The evening world. Newspaper, February 4, 1916, Page 4

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PLANS TRIPLE POISONING, BUT HEEDS CONSCIENCE Widow Who Bought Acid to Kill Self and Children Gives Up to Police. aeneeneree et nay omer name, told the officers she lived at No. 1410 Fifth Avenue, and said: “1 want to give myself up. I de- clded Sty my two children and myself, it my conscience hurt me, so T'have’ decided to surrender instead.” Mra, Benadrath was turned over to Waverley House after being ar- raigned in Harlem Court. The Chil- dren's Society has taken charge of the two children, Leah, five years Anybody with work for a woman] old, and Frances, three. SHOT AT THE CONDUCTOR. ‘who has more pluck than she thought whe had can call up Waverley House, No, 38 West Tenth Street, and offer to help Mrs. Anna Benadrath. Mrs. Benadrath, a widow with two children and unable to get work, bought @ bottle of carbolic acid and decided to take the eaniest way out of her troubles. The thought of what she planned to do upset her so much, however, that she carried the acid to the Bast One Hundred and Twenty- sixth Street Police Station, gave her The milk is already mixed in it a eee Si ecir ont sae ‘Whea you wo Aust Jemima’s Pancake Fleur, you! eave this extra expense. weet milk és already mixed in if. Much sore calcio, oe Have your quecer cond you a package, and cco for UNT JEMIMA'S MAANCAKE FLOUR “Made tn @ minaste—the milk’s mixed tn it” (Cuseregte, 103) Dt Vita Vota of No, 133 Myrtle Avenue, Brooklyn, put off a car to-day at De Kalb and Central Avenues after a dis- pute about « transfer, drew «@ revolver and fired two shots at the conductor, tga Mulhare of No, 207 Taaffe ace. ‘One shot went wild and the other was at by @ penknife in Mulhare's Pocket, Vote was arrested. by ‘Police: man Crystal of the Hamburg Avenue Station. tions funde, H. Strong, Washington Heights Hospital at Nos. 662-554 West One Hundred and Sixty-) Questioned by special William Ff. Hotchkiss, Deputy Commissioner of Charities Doherty told of amazingly sordid and unsanitary conditions he found jn an inspection made Dec. 14 last. “There is a point which may well be recorded now,” said Mr. Hotch- kiss, when Mr. Doherty said the hoa- pital was undenominational. three Jewish institutions have been investigated by this board. the report was ‘no eriticism,’ on the other two ‘approximately ide: is in decided contrast to the reports on other institutions established by religious bodies.”” “The result of our inspection, Deputy Commissioner Doherty, ‘was that the hospital waa ndtified that were entirely changed within thirty days the Board of Ambulance Service would sever its connection with tho institution.” fifth Street counsel ‘unless frame dwellings. THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, HOSPITAL INQUIRY BARES AMAZING. NEGLECT OF BABS Washington Heights Hospital Inspection Revealed Condi- tions Most Unsanitary. ‘The investigation of the manage- ment of private charitable institu- partly dealt for the city, conditions supported to-day by before Commissioner Charles) the with public | “Only On one ’ This tation was bad and all the windows|boys were backed two In a tub, Were tightly close dressed heir solled clothing after Ve went to a thy t thelr clothes tadned a patient, and a cot, in which were two babies, end, we found that babies had only sponge baths. the second floor was co dirty linoleum, Th rags on the glass tops o operating tables; a dirty pail with broom and a filthy scrubbing brush sweeping dust from the stairs through @n open door. unlocked. As I noted it a nurse was ordered to lock it were @ few rolls of gauze, absorbent In No, 662 we found the ‘dis- eter , Sighting, i Pensary’ to be @ small dark room, Moctezuma, Scene of Fighting, = with ths plastering fallen: twenty! Effort to Capture Rebel Chief. small and dirty, there were no sani- tary appliances. ter slept there were all unsanitary. were scanty. the milk in the place. tub to make a table. was dusty and dirty. skull died during our visit. ter was called in from cleaning the sidewalk, and the chauffeur, who had been on duty twenty-four hours, was taken from the ambulance. carried the body to the room’ in the basement. a corner of the cellar. There he was laid in a board coffin only seven feet said ‘The hospital is down for $4,800 in the 1916 city budget. The hospital is in two throe-story “The mattresses - Franklin Simon s Co. Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets “4 | Offer Saturday Remainder of Women’s Fur Coats and Furs At Large Price Reductions - 9 Hudson Seal Coats 5 Hudson Seal Coats Heretofore $110.00 65.00 Heretofore 7 Rie egaegememnd rs San, 4 Micon asst tr ot Beaver, Ketetiereratore $180.0 95.00 ee i rttotore $275 8 Hudson Seal Coats 5 Caracul Coats + wader ten Eunceis ma ostinato Heretofore $175.00 135.00 Heretofore $135.00 12 Hudson Seal Coats 2 Baby Caracul Coats nt aaa Pitas t itaee Poca atenS™ Heretofore $195.00 150.00 leretofore $345.00 : Fur Muffs Fur Scarfs Skunk Heretofore $25.00 19.50 Black Wolf Heretofore $19.75 Skunk Heretofore $29.50 23.50 Skunk Heretofore $22.50 Raccoon Heretofore $11.50 8.50 Skunk Heretofore $27.50 Raccoon Heretofore $16.50 10.50 Raccoon Heretofore $11.50 Hudson Seal Heretofore $18.50 13.50 Hudson Seal Heretofore $10.50 Hudson Seal Heretofore $27.50 19.50 Taupe Wolf Heretofore $22.50 Black Fox Heretofore $30.50 28.00 Beaver Heretofore $13.50 Black Fox Heretofore $19.75 15.00 Beaver Heretofore $19.75 Taupe Wolf Heretofore $24.50 16.50 Black Fox Heretofore $39.50 Brown Fox ° Heretofore $29.50 22.50 Black Fox Heretofore $19.75 Beaver Heretofore $22.50 14.50 Fitch Heretofore $29.50 Fitch Heretofore $45.00 29.50 Brown Fox Heretofore $24.50 Will Close Out Saturday 11 Scotch Mofe Scarfs 11 Scotch Mole Muffs 7 Natural Mink Scarfs 6 Natural Mink Muffs 5 Natural Lynx Scarfs 5 Natural Lynx Muffs Heretofore $29.50 Heretofore $29.50 Heretofore $22.50 Heretofore $39.50 Heretofore $29.50 Heretofore $29.50 sz3s.00 195.00 00 225.00 75.00 245.00 12.50 14.50 19.50 8.50 7.50 14.50 8.50 15.00 28.00 15.00 19.50 17.50 Entering No. 654 the investigators were shown to the “main ward,” formerly a panor and now containing three beds and a cot. were old and worn,” sald Mr. Doherty. “Tho bed- ding was unclean and full of holes. There was a quarter of an Inch of dust on the mantel, and the plastering had fallen from the wails of the bathroom. In the bathroom gas was escaping from the tube which con- nected with a gas-heating plate. “In the bath room was a rusty iron sink, Under it was a rusty garbago can containing dirty rags. The ven- from the furnace. The body was un- covered. and the porter went upstairs and brought a chunk of tee, which he placed on the man's chest. same room was a bin full of the street clothing of patients, taken from them when they were received. rubbish and is a firetrap. opinion it should be cl: once. at Cherry Valley, N. Y. the Salvation Army, Mr, Doherty said, | street and Second Avenue, forty-two boys and twenty-six girls undressed for said, did service on the bed. One ¢ for twenty-two The A nurse showed us a tin children were obliged to eat bathtub in whioh she said the babies | with their fingers, Mr. Doherty said were buthed. It was deep with dust,| Chief In ‘or A. Oxoroft took the When | poked into it the nurse said (stand to ort on, St. Benedict's| Bank, N. she wae mistaken gnd brought us aj tome for Destitute Colored Children tin basin which she said was used. Alat Rye. He characterized it as “seri- Physician ovrrected her and, in the deficient.” srooklyn Nursery and Infant's No. 396 Herkimer Street 1916. N. ¥., over thirty Grand Chaplain of Lodge of Free Mi: Dr, Dannell 01 Venrs O14. The Rey. Dr. William N. Dunnell, ree- tor for forty years of All Saints Church, New York City, and President and or- ganizer of the Clergymen's Insurance | . League of New York, celebrated in good | health his ninety-first birthday yester- | day at his home on Kector Place, Red Dr, Dunnell was chaplain of the Twenty-second Regiment, N. G.,| , and has been New York Grand Stern Brothers 42nd ond 43rd Streets West of Fitth Avenve “The floor of the operating room on rom the city in 1913, ‘The whole bulldiog uswerted H VILLA LED ATTACK ON CARRANZA GARRISON Government Troops ‘as in the corner and a maid was The poison closet waa The only supplies Rushed to on and a le of alcohol iting in the narrow a also} EL PASO, Tex., Feb. 4—Juares, the Mexican border town opposite here, Was completely isolated early to-day from communication with Chihuahua City as the result of the attack late yesterday of Francisco Villa upon the ‘weatment room’, I was told the por- “The kitchen, laundry and pantry ine. Food supplies An open can held all ‘The bathroom miles south of this city. Beyond establishing the fact that Villa himself led the attack on Mocte- zuma, no news had been received at military headquarters to indicate how the fight resulted, Troops under Gen, Herrera wero hurrying from Chihuabua City to at- tack Villa, while reinforcements from Villa Ahumada of 160 men and some machine guns were en route to Mon- tezuma to support the Carranza troops, They believed that should the fighting be prolonged Villa would be surrounded on all sides. ——>___ “The place is full of inflammable STABBED IN FIGHT AT BALL. In my a, and at| Deteetives Find Man Wounded and Arrest Two. William Christiana, twenty-four, of The laboratory “An Italian patient with a fractured ‘The por- ‘They ‘mortuary It was really I spoke to them about it In tho “I understand that most of the di- more. rectors resigned when they read my/No, 159 East Fifty- Feport to the Board of Ambulance | Reception MANIA Geter SIGs SiRD rvice."* ae y with stab ‘woun in face and forehead, and t SALVATION ARMY HOSPITAL |men are locked up in the Hast Eighty- CONDEMN eighth Street Station following a fight, ‘The Cherry Tree In jal Home |the police say, at a ball given by the ‘onducted by |Imperial Social Club at Ninety-second ‘The pris- oners, arrested as they ran from the are Timothy Murray, No. 300 Bast Ninety- Howard Floor, twenty- 07 “East Ninety-third 000 a year to ald in caring for the ages of two and fifteen, |PIAce, say the “tacked every element of /siyin sirect, Jone, of Ni y. He specified by saying that the! Stree 29.50 to 98.50 Silk 18.50 to 59.50 SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY Misses’ “‘Country Club” Suits—style Registered Six New Models for Town and Country Wear—14 to 20 years also Men's Wear Serge or Gabardine, in Special 29.50 18.50 to 98.50 New and Exclusive Models—6 to 16 Years able fabrics. also silk or wool Jersey fabrics. SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY Misses’ Afternoon Gowns New Spring Models Of Taffeta Silk and Georgette Crepe in old blue, rose, sand, aray, navy or black, bodice and sleeves hand-emb'd, skirt of Taffeta and Georgette Crepe. 14 to 20 yrs. Special 1 8.50 Exclusive Models at Moderate Prices sive adjoining the dining room was used sy aalotning the dining room warchen.|arrison at Moctesuma, about 100 prin Boards had been laid across the bath- i Spring Fashions for Misses and Girls Misses’ Tailored Suits—rzelusive Models Copies of Paris Models and Our Own Originations Of Callot Checks, Wool Velour Checks, Men’s Wear Serge, Gabardine, Wool or Silk Jersey Cloth, ‘‘Poiret” Twill and Gros de Londre Silk; 14 to 20 years. Misses’ Evening Gowns New Spring Models Of Silk Maline over silver cloth; soiree, embroidered or plain Taffeta Silk in all the evening shades, trimmed with silver laces and bandings, 14 to 20 years. Special 29.50 Holding Down the Cost. The cost of eyeglasses ‘is no indication of their value. Eyeglasses adapted to your particular needs will make an eyeglass valuable. Lack of adaptability will make a costly eyeglass valueless. ou purchase glasses service, you do not obtain your money's worth—no matter what they cost. For years we have beenput- ting dependable quality into Harris service and Harris eye- glasses—and holding down the cost. That policy is largely re- sponsible for our remarkable growth The comfort, security and ef- ficiency of our service and Glasses are the result of gen- uine skill and experience. We enjoy the complete con- fidence of more than 250,000 satisfied patrons. Harris Glasses cost 82 or Jeanklin Simon 8 Co. Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets Misses’ Spring Coats—copies of London Models For Street, Sport, Travel and General Wear—14 to 20 years Of Suede Cloths, Overplaid Velours, ‘‘Callot Checks,” Corduroy, Mannish Tweeds, or Wool Jersey, full flare or belted models, some leather trimmed. Of Callot or Shepherd Check, Overplaids, Homespuns, Mannish Fabrics; avy, White, Rookie, Tan or Twilight Blue. Misses’ Afternoon and Evening Gowns Exclusive Spring Models—Sizes 14 to 20 Years Of Taffeta, Georgette Crepe, Silk Merveilleux, Radium Silk, Check, Plaid and Novelty Silks; also Silk Nets or Laces, Girls’ Spring Dresses and Coats School, Party, Dancing, Afternoon and Morning Frocks of all the new silk, wool and wash- School, Dress, Travel and Sport Coats of cloth or silk, Women’s Tailored Hats Are here, showing the early Spring modes in Imported and American-made Straw Braids;also combina- tions of Straw and Satin, at interesting prites. MAL FOR SATURDAY, ST FLOOR. Milan Hemp Hats | Women’s Lisere Hats Striped; lisere brim; black and colors, at $1.95 A large variety of original models; black and colors. at $2.50 i Boys’ Suits and Overcoats A Final Clearance Sale AT UNUSUALLY LOW PRICES Boys’ Norfolk Suits neat fancy mixtures in new of $5.00 Were $7.50, at models; both light and heavy! “ 40.00, “ $7.50 weight fabrics; all with extra) A _ knickerbockers; not all siz 15.00, * $9.75 but a full range; 8 to 18 years. Ove coats, | a? H Boys’ Junior ron! Were 87.50, at $5.00 some cut Russian style, in fine| i ps blue and gray chinchilla, others / 10.00, * $7.50 of neat fancy mixtures; sizes} « 15.00,“ $9.75 214 to 8 years. Boys’ School Overcoats, | All this season's models and fabrics in neat fancy patterns; some with belts; others plain; they are of double-faced cloth and lined; sizes 10 to 18 years. Were $15.00, at $9.75 “18.50, “* 12.50 New Spring Outer Apparel ° 1° for Misses and Girls Is herein most at tive assortments, embod very latest Paris edicts in style, material « coloring evolved for youthful figures. Charming Tailored Suits, $29.75 to 110.00 suitable for beach, travel and sport wear, of Callot checks, men’s wear serge, gabardine, wool jersey cloth, ret twill and gros de Londres, also silks combined with serge. Unusually Smart Coats, $16.50 to 29.75 for travel, sport and utility wear, introducing many new style features and every fashionable material and trimming for Spring. Afternoon & Street Dresses, $18.50 to 79.50 of George serges, silk merveilleux : s, all of which are most effectively trimmed with laces and ribbons. Also Continuing ['o-morrow, The Absolute Clearance of Misses’ & Small Women’s Suits $15.00, 20.00 Originally priced from $32.50 to 45.00 Misses’ & Small Women’s Coats $18.50, 25.00 Originally priced trom $29.75 to 49.75 ONLY BRONX STORE a” Everything tor the ome—Cash or Creait WEE . A Ce FEB A Open p or FURN URE & R Every a it what This Means ¥ ©¥e"ing f We shall make this the GREATEST REAL VALUE SALE cyer had, every piece of Furniture, every Rug, every article of our enormous stock been greatly reduced for this SALE, and our stock has never been | and look around—jt will pay you, Below are some of the values offered, Rooms Rooms Completely’ pores pace 122" ENTRANCE NEXT DOOK TO POST OFFICE ON (40TH STREET 149™ ST., COR. 3°” AVE, li MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED— A WORLD “WANT” WILL GO AND GET IT

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