The evening world. Newspaper, November 3, 1916, Page 22

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Pm e eR UNRER pater tere nee raemena cate ARLE LILE LL OTRO LL LEI Were 9 ome te tees TAR BVmnaNe WURLD, aS - FOUND DEAD, WITH HEAD INSIDE BARREL, IN CELLAR Cloths Wrapped About Florist’s Face—Suicide With Chloroform, Says District Attorney. renk Sobioek, twenty-seven years, a Gerist of Bayville, 1. 1, was found dead yesterday tn the cellar of his home with hip head and shoulders ine sugar bar- rel. Wrapped about his head were towels and other articles taken from a clothes line in the yard. Near the body was u bottle containing chloroform. The head wrappings were Without the odor of the drug, Coroner Moore said. Mrs. Sobicel told the authorities she had been aw rly in the morn: ing by a nol: yard, as if dogs had got in band went out to investigate and breakfast time he Was missing she found his body. ho Knew of no enemies of her hua- band, she said, thoveh her home in Blue Point was once get on fire and at an- other time her home tn Sayville was | Then tot Attorney Green, following autopgy last night, sald soblock’s dah wae due to. chloroform he waa convinced It w: elde Intelligent Girls Fai HIS t# one of the smartest and moat attractive frocks that the season has brought forth. The bodice with the half low neck and with the long sleeves ts quaintly attractive, The tunto gives the newest lines pos- sible and the open front with its Red- ingote suggestion ts exceedingly well Mked. Here it ts made of charmeuse eatin and is worn over @ two-piece skirt, but the pattern ts really @ frock, consisting of a bodice and two-piece skirts gathered, therefore you can make two entirely different dresses from it You cold uso it as it is shown on the figure to form a Red- ingote with a skirt beneath, and you could make an entire dress with # long etmplo skirt and high neck with aailor collar to give an entirely differ- ent effect; one will not in the least mug the other, For the high neck frock serge would be pretty, or poplin or material of such sort, and the big collar can be left plain or it can bo embrotdered with some ample design, Just now there 1s a tendency for broadcloth collars on serge, Tho blue serge frock with the collar of ivory broadcloth, either finished with a picot would be edge or a scalloped eago, exceedingly attractive for needs. The charmeuse dre b mo as anything that ed for afternoon occasions. he 16 year size the bodice with Redingote or the entire dress will re- quire 6% yards 36, 4% yards 44, and | §, the skirt 2\ yards 86, 2% yards 44 Roth the patterns of the frock, No. 9255, and of the skirt, No, 9042, are cut in wizes for 16 and 18 years. No. 9255—(With basting line and add- ed seam allowance.) 0 for and Small Women, 16 and 18 + Perforated for Redingote ef- fect and for tunic length. No, 9042—(With basting line and add. ed seam lowance.) Two-Piece Skirt for M and Small Women, 16 and 18 y Call at THE EVENING WORLD MAY MANTON FASHION BUREAU, Donald Bull ite Gimbel Bros. ), New York, (of fm cola or stamps for IMPORTANT—Writ specify sive wanted for men, wome Suits & best FUR Xt?) SMART CLOTHING Newest styles—attractive prices. ON EASY TERMS! Men’s and Boys’ Women’s & Misses’ an Coats, Suits, Dresses & Furs In a wonderful variety of the ding, 100 West Thirty-second Street (op- corner Siath Avenue and Thirty-second sent by mall on receipt of fifteen cents each pattern ordered eo your address plainly and always nm, boys and girls. Overcoats m2) a styles. TURE 4 TH ST. Hon AT we ‘Ave. KLYN. "ot oule | PINNED IN ELEVATOR, GIRL TELLS RESCUERS HOW TO RELEASE HER Bears Pein Bravely Bravely, but Be- comes Hysterical at Fear of Losing Legs. No sooner had Mise May Gibson, Nineteen, entered an empty elevator, in which there was no operator, at the fourth floor of the Berlin Depart- ment Store at Broadway and Wil- loughby Avenue, Brooklyn, where she fa employed as bookkeeper, at 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon, than the elevator shot downward, Mias Gibson fell back, her lege stil! inalde the elevator, Before she could withdraw them the roof of the ole- vator smashed down across her lap. Her screams etartied patrone and employees, For one hour and twenty minutes Miss Gibson remained pinned there, while a score of firemen under Bat- talion Chief Kane hacked, sawed and filed her to froedom. During .he Process Ambulance Surgeon Irving Behnelkraut gave Miss Gibson two hypodermio injections when she be- came hysterical over the fear sbe might lose her legs, The agony she bore stoically and advised with her rescuers constantly a# to the best method of freeing her. She wae taken to the Holy Name Hospital, where it wae said no bones were broken, Bhe lives at No, 69 Nichola Avenue, Brooklyn. ———»—__— STATEN ISLAND NOTES. The Democrats will bring their cam- paign to a close to-morrow afternoon ut the German Club Rooms with a meeting that Is to be addressed by Judge Seabury, William F. MoCombs, and the local candidates, on Monday by the Port Richmond Lit- erary Club. The meeting will be ad- dressed by # number of former presi- dents, and the musical programme will consist of @ piano solo by Miss Harrison and @ vocal solo by Mrs. J. Walter Wood, First Lisut. Bertram G. Eadie of Troop F returned to his home in New Brighton yesterday afternoon from the Moxican border on a thirty-day furlough, A bazaar for the benefit of St. Clem- ents Church will open tn St. Clement's Hall, Van Name Avenue, Mariners’ Harbor, to-morow evening and con- Unue all next week. and to-morrow on Grove Avenue, Port Richmond, by the Ladies’ Aid Society of Grace M. B. Church. A euchre and dance will be held at the Advance Lyceum, West Now Brighton, Monday evening, by the steam and operating engineers of Richmond Borough, A poverty social will be held this evening in the Active Club house, Huguenot, by Pride of Staten Island Circle 24, Lady Foresters of America, The Shawnee Club of West New | Brighton will hold a reception in Fire- men's Hall, West New Brighton, Mon- jday evening. Norfolk A w Rules, NORFOLK, force of draughtamen employed in the navy yard here went on strike at noon yesterday. They have been working seven but ¢ regulations 3 3 = = = ES ouragement conalderable criticism among « Eleht-Mour Law. PHOTOPLAYS. Trust. Powell. | STEAL ENOUGH WIRE candidate for United States Senator, £ “Old Home Day” will be observed | ia A rummago sale will bo held to-day! _ 1.—Tho entire | rn AVAL, AVVEM SER TO LIGHT UP SMALL CITY Confess Taking 1,000,000 Feet of Tungsten Filament From Westinghouse Works. John B. Elwell of No. 45 Locust Street, Bloomfield, N. J.; Jamea ¥. Whelan of Brooklyn and Edward Donegan of Bloomfield pleaded guilty in Special Sessions at Nowark yen day to stealing 1,000,000 feet of sten electric lamp wire, valued $7,000, from the Westinghouse Lamp Works in Bloomfield. Donegan, who worked for the lamp works for $8 a week, stole the thread- like wire, wrapped on spools, accord- ing to written confessions of the three. He turned it over to Biwell, who removed the labels, rewound the wire and gave it to Whelan, Whelan sold it to independent lighting com- on in New York and Now Jerney. Slwell's books show that he received $6,000, Whelan $900 and Donegan $300. thefts had been going on for 1 months. Because since the war cut off importations from Ger- many, the Westinghouse Company h enjoyed a monopoly tn the manufac- ture of the wire it was easy to mark some of it for identification by oxt- dizing it. Donegan and Elwell were caught with the oxidized wire in @ saloon in Bloomfield last Saturday, Whelan's atrost followed. JAIL FOR DINNER BILL, awer Butler Refases to Pay §1.20 Except by Check in Court. For refusing to pay @ $1.20 dinner check, Vincent Butler, a lawyer, fifty years old, of No. 40 Clinton Street, Newark, N. J., was fined $10 by Magis- trate Dauel In the Men's Night Court last night. Mr, Butler was arrested on complaint of Philip Brill, at Mouquin's Restaurant, nue and Twenty-elghth Stree In court Mr, Butler offered to pay by check, but Brill refused to accept the paper. A friend in court offered to pay the bill, but the lawyer rejected it and was committed to Yorkville Prison in ult of the fine, teeinanipeenees Both Sides O1 HAVANA, Cuba, Nov, the Liberal candi nt of Cuba, claims that he jected by 20,000 ma: ae ty of the Interior Heira mn rts AVOID ALL MEAT — BLADDER BOTHER Uric Acid in meat the Bladder. Take Salts at first sign of Bladder Weakness or Kidney-Backache. Kidney and Bladder weakness re- It from uric acid, says « noted basta The kidneys filter this acid from sna blood and pass it on to the bladder, where {t often remains to irritate and {nflame, causing a burning, scalding sensation, or setting up an Irritation | at the neck of the bladder, obliging | you to seek relief two or three times | during the night. The suffere: constant dread, the water passe: times with very profuse; again there is cH in voiding it. Bladder weakness, most folks call It, | because they can't control urination, While it is extremely annoying and sometimes very painful, this is really one of the most simple ailments to overcome. G Jad Salts from your pharmacist and take a tablespoonful in a glass of wa-| ter before breakfast, continue this for two or three days, This will neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer iy @ source of irritation to the bladder | and urinary organs, which then act normally again. Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless, | and {s made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, | and is used by thousands of folks who | are subject to urinary disorders | by uric acid irritation. Jad splendid for kidneys and causes no bad effects whatever. Here you have a pleasant, efferves- cent lithla-water drink which “guiekly relieves bladder troubl Ad f Pia) HAVE COLOR IN CHEEKS Be Better Looking—Take Olive Tablets. ‘our skin {3 yellow—complexton pallid. tongue coated—appetite poor | ou have a bad taste in your mouth lazy, no-good feeling—you should take Olive Tablets. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—a sub- stitute for calomel—were prepared by Dr. Edwards after 17 years of study with his patients. Dr. Edwards’ purely vegetable compound with olive oil. You will know them by their olive color. To have a clear, pink skin, bright eyes, no pimples, a ecling of buoyancy ‘like childhood days you must get at the cause. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act on ithe liver and bowels like calomel— yet have no dangerous after effects. ‘They start the bile and overcome constipation. That's why millions of boxes ure sold annually at 10c and 25c. All druggists. Take one or two nightly and note the pleasing results. Advt _.___ CONCERTS AND MUSIC. |. Sat. Eve. A Now biicans here, because of the Presi- | Song, DIMITRIEFF __PHOTOPLAYS, Olive Tablets are e! mixed | Boe noth Viviai & Gir ae [Er ara Be LOEW'S NEW YORK THEA @,,HOOE, te! od % M. S 1 two) A. Cons Ht taste §S rhs Hart Ot ites Loew's epee Root Riaeaate sit Fu LAG HT TROVOLTA ¥ i. FB KbITH 3) Ne PALACE : Daly’sfaa! Be Bee |Twice Dai OLUMBIA,! 2 215 & 81 epee C THE ROSELAND GIR) LS” KL onrah i 1 Tc SRATING Aduisaion, be, T\LYMPIC fst aT ‘DAILY J “MONTE CARLO GIRLS” r BROOKLYN. | TRIANGLE THEATRE aad Anniversary ea BE FRAN (NK KEENAN & ENID MARREY ‘Jim Grint Boyt" 3 Other P PHOTOPLAYS, —_ SIGNAL FILM CORPORATION Presents The Supreme Favorite HELEN HOLMES jn ASPECTACULAR MOTION PICTURE CHAPTER =PLAY OF THE NORTHWOODS “A Lass of the Lumberlands”’ Holmes’ newest and greatest motion picture success. It is a story of the great timber regions of the Northwest. the battle of a lone girl against that gigantic octopus It is presented in See itl Motion Pictures Produced by the Signal Film Corporation. tributed through Sixty-eight Mutual Film Exchanges in America. is Helen It portrays the Lumber The perils and dangers of life in the Northern forests are depicted in thrilling reality! The story, “A Lass of the Lumberlands,” is from the pen of the noted novelist, E. Aleander Itisa story of deep heart-interest with thrilling situations dec idedly new to the screen, chapters —e new chapter every week Ask your theatre manager when it will be shown. fifteen spectacular Read the Story Every Saturday tn the New York Evening World. Dis- IF KIDNEYS AND | scalding sensation and is , 3, eon en etree tie tren yee eR AB PHOTOPLAYS. tldmeys and trtinice ce without t a by the PHOTOPLAYS., Greatest Human Showing NOWai ce Ex Int citing CHAYES F OR USPARKI ch FN CYRIL AUDE mae ‘SPRINGTIME After the Play see (Aton this Theatre) IEGFELD i FROLI Taleernae BASKER COHAN HUA, Sra Rat.. 3028s Election Day & Wed.. and company incl in of Ig thal ‘Fragrant. divertin=, avoeath pate KEMBOC Kel. & re) 2 Fath, Lia W RFI "ELD t tie Mise Duy & A. Sat, Pee CRITERION ins JOHN DREW § § HUDSON Wish nepstahi. POLLYANNA Fate: Jov_Inte Living, ar wes, bie 80. ie, Dey & ‘Thur. BACKFIRE with Mary Holand and Frederick ‘Trunsell, Tumapesht GAIETY, F DO. Mats. Bat. Tues, Wed, FULTON *g:;.%i tb A COHAN EHARRIS "een? THEA. DT, Kvn at 5.20. Mats.Sat, Ele’, Day & Wed “Object Matrimony” Ry Montaque (lam & Jules Kekort Goodman, REPUBLIC pay wea.2:20) GOOD GRACIOUS ANNABELLE} BELASCO Wa.S4h. "yet Bay Sirhan: SEVEN CHANCES HARRIS “Si... "huod'iey Mived 238 “UNDER SENTENCE,” with George Nash and Janet Bee LIBERTY }\w. Twice tac, Sunday, 216 A610 FM, D. W. GR! FFITH'S COLOSSAL SPECTACLE Orchestra of 6 = ie A GLOBE Force. E Greatcsi Drama since the dawn of the screen MAURICE COSTELLO The Master Sitar and Charming HEL RANDIN PHOTOPLAYS, Writien in wonder cha: mas for your per by Alber! P your ensc-Fast-las on Terhune theaire, Produced by the ERBOGRAPH Co, Presented by \ CONSOLIDATED FiLM CORP'N O.EGOEBEL, President {VOWICG BERD, Treasures New York, METR O Gssunse 1 MDS. Eves 8 WINTER GARDEN {11,8 ena Pires [ SHOW OF WONDERS) OF WONDERS 29TH ST. that, g& Biv. Bie 2 sar a Ele Day MA UUM MN ) i il hier wi Wet) I et & Biee. 20 LONG tert gid Tayer Hanes WUNKER BEAN PLAYHOUSE G'®. & of Wires. rs, #20. THEMAN WHO CAME BACK “HUSH! ft. To-m!w, 2.80. Pierrot « Paeaaal WEEK at the BOOTH FER ie DAY at the LITT Ho-mo.0%, DONGACRE WM. COLLIER .. “NOTHING hs 4THST i Richard Walton, = Tully’ FCASINO Br, lina Abarbanel, COMEDY. Wo4i ) deth ay CORT Wie) Season's ONE. Sutut al Ohy Nororce RE ANB" soiinen WUPSEA i wa oe STANDARD “VERY GOOD EDDIE Next Week— SILENT WITNESS, eae HAOAS WAY WILLIAM FOX presents A-DAUGHTER OF THEGODS]} With ANNE TT N OPER, | MAN HATTAN | OFEN BOS |NEXT weEk MON NOV 6 Ais Mat | law & Prlenger a Plc OX ed watre 40th, TREASURE ISLAND a ial hy abypiontit YORKVILLE ys Hoy tt Lexington pu? ‘oie TOLLE DOLLY“ mew jad 1,000 Times tp Reriin— he ot, —__ PHOTOPLAYS,_ 14TH STREET and 6TH AVE. rl THEATRE, ors ry i had | 1h A. SE to inh eO he b pint TRICE FAIRFAX ig Vaudeville feta 7 REELS ov 7 iaaeet FF # on Barth, | PARK Theta, Wnt aby 0, St Daly Bey ‘Y 47 aris OF THE TRAD a oem FO 1140, raud Orch, & Soletae Nat. Wk—Mury Plokford, Less Than <s : em gn Ree Wilfesd Lucas stance Tal: ite tnd Poo Risto Ore |AROA DWAY) THOMAg Era) ry |

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