The evening world. Newspaper, July 29, 1918, Page 5

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DR, JOSEPH M. CREAMER DIES SUDDENLY AT DEAL Noted Physician and Athlete Expires After Second Stroke of Paralysis. Dr. Joseph M. Creamer, for many years one of the best beloved phvai- Clans in New York City because of his tireless work. without fees, among the poor, di«i Sunday evening at his sum mer home af Deal Reach, N. J., folow ing a second stroke of apoplex Two months ago an initial at warning that the end of his life's work was near. Dr. Creamer, who was forty-one years old and born in Brooklyn, re ceived his early education at St. John's College and got his M.D. desree from Long Island Medical College. His fath W the late Coroner Joseph M. Creainor 4nd his grandfather, of the same name wad preceded him in his chosen profes sion. Dr. Creamer married the daugh- ter of Henry McAleenan, For many years he practised in the east side dis- triet from an office in East Seventh Street. Besiies his private practice among the poor, which almost absorbed his Whole time, Dr, Creamer maintained free clinics at Bellevue, St. Luke's and Poly- clinic Hospitals, He was himself an athlete and served as medical adviser to nearly every athlete of note in America. His wife, Josephine, and three youns @avghters, as well as his mother and brother, Frank D, Creamer, and one sis- ter, Caroline, survive the physician Funeral services will be hel! at Deal Beach at 7.30 A. M. to-morrow and in- terment will be in the McAleenan vault, Calvary Cemetery. SANDY" DINGWALL DIES AFTER AN OPERATION Well Known Theatrical Manager| Had Been Seriously Ill Only Short Time. Alexander W. Dingwall, known gen- erally as “Sandy” Dingwall, died yes- terday morning at the Post Graduate Hospital, after an operation for intes- tinal trouble. He was taken to the Institution from his apartments at the Spencer Arms last Monday. He had been seriously ill only a short time. Mr. Dingwall was born in Toronto sixty years ago. Twenty years acto he was one of the most active and |‘ prominent producing Broadway. For ten years, from 1899 to 1909, he was manager of the Broadway Theatre. When he took over the Broadway, Dingwall was in partnership with the late Jacob Litt, Together they made many notabie productions, and were pioneers in sending abroad for the American rights of successful forelcn managers on plays. “Ben Hur’ ran a year at the Broadway during their regime. Dingwall came to New York from the West, where he got his start in the thatrical business by managing stock companies, When he became es. tablished here he becume an associate ot Klaw & Erlanger and was usually found aligned with the so-called syn- dicate. Dingwall had a narrow escape from death in 1901 when a drug-crazed youth, Robert Hay Moulton, at tempted to shoot May Buckiey in a| restaurant, where she was supping with the manager after the first per- formance of “The Price of Peace” at the Broadway. The bullets missed Mies Buckley, but Dingwall was wounded in the side. He was taken to the hospital fgared, but he Veteran Tom! ‘William M. White, 2. @ keeper at the Tombs Prison for many years, died suddenly while on duty this morning. Dr. Drosman of the Volua- teer Hospital, who was called by tendants who found the aged Jailer Conscious pronounced him. dead. His home was at No. 2500 Eighth Avenue, and his death was PRISON AND HEAVY FINE FOR GERMANS WHO FAIL TO GIVE UP OLD CLOTHES Government Also to Confiscate Cur- tains and Substitute Paper— Open Grumbiing Heard. MSTERDAM, July 2%.—The yas German. Government has “final notice” to the given public to give up voluntarily at least one suit of clothes each to the war workers and the army. Failure to meet the demand will result in forcible requisition and ae will be liable to im- nt for one year and & prison fine not exceeding 10,000 marks. With very few exceptions none of the German communities has yielded its assessment of worn Clothes to make up the aggregate of the one million suits required. Greater Berlin only has contrib- uted 34,904 of the 75,000 suits de- manded, How high the need for fabrics has risen is shown by @ decree announcing the impending confiscation of curtains which will be replaced gratis with paper fibre material or paid for at the original peace time cost price less wear and tear. Although private residences have been exempted from the confiscation for the present there already is a good deal of grumb- ling. The Lokal-Anzeiger of Berlin makes bold to si vially the “Tae population, esp much-plagued middie classes, 1s dof making endless sacri+ If the Government wants | things, it should pay handsomely, as it does the war material pur- veyors. STRIKERS AT COVENTRY TO GO BACK TO WORK Munitions Makers Vote to Accept British Government's Offer of Mediation, LONDON, J Striking muni- tions workers in Coventry, the of the fy t disturbance, ¢ a mass neeting to-day to k immediately and accept overnment’s offer of mediation. BILRMING! M, July 29.—Acting on a resolution ed by their colleagues yesterday, strikers in munition the works here returned to their places of employment this morning, Although their hostility to the embargo upon Killed labor is unabated, of an inquiry into the ‘situation has reconciled the strikers to the inevit- secre ae Mark Retara of Electric Strikers, LYNN, Mass., July 2.—Several thou- sand employees of the General Electric Company, who had been on strike here two weeks, wont back to work omy Fights General upon invitation of the company. Bi} counters recurred when pickets tried to persuade the men not to return, the a clubs. and police were obliged to use’ their om drowning here yesterday by Sam- rgan, President of the Southern npany, after an exciting struggle sur —_— Drowns tn It Selzed with epilepsy while taking a Olaf Hanson, twenty-five, of No. cond Place, Brooklyn, drowned in home yesterday, He downward in about R, J. Reynolds, Tobacco Magnate, Dead. ALEM ids, N. ©, July 29,— hoad of one of the manufacturing concerns died here to-day, HE smooth, mellow flavor of each slice makes Gobel’s Cooked Ox Tongue one of the good things of the earth. Back Up Our FIGHTERS! Buy W. S. S. or It is perfect served cold as a lunch meat in sandwiches for Smoked and then cooked to rich tender- ness in Gobel's model kitchens, picnic baskets. it comes to you instantly ready for the table, sliced as Pure Lard For sale at all good delicates- sen and food stores. either way. Get cooked meats where you see the “Quality First” sign. From Gobel’s Kitchens You can buy it by the whole tongue or It is economical you wish, Not an ounce of waste. Cooked Ham Frankfurters Smoked Ham Bologna Bacon Slicing Bologna Cooked Corned Beet Liver Sa URE MEAT Sobels U. 5. Government haspected Establishment Ho. 317, Morgan Ave, and Rock St, Brooklyn, N. Y. the promise | ‘HELD FOR ‘ARDUCTG {on the other side of the Marne. |5 feet 11 inches in height and weizhs |95 pounds. $17.5) GIRL TWICE HIS su 95-Pound Patriot, Barred from the TH ermore. Army, Tries To Elope, but sie nate to Heumenth: aeainue a BANA >olice Catch Hi x sngside which it was moored Police Catch Him. | LIVERMORE FALLS, Me, July 29. ec homan haha ond 0h OF nk H. Lewis, 24, of No, 345 West| ‘The mills of the Internation r ‘sna teeny the wee , thelr 40in 8 ; Company here were reopt t tently. pinned 20th Street, seems to have been born) A739 employees voted to resume work |the body waa for hard luck, but there sull burns in} upon receipt of word from New K] tin was about forty-five years : 1 | that differences over the interpretation [his pocket was a War gone, pa hia breast the saine fire that has BUTS | a set er tha Federal War Labor |g the name of ek Nelison of No into a flame among the American boys | \ourd had been adjusted * Fourth Btreet, Brooklyn Frank Js a bellhop at the Waldorf-Astorta, or | Was until he was arrested last night on a charge of abducting pretty Marie Mar berger, 17, dughter of Jacob Harberger. proprietor of a bakery and lunch room at No, 164 Eighth Avenue. Frank was a butcher boy in the Neighborhood of the restaurant. He is Marie is twice as big, but| love knows no bounds nor boundaries When Frank was turned down by the draft, he wrote a manly letter to Wash- ington, asking if he couldn't be placed somewhere. He was assured that the firet 95-pound job in the army would He went on making love to nd Papa Harberger found it ont and him fired from the butcher store, So he went to bellhopping. They laughed at Frank when he applied for a marriage license and ealled him a kid. Then he and Marie eloped and went to his brother's home in Easthaven, Conn, where he tried, he says, to get a marriage license and failed. When he returned to the Wal- dorf-Asoria, Detective Stevens was waiting for him, i WESTERN UNION FACES FINE OF $17,500,000 Corporation Formally Pleads Not Guilty in Night Letter Postal Violation Case, The Western Union Telegraph Com- pany, indicted as @ corporation Friday for a violation of the postal laws in | sending “night letters" by messengers on trains, entered a formal plea of not guilty before Judge Learned Hang in| the United States District Court this! ! | morning. Strike at 1 One week Union faces 4 it be convi 00,000 shor would. re of 344,00 in was given the cor poration to either file a demurrer or | change its plea WwW ent a fine Mew One man tum, owned by Harms & Co. with 1 a fine ot |! tod. The | d eank this Brooklyn 4, Erie Basin, Paper | the night, Ite upper works wore Suits for Men IN A GREAT WAR-TIME SALE $22.50 and $25.00 Suits, now.....$17.50 $28.00 and $30.00 Suits, now.....$23.50 $32.50 and $35.00 Suits, now.....$27.50 Kupp.-Air-o-Weave Suits... ... .$15.00 to $28.00 Tropical Worsted Suits. . Silk Suits and Flannel Suits. . . Cool Cloth and Genuine Palm Beach Suits... . eee $17.50 to $28.00 . $22.50 to $35.00 Mohair Suits. . .$12.50 to $20.00 . $10.00 to $15.00 The Kup 1456 Broadway 279 Broadway Broadway at 49th Street 2 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn penheimer House in New York. 44 E. Mth St. 125th Street at 3d Avenue Save or Sla ve—Buy W. S. S. Regularly! Lord final 38th Street —FIFTH AVENUE— BUY DHRIET STAMPS —1826— goth Street PERFECT FUR SrOR OSE: A Remarkable Sale Beginning Tomorrow, Tuesday 900 Pairs of Fine White Canvas Pumps In the smart styles illustrated $2.05 White Pumps with white soles and covered heels. All sizes and widths when the sale begins. None C, 0. D. No Becond Floor. Returns, July Clearances and Specials in Art Embroidery Section Items of special intere’ it doubly advantageous to buy what you need now. st to vacationists. the-minute novelties and staple requirements. Cretonne Knitting Bags of colors, shapes and sizes, practical uses 25¢ Stamped Dresses, to embroider; a smart model, in pink or blue; for tiny tots; 2 to 4 year sizes; GAP. <i2cse-asa pe eeee Fine range Rib » for many | pin ca to $1.00 toilet Stamped Luncheon Sets, 14 pieces; colored con- Present clearance prices render Large varieties of up-to- bon Novelties—Sachets, needle cases, rriers and many dainty accessories of and work tables goc to $1.00 Pillow Slips, round styles i of Cretonne; many pat- ventional designs; to em- Relies in’ bien terns and colors from Gtisrrercecere.., SLoas | which tocclect...... SOC Fifth Floor Sneanie Pie in Mahogany Floor Lamps Solid mahogany standard; excellent assortment of silk shades in all de- sirable colors, trasting tints.....ec- Cut Glass Candlesticks Excellent designs; complete with tall, slender candle, in all favorite colors $1.00 +++ $6.00 Soli comp color, Fifth Floor Solid prettily lined; all desirable colors Not a large but a very choice lot with mainly but One Lamp atea Vie: eieccies sae eric eren ei aiei eet OOO Two Light Table Lamps Solid mahogany; empire shade of silk in | favorite colors and daintily trimmed in con- | Boudoir Lamps mahogany; dainty silk shades, $3.00 Jacobean Candlesticks 1 mahogany in quaint old twist style; lete with candle in any desired tenes $71.50 ee d when the and load- $20,000 worth of copper ot r morning at eved the barge sprang « leak during owr 47 Cortlandt St. barie It is dames McCreary & Co. 5th Avenue ON TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY 34th Street Purchases Will Appear on Bills Rendered September Ist. Special Offerings CANNING UTENSILS (SIXTH FLOOR) 1-Atlas EZ Seal Fruit Jars—wide mouth and glass top. A perfectly sanitary jar. 2—Folding Canning Rack, to place in boiler, with adjustable wire mesh bottom; holds eight jars 3—Family Scale for household use; weighs 24 pounds by ounces; black Pint size........doa. 1.15 wath fits number 7 or 8 | enameled with white dial. Quart siz ...doz, 1.25 | boiler. 4% gallon size... .doz. 1.50 95c 1.95 and 2.25 ’ Good Luck Fruit Jar Rings,—the original cold pack; red rubber. doz. 15¢ Fruit Presses, — heavily retinned strainer and steel handle. 65c Highly Polished Aluminum Strain- ers with side handle; 746 inches in di- ameter and 314 inches deep. Handy Individual Fruit Jar Hold- ers,—fit pint, quart or half-gallon jars. each 10c Fruit Jar Lifters with rubber cover- ed ends,—to remove jars from sterilizer. 5c **Parowax”’ for sealing Fruit Jars and Jelly Glasses air tight. .Ib. 25¢ Jelly Strainers with wire rack to fit any preserving kettle. Tat’s Jelly Strainers,—these new fruit strainers will prevent burned, or stained hands. Sherwood Metal Frame EXTENSION WINDOW SCREENS Moderately Priced ‘ 24 in. high, 20 to $7 in. extension. . nee fn bite ‘ .. 30 in. high, 21 to $7 in. extension. oe ee high, 19 to 83 cal extension, +90 30 in. high, 24 to 43 in. extension. ..1. 00 | 32 in. high, 24 to 43 in, extension.....1.15 Lord € taylor 38th Street —FIFTH AVENUE— goth Street MEN'S BARBER SHOP _ RIRECT ENT! RANCE sal ables STREET [aie E mie tts Ree “Mente Rumnishiagé Special Values Affording timely opportunities to replenish Summer haberdashery needs at prices of unusual economy. Men’s Fine Silk Shirts That We Could Not Duplicate at This Price To-day 3.85 ‘Tub Silks and Baby Broadcloth Silks in a selection of neat and novelty stripes, Shantung Silks with collars attached. If you want to fight join the marines now, Recruiting Head- quarters, 24 East 23d St. ot? Four-in-Hands 5e Silk Grenadines in a large assortment of fancy stripes, | also smart self-color bro- | | | Sport Shirts $1.65 White Oxford and mer- cerized fabrics, attached col- lars Pajamas $7.65 Percales and Mercerized materials; excellent variety of stripes and plain colors, Terry Bath Robes $4.50 Medium weight; blue, tan, lavender and pink back ground for Jacquard designs, some half sleeves Silk Half Hose 85¢ cades Four-in-Hands 55E Foulard handkerchief euaS aay a rtment of choice new patterns, nforee and hee Ground Flor A seven-time World Want works all the week. Order one to-day and prosper.

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