The evening world. Newspaper, July 16, 1915, Page 6

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Street, single track for several blocks, smashed by tho collis! gers were thrown to the floor. SHOWER GIVES RELIEF Passengers. Five persons were slightly injured when a White at Two Hundred and Thirty-third The Bronx. After treatment wv Scott of Fordham Hospital all home. They are: Miller, 33 years oid, of No. 1824 Clay Avenue, the Brohx. Ottillie Mahoney, 23, of No. 844 East Hun‘red and Fifty-sikth Street, Bronx. . Storer, 60, of Now 143 St. Place, Brooklyn. Charles Plitz, 63, No, Street, The Bronx. / Max Rosenbaum, 48, No. Weather Man Says Relief Is Only Temporary. cooler for a day or two. away and left us. weather man says wi ‘6 Bock 6 Easex Tt was a fino little shower, Breese, faint 8. B. at 7 o'clock, suddenly be- gan to freshen and rolled in banks call a “sea turn.” The sun hid his face. Drop by drop the rain pelted the mercury in the tubo till it regin- tered 72 degrese—a fall of 6 dogreos from its summory 78 at the same hour of yesterday. “But the relief is only temporary,” said the weather man this afternoon. “We shall have more humidity before the day i# over, The thermometer may climb as high as 88 or 64 degrese before mid-afternoon.” William Blake, thirty-six years old, ot No, 3%1 Hudson Street, died this morning in Bellevue Hospital as a result of the effects of the heat. The Is the Time to Get Rid of These need a is nolonger the test meed of at tne ad of it aight and mee an co f00u see tliat even t! ears. Se nd wi ken to the hospita: is the price we have placed upon an elaborate variety of fine Summer Shirts. Qualities that usually sell at $3, $3.50, 54 & $5, Pure Silk, Silk-mixed and high-grade Madras. Plain and Plaited bosoms Soft and laundered Cuffs Sizes 1344 to 18 BROKAW BROTHERS Sr si He SR u ote you buy for cash or DUR PRICES AR 10 PIECE FUMED OAK DINING ROOM SUIT Regular Pri: At the place where the accident oc- ocurred the track {fs being repaired and ali cars travel on a temporary All the glass in the two cars was and passen- FROM TORRID HEAT Brings the Mercury Down, but ‘Yes; it's cooler, and Iikely to stay But that doomn't mean that summer bas run} >louse into feminine society came al- No, indeod; the to be cooled @ little to-day with occasional showers like the one that began at 7.38 A. M. and squeezed out five one-hundrodths of an inch of water before it stopped. of mist, in what our Maine neighbors man fell unconscious near his home| efcea Fevery ‘usticte ts trom te femular lock, ART YOU Ua re ee one a vara anh soba tee er ke We ay LWAYS THE LOWEST | = STORES OFEN SATURDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 10 O'OLOOK Ga Sale of High-Grade Suite for Libr ng Room and Bedroom 7” js OF FULLY ONE-MALY, The Manly ‘Separate Blouse With Ite Cuffe and Collar Has Been Feminized and Made Sightly Part of the Toi- lette — Both Its Lines and Materials Softened. Comrie Wes York tveclnn Wena The introduction of the separate most simultaneously with the wom- an's tailor suit, At first they were manly affairs evolved to go with the severely plain suits, Starched and sti! yokes, stick-up collars and at- tached cuffs were their characteria- tics, They were always of some fig-’ ured material or colored gingham, as white was considered a bit too shirt. Uke. Gradually, however, they were feminized and softened, the collars came off and were replaced by stocks of ribbon or embroidery and the cuffs were made undetachable, wit out the links, Soon they wei de of frivolous materials such as ailk and la but it was for some time wtill oc dered an “undgess” gar- ment. All of a sudden the idea of using it as @ means of smartening a tailor sult for formal wear occurred. It was the natural accompaniment of the evolution of the suit, which began to assume a« dressier effect by its cut and material, and by braid or fur | trimming. Womankind went rather mad about the blouse for @ time, and bright~ colored decollete evening waists often seen with black velvet or silk skirts, Such @ break at the waist- line was most unkind, however, to most figures, and as soon as women realized this they adopted the one- | color scheme of a blouse in harmony | with the skirt. ‘This was found so practical and convenient that it has | not disappeared yet. The washabie | blouse too has gone through its own | Yarious phages, until now it is as frilly and dainty and distinctive: as the most fastidious could desire, This year they are made of or- mandy, batiste and fine linen for wear with art sport skirts, The open ———— DESCRIPTION OF THE BLOUSE ‘The two models I am showing are significant of the mode, but distinctly individual. The one at the left might be made of white batiste on kimono lines with sleeves open and flaring below the elbow. Narrow Valencienn insertion trims it in a way to sug- west @ yoko across the nt and back and over the top of the arm, Then, #0 as not to detract from the breadth of the collar or the width of the sleeve, the insertion is placed on the very edge of them. A tiny lace to matoh gives a pleasing sug- gestion of suppressed frilliness, A now, Your 5 rN" ann srtlsle or an wang boy without any of eny kind, ee > way eilk tie may match the color of developed vital qualities such as linen either plain or in some stripe effect, front is plaited from neck to waist Original Home Dressmaking Designs By The Evening World’s Fashion Expert | nec! the most popular and becom- ing, and the collars usually broad and | @" awning stripe skirt, with which it pretentious. could be suitably worn, The other blouse is capable of being from material of more The ine, while the sides are trimmed by sloping yoke which Is outlined with STYLE tn Rockaway bathing suite this year is described as “not big enough to talk about,” and Board of Trade is to act. i} YONKERS WOMAN is to operate a jitney line in competing with trolley cara, VILLAGE LIGHTS have been dispensed with in Mast County, Pa,, because there are so many firefiles, SWARM OF BEES in Peekskill killed five valuable hounds and sent four persona to the doctor, TO SERVE A YEAR AND A DAY will start here alone for the Atlanta Federal Prison, and thus save the Gov- ernment the expense of a guard, FOX TROTTING on the decks in passengers on the American liner St, through the submarine zone around England, STATEN ISLANDERS. MEET TO PICK NEW PRESIDENT Business Men Want a Worthy Borough Chief, Who Must Be a Democrat. Business men and property owners News Oddities DECLARING that Lum Lin, his supposed Chinese bride, js a Jap, Chu Bain, a Chinaman, has sued here for annulment, : bb | S0c WEEKLY ‘oer any article ae 3 ae DELIVERS ’ COMI! OOM OUTFIT TO YOUR HOME need tT SALE OF REED CARRIAGES Ree, rie 43 #20, e' Cash or Credit, Dest corduroy Mnings extra heavy rubber tims, Full roll on hood and body, Heavy posts, with flat You can open an Vasene Reavy filling tnd top | account with the’ par rods. Single sine only, Deable Sampe Mornings cate NO ‘TRA ©) You, may puro from #8 to at money without extra ciarges of any kin Ase AY Article or articles 00 aaving prices of Btaten Island who are desirous of a successor to the late Borough Presi- dent Charles J. McCormack who will fittingly represent the Borough of | Richmond in the Board of Estimate |and carry out the work instituted by |the deceased representative of the |borough in the City Government will | meet Saturday night to present to the Aldermen who hi he power of ap- ointment tho names of several resi- ents who woul is believed, fill the requirements. ‘The call for’ the meeting was sent out to-day, not only to Democrats—for the successor to a Pound a Day ‘Thin men and wor to imorease their welmht with 10 of 15 pounds of healthy “stay there” fat should try eating @ little Bargol with their meals for @ while and note results, Hore te « food Cost worth trying. Firat weigh your- eolf and measure yourself. Then take Sar gol—one tablet with every meal—for two weeks. Then weigh and mesure it ton't © question of how you look or fea! or your friends say and think. The scales and the tape mesaure will tell thelr own nd moat any thin man or woman oan add from five te eight pounds in t fourteen days by following this simple Aireotion, And ef all, the new flesh etaye put, Harkol does not of itself wi wt food, It who would I make fat, but turne the ‘fate, rohes of what you have ri t producing nour nd blood-—prepares a form which the All this nourleh> of a cs @ cotored piping. ‘This also serves a8 @ convenient place for a poc #0 4 tiny flap on each side call tion to its usefulness, The deep flar- ing cuffs are an addition to the nar- row close-fitting cuffs which are piped with the color outlining the yoke, while a ribbon to match Ie drawn trigly through elite in the pointed collar, Hope, Pike FOR FRAUD, David Essacson, sixty, life belts was the pastime adopted by Paul to allay fear while passing Mr. McCormack must, under the law, be a Democrat—but to independents. | The power of appointment of a Bor- ough President rests with Aldermen Fink, O'Rourke and Cole of Staten Island. All are Democrats, and Fink | and O'Rourke are allied’ with the! Tammany Hall organization, which {s | controlled by Superintendent of Banks Eugene Lamb Richards and Sheriff O'Grady. | It is understood that Sherif) O'Grady, whose term of office will end | this fall, aspires to the office, and that the’ nomination for Sherift has | « been promised to either O'Rourke or Fink or both, Oth nxious to auc | ceed Mr, MoCormack are Spire Pitou, Commissioner of Public Works and Acting Borough President, and Liv- ingston Bostwick, County Clerk. pasties se a OBITUARY NOTES. Dr, Lewis H. Adler, seventy-four years old, prominent physician and surgeon, died of a chronic ailment yesterday at the Mernoriat Episcopal Hospital in Philadelphia, Mra. W. W. Mayo, mother of Dra. W. J, and C. H. Mayo, the Rochester, Minn., surgeons, is dead at the age of ninety. Elisha Shepard Elmer, elghty-nine, veteran fireman and letter carrier of Hartford, Conn, died at the Old People's Home in that city, Frederick Prime, geologist and ‘metallurgist professor at Girard Col- lege, Philadelphia, is dead at Atlantic City. Cecll Chapman, a Tonopah pioneer, died yesterday at his home in Los Angeles. He was a partner of George Wingfield, of Goldfield, when their combined capital was §1.: Both amassed large fortunes, At the age of 101, Matthew Doherty died at his home, No, 169 Cleveland Street, Orange, He was born in Ire- land, but had Mved in the United Btates seventy years, Joseph Pattison, eighty-two, a yoelthy be verge) Srower, ged in his home at reatogue, Conn., ye terday, He wenlbare in Ireland” 01 of his children is former State Sena- tor A. T. Pattison, Mrs, Julla C. Frobisher, widow of body am waate. cy inex: ve. ists in New York pe a Pr hs forty ro bmerease os money | aral Joseph B, Frobisher, formerly pro- fessor of elocution in Fordbam Uni- versity and City College, died of gen- lebility at her home, No, 505 West One Hundred and Thirty-fifth | Btreet, The Rev. James Wood Pogue, FAILS IN HOLD-UP Woman's Cries Heard by Police- Police Court to-day was held $2,500 bail on @ charge of attempted felonious assault. threatening Harry Wen of No, 411 Bast Ninetieth Street O'Donnell of No. 1262 Third Avenue with a loaded rovolver in Central Park last night. wore walking in the East Drive when xi} contro, it 1s charged, approached them | Academy at Annapolis. and ordered them to raise their hands. Both obeyed, but Miss O'Donnell be- gan to scream. the attention of Policeman McGrath As he approached Nicostro fled. Mc-|by warships before. The Peruvian kills them. Nothing Grath fired three shots at him before|unbogt Tenlente Rodriguez passed 1 he stopped running. through the waterway on Aug. 17 last else SO sure, ——>—___ year and a flotilla of American sub- . frarines on Feb, 25 of this year navi- |{ Peterman’s Discovery (liquid) INSPECT ISLAND PRISONS. gated the Canal during battle prac- kills bed bugs and their North River, at 9.30 o'clock this morning with a party of city oMet under the present administration. detracted from the enjoyment of the WHEEL CHAIR “RHEUMATIC” GLOBE TROTTER WALKS Travelled 37,000 Miles in Wheel Chair Looking For Relief—Finally of the frontage property The attorney for the maintaing this provision of law only to saloons and batrooms to clubs. Judge Pugh reserved his decision, —_——— THREE U, S, BATTLESHIPS SAIL PANAMA CAWAL Wisconsin, Missouri and Ohio First Big Warcraft to Navigate the Waterway. PANAMA, July 16,—The Panama Canal was used to-day for the first time’ by large battleships of the | Untted States Navy when the Mis- |sourl, Ohio and Wisconsin, carrying naval cadets from Annapolis to San Francisco, made tho trip from the Atlantic to the Pacific. The battle- ships, which compose the naval acad- emy practice squadron, are ‘in com- mand of Rear Admiral William F. Fullam, Superintendent of the Naval The squadron IN CENTRAL PA Mra. Marye Denies Husband ta te Re- nizn as Ambassador to Russia, SAN FRANCISCO, July 16—Dental of the report that George T. Marye, Ambassador to Ri is to résign was made to-day by Mrs. Marye, who returned from Petrograd to her home here recently to gain relaxation from the strain of war onditions in Bu- rope. Mra. Marye sald she has planned to sail for the Orient next month on her way to join her husband in Petro« grad, man, Who Fires Three Shots at Fleeing Highwayman. Benjamin Nicostro, a young barber it No, 208 Grand Street, in Yorkville in He ts acoused of and Elsie KILLS ROACHES Roaches are disease carriers. Peterman’s Roach Food Wenz and Miss O'Donnel! | left Cristobal at 10 o'clock this morn- | ing and was scheduled to reach Bal- | boa, the Pacific terminal of the Canal, até P.M The Panama Canal has been used Hor cries attracted tice, . - eggs. Standard 29 years, BIG CLUB MAY GO “DRY.” At your dealer's. WILLIAM PETERMAN, Ine. 200 Fifth Avenue, New York The police tug Patrol left Pier 8, men for an inm Hart's and Riker’s Islands, The party was under the direction of Com- missioner of Correction Katherine Be- ment Davis, who wished an inspection WASHINGTON, July 16—Nathantel | 4 t tan f the institutions of her department | Ws0%, President of the Metropol nd the improvements made in them Luncheon was served on the Patrol ind the wet summer morning in nowise| license Kranted to the club by the Eix- cise Board had been attacked by the aloon League. ting. Miss Davis p the ‘excursion and ‘showed. her guests ontended that the Excise Law ts No Bextra Charnes for It. over the grounds ‘and interior of the ated by the club in selling liquor and| Advertisements for The World may be tof at penitent the workhouse and the| by the Excise Board in issuing a license | any American Distelot Messenger office tm the ity reformatory. to a club where less than 60 per cent | eity until © P.M, MET PUBLIC: AND TOLD OF HIS RECOVERY / Discovers Remedy in Var-ne-sis. William W. Graff wins his long fight for the use of his limbs—for “Happy Bill,” as he is familiarly known, now walks, You've seen him in his wheel chair, for he is famed the country over the rheumatic wheel chair globe trotter, He remained in Boston all one week to meet the public to tell them how he recovered after spending 15 years in a wheel chair. man I had seen at the Hot Springs, and who was being treated by the same physician, When I hed previ ously seen him he was very lame, ant this time he seemed well, He told me he had been taking Var-ne-sls, and said he thought it would help me. “I started in then taking Var-ne- sis. Soon I became conscious of an increased strength in my limbs, Then I became almost réligious in my at- tention to take this remedy, This is the result.” And “Happy Bill” stool up, moved about, waved his right arm and smiled In perfect happiness. . first I was like an Infant learn; ing to walk, I bumped into things, but I walked, and that was the main thing. Var-ne-sis is the cause of my recovery, I feel so grateful that 1 could sing the name of that remedy, and I want to talk about it all the time. “I know what rheumatism {s—I've ‘had it for 82 years, and I know what one hag to suffer, For that reason { want to meet every man and woman who is suffering from the disease, and tell them my experience and how a simple remedy like Var-ne-sis sic ceeded aud made me walk, after springs, specialists and all sorts of remedies fatled. Write to me at %2 has done so much for me that I want every other rheumatie to Joy of freedom from pain When at the Var-ne-sis exhibition rooms; where the public had been in- vited to see him, talk with him and investigate, he sald: “It seems pretty good to get out of that old chair, 1 want to be on the move all the time. No one but a rheumatic sufferer can understand what | have gone through, and now that I am able to walk I want to meet every man and woman suffering from this terrible disease. I want to shout from the housetops how I recovered from rheumatism after suffering 32 years. Most of my trouble was confined to my legs and feet, which were useless from the disease, as well as my right arm. “Naturally, travelling about as I did, almost every one I met had a sur cure-—and I tried anything and every- thing in the hope of relief, Some times I would be relieved a little while, but as soon as the effects of the medicine wore off I would be worse than ever again, I have tray- elied 37,000 miles in my wheel chalr, selling souvenirs to raise funds to take me to Germany for treatment, and was about to start when the wa: kefout. ooyou want to know what wrought “I believe this is one of the most remarkable recoveries from rheuma- tism every published,” sald W. A. Var- ney, the discoverer of Var-newts, “and that is why I arranged to have him at my exhibition rooms for @ week to meet the public and see him as he ts to-day. His cards signed by the Mayors of the different cities that he bas paased through, of news er clippings, showing how the papers wrote up his travels from one end of the country to the other, 80 helpless from rheumatism he eould get around only by moving his wheel chair with one hand, prove in what a terrible condition rheumatism had put him, One can hardly credit remarkable evidence until they have been able to see this indisputable evidence,” Send to W. A. Varney, Lynn, Mass, for the story of Var-ne-sis and ‘ py Bill's" letter to the public. Get Var-ne-sls now, to-day, at Riker: Hegeman and other reliable dru; gists, and know what good health mean: Tell your druggist a rin. olpal of the Sheldon Business So) ie dead at his summer, home at Gar- den uk Tremont Street, Lynn, Mass, I will Var-ne-sis for you from his ‘give you the details of my recovery, recovery foil, last October I saler, or send to W. By, W"ekieed Geuns ond mans 6 Mass. & Varawy

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