the article yes need to make your home more attractive than ever this Open Evenings Until Xmas Harlem Store Only és Five Pieces in the Beautiful Adam Style lo newspaper ploture could do justice to these solid ma! whiel areraptcal examples of the cxaulatte furniture at yt feeyier} Adam Brothers many years ago, and which is to-day all the rage among tt mahogany we are used to seeing—the finish Varied Termiuure Tasers is) a shasts renuerset te the ate er refinement to it work? Rocker, c chair and sof b anelted cane backs and blue Agured three pigs logether are fine 39. 50 furniture lovers. U: te bro nen this jue jo entire including WONDaLDs oF PARLOR OUITKS FO" CHOUKE ‘POM ‘AT. LOWEST PaioEs, A Talking Machine for Christmas This te the greatest value in brass beds have ever been able to te Heavy 2-| inch” continuous iw husks at the cen- ‘and foot Contatn and mas- There 1s scarcely any present that one can think of which much pleasure Grafonola. plot the and sist al ices from. nT. ‘50 Yo $500, ‘inary |A thousand records at 65c. each. nih $16. 15 Telephone Stand and Stool ‘This pretty stand and stool are a wonderful _conven- fence, Comes tn solid oak, golden, weathered, fumed st the thing for your youngster’s or Early English Christmas. Red outside, decorated in gold orank, n time. Price only ill make your boy happy all year—only, . gwar Bhat Het CowPERTHWAIT &.SONS | It's consarned, goldinged funny. Use World Ads. to Sell a Farm! Read World Ads. to Buy a Form! Oldest Furniture House in America” 3rd Avenue Two Park Row at 12let Streot, Stores

Other pages from this issue: