The evening world. Newspaper, May 27, 1919, Page 11

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Suading ZION HOSPITAL ENJOINED, Borough Park Section of Brooklyn Objects to Building. Citizens of the Horough Park section of Bro poklyn day succeeded in per- preme Court Justice Benedict ‘j to temporarily enjoin the Vople Cor struction Company rfom continuing t build the @ion Hospital. This building Forty. teenth is being erected’ tween Forty-ffth anu ~sixth Streets, and between Six- and Seventeenth Avenues. Th injunction’ is returnable June 3. citizens are said to have offered $5,080 more than the hospital 4 dala forthe land toc have oe mifted a new site, president of the also have sub- Leo Greenfield, hospital, and Abraham Browne, former president and now al direptor, said would ; { , 4 lay that the hospital je all protests «fF es Te not wearing joston Garters, ‘€ missing a lot of pine and garter service. Buy — ‘by name—" Sold eayaty, RICH WOMAN DYING AFTER BROADWAY MOTOR SMASH-UP Mrs. Clara Wheeler Brown and Five Others Injured’ | in Collision. Mrs. Clara Wheeler Brown, & wealthy widow, thirty-one years old, living at the Hotel Commodore, was |probably mortally injured at 1.90 A. M. to-day when her automobile, con- taining a party of friends, was in collision at 72d Street and Broadway, with a car driven by Cornelius J. Buckley, a chauffeur, living at No. 147 West 66th Street. Mra, Brown is in Roosevelt Hospital with coneus- sion of the brain and a ble frac- ture at the base of the skull. The others hurt were: William N. Gage, thirty-nine, a broker, No, 246 West 734 Street, broken nose and cuts and bruises. Mrs. Dula Gage, forty, bis wife, one side injured. Dr. John D. Burke, forty-one, No. 19 West 69th Street, cut in forehead and minor injuries, George Held, thirty-five, No. 216 West 67th Street washer, employed in a-marage at No. 260 West 80th THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY 27, 1919. Street, cuts and bruises about the face and head. Harry Krenow, forty, No, 73 Bast! 127th Street, also a washer at the garage, cuts and bruises. Mrs. Brown, the Gages and Dr. Burke were returning from New Ro- chelle, where they had dinner togeth- er, In the other car, according to the police, Buckley was taking the two washers home from the garage. The Brown car was going west in 724 Street and the other was going south in Broadway. Gage was driving the Brown car. | The Brown car was struck amid- ships with such force it was turned | around and carried forty feet to the | sidewalk to the doors of the Lincoln | Trust Company. Mrs. Brown was) hurled Neadlong to the street, Both cars were wrecked. Buckley was the only one not hurt. He was locked up in the West 68th Street Station charged with being to blame for the accident. The license number on the car driven by him indicates it be- longed to Mra, Amelia J, Burr Me Englewood, N. J. At the Hotel Commodore it was learned Mrs. Brown had taken an apartment there last O@tober after subletting her home in the Adelon, No. 200 West 54th Street, where she had lived since the death a few years ago of her husband, Garrett Brown, who was chief accountant for the Bell Telephone Company. Mrs, Brown came here from Washington. Friends are trying to communicate with a sis- ter in Washington and her tweive- year-old son Marshall, who attends a military academy at Cornwall-on- Hudson. At the hospital it was said she remained unconscious all morn- ing and her recovery is doubtful. Help the Saivation Army to continue its great work HG. Altman & Cn. MADISON AVENUE-FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fourth Street An Important Sale of House & Bungalow Dresses will take place to-morrow (Wednesday) The materials are gingham, voile, tissue and percale, made up in neat, practical styles that will be found invitingly cool on the Second Floor during the warm weather. The prices, unusually low, are Thirty-fifth Street $2.10, 3.00, 450 & 5.50 Interesting Sales of Women’s Summer Blouses st $2.95, 3.85, 4.90, 5.85, 7.75 & 9.75 ‘and Women’s Low Shoes at $4.75, 6.75 & 7.85 per pair are now im progress on the Second Floor Women’s Spring Tailor-mades comprising over twenty-five modeis, developed in tricotine, paulette and Poiret twill, some handsonte!y embroidered, will be on Sale to-morrow. very specially priced (sizes incomplete) at $78.00 (Ready=to-wear Suits, Third Floor) ““BABY KATHERINE” WRITES A TOUCHING LETTER TO HER MISSING FATHER SCHAUB Edward Schaub, wherever you are, | -- The Evening World bas a message for you. It's from your daughter, | “baby Katherine,” and it's one that | will move your heart if you'll take the time to read it: “My Darling Daddy: This is your) own baby Katherine writing. It's| been such a long, very long time since I last saw you. Surely Daddy, you will write to us when you see this, won't you please? “Mamma’s heart is breaking. She cries all day long and even through the night. We all pray for you and that you will either come back to us or write and say you are well. “We miss you, oh so much. Please, Please come home to your baby Katherine.” Katherine, crippled from an attack of infantile paralysis cbntracted dur- ing the epidemic, is a pupil in P. 8. 27, 148th Street and St. Ann's Avenue, the Bronx. The missing father was last seen on April llth. He was on his way home from the movies with his wife, Katherine. He stopped off at @ store and told her to go on home and walt at the door for him. He never re- turned, nor has word come from him, although the police have made an ex- haustive search. Schaub is a boilermaker and lived He has ten at No. 474 Brook Avenue. two other children, Edward, years, and August, eight. Officer With Fate: Fined. WASHINGTON, May 27.—The first case on record of an army officer wearing wound and foreign service stripes to which he was not entitled was officially closed to-day when the War Department announced that President Wilson had commuted a sentence of dismissal imposed on Bec- ond Lieut. Roy L. Mangum, 10th In- fantry, to restriction within camp limits for six months and a fine of $300. Mangum was charged with hav- ing while on duty in Chicago repre- sented himself as a Colonel wounded in overseas service, when he had nev- er served abroa: ‘ound Stripes Edwin Eliphal ty- two years old, of No. 424 Clinton Avenue, Brooklyn, died suddenly yes- terday of acute indigestion. He is survived by his wife, Caroline Mather Boorum The funeral arrangements have not as yet been completed. Mr. Jackson Was born in Binghampton and was @ graduate of Amherst and Columbia Law School, For years he was a emember of the law firm of Noble, Jackson & Hubbell, at No. 52 William Street, Mai 8. While he | was attorney for in Manhattan he e interested in the field that gave him greatest suc- cess, and he was known nationally for a time as the King.” He Union League corporations “Brooklyn Pool % & member of the ub, Manbattan. VICTIM'S MOTHER TRAPS CHAUFFEUR WHO RAN DOWN BOY pea ln I Auto Driver Captured After Pretending to Aid in Hunt for Himself. A mother’s intuition succeeded to- | day where three days’ detective work had failed, and landed in @ Brooklyn cell the chauffeur who fied after run- ning down her eleven-year-old son. Incidentally was revealed the chauf- feur’s unique scheme of trying to clude the police by helping them search for himself, At noon last Saturday Francis Reiser of No. 384 Oakland Street, Williamsburg, was wtruck by an au- tomobile at Huron and Franklin Streets and taken to the Greenpoint Hospital with a fractured skul) and two dislocated khees. The chauffeur sped away before any one could get the number of the car. In a short time a youth describing himself as Harry Becker, eighteen, No, 183 Franklin Street, went to the Greenpoint Police Station and said he saw the accident but not the num- ber of the car. He volunteered to help Detectives Dowling and Royce search for it, mying he believed he would know it if he saw it again. He went around with them Satur- day, Sunday and yesterday without result, and Mrs, Reiser became sus- picious that he knew more than he had tom. Her conviction was #0 strong the detectives accused Becker to-day and ho finally broke down and admitted it was he who ran down the boy. He said he was employed by Kohn & Cooper at No, 98 Green Street, and didn’t want to lose his job, so he de- cided the best way to throw off sus- picion was by helping the police. — Vaccarelli Loses His Salt. ‘The application of Paul Vaccaretli, sometimes known as “Paul Kelly,” for reinstatement ag fifth vice prest dent of tht International Longshore men's Association, was denied by Jus- tice Tierney in the Supreme Court to: New York Brooklyn Philadelphia Fifty Models Attractive Blouses White, Rose, OPPENHEIM, CLLINS & G 34th Stfeet—New York Remarkable Sales for Wednesday (Only) 1,500 Women’s Blouses Three Illustrated of embroidered and checked Voile, also Batiste, trimmed with Organdy, Val. lace and embroidered panels. Orchid and League Blue. Offering Exceptional Values 1.85 AUTOMOBILE REFRIGERATOR OR EXTRA TRUNK 15 puis is the Automobile Refrig- erator you have wanted— strong, well-made, and exception- ally handsome, and offered at « price surprisingly low. Made of staunch black fibre with patent leather finish, nickel trimmed and lined with either white enamel or galvanized iron, this refrigerator has a removable ice chamber which may be placed at any point and will carry 10 lbs, of ice, The 14 inch erator 19 5 inches and tl tnahos wide. a 8p canvas straps with ing on your running Many motorists will use It often as ‘an extra trunk, Ideal for touring or roadside supper parties. fwis& CONGER tb STREET and th AVENUE NEW YORK authorities, claiming the smoottiie, which onty three revolver shots wer fired, was done in self defense. received hero said the trouble started a fight between Mra. Robertson Mra Boutwell and Mra. daughter, Male members of both {lies responded to cries for helj ling regulted, KILLS 3 WITH 3 SHOTS. Missiantppt Pt rel of W m. HAZBLUURST, Miss., May 27.—B)- Nason Robertson, owner of a plantation near here, shot and killed James Bo: well and the latter's two sons, tena om his place. He surrendered to the tripte ANA AEN OM CAEN AHA THLI THAT LEYLA CEU EOE = PERFECT CANDY Our Candies are of the highest quality. by in perfect condition when leaving here niendie @ rough handling in transportation sometimes causes damage A fresh box or money back if you ever find an unsatisfactory package. Cleveland Buffalo Newark An Additional 900 Girls’ Wash Dresses Dresses of Parkhill Gingham in checks and plaids; plain color Chambray and Linon; straight-line and pleated models, smartly trimmed. Sizes 6 to 14 years. Values to 3.95 2.00 : —ll Important Sweater Sale 1,500 Women’s Shetland Sweaters All Sizes to 46 Bust Measure Representing a manufacturer's entire stock of Shetland Wool Sweaters in slip-on and coat styles —fashionable sport shades and combinations. Sailor and Shawl collars, belted and pocketed, Values 5.90 to 10.75 3,95 Serpentine Crepe Break- fast Coats in Rose, Copen, Pink, Wistaria. Fringe trimmed. Sash belt Women’s Breakfast Coats (as illustrated) Light Blue and and pockets. Exceptional Value 2.00 Women’s Surf Satin Sport Skirts Smart model of white washable Surf Satin, slashed pockets and de tachable belt. Same style in White Cotton Gabar- dine, Pique or Honeycomb, vA Exceptional Value 3.95

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